Gravity Shifts and Grocery Stores

Kroger grocery store midday on a Tuesday. Winter still around in Nashville, you feel it most in the parking lot. The people who normally stroll through the parking lot like kings on parade are actually putting up a brisk pace. Trash tumbleweed and cold cigarette smoke hit you right before the sliding doors open. I started hearing a child shrieking behind me.

It’s the nervous high-pitched yelps a child might make on Christmas, mixed with some anxiety. It immediately sours my mood as I walk in the warm lobby. Why didn’t I hear a soothing mother’s voice hushing him? I head to the carrots, perturbed.

“Ah… Ahh Ah!” Little rapid fire blurts, then silence. They follow in behind me. Now it can be heard in the whole store. I turn around to see a little kid sitting in a cart. He can’t be more than 3 or 4, swinging legs dangling through the holes. His mother is overweight, looks like they’re struggling a bit, but she has a huge smile on her face. You can tell undefeatable energy when you see it. “AH, ahh”.. he bleats on.

She stands next to a man near the entrance. They’re beaming at each other for a moment, and she rapidly moves her hands to start talking in sign language. He nods and signs back.

They carry on, with the little child smoke alarm still going off. People skirt around them, confused. The two are locked in, their faces and hands show two friends catching up at a coffee shop. The child continues. I stood by the produce and watched for a beat too long.

 I’m a sensitive person, I will fully admit I suffer more from sounds, textures, and spatially and spiritually unaware people than others do. This odd little family juxtaposition entertained and annoyed me. I wonder what everyone else briskly moving by thought.

Does the mother know or simply not care? Is this child responding to never speaking out loud with anyone by just yelling out? Is this the rhino and the little bird on the savanna living in symbiosis to help each other? God smiled on this Deaf mother and her Siren son pairing.

Her warm, unconcerned smile could be a rare time he sees that reaction, this pairing couldn’t be out of randomness. The cosmic balance walking around Kroger looking at bananas.

We all go about our lives tumbling and yelling and butting heads or melding in with others, circling in orbit hoping to find our gravitation counterpoint. The romantic in me hopes I can find this partner by luck or action, the calm deaf person to my wailing boy. The antidote to occasional genius or madness with a warm, calm demeanor.

Meanwhile I’m strolling through Kroger head down, working, going to the gym. No drastic bends to the fabric of normality, trying to present as cool and collected.

Maybe I have to get so hot and uncomfortable that I let the steam out at the grocery store, or Twitter? I plow forward with everything on my sleeve. Everybody is broadcasting something; has some frequency that can complement and balance another. The mother and son some odd reminder that maybe there is a point to it. I try to pick up alterations in the daily life, later that day on the same busy road I saw another kind of shift.

Coffee Shop

That afternoon at the coffee shop. Homeless and drunks and hipsters all working away at something. It’s a place of quiet conversations and politeness, political correctness and funky couches that have their own Instagram account. I saw another glitch. A homeless lady walked into shop slamming the door behind her. She ignored every hello; how can I help you?

I looked up to see her, huge backpack slouching off the shoulder, burnt from head to toe and layered in heavy coats. She went to the counter, grabbed the bathroom key and strolled to the back to lock herself in. Some murmurs from the workers, a subtle smile to each other.

After a couple minutes, as simply as she came in, she walked out of the bathroom with the key, again ignoring the barista calling after her. This time all eyes left their bible studies group and almond lattes to follow her on her march. Like the aforementioned kings of the parking lot, she strolled right past everyone. “Ma’am!” She swung open the front door, stepped off the curb and onto the busy street. The barista charged after. He intercepted her as she was about to Frogger her way through traffic.

She was unaware of every person, custom, traffic law. She said nothing but had everyone’s attention for that brief period. We all sat in brief discomfort of her signal, slapped physically and olfactorily.

There was nobody there to offset her heavy presence, but she could have been on her way to meet her counterpoint on the other side of the road. She could be bulldozing normality and serving looks to wake us up from our mundane discomforts. Eventually she’ll run into traffic or a life changing opportunity.

