Once
every two years or so, I make a shopping trip to Walmart. Yesterday, Desiree accompanied me on one such
excursion.
Only
a few days ago, I read an article about how Walmart is considering closing some
stores due to escalating (if not devastating) rates of thievery.
Interesting. I worked on a remodel of the local Walmart a
bit over twenty years ago. At that time,
the security scheme in this regard revolved almost entirely around monitoring
store employees (associates in Walmart-speak).
My
reason for not regularly shopping at Walmart also has to do with this. While working within the store, I was forced
to open my lunchbox for inspection by a store employee every day as I walked
out the door to go home.
I
don’t steal and I don’t appreciate any doubt about that. I prefer to shop where I am a trusted
quantity.
Yesterday,
when Desiree and I landed at a checkout line, we found ourselves behind a
somewhat scruffy fifty-something woman. When
the associate, a woman with beautiful black hair (which I always notice),
scanned a tightly rolled blanket, something caught her attention. Reaching inside the roll, she fished-out an
aerosol can of air freshener hidden inside the blanket. “Is this yours,” the associate asked the
shopper.
“No,”
responded the woman, appearing much less surprised than you might imagine.
The
associate, ever the professional, placed the can on the station counter nearby
and continued checking items.
When
we advanced to the register, I asked the clerk about the air freshener. “The blanket felt heavy to me,” she
responded.
“Thievery,”
I said. “That’s what that is.”
As
the checker scanned our goods, she asked Desiree if she was Asian.
“I
am from the Philippines,” Desiree told her.
“Me
too!” the woman exclaimed. Soon, she and
Desiree exchanged conversation in rapid-fire Tagalog. I stared at the can of air fresher on the
nearby counter, wondering how the world has come to this.
—Mitchell Hegman