Beth Mann's Blog

Beth's Urban Tales of Wonder and Decay

Beth Mann

Beth Mann
Location
Long Beach Island, New Jersey, USA
Birthday
November 11
Title
Presidente
Company
Hot Buttered Media
Bio
I'm a writer and creative consultant. I have years of experimental comedy and strange theater under my belt. I surf. I cook. I love wine, men and song. And oh puppies. I effin' love puppies.

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DECEMBER 16, 2011 9:52AM

The REAL Jersey Girls

Rate: 25 Flag



Click on funny NJ map to enlarge.


Jersey. No, not like the show The Jersey Shore. That bears no resemblance to the South Jersey existence I'm tethered to. Mine is the Jersey shore that's entering a long winter, where a handful of weathered locals sit at dimly lit bars, drinking Coors Light, talking about sea bass, football and plumbing.

Jersey. Bad accents. Really bad ones. Now that I'm living here again, I can hear that nasally vowel-dragging suburban twang returning to my speech after years of trying to get rid of it. Makes me want to sew my lips shut.

Jersey. I was born here. So I guess that makes me a "Jersey girl." I fit the bill, I suppose. I’m not thrilled about it, but its my simple, inescapable fate. I would have preferred London or Madrid, but New Jersey it is.

Though there are some qualities I do appreciate about being a Jersey girl.

Qualities of your Average Jersey Girl

  • She “parties” in one form or the other and has for a long time; its simply a way of life now.
  • She keeps it real; no bullshit. Definitely not prissy.
  • She probably lost her virginity pretty early on. In a fast car with orange flames painted on it. He kept his leather jacket on. The smell of leather will turn her on from that point forward.
  • She smoked cigarettes in high school bathrooms, where you had to say, "It's alright" before entering, so the other girls knew you weren't a teacher, trying to bust you. If you forgot, and cigarettes were tossed in the toilets, those girls got pissed.
  • She attended many a keg party. She rolled down hills while going to pee with her friends. They laughed hysterically until they realized they couldn't climb back up the hill because they were too drunk.
  • She most probably had brushes with the law. Maybe involving Quaaludes.
  • She’s definitely tripped on acid before. Something wildly disastrous happened that is still talked about to this day. She can laugh about it now, finally - but it took a while.
  • She may have jumped over fences while being chased by the cops. And tore her jeans while doing so. She wore those jeans for years  until the bottom finally ripped. When she threw them away, she may have sighed.
  • She thinks an occasional fistfight is a perfectly acceptable way to handle disputes.
  • Yes, she's eaten hoagies. And panzarottis. And pork roll sandwiches. And Scrapple.
  • She never wants to hear the name "Brianna" again. 
  • She has never said "Joisey" or anything remotely like that. Also doesn't joke about "What exit are you?"
  • She’s roller-skated in her past. Bubble gum and strawberry lip gloss. She carried a comb in the back of her pocket and compulsively ran it through her feathered hair so Alan Gantowski would maybe, just maybe, ask her to join him during "Couples Skate." He never did.
  • She has the mouth of sailor but can be soft and sweet in demeanor at the very same time. Its a delightful paradox, at least to her.
  • She knows lots of "dudes." Not quite boys, not quite men. Just straight-up dudes.
  • She's humble. She had to be or she'd get checked by a group of friends that didn't tolerate snobbery of any sort. She could stand to be less humble at this point of her life.
  • She acts a little Italian, whether she is or not.
  • Yes, she has a strong affinity for Bruce Springsteen. (She does not feel this way about Bon Jovi.)
  • She learned French kissing in the back of a school bus. She mastered the art over the years and enjoys it as much as sex. (Well, almost.)
  • She will moon people if she's provoked. She will not feel embarrassed about it the next day.
  • Friends are her family.
  • Andrea Saggio dragged her kicking and screaming to see Jersey Boys on Broadway and she loved it, in spite of herself. She knew every word to every song, of course.
  • She's worked hard. Too hard for too little. She gets weary; the kind of weary that Otis Redding sang about. She now awaits tenderness. Waits, waits. It comes in dribs and drabs when she needs buckets of it.
  • She didn't dream as big as she'd liked. Everyone around her, well, no one was that inspired to break out the suburban trap that was South Jersey...eh, or maybe dreams are overrated.
  • She likes flannel shirts.
  • She will always love classic rock.
  • She is a survivor.

Yes, living in New Jersey has shaped me. When I go other places, I realize I'm from this state. There's a "keeping it real" aspect that made moving to California a little difficult at first, for instance. Now, to get the hell out here.

Because as Bruce so aptly puts it:

"Baby this town rips the bones from your back. It's a deathtrap. It's a suicide rap. You gotta get out while you're young. Cuz tramps like us, baby we were born to run."

 

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woid (sorry, couldn't resist)
This is everything I know about the New Jersey shore.
It's like an encyclopedia in a bottle.
I was born in New Jersey, too but somehow it didn't take. I blame my parents for moving to the South when I was still a kid. So sad to read this and realize there are so many I'll never experience! Though I do find myself in this one: "She has the mouth of sailor but can be soft and sweet in demeanor at the very same time. Its a delightful paradox, at least to her." Thanks for showing your Jersey pride!
You go, Jersey girl. From Halifax to the shores of Great Lakes' Erie and Ontario, have to say I share some of these, though I'm not saying which ones .... ;)
"She could stand to be less humble at this point of her life."

Yeah alright, maybe a little less. Jersey girl defined, and it's YOU Beth Mann. The map is hysterical btw too
I fell for a Jersey Girl named Beth. So there is truth here.
Relatable--even to an envious midwesterner.
U sAY u haVE aN aCsCenT bUtt claIM to nOT sAY jOIsaY.

