T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
347.1 | Where do you shop? (I won't go there.) ;-) | NEXUS::CONLON | Have a nice diurnal anomaly! | Wed Jun 24 1987 10:09 | 14 |
| Hmmmm.... When you say "every person that carries a pocketbook"
-- to whom are you referring? Are you talking about men and
women who carry pocketbooks (and mean to exclude men and women
who *don't* carry pocketbooks)?
A man or a woman who carries a pocketbook is (in my experience)
generally aware of what is contained in the pocketbook (or in
the wallet, as the case may be.) Persons who attempt to purchase
goods and do *not* know the contents of their money-carrying_device
are at the very least annoying and possibly foolish.
Myself, I have not encountered this problem very often.
Suzanne... ;-)
|
347.2 | puh on shopping | CEODEV::HANLEY | Woman from A.U.N.T. | Wed Jun 24 1987 10:18 | 7 |
| i have come across this problem many times. while your standing
there waiting for the cashier to ring all the items, why don't
you try to get some money ready. Don't wait till the last minute.
shopping stinks bad enough. Lets not keep others waiting all night.
|
347.5 | a sad story of the modern age | HARRY::HIGGINS | Citizen of Atlantis | Wed Jun 24 1987 10:31 | 9 |
|
sometimes, mr faulkner, it is a two way street, with the cashier
causing the traffic jam. How many times when a purchase comes to
say...$5.02...and you hand the cashier a ten ....and they say "Have
you got the two pennies?" and watch and appear irratated as you
fumble in your purse or pockets for the elusive coinage?
of course these things never happen to me, I'm not like that...
|
347.6 | Lessons on how to shop effectively...? | NEXUS::CONLON | Have a nice diurnal anomaly! | Wed Jun 24 1987 10:32 | 28 |
| RE: .2
Remarkable how closely your style matches that of the author of the
basenote. I thought he wrote it, in fact. Hmmmm...
RE: .4
Men do *too* carry pocketbooks. Not many or all men (at least
not in the U.S.) In MENNOTES, I believe, there was a discussion
awhile back about how common it is in Europe to see men with
pocketbooks.
Well, I guess the point still remains that you worked/shopped
in the wrong places. Where *I* shop, there is an automated
check-approval machine (5 or 6 of them in a row) at the front
of the store. When you get to the cashier, the check has
already been approved so he/she wastes no time in marking it
up. While he/she rings things up, the shopper fills in the blanks
(except for final amount) and signs it. When the amount is
known, the shopper writes it in and the cashier stamps the back of it
and sends the shopper on his/her merry way. Takes very little time.
Where I shop, the vast majority of people pay their bill in
this manner (unless they are at the express line.) Myself,
I have a 6'2" teenager with a hollow leg at home, so I never
make it into the express line.
Suzanne... ;-)
|
347.7 | | MANANA::RAVAN | | Wed Jun 24 1987 10:34 | 19 |
| "One guy in ten has the money ready," but "the left-over sex is
less considerate"? I'd consider one out of ten pretty bad odds,
even if the purse-bearers (thanks for putting it that way, by the
way!) are even more lax.
I've noticed a similar syndrome, usually in supermarkets. (As the
majority of supermarket patrons are women, I can't tell from that
whether the sexes do tend to behave differently here.) Anyway, it is
certainly annoying - although not as annoying as:
o People with full carts in the express lane.
o People in the cash-only lane who discover at the last minute that
they have no cash.
o People who present an inch-thick wad of coupons *after* the clerk
has tallied two baskets full of groceries. Grrrr...
-b
|
347.9 | The money to be spent not the sex of the shopper | YAZOO::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Wed Jun 24 1987 11:08 | 8 |
| I suspect that the reason that you have only seen women performing
this sort of behavior is because....
more women than men do the family shopping
many women who do the shopping are on fixed budgets and try and
save money by couponing and watching sales.
It is not that men don't do this, but rather a much smaller percent
of them....
I think this is the response of a person on a tight budget
|
347.12 | Angle of incident | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Jun 24 1987 11:26 | 16 |
| Let's see. In his reply .4 Mr. Faulkner says:
Three guys out of ten will correct miss-rings.
Then in reply .8 he says:
[I've] never heard a man say "oh, gees you
rang up my endives at $ 1.19...they're on sale for .89 c [sic]."
So what's the difference? Easy. If it's a *man* giving a correction,
it must be right. If it's a *woman*, it can't be.
Try again. (And this time, try not to suggest that the goods were
on sale for $.0089. Any woman knows better than that.)
