Anyway, you finally get to the checkout line's front, and pay for 
your food, and wait to get your check or card authenticated by a 
machine, and then get told to "Have a nice day" in a voice that is the 
absolute voice of death, and then you have to take your creepy 
flimsy plastic bags of groceries in your cart through the crowded, 
bumpy, littery parking lot, and try to load the bags in your car in such
 a way that everything doesn't fall out of the bags and roll around in 
the trunk on the way home, and then you have to drive all the way home 
through slow, heavy, SUV- intensive rush-hour traffic, et cetera, et 
cetera.
The point is that petty, frustrating crap like this is exactly where 
the work of choosing comes in. Because the traffic jams and crowded 
aisles and long checkout lines give me time to think, and if I don't 
make a conscious decision about how to think and what to pay attention 
to, I'm going to be pissed and miserable every time I have to foodshop, 
because my natural default-setting is the certainty that situations like
 this are really all about me, about my hungriness and my 
fatigue and my desire to just get home, and it's going to seem, for all 
the world, like everybody else is just in my way, and who are 
all these people in my way? And look at how repulsive most of them are 
and how stupid and cow-like and dead-eyed and nonhuman they seem here in
 the checkout line, or at how annoying and rude it is that people are 
talking loudly on cell phones in the middle of the line, and look at how
 deeply unfair this is: I've worked really hard all day and I'm starved 
and tired and I can't even get home to eat and unwind because of all 
these stupid goddamn people.
 
1 comment:
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