Encounters

What is it about the grocery store that brings about such passionate emotions in me? Why is it that almost every time I go to the grocery store I end up in some kind of …. encounter? 

Today, Im feeling pretty cheery. The weather is unseasonably warm- almost spring-like. In honor of that, I go in search of rack of lamb. (spring lambs and all that… )

Immediately I notice that my produce man friend who most of you now know as “veggie man” is no where to be seen. Perhaps he is hiding but no matter, I am in no mood to tangle with him today even though there is great cause. Great cause, indeed.

To my right is a bin with a sign above it that clearly states: Blood Oranges. In the bin are mangoes. While pondering this I decide that it might just be Veggie Man’s idea of a joke. He will go home this evening with a smirk and laugh over his plate of fresh kale and know that some hapless shopper made a blood orange sauce out of mango. I suppose we all have our petty torments. 

Something else that vexes me greatly. Why do we need entire bins for things like burdock root? WHO buys these items? In all my shopping days, I have never once seen a person at the check out with a basket full of burdock root. Ive never even seen anyone with ONE burdock root. Surely someone must be purchasing these items but WHO?

And another question. Why bundle popular items like asparagus and broccoli TOGETHER in one bin while giving burdock its own? It makes me wonder about my little Veggie Man and what might have happened to him as a child. 

Anyway. Lovely rack of lamb selected along with some other items I head down the aisle where the olive oil resides. Half way down and in the MIDDLE of the aisle with her cart turned at an angle so absolutely no one can get around her, is one of our own Real Housewives of Johnson County in her lavender yoga outfit chatting away on her phone. She had several of those reusable”earth” bags in her cart to haul her groceries in and nothing else.

 I dislike her immediately. 

Shoppers are beginning to queue up on either side of her cart, each looking too timid to ask her to move lest they interrupt her very important phone call. I observed this for a moment or two, pushing my way through the 4 shoppers that were on my side. The woman never even ONCE looked at any of the others, nor did she move her cart. The conversation seemed to involve a discussion around a play date for her toddler and how she wasn’t sure that she wanted him to associate with some other child. I for one had enough. I may have been the only one. 

In the moments before I took action I imagined the other shoppers cheering for me and clapping and thanking me for saving the day. Of course how we imagine things is rarely the way they work out. I pushed past the shy looking man who was closest to her cart and could see that he just wanted to get past. I nodded him out of the way, letting him know with just my eyes that real help had arrived. Chatty Cathy continued to lean on her cart and ramble, not looking at anything in particular. I eased my cart toward hers and then, bumped it. 

Ok, it was more than a bump but less than a crash. Well, crash was the sound it made but not quite the intent. “Cathy” turned around quickly with a shocked look on her face, looking from her cart to me and back to her cart. “Pardon me” I said. Pushing again a little less forcefully. It was clear that her cart was not only blocking me but the other 7 people who surrounded her. She then acted as if she just realized she wasn’t the only person in the entire store. 

I looked at my fellow shoppers, waiting for support (or cheers!) and all I saw were cowering sheep! So much for my hero’s welcome. Moving her cart just the tiniest bit as if to kindly accommodate me, she narrowed her eyes at me and waved me around with one perfectly manicured hand, still clutching the phone to her ear with the other. 

This was a line in the sand. I wasn’t going to try and squeeze past her, oh no. The man decided he wanted no part of this and crept away pushing his cart in the other direction. The two women on my side stood with their mouths open, ready to scurry at my next move. The elderly woman on the other side of the obstruction stood with her arms folded as if she were a referee about to throw a flag.

I pulled my cart back a little and then PUSHED hard knocking Cathy’s cart over to the side and bumping it in to her pristine yoga outfit making her nearly drop her phone. 

Plowing past, I glanced at her over my shoulder seeing her face aghast with disbelief and now wordless.  I dismissed my fellow spineless shoppers and moved on.

As I reached the point nearest to her, I leaned closer and said calmly, “Two words… CART MANAGEMENT.”

I peeked back only once seeing the rest of the shoppers cautiously moving around her while she stood in immovable shock. 

Lamb chops for dinner dears! 

I LOVE A GOOD SATURDAY! 

Adventures in grocery shopping

Let me just preface this with the following: I don’t go to the grocery store looking for confrontation. It simply finds me!

Needed romaine hearts. Didn’t see any. Asked the guy who led me over to whole romaine which everyone knows is different.

He said, “these romaine hearts.”

I said, “no, in fact they are not. I’m looking for the package I buy here all the time that is just romaine hearts.”

He says, “these romaine hearts- very good!”

I said, “no, I want the hearts, not the whole thing, you see?”

