Shopping Local
Let empty boxes collect at curbsides, let the men in brown dash from truck to stoop. But last-minute shoppers unwilling to pay for overnight shipping (or maybe just people like me, who enjoy a bit of the hustle bustle) were out full force yesterday at the mall.
It felt good to be jostling with other shoppers, to be part of the public square. I've been worrying about the public square lately, wondering if its day has passed. Many of the young folks I know shop solely online, and recent forays to the mall have only confirmed the threatened condition of old-time getting and spending.
But yesterday drew out the folks who only shop this time of year: dazed men wandering with shopping bags; the very young and the very old; working folk who seem more at home behind a desk than checking out spatulas in Williams and Sonoma; parents jostling toddlers in the line to see Santa.
All of this in a glorious cacophony of squeaking toys, shouting kids and the nth rendition of "I Saw Mama Kissing Santa Claus."
I didn't have to go to the mall yesterday; I was buying a few extra gifts that everyone could live without. But I'm glad I came.
It felt good to be jostling with other shoppers, to be part of the public square. I've been worrying about the public square lately, wondering if its day has passed. Many of the young folks I know shop solely online, and recent forays to the mall have only confirmed the threatened condition of old-time getting and spending.
All of this in a glorious cacophony of squeaking toys, shouting kids and the nth rendition of "I Saw Mama Kissing Santa Claus."
I didn't have to go to the mall yesterday; I was buying a few extra gifts that everyone could live without. But I'm glad I came.
Labels: holidays
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