*This post was difficult for me to write. It took an inordinate amount of editing to keep it somewhat light hearted. I deliberately left out some of my ‘new best friend’s’ racist comments made as I was unloading my groceries. I am trying to make light of what an outrageous twit she was but I am still burning with rage on behalf of my son, my children and disabled people every where.*
After putting it off for a month, I could no longer avoid the inevitable. The cupboards were bare. Short of having my children root for the freeze-dried remains of stale and long forgotten food at the bottom of the deep freezer in order to feed them, I had to buck up and face the music.
Specifically the well-choreographed music of cash registers beeping, children screaming and the sounds of cans falling from overly stacked displays at an over-sized food chain.
Despite my well-documented love dislike for grocery stores and food shopping, I found myself wandering the aisles of domestic hell, randomly putting food items in my cart in an effort to finish as quickly and painlessly as possible.
I pushed that shopping cart around like a team of fire-breathing demons was chasing me, singeing my butt-cheeks with their flames. I must have looked like I was trying to qualify for one of those cheesy game show competitions. Ready, set, shop!Â
After 45 minutes an eternity I had finally piled enough foodstuff, toilet paper, pet food and personal products into a small slightly lop-sided mountain and headed for the gates of hell. Also known as the check out cashiers.
With a bead of sweat slowly trickling down my neck, I stopped to peruse the freakishly long line ups and fleetingly thought of abandoning my filled cart and making an escape (sans groceries) to the nearest coffee shop. While mentally balancing how much longer I could feed stale breadcrumbs to my children before social services intervened, I quickly scratched my escape plans and randomly chose a line.
I’ve learned two things over the course of my life that served me well at that very moment in time. Adoption bureaucrats work hand-in-hand with social services and none of those bureaucratic type people have a well-developed sense of ha-ha. Forcing my children to forage for food certainly would not look good in our bid to adopt.
Secondly, it doesn’t matter which line I choose to stand in, the moment I’m in it, time freakishly stands still so every other person in the store escapes the gates of hell while I stand waiting and wishing I chose a faster line.
With a deep sigh, I pushed my cart to what seemed to be the shortest line and waited to empty out my bank account. Just then I noticed a woman stand behind me holding only two items in her hands. I’m not a demon so I turned around and offered to let her go ahead of me. I figured maybe the Gods would notice my good grocery store karma and the line through hell would move a sliver faster.
The woman, an overly bleached blonde in a suede brown jacket thanked me kindly and moved ahead of me. Smiling at me, she eyed my cart, noticed my pathetic expression and decided to try and distract me from the woes of waiting.
Because nothing makes a social recluse such as myself, more comfortable than being forced into small talk with a random stranger while waiting to empty out one’s pockets.
We briefly chatted over the absurdity of how busy the store was and how long the lines up were. We discussed global warming Angelina Jolie and American politics the weather as we sprouted more gray hair and slowly morphed into aged old women waiting for the line to move.
Eventually our line moved ahead enough that I was able to start unloading my vast array of goods onto the conveyor belt as she stood there and ogled every. single. item I pulled out of my cart. While she didn’t actually verbalize her thoughts, with every item she saw me place on the belt I could hear her silent critisms.
“Honey nut Cheerios? Why doesn’t she just pour refined white sugar down her throat instead?”
“No name canned tomatoes? Poor thing, she must be one step away from standing in line at the food bank.”
Finally my over-processed blonde friend got bored with snooping through my purchases and took her laser beam gaze to running it up and down my person instead. I could feel her check out the size of my ass when I bent over to get the toilet paper from underneath the cart.
I saw her check out my wedding ring in an obvious attempt to gauge my social status and wealth. Her eyes traveled to my coat, probably looking for missing buttons or stains and she stopped once she saw my footwear.
I love it when people try and pigeon hole another person based strictly on their grocery store purchases and appearance. It’s as if someone could learn something about me based on the fact I wear scuffed cowboy boots and have a preference for oversized bottles of personal lubrication.
Oh wait. Nevermind.
We were getting closer to the holy grail cash register when our cashier called a price check. Within a matter of seconds a brunette male employee rolled his wheelchair over, whispered in the cashier’s ear and then rolled away as she resumed whipping things across the scanner as we waited for our turn at bat.
My new best friend stared in horror at the obviously disabled young man working in his wheel chair and leaned closer to me and whispered, “That’s why I stopped after having two healthy children. I couldn’t imagine raising a disabled child. What kind of quality of life does that man have? Sentenced to work in a grocery store for the rest of his life.”
Ya. Because the abled bodied people choose to work at the grocery store but the big bad world knocks on disabled people’s doors, holds a gun to their head and says “Work at Walmart or else.”
I looked at my new best friend and thought, “I have two choices here Tanis. I can educate this woman or pretend I no speaka no inglish and just ignore her.”
It didn’t take long for me to decide which road to take. As per usual, it wasn’t the high road.
Bristling, I looked her square in the eyes and raised my voice slightly. “I have a handicapped son and the quality of his life far exceeds what your limited imagination can conceive.”
To be fair, my new best friend blushed to her freshly bleached roots. But then she apologized to me.
“I’m so sorry. How horrible for you,” she stammered.
It was all I could do not to smack her. But visions of me behind bars while wearing an orange jumpsuit flashed before my eyes, persuading me to go in a different direction.
