I am not a trend setter. Not in how I dress, not in what I write, and certainly not in the music I listen to. I am, what one could accurately describe as, a square.
Perhaps this is because I grew up listening to scratchy 8 track cassette tapes of Waylon Jennings and Dolly Parton.
Or maybe it’s because my parents always had a radio (perched on top of our refrigerator) playing; the dial never once moved from the local farm station on the AM channel, even when FM barged it’s way into it’s place in modern day culture. I always knew when the schools were closed, which country act was coming to town and the price of hogs on any given day.
(Pig prices wasn’t particularly useful information for my family as we were a bunch of surburban city dwellers, but somehow it made a permanent way into my psyche. Go figure.)
The only vinyl my parents I ever considered playing from my parents large collection were a few scratchy Elvis records. I had no interest in listening to the plethora of Hank Williams tunes that seemed to dominate the entire selection.
I grew up knowing how to dance to a good polka and I can square dance with the best of them. Oh ya, I am hip.
My siblings, Stretch and Mouse, shook off this cultural immersion in all things country freakishly old fashioned and morphed into people reasonably in touch with modern day society. They listen to current music, buy the latest technologies available on the market and, when asked what the latest price in the pig market might be, have the appropriate blank stare and WTF? look on their faces.
Me? I’m still listening to that AM channel with the mid-morning piggie announcements and I can’t get enough of Merle Haggard and Johnny Cash. There is even a radio perched on the top of my fridge that I turn on every morning when I pad my way into the kitchen for my morning coffee.
I am, and always will be thanks to my parents successful indoctrination, an old fashioned girl.
(An old fashioned girl who gets knocked up with two kids before marrying her babies daddy, finishes her post secondary after having children, sports a blue bush, has a few nipple and nose piercings and is riddled with tattoos. Still, I am old fashioned, I swear.)
Ahem.
I am in fact, a crotchety old lady trapped in a young woman’s body.
I totally blame my parents.
Which brings me to the point of this post.
Yesterday I spent the day with my father. The same man who constantly hums “There is a Tear in my Beer” and doffs a cowboy hat when ever he sits down for a meal. The man who has had the same hair cut his entire life, wears cowboy boots because they are practical and wouldn’t know what a trend is if it bit him on the arse.
Other than the fact my father looks nothing like me and has a vocabularly that makes even sailors blush, we are pretty much the same people. Stuck in our ways, hesitant to try anything new and sporting the same grouchy outlook when it comes to our world views.
We are two sides of the same coin.
Or so I thought until yesterday as the two of us went shopping for his belated fathers day present. Picture him ambling down the hardware store aisles in dirty cowboy boots, jeans and a denim shirt with a black cowboy hat perched on his thinning hair and then picture me in my dirty cowboy boots, jeans and denim shirt with a straw cowboy hat perched on my head.
We don’t dress for fashion around here, yo.
As we stood in the massive hardware store surveying cabinetry and counter tops, mulling over colour choices and variety of wood grains, his cell phone rang.
Except I didn’t think it was his cell phone. I thought it was some punk ass kid’s who must be lurking around the corner.
When my father put down the cabinet sample to reach into his front pocket to grab his cell phone I just about died.
My father, the man who refuses to even learn what an iPod can do and listens to the same scratchy radio station, has a fancier cell phone than I do. A cellphone that sings out “Kung Fu Fighting” at the top of it’s lungs when ever some one calls him.
This from the man who threatened to throw out our television set whenever my brother Stretch and I wanted to watch Micheal Jackson’s video Thriller on MuchMusic.
This from the man who swears the Beatles music is nothing but a bunch of British twits with too much time on their hands.
This from the same man who thinks the definition of disco is derived from the movie “Rhinestone” from Glen Campbell’s song “Rhinestone Cowboy.”
My 61 year old father had a itty bitty cellphone belting out a musical ring tone. As people turned to stare at us to see who the jackass it was polluting the hallowed halls of the hardware store with such a silly ring tone, I pulled the brim of my hat down lower, stared at my boots and wished for the powers of invisibility.
After my dad concluded his phone call, he slipped his phone back into his shirt pocket, picked up the sample we were examining and tried to pick up our conversation where it left off.
Except I was staring at him like he just grew a tail and horns sprouted out of his forehead.
“Whose phone is that Dad?” Because there was no way it could have been my father’s.
“Mine. Why?”
“Where’d you get that ring tone?” Because obviously someone played a practical joke on him. Obviously. “I can CHANGE it for you,” I graciously offered.
“I bought it. I like it. And I can change it myself if I wanted to,” he huffed at me, indignant with me for thinking he was too technologically challenged to handle a simple task such as that himself.
“But DAD. It’s embarrassing. Seriously.” I gaped at him, while reaching for his cell phone to correct his obvious error in judgement.
“I like it. Your mom’s phone moos like a cow when ever someone calls. It makes us smile,” he replied as he evaded my hand.
I just stood there dumbstruck, wondering where my father went and how I could get the body snatcher out of my dad’s skin and return the world to normal.
“I’ve even got it programmed to bark like a dog when I get a text message,” he grinned.
That’s when I fell over dead and saw my lifeless body below me as I floated my way to heaven.
Pigs grew wings in that moment and snow started to fly in the deserts of Africa too.
I don’t get it.
What ever happened to the basic ring tone? Am I the only grown up in the Western world who doesn’t need to hear a chicken cluck or a digital version of “Take me out to the Ball Game” when a call comes in?
As my father and I were leaving the store he asked me where my cell phone was.
“Why? Is your battery dead?” I asked as I dug in my pocket and handed it to him.
“No. I just want to check out what ring tones your phone has.”
GAH.

