While it has settled down to maybe once a month, I still get emails and messages berating me for using the term 'The Poor Sod' when referring to the guy who is, at this very moment, upstairs snaking the drain in the bathroom sink.
From the time columnists have been referring to spouses/significant others/etc, they have dug deep for something they can use as shorthand without delivering up the person's actual name. See, we do this for a living; there are often others who still deserve a degree of anonymity; my kids got a say as they came of age - they too had fake names when they were younger.
So, the fact that most of the columnists I dug up for comparison were male wasn't lost on me. 'The Wife', 'The Goddess', 'She Who Must Be Obeyed', 'The Boss', and on and on. You get it. The very first time I ever referred to him as anything, it was an in an auto column. 'The Poor Sod Who Lives With Me'. Where'd it come from? Well, first off, for the legions of you who think I am unaware that the origins of the word are British, and that the origins of the word are less than complimentary, stop. My Mom was a Brit. Her pet name for my father was often Poor Sod. The cat was often called the Silly Sod. Yes, 'sod' descends from sodomites. I get it, I know. But the word has evolved to the point that the standard the Toronto Star uses for usage (Canadian Oxford Dictionary) includes current acceptability of the term. Also, anyone who has to live with me deserves at least a small, sympathetic head shake.
IT WAS A TERM OF ENDEARMENT in my home growing up. I'm sorry if your sensibilities get a little bruised by it, but I'm not sanitizing my work to paint out the crazy-natured basis of my upbringing. There is no derogatory intent at all. None. If a Brit wins a lottery, he'd be referred to as a lucky sod in more than one publication; bet on it.
I stopped answering mail on this subject about a year ago. I got tired. It's been a repeated cycle by people who a)if they read my work, would know my Mom's origins, and should twig that I understand what I'm saying and b)I write from my gut, and it is what it is, to batter a bad term to death.
What I write about my family is cleared with my family. And quite frankly, if they're cool with it, I think everyone else should be.
Henry Ford II used to say, "never explain, never complain." But then,he said that to reporters while paying his fine for drinking and driving.
ReplyDeleteSo, did you blow up any Mercedes engines this week end?
TLATO agrees 100%!
ReplyDeleteNow explain Webgod Jeff...
ReplyDeleteI think Webgod Jeff has totally explained himself over the years.
ReplyDeleteYes, honey. It's been YEARS.
And you have to admit, Webgod is the best nickname, evah.
In our family, everyone has a nick name. Live with it.
ReplyDeleteRoz
And Lorraine's would be...???
ReplyDelete...unrevealed, if Roz knows what's good for her.
ReplyDeleteI like it, I'd love to come up with something for my 'poor sod' as at 40 something 'boyfriend' just sounds stupid. He's not my husband, but is a grown man and 'partner' sounds gay. The people berating you for that truly need to get a life.
ReplyDeletehahaha...seriously? people complain about that?
ReplyDeletemust admit, my husband and i get weird glances at loblaws when we refer to each other as bitch and we say boobies for chicken breast..but after a while every married couple develops their own personal language that no one else knows.
go get em lorraine.
btw, i saw this awesome bmw z4 roadster. test drive it for me will you...and post pictures too!
C'mon, Roz. As the senior sister, it behooves you to reveal almost all!
ReplyDeleteOh, and I don't blow up Mercedes...btw.
ReplyDeleteNo, it behooves her to consider all the childhood names that could come tumbling out of that box...
ReplyDeleteMaybe we should wait until Gilly gets here.
I've always smiled when reading "Poor Sod", finding it charmingly self-deprecating... In another blog I read, Quinn Cummings refers to her S.O. as "Consort" which is another unique approach.
ReplyDeleteYeah, but Gilly is late to these proceedings... I'm nursing a bitch of a migraine; I need some vicarious relief and this forum is it... today, at least.
ReplyDeleteI'm also not sure why I'm posting as me and not my vainglorious alter ego, OmemeeOzzie!
Probably because you know we call you Oziemozie behind your back.
ReplyDeleteSorry about the head.
Actually, I heard it was OzzieSchmozzie...
ReplyDeleteThanks. BTW, how did you manage to escape?
Life would be boring without nicknames or funny banter. Lorraine didn't smoke a Mercedes Benz engine. I'm disappointed but also relieved. Truth be told, they're so well built, you'd have to be trying hard to kill one. Or be a true non peroxide blonde. :)
ReplyDeleteYou should hear the nickname I just thought up for you, Buzz!
ReplyDeleteWow! Sharp as a tack this one, eh Buzz??
ReplyDeleteWhere's Gilly?
Roz... ping her. Without her particpation, we other proverbial Poor Sods (and we are legion) can do nothing... well, almost nothing... sometimes... most of the time... when it suits us... Iv'e just been told to make dinner.. for TLATO, our five cats and beleaguered dog.
I remember reading Blatchford in the 80's. She always referred to her partner of the time as "The Boy".
ReplyDeleteOh, do tell me.I cringe to think of what Lorraine will call me. I try to be nice, I really do. But sometimes I just can't help but slip a one liner in. How does that old phrase go? "how sharper than a serpent's tongue it is..." ;)
ReplyDeleteHey "David", watch it with the senior sister stuff, buddy. Who'd a thunk ozziemozzie would have a name like David. Don't travel incognito, it messes me up. Can't tell Lorraine's nickname either and don't even ask Gilly Gilly. Besides, some of us are busy working...
ReplyDeleteHey, in our brood, I'm the elder brother, so say what you like -- sticks and stones... What does Lorraine have on you? Not like you to acquiesce to another sister's veiled threats. Sorry for the delay in responding. Was working on assignment out of town!
ReplyDeleteLorraine outed herself today in her Motherload column with one of her nick names.
ReplyDeleteRoz
Yes, Roz, I did notice this as I peered through my $5 reading glasses drinking espresso at the kitchen table. This name has, however, appeared before -somewhere. I was hoping and still expect, something new, a revelation...
ReplyDeleteI think I outed her in a blog a while ago.
ReplyDeleteYou can do a lot with Rainey if you think about it. Rain, rain, go away
I'll try to think of better ones.
Roz
Entirely up to you; I accept absolutely no responsibility for ANY familial backlash whatsoever.
ReplyDeleteDo dish...
She scares me. Even if she can't think of an actual nickname, she'll make one up and you'll all believe her so I'm not going there.
ReplyDeleteRoz
(wait for her eldest son's tell-all book, "The Real Motherload". It'll be a doozy.
It's MotherLODE, fer crying out loud. After 6 years you don't know the name of my column???
ReplyDeleteI am so going to think up some new names for you now.
Perhaps, in fairness to Roz, her spelling is quite deliberate, a play on words? At least in Christopher's tell-all.
ReplyDeleteThen I scanned this thread...
Roz... you're on your own now, I'm afraid.
if you're not careful I'll tell them what your eldest son called you a year or so ago.
ReplyDeleteyour darling sister.
Tickets? Tickets? Who needs tickets...?
ReplyDeleteI always thought the old sod or poor old sod referred to the grass. My dad used to use the term you lying sod (a play on words as you lay sod). He is from Ireland and the Irish are famous for their little expressions. BTW, I have read your column for years now but just recently on line. Are you the Loraine that lived in the Wiltshire apts back in '72 or so?
ReplyDeleteNope. Always been in the same house.
ReplyDeleteI think I might start telling people I'm just call him a clod of grass from now on. Thanks for that, Elmer!