Anonymous wrote:We are in Alexandria and I have noticed in the last year the Giant where I shop has more POC, more products aimed at them and more products locked up. A new Wegman's opened nearby so I assume a lot of people switched to that store because of its reputation even if it is more expensive. I never thought of grocery shopping being indictive of class, but it might be going that way.
Tell me you see what you're suggesting here.Anonymous wrote:Yes, OP. They're quietly signaling their affluence by not walking into the grocery, hoping you notice their absence in the checkout aisle. And I hear the app doesn't even work unless you're wearing a Cartier bracelet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All our very rich neighbors with the $3M+ homes use grocery delivery services. They get EVERYTHING delivered, including two cups of coffee from Starbucks. It's literally a stream of delivery folks coming and going all day.
Us mere plebes with "only" the original $1.3M homes do our own shopping. We tried to use those grocery delivery services and they all sucked - bad produce, bad substitute items, etc.
I know the type. It's 100% a new money striver "flex" to have servant class proles bringing everything to your door all day, cleaning your house, walking your dog, tutors for kids, etc. My son had a play date with a 12 year old friend and he casually ordered $100 in door dash food to our house from his phone.
Anonymous wrote:All our very rich neighbors with the $3M+ homes use grocery delivery services. They get EVERYTHING delivered, including two cups of coffee from Starbucks. It's literally a stream of delivery folks coming and going all day.
Us mere plebes with "only" the original $1.3M homes do our own shopping. We tried to use those grocery delivery services and they all sucked - bad produce, bad substitute items, etc.
Anonymous wrote:All our very rich neighbors with the $3M+ homes use grocery delivery services. They get EVERYTHING delivered, including two cups of coffee from Starbucks. It's literally a stream of delivery folks coming and going all day.
Us mere plebes with "only" the original $1.3M homes do our own shopping. We tried to use those grocery delivery services and they all sucked - bad produce, bad substitute items, etc.
Anonymous wrote:All our very rich neighbors with the $3M+ homes use grocery delivery services. They get EVERYTHING delivered, including two cups of coffee from Starbucks. It's literally a stream of delivery folks coming and going all day.
Us mere plebes with "only" the original $1.3M homes do our own shopping. We tried to use those grocery delivery services and they all sucked - bad produce, bad substitute items, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think this is status related at all. Maybe time related. Of course it makes sense that retirees with no job can go to the market and shop for hours every day. Busy parents doing grocery pickup or delivery just makes sense for how busy they are.
It's just an interesting observation is all. A broader theme of UMC becoming more and more secluded, seemingly outsourcing everything to a servant class. We don't go into coffee shops, we order from an app and don't have to speak to baristas. We don't go into grocery stores, worker bees deliver it to our door step. We take an uber and request the driver not talk.
Anonymous wrote:You need to use your brain for something that matters. There isn't some grand movement to avoid the grocery store as some kind of class distinction. Your conclusions are faulty.