If you grew up like she did, you'd call yourself a tomboy too. She has the attitude and the antique pictures on her wall to prove it.
“When I was a girl,” she said. “After school, we'd spend the afternoon catching frogs, fishing, climbing trees. A tomboy like me didn't know HOW to be comfortable indoors. I was nothing like my other sisters, I wanted to be outside, in the mud."
Muddy childhoods like hers are foreign concepts to modern-day kids. Things like climbing trees, throwing pocket-knives at pine trees, or catching frogs are forms of cruel and unusual punishment now.
Today, it's video games, texting, or songs
about getting naked and drinking enough tequila you forget your limo-driver's name.
And folks have the gall to call it country music.
While we chatted in the kitchen, her eight-year-old grandson laid on the sofa, playing with his phone.
“Used to,” she went on, “my favorite thing to do was camp with my friends. Mama didn't even worry about safety back then. We girls camped by the river, we'd get so dark-tan we looked caramel.”
Her grandson waltzed into the kitchen, his sneakers squeaking on the floor. Without taking his eyes off…