Born in these hills, taken away when I was three. Son of a coal miner who took my mother, my brother, and me. Drove west to the ocean, Pacific.
The kids there called me "hillbilly" and "hick." Said I talked funny. Punched me, kicked me, generally tried their best to make sure I knew I didn’t belong there. And I did not.
Eventually, though, I learned to speak like them, dress like them, act as if I was not from Kentucky, my daddy was not Appalachian, that these mountains had no part of me. My only recourse was after the pledge of allegiance… I never sang the “Oregon” song. I sang, "Kentucky."
But, my father, he wouldn’t change. He was proud of his heritage. He played banjo; he played mandolin; he went fishing, a lot. Grew the best garden in the county, ate soup beans and cornbread. He did not give a hang for their Yankee ways.
I hated him. I hated my father. until I returned to these hills.