As one
of my readers pointed out recently, “I don't know that this
qualifies as a check in,” therefore, you can certainly apply much
the same to this post if not more. I must be a slow learner. I really
try to write 750 words every day. I do, but they're usually comments,
remarks to trolls, chat room conversations and I'm pretty sure all of
that drivel is not going to add up to a lasting body of work. It's
more like graffiti on the internet's bathroom walls, and usually not
so polite.
I'm fairly certain this is NOT a contribution to Arts and Letters throughout the Ages.
Not to change the subject, but I hope these yahoos made some money from this post. I certainly didn't. "Playing the Violin, and How to Avoid It," was one of the funnier things I've written.
You can tell the folks at the Algonquin Round Table would have revoked my privileges, had they still been around and if I had ever graced their presence and this were 19__ whatever.
So,
today, I had a mini-odyssey. There have been many changes here
lately. Some good, some not so. With the death of Kevin, his ALF is
finally keeping their residents close to home; it's just a shame
someone had to die before they started doing their job. The new
laundry is open, so we no longer look like refugees from the Eastern
Front in WWII. The have installed a new Express bus line; the Green
line and until June the 7th, customers ride free. I was
going to take advantage of this. We get paid tomorrow and our fridge
turned up it's toes and died a slow and stinky death, so everything
had to go.
We're
replacing in stages, but we have to cut corners for a bit. I had a
couple of prescriptions due today and I was going to take advantage
of the freebie bus. Well, shit. The damn thing doesn't run on
weekends, so I walked to the local Sweetbay, which is a mile. I can
do this easily, in spite of all this hair-on-fire warnings about
COPD, congestive heart failure, PD, blah, blah, blah. I am one
strong, and tough ox. Seriously; even with the falling down and
blindness. Seriously, I walk fast and easy and I can walk forever;
it's probably metabolic or something. My knowledge of physical
fitness is abysmal. Unfortunately, my dollar store shoe couldn't keep
up, so I had to limp-hop across the HOTTER THAN HELL BLACKTOP.
How do you market this? Here they are in Pumpkin Gulag. They started out in the front of the store, scaring the bejesus out of the customers. I thought we'd wandered into Frankenstein's lab. They were a whopping 6 bucks a piece. They did not sell in time for Halloween. Over time, they kept moving farther and farther back, their prices dropping. First to 3.49 each, then the dollar you see here. They were so forlorn. I felt so sorry for them. Poor pink pumpkins. Jim, the produce guy and he of the shirt-and-tie now, said they just showed up on the truck and it fell to them to market them. People thought they were mutants. They tried to tie them in with "Breast Cancer" somehow, but that flopped. I was never sure if they meant, "these will give you breast cancer, or cure it, or we will donate to breast cancer." They ended up cutting one in half to show people they were "safe." I wonder what the geniuses at central distribution will send them this year.
Jim, the
wonderful pink-pumpkin guy is now wearing a shirt and tie and works
up front. I can think of no one better. He is an endless supply of
enthusiasm and professionalism and one of my favorite go-to people,
along with Casey, Paula and the Manager Josh Hamilton, who has known
me from day one, when I went to the homeless shelter. Jim's solution,
when I entered the store with my broken shoe, was to offer me a
riding cart. I just looked at him. He said, “yeah, I didn't think
you were going to go for that.” So, I shuffled off to the Pharmacy
and got my prescriptions.
Sweetbay has just been bought out by Winn-Dixie, but the people at my store are going to stay. Yay!
I picked
up the few other things we needed, and while I was in the line to
pay, I had a brainstorm. I saw Jim and Josh and said “Hey, do you
guys have any duct tape?” They looked at each other. “For my
shoe.” I explained. Jim rustled some up and I took my stuff up to
the front of the store and bent over. Here I am with my underpants
hanging out, bent over. I stood up. “I am so going to end up on You
Tube.” These guys have seen me playing “Air whackamole guitar” in the
rice aisle. I was getting' down, lost in the moment, but got that eerie feeling you get when someone is looking at you, but you can't see them (I ignore cameras) and I turned around. This guy was
standing behind me, grinning. I said, “Oh, I am so sorry.” He
said, “I'm in no hurry. Party on.”
Wrong clan and wrong instrument and wrong number of people, but too cool to pass up.
So now, I
managed to get my foot up on the newspaper stand and wrap duct tape
around it a few times and tear it off. “There! Now, I'll be able to
get home, without dragging my foot like Igor, Dr. Frankenstein's assistant. Now, Jim you just keep
being great.” Jim, ever the comedian, says, “First I have to
start being great.” This is seriously the best grocery store, ever. Because the
spice aisle is jointly run by the CIA and the KGB and the whole place
treats all the bizarros with complete aplomb, I feel right at home. I
took the regular bus home, and had to beat feet, to avoid one of the many neighborhood Lotharios. Ick. JC is watching the
SyFy "Piranhaconda" movie. I can't miss that.
7 comments:
You can't make this stuff up!!!! The pumpkin riff was beyond funny. The reality of walking to the grocery store and 'making do' yet again perhaps not so funny but a testament to your courage and perseverance. Keep writing those 750 words a day. Every single one counts.
As a non-ROW 80 check in, it's a pretty good piece of writing, so in itself counts towards your writing goals!
When your posts are as entertaining as this one, who cares what your wordcount is?
Mad pipers. Pumpkins. And a LOLCat.
What next?
@Beth,
The Pink Pumpkin thing is a recurring theme with me. It went on and on until after Thanksgiving. It became a source of much hilarity with Jim at the store and Casey, Assistant Manager/Standup Comic. I thought of the duct tape at the last minute and thus was spared a "hot foot" then sat on my favorite sunglasses. What the Lord giveth, the Lord taketh. I have several other pairs. Thanks for reading! You are a special Angel. I told Alberta that. She is a dear lady. Thank you for that and for being you!
@elizabeth,
I think I'm supposed to be doing something organizational that will someday result in a book that people might actually give me a buck or so for. I'm aiming for an e-book to start and lord knows I have enough jottings, minutiae, screeds, posts, angry letters, rants and "those were the days" reminiscences to do so, if I had more than the attention span of a paper clip. You can always tell I feel guilty when I start out with "goals, schmoals" and then go on to talk about some idiocy or another. I just plain love #ROW80 and all of my crew mates! Thank you, dear heart!
@Lee,
Not to mention duct tape and showing my underwear to the whole grocery store. Although on Nebraska Avenue, no one even stopped what they were doing. They've seen a whole lot worse! That's just one of the many things I love about the 'hood! Thanks for stopping by. I love your blog and learn something new everytime I drop by (Emily Davis, Suffragette!) Thank you, from the bottom of my heart!
@Elizabeth,
Thank you, thank you, thank you for the kind praise. It's always so great to hear that from another writer!
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