I was a Florida resident for just 18 days before I was rushed to the ER with septicemia. I am the family cook and grocery shopper. I barely had a chance to do either before my system shut down and I spent four weeks at AdventHealth Daytona. I did shop once at Publix in Ormond-by-the-Sea but mainly, during the turmoil of moving cross-country, we had a lot of food delivered. My wife fended for herself during my hospitalization with the help of family and friends. I awoke from a medically-induced coma after five days and was put on a restrictive diet due to the after-effects of sepsis and my chronic cardiac condition. My orders to the hospital cafeteria hotline were filled with “you can’t have that” and “no.”
The food I did get was tasteless mainly because it was without taste and the meds I was taking robbed me of my taste buds. I know this because once I could order a hamburger, I did. “Your brother and I had them for lunch and they were tasty.” I tried it. Tasted like cardboard. I hadn’t eaten any cardboard in a long time but that was what the food tasted like had I sampled cardboard in the past. Only once did I cheat. My sister-in-law brought me dumplings from the favorite bistro and I got a shot of salt and Asian spices. Yum. But I was caught cheating and nurses read me the riot act.
I
started dreaming about Publix. You know that TV ad where a beautiful young woman
flies across the store on a grocery cart triggering the lights in the frozen
food section while “Bitter Sweet Symphony” by The Verve swells? (you can see
the long version on YouTube). I didn’t have that dream. My subconscious put me
in my bed which was transformed into a car and I drove to every Publix in town
which are legion. I told that dream to the morning’s first wave of med staff
and they thought it was funny. A nurse looked up my diet. “I’d dream about
Publix too if I had to eat hospital cardboard.” She didn’t say that part about
cardboard but she appreciated my dreams.
After
my October 4 release, I received daily in-home care for more than a month. Nurses
tracked my ingoing and outgoing. PT helped me exercise. I ate simple meals , shopping
done by my wife Chris. She can shop and cook. As for shopping, where I enter
the store door, I hear a symphony playing. But Chris is assaulted by the sights
and sounds I so enjoy. She has a solid case of ADHD and she limits herself to a
few items and is out ASAP. Her cooking skills are limited due to nobody, not
her mother or sister or teachers, had the patience to teach a left-handed
hyper-kid how to put a meal together. I was the oldest of nine and often cooked
for my siblings. I cooked when I was a college student and served food at various
fast-food joints. Now I cook for my family. Chris, bless her, likes to clean. We’ve
been married now for 43 years.
This
brings me to the issue of affordability. Three weeks ago, I shopped at Publix
with my adult son who is living with us. He has ADHD but it is a different
strain from his mother’s. He is an amazing shopper. He can look at my
handwritten grocery list, disappear into the aisles, and return with our
heavier and bulkier items such as toilet paper, multi-packs of Kleenex, Diet
Coke twelve-packs, kitty litter, laundry detergent. I will be puttering around
the store in my e-scooter with a few BOGO items, a rotisserie chicken, a packet
of deli chicken slices. “What else?” Kevin says.
This
leads to a quandary. I don’t mind spending two hours in a grocery store. Kevin
thinks a half-hour is way too long. This leads to a question: Should I have
Chris drop me off and return when summoned later in the day? Or should I snag Kevin
and go team-shopping?
Publix
is like Disney World to me, a carnival of foodstuffs. I’m in those
TV ads. At least I was until last month when the shopping bill went over five
hundred dollars. That’s 10 days of food for three, sometimes four (daughter Annie
drops in for an occasional meal). I have never spent that much on one grocery
trip. There were many times in my life when I clipped coupons to afford the basics at Albertson's or Safeway for a family of four. I joined shoppers who clicked on their coupons and had
the store computer ring up the savings. I would get to the receipt’s final line
and boast, “I saved 75 dollars." "I saved 101 dollars.”
I
save money at Publix with the BOGO items. Sometimes I get BOGO items just to
get BOGO items which will add to the savings line.
Ormond
Beach old-timers offer advice. Shop at Wal-Mart. Yes, I know, but it’s Wal-Mart
and the Walton family supports Trump and right-wing kooks and yes, I know that
one of the sisters has opened an incredible art museum. My sister Mo is a
CostCo fan. She talks up the place all the time even though her three children
have flown the nest and she shops for just two. She is the only person I know
with a CostCo puzzle. She brought it to me in the hospital. It has a million pieces
and I barely completed the CostCo hot-dog stand before I gave up. Mo and her
husband Ralph took me for an initial foray into CostCo Daytona. The
front-of-store display was a massive 100-inch television for an incredible
price. I later saw a young man pushing one in a cart across the parking lot. I
was entranced by the bakery section. They make their own bagels! Multi-packs of
cookies still warm from the oven! Pies the size of 1955 Buick hubcaps (remember
them?)! I signed up right away and got a 20 dollar discount on the joining fee.
I could go out there right now and pay one dollar and 50 cents for a gourmet
hot dog with all the fixins and a soda.
We
conducted our Thanksgiving shopping at Wal-Mart. Yes, Wal-Mart. I brought Kevin
with me as a defense mechanism to thwart the pre-holiday crowds and the sheer
size of the place. It wasn’t glorious. I saw no pretty young women soaring on
winged carts sailing through the frozen food aisle to “Bittersweet Symphony’s”
opening violins. I did see a pair of youngsters shouting “Marco” while their
mom yelled at them and then came the distant response of “Polo!” I asked Kevin
if that was “a thing” and he replied “Sure.” We bought Great Value products
(breakfast bars, pasta, ice cream) and spent a tad over four hundred dollars and
I was tempted to remove enough items to go into 300-something but did not. The
checker had already yelled “This register is closed” at the poor people behind
me. I kept out my receipt as we made it out as that is demanded at Wal-Mart,
checking the receipt against the items in your cart. Can’t be too careful
during this “fake affordability” crisis.
Cue
“Bitter Sweet Symphony,” the Publix ad not the original video which is kind of
creepy. The song’s opening lines: “ ‘Cause it’s a bitter sweet symphony, this
life/Trying to make ends meet/You’re a slave to money, then you die.”