The Mystery of ‘The Sales’ Revisited

English: A police officer in riot gear at the ...
“Customer service, this way madam.”

How was it? Did you survive Christmas? Did you manage to drink your way though the sherry, the port and the bickering? Well, I’m currently struggling to break free from beneath a pile of empty Champagne bottles, sweet wrappers and a fog of Brussels sprouts (as soon as I break free, I’m going to work on getting myself stuck under a pile of full Champagne bottles and sweet wrappers and there are still sprouts in the fridge that need eating), so while I languish somewhere between diabetes and cirrhosis of the liver (just north of gout), here, for your reading pleasure, is one from the vaults – a timeless piece on the ravages of post-Christmas commercialism and worse, shopping. Enjoy and I’ll be back afresh next week, sprouts allowing.

Shocking news has reached me here at PFPT Towers that at this very moment, hordes of normally sane people are flocking out of their safe and cosy homes and willingly entering into a bizarre behaviour known as “hitting the sales”. Sadly, after years of extensive testing, it has become apparent that I was born without the shopping gene and so I decided to hit the streetsΒ toΒ investigate what all the fuss is about.

Having fought my way through a hysterical melee outside an electrical goods purveyor’s, I approached a Mrs Woosterford of Kensington and asked why she felt the need to venture out onto the streets today.

“Well dearie, it’s a tradition that goes back as far asΒ I can remember. We all come out into the streetsΒ as soon asΒ we’ve eaten all the cold turkey and Quality Streets, not the strawberry or the coffee ones of course,Β and see who can survive the most ‘sale rail rumbles’. I’ve made it to round 7 this morningΒ and am about to encounter my 8th challenger in that knitwear shop behind us. Apparently there’s only one pink cable-knit sweater in a size not designed for a toddler or a tank so it’s going to be quite the fight. I’ve come tooled-up with my sharpest umbrella and a I’veΒ sewn bricks into the elbow pads of my mackintosh. Must dash.”

I stopped another passer-by, a Mr Fairfield of Twickenham, and asked him if he had arrived early today.

“Silly woman. I’ve been here since 03:00 as everyone knows that the shops open at 06:00Β and only have enough produce in their stock rooms to last until 06:02. After that you have to fight to the death over a broken garlic press, half a meter of garden hoseΒ and a solitary Hello KittyΒ mitten.”

Judging by the demented look on his blood-spattered face, I thought it best not to keep him any longer and left him to carry on wrestlingΒ aΒ schoolgirlΒ for possession of a Crossroads DVD.

I decided, for my own safety, to talk to someone who was less involved in a shop floor brawl and spoke to a young lady waiting in a static queue outside a shoe shop on Oxford Street. I asked her what shoesΒ she was hoping to buy.

“Shoes? I’m notΒ queuingΒ for shoes. This queue is for theΒ hat department of Harrods. Only 2.4 miles to go! I’m a massive fan of queuing, it is, after all, the national sport of Great Britain. Do you know if there’s a loo at the end of this? I’ve been stoodΒ here since Christmas Eve.”

Further down the line I met a Mr Giles St Chalfont who told me that his good lady wife loves coming to the clothes shops right after Christmas to kick start her New Year diet. Apparently just 3 minutes under the harshΒ cellulite-enhancingΒ glare of a cramped fitting room cubicle light, with just half a bedraggled curtain to protect your festively plump modesty from theΒ critical eyes of the whippet-thin teen model shop assistants really puts you off eating for a good 3 months. A sobbing sound could be heard from behind Mr St Chalfont but no further comment was issued.

AΒ black-eyedΒ Miss Newham of Tottenham said that she liked to “play as a team”. Apparently this enhances the whole experience.

“Me and my mates take it in turns to pick a shop, drag the others round it, asking for opinions that we totallyΒ ignore and then we all have to stand around outside the fitting rooms while someone goes in and tries on 20-30 items. It’s such a laugh. If my friends aren’t available, it becomes a romantic day out for me and my boyfriend. He gets to carry all my bags and boxes and thenΒ I let him sit outside the fitting room with all the other lads. They look so sweet all sat there in a row, pretending to be really bored and brow-beaten. You should see what face he pulls when I make him sit outside the fitting room of the lingerie shop; it’s a really good impression of an embarrassed serial killer. You can’t put a price on that kind of quality time spentΒ together.”

Miss Newham then added that she couldn’t wait to have children, as a fully loaded bratmobileΒ and flock of tantrumingΒ toddlers is one of the best ways to clear your path through the crowded stores and trip up granniesΒ with their brick-lined rain coats, thus ensuring you get to at least level 10 in the sale rail rumbles. Apparently buggiesΒ make great “aisle blockades”, giving you enough time to grab 16 half price novelty egg poachers while maintaining your coveted place as 164th in the queue for the check-out.

