I'm a horrible slacker and now my present won't go out until after Xmas.
Gremlins keep hiding things from me...
Jenny ,'Bring On The Night'
Every year we watch the Charlie Brown special, do the Snoopy dance, wish everybody a Merry Christmukkah, and thank our Secret Santas in the good riddance thread. Which is this one, in case you were wondering. Oh, and 2004? Don't think we've forgotten about you.
I'm a horrible slacker and now my present won't go out until after Xmas.
Gremlins keep hiding things from me...
Mine is going out tomorrow, lord willin' and the creek don't rise. It's been very difficult convincing myself it's enough. I'm hoping sending it priority will make it arrive at least early in the week after Christmas.
lord willin' and the creek don't rise
Sister! Someone else who uses that phrase!
I love that phrase! It's very useful. Though I say "God" instead of "Lord."
My version's a little longer--"if the Good Lord's willin' and the creek don't rise."
I use "Good Lord willin' and the creek don't rise."
Mostly I say the whole thing like Ginger does, but I suddenly thought it might seem a little... unusual here, so I shortened it.
I say lots of those things, and yesterday I discovered that my accent southernizes when I'm cranky as well as when I'm tired. I hadn't realized.
Now I'm wondering where my family got it, because the farthest south any of my ancestors has ever lived... well, my grandparents lived in Florida during WWII. But otherwise I think New Jersey wins.
The full version has a better rhythm.
I just googled. [link]
The originator of the phrase is "Benjamin Hawkins, and the phrase would be correctly written as 'God willing and the Creek don't rise'. Hawkins, college-educated and a well-written man would never have made a grammatical error, so the capitalizion of Creek is the only way the phrase could make sense. He wrote it in response to a request from the President to return to our Nation's Capital and the reference is not to a creek, but The Creek Indian Nation. If the Creek "rose", Hawkins would have to be present to quell the rebellion. I believe that the phrase is somewhere in his preserved writings."