The New Zealand Herald

Dystopian checkout ordeal not my bag

Trade-off for axing single-use plastic is an auto-teller nightmare

- Jake Bailey

Ithrew all of my spare change into any water-holding vessel I could find. I hunted down every chicken in the land and broke its bone. I rubbed the lamp furiously, in the most literal and least metaphoric­al sense possible, to summon the genie. I scoured the skies above for a shooting star. I blew every dandelion, every candle, until my chest pulsated in the desperate search for more air. And once I had gathered all of my luck, prepared all of my wishes to be used, gritted and bared my teeth, squinted my eyes until my ears rang, and crossed my fingers, I did it. I longed, I craved, I yearned, I dreamt of, I pined for, and I wished for — a receipt.

The automated supermarke­t checkout lady, who had only moments prior been haranguing me on placing unexpected items in the bagging area, has now melted to a sickly-sweet puddle of maple syrup. “Do you wish to print a receipt?” she queries thoughtful­ly, in the tone of a receptioni­st at a day spa, inquiring on whether you would prefer a foot massage or a face massage, even though they can barely tell the two

ends of you apart. No, I wish that I did not have to bag my groceries with wildly exaggerate­d movements, as though I’m trying to entertain a toddler, in order to stop you from telling me off.

I wish I didn’t have to enlist the physical equivalent of how you sloooow down your words, and take loooong pauses, and speak loudly, when you’re trying to ... speak to someone who ... doesn’t speak very good English, just to bag up my dinner.

Actually, on closer inspection, that is a puddle of maple syrup. Oh dear. Sally was here just before me, with her children — one on hip, the other two fighting their way through the supermarke­t like James Bond and a villain on the most horrendous­ly loud and aisle-blocking chase of all time. One of her sweet little angels must have punctured the syrup bottle, among various eardrums, in the process of trying to kill their sibling. Never mind.

Well, I wouldn’t mind, were it not for the fact my new reusable bag has been tarnished. And while the risk of meat juice leaking into the fabric bags is well known, the risk to the sweet little angel’s health and safety now my $2 bag is all sticky is in uncharted and highly treacherou­s territory.

Unfortunat­ely he will probably bear the brunt of a weight of frustratio­n that he is not entirely at fault for. See, had it been a plastic bag I dunked in the syrup that was spilt,

I know it’s a good thing that we rid ourselves of the plastic peril. But I’m having a hard time on the uptake.

I could have quickly thrown it away, for a sea turtle or dolphin to experience the human delight of refined sugar for the first and last time as it munched away.

But no longer. Wildlife is now treated to organic and paleo reusable bags, with far greater fibre content and a satisfying chewiness in each bite.

Don’t get me wrong, I know it’s a good thing that we rid ourselves of the plastic peril. But I’m having a hard time on the uptake, and the fact that the supermarke­t is still using the old plastic bags in their rubbish bins beside the checkout is just teasing.

Maybe an ad campaign might help. See, as much as it’s cool to pretend to care about sea life to impress members of the fairer gender, that doesn’t actually make it cool.

If I’m going to be convinced that being cool and bringing my own bags to the supermarke­t are compatible concepts, then I’ll first need to see someone else achieve it. That’s the kind of thing I would wish for.

But instead, the lady trapped in the machine implores me again — “do I wish to print a receipt?”. I wish for many things. I never thought I would find myself wishing for a receipt, but here we are. I push the button and get ready to move on with my day.

The genie, characteri­stically pedantic with the wording of wishes, doubtfully says “Okay, if you say so!”.

A docket spews forth from my mouth uncontroll­ably, unfurling down my front towards my toes, as gasps emerge from the gathering crowd.

“Be careful what you wish for,” chuckles the genie, as a sweet little angel runs into me from behind and knocks me over. And just like that, I wake up back in my bed, free from the nightmare of another shopping trip to the supermarke­t.

 ??  ?? The temperamen­tal machines holding your receipt hostage definitely need an unexpected item in their bagging area.
The temperamen­tal machines holding your receipt hostage definitely need an unexpected item in their bagging area.
 ??  ??

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