Hi! I'm Lindsay Ferrier. You might remember me from a blog called Suburban Turmoil. Well, a lot has changed since I started that blog in 2005. My kids grew up, I got a divorce, and I finally left the suburbs for the heart of Nashville, where I feel like I truly belong. I have no idea what the future will hold and you know what? I'm okay with that. Thrilled, actually. It was time for something totally different.
September 12, 2008
>Something about grocery shopping makes me very, very grumpy.
It’s just not a chore that I enjoy, probably because with six people in this house, I find myself there nearly every damn day.
So when I arrive at the grocery with a list a mile long and 20 minutes before the babysitter has to be relieved, there’s only one thing that can turn what’s certain to be a bad experience into pure, unmitigated torture.
Read all about it in this week’s newspaper edition of Suburban Turmoil. The full text of the column is below!
When Grocery Shopping Gets Old
It’s not even noon, yet the supermarket parking lot is full. Frowning, I pull into a spot at the end of the lot and walk briskly toward the entrance. I step through the double doors, quickly scan the crowd of shoppers, and feel a cold chill go up my spine.
Unwittingly, I’ve entered the ninth circle of suburban hell, otherwise known as Senior Discount Day.
No matter how I time my grocery runs, I can’t seem to avoid Senior Discount Day. In fact, I suspect the manager at Kroger has some sort of hidden surveillance camera inside my refrigerator, allowing him to spontaneously announce a Senior Discount Day each time he notices I’ve run out of milk.
It’s not that I begrudge my blue-haired neighbors their discount. Hell, old age doesn’t have many perks; not counting shuffleboard, ten percent off groceries is about as good as it’s going to get. Besides, on a normal day at the supermarket, the seniors who show up are quite nice. They smile at my children and I in turn retrieve hard-to-reach items for those of them riding on motorized scooters.
When Senior Discount Day rolls around, though, our shaky truce dissolves. Banding together, they flood the aisles; their white heads bobbing like the foamy crests of waves in a windswept sea. I try to stand firm against their tide, but before I know it, my cart and I are caught up in the current. As I’m swept past the meats, I futilely attempt to grab a marked down pork tenderloin, only to be butted from behind by a cart pushed by a dried apple of a man wearing a beret and an evil grin.
“Ouch!” I shout, rubbing my hip. He laughs spitefully and snatches up my meat.
“Hey!” I protest. “I saw that first.”
Immediately, his face changes, assuming an expression of bewilderment and sorrow. “I’m sorry, dear,” he said. He tries to hand me the tenderloin. My face burns with shame.
“Oh, no,” I mutter. “That’s OK. You can have it.” Immediately, his face settles back into a sneer. He cackles delightedly and shakes his head at my naiveté before tottering back to his cart.
Bruised and forlorn, I manage to collect a few more items before ending up sandwiched between three other carts in aisle four, while a small group of mall-walkers argues heatedly over which brand of peanut butter is cheapest, and whether coupons on Senior Discount Day are doubled or tripled.
“Excuse me,” I mutter, trying to semi-politely push their carts out of my way. They ignore me. I raise my voice.
“HEL-LO. EXC– USE ME.” One of the women looks at me and frowns before making a grand show of adjusting her non-existent hearing aid.
At this point, I decide it’s safest to limit my shopping to AARP member-free areas of the store. First, I try the expensive organic foods section but aging shoppers are attacking its free sample trays like sharks in a feeding frenzy. Next, I check the beer aisle. A half-dozen Sansabelt wearers, fighting over what’s left of a sale on Pabst, are mobbing it.
That leaves the baby food aisle, which turns out to be a peaceful and empty haven in this senior storm. It appears my family will be having pureed carrots and teething biscuits for dinner tonight. They won’t like it, but once they hear about my ordeal, I’m sure they’ll understand. Actually, they won’t, but I’ll worry about that later.
My cart filled, I hurry to the front of the store, where I find long lines at every checkout. I move to the back of one, glancing impatiently at my watch. Within minutes, my favorite bagboy appears and catches my eye, pointing to register ten. Grinning, I quickly wheel my cart toward his register, and that’s when I spot a woman with a cane looped over her arm, headed in the same direction. I can see by her face that she’s witnessed our entire exchange and is determined to get to the register before I do.
Making eye contact, we glare at each other for a split second before simultaneously running for it. I make it to register ten in record time, but my competition is closer, and noses her cart into the aisle a split second before I get there.
