Have you ever been shopping and spotted something that you
knew would change your life if you could just take that item home? And, no, I’m
not still talking about the bench-sitting guy at the front of the grocery
store. I’m talking about a product. A new product---well, new to me at least.
I’m talking about Weber Beer Can Chicken Seasoning for “grilling enthusiasts.”
Oh, my! I don’t know why it was love at first sight. I don’t drink beer and I
gave away my outdoor grill a month ago, but having a spice to give a “robust punch” to the
chicken I rarely cook---well, like I said, I just knew my life would be perfect
if that bottle of spices jumped into my shopping cart. Maybe it was the design
of the cap that makes it easy for arthritic or clumsy hands to open that made
me fall in love. I like good package designs. Whatever the reason, $1.89 for a few minutes of entertainment in a grocery aisle is pretty cheap.
Shopping is sure different without Don. I’ve had eleven
months, now, to get used to shopping in the Widowhood Village grocery store
compared to twelve years of shopping in Caregiverville. Anyone who’s done that
knows you don’t have time to read labels and fall in love with products with
handy little tops while shopping in Caregiverville. Nope. It was hurry up so I
didn’t have leave Don too long at the front of the store, sitting in his
wheelchair next to the bench were the man in red was perched today---the
wife-waiting department. Don would drink Starbucks, people watch and thoroughly
enjoy both and I’d have to get my shopping done before he needed a trip to the
bathroom which he couldn’t do on his own. Flossie and Fred in the handicapped bathroom
stall---if you don’t catch the dark humor in that reference you’ve never read The Bobbsey Twins in a Radio Play or The Bobbsey Twins in the Mystery Cave or
any of the other 135 books in one of the longest running children’s series ever
written.
Flossie and Fred Bobbsey and the other set of twins in the
family, Bert and Nan, will go on forever. Too bad life
doesn’t follow the same path as fiction. When Don and I was doing our Bobbsey
Twins routine, though, one thing could have been written in stone. Don would
have enjoyed seeing the guy on the wife-waiting bench checking me out. He would
have thought that man had good taste no matter how gray and old I look. I miss
being loved like that. ©