Well, I live in a small town too, though one in the North, if that makes any difference, and a lot of farmers live here, if they are what ya'll would consider rednecks, and I've never lived with such nice people in my life! So there!!
To give an example, my older son was a victim of extreme bullying in our old place. He was tiny, smart, and white -- three bad things to be in our old school district. The bullying was one of the reasons he took up wrestling. It wasn't just being physically knocked around -- the other kids stole his books, his notes, destroyed his science projects, erased his computer projects, etc. He had two backpacks and one gym bag stolen in seventh grade alone. When we would complain we would be told "We worry about the kids who bring guns into school. Why should we worry about a kid with good grades from a traditional two parent family when we have kids who don't get enough to eat?" Well, the long and short of it is that my precious son developed clinical depression in seventh grade.
We gave up and moved.
My son was morose at his new school and would barely talk to any of the other kids. The new school was calling us daily to express concern over him. Luckily wrestling season started less than a month after we moved. I would drop in on the practices on Fridays, my day off of work. One of the dads asked me one day soon after the season started about why my son was so quiet. So I told him about the ordeal at our old middle school. A couple of the wrestlers were hanging around and got very quiet and I could tell they were really listening to what I was saying.
The next week on Friday was the first time I saw the game.
A bunch of kids, boys and girls, of all races, surrounded my son. They gave him little pokes and tickles and told joke after joke. The first person to make him smile was the winner.
The game continues to this day whenever the other kids see him get down.
God, I love those kids. Please don't knock small towns or farm kids or hicks (that's what people from our old town call the people in our new town "The Hicks") to me. You couldn't meet better people anywhere in the world than right here in Hicktown USA.