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[personal profile] raybear
Friends from out of town here, me leaving town to see friends, and in between, the negative overlapping space of being unable to stop time, I want to do it all and can't, no matter how many times I touch my fingers together and try to stop time or do my impression of a Carolina accent to say "I wish there were two lives apportioned to every man".

Today at lunch there was a discussion of Southern accents and I did my best to explain a sound of Atlanta and I think I maybe did alright. My friend is an actor and is learning a new monologue and was looking for any additional advice. I told her under no circumstances was she to add any Rs to any words, such as "warsh" or "idear". She asked if I ever had an accent and I honestly didn't know if I lost it or if it was there to be lost. I learned that even though I don't shape my vowels and consonants in the stereotypically southern way, I tell my stories in the same cadence, of fast then slow, of pausing and going up, of beginning every sentence with "and" except it's more like a tag from the sentence before. She said, it's similar to Irish, and I believed it, because that is it's origin.

I did karaoke last Friday, a little more of it on Sunday night, and might be doing it again tomorrow. It might seem excessive if it wasn't so hilarious to me.

Date: 2006-04-26 01:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] riotdrake.livejournal.com
i think my great-grandmother definitely said things like "warsh" and "idear", but she also probably never actually stepped foot inside the city of atlanta. poor rural southern speak is so different. its all very interesting

May 2010

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