75 signs you are Turkish..
You know you are a Turk when..
- you’ve lived in Auburn; Broadmeadows or Dandenong
- you have at least one relative that lives in Mildura or Shepparton
- your family or relatives owns a restaurant on Sydney road
- your parents pronounce Brunswick as Branzvik
- you know where “Ford’un arkasi” or “Corum parki” is
- your dad’s favorite English insult it “Blady poofta!”
- you argue with your Greek friends about if Turks or Greeks invented kebabs
- your parents watch the ‘Ibo Show‘ or ‘Kara Melek‘
- your father used to work at the Ford factory
- your father now is a Taxi driver or owns a Restaurant
- you are forbidden to speak English at home but speak Anglo-Turkish e.g.
- “Mom ben tonight disari cikmak istiyorum” (this is especially true for Cypriot Turks)
- you have watched all the Kemal Sunal movies and think they are hilarious
- you are years old and still living with your parents
- you always bet money on Turkey in a soccer match even if they are playing Brazil
- your name ends with -han; -kan; -tan
- you can speak perfect Turkish even though you have lived in Australia all your life
- you are an adult and your mother still thinks she can bash you
- your parents pronounce Coburg as Koburk
- your name rhymes with your brothers and sisters names
- your parents pronounce Thursday as Turzdey
- your mother can cook at least four different kinds of dolma
- you brag to your friends about how your great grand father shot dead skips in Galipoli
- you learnt to dance the Zeybek by watching your drunken relatives at a friends wedding
- at least one of your aunts or uncles is married to an Albanian; Bosnian or a Bulgarian
- you think kick boxing is the Turkish national sport
- you go out with a Turkish girl; your parents automatically think that you’re going to marry her
- you have at least three evil eye beads (Nazar boncuk) hanging over your doors in the house or hanging on the rear view mirror in the car
- you don’t know half the people on your dad’s side but know everyone on your mothers side of the family
- your parent’s friends always confuse you with your older brother/sister
- your parents want you to go to University just so they can show off to their friends
- if your great grand mother was from Russia or Greece
- if you think that Galatasaray is the best soccer team in Europe
- your father thinks he knows everything and there is no way you can win an argument with him even if you are % right
- you went to learn folk dancing on Saturdays when you were young
- you are an adult and your parents still expect you to kiss the hands of visitors (misafir)
- you go on facebook 24/7
- you passed Turkish school with out doing any work because your Turkish teacher is a family friend
- you have an account with every single mobile phone provider
- someone in your family is a panel beater
- your Baba hangs out in the Kahve (Cafe) with his friend’s playing cards or Okay
- your parents used to make you go to the Bakkal (bodega) to buy a newspaper when you were years old
- your mother used to hit you when you were small to make you stop crying.. I still don’t understand that one
- your father or uncle buys smashed cars; fixes them up and sells them for twice the money he spent on them
- you have never paid money for a program or game for your computer; instead you just borrow it from your friends or just get it burnt
- when it’s Bayram and you go to someone’s house and they offer you lollies; you take a handful
- you have at least one fake belt or a fake bag from Turkey
- your family is bigger than the Kelly Family.
- you have at least 600 invited guests at your wedding, half of which you don’t even know.
- you even smear Nutella and jam on the pide.
- you know who Saban is.
- your father comes to one of your soccer games and is upset that you’re not a striker.
- your father constantly insults you with “ESSOLESEK”.
- your name is never pronounced correctly.
- there are at least 5 tapes from Orhan, Ferdi or Müslüm in your household.
- your household consumes more tea than the UK.
- you like sunflower seeds and keep eating them even though your tongue and lips are already numb.
- you can’t buy anything without haggling first, even in Australia
- you never have a plan, but always a solution.
- your mother expects four people to visit, but cooks so much that an army could be fed and still says: “Ay bu yetmez, biseyler daha yapayim”.
- the TV runs all day even when nobody is watching.
after buying a television, your father wraps the remote control in plastic film so that it doesn’t wear out so much. - your mother (but even more grandma) buys a couch because of the beautiful design, but puts a blanket or “Carsaf” over it so it doesn’t get dirty.
- you think you could repair an electronic device by giving it a few hard times or turning it on and off once.
- you chat with your guests for another 10-20 minutes in the stairwell when saying goodbye in the middle of the night.
- as a girl you always have to hear: “Bak cok ayip, bi kiza hic yakisiyor mu?”.
- in your home there are small, white, self-knitted, overly annoying doilies called “Dantel”.
- your Turkish hairdresser is at his door “open until 6 p.m.” and you can see him cutting his hair at 10 p.m.
- you tell something exciting and get louder and louder without even realizing it.
- you as a girl buy a new dress every time a relative of yours marries, even though you have at least 10 dresses that you have only worn once.
- if at least one of your relatives is a taxi driver, car dealer, kiosk owner, snack bar or restaurant owner, doctor’s assistant or fruit and vegetable seller.
- you share a meal with your friends and leave the larger piece to them and say you are already so full, even if it is not really so.
- everyone sits at dinner and a small piece is left over, but no one dares to finish this piece and a little argument breaks out because everyone thinks the other should eat it.
- little girls are always told by older women “Seni ogluma alayim mi?”
your father at work and your mother in the women’s group bragging about the son / daughter. - every new Turkish acquaintance says “Memleket nere?”
- as a child you are always asked “Kimin oglu- / kizisin?”