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My assignment was to pick up a few items from the grocery store. You should understand in advance that I'm not the designated shopper in our family. I suffer from a condition called CFS (Can't Find Shit). If you ask me, for example, to open the crisper and take out the bowling ball and the severed human hand, I would come back with, at best, one of those items and a bag of small carrots.

So you can imagine the panic that sets in when I'm handed a shopping list. I hope and I hope and I hope that the list will contain only familiar and easy-to-locate objects. For example, cucumbers are a good choice for me. I know where to find them, and when I come home with one that is spongy and inedible, I can say, "It was the best one they had."

I scan the shopping list: six items. I feel good about five of them. The sixth is coconut milk. Oh, God. I do not ask Shelly where in the grocery store I might find coconut milk. That is announcing failure in advance. I vow to find it on my own.

As I drive toward the store, I consider the possible hiding places for coconut milk. I'm sure it's not in the dairy section. And they probably don't have an "all things coconut" section. It's not a fruit juice. It's not a soda. My only hope is that a thirsty monkey is in the store at the same time, so I can follow him.

I soon realized that I don't have any of the qualities necessary for finding coconut milk. I'm not a good shopper. I'm not experienced at cooking, which might give me a clue as to what section the coconut milk would be in. I have no knowledge of the store. I have no patience. I'm not a good guesser. If there's a choice that is correct and a choice that will go horribly wrong, my instincts always lead me in the direction that will be comically catastrophic. It's often not good to be me.

I was willing to ask someone for help, but all of the store employees were in their secret hiding places, and the other shoppers all seemed angry. If I had a different type of personality, I might impose on the other shoppers and not care about their angry reactions. Or I might have interrupted a checker during a transaction. But as I'm trying to tell you here, I have NONE OF THE QUALITIES NECESSARY FOR FINDING COCONUT MILK. I don't know how many more ways I can say that.

I decide to do a shelf-by-shelf search, leaving out no section of the store, no matter how unlikely. I search through the donuts and the tortillas. I rifle through the radishes. "It might be frozen" I think to myself before opening every door of every refrigerated section. After searching most of the store, I was near exhaustion - and starvation, ironically. I reached the Asian food section. I never knew that my grocery store was a racist, but there it was. My eyes gazed upon a can on the bottom shelf with mostly Japanese or possibly Chinese characters and an English title "Coconut Milk." Now I have a new problem. I wonder if any of those words mean anything I should know, such as "Not intended for use in any of the ways your wife would like," or "99% Panda urine." There were a lot of ways this could go wrong. Worse yet, there were two brands side by side. Was one of them the "right" kind and one of them the sort of thing you only buy if you have a severe case of CFS?

I choose one brand randomly and grab four cans, semi-triumphantly. I quickly locate the other items on the list and sprint for the checkout. As a precaution, I double-check my shopping list. It said FIVE cans of coconut milk, not four. Damn! I hurried back to where I found the first four, only to discover that in the past five minutes the store employees had scampered out of their hidey holes and rearranged the entire store without anyone noticing. It was like a bad dream. The Asian food section was now nothing but pickles and mayonnaise. Or maybe I am bad at retracing my steps. The point is that I have NONE OF THE QUALITIES NECESSARY FOR FINDING COCONUT MILK TWICE.

Eventually I find where the Asian food section has been hidden. I pay for my items and stride triumphantly out of the store, across the parking lot, only to discover that someone has stolen my minivan. Or maybe I forgot where I parked. Or maybe the friggin' thing was on the bottom shelf of the ever-moving Asian food section. The point is that I couldn't find it.

In past situations like this, when I needed to distract myself so I wouldn't spontaneously transform from Bruce Banner into something green, I used to check my BlackBerry to see if I had any interesting messages. But I got rid of my BlackBerry, and now I have something called an iPhone. It operates differently, in the sense that instead of being a device for communicating, it is more like carrying disappointment in your pocket. On this day, despite having both the ringer and vibration setting on, my iPhone had failed to warn me of two incoming texts and one voice call from Shelly. The first text message read "Also get lemon juice."

The items I had already purchased would have melted in the car, should I ever find it, because temperatures hovered around 100 degrees. And I couldn't take my groceries back into the store because I fear being arrested for shoplifting. Once I buy something, I spend the next six months driving in wide arcs around the store whenever I'm in the area just so no one will falsely accuse me of running out the door without paying. This is one more way in which I'm not normal. I know I had a receipt. Shut up.

Eventually I found the minivan. I drove home and tried to convince Shelly that the lack of lemon juice was Steve Jobs' fault. She didn't say anything, but judging from the way she shook her head in disgust, I think she really hates that guy.
 
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Jul 11, 2010
I've got to ask this: what would your wife need 5 whole cans of coconut milk for? Was she catering a party for like the whole neighbour hood? Bathing in the staff? Stocking up the shelter so you'll be able to still eat tasty meals during the zombie apocalypse?

Or were the cans tiny little sample size cans or something? Otherwise that is a serious quantity of coconut milk.
 
 
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Jul 9, 2010
It's called 'Man Eyes'. That's the total inability to see what you're looking for (and that your wife is directing you to), even though it's right smack in front of you.

'Honey, where's the cinnamon?'
'In the spice rack, between the cardamom and cumin.'
'I can't see it!'
'Of course you can't, you're using your man eyes. Pretend you're using my eyes and try again...(minutes pass)...Oh, for heaven's sake, I'll just come over there and get it for you myself!'
 
 
Jul 8, 2010
I do almost all of the grocery shopping and subsequent storage at home, so I'm rarely afflictied with CFS. But I have another malady that is just as bad CSS - Can't See !$%*! Why is there so little light in my stinking garage? Sure, I know that the exact tool I need is in the toolbox, but I can't see well enough in there to retrieve the dang thing! Having made the old man migration to bifocals last year certainly doesn't help either!
 
