Rainbow Foods Monopoly or: Holy Shit What a Boring Monotonous Torture Contest.

I shop at Rainbow Foods because it’s close by and the only other grocery stores around are either super expensive Lunds and Kowalski’s or hippy natural organic Co-Ops. Every few months Rainbow has some promotions contest where you get little scratch off tickets to win free groceries or whatever and this time around they’re doing a Monopoly game. Awesome! I enjoy games and winning stuff and I shop at Rainbow anyway.



There’s just one problem. It’s not Monopoly. It’s not a game. It’s hell.



First off. The board isn’t a Monopoly board. It’s not a square, no passing go, collecting yada yada. I know they’re not going to be an exact replica of the Monopoly board but even the McDonalds game makes the pieces look like the property squares. On the Rainbow game you get a ticket –



you get one for shopping there an extras if you buy specially marked items.





Tear off perforations on both sides and open it up and you get four slips –



Right side: Four “game pieces” that have some grocery item on them. Left side: Shitty $0.25 coupon for some thing you’ll never buy like single serving frozen french fries.





Each game piece has a letter (A-Z) and a number. You find where each of your tickets goes on the 107 possible spots on the board, lick the back of the piece and place it there.



The back side of the board is covered in places to put game pieces, too. You have to look all over both sides and usually you just find that you’ve already filled the spot that piece goes to.





The only thing that even relates this game to Monopoly is that the Monopoly guy is on the board, you’ll spend hours “playing” it and you’ll end the game frustrated and angry. Honestly, though they could have as easily just called it Jenga or Twister.


There’s plenty of great prizes to win, though. A $250,000 “dream home”. 25 grand in cash, 5 grand in groceries. There’s also plenty of shitty prizes available, too, like $5.



They had the Monopoly game last summer, too and I played. I got the board, a bunch of tickets and put them all in. I usually just waited until I had like 50 of them because I was lazy and spent the better part of an hour finding the right place for the 200 game pieces. I won two dollars. When I brought it in to get my sweet reward the cashier said that I was like the third person to ever come in with a winning board and the other two people were two dollar winners as well.



What’s even worse is that I’m playing again. Of course I am. I’ve got a pile of tickets just waiting to be licked –



Looks like I know what I’m doing all afternoon.





That’s not even all of them. I usually shove them in my pockets when I leave the store an forget about them. Find them 2 hours later at home and just put them on the nearest flat surface. On the bright side looking for them will give me an excuse to clean the place.



So that’s what I’ll be doing. Licking dozens of ticket backs and placing them on a game board like a goddamn factory worker thinking of ways this game could be even less fun. Here’s what I’ve come up with so far –



*Put something on the back of the tickets to make it taste bad like fish oil.

*Instead of pictures of grocery products on the tickets have pictures from concentration camp prisoners.

*All the coupons that come with the game pieces are for sardines.



Off to work! I’ll let you know if I win anything (of course I’m not going to win anything).

Girls Love Shopping!

I know you are all hoping for another story of Bill’s Bowels (the name of his next stand up album… it’s very moving), but unfortunately for us all, he is off scuba diving, or boating, or exploring Mayan ruins, or napping in a hammock. Probably napping in a hammock.

So instead, let’s talk about something a little closer to home. Home-making.

I went grocery shopping for the first time in about a year. I mean, I’ve gone out for eggs a couple times, or to get the right salsa for the party I’m throwing. But as for going to the store to purchase food because we’re out, it’s been over a year.

I dropped Jared off yesterday for his state testing, and had a couple hours for grocery shopping. I got to the grocery store, grabbed a cart with the mandatory stuck wheel, and headed into the grocery store. The doors opened, and there I was, standing in the produce aisle, with no idea what to do next.

I mean, okay. I have the basics down. You select an item, put it in your cart, and go. But there were so many items! When I’m home, and I want an apple, I go to the fruit bowl and grab one of three apples sitting in the bowl. Here, there were so MANY apples. It was up to me to pick the right apples for my household. And then I realized, I don’t know what kind of apples my family eats! I know that they’re green. Green apples. But the green apples I find all have different apple names… granny smith, something that starts with a c, something else that rhymes with shire or empire…

I am completely out of my element. I have already been defeated by green apples.

Curse you and your potential deliciousness!!!

I grab a bag of carrots and a couple bananas for the boy, and head to the bulk foods area. Like Luke Skywalker daydreaming about Jedi mentors, I remember Bill saying something about how rice can sometimes cost less  in a box rather than the bulk dispenser. Or was it the other way around? I can’t remember. I’m unclear which was what, but the bulk rice is right in front of me, which probably makes it a trap, but on the flip side, I’m already starting to lose my grip on what’s true and what’s not, so I grab a bag and go to the dispenser for long, white rice. I try to flip the dispenser thing, and it moves, and a little rice comes out. Not a lot. Just about a table spoon. I try to open it more, but I just get another tablespoon. I shake it, and get another tablespoon.

Awe, nuts.

My family eats a LOT of rice. It’d probably be smarter for me to stop and go grab a box of rice, but I’ve already started getting bulk rice, and if I stop now, what do I do with the bag, and damnit, I’ve now been presented with a challenge that I must over-come!!! So tablespoon by table spoon and 10 minutes later, I have a bag full of rice.

I remember that we need toilet paper because my but is still sore from the paper towel I had to use that morning, and go to grab a bag. I stop. Last time I ran out to get TP, I brought back the wrong brand. Bill had told me that the kind I got was made by a company that supports the slaughter of African children to make sports drinks or some such. But I can’t remember which brand it was, and I feel awful because I know Bill told me once, and if I pick wrong, slaughtered African children. On the flip side, my butt still hurts, so I pick up the one that says quilted. Hopefully the African children’s parents can forgive me. I know my butt does.

Eventually, I get what I think is an appropriate amount of food. Some of it I remember, like “Hey- frozen broccoli! I’ve seen that in the freezer!” Other items are things I think would be nice to have in the pantry, like crackers and rice cakes and other things Bill never buys. And head to the check out.

I get to the self check out and start scanning items. At first it’s fun, like playing grocery store when your a kid. but then the machine beeps at me, and an attendant comes over and asks what I did. I have no idea. I put a thing in a bag after I scanned it. Isn’t that what you’re supposed to do? That’s how I always played grocery before.

She scans her card and let’s me continue. 30 seconds later, she’s back again, and I’m preemptively saying “I put a paper bag on the counter! I’m sorry!” This continues for 5 minutes. I feel awful, like everyone’s staring at the newbie who can’t even use a self check out, like they’re wondering how I put my own closthes on in the morning. The attendant lady is very encouraging every time she comes by to swipe her card and punch in numbers. “you’re doing great! You’re almost done!” Which simultaneously made me feel better and patronized at the same time.

I finish the check out, get the food into the car, pick up Jared, and get home. Jared mentions that I forgot pickles, and I start openly weeping in front of my child, who tells me it’s okay, that I did a good job, and that we can get pickles later.

Bill, come home. We miss you.