Yesterday I ran up to the closest grocery store, which is located in shopping center I sometimes call "the corner." I like the way it sounds, saying "I'm going up to the corner," as if I lived in an old-fashioned neighborhood where people yell out their windows and hang their laundry on the line out back.
I don't live in such a place, of course, and I don't go to the corner much anymore, either. I've switched to a discount grocery chain that saves me money but lands me in anonymous strip malls off busy suburban highways.
At one time, when the children were young, I seemed to run into friends all the time at the local supermarket. But that's been ebbing away for years, so I'd might as well drive a few more miles and save some cash.
Being back at the corner today reminds me of what I've missed, though, which is, in short, familiarity. I've been going to that grocery store as long as we've lived here. It feels homey, even though the produce is overpriced and the seafood is iffy.
For better or worse, that store — and the "corner" around it — are my town square, the closest thing I have to a meeting spot, where I rub shoulders with the people in my 'hood.
(Vale School House, which is near another corner where I live.)