“Come on, Myrtle,” she says, looking over her shoulder. “This nice boy opened up his register just for us.” A grandma in a velour tracksuit shuffles up behind her, snickering at me before getting in line. The bagboy shrugs as if he’s seen this happen many times before, and resolutely starts scanning box after box of Depends.
I stand behind them, grinding my teeth and vowing revenge. In forty or so years, these shoppers’ cherubic and adored grandchildren will be supermarket-shopping adults and I’ll be the Keds-wearing, dentured one cutting them off in line.
And I’ll be damned if I’m not the meanest and most competitive little old lady anyone around here has ever seen.
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
>Wow, Lindsay. I know it was all in fun, but all the stereotyping comes across as ageist. Guess you’re not afraid to piss off the senior citizen readers.Don’t get me wrong, I love your column and blog, but when I read this I just inwardly cringed a bit.
>Don’t worry. When I’m old, I will doubtless be raging against the young folk from time to time. Wait. I do that already. I TOLD you it was a Whiny Wheek.Admittedly, I wrote this after being emotionally pummeled by a group of… well, I’ll just say they put the ogre in… Krogre?But no, in general, I LOVE old people. I’m just bitter about that 10% discount!
>Those are my 2 biggest Kroger pet peeves, too, senior day and expectant mom parking. Having to walk through a gauntlet of smoking employees out front and dirty hand baskets round out the list. That’s why I drive an extra mile to the Publix.
>had step last year went to grocry to get scrip filled & buy soup etc-experienced senior day at Kroger OMG almost got run over twice in the parking lot never mind in the store itself.as far as pregnant parking I always parked at a distance figured the extra walking would be good for me.
>I used to park in the pregnant spot when I was pregnant and feel guilty, seeing all these moms around me struggling with baby carriers and toddlers. Harris Teeter has spots for mothers with young children, which is a MUCH better idea.
>As an expectant mom for almost, oh, I don’t know, 6 years now, I like those spots. Especially when I have to pee. Which is all the time. When I’m not gestating, I park far far away near the furthest cart corral. (I despise close parkers.)Now in ATL they had senior day every Wed. and they also had big vans that came from the local mature communities to transport said senoirs. I started hating shopping on Wed b/c they would constantly tell me that my daughter with miles of beautiful hair was a handsome boy. I was okay until she kept insisting, “No Mommy, I a BOY!”
>I can tell you one day at the grocery store thats worst in my neighborhood than senior discount day…the first of the month when everyone gets their food stamp money. I am all for people getting help when they need it but when your using that help to feed your family absolute crap is what bothers me. I’m talking ho’s ho’s, frozen pizzas, donuts, soda, ect. And then they go and load their groceries into their brand new SUV’s….makes you wonder…I’ll gladly deal with senior discount day than with the other crowd!!
>I have four under four…at one point I had four under 1 and 1/2 (two sets of twins). I would much rather walk my kiddos in than walk a long way when pregnant. You might have had easy pregnancies (I don’t know), but a lot of women are in a great deal of pain when pregnant. These spaces are a huge blessing to women like me, and should be used on the honor system.
>Okay, how about “For Expecting Mothers and Mothers with Small Children”? And also “People Having a Really Bad Day?”
>Handicapped parking is a must, senior parking – not so much. But I do think expectant mother parking is a good thing IF it also applies to mothers with small children. We actually have stores that have “Family Parking” for families with childrenunder 4.
>I almost quality as a senior citizen (over 50, under 55), and I always park further away than closer; my sympathies go to moms wrestling with a shopping cart and two-more young ‘uns. Perhaps I’ll have a different view when I’m 75 (my crusty curmudgeon badge should be well-earned by then, if I’m still around); perhaps not.Such comments don’t make me cringe, since I could give a crusty curmudgeon-in-training’s backside about political correctness ;)As for “whiny week”, what the heck: who doesn’t have ’em, and as a humor writer, it’s easier to do a little self-deprecating humor when faux-whining.
>Wait a sec…my crusty curmudgeon-in-training missed something…10% discount? Am I close?So maybe this sounding like Rice Crispies first thing in the morning does have some benefits?
