Stereotypically speaking, writers tend to lean more toward the left side of life.
They indulge themselves in the creative arts and use witty political banter during their weekend visit to a local winery. They view themselves as open-minded individuals, people who care about preserving the natural goodness of the earth. A cigarette helps jump-start their originality.
This is why you might not find many writers at the Sikeston Jaycee Bootheel Rodeo.
There's no wine, a lot of sponsorship by corporate America is involved, and the bantering is so crude and childish, that "banter" is a much too formal and intelligent word to describe it. Frankly, many writers feel these festivities are not quite par with their intellect and latte-sipping abilities. And some of them might be right.
But for a person like me -- a person who enjoys the simpler things in life (besides the i-pod, laptop, digital camera, cell phone, day-to-day living, etc.) -- going to a rodeo is like entering a fantasy land complete with decent parking and unforgettable characters.
A painter might call them living, breathing caricatures. A subculture so lavish and flamboyant that, were it to be put on canvas, the exact point of exaggeration would be hard to detect. It is a people watcher's dream and, at $4 a paltry cup, an alcoholic's paycheck.
So when my friend got four free tickets, I side-saddled my way down to my hometown, trying to remember how many years it had been since I had gone to one of these things. I tallied a baker's dozen and wondered if my traditional Southeast Missourian roots had run dry and shriveled up after so long.
The bleachers held a fairly large crowd that evening, even with storms threatening to hit the area again. Rain had already turned the ground into a milkshake of mud and animal dung. The humidity held the smell firmly in place, reminding us that we were in fact at a rodeo. An announcer's voice welcomed everyone with a joke older than the ground we were walking on.
I still laughed.
It wasn't long before I started having a good time. Watching people get thrown in the mud was more fun than I had expected, and the crowd's enthusiasm was incredible. I had forgotten what the rodeo was all about: to kick back. There were no catches -- it was all about having fun. No strings attached. Laughing was a luxury free to everyone.
Does this make me a down home, backwoods, country boy? Not in the least.
Will I be attending the rodeo every year from now on? I don't think so.
Has the experience given me a valuable life lesson and restored my faith in a community's attempt to bring strangers together? You bet.
The beauty of a rodeo is that everyone is invited. There are no requirements as to what kind of person you should be to get in.
And that, my friends, is a honky tonk tradition all of us could learn a little something from.
Sam DeReign is a student at Southeast Missouri State University. Contact him at sdereign@semissourian.com or see his blog at sdereign.blogspot.com.
Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:
For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.