Folding, spindeling, and mutilating lauguage for fun since Aug, 2004
Tuesday, November 15, 2005

     Isn’t it funny how the most simple and seemingly harmless things can throw us off?

     Even people being helpful.

     Especially people being helpful on their own terms without regard to what you actually want done.

     I went to my local Rainbow Foods today to get groceries.  It should be so simple.  I brought my nice canvas bag with me, as I often do.  Most of the time, I can’t get all my groceries into it, but it certainly reduces the amount of plastic and paper wasted by our household.  Yes, we recycle, but as we all know, not everything that you put in your recycle bin actually ends up being recycled.  Best to rely most heavily on the reduce/reuse tactic, and save recycling for the unavoidable stuff.

     Anyway, I get up to the check-out counter, and find that they now have baggers.

     If you’ve ever been to the grocery store with me, you know that I’m a little particular about how my groceries are bagged.  I put all the frozen stuff together in one bag, the refrigerated stuff in another, and the stuff that goes in various cabinets gets grouped together. 

     Heavy, durable or well-packaged stuff on the bottom, fragile, crushable, or smooshable stuff on top.  Tall, square items to the outside, small, disorderly items to the inside.  Fill each bag completely, and then move on.

     I’ll admit, it’s more than a little pathological.  I arrange things in the cart so that it is easy to unload the cart onto the conveyer in such a way as to make it easy to pack the bags…which makes it easier and more efficient to put stuff away when I get home.

     It’s not rocket science, but yes, it IS a tad obsessive.  On the other hand, it saves me time for doing things like writing blog entries complaining about how people goof up my system and waste my time.

     But I digress…

     When I realized that the guy at the end of the counter was supposed to bag my groceries, I handed him the canvas bag.  He looked at me like I’d just hit him with a rubber fish, and then explained that I did so because he wasn’t wearing his moonbeam coat.

     “What’s this?”  He asked with a truly remarkable blend of confusion and contempt that tapered away into a smooth finish that hinted vaguely of ennui.

     “It’s a canvas bag.  If you can’t get everything into it, please put the rest in paper bags.” (You know, because trees are a much more renewable resource than oil.)

     “Hmmmph” he agreed.

     There was a manager standing down there with him.  I assumed she was supervising his efforts.

     I paid, and then stood and waited while he carefully placed two or three items in each plastic bag, and then placed the bags in my cart.  I would have reminded him that I asked for paper, but I needed to get home and get ready for the kids to come home from school, and didn’t have another twenty minutes to wait.

  Once outside the store, I went through and re-packed my bags…including the contents of the plastic bag that had been placed inside of my canvas bag.  I condensed the five or so bags into three and got the really fragile and smooshable stuff out from under the heavier stuff, and drove home, wondering if maybe I should start shopping at Cub.  Either that, or I need to get used to eating smooshed bread.

     Or maybe I could get some therapy and get over the ingrained illness that is “Minnesota Nice”, and just tell the baggers to back off…I’ll do it myself.

     Yeah…that sounds like a lot more fun.

Tuesday, November 15, 2005 7:42:31 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00) | Comments [9] | #
Tuesday, November 15, 2005 9:15:31 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
I say go for it. Just tell em "Look, it's nothing personal. Im just a bit anal about this sort of thing and preffer to do it myself."Believe me sweety, Im lifetime CS. People in that kind of job REALLY dont like uber-picky customers who want, frinstance their Whopper with one slice of lettuce spread very thinly with mayo on the side in a seperate wrapper and the onions under the meat not on top. If you make it clear you're not questioning the amount of intellect it takes to pack a groccery sack but instead have a very particular system that requires a person to actually LIVE WITH YOU if they are to intuit it, they'll probably shrug, step back and find some way to slack while appearing to be busy, a skill that EVERYONE in service proffessions perfects early on.
Hugs
Bob
Bob Wagner
Tuesday, November 15, 2005 9:42:42 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
Try shopping at Whole Foods. I went there after a walk around the Lakes this summer. Needless to say, I did not have my canvas bags with me- as I often neglect to bring them with on walks- I know- bad Sue. As I stood at the checkout, I turned to the bagger, and said, "Paper, please."
He said "What?"
"Paper. I'd like paper bags please."
To which he rolled his eyes, and looked at me in disgust. "We don't even USE plastic here." Oh. Kay. I almost remarked about his plastic eyeglass frames, his plastic ponytail holder, the plastic cash register, and his shoes, which were clearly either made out of dead animal hide or... you guessed it... plastic. Instead, I gathered my pride, grabbed the bag, and skulked off, grumbling under my breath, "At least I chose PAPER."
Sue
Wednesday, November 16, 2005 7:18:14 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
Yeah, I don't think I've run into a competent bagger since the last time I was at Byerly's (which, sadly, was *years* ago). And I really think that Rainbow has gone downhill since they were bought out. :(
Kaji
Wednesday, November 16, 2005 10:34:43 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
I guess I've lucked out with my Rainbow baggers - and have quite enjoyed walking to the end of the row to just pick up my groceries. However, most of my baggers have consisted of mom-types, my age or older, so I'm sure they tend to be more careful.

