Friday, May 9, 2014

Crazy Stuff My Mother Says



Mother’s Day is this Sunday, and to honor my mother, Carol Bull, I want to share some of her 

personal sayings, and provide some etymology. Some of her sayings are worthy of 

resurrection in the popular culture -- and some are so terrible I cringe when I hear them. 

Here’s to you, Mom! We love you!

What is wrong with me! I have a mind like a sieve! 

This is what she says when she can’t remember what to do next, or why she came into the 

room.

If my brain had a twin, it would be lonely!

She uses this phrase just as much, and she says it when she’s made a mistake and is angry 

with herself. My grandmother Mary Raynard said this often as well.

I look like Who Shot Liz.

This is one of my favorites, and I can’t find the root etymology. When you look terrible, or 

someone looks ravished, you say, “I look like Who Shot Liz,” or “She looks like Who Shot 

Liz.” In England, they use the phrase “Who Shot Lizzy” to express the same sentiment, and 

there was even a U.K. rock band named Who Shot Lizzy. Yet I have searched and cannot 

find the source of the phrase. Who was Lizzy? And the phrase doesn’t make sense. “I look 

like Lizzy when she got shot,” makes more sense, Or “I look as if Lizzy shot me.”

It’s had the biscuit.

This refers to an item that is beyond repair and must be tossed away. For instance, you might 

say, “I’ve repaired that car twenty times in the past year, and it’s still having trouble. I think it’s 

had the biscuit.” Or she may say, “these are my favorite shoes but I’ve worn them so much 

they’ve had the biscuit.” This is an English expression from World War I trench warfare. 

When a solider was dying, they rushed to give him the Eucharist and the last rites, which 

meant taking a wafer from the priest. Thus, upon dying, you had the biscuit. What once 

referred to brutal warfare, my now mom uses to describe an old sweater she must throw 

away. Then again, as kids we play “ring-around-the-rosy,” which is a nursery rhyme that 

refers to the Plague of the Middle Ages.

A lick and a promise

This is another English phrase, which means to do a barely sufficient amount of work on a 

task that requires much more effort than you are providing, but with a promise to return and 

do a more complete job later. For instance, “this kitchen floor needs a good mop and shine, 

but for now just get a broom and give it a lick and a promise.” I like this phrase, and it hinges 

on the word “lick” as a unit of work. You sometimes hear someone say, “he’s not worth a 

lick,” or “he didn’t do a lick of work today.” It may have started in England, but it’s used often 

in the American South.

It’s better to be lucky than good.

This is a phrase you chant out loud when you get lucky at something, like finding a parking 

spot when you least expect it. You also use it to remind yourself that despite your best efforts 

to plan and be prepared, luck plays a big part in any success. “Yesterday, I left for the store 

an hour early to find a parking spot, and circled forever before I found one. Today I went 

there on a whim and found one right away, which proves again that it’s better to be lucky 

than good.”  The phrase has been attributed to Lefty Gomez, Arnold Palmer, and airplane tail 

gunners World War II. The sentiment is in many old fairy tales (pre-Disney) in which the 

heroine or hero doesn’t seem very deserving, yet just gets lucky.

I have to piddle.

This one has to go. She doesn’t say pee. She says piddle. She also says it out loud to her 

adult children and her grandchildren. For instance, in a restaurant, as you come back to your 

seat, she will say, “did you wash your hands after you piddled?” I don’t like this phrase, but I 

may haul it out when I’m in my 70s and I want to be passive-aggressive with younger 

members of my family.

Oh Carol!

She often talks to herself when she is frustrated, which is slightly reassuring. It proves 

she is equally judgmental of everyone’s performance, including her own. She reprimands 

others often, but she reprimands herself just as often.

My mother was born in Canada, but her father was born in Yorkshire England, and her 

mother was born on the Isle of Lewis in the New Hebrides of Scotland. Most of these 

phrases were probably said in her own home growing up. 

In honor of Mother’s Day, my daughter Lily wrote this letter to her grandmother (with 

some help from us):
Dear Tutu,

Happy Mother’s Day! I am sorry if this letter arrives late. I didn’t look at the calendar, and 

I forgot which week is was. I’m not surprised, I have a mind like sieve! I think if my brain had 

a twin it’d be lonely.

I got out of bed this morning and when I looked in the mirror my hair was such a mess I 

swear I looked like Who Shot Liz. Then I went to put on my shoes, and the laces broke. it 

was then that I realized that my favorite shoes had the biscuit, so I tossed them.

All this made me late so my dad had to drive me to school, but he got a parking spot 

right in front. That proves again that it’s better to be lucky that good.

This letter would be longer, but I have to piddle.

Oh Carol!

Love Lily.

8 comments:

  1. great personal sayings and great letter to a special grandma!, just so funny i really liked it
    sorry , but i look like who shot liz
    i have to go!
    laure

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  2. My grandmother used to say "I look like who shot Liz". Never could figure that one out.

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  3. My mother, who is from Louisiana, also used the phrase "who shot Lizzy" in the same way. I found your blog when searching for the origin of the phrase but no luck yet.

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    1. I should add that the legend was that Lizzy was an escaped slave who was shot at while trying to escape, but that's all I know.

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  4. So delighted to find you and your mother with the same fascination for expressions that keeps me entertained! I found you over "who shot Lizzie." In my experience from childhood on it is used in several ways. "I've done it that way since who shot Lizzie"; He know everything--the periodic table, the kings of England, and who shot Lizzie" ; "That's my junk drawer--you'd find odd stuff like the lid to a jar, the recipe for Granny's applesauce, the left sock that;s missing or who shot Lizzie". All of my kin came here before the Revolution as immigrants, immediately went south and then started moving west as pioneers. I've discovered that traditions (what you serve for Christmas dinner) recipes, and expressions follow the trail. My latest encounter with Lizzie is in Jan Karon's book "These High Green Hills" (NC) in a discussion about some missing lists: "...curretnt membership, Sunday School roll...lists of pledges and non-pledges...people who worked on the roof since who shot Lizzie...". Love it!!

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  5. Who shot Lizzie brings me here, too! My grandmothers would say, however, that they looked like who shot Aunt Lizzie. That's not to be confused when they weren't feeling like death eating a soda cracker!

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  6. My mother used the phrase to mean bad-looking. “I look like who shot Lizzie.”

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  7. My mother used to say “who shot Hannah“ to be in that one looked rough. Wish I knew the origin.

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