Tag Archives: 7-Eleven

Wasted Away Again in My Coronaville

 

I got a text this morning: My medications were ready for pickup at CVS.

Unlike, say, toilet paper, for which you can find crude substitutes (Kleenex, generic sandpaper tissue,  unwitting bunnies), there’s no substitute for Mycophenelic Acid. I had tried so sign up for home delivery, but they must be overloaded at CVS: the system kept crashing like the DOW.

There was no getting around it. I would have to venture out. Into stores. Mingle with masses.

So I geared up before heading out. I guess this is the new normal. Shower, scrub, forego lotion (My skin is dry as hell, but figure a warm, dry animal picks up fewer germs than a warm, moist, sticky one. Who knows? Corona probably loves desert mammals.).

Next, time to tool up: I have dozens of rubber hospital gloves from my many stays. And, like hotel stays, I help myself to the freebies, including toilet paper. People tease me for rationalizing the theft, to which I reply: I figure they’ll screw me over in the bill, anyway. So, in a way, that’s my TP. Now I see I should have hit more lodgings.

So on with the gloves, beneath a pair of cloth gloves. Follow that with a face mask I pocket, along with extra masks and gloves in the car. I bring my iPhone and ear buds, either to wend to music or cover up two more face holes. At this point, who knows?

The drug store is a breeze. So easy, in fact, I head to the grocery store. What could possibly go wrong with pushing your luck during a pandemic, I figure.

The grocery store was PACKED. I drive by once to see the exiting pedestrian traffic, to determine if I should shop looking I’m like Doogie Howser, M.D., prepping for surgery. Image result for doogie howser surgical mask

Only a few were wearing masks, so I entered just in gloves. Still, I was concerned walking in that I’d get that look that screams Oh, you believe the fake news, huh?

Instead, I was surrounded by believer. Zealots, even.

One woman shopped in full winter apparel: coat, hat, gloves, muffler, scarf around her face. One man held a mask to his mouth while he one-handedly placed groceries in a basket. Another man, either  amused or angry, zipped through the aisles in a dirty t-shirt, cargo shorts and sock-less sandals, huffing as shoppers created traffic jams to accommodate social-distancing.

But most unnerving was the look on the faces of shoppers. No one made eye contact in that store. It became so apparent I made a nuisance of myself, pulling out the ear buds and trying to look every person in the eye and smile as they passed. No one noticed, though I’m sure it caught the attention of the security guards who now patrol the aisles, either to enforce a capacity limit or billy club toilet paper rioters. And that’s not hyperbole. Someone needed to smack some sense into these suburban survivalists:

Luckily, there were no brawls over butt wipes that day. But the lack of eye contact bothered me long after I left the store.

This is where we typically shine, isn’t it? Remember the first responders? The school- and club- and church-shooting fearless? The annual parade of Hurricane heroes?

Not here. Not yet. Maybe we are nesting with a vengeance. Maybe the last three years have been a not-so-subtle message: You’re on your own. Maybe we just need time getting a rhythm down with the New World Order.

Whatever the answer, I made a final stop at my equivalent of the Cheers bar, 7-Eleven. Nobody knows my name there, but they know my face.Image result for cheers bar norm

“How are you, brother?” I heard in a Middle Eastern accent. “Sorry for all the boxes.”

The store, like Ralph’s, was shoulder-high in boxes as suppliers tried to get goods to the distributors.

At the counter, the familiar cashier looked me in the eye and smiled. He began to pull out out plastic bags. Normally, they’re 15-cents a pop. But this cashier usually bags mine for free, unless the manager is around. Yeah, I’m kind of a big deal.

But as he tried to open a bag, his gloved hands could not get a grip on the plastic. He wore larger, bulky rubber gloves, the kind hot dog vendors wear when slinging weiners.Image result for hot dog vendor

“I should have gloves like yours,” he said, pointing to my latexed hands. Yeah, I thought, medical-grade shit is always high quality. I could probably be a black market glove dealer.

Instead, I put them to another use. “Do you mind?” he asked, gesturing at the still-closed bag.

“Not at all,” I said, opening the bag easily, courtesy of the Valley Presbyterian Center.

So we stood there, as the line grew behind us: He, carefully packing the bags, while I waited and opened each one.

“Thank you my friend,” he said. Again, eye contact and a smile.

Sooner or later, we’ll all find that rhythm again.

What’s In YOUR Wallet?

Image result for funny homeless pics

I have a long and colorful history with the homeless population of any big city I inhabit. There was the woman who hawked a loogie on my apartment front door because she didn’t believe I had no spare change (I really didn’t). There was the guy who broke down crying (leading me to do the same) in front of a 7-Eleven when I gave him $20 on Christmas Day, my unofficial annual tradition. There was the man who routinely coaxed me out of my change in D.C. simply with an ingenious shtick:  He called himself “Blelvis the black Elvis,” and could sing any Elvis tune you asked him. How could you not reward that cleverness? Image result for black elvis

Then there was the event several years ago that cemented my decision to acknowledge the homeless: I had to walk home from a motorcycle repair shop and, not wanting to haul a helmet and heavy jacket, dropped them into an abandoned shopping cart and hoofed it home. I was astounded by how many people would not make eye contact (some even walked on lawns to avoid being on a sidewalk with me), lest they be asked for money. I realized then how we dehumanize that population like human flotsam.

But every once in a while, I come across someone who only reinforces the disdain many people have for them. Like the obnoxious guy in Westwood who would shake his coin cup about an inch from your passing ear to ask for change (how I wanted to slap that cup in the air). And Loogie Lucy was never going to be mistaken for Miss Congeniality.Image result for miss congeniality

Add to those  ranks Capital One Man, who I encountered today.

I was heading home from a doctor’s visit, and stopped at 7-Eleven for my first caffeine of the day. I had a pounding headache from the medical procedure, and the relentless sun made it impossible for me to make eye contact.

But I heard him fine.

“Got any spare change?” he asked. “I need bus fare.”

I couldn’t look him in the eye, couldn’t even make out his face in the orange haze. But I was determined to acknowledge him. “Sorry,” I said. “I only have plastic (that, too, was true).”

He paused a moment, then said, “Cash back?”

I was so thrown off by the response I broke into laughter. Clearly, the guy had been told this before, and had a ready response. Because you can get cash back with an ATM purchase at a 7-Eleven. But the maximum is $10, usually dispensed in a single bill or two $5 bills. Was he expecting a Lincoln or Hamilton?Image result for $5 and $10 bills

I’ll never know, because he was gone when I exited the store. And I felt bad for laughing at the guy.  I know homelessness is no joking matter.

But come on: If you’re that clever, you could at least belt out a couple lines of Love Me Tender.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GSvKkMs2ieo