Wednesday was not one of my better days. I almost never go shopping because I do most of my purchasing online now, but, on Wednesday, it was time for Grandpère and me to make a trip to the nearby larger town. First we went to cancel the internet service for our laptop at the phone store, because I was not successful either by phone or online in cancelling the service. We learned to our dismay that our contract did not run out till September, so we'll be charged $90 to cancel. Still, even with the cost of cancellation and the cost of a router at $100, we'll save money in the long run, plus we'll have better service through our cable provider.
Our next stop was the electronics store to buy a flat screen TV for me. Grandpère recently purchased a new flat screen, and, after several months of comparing the quality of the displays, I decided to ditch the old clunky set for a flat screen. (No, we mostly do not watch TV together.) The prices of flat screens are surprisingly low, so why not? The purchase went without a hitch. Thank goodness.
On to lunch at a restaurant that offers an Italian buffet, with a discount for seniors, which Grandpère welcomed after all the money we had already spent that day After lunch, we went to the large chain bookstore nearby. I have a discount card for the chain, and I stayed in Grandpère's truck to look for the card. He locked the truck, and went on into the store. When I tried to get out, I could not. The doors were locked and I couldn't open them. I tried and tried with no luck, so there I was trapped in the truck. I thought to myself "This is not possible. Suppose the truck catches on fire." I thought Grandpère would miss me and come to look for me, but he didn't. He thought I was somewhere in the big store.
We both have cell phones, but Grandpère doesn't carry his with him, and, even when he does, he only turns it on when he wants to call someone. If he'd carry his phone and turn it on, life would be so much less stressful for both of us in so many ways.
What to do? I looked up the phone number of the bookstore and called and told the person who answered of my plight and gave her Grandpère's description and asked her to look for him and tell him to come let me out. I waited and waited, and Grandpère never came, so I called back. The woman said she had called for him, but no one came, and she was the only person working in that very large bookstore, and she could not leave the checkout counter to look for him. I sat for maybe half an hour, and finally a man parked nearby, and I waved to him and began to shout through the locked windows to ask if he was going into the store. He said yes, so I shouted Grandpère's description and asked him if he saw him to tell him to come unlock the truck. He found him, and I was rescued. I wasn't in any mood to look at books, so we checked out Grandpère's book with my discount card, which caused all the trouble, and left.
The next stop (If we're going to shop, we try to do it all in one day.) was a home decorating store to buy curly maple branches to put in two vases in the living room. Another easy success, and the branches have a nice minimalist look about them that I think is quite attractive, though I doubt everyone will agree.
When Grandpère told my son about my getting locked in the truck, he said it was impossible to be locked in a vehicle. He came to our house later to check out the situation, and he was right. There is a lock inside the truck that works without the key. The problem was that neither Grandpère nor I knew where the lock was. Now we know.
End of shopping but not end of bad day and whine. More whine to come!
Showing posts with label shopping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shopping. Show all posts
Friday, March 14, 2014
Saturday, November 27, 2010
WHERE I WAS NOT ON BLACK FRIDAY
From the Baton Rouge Advocate:
They were packed onto escalators and in food courts. Others had endured pre-dawn hours standing in line.
Whitney Cooper, 29, was slumped on the floor at the Mall of Louisiana eating lunch with her 6-year-old son, Rayne.
“I was not expecting to be sitting on the floor eating Chick-fil-A,” Cooper said. All of the seats in the nearby food court were taken. So this mother and son joined dozens of other shoppers at this pinnacle of Baton Rouge shopping venues and had lunch, exchanged shopping stories and just generally people-watched from knee-height.
....
On the other side of town, Toys R Us bore all the signs of a serious play date, the aisles littered with toys and the occasional screaming child.
“I was surprised at how cleared out the shelves are,” said Larry Bezet, who was standing in the checkout line with his 4-year-old son, Nicolas. Their shopping cart was loaded with an Imaginarium track system for toy cars and a Crayola digital camera for kids.
....
Across the street a banner in front of The Compact Disk Store advertised 30 percent off.
“I call it the Black Friday super surreal sale,” said Chris Lott, 26, a self-described “music specialist.”
Lott’s “surreal” description was not too far off the mark. Because unfortunately, these discounts had nothing to do with the day after Thanksgiving or even with Christmas. After 26 years, this venerable Baton Rouge music lovers’ institution will soon close its doors. A casualty of iTunes and Amazon, Lott lamented.
The title of my post is not entirely accurate, because I visited a local jewelry store which is going out of business. My one shopping stop was stress-free, except for my wallet and my grandson who was with me and didn't want to be there at all. I found a white gold necklace and earrings (not matching) for incredible prices, so I bought them as Christmas presents from me to me. The reason for the low prices is because a good many folks don't much care for white gold, since it may be mistaken for the lesser sterling, and others will not know that you wear GOLD. However, I like white gold, and I benefited because of its lack of popularity.
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