Ann B.
|
347.13 | Personally, I watch men shop... ;-) | NEXUS::CONLON | Have a nice diurnal anomaly! | Wed Jun 24 1987 11:28 | 22 |
| RE: .8
All this anguish in retail stores is caused because "women
are women?"
Goodness, Kerry, I surely do hope this doesn't mean that you
feel that women have inherent flaws.
RE: Bonnie
You are correct. Kerry probably notices what women do at the
stores because women are more often given the responsibility
of feeding a family on a very limited budget.
Also, I'm sure that Kerry (being the strong fan of women or
at least appearing to be somewhat obsessed with women) spends
more time looking at women than he does checking out men.
Suzanne... ;-)
P.S. RE: .10 -- I do agree, Kerry, that in your case -- less
is better. ;-)
|
347.15 | You were correct about the superior nature of her note, tho.. | NEXUS::CONLON | Have a nice diurnal anomaly! | Wed Jun 24 1987 12:00 | 15 |
| RE: .14
The note I read from Ann did not scream anything (and certainly
not "Sexist!!!")
Please try to keep your comments on what has actually been
written and not what you think you heard yelled out from down
the hall (by any one of hundreds of people who work in your
building.)
Also, please resist the urge to be clairvoyant. There is another
conference for that. (DEJAVU)
Suzanne... ;-)
|
347.17 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Wed Jun 24 1987 12:25 | 6 |
| { A Message From The Moderator }
A little less heat and a little more light maybe, folks? Or is
this the designated Catharsis Note this month? <--(serious question)
=maggie
|
347.18 | time waster, which arguing with Kerry is | ULTRA::GUGEL | Spring is for rock-climbing | Wed Jun 24 1987 12:48 | 5 |
| re -1:
I thought this was titled corrrectly as to the type of note it is.
-Ellen
|
347.19 | | CALLME::MR_TOPAZ | | Wed Jun 24 1987 13:02 | 11 |
| It would seem that Mr Faulkner omitted any discussion about the
"person" who, having elected to pay by check, holds up the line for an
outrageous length of time, laboriously penning the information on the
check, then going through the complex mental gyrations needed to
subtract $30.00 from the current balance of $86.77.
Is Mr Faulkner willing to admit that this omission is due to his
absent-mindedness and failure to tend to details, of which both are
well-known male traits?
--Mr Topaz
|
347.21 | Why do you keep coming back here if you hate us so much? | NEXUS::CONLON | Have a nice diurnal anomaly! | Wed Jun 24 1987 13:23 | 23 |
| RE: .20
Honestly, Kerry, if you think that it's all such a waste
of time to note in here, then why do you bother? (Bother
*IS* the operative word here, I might add.)
You write notes and then challenge us to respond a certain
way (then criticize us whether we do or don't.)
Suggestion -- the next time you write a note and expect
people to respond, tell us precisely what you want us to
say (word for word.) We'll extract it and sign it. Better
yet, we'll just sign it with a mass name that includes all
women.
Do you want us to say that you are a God and that women are
all cretins (or at least every woman who doesn't imitate
your writing style and kiss your feet after every word
you utter?)
Is that what it will take to make you happy?
Suzanne... ;-)
|
347.23 | Oh! You wanted a precision response to it! | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Jun 24 1987 13:28 | 12 |
| Okay. I'll tell you. I don't do that. My wallet is out, and
either my check is mostly filled out, or I have a good shot at
exact change in my hand. Women I have shopped with are similar
in their behavior. Many men in front of me at check-out counters
are slow to pull out their wallets and slow to select which bills
they are going to use to pay with.
Side note: When I am in a bank, and there are multiple lines to
choose from, I choose the line with the highest percentage of women
in it. I find that such a line moves fastest.
Ann B.
|
347.25 | One more try... | XANADU::RAVAN | | Wed Jun 24 1987 13:39 | 38 |
| OK. Mr. Faulkner's premise appears to be that, in his experience,
women tend to be "time wasters" at the checkout line much more often
than men. [Do I have the gist of it, Kerry?]
Now, since the base note was expressed in a civil tone and, by using
"purse bearers" rather than "women," seemed to convey a more
light-hearted note than some of Mr. F's previous efforts, I thought
it worth a response. However, now that it has sparked a discussion,
Mr. F. appears to be reverting to his old habits.
Kerry, why does it bother you when someone actually reacts to a topic
of yours? Did you only want to hear "yes, you're right" replies - even
if other peoples' experience differs? I'm honestly puzzled by your
tendency to tell people (including me, on at least one occasion) that
they must be lying when they are simply recounting their own
experience. I don't understand your apparent anger when someone
suggests alternate causes for behaviour you've observed, and I must
point out that if I say "I have never seen people do thus-and-such" and
you say, "You're a liar," I'm not going to want to discuss things
further.
