I found a great parking spot right
next to the handicapped slot. As I entered the automatic door, headed for the
cart corral, a checkout lady pushed a cart in front of me. “Here you go.”
“Oh, thank you!”
Yes. I was thankful that she saved
me three steps. Even though she was most likely pushing it to the cart corral,
and saved herself three steps. Yes. I was thankful. Until I pushed that cart
three steps. Thump-a-lump-a-thump! It was one of those flat-tire carts! The
kind that have part of the rubber gone from a wheel. Well. What a fine kettle
of fish that was. I did not want to appear ungrateful. I thumped along past the
bananas, on my way to the shredded lettuce.
AND A GRUNGY BACKWOODS-LOOKING GUY
DARTED AHEAD OF ME! He stood looking at the lettuce. For five minutes. Then he
grabbed a head and headed out. Back towards the front door. I’m
guessing he actually went through a register from the wrong end. He did not look like the lettuce type.
Perhaps he was going to use it to sight in his gun.
I picked up my shredded lettuce, and
turned down the first aisle. Thump-a-lump-a-thump. A heavy sigh escaped me, just
as I was passing by a cart in the middle of the aisle where a stockboy was
stocking cheese.
“Oh. I’m sorry. Let me move that for
you.”
“No.
It’s no problem. I seem to have a flat tire, heh, heh.”
“I can go to the front and get you
another cart.”
“Oh,
no! You don’t have to do that! The lady up front gave me this one, and I didn’t
want to hurt her feelings.”
“It’s no problem. Let me go get you
one.”
“No,
no. That’s okay. But thank you!”
Darn. Those Save A Lot people are
all about customer service.
I picked up seven cans of sliced
black olives. They stack easily in my pantry. The little 2.26 oz cans. No need
to take a chance on running out. Then I grabbed a bottle of ketchup, and the
spicy brown mustard. On to the bottled water in a display up front. Thump-a-lump-a-thump.
Well. Apparently, a new shipment of
water had come in. The plastic-wrapped cases were stacked as high as the corn
in Iowa. Or at least as high as Val Thevictorian’s eye. Even though it was
kind of like a rectangular pyramid, I could not drag a case out from a lower
row. I’m not really good at Jenga. I’m not really good at dragging a heavy case
of water encased in plastic, at eye level, across other cases of water encased
in plastic, either. There’s a friction issue. I wrestled that water for as long
as that lettuce-shooter pondered over his selection. Almost threw out my back.
It’s a pity The Pony wasn’t with me to help.
I picked up some name brand queso,
but left it on the shelf by the Save A Lot brand that I took instead. It’s the
least I can do, right, with those employees being so helpful… I got the mild
salsa instead of medium, which made my stomach kind of burny after Val’s Super
Nachos.
On to the checkout, where the short,
curly-headed, plump, not-so-old old checker who gave me the cart was stationed.
I put my soon-to-be purchases on the conveyor, pointed to my case of water in
the cart, and moved it around for her to put my imminent purchases in. Chubby
Checker started scanning. She got to my sliced black olives.
“Oh, you must like olives.”
Seriously? Like I was going to go
home and eat all seven small cans of sliced black olives as a treat? Or maybe
grab that can opener that I stash under T-Hoe’s driver’s seat, (or squeeze them
open like Popeye), and start eating them on the way home. As if I couldn’t just
buy a large can of whole black olives if I like olives so much. I swear.
Checkers these days are entirely too friendly. What’s next?
“Oh, I see you have a burning itchy
rectum.” Tosses Preparation H into the cart.
“Oh, I see you crap yourself.”
Tosses Depends into the cart.
“Oh, I see you have stinky armpits.”
Tosses Lady Speed Stick into the cart.
"Oh. I see you are a hairy Sasquatch." Tosses Schick Women's Razor into cart.
"Oh. I see you are married to Hick." Tosses pack of hot dogs into cart.
"Oh. I see you are a hairy Sasquatch." Tosses Schick Women's Razor into cart.
"Oh. I see you are married to Hick." Tosses pack of hot dogs into cart.
Mind your business, woman! We
stopped being buddies when you gave me the flat-tire cart.
Maybe to get back at her (the next time)--smear something all over one of the items, so that she ends up getting it all over her hands.
ReplyDeleteYou are so hard-core! Maybe I should just poke a raisin up my nose, and pick it out as I pay, sticking it on one of the bills...
DeleteNo. I'm not out for revenge. I just want her to get her nosiness in check. You can talk to a customer about the weather. No need to get personal.
Ha! Only you could squeeze a fun post out of a trip to the store.
ReplyDeleteThat's because I never have an uneventful trip to the store.
DeleteI never go to the supermarket without finding at least three things that piss me off.
ReplyDeleteI would have exchanged the cart and not worried about the ladies feelings...I am very particular about my cart.
I don't mind small talk at checkout, but comments about what I was buying??? Bad form!
Of course you are particular about your cart! You don't want to be slowed down while running over squeaky 4-year-old candy-stealing girls.
DeleteYou certainly don't want comments about stuff you are buying off Mrs. Cranky's shopping list. Not some of those items I've read with my own eyes!
Better than being asked when your baby is due, and you're not pg. I made up a due date. This was years and years ago.
ReplyDeleteHeh, heh. Let's hope nobody rubbed your belly...
DeleteI have been asked pregnant question before and I also made up a due date. If that person had fondled my belly, you can bet that imaginary baby would have kicked!
DeleteHeh, heh! That'll learn 'em!
DeleteIt is NEVER good form to ask a woman when her baby is due. SWMBO taught me that years ago and I still have the bruise.
ReplyDeleteI don't want to know where the bruise is.
DeleteChubby Checker's customer service is a bit misguided. You'll think of a good comeback for the olive can remark at about 2 a.m. and it will be a good one.
ReplyDeleteHuh. You'd be good with a stand-up routine for people watching paint dry, I suppose.
Delete