 
Jul 8, 2010
Hilarious story!

That reminds me of the annoying shopping list with a 2nd column squeezed in -- did she want 1 item or 2??

coconut milk
peanut butter cookies
vanilla yogurt
cream soda
cheese cake
monkey bread
 
 
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Jul 7, 2010
Sorry, I am assuming that the store has a wifi connection your iPhone can tap, and that the directory is available.

If it doesn't/isn't, then stores ought to hop on this in a big way. What a cheap, easy, marketing gimmick, suggested for free.

Also, when you say coconut juice (like soy juice), you gag, just a little... (more apologies to Lewis Black)
 
 
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Jul 7, 2010
that should have read coconut t i t t y
 
 
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Jul 7, 2010
I have a friend who used to have the job of creating and updating supermarket layouts. Deciding which things go where, how much shelf space to allot to each item, which to get rid of, etc. He did the whole thing on his laptop, and that was tied into the corporate database, so anyone in management could instantly see how many feet of shelf in the dozens (or hundreds of stores) was devoted to Red Bull (a lot) or to jalapenos (a little). I am certain that this can all tie into inventory, and shipping, and, and and...

I am sure that someone out there can, and probably already is, writing an app for the IPhone that will allow you to link into the store's directory the second you walk through the door so you can search out the items you want. If you got really creative, you could load your shopping list to your phone and then have it map your route to all the things on the list.

BTW, there is no such thing as coconut milk. It's coconut juice. I know this because there is no coconut !$%*!$ (apologies to Lewis Black)
 
 
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Jul 7, 2010
I also suffer from CFS when it comes to grocery stores. It seems to me that finding things in a grocery store is a solvable problem, given the right technology. To help people in my community with this exact problem, I run the website http://www.groceryblueprint.com - hopefully this kind of answer to a common problem becomes more widely available.
 
 
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Jul 7, 2010
"My wife, bless her, will put all the items on the list in the order that they'll be found if I start on one end of the grocery section and continue to the end."

There's an iPhone app that does that. You tell it everything you need, and then shop by traversing the store from one end to the other (checking off items as they are found). It will learn the order in which you find things, and in the future present your list in that order.

Grocery Gadget.
 
 
Jul 7, 2010
My wife, bless her, will put all the items on the list in the order that they'll be found if I start on one end of the grocery section and continue to the end. This way the next item on the list is near by and if I happen to find an item that isn't next on the list I know I missed it and it drastically narrows down the search area. For I too suffer from CFS. It can cut an hour long experience to a 15 minute one. It's that helpful. And she has mad skills at putting it in order, she's never friggin' wrong.
 
 
Jul 7, 2010
I have said it before, although not here-

Seeing is not in the eyes. Seeing is in the mind. Change your mind, and you change what you see.
 
 
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Jul 6, 2010
Scott, many people probably already mentioned it before me, but just in case nobody has: you might suck at every mundane task in the world, but you sure as hell are a genius at writing about your own failure. And that is a skill that very few people have, so who cares you suck at the mundane things? It is actually just as well, now you have something to write about.

So keep happily failing and writing about it. If your wife ever gets tired of your failures just give her a some money to shopping and she will know what is important.

 
 
+1 Rank Up Rank Down
Jul 6, 2010
This is where it helps to be a techno-nerd (and chemist). Technically coconuts don't have milk. Only mammals produce milk....and coconuts don't even produce a close substitute. So I would have gone to the diary and gotten real milk and said I couldn't read the first first word. Then I would have explained to the boss, in your case !$%*!$% that she also probably sent the text message and voice mail to the wrong guy.....someone obviously from her former life who is now buying lemon juice and wondering what she has planned for the evening.
 
 
Jul 6, 2010
I would have looked near condensed milk, then sugar/sweeteners, and then given up.

PS. Steve Jobs was totally to blame but I'd also blame your cell phone company as well.
 
 
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Jul 6, 2010
You're on fire today Scott.
 
 
+1 Rank Up Rank Down
Jul 6, 2010
This is where your advice about affirmations should come in handy. Write this down 15 times everyday.

"I, Scott Adams, will no longer have any trouble finding items at any store, ever."

You may thank me by cash or check.

 
 
Jul 6, 2010
You ate lucky, you could have ended up with other similar products that would have been wrong.
 
 
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Jul 6, 2010
Loved this - hilarious!

I shop enough that I can find most things, but I occasionally clip some recipe out of the paper that calls for something that doesn't actually exist, like smoked olive oil. Or there was the time that my sister asked for a small fondue set for Christmas. After she opened it, she found that she needed lose little cans of gel fuel to use it. Since I gave her the present, I went out to the store in search of those things. 40 minutes of searching and 2 store clerks later I found it. I get it home only to find that my sister had changed her mind and returned the fondue set! I still have those cans in my pantry and I'm sure one day they'll cause my house to burn down.

This weekend I went on Consumer Reports looking for vaccuum recommendations as mine has ceased to suc.k. Once I found the ones they considered best buys, I searched the web for them. Of course no one sells those models any more. I went for the closest thing with good consumer reviews and I'll hope for the best...
 
 
Jul 6, 2010
Hilarious, Scott. Sell it to syndication soonest.

My own CFS syndrome is worst when I mis-remember the color of the object I'm looking for. I'm lazy, and if I know the scissors, for example, are orange then I just scan for orange objects. I can literally look right at the pink scissors but they have become invisible to me.
 
 
Jul 6, 2010
Then, after days of searching, you find a clerk to ask for said missing/lost/hidden item....
The clerk rolls the eyes and points to shelf next to you.
 
 
 
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