One thing I had to chuckle about the other day while listening to the bagger and the check-out lady chat. The check-out lady was asking the bagger if she'd watched the bagger training videos yet. TRAINING VIDEOS for BAGGING GROCERIES.

Perhaps your baggers haven't received their proper training yet. *snark*
Kristi
Wednesday, November 16, 2005 1:08:40 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
"I guess I've lucked out with my Rainbow baggers"

well...that could be it...or another thought is that maybe you arn't psycho.

Anyway, that's my take on the probable difference.

Trees
kemaris
Wednesday, November 16, 2005 1:19:27 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
The slow death of the art of bagging can be traced to the advent of the dreaded plastic sack. The best you can do with those whisper-thin plastic insults to packaging is to sort your items into separate bags because the contents of each will shift around no matter how careful you are.

I remember when I was a kid, (back in the Nixon administration - now only the second most disgraceful in my lifetime), and my mom would walk me to the local A&P with our folding shopping cart. Proper bagging was essential if you had any hope of getting all the goceries into the cart and transporting them home without damaging anything. In order to fit them in the cart the bags had to be stacked three deep and two abreast so you had to be very careful with the size, shape, density and hardness of each item. Bananas being simultaneously dense, irregularly shaped and easily damaged were always a special challenge to this six year old. I would not discount how much those early exercises may have helped me with spatial relationships. To this day I've only met one person who packs a suitcase more efficiently than I do and she was a flight attendant for nearly twenty years. An odd thing to be proud of but a point of pride nonetheless.
John
Wednesday, November 16, 2005 1:30:07 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
John,

I bet you RULE at Tetris!

:-)

I think part of my pickyness is that my dad had moonlighted as a "carry-out boy" and was also an engineer.

So he sort of ingrained me with an obsession for efficiency and structural integrity that leads to my problems today.

I agree...bananas are the devil when it comes to packing groceries. Also, I NEVER pack eggs in a bag. They sit on the floor of the front passenger seat where I can keep an eye on them.

LOL!

Trees
kemaris
Wednesday, November 16, 2005 3:03:42 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
My dad and I had a system. Shopping for a family of four, it was simple. Mom earned the money, Dad wrote the check, and I packed them up at the checkout and my brother helped all of us to get them into the house and put away.

Cold stuff in plastic (so you know what to put away ASAP). On the shelf stuff in paper. Heavy stuff on the bottom, light stuff on the top. Not exactly rocket science. Even though I am not all that old, and probably one of the youngest in the current readership, I still need to smile and tell the kid bagging that I'll do it myself. Telling them that cold stuff goes in plastic and on the shelf stuff in paper only sometimes works.

I think we all have our systems and if the world worked my way, all grocery store baggers would ask if you want their help or not. *shrugs*
Karen
Sunday, November 20, 2005 3:01:03 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
As a matter of fact I do rule at Tetris. I believe level 249 was my record on the original Nintendo platform, though I think it just repeated after about 200 without getting any harder. I recall that I got bored and just put the controller down at that point. My eyes and reflexes have deteriorated in the last ten years but I can still hit the 80-100 range pretty easily on those rare occasions when the kids let me play. If I warmed up for a couple days I'd probably be able to find that groove again.

BTW, eggs go on the floor in the BACK seat. Theres less room to slide around back there. ;>

-J-
John
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