The
Grocery Store
Going to the supermarket back in
the United States was more of an inconvenience than it was
difficult. Pushing your cart up and down the aisles grabbing
what you need while grabbing a few items that you don’t
need. Head to the checkout and the whole thing is over.
While the weekly trip to the grocery store back home is
a pain it is by no means a challenge. My first grocery store
experience in Japan proved to be more of a challenge than
an inconvenience.
Arriving in Japan only one month ago
going to the grocery store became a whole new experience.
Walking into my first grocery store in Japan had all my
senses on overload. The huge variety of products, vendors
inviting you to sample their products, bakers offering
reduced prices on baked goods add all this to the fact
that I can’t read any Japanese and you have sensory
overload.
I pushed my cart up and down the aisles
for a good 20 minutes just looking at all the different
products. Since I can’t read Japanese I was reduced
to my best context clues which comprised of studying the
product, looking at the pictures on the wrapping paper
or looking for a nearby product in English and assuming
that the item I was looking at was the Japanese counterpart.
After about 2 hours I finished my first
Japanese grocery store experience. I had enough food for
2 days and all went well with one minor exception. First
I was looking for some candy and ended up buying cough
drops instead. The package had a picture of a lemon and
a guy smiling; Looked like candy to me! One thing is for
sure I definitely couldn’t have completed my grocery
store mission if it wasn’t for all the kind hearted
people in the grocery store who took a few minutes out
of their day to help this clueless guy from California.