Before we get onto the pre-written post, below, let me tell you about the latest — which fits pretty well with being :all balled up.”
Yesterday, my new phone came. That was planned.
What hadn’t been planned was both phones and internet getting a new consolidated provider. It was a last-minute decision from a cold call at our door. I am pretty resistant to sales pitches at my door, but I succumbed.
Both the new phone and the new internet came on the same day which was a bit overwhelming. First, I had to get the new phone up to speed, which was relatively easy. Then, the technician came to get the fiber line into the house. He had trouble, and the job extended into hours, but he got it done,
But the rest was up to us to configure or pay $150 for him to do it. This wasn't his fault. It's just how it is done. That "balled us up" a bit, but we managed to get it up and running. But I still have the old internet too, and I think some devices are on the new system while some remain on the old. My ex-BiL is very good at this sort of thing, so he will come by sometimes this weekend to help us get all sorted and “unballed up.”
"I'm All Balled Up." I said it one morning as I was changing back into my daywear lounge pants. They are the same as my nightwear lounge pants, except I wear black during the day and shades of blue at night. This colour scheme wasn't planned; it just happened. It helps me keep the two usages separate.
Digression aside, I was struggling to get my right foot through because the pant had become all knotted or tangled down by my foot. That is when I said it to myself: "I'm all balled up."
I surprised myself, for this phrase is not part of my normal usage. However, I know where it came from although I hadn't heard it for decades. It was something that my dad would say when he got things confused. Maybe he would get his times wrong or some fact.
I looked it up for clarification. This is what Merriam-Webster had to say:
ball up
verb: balled up; balling up; balls uptransitive verb: to make a mess of : confuse, muddle
intransitive verb: : to become badly muddled or confused
I was also curious about the origin. According to dictionary.com: "This term may come from the fact that when a horse is driven over soft or partly thawed snow, the snow becomes packed into icy balls on its hoofs, making it stumble."
However, it also suggests that another meaning is possible: "that it alludes to the vulgar term balls for testicles." Apparently, that usage may have become common with American troops in WWI. I guess an alternative in that sense would be, cock up.
It's earlier usage, however, seems to have been somewhat common with America colleges students.
The phrase "I'm all balled up" originated in American college slang of the 1850s, where it initially meant failing an examination or becoming thoroughly confused. While the precise source of the word choice remains obscure, possible connections include the image of a snarled ball of yarn or string, the act of crumpling paper into a ball, or a horse's feet getting clogged with snowballs in winter.
Dad wasn't a college student of any era, and he wasn't a soldier either. He never would have used it in the vulgar sense; nor would I although I wouldn't be quite as averse as he. He would just being using it as a synonym for confused — as was I.
So there we are. I'm am almost sure that I haven't used the phrase or even thought about it for a long time, but, suddenly, the words were back — as was dad . . . if you know what I mean.
Lately I'm all balled up much of the day. I am faintly aware of the term, so I guess it was used around me a time or two. Good luck with the tech stuff.
ReplyDeleteIt is an interesting phrase for sure. I haven’t heard it for years.
ReplyDeleteIt does lend itself to a coarser interpretation, doesn’t it….. if in a different context. When I first saw the title, I had feared you were having a recurrence of urethra issues. Fortunately, I much prefer the “confusion” meaning and am glad that was your usage.
ReplyDeleteCold call salespeople drive me to distraction as I am HIGHLY resistant to their pied piper song whereas my wife swoons to their tunes easily. My Dad was like my wife in that regard, so much so that for the last two automobiles he purchased, he asked me to accompany him so as to be somewhat of a shield between him and the artful salesman who would valiantly try to sway my Dad into adding all manner of very profitable for the dealership’s bottom line.
PipeTobacco
Should have said “very profitable ADD-ON accoutrements…. for the dealership’s…..”
ReplyDeleteI have never used that phrase.
ReplyDeleteOK, new phrase to me, but not a new condition actually! Word finding has become such a problem, I think I need Mr. Roget's book at hand, to figure out what can I say besides "that thing that does that."
ReplyDeleteI haven't heard this phrase in decades.
ReplyDeleteWe use this to describe the mules getting ice balls on the bottom of their hooves in the winter. But I can relate it to confusion and of course getting mucked up when changing clothes! Good one!
ReplyDeleteI hope you get all your internet stuff figured out too.
Anything that reminds us of our departed loved ones is always welcome by me.
ReplyDeleteMy dad used to say that expression! I find myself using some of the same vocabulary as my parents--a testament to how important they were in my life.
ReplyDeleteIt is an interesting phrase.
ReplyDeleteAnd it's very brave of you to change providers. I've been tempted but am terrified that it'll be a nightmare of non-working devices.
ReplyDeleteJolly that you can get fiber. Google fiber is in a house 40 yards from my apartment. We've tried to get them to come into our apartment complex, but it's so old that they don't want to mess with stringing their lines around weird attic space and brick for my single story part and the older 3 story main building. Yep, we've thought of "stealing" it from the nearby house. Figured we probably shouldn't. Linda in Kansas
ReplyDeleteI do know what you mean. Isn't language wonderful? It also conjured my Dad who might have used this phrase thanks to his own Dad who had horses. Thanks for the time travel.
ReplyDelete