AMEN.








Tatiana
Awesome! I too am firmly in the ‘phone should sound like a damn phone’ camp. The worst is old people listening to rap.
And I so did not enjoy a hick upbringing like you, but I still love Johnny Cash.
Maureen at IslandRoar
My son has the Darth Vader music from Star Wars play as his ring tone for when I call him.
Mine just rings. My kids say I’m boring.
You at least have a cowboy hat.
Nice!
Jenna
My phone has a normal ring too. My mother loves ring tones. The one she has for me when I call her is Carrie Underwood’s My Last Name…Does she think I’m a drunken whore??
Kelly
You know, this makes me laugh. You were embarrassed by your dad’s ringtone, probably just like your son was embarrassed by your silver pom poms at his award ceremony. Too funny! I guess what goes around comes around huh?
Heidi
I am proud to admit that I am 27 and have been a cell phone user for the last 10 years and my phones have always JUST RANG. I get so annoyed by the musical ring tones. Either they are poor quality, way to loud (People in Africa dont need to hear your phone belt out “She’s a super freak”), or, well to be honest, the song sucks. I have 1 phone that has a musical ring tone, it is the pre-paid the Mr. Nuts uses to keep track of me when I am away and he is the only one with the number. When he calls it plays “Me so horney” and I didnt make it do that, he did. I was told if I changed it I was going to get all my pretty lil’ fingers broke LOL. He likes to make a scene. Gosh bless the plain old ring.
tony
i can only remember dad watching two shows on our black and white tv when i was young. the grand ole opry and live Atlanta wrestling.
could not convince him the wrestling was fake
but i still enjoy his choice of music. my favorite would be “no show jones” George Jones.
Amber
My mother is a couple years younger than your dad, but when someone calls her phone she looks around quizzically. Then she doesn’t know how to answer it. I would take a little ‘Kung Fu Fighting’ any day.
Bush Babe (of Granite Glen)
My phone sounds like a phone. Clearly all that Johnny Cash and Charlie Pride had an impact on me too. Oh and Tanis? My dad doesn’t even know how to turn ON a mobile phone (his fingers are too big!!)… you can borrow him anytime you like!!!

BB
Bush Babe (of Granite Glen)
PS A blogger friend of mine posted a hilarious story about her mother and a mobile phone – you would love it:
http://rhubarbwhine.wordpress.com/2009/06/24/this-is-your-handbag-calling/#comment-2984
And while you are there please click onto the lesbian cucumber story!!!

BB
Angie [A Whole Lot of Nothing]
I have a fancy iPhone with a boring ring*ring for phone calls.
My old phone (pre kids) had “you’re crazy bitch, but you fuck so good i’m on top of it.” It was a ‘hit’ with my mom…
Frogdancer
I normally text, so whenever my phone would actually ring, I’d usually miss the call before I realised that it was actually my phone.
Until my fourth son changed the ring tone.
It’s now the sound of him screaming. It sounds as if someone has a blowtorch to his toes or is ripping his fingernails out one by one. The minute that ringtone happens, it hits me right in the heart and I’m diving for my phone.
Awesome. (But I think it’s taken years off my life…)
Sarah @ BecomingSarah.com
That comic strip is just the icing on the cake lol!
Also, I love your dad. Although I’m totally with you on the dying part. My dad and I have alot in common and if I heard Kung Fu Fighting coming out of his phone, my heart would stop beating on the spot.
Not that it would matter. Neither of us really answers our phones anyway.
harmzie
I have had the xkcd philosophy since I’ve had a cell phone. I had forgotten what solidified it for me, but it was that cartoon. Partly because I have a big nasty cougar crush on Randall Munroe and would do whatever his bidding, and partly because of, well you’ve said it all above.
Sue
Great post!! There has been CFCW on in my kitchen every morning for the last 40 years. Piggy prices are apart of every Alberta rednecks morning coffee.
As always I’m laughing my ass off and nodding my head in agreement with you!
Jan
I rarely use my cell phone. If someone ever calls me – it just rings. I could care less.
On another note, the radio station you listen to – does it announce the local obituaries? Our AM country station sure does – every weekday at 12:50 on the nose. Heaven forbid you interrupt my grandparents at this time.
bella
Thank you I am 34 and my phone rings, I can listen to music when I want to, I have missed calls because I used to have a ringtone walking through wal mart and didnt hear it!
RebTurtle
Hill-friggin’-larious! I think I might have the same thoughts if my mom had a funky ringtone. She’s far from technically challenged, but she’s…..my mom!
The problem I’m finding is that every time I get a new phone, the built-in ringers are all craptastic. I changed mine about 2 years ago to the theme from Knight Rider, and ironically just yesterday got bored with that and changed it to bullfrogs croaking. The first thing I did after that, was check out my 11 year-old daughter’s reaction.
- Priceless!!
I think I know how your dad feels
Potty Mouth Mommy
rofl… you know that ring that the old rotary dial phones used to make- that bringing bell-like sound…
That’s MY ringtone!!
Mik
Way to go Dad, my folks still treat their cell phones like they are some evil technology, Dad is always losing his.
I hate my cell phone ringing so it is always on vibrate.
Avitable
Who told you you had a young woman’s body?