MY
CORONAVIRUS SHOPPING
If
you see me, you’ll never guess the depth and breadth of my appetite. And what I
consume, I burn doing endless chores. So there is a fast cycle of eating and
shopping for food, sped further by having no appetite for starchy foods or
sugary drinks--an appetite and a half for fruits and vegetables. These tender produce are extremely good-looking yet lose their looks fast, requiring constant
shopping trips. I start shopping for THEM and my eyes get caught by other
things that I think I’m running out of, or in need for. In time I end up
shopping for the sake of shopping. Things spiral out of control when shopping at
wholesales and malls. I could be shopping for pomegranate and end up buying the
on-sale shoes!
Life
was a series of shopping trips until Coronavirus facts started to tumble over
my head. Pretty soon, Dr. Anthony Fauci’s announcements dominated the air,
snuffing out contrary claims made by a certain loud mouth. I listened to
Fauci’s sincere concerns and followed his fatherly advice. He prescribed ‘HOME”
for my age group--the most attractive human beings to Coronavirus. And if you
are one of those people who spent their lives in a race to achieve one goal
after the other, you feel sort of special even if a virus puts you on top of
its list.
I
feverishly started to compile an inventory of the contents of my pantry,
kitchen cabinets, and the under the stairs storage of paper goods and cleaning
supplies. The inventory did not stop at the names of items. It included almost
all the information on their labels such as their brand, ingredients, and size.
Then I divided the inventory in accordance to two main purchasing sources, a
super market chain and a whole sales chain. Now I was ready to select from the
inventory the shopping lists to give to the shoppers of these two sources. I
placed my orders. No substitutions.
At
first, I was elated when piles upon piles of groceries were delivered to my
door! No driving! No cruising through endless isles. Three or four item were
missing from each delivery, but even I couldn’t always find all what I shopped
for. The time I saved by delegating in-person grocery shopping, however, I
spent shopping online for clothes and shoes.
Then
I started to miss more and more items that were on the lists. So I allowed
substitutions. That is when the process went out of control. Rarely were the substitutions
to my liking.
And
how were my fruits and vegetables? I ask you: how many shoppers have you seen
picking up an apple or a pear, then turning it around looking for consistency
in the level of ripening and no dents or bruises?
Worst
of all is the persistent picture popping into my mind from years past, of that
tiger I saw in a zoo pacing his cage like mad, leaving his lunch of fresh meat
to a swarming cloud of flies. The aim of us animals is not to get what we
need. The aim is to have the freedom to
go get it.
Still
taking Dr. Fauci’s advices to heart, I put a mask on my face, wear glasses to
cover my eyes, stick a hat on my head, insert my hands in plastic gloves, shove
a sanitizer bottle in my pocket, hang shopping bags on my shoulders, and go
shopping.
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