
Another reason I feel like I'm in Mother Russia whenever I go to the grocery store is the music. They're always playing songs that were really popular for about five minutes 15 years ago like "Don't Want to Miss a Thing" by Aerosmith. Incidentally, has anyone ever noticed that that song is 18 minutes long, 17 minutes of which are chorus. I don't even know how that's possible, but I guess that's why they're rich and famous, and I'm just rich.
Editorial Note: That last statement is funny because I'm not rich at all.
It's either 15 year old Top 40 or popular songs from the 90s redone by foreign artists. I can honestly say that I have now heard "Unbreak My Heart" in Korean more than one time. Every time it plays I see all the elderly Korean woman swaying a little and muttering the words quietly to themselves. Note to self: elderly Korean women love Toni Braxton.

I got to thinking, as I walked toward the checkout counter, what will it be like when I go back to a grocery store in the West. Will I just go nuts and buy 14 varieties of Hungry-Man dinners, just because I can? Probably. Or maybe I'll buy my groceries at the in-store pharmacy, because they have those in Seattle, and they have to ring you up--even though they went to Pharmacy School for 6 years and hate people who make them ring groceries. Or maybe I'll just get drunk and push a cart around the giant aisles until they kick me out.
Here the aisles are so small and cramped, the carts are so tiny, and yet to defy logic itself the checkout lines are always enormous. I just, I don't understand how it's possible. Perhaps it's some kind of backwards effort on the part of the Bay Ridge City Council to build community or something. I've definitely made conversation with people in line before, even though this is New York and strangers are categorically, statistically adverse to talking to each other. I let a guy use my Food Town card the other day. Once, a man saw that I only had one item and let me go ahead of him in line. We had a conversation about I don't even know what, and for a second I forgot where I was, and everything I'd come to understand about New Yorkers turning themselves off to human contact as a survival instinct.
Editorial Note: Today I found a woman's wallet sitting forgotten on the counter. She was still in line so I walked it over to her. It took me three times, saying "Excuse me, Ma'am" to get her attention so I could give her back her very expensive wallet with about 14 credit cards in it. That's just how people are here, Mike has a good story about ignoring a blind man because it's been ingrained in us that everyone we don't know who approaches us is trying to scam us in some way. Hey, look at that I said "us" and "we" in regards to people in New York. That's probably significant somehow.

I have no insight on where all these people are going, but I'll tell you where they're not going. They're not going home to cook something with Mr. Yoshida's Teriyaki sauce, because you can't fucking find it anywhere in New York.
7 comments:
I'll tell you what will happen when you grocery shop in the West. It will be The Right Thing To Do. And you will not Regret It or Living There Again.
Word. I hate grocery shopping here. I eat pasta about eight nights a week because I can't handle the trauma of the grocery store. When I look at the "produce" in the "produce department" (meaning sad 10 foot long refrigerator case by the door), I get all weepy thinking about how I used to live near Florida and every lovely fruit and veggie in the store was fresh and happy.
Do you want me to bring your sad ass some Mr. Yoshida's Teriyaki sauce when I come visit next month? (Just bought my plane ticket!) Although it depends on if Safeway/Trader Joe's/Whole Foods sells it in San Francisco...
Ok, I just went grocery shopping, and The Weather Girls' "It's Raining Men" came on, including the intro with the sassy banter. And this time I was the one dancing around and singing in the store.
unrelated: you don't want the link to the styler program, it's all lies
Is everything GOYA brand in Bay Ridge, or is that just in the Union City barrio?
I grocery shop in Scotland. Try looking for Chicken and finding Haggis.
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