Or do you just go down the middle and not need the balance? Be palatable. Work, drink, weather, football, complaints and aspirations that won’t turn any heads in the grocery store.

There’s people at grocery stores and coffee shops and street corners who are heavy walking billboards of harsh truths. Autistic infants, patient mothers, homeless women plowing into traffic. We’ll scramble to avoid looking at ugly realities.

The more fortunate polish their billboard every day, online and in real life. Annoyed by the yelling infant, buying craft beer, curating the same sheen in mind, body, and status.

The harsher your truth the more drastic the balance.

I have to figure out where my weight goes. All the dogshit humanity beneath my Republican haircut wants to breathe. It’ll pull and repel rather than just cling to a false self-image. I’m not an algorithm, despite how much optimization seems to build your prestige.

My ideas or sadness or joy will only matter if seen unfiltered.  When I walk into a room with only the weight of my presence and not my baggage, I’ll find a genuine conversation. Be the squealing infant when you need to say it, rather than burying it with dopamine hits. Grab the key and walk into traffic instead of pruning your eyebrows. No more diet coke friendships that feel good on the surface and make you sick. No more hiding the dark, let the light find it.

Seesaw

Pain and pleasure on a spectrum, they can come in an IV drip or in a crashing flood. Both swing the pendulum back and forth in a predictable manner.

Sleep gets mildly disrupted, wake up to a somewhat humid room your eyes are crusty, back feels a bit sore.

Grateful to be here, grateful to be alive.

The mood wall. It plays news, music, uses a slight filter for the mirror (depending on where your trajectory will go for the day). It makes you look more gaunt and baggy, or maybe it tightens your skin to uplift your spirits before you walk out.

The shower water temp is a bit hot; the eggs are a bit overcooked.

You go through the same motions; these are pre-programmed as they have created a predictable dopamine ride to prepare you for the day and harness your cortisol awakening response. You dry your hair this way, put on your socks just so. You meditate. Since your minute motions are predictable, the smart environment knows how to tweak these to change your internal feed.

Traffic patterns show a delay you weren’t notified about, at work there was a last-minute meeting scheduled that you didn’t receive notice of a system update.

Maybe the barista doesn’t remember your name, though you’ve been there several times over the past few months. Maybe the pretty girl’s eye you’ve caught doesn’t happen to look up today, your chance to meet fades away again.

But what if you locked eyes and smiled? Fleeting moments of beauty- that’s what gets sealed in. “Core memories” If you use Instagram and adopt that vernacular. Smells, noises, swish of hair and a side look. That feeling hits you unexpectedly, whether scrolling aimlessly on the toilet or stuck in traffic. Hopefully not at the same time.

Those are what the hippocampus imprints, replays, and yearns for forever more. The forgettable laundry moments require discipline though, they are what are championed. You have to put in that dopamine groundwork to prepare you to appreciate the perfect gaze, that song that sends shivers, that sexual moment where you feel like a fucking animal and forget about the world.

You need the predictable to appreciate the moments of unexpected beauty. But what if predictable is pain skewed, and you are constantly fighting for the baseline? Using that IV drip from your phone to fart you along from 10-1, then to 1. Caffeine, Adderall, anti-depressants, Instagram, Hansel and Gretel breadcrumbs leading you through the day. But the ups and downs turn into a seesaw attached to a jet engine. Up and down until your brain is whiplashed. No wonder It’s hard to fucking feel ok.

It’s all relative, all based on your programming. That day is set by the day before. The synapses clock in and clock out. They’ll eat what you feed you them. They grow diabetic from TikTok, or turn into David Goggins if you live off grid and make straw dolls for fun.

I’ve smashed the seesaw before. My ass got sore, my eyes were baggy, and I was having self-righteous arguments with imagined foes in the shower.

So I sat in a jungle staring at the wall listening to the rain. I stroked a female’s hair and held in a delicate fart to not break the silence. Sweat dripped off my face into rocks as I labored up a mountain at dawn. I congratulated myself for doing insanely normal human shit because I had forgotten what it was. Unplug the seesaw, instead, make it a bike ride over hills. Never easy, but not so abrupt.