>I had issues when I was pregnant, so that parking spot was a godsend to me. When I was pregnant with #1, I went into early contractions (at 30 weeks), so the OB ordered terbutaline and immediate bedrest. Being military, the pharmacy was NO WHERE near where my non-military OB was, so I decided to suck up the co-pay and go to Kroger. I was unable to find a “pregnant mom” parking spot (and this was when I needed the shortest walk ever, as I was still having contractions). But a lady did get out of her car (parked in one) as I walked by…she was smoking a cigarette. I chased her into the store and gave her hell (and then some)…and she flipped me off, told me to “get owt her bidnezz”. But then the people in the store who had heard me (anyone who DIDN’T was deaf or had their hearing aids turned off!) started in on her – for shame, you go move that car missy, etc….Meanwhile, all the seniors in line at the pharmacy let me cut in, and told the pharmacist to get my pills. Someone offered to get a wheelchair and bring me back to my car. Just sayin’…sometimes that spot IS a good thing.
>LOL! “For People Having a Really Bad Day.”Now I’m all for that one!
>We used to have a Harris Teeter here,and I loved it, but that darn Kroger bought it out. Now, in a town of 25,000, we have 3 Krogers!
>good-ness!! I thought your post was hilarious. And I love my grandma, so I am not hostile towards the old. People need to lighten up! I was so surprised when I perused the comments and saw the responses. Not that you’d be deterred I’m sure, but don’t pay any attention to those with no sense of humor. 🙂
>”the ninth circle of suburban hell”–indeed. I didn’t even get past the first lines of your column, just started laughing because I have SO been there–just last month, when I vowed NEVER AGAIN to go to Kroger on the first Wednesday of the month! I have nothing against old people–I just don’t like grocery shopping with a store FULL of them. (Or a store full of anyone, for that matter.)OK, off to read the rest of the column 🙂
>I couldn’t agree more with you about the exectant mother’s parking. I’ve considered faking a pregnacy a time or two just to save myself the trouble of walking.
>We have parking for people with small children *and* pregnant parking. Don’tcha wish your Kroger was hawt like mine?! Don’tcha?!
>Can my pregnant self just express some bitterness that there are no f***ing expectant mom spots around here? I mean, it’s hot, I’m the size of a water buffalo and I have two other small children but people with five year olds take up the moms with infants spaces all the time, so why can’t I have a damn spot? I don’t care if it’s labeled “water buffalo parking”, I just want a good space.
>That was hilarious. Maybe your snarkiness is a result of being “bitten” by one Sarahcuda?LOLJust kidding.
>Yikes, those comments are harsh over there! I shop at Super Target– it’s too big for any old people. But, I could start complaining about those bitches in their track suits, lattes and cell phones. Wait, ripping on old people is much more fun
>Bahhahaa… I swung into that maternity parking spot the minute those two little lines showed up. My husband was mortified.
>You read my mind. I have thought that so many times! The other day I had to run in to the store with my two year-old, and I came SO CLOSE to parking in that space. Then I didn’t because I was afraid I’d be sent to the grocery principal’s office or something.
>I need a whole dang lot all to myself this week.I loved this post.
>When I worked for Ames dept store they had senior tuesday… I hated that day… I think every old person from 10 towns over in each direction came out for that day… it was our busiest day, we opened early too…I can understand that they need to save money but when they come out its like they think we should all bow down and kiss the ground they walk on… Being old doesnt mean you get to be rude and forget the manners your mom taught you, or to be sneaky and dishonest… And also why is it when you hit 60 is it ok to fart going down the isle?
>Agree I do, for my own reasons…
>As a 32 weeks pregnant mom with currently enjoying a baby with her head on my bladder and some pelvic displacement you get no pity from me with your kids on the outside of your body.
>I suppose the challenges of grocery shopping never end; here’s a perspective from the other end of the age range: Chonda Pierce on Menopause Parking. (a 2 min. video). This proves you have your finger on the pulse of the groundswell issues women of all walks of life care about. Or that women never stop complaining. One of those. Maybe if more women could be as funny as you and Chonda are with your complaints, men would actually listen more. Maybe. : )
>today I fell down (squirrel related) and bashed in my knee and am now happy because it got me out of going to the grocery story (a friend took pity and went in my place). All in all, me and my knee are better off in our bashed in state then me and my brain would be had I gone to the grocery store with my 3 yr old tornado (and the old people).
>I used to live in Lexington, Ky and at that time their parking was designated for pregnant women and moms with children 2 years of age or younger.