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gerund
04-23-2008, 09:36 AM
So there I was, following my well worn track through the Supermarket. I tolerate shopping. Not that I really hate it, we all have to eat.

I get to the bread aisle. All I need is one loaf of white and one of rye. I know where they are, and I can grab them on the way past and dump them on the top of the pile.

But wait! There's a lady at the shelves I need to get to. She has her trolley blocking one bank, and she's blocking the whole of another section. Now I'm not saying she was fat, what I am saying is she was wide enough to stop me getting to my bread.

All right she was fat. The ratio was about 1.5 (I.E. she was 1.5 metres tall and 1 metre wide) :roll:

So I wait. I read all the labels on the bread I don't want. I wait some more. I re-read all the labels. I start to get sick of waiting. Normally I will let someone else have their turn at the shelves. If they are there before me I will wait for a short while, then I will say politely "excuse me"

This was different. I was speechless. What she was doing stopped my vocal cords. I went down the aisle so I could watch her and not get caught in the stupid fallout when her head exploded.

When I first looked she had two loaves of bread in her trolley. She was pulling at the plastic from various angles and looking at each loaf. This went on for a while. Then she put both of these loaves back and stroked them across the top, then moved on to the other loaves on that shelf, stroking them (like you would a cat - from the head to the tail with your whole hand, pushing a little harder with your fingers as you get to the tail).

Each loaf was treated to the full stroke - some were stroked several times.

Then she went down one shelf and stroked all the loaves on that shelf. Then back to the upper shelf and stroked all of them again. Picked one loaf and held it in one hand while she stroked it again, put it back and did the same to the next one.

Then she went back to stroking them again.

I didn't want to talk to her. My brain was rushing from side to side, looking for a way out. I really needed bread, but what to do? Was she going to start stroking the lower loaves - the ones I wanted, or was she satisfied with the ones she was stroking now?

I was brave. I told my brain to behave. I pressed my lips together to stifle my laughter. I told myself - "It's like approaching a wild animal. If you look confident they can't do anything. Whatever you do, don't. Just don't"

I marched towards her. She hesitated. I lunged towards the lower shelves. I secured my prize! I turned, and as I walked back to my trolley I could feel her wild eyes glaring at my back... or was that my eczema? I chanted to myself "Don't look back. Don't look back."

I put my bread in the trolley and pushed it towards to end of the aisle. Made it! I risked a glimpse back. She was still there. Still stroking. Over and over.

In the immortal words of Colonel "Bat" Guano (played by Keenan Wynn) "I think you're some kind of deviated prevert."

Yes, prevert.

Stroking bread.

Gah!

Boochan
04-23-2008, 10:49 AM
That is really tripped out.
Something a bit off with that woman. Was their anyone else down that aisle at the time?

friendofjimmyk
04-23-2008, 11:43 AM
Stroking bread? Is this like a different take on a "milk maid"?

gerund
04-23-2008, 11:48 AM
That is really tripped out.
Something a bit off with that woman. Was their anyone else down that aisle at the time?

Er sort of. They were not watching. I was the only one who noticed. Does that make me strange?

I feel strange after having witnessed that.

Sheldonrs
04-23-2008, 12:49 PM
At least she wasn't stroking her rolls.:devil:

marasbaras
04-23-2008, 01:14 PM
I stroked some bread here ... but, that's because the average bread here is really sickly sweet and I found some nice, nice whole grain braid that's yummy. I stroked the package, then I pierced it's protective plastic skin and stuffed a couple slices into the toaster like the evil amateur culinarian that I am. :devil:

chainedbarista
04-23-2008, 03:41 PM
was she caressing it in a 'my preciousss...' sort of way? (not that caressing bread isn't weird enough...)

yes, that's just out there; no, you're not out there for noticing it, just observant.

you have freak radar, and it was kicking right about then. :lol:

depechemodefan
04-23-2008, 05:10 PM
And here I was thinking my bread-sniffing was a problem:lol:

allniter
04-23-2008, 06:00 PM
I'm no medical expert, but I wonder what meds SHOULD she be taking?

Umingmaq
04-23-2008, 06:17 PM
Hmmmm. Maybe this belongs in the "yeast infection' thread.

Xieg
04-23-2008, 09:03 PM
I think you mean "yeast infatuation"

Umingmaq
04-23-2008, 09:46 PM
I wondered if anyone would rise to that.

Brightglaive
04-23-2008, 10:10 PM
I wondered if anyone would rise to that.

You're a punny guy!!! (or girl as the case may be)

What she was doing was a little bit out there. However, if you want to know how firm a loaf of bread is i.e how "heavy" or dense the bread is you can lightly squeeze the bread (....not stroke!!!) Sometimes I squeeze(!!) the loaves of bread to determine if the bread is heavy enough. I really hate making a sandwich and having the bread fall apart or crush into a breadstick at the slightest amount of moisture or pressure.

BTW whoever invented wonderbread should be shot!! They put waaaay too much soy lecithin into it for it to be used for sandwiches. (Soy lecithin softens the bread. Too much and the bread falls apart.)


That said......EWWWW!!!!! stroking the bread????? :wtf:

Maybe