
My husband, Cliff C. Graber, in the U.S. Army 82nd Airborne Division, messing around with a paper airplane and a few of his buddies. 

Messing Around with Terminology
When referencing food and the military, I am frequently asked the same questions by  students. “Why does the military give out mess kits?”, and “Why is the  place where soldiers eat called a mess hall?” I am a person who needs  answers that add up. Inquisitive kids are that way too. 
When I first  started looking around for an answer back in the early 1990s, I found a few bits and pieces of information available, but not one source I read  actually tied it all together to where it made sense to me. 
From the outset “mess” obviously meant  “food” and nothing more.  The biblical Essau had a “mess of potage”  which  is believed to be a portion of lentil soup or beans.  While  growing up my brothers had G I Joe  action figures that came with “mess  kits” and watching the “Beverly Hillbillies” on television I heard the  term “mess a’vittles” frequently used.  While listening to former  Presidential aide Dee Dee Meyers talking on late night t.v. she referred  to her “mess bill” for something she had eaten on Air Force One.  It  was starting to drive me a bit nuts.  If “mess” historically had meant  food, how, why and when did it become the definitive term for a state of  confusion and disorderliness? 
It took me much sleuthing, but I  finally found a very old book on  word origins and voila…  there was an answer that made sense. The change in the general public’s  definition of the word apparently was in the 1590s, when a  party game  called “Muss” spread across Europe.  Muss was a game in which trinkets  were tossed around a room and the party guests would scramble to  retrieve them (anyone for some 52 pickup?)   As popularity of the game  spread throughout Europe, with its various languages, the name of the  game somehow was changed to “Mess”.   The Bible, military handbooks, and  all other writings had naturally been left with the original meaning of  the word intact.  But from that point on, “muss” has rarely been used   as a common term for something in a state of disarray, other than  regionally in a few parts of the world. 
Many southern states here in the U.S. are one such regional area. The term muss is still used in the south, while I rarely hear it here in Southern California. The eyes of an octogenarian attending one of my seminars became misty as he recounted how his grandmother in Alabama would scold him for wearing his hat in her home. “I would say that my hair was a mess underneath my hat. She would then correct me by saying, ‘Your hair is mussed. It is not a mess!”
Now I always try to  remember that my daughter’s room is not a mess.   Her room is  simply mussed up.  It sounds better and somehow makes me feel a bit  better about it.
This was originally posted in 2010
© Maura J. Graber 2010/The R.S.V.P. Institute of Etiquette
 
 
 
 
 
 
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