all my ~ma are belong to you, Kristin.
Spike's Bitches 40: Buckle Up, Kids! Daddy's Puttin' the Hammer Down.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
My Kroger actually sells canvas shopping bags, and still there are times when they totally ignore my bag! But most of the time they're pretty good -- the cashier gets it even if the bagger doesn't, and at least some of my shopping ends up in there! I'm quite proud of myself for remembering the bags most of the time.
TJs will re-use paper bags but I can never remember to bring them in with me. I got them as far as the car. I wonder if I invested in canvas bags if that would help me remember.
I've gotten in the habit of leaving them in the trunk. When I bring groceries in, I put the empty bags on the door knob, so I can't forget returning them to my trunk.
I wonder if I invested in canvas bags if that would help me remember.
Hasn't helped me. I remember the bags just as they start bagging whatever I bought.
We leave the bags in the trunk. We tend to shop at TJ's and Whole Foods and they are really good about using the bags if you bring them in.
Cashmere mentioned baggus, and I bought four, so I could make sure I always have one or two in the car. I sling them over my shoulder and fill them as I walk the store which helps limit how much I buy. Cashiers vary in their reception of it--at Bristol Farms you'd hand them your cart or basket for them to unpack, so handing them the bag is normal. Ralph's seems a bit testier about being expected to do that in general, so I just put the bag right on top of everything so it has to be handled before the first merchandise is swiped.
Still, I get asked if I want stuff put into the bag. I'm not sure what the rationale for not wanting it in there is.
I got very irritated grocery shopping today. I don't feel it's much to ask to get customer service in my first language. But I got the major brushoff from this woman who didn't care to slow down and work out that no, I'd already looked in aisle 15 for the Jason toothpaste, but the toothpaste hadn't been shelved in the normal oral care section before the incredibly confusing store redesign anyway.
It's possible I'm not handling change well these days.
I took a large canvas shopping bag to the grocery store the other day. As I was checking out, I told the cashier that I wanted most of it bagged in the bag I brought with me. When the bagger showed up, I told him the same thing, looking him right in the eye.
He started grabbing groceries and bagging them in plastic bags. I reiterated to the bagger that I wanted most of it bagged in the bag I brought with me, and started putting groceries into my bag, leaving it available for him to use, too.
Most of my groceries wound up in plastic bags.
I had half a mind to stay there and unbag the groceries into my own bag, but by that time, I just wanted to get out of there.
The current Aust govt is looking to get rid of plastic bags in supermarkets entirely by the end of the year. Reusable bags are already the norm, and very useful outside of groceries too. I even bought some learning materials at the Chinese bookstore today (my lessons aren't as useful lately, so we're going to try Wallybee teaching me directly for a while), and they've stopped using plastic bags completely. Got a reusable bag for free.
last year when I was at Ikea, getting something for work, the lady ahead of me in checkout had a million dust collector things. The cashier rang her up, gave her the receipt, and proceeded to check me out. The lady was a bit miffed, "well, aren't you going to bag those for me?" "Bags are 5¢ each, how many would you like?" "What? They are free at other places!" "Sorry, company policy. How many would you like?" "none if i have to pay for them!" and she scooped her crap into the basket and headed for the car. I thought it was an excellent deterant to too many silly bags. Of course, silly lady doesn't realize, the bags aren't free, they are just priced into all she buys. But that's another story, I suppose. All in all, I found it very entertaining.