“It’s not horrible. Quite the opposite. It is different than raising an able-bodied child. But different is wonderful too. And that man in the wheel chair would probably run you down with his chair in the parking lot for thinking his life was less than yours. That it was horrible for his family. For him. Just so you know,” I scolded.
She stood at the cashier, as her items were being scanned and she eyed the man in question and then turned back to me.
“It’s not that I have anything against disabilities,” she assured me as she handed over her cash to beat a hasty retreat from my death glare and that of the cashier who had overheard our entire conversation.
“We adopted a dog from the S.P.C.A. We picked a three-legged dog who was blind in one eye. He was a good dog,” she smiled at us as she grabbed her bag, her receipt and practically ran for the exit.
I just stood there with my jaw on the floor, shocked with disbelief she just compared a disabled mutt to my son, that store employee and any other person with a disability.
The cashier looked at me and rolled her eyes towards my now fleeing new best friend and mocked, “That woman was horrible.”
Shaking my head, I had to agree with her.
“That man,” she continued, “is my brother. And he works part-time here to pay for his university. Stupid people.”
Sing it sister.
I’m hearing you and beating on that drum right beside you.









Chrissi
Powerful.
Hopefully, she will think before she opens her mouth next time.
From a Momma who has dealt with similar issues- you are amazing. I do hope she will take this little bit of education and turn around her nastiness.
Dani
Actually you did take the high road. I think the wrong would have been to not educate her. Hopefully her mind is now not so small as it was. Cos it was pretty darn small.
Angella
Another reason to love you, Tanis. Good for you for setting her straight.
What an idiot.
deb
Thank you for standing up for disabled people everyone Tanis. Katie has a wonderful life and I’m not sad that she’s disabled. It was hard at first but I’ve come to see how amazing and strong she is. My Katie girl rocks.
Stacy
Neil commented earlier wondering if you may have exaggerated in order to enhance your story. . . hate to tell ya Neil, but people do say things this stupid! As the mom of a son with Down syndrome I have heard my fair share. You would be amazed at what some people actually say.
I think you did take the high road, otherwise you would have shamed her far more than you did!
Goldengirl
my older disabled brother, who has spent his life in a wheel chair, is currently in med school to become a surgeon. some people just don’t understand real life. thank you Tanis for this story, very inspiring. i hope i will have the strength some day to stand up to an ignorant person as you were able to.
Rhea
I’m horrified someone actually THINKS that way, much less is willing to share such thoughts with a stranger. I’m shocked, appalled and disappointed. Good for you for what you said.
Damn, now you’re really never gonna want to go to the grocery store ever again.
trickie
As a diabled person I’ve had people say similar things to my face one of the many reasons I hope to never have to work in retail ever again but as a poor university student I’m sure I won’t be so lucky
CJ
Good for you, Tanis. I raised a mentally ill child and ran into this attitude all over the place. My “defective” and “horrible” kid is now 21, living on his own, working and is a professional musician. So pooh on her.
Dorothy Stahlnecker
The world is filled with assholes, and some of them are useful..hers isn’t..How can we keep ourselves from hating more people then we like?
Well said and bless you..
Dorothy from grammology
grammology.com
Scattered Mom
I love how you handled this!
And might I add that the MAYOR of Vancouver…you know, the city that is hosting the 2010 Olympics…is in a WHEELCHAIR.
So there. Who says that disabled people have to settle for Walmart?
http://www.ccl-cca.ca/CCL/Newsroom/Profiles/PILSamSullivan.htm
I’m adding this post to my delicious bookmarks
NTE
Thank you for choosing not to be silent (then or now). I’d like to say I can’t believe that someone would say that, but I can.
Tootsie Farklepants
I’m so glad you said something! You’d have regretted it if you hadn’t. I swear, sometimes people do not have the good sense that God gave a goose.
So, are you having your groceries delivered from now on or what?
Tammy G
Fabulous! You need to go to the store more often I think who knows who you might educate. They need you Tanis. Need.You.
melissa
HI Tanis! Thanks for telling us this. Are you sure you weren’t in the US? Over here a whole bunch of people think an animals life is worth more than a humans! Shame on her. I have met and worked with more disabled children that are smarter, nicer and will go further in life than most other children. I won’t go into a rant but YOU GO GIRL!
Bush Babe
Dear Lord… poor ignorant woman. Great reply. I always think of something clever AFTER the offender has left the scene.
Her poor, poor dog!!!
BB
rich
Thanks to Five Star Friday I had the opportunity to see your wonderful post. Good for you. I don’t know what I might have said – I probably would have been struck dumb.
rich
Thanks to Five Star Friday I had the opportunity to see your wonderful post. Good for you. I don’t know what I might have said – I probably would have been struck dumb. Some people are just clueless.
Thimbelle
Found via Five Star Friday.
I am just stunned. And it took me right back to here: http://creepingtowardsnormal.blogspot.com/2005/07/i-feel-sorry-for-you.html
(sorry about the crappy linkage – it’s the middle of the night, and all of my HTML skills are either asleep, or in the kitchen eating all of the chocolate).
I would never have handled it as well as you did. Bravo!
Thim
Nancy
You. Are. Amazing.
I work in a grogery store and many of my co-workers are disabled. Some of them are in wheelchairs, some of them are deaf or mute. All of them are awsome. Everyday it burns my insides out to see cusomters treat them differently. As if a disability makes them stupid or useless.
Thank you for not only standing up to that bitch, but also for standing up in a battle that some people know nothing about.