Here is something very funny from "Huffington Post" - please follow link to original.
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kelly-maclean/surviving-whole-foods_b_3895583.html
Whole Foods is like Vegas. You go there to feel good but you leave
broke, disoriented, and with the newfound knowledge that you have a
vaginal disease.
Unlike Vegas, Whole Foods' clientele are all
about mindfulness and compassion... until they get to the parking lot.
Then it's war. As I pull up this morning, I see a pregnant lady on the
crosswalk holding a baby and groceries. This driver swerves around her
and honks. As he speeds off I catch his bumper sticker, which says
'NAMASTE'. Poor lady didn't even hear him approaching because he was
driving a Prius. He crept up on her like a panther.
As the great,
sliding glass doors part I am immediately smacked in the face by a wall
of cool, moist air that smells of strawberries and orchids. I leave
behind the concrete jungle and enter a cornucopia of organic bliss; the
land of hemp milk and honey. Seriously, think about Heaven and then
think about Whole Foods; they're basically the same.
The first
thing I see is the great wall of kombucha -- 42 different kinds of
rotten tea. Fun fact: the word kombucha is Japanese for 'I gizzed in
your tea.' Anyone who's ever swallowed the glob of mucus at the end of
the bottle knows exactly what I'm talking about. I believe this thing is
called "The Mother," which makes it that much creepier.
Next I
see the gluten-free section filled with crackers and bread made from
various wheat-substitutes such as cardboard and sawdust. I skip this
aisle because I'm not rich enough to have dietary restrictions. Ever
notice that you don't meet poor people with special diet needs? A gluten
intolerant house cleaner? A cab driver with Candida? Candida is what I
call a rich, white person problem. You know you've really made it in
this world when you get Candida. My personal theory is that Candida is
something you get from too much hot yoga. All I'm saying is if I were a
yeast, I would want to live in your yoga pants.
Next I approach
the beauty aisle. There is a scary looking machine there that you put
your face inside of and it tells you exactly how ugly you are. They
calculate your wrinkles, sun spots, the size of your pores, etc. and
compare it to other women your age. I think of myself attractive but as
it turns out, I am 78 percent ugly, meaning less pretty than 78 percent
of women in the world. On the popular 1-10 hotness scale used by males
the world over, that makes me a 3 (if you round up, which I hope you
will.) A glance at the extremely close-up picture they took of my face,
in which I somehow have a glorious, blond porn mustache, tells me that 3
is about right. Especially because the left side of my face is
apparently 20 percent more aged than the right. Fantastic. After
contemplating ending it all here and now, I decide instead to buy their
product. One bottle of delicious smelling, silky feeling creme that is
maybe going to raise me from a 3 to a 4 for only $108 which is a pretty
good deal when you think about it.
I grab a handful of peanut
butter pretzels on my way out of this stupid aisle. I don't feel bad
about pilfering these bites because of the umpteen times that I've
overpaid at the salad bar and been tricked into buying $108 beauty
creams. The pretzels are very fattening but I'm already in the
seventieth percentile of ugly so who cares.
Next I come to the
vitamin aisle which is a danger zone for any broke hypochondriac.
Warning: Whole Foods keeps their best people in this section. Although
you think she's a homeless person at first, that vitamin clerk is an
ex-pharmaceuticals sales rep. Today she talks me into buying estrogen
for my mystery mustache and Women's Acidophilus because apparently I DO
have Candida after all.
I move on to the next aisle and ask the
nearest Whole Foods clerk for help. He's wearing a visor inside and as
if that weren't douchey enough, it has one word on it in all caps. Yup,
NAMASTE. I ask him where I can find whole wheat bread. He chuckles at me
"Oh, we keep the poison in aisle 7." Based solely on the attitudes of
people sporting namaste paraphernalia today, I'd think it was Sanskrit
for "go fuck yourself."
I pass the table where the guy invites me
to join a group cleanse he's leading. For $179.99 I can not-eat
not-alone... not-gonna-happen. They're doing the cleanse where you
consume nothing but lemon juice, cayenne pepper and fiber pills for 10
days, what's that one called again? Oh, yeah...anorexia. I went on a
cleanse once; it was a mixed blessing. On the one hand, I detoxified, I
purified, I lost weight. On the other hand, I fell asleep on the
highway, fantasized about eating a pigeon, and crapped my pants. I think
I'll stick with the whole eating thing.
I grab a couple of
loaves of poison, and head to checkout. The fact that I'm at Whole Foods
on a Sunday finally sinks in when I join the end of the line...halfway
down the dog food aisle. I suddenly realize that I'm dying to get out of
this store. Maybe it's the lonely feeling of being a carnivore in a sea
of vegans, or the newfound knowledge that some people's dogs eat better
than I do, but mostly I think it's the fact that Yanni has been playing
literally this entire time. Like sensory deprivation, listening to
Yanni seems harmless at first, enjoyable even. But two hours in, you'll
chew your own ear off to make it stop.
A thousand minutes later, I
get to the cashier. She is 95 percent beautiful. "Have you brought your
reusable bags?" Fuck. No, they are at home with their 2 dozen once-used
friends. She rings up my meat, alcohol, gluten and a wrapper from the
chocolate bar I ate in line, with thinly veiled alarm. She scans my
ladies acidophilus, gives me a pitying frown and whispers, "Ya know, if
you wanna get rid of your Candida, you should stop feeding it." She
rings me up for $313. I resist the urge to unwrap and swallow whole
another $6 truffle in protest. Barely. Instead, I reach for my wallet,
flash her a quiet smile and say, "Namaste."
MBA: Mortgage Applications Increased in Weekly Survey
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From the MBA: Mortgage Applications Increase in Latest MBA Weekly Survey
Mortgage applications increased 1.7 percent from one week earlier,
according to da...
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