You knew you were Jewish if:
•You watched Ed Sullivan every Sunday night, and your parents laughed out loud
at Myron Cohen (if you don't know who Myron Cohen is, don't bother reading
any further).
• You spent your entire childhood thinking everyone called pot roast
"brisket."
You grew up thinking it was normal for someone to shout "Are you okay?
Are you okay?" through the bathroom door when you were in there
longer than 3 minutes.
•Your family dog responded to commands in Yiddish.
• Every Saturday morning your father went to the neighborhood deli (called
an "appetizing store") for whitefish salad, whitefish
("chubs"), lox (nova if you were rich!), herring, corned beef, roast
beef, cole slaw, potato salad, a 1/2-dozen huge barrel pickles, a dozen
assorted bagels, cream cheese and rye bread (sliced while he waited) ..
all of which would be strictly off-limits until Sunday morning.
•Every Sunday afternoon was spent visiting your grandparents and/or other
relatives.
•You experienced the phenomenon of 50 people fitting into a 10-foot-wide
dining room hitting each other with plastic plates trying to get to a deli
tray.
•You had at least one female relative who penciled on eyebrows which were
always asymmetrical.
•You thought pasta was stuff used exclusively for kugel and kasha with
bowties.
•You were as tall as your grandmother by the age of seven.
•You were as tall as your grandfather by the age seven and a half.
• You never knew anyone whose last name didn't end in one of 5 standard
suffixes (berg, baum, man, stein and witz.)
•You were surprised to discover that wine doesn't always taste like
cranberry sauce.
•You can look at gefilte fish and not turn green.
• Your mother smacked you really hard! and continues to make you feel
bad for hurting her hand.
•You can understand Yiddish but you can't speak it.
•You know how to pronounce numerous Yiddish words and use them correctly in
context, yet you don't exactly know what they mean. Kinahurra.
•You're still angry at your parents for not speaking both Yiddish and English
to you when you were a baby.
•You have at least one ancestor who is somehow related to your spouse's
ancestor.
•Your grandparent's newly washed linoleum floor was
covered with the NY Times, which your grandparents could not read.
•You considered your Bar or Bat Mitzvah a "Get Out of Hebrew School
Free" card.
•You think eating half a jar of dill pickles is a wholesome snack.
•You're compelled to mention your grandmother's "steel cannonballs"
upon seeing fluffy matzo balls served at restaurants.
•You buy 3 shopping bags worth of hot bagels on every trip to NYC and ship
them home via FedEx. (Or, if you live near NYC or Philadelphia or another Jewish
city hub, you drive 3 hours just to buy a dozen "real" bagels.)
•Your mother took personal pride when a Jew was noted for some accomplishment
(showbiz, medicine, politics, etc.) and was ashamed and embarrassed when a Jew
was accused of a crime .. as if they were relatives.
•You thought sleepaway college was only where non-Jews went ... Jews
went to city schools ... unless they had scholarships or made an Ivy
League school.
•And finally, you knew that Sunday night and the night after any Jewish
holiday was designated for Chinese food.
—Contributed by Larry
Gorfine, San Diego, Calif.
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