Ur NutZ aND
I fell in love with a girl from New Jersey in a Howard Johnsons at a rest stop on the turnpike. It lasted only through a meal, but I remember her to this day!
Great piece. I'm a Queens girl myself, but I have a lot in common with the Jersey girls. After living in the state for 5 years now, I guess I'm an honorary Jersey girl. Rave on!
Nice summary Beth. I came withing five weeks of getting married in Jersey. Now I've a better idea what I missed.
There are only California Girls and Jersey Girls, no other state qualifies. I'm a California Girl who now lives in and loves Jersey. My 2 daughter-in-laws are Jersey Girls, who have many of the more positive qualities you mentioned. My son, a Jersey Boy has the same birthday as you, which accounts for creative originality. Brava!
Ok, I found myself at Cape May (Philly trash and Canadians!) hilarious.
This sounded very familar to me, as Philly trash, we embrace about the same stuff. Some good some bad. But unapologetic about it.
CRAP! You mean I'm a Jersey Girl??? (well, except for that gawd awful accent, the school bus kissing thing and having some goombah doing me in the back of a cheezy painted Torino! :D )
Isn't it sad that Snooki, who is not from Jersey, will now be associated with the term Jersey Girl in the popular consciousness?
"She keeps it real; no bullshit. Definitely not prissy."

Yo!

"She has the mouth of sailor but can be soft and sweet in demeanor at the very same time. Its a delightful paradox, at least to her."

Double yo and f*****'-A!

"Yes, she has a strong affinity for Bruce Springsteen. (She does not feel this way about Bon Jovi.)"

Yo to the max!

The flannel shirt thing never really worked out for me but I can still crack my chewing gum with the best.

Burger-bit princess masquerading as a Euro-diva.

R/
Jersey should be proud to claim you! (Lots of us French-kissed in the back of the bus --even girls from Florida.)
Don't forget the chlamydia and a mustache!

...Not you, of course -- other Jersey girls.
Beth, I love the way you can lay it all out there.

Jersey was always this mix of incredibly distinct contrasts to me, from the woods and ritzy houses of Alpine to the refineries along the Turnpike, the very mean streets of Newark and summers of teen indulgence, breathing the ocean air at Wildwood. To others, like many places, it's an overblown version of any of those things. Perhaps we should throw in Rutgers and Princeton, as well... I'm thinking that some of America's most prestigious venues of education don't come to mind when people think of Snooki... I have noticed that whenever I mention something nice about NJ to anyone who's never been there, they're surprised (take note Tourist Board).

A few years ago, I was back there for the first time in decades, driving from FL and stopped at the first Ho Jo's rest stop on the Turnpike. I couldn't believe how much it felt like taking a time machine back to 1970. I stayed in West Orange with native Joisey-ites (yeah, they did talk that way) and ate at the diners, drove through the towns, went shopping, all of which did the same. The buildings had changed, but a lot else didn't seem to have, both the things I hated (the guidos) and the things I loved (the food – nothing like what I now eat, but can't deny the appeal of).

Many years ago, I traveled throughout the US by car several times. The most salient impression then, was how clear it was that one half has no idea at all what life is like for the other half, save for gross stereotypes. I'm not sure that all of the media that's evolved to show it, nor the Internet, has made that much of a dent in those stereotypes. By the way, I'm from Da' Bronx, but a lot of the experiences you describe could very easily apply to growing up there, as well. R!

PS @ Pam: Texas might have an argument with you there, and having lived there once, so would I .
This was totally enjoyable and the map was freakin' hilarious!
~R~
South Jersey has a treasure, and it is "she"
That's the funniest damned NJ map I have ever seen. R
Imagine how weird it is to be a defense attorney in NJ. Each of those cultural areas has a unique perspective on perceiving guilt and liability and its a no-brainer that culture informs the bench and bar of each area of the state.

In my opinion, trying a case in Newark and Camden is much different from trying a case in Cherry Hill. Both are a world apart from trying a case in a rural town in Hunterdon or Warren County. Of course, even though Flemington is the county seat of Hunterdon, it is vastly unlike the rest of the county.
Groovy map great read!
~R~
Born and bred in South Jersey this post hits me hard. Even marrying a south jersey girl (and then divorcing) wanders hard in my soul. Rated for those of us who know.
Rated.
@samasiam, I was speaking linguistically. We talk about California Girls and Jersey Girls (especially in that great Beach Boy song, "California Girls") but I know of no other state that has "girls" attached to its name. Texas Girls? No such thing.
Ah, Beth, you nailed it. But you should have made the distinction that this is the definition of a SOUTH Jersey girl. I've lived in North Jersey my entire life, and my list would look a little different...same foul mouth, same punch-out dispute resolution, but certainly no flannel shirts. One thing about North Jersey speak: We say "yas" as a way of saying "you" plural.

There are the hard-core Italians (like on Real Housewives of NJ) who go all out and say YOUS, as in, "What are yous doin' tonight?" But then there are those like me who say "yas" so fast that you barely hear it, as in, "Whatdyas want for dinner?" But it's there and I know it is...and it's embarrassing!

But wait...do Jersey girls get embarrassed about anything Jersey related? Whatdyas think?
My South Jersey bred wife doesn't meet many of your points there, except flannel shirts and hard work...and she grew up in a Happy White Family (farm) in the Huge Houses zone, with a beach house at LBI which she still has a piece of. (Or more accurately, just finally inherited a sliver of). Frankly I'm thinkin her Quaker clan is a world apart from the one you describe. But yes, they don't say "Joisey".
You need to get this published somewhere, Beth. If you haven't read Patti Smith's memoir Just Kids, you should...I bet you'd like it. You remind me of Smith a little. She's tough, but sweet, like this.