Having discovered what great fun everyone seemed to be having and how determined everyone is to keepΒ the tradition of “hitting the sales” alive,Β I thought I would speak to one more person and find out exactly what sort ofΒ awesome essentials are being procured and just how much money people are saving.

MrΒ PiddletonΒ ofΒ Birmingham was only too glad to regale me with victory tales through what he had left of his broken teeth.

“I managed to get a new set of car tyres for only Β£90.00. They were originally Β£120.00 so I’m really chuffed with that. I don’t own a car but did you hear me? Β£120.00 down to Β£90.00! I’d have been mad not to! I also got a size 6Β ladies dress for Β£15.00. No, I don’t have a wife but seriously, Β£15.00!!! IΒ bought this thingy here that seems to have something to do with horses orΒ armpits or… whatever. It was reduced from Β£500.00 to just Β£200.00, how can you say no to bargains like that? It’s like I’ve actually made money today!”

Clearly my genetic predisposition is putting me at a great disadvantage here. I seem to have missed out on so much fun and so many impromptu ‘bargains’ that I didn’t even know I needed. If only there were some other way for me to make well researched, cost-comparedΒ purchases all year round, avoiding queues, elbows and screaming infants. If only I could try clothes on in the comfort of my ownΒ well-lit boudoirΒ and ifΒ only I could buy really bulky items without having to drag them all the way home through legions of masonry-clad seniors… Oh look, The Internet!

Comments

14 responses to “The Mystery of ‘The Sales’ Revisited”

  1. twindaddy Avatar

    So insidious commercialization isn’t just an American thing? Nice to know we’re not the only country doing this insipid crap.

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      I’ve heard it’s pretty much rife in any country they have a cash register. I therefore blame cash registers!

      1. twindaddy Avatar

        So you say, so it shall be!

  2. kindredspirit23 Avatar

    Oh, I figured the sales thing was nearly world-wide in one form or another.
    And, don’t pick on babies and buggies. I know that once when I was in a horrible line at a store, my little daughter began crying and the wonderful people let me go ahead of them. Now, I won’t say I took the pacifier from her mouth, but …

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      Evil! You sir, are one of the reasons I shop on-line!

      Don’t feel too bad though, there are precisely 5,826 other reasons too. πŸ˜‰

  3. Adventures in Kevin's World Avatar
    Adventures in Kevin’s World

    Thanks for the laugh as always.
    The news in the US is always about how insane US shoppers are on the day after Thanksgiving (“Black Friday”). But I also hear that English shoppers are just as nutso on Boxing Day. True????

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      If we didn’t kill each other fighting over the last bag of spuds on Christmas Eve, yes, we take to the shops for one more fight to the death over clothes that don’t fit us and kitchen utensils we have no idea how to use. A tradition as old as religion.

      1. Adventures in Kevin's World Avatar
        Adventures in Kevin’s World

        Not that I’m glad our society is like that, but I am glad the US is not the only crazy place, since we get all the negative press! Although, I wouldn’t mind some fun new kitchen utensils…

  4. Bridget Avatar

    There are still 3 Quality Streets in the box (all fudge) hence I will have to stay in the warmth and comfort of my own home where my student daughter and her boyfriend are camped out in the lounge, put-up mattress taking up the entire floor space, commandeering the TV. Oh well, rubber gloves on, there’s surely some post-festive-detritus for mum to clear up. Happy New Year!

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      I’m down to nothing but strawberry and orange cremes. Hard times.

      Why not scream “FIRE” and watch as they run from the room, only to find, on their return, that you have taken up residence of the living room/mattress and have no intention of sharing the remote. Happy New Year to you too. πŸ™‚

  5. smcwrites Avatar

    We missed all of the Boxing Day or as they now call it “Boxing Week” sales this past year, thank goodness. Last year we got a nice KitchenAid mixer for a good price but this year we couldn’t be bothered. We were still out at the farm until the 27th and half my boyfriend’s family were sick with the flu and gave it to us to come home with, so we were sick with that until NYE. Luckily there are such things as hot toddy’s, so we were in good shape just in time for NYE πŸ˜‰

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      (How did I miss your comment all the way back here?!)

      I would take having the flu over that period as a blessing – it gave you the perfect excuse to shun the hideous crowds and sink into a film-watching coma.

      1. smcwrites Avatar

        When you put it that way, yes it was a blessing.

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