I
discovered a stupid opinion I have. I have lots of opinions, but I
usually manage to agree with myself. It's a rare occasion when I
disagree with my own self.
I have this
superiority issue in re: my neighboring states. This is quite
incongruous, because I'm not prone to being clannish about anything. I
don't have "school spirit" when I think of my alma mater. I don't have a
great deal of pride in the city I live in. You won't catch me waving an
American flag.
But for some obscure reason, I'm proud of being from Kentucky, and would not want to be born or die in Ohio or West Virginia.
I was at
work when this profound knowledge was revealed. I have to make copies
of people's personal documents on occasion. Social security cards and
birth certificates are rather interesting to me. I can tell from the
number on a social security card if a person got their Social Security
card while living in a state other than Kentucky. Kentucky numbers
begin with 40*. Though I can't tell you off the top of my head which
numbers Ohio and West Virginia have, I do recognize them when I see
them.
Of course
birth certificates tell where a person was born. You get a little
snapshot of their life. If their parents were married when they were
born, and what the mother's name was. Old birth certificates tell the
race of the parents and the occupation of the father when the child was
born, as well as where the parents lived at that time.
I must have
been unusually contemplative today, because I noticed a woman's birth
certificate showed her mother had been single when she was born about 30
years ago. That was rare then. She is a single mother herself. I
wondered what impact it has on a person to be born to a single mom.
The next
person had been born at a hospital across the river in West Virginia.
About 25-30 years ago a lot of the locals had their baby at that
hospital because they had a Neo Natal Intensive Care unit and neither of
the hospitals here had them.
I found it
disturbing that a native Bluegrass resident would have their child in
West Virginia on purpose. I then found it ridiculous that I felt that
way. What does it matter?
We are all born and then we die. Does it matter where these events occur?
I thought
about it, and I guess it's about geneology. It's a lot more difficult
to find your roots when people are scattered to the four winds. At
least that's what I hope it is.