It’s strange to be nostalgic about a grocery store. But there it is.
In the lobby were quarter machines. In exchange for coins I’d dig from couch cushions and mom from the bowels of her purse,
I’d watch colorful gumballs spiral down a slide and tumble through the open hatch into my awaiting palm, and another with wax figures which I collected.
Inside to the left past the magic sliding glass doors was a DVD rental section. Rows and rows of movies I’d peruse looking for something to watch on a school night.
Across from that were the magazine and candy aisles with various furniture—tables and couches and chairs and sofas— spread out in the middle. I would
read skateboard magazines beating my short legs against the static incline of a sofa chair and one time a lady watched me placidly reading on a comfy chair from the security cam and thought I was reading something pornographic and told my mom at the register.
At the register, mom would let me get Archie comics and bubble gum—
One time when I was five I stole a pack of Fruit Stripe gum. In the mini-van I revealed my sin to mom and she had me (alone) walk back into the store and hand it back to the cashier, apologizing for my grand theft.
When my dad would take me to the grocery store he would like to play games.
He once took an egg out of the carton and tossed it to me down the aisle. Too scared to catch, I let it fall to my feet with a wet crack spilling egg all over the gleaming porcelain.
He grabbed soda bottles and junk food from the shelves and consumed them then and there, handing the cashier the empty containers.
There was a coffee shop inside the grocery store he would stop by every morning. Some Saturdays he would wrench me from my cartoons and take me with him and I would play the 25 cent slot machines while he got his venti mocha latte.
Once I had a nightmare I walked into the parking lot and couldn’t find my dad. I called and called for him but couldn’t find him anywhere. Suddenly his voice boomed at me from the clouds.
In a thunderous yet soothing voice of one who has passed on to nirvana, he said I would be okay, and to take care of my mother and my little brother and sister. I cried and cried out to him, searching for his earthly body in the grocery store parking lot.
I woke up in my parents’ waterbed choking on my tears; dad ran out of the bathroom mid- shave to his side of the bed where I slept and I threw my arms around his neck.
Years, and a decade later, I drove my fiancé through the old town I was raised in and told her stories of the pawn shop, gas station, video rental, Mexican restaurant, and grocery store.
With the video rental now a tire station, and the mom and pops in chains, we drove by the old grocery store standing tall and proud still as colossal as I remembered.
As the memories flowed from my heart to my lungs babbling from the driver’s seat, that old grocery store I gave my time and quarters to carried a greater weight than I ever thought grocery shopping on Saturday mornings and Sunday afternoons could ever have.