enlightenment
at sam's club
by lavinia plonka
I
confess. Every couple of months, I go to Sams Club.
I take my list, grit my teeth and try to blow through the place in 15
minutes, not looking at the deck furniture on sale for $299, or the
leather jackets for $49. I head straight for the toilet paper, the cheese,
biscotti and occasionally break down and buy Michaelangelos Eggplant
Parmagian.
(Ive
reconciled Michelangelo's poor treatment of immigrant workers with the
rationale that if I boycott their product, the workers will be unemployed,
so either way Im damned.)
I
race down the aisle and see an open cashier. One man is finishing his
transaction. Oh joy, oh joy. I unload my cart, noting that I have only
bought one unnecessary item - the forty spears of asparagus. It will
be a race against time to eat them all, but Earth Fare charges $10 for
a tiny bunch in season
.
My
cashier is ignoring me. She is deeply in conversation with another cashier.
Periodically, they look at the floor, murmuring. Have I become invisible?
I clear my throat. She ignores me. I drum my fingers on the conveyor
belt. Slowly, a stream of white liquid starts oozing from behind the
cash register on the floor. The two cashiers stare at it. She looks
at me. Got a spill. Yeah, and?
A
supervisor appears and they have more earnest debate. He runs off and
I hear an announcement. Clean up spill at register six.
Now of course, if my judgement had not become clouded from dodging 80
year old women in ultraviolet eye shadow offering me unidentifiable
oozing samples of fast food and couples arguing over garden hose and
clematis bulbs, I might have moved to another line. But I stood there,
mesmerized by the spill. Finally one cashier said to the other, slowly,
as if pondering a great truth, Maybe you should use the paper
towels. The other bent down and produced a roll of paper towels.
Slowly, as if she lived in another temporal dimension, she bent down
and began tearing paper towels off the roll, placing them like pieces
in a jigsaw puzzle inside the spill. She looked up at me and said, If
they see me now, theyll think I did it !
Still
I wait, rooted to my spot, as other lines move, customers pay and leave.
The cashier stands up. Um, are you going to ring me up?
She stares. She thinks. And finally:
Dont
see how I can. Got a spill. She begins to put my items back in
my cart.
Ive exceeded my Sams Club time limit. I feel a kind of insane
seething building in me. The injustice! The stupidity! This place sucks!
Why, I could just leave my cart and storm out of here. There is nothing
of life importance here. Ive just poisoned my soul with this toxic
atmosphere! I stare at my bag of bargain lemons, my 64 oz. of Era Detergent
and slowly get on another line.
In
front of me a couple bickers. The wife, in frizzy perm and painted on
eyebrows grabs a box out of her chubby husbands hands. Just
let me load the belt and dont argue. I am so sleep deprived right
now, anything will set me off. He leans on the handle of his cart
and looks up at me. His face is raw, as if he shaved with a dull razor.
There is food in the corner of his mouth. I do not want eye contact.
I want to be abducted and taken to another planet, right now, please
lord! He smiles at me and says, in a thick accent, It only seems
like forever.
My
senses, dulled from the last encounter, cannot comprehend him. What?
I
said, it only seems like forever. You will get out of this store, its
not that bad.
I wonder what my face must have betrayed. I shrug. Its a
long story.
He gestures to the pile of groceries on the belt. I got time.
Oh
its nothing. Its just that I was at another register and
had all my stuff out and they closed the register.
He
looks shocked. He grabs his wife. Did you hear that honey? They
closed the register on her!
She
looks at me. What? As you got there?
He
interrupts. NO! She already had her things out of the cart.
Her
eyes widen. Oh, no, thats not good. Unacceptable. I wont
stand for that.
Im
a little intimidated. I find myself saying, Well, its not
that bad.
Not
that bad! I mean, there you were, standing there, waiting, while other
customers who were behind you on other lines were leaving, right?
I
nod weakly. Her husband chimes in. And then you had to take everything
off the conveyor belt and put it BACK in your cart. Can you believe
it?
She
is now livid. That means that people who were behind you in line
got out of here first. Oh, no, call the supervisor. Theyre going
to hear from me.
No,
no, thats OK! Suddenly, my dilemma seems minor compared
to an argument between strangers and a Sams Club supervisor on
my behalf.
My
fuse is really short right now, she growls. Ive had
seven hours sleep in 3 days. My tolerance is gone. She turns
to her husband whos playing with a food item. Put that down!
she barks. She turns to me, And I have to deal with him on top
of it.
Shes so angry at my predicament that Ive lost all my steam.
In fact, I want to start convincing her that its really OK. That
I really dont mind. That things happen, and that theres
no one to blame. Anything, to get her to stop. As she pays she says
to the cashier, Now, you be good to her. Shes having a bad
Sams Club experience. As I handed my Sams Club card
to the cashier, her husband says, See, I told you it only seems
like forever.
As
I wheel my cart through the parking lot a van door opens and a voice
yells, Did everything go OK? Its the frizzy headed
woman.
Yes, yes, thank you.
Good,
cause if it didnt, Id have been ready to wallop em
for you, she grins.
As I drive home, Im smiling. These clownish people had somehow
defused my rage. And that was when it struck methey had actually
embodied the principles of Aikido, the martial art called by its founder,
The Art Of Peace. Aikidoists receive the energy of the attacker, blend
with it, then use that same energy to disarm. Ive studied aikido
for 9 years, working to understand this movement of energy, landing
on the floor thousands of times. But I have never seen such a skillful
use of the principle in life. This odd couple had received my negativity
and used it to support me, effectively changing my direction.
Moshe
Feldenkrais, founder of The Feldenkrais MethodÆ and a black belt
in judo used this same principle in his work with others. He called
it supporting the habit. When someone comes to see me with
tension in the shoulder for example, I might hold her shoulder up for
her. Her shoulder (and her nervous system) receive the message that
something else is doing the work, and for a moment, it lets go. When
that couple started yelling for the supervisor, they were holding up
my rage and I no longer needed to sustain my righteous indignation.
When
I am stuck in a pattern, I am unable to see a way out. Whether it is
a physical pattern of pain, an emotional pattern of negativity or a
habit I cant shake, like smoking or overeating. But when someone
can enter, receive my behavior and reflect it back to me in a non-threatening
manner, I can see my own folly and begin the process of changing direction.
I may fall down a couple of times but hopefully my partner will be compassionate.
One of Feldenkrais definitions of maturity was to not be afraid
of falling. Hmmmm.
Lavinia
Plonka
is a movement junkie. She spent 25 years performing and teaching mime
around the world from the lofty heights of the Guggenheim Museum to
the dubious distinction of being dubbed NYCs bar mitzvah
queen. Yoga, Aikido, Nia and The Feldenkrais Method® form
her current course of study. Lavinia teaches The Feldenkrais Method
privately and with groups in Asheville, as well as workshops nationwide.
Her new book, What Are You Afraid Of? A Body/Mind Guide to Courageous
Living (Tarcher/Penguin) will hit book stores April 12.
[ laviniaplonka.com ]