Skip to main content

Great Grump Saturday

 Goodness me, but everyone I met when I was out and about yesterday had a proper grump on. I didn’t. I was a cheerfulness and light. I had a plan for the day which mostly involved writing and watching films, but I had errands to run first, so was up with the lark and out with the wise worm trying to avoid the early bird.

Firstly to Morrison’s. I rarely shop there now, but needed a couple of bits I can’t get in Aldi, and I thought I’d couple the trip with a visit to the petrol station to fill up the little red car. 

Arrived just after 8 a.m, grabbed a trolley and walked into an almost deserted shop. From nowhere, a Morrison’s employee carrying a box flung herself in my pathway. I slammed on the brakes of my trolley to avoid collision. 

‘Oooh, I’m sorry!’ I said, because I am polite and did the British thing of taking immediate and full responsibility even though it was a six of one and half a dozen of the other situation. Do you know what she did, this Morrison’s employee carrying a box? She bloody rolled her eyes at me! Tight lipped, eye rolling, silent and miserable baggage! 

Well! That was a bit uncalled for, thought I. But I continued my journey onwards whilst writing a letter of complaint to Morrison’s Customer Service Dept in my head. 

One aisle I needed to negotiate was blocked by another employee with her shelf stacking trolley. That’s okay, thought I, still cheerful and light, although not as cheerful and light as when I left home. I can go the long way around. The shelf stacker showed no signs of moving out of the way, so it was the easy option rather than me stand there looking like a lemon. As I turned to go around the other way, the shelf stacker moved her trolley. 

‘Thank you!’ I said, with a big smile.

Which was met with a dead eye, silent stare.

Sheesh. Well, I zipped round the rest of the supermarket and, to be honest, I needn’t have bothered with a trolley because what I actually bought could easily have fitted in a basket - filo pastry, dried baking yeast, antiseptic cream and a pair of cheap jeans. 

I went to the self-checkout rather than run the risk of meeting up with any more emotional vampires. The jeans had a security tag on them, goodness knows why given they were so cheap. No one arrived to remove the security tag for me despite me standing and waiting under a red flashing light. So I paid my bill, left the shop and cut the tag off myself with a pair of wire cutters when I got home. 

Filled my car with petrol, went into the station to pay. Two employees behind the counter chatting non-stop at each other. I waited until they realised I was there. ‘Pump 3, thanks!’ said I. Smiling. 

Not a single word did either of those two employees speak to me. The payment was made without eye contact from them either. Too busy chatting shite to each other, you see. I was an inconvenient customer paying a HUGE amount for over-priced petrol. 

On to Cotton Traders to collect two pairs of jeans for Andy. I’d ordered them via the Click and Collect option. The shop opened at 9 a.m. I arrived at 9.15. 

‘I’m here for a Click and Collect!’ I said, brightly smiling at the woman behind the counter. 

‘You’ll have to wait,’ she said. ‘I haven’t cashed up my till yet.’

I was on the verge of saying, ‘That really isn’t my problem, is it?’ and then marching to the behind the scenes at Cotton Traders to find my already paid for order myself. At least if I served myself I would have been cheerful and polite.

‘There you go, madam,’ I’d have said to myself. ‘Thank you for your custom!’

‘Why thank you,’ I’d have replied to myself. ‘Your customer service has been second to none. You have a lovely smile!’

But I didn’t. I mooched around for five minutes until I was summoned back to the counter, asked my surname and postcode and then given my parcel. 

Well, I went home and did lots of writing. I ordered myself a box of 20 of my favourite biros, a large pack of A5 exercise books in very cheerful colours, and a guide to self-publishing. And then I watched the film ‘Shirley Valentine’ and knew EXACTLY what she was talking about when she says that women of a certain age outlive their usefulness and become just a background presence in the lives of other people. 

This morning I was gardening by 7.30 a.m. I moved loads of topsoil leftover from the patio build. I planted out kale, chervil and butternut squash. And I picked the first of the sweet peas, and some courgettes for lunch. 

I’m still smiling.



Comments

Anonymous said…
They seem to move in shoals, grumpy people. A friend of mine once asked a very grumpy government person if she really hated her job that much? The grump took it down a notch after that.
KJ
Denise said…
I was glad to get home, KJ. Perhaps it was International Grumpy Day and I didn’t know.

Popular posts from this blog

The Frosted Dawn Enigma

The decorators are in at the moment. Stairs and landing. Given my previous history of 'Hoo Ha Occurring on Stairs ' - reference the Trapped Under the Sofa Incident and the Foot Wedged Between Bookcase and Stair Rise Debacle - I thought it wise to pay for professionals to decorate the stairs and landing rather than get myself in a mix with ladder and plank combinations and achieve the Magic Three of staircase accidents. The decorators are a father and son combo who go by the  names of Craig and David. This automatically causes me entertainment. 'Came in on a Monday, prepped, filled and undercoated, back on Thursday, first top coating, by Friday finishing touches...' Okay, not as frisky or well-scanned as the original song, but you get where I'm coming from. Anyway, before they started the job Craig asked what colour I wanted for the walls. 'Same colour as the downstairs walls, please,' said I. 'Dulux Frosted Dawn.' And then white for ...

Day 1 - Decisions Are Made Beyond the Author's Control.

‘Well,’ I say, looking at the expectant faces gathered around the huge table in the Great Dining Hall of Much Malarkey Manor, ‘I didn’t think it was going to happen this year, but it is!’ There is a sharp intake of breath as everyone wonders of what I speak. I’ve been muttering about all sorts recently, and I’m not talking liquorice here either.   ‘The Much Malarkey Manor Annual and Traditional Christmas Story!’ I say, and wait for the expulsed air of relief to settle before I continue. ‘I thought we had done it all. I thought we had covered every Christmas story there was. I’ve been wracking my brains for a full two months now, trying to come up with something we haven’t done before and then it hit me! We haven’t done a version of one of the Great Christmas Films of Yore!’ ‘Your what?’ says Mrs Slocombe, who is more interested in the selection of pastries I have brought to this breakfast meeting, because that is what one does, isn’t it? Eat pastries at breakfast...

Sun Puddles

A few weeks ago, I met up with a dear friend for a meditation and healing afternoon, both of us being light workers on the spirit pathway. It did me good to re-engage in a bit of focused energy channelling (because I have let my practice slip somewhat) and during the afternoon the words ‘sun puddles’ popped into my head.  Now, I know this wasn’t my human brain thinking these words because I have never heard the phrase before; when I arrived home, I looked it up and said to myself, ‘Aaah, you mean sun spots!’ This is a sun puddle... ...there! That thing that Flora is lying on. No, not the sofa - the warm patch of sunshine on the sofa. Here are Flora and Bambino sharing a sun puddle... This proves that no matter how much they scrap with each other and try to denude each other of fur all over my rugs, they secretly share a mutual and fond admiration. I think. And here is Bambino on a sun puddle that has come to rest on my legs... It’s his casual, ‘I’m so cool’ pose. Metaphorically coo...