As for the time-wasters I mentioned in .7, the coupon-holder was
indeed a woman - but was she discourteous because she was female,
or just because she was an asshole? The no-cash-in-the-cash-lane
individual happened to be a man, who not only had no cash but then
tried to bully the clerk into accepting an out-of-state check with
no check-cashing card... Was he rude and overbearing because he
was male, or because he was an asshole?
Or were both of those people just having very bad days on those
particular occasions?
It may in fact be true that the majority of women shoppers are more
rude and thoughtless than men shoppers, but I can't confirm - or
deny - that from my own experience. I try to be courteous myself,
and that's as much control as I have over the situation.
-b
|
347.29 | 100 years from now, what will it matter? | NEXUS::CONLON | Have a nice diurnal anomaly! | Wed Jun 24 1987 21:14 | 40 |
| Additional helpful hints:
To anyone of either sex -- the supermarket is not a great
place to go if you are extremely pressed for time. A trip
to the supermarket is an exercise in manual control of one's
bloodpressure (even if you have all day.) If you are in a
big hurry, you've already lost the game (before you ever
walked through the door.)
It's absurd to blame women for the fact that food-shopping
is not fun. If anything, we should get the most sympathy
because we spend more time in hell-hole foodermarkets than
anyone. ;-) It's not the people who do the shopping that
are to blame. We didn't design the aisles versus the width of
the shopping carts (nor did we decide how many cashier stations
to set up on a busy Saturday.)
Carrying the groceries up from the garage and putting them all
away is not a barrel of laughs either. It rates higher than
root-canal work, but just barely.
Once you accept the fact that grocery-shopping is one the
necessary evils for people who eat at home -- go into the market
with a big smile on your face expecting the worst (but knowing
that it's just one of life's little pains and is no reason to
wage full-scale war on people who are just as miserable in there
as you are.) ;-)
Also, if you do get tied up in a line -- read all their magazines,
or balance your checkbook, or listen to your walkman, or blow
into your SO's ear.
If someone in front of you happens to spill a little change
into the bottom of her purse and has to dig for a minute --
don't have a coronary.
Life is just way, way too short to get upset about such little
unavoidable annoyances.
Suzanne... ;-)
|
347.30 | | FAUXPA::ENO | Section III, Journey & Flight, Chapter 6 | Thu Jun 25 1987 09:44 | 6 |
| For goodness sake, is *EVERYONE* in such a terrible hurry? No matter
how dismally dim and slow the person in front of you at the checkout
line is, the five minutes delay is not a major event in *my* life.
You get ulcers if you care about the small sh*t that much!
Gloria
|
347.31 | :) :) :) :) :) | DEBIT::RANDALL | I'm no lady | Thu Jun 25 1987 09:51 | 9 |
| Well, the reason I'm usually in such a hurry to get through the grocery
store checkout line is that it's a real challenge to keep my 3-year-old
out of the candy they so graciously line the checkout area with! Of
course he's also the most common reason I'm guilty of the behaviour
Kerry complained about originally -- it's hard to get your money out
while you're trying to keep a toddler out from under the wheels of the
next carriage.
--bonnie
|
347.33 | he's a cute kid, bonnie | HARRY::HIGGINS | Citizen of Atlantis | Thu Jun 25 1987 12:18 | 4 |
|
...and a muzzle
|
347.34 | sigh | YAZOO::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Thu Jun 25 1987 12:45 | 2 |
| re 347.32 'leash'
that is a whole another controversial subject (see parenting) :-)
|
347.35 | more peeves, regardless of gender | LEZAH::BOBBITT | Festina Lente - Hasten Slowly | Thu Jun 25 1987 14:31 | 39 |
| Just to register my opinion - I believe that gender has nothing to do
with the degree of twitliness many people display in supermarkets.
Some things occurred to me that I'd care to mention:
One peeve I have about stores is that often related
food items are placed extremely far from each other. Also,
Marshmallows, often used in cooking - are suddenly in candy.
Some sodas are in the soda aisle - some are at the end of the fruit
aisle (is it artificial or natural?) - granola and sugar-fruit rollups
are sweeter'n candy, but put with breakfast cereals. Ethnic main
dishes are far away from the spagghettio's (so you'd better remember
what they have where if you want any variety). Yoghurt is in a
case by itself 50 feet away from other dairy products. Raisins
are not with fruit. Specials are not with like foods - they've
wandered off somewhere to grab the attention of those who are perusing
the meat counter. The signs they hang at the end of each aisle
are sometimes helpful - but sometimes "cosmetics" means "cosmetics,
cleansers, drugs, vitamins, and toiletries", or "juice" fails to
include anything powdered, concentrated, cartoned, or frozen.
"international foods" that fall into almost every category are put
in the aisle with pickles and diet versions of every food known to man.
And then there's the lady with three screaming children who's rushing
through like a chicken with her head cut off (which i can understand),
trying to wait patiently while the gentleman in front of her tries
to explain to the clerk that he really doesn't have 22 items when
he should have 12, "Consider all the stuff from the baking/dairy
aisle to be a cake."
And how often do people pull out of parking places at the speed
of light when you're trying to put your groceries in the trunk.
And how many times has the only parking places in
the row been filled with carts at random angles.
and so on - ad nauseum.....I'll be glad when I get my act together
enough to devote an hour or two at some point during the weekend
to get ALL my shopping done for the week (or two!)
-Jody
|
347.38 | | STUBBI::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Thu Jun 25 1987 22:10 | 1 |
| thanks eagle
|
347.39 | | TSG::BRADY | Bob Brady, TSG, LMO4-1/K4, 296-5396 | Fri Jun 26 1987 18:39 | 28 |
| RE: .36
The scattered distribution of related items in supermarkets
is no accident; neither is the biweekly or monthly rearrangement. Both are
deliberate "retailing techniques" designed to maximize the number of products
one must walk by while in the store. The rearrangement stunt is recent,
caught on big within the last ten years. Probably started getting taught
in Food Retailing 101...
As for the candy-at-the-checkout ploy, its originator should be...
well, some stores have actually begun to sport no-candy checkouts, though.
BTW, while we're on the sex-differences-in-the-supermarket theme,
I avoid *male* cashiers and *bagpackers* like the *plague* particularly
of the teenaged vintage. The sex-difference here is substantial and the
females are *way* ahead for the most part. The guys think it's a proof
of manliness to get a month's canned goods into one bag...along with
the strawberries, of course.
My other data point on this topic is the local ice-cream stand.
Walk up to any of the gals, order four different cones, she comes back
with the four and the total price. With the guy, order four, he walks away,
comes back with the first, "...and what else did you want"? List the
remaining three, get one more, "...and those last two were "? Every time!
Oh, and of course, by the time he brings the last one, I've distributed
the first three out of his sight to my eager party and must replay the
list one more time for a pricing...maybe the guys are all future SW
engineers practicing the recursive approach :-) :-) ...
|
347.40 | On generalizing... | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Mon Jun 29 1987 09:27 | 40 |
| I'm catching up with Womannotes after being away at training, so
I just read the remaining replies from #1-#39 all at once.
Maggie asked us to try to generate a little more light than heat.
As I read through the notes it seemed very clear that what generates
heat is *making generalizations*.
Person A can say "It really bugs me that some women tie up supermarket
lines while digging for coins and restraining toddlers". Since
'some' is the operational word here, most people will nod their
heads in agreement. Women who do not do this, have never done this,
and never plan to do this will not be offended. Someone may calmly
add that some men do this as well.
Person B can say "I hate it. Women do this. Women do that. Women
are ... " and the conference bursts into flames.
(Kerry, I wish you would consider switching from Person B style to
person A style unless there is a factual basis for generalizing.
I would enjoy reading your notes and responding to them if you would
temper your observations with "some", "many", "all of the women
in front of me last Saturday" or whatever.)
Some people deliberately generalize to provoke a reaction from others.
The ensuing argument gets very emotional because the provoker can
always find one example to support her/his point, and the reactor
can always find one example to refute her/his point. (Of course!)
If notes contain blatant generalizations, I think it would be within
the scope of this conference to identify that instead of reacting
to them. I don't think that an argument based on generalizations
can be won or lost--I think it is much more important to step back
from it and identify why it makes people so angry. Generalizations
are one way that women have traditionally been kept "in their place".
One of the first things we did in some of the early consciousness
raising groups was to learn to speak for ourselves and stop
generalizing.
Holly
|
347.41 | why not take your time?? | RHODES::QUIROGA | | Mon Jun 29 1987 14:23 | 13 |
|
re. to 0
Why shouldn't I wait for the clerk to tell how much I owe??
can you read peoples' minds ??
Sick and tired of attitudes like yours, don't take everybody for
granted!!!
ART.
|