He holds up his hand and goes to get another guy.

We start over- from the beginning.

New guy points at whole romaine and says, “these romaine hearts.”

*sigh*

Then they both just stand there smiling like they are conspirators in tricking me into buying whole romaine.

Not this day lettuce man, not this day.

Home

Our beach house is my favorite of all places. For more than 11 years we have returned to it, in good times and bad and so we will again.

It’s right on the water on a private beach near Santa Barbara and it’s as much our home as anywhere we’ve ever been.

We sleep with the tall windows wide open so all you can hear is the crash of the waves. Mostly what I do during those 8 or 9 days is just sit in my chair on the deck, in the sun or under my green umbrella. That’s it.

We like to go into Santa Barbara and get fresh spot prawns and other delicacies and I put them on the grill and we share a good bottle of wine. Ive never slept better than there.

When the tide comes in, I can feel the sea spray on my face and when it goes out, I watch the tiny crabs scrabble across the sand. 

There are dolphins and surfers and the occasional happy beach dog carrying a driftwood stick but usually when we are there the beach itself is quiet and so am I.

I have a seagull, Jonathan, who returns to us each year and knows me by sight. I know him because he has a small hole in his right foot. He’s no ordinary bird. He’s my bird. He never shared with me how he got that injury in all our time together though there have been many days on that deck when we sat quietly next to each other and I expected him to tell that tale. Perhaps he doesn’t want to explain it and I don’t pry.

We have an understanding, Jonathan and I. I bring him fresh croissants in the morning and shrimp at dusk and he watches over me and asks nothing of me. But he always returns.

Mostly, we are silent as I sit under my umbrella and he on his rail. I suspect he’s seen a lot in his years, my bird and when the sun finally starts to set and all the other gulls fly away, he’s always the last to go to wherever it is he goes when he leaves me.

Often at night I like to take a blanket and glass of wine and go back out to my deck, when you can see nothing at all, but you can hear the waves and that furious sound, crashing on the rocks.

One night I was staring into the dark, no moon or stars- and spotted a light. A flicker, many miles out to sea. And then again. I wanted to be sure so I held my own lantern up and flashed my light with my hand and waited.

And another flash.

This time I held my lantern higher and swung it hoping I could really be seen and that yellow light swung back at me too. When looking to the far left, I could see the cars from the Pacific Coast Highway but this was out at sea.

I sat there surrounded by the sound of the waves in blackness and he came to life in my mind.

He’s a fisherman, a thinker and more.

I imagine he takes his boat out to sea again late at night because he understands it better then. There is a clarity to the night sea and it speaks to him as it does to me. He looks and looks and sometimes finds himself and other harder truths that are easier to see in the dark.

His beloved wife of 30 years falls asleep waiting for him but she never questions why he must go or if he will return. They have two kids grown up and gone and neither heard the call but maybe they come home for Christmas. He works hard but worries how fast the days go by now. And he thinks about that one time long ago. There are things that go unsaid.

I think he’s sitting there in his boat, listening to the waves, just as I’m doing now.

Does he recognize me, my lantern waving? Would he know me in the dark?

I’m surrounded by the sound of the waves in deep blackness and find comfort in knowing he’s out there too, my fisherman and that he saw me.

And so we sit for a while with it, just the two of us.

Later, I flash my lantern again and there is no response.

Desperation Andromeda

He was a bartender in the Desperation Andromeda sim. In a tiny, dirty bar.

He said his name was Vital. His eyes are what I remember most. That and his tattered clothes.
His hungry eyes. He touched my hand as he poured my drink. Hungry.
I never saw him again but i wont forget.

october

and so October came.

yesterday there were pumpkins in the market.

I am never sure why autumn brings such melancholy

the seasons always change

I am not sad for the flowers as the frost moves in

or the days that grow shorter

My fear is more how fast they fly by us now

those days

like pages on a calendar gusting in a strong wind

and gone and gone again

faster than even those red orange leaves

that fall and melt away

and maybe it is not even the days themselves I want to grab

and hold on to

mostly its the words

or whispers

or memories

that rustled past me this year

those brief moments that I wanted to grab

and squeeze

and press up next to me

flashes of summer

or a voice or a touch

that I know will be important later

and a dozen times when my ghosts

reminded me

they were here.

– Me 1999

We die, we die rich with lovers and tribes, tastes we have swallowed, bodies we have entered and swum up like rivers, fears we have hidden in, like this wretched cave. We are the real countries, not the boundaries drawn on maps with the names of powerful men…That’s all I’ve wanted — to walk in such a place with you, with friends, on an earth without maps…

— Michael Ondaatje, The English Patient