Anonymous wrote:You know what's a status symbol? TIME. Having the time to browse and shop. Most people don't have that luxury.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like picking my on fruits and vegetables.
I can't imagine someone else's hands rubbing all over my pears.
How do you think they get from the tree to the distributor to the grocery store to your fruit bowl?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like picking my on fruits and vegetables.
I can't imagine someone else's hands rubbing all over my pears.
How do you think they get from the tree to the distributor to the grocery store to your fruit bowl?
Anonymous wrote:I like picking my on fruits and vegetables.
I can't imagine someone else's hands rubbing all over my pears.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not really. Maybe it signifies people who are comfortable having other people choose their meat and produce for them.
Many people who cook for themselves are picky about the qualities of what they cook. If I want “fresh looking leeks” and “unblemished dark Orange sweet potatoes “ then it’s simpler and better for me to pick them myself.
This right here. Someone in an earlier reply talked about the "opportunity cost" of shopping for yourself but that in my opinion is time well spent making sure I don't get rotten onions or the wrong cut of meat because the Instacart shopper was lazy and just grabbed the first thing they could.
Anonymous wrote:Not really. Maybe it signifies people who are comfortable having other people choose their meat and produce for them.
Many people who cook for themselves are picky about the qualities of what they cook. If I want “fresh looking leeks” and “unblemished dark Orange sweet potatoes “ then it’s simpler and better for me to pick them myself.
Anonymous wrote:Why would I go to the grocery store myself when I can exploit cheap foreign labor to do it for me? I love immigrants!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are more productive uses of time than wasting 1.5 to 2 hours door to door grabbing the same grocery items once a week. And grocery delivery is basically free, so it’s silly not to use it.
It's not free. There's the uncharged on each item and 15-20% tip.
According to this weekend’s WSJ, it actually is free right now because Amazon, Walmart, Target, and other grocers are eating losses to run delivery and pickup. Sure, you should tip. Saving 1-2 hours of free time is worth a tip! You’re avoiding boring manual labor, you’re not putting miles on your car, you’re not burning gas or electric, you’re not wearing your back out loading and unloaded heavy groceries.
This feels overly dramatic for what shopping is like living in a city. We live a few blocks from a decent store (think Safeway not Whole Foods) and just get what we need a few times a week. It takes 15minutes and no back problems.
You are insane.Anonymous wrote:At least for older millennial and gen X families*
My last few visits to grocery stores it looks like all retirees shopping, plus a handful of singles using the salad and hot bars. The aisles are filled with solo workers collecting orders. It seems like parents my age, whether they're actually wealthy and super busy () or merely want to give that impression, exclusively do home delivery or drive-up pickup. Even the upper middle income SAHMs I know who have plenty of free time during the day do at-home delivery or drive-up pickup for groceries. Is grocery shopping in-person becoming lower class and/or elderly retirees thing?
It's almost like status-conscious people don't want to be seen grocery shopping because of the perception it gives that they're not wealthy or have too much free time. At least that's kind of what it feels like after Covid.