By Jody
Worsham
All rights reserved
for First Aid
I am what
you call a Wal-Mart frequent shopper/walker.
My face appears on their security tape entering and leaving their store
more often than anyone in town. It is
not that I am an avid shopper; it’s just that I find myself with many separate
hours to kill while I wait for ballet lessons, violin lessons, Boy Scouts,
basketball or whatever to be over. Because
of this, I am acutely aware of their clearance aisles and their ever changing rotation
and migration of merchandise and have a closet similar to a Wal-Mart warehouse.
At
Christmas, not trusting anyone over four feet five inches, the eight-year-old
had me put his many Wal-Mart gift cards in the safe. This served a dual purpose. It prevented
impulse buying on his part, and I could see which defective toys made it back
to the return counter at Wal-Mart after Christmas. On one of my recent walking tours, I noticed
all the Christmas junk toys were gone, and the good stuff like Legos, were now
being marked down. Time to retrieve the
boy and the gift cards.
As the
Wal-Mart greeter called me by name, we headed for the toy aisle. As usual, the clearance Legos were Legos no
one wanted. The eight-year-old headed straight
for the good stuff. When he showed me
the box, three things immediately jumped out at me, first the price. When did a toy cost as much a mid-size
compact? Second, how can 512 Legos fit
into such a small package? And third,
why was a grenade wired to the box?
I had promised myself that I would bite my tongue before I said anything negative about his selection. It was his money, his choice, his Lego. With my teeth clamped tightly on my tongue, he put his selection in the shopping cart. Why is it that every Wal-Mart has at least one cart with a wheel that is locked, lopsided, or lists to the left and I always end up with that one? We lurched toward the checkout stand with the loaded Legos.
As the cashier scanned and removed the detonating device from the Lego box, the eight-year-old pulled out his gift cards. Card number one had either been next to my cell phone or had been used and forgotten because it was blank. I bite my tongue. Card number two was ok as was card three and four and my tongue began to swell. Card number five was for McDonald’s and so could not be used to purchase Legos, and card number six completed the purchase with $5.22 to spare.
“What’s the matter Mom? Are you crying?”
“No, just
bit my tongue.”
Next week,
The Lego Wars
5 comments:
Good for the little fellow banking his gift cards! How awful Legos cost so much.
I turned in my PT Cruiser at 130,00 miles of kids when it needed its third in a short row thousand dollar repair. I bought a new car with 15,0000 in August; it at 23,000 since then.
My grandson used to give me his Christmas list so I could see what to get him for Christmas. The list always included a few Leggo sets. Most of them cost $100+. Then I would watch him put them together in less than an hour, never to be played with again. It made me ill.
Got to love those gift cards! My grandson had one from Amazon, but we couldn't read the last letter/digit/symbol? In the end I had to use my Amazon points.
Thanks for the comments.Legos used to be much much bigger and they used to be cheaper. Anybody remember building things with left over scrap lumber?
Jody, So proud of your son for stashing his gift cards. Toy costs cause heart palpitations.
My oldest great-grand is currently into Transformers, another bottomless pit. I keep a stash of polystyrene packing blocks around for various construction projects and racing ramps. When one gets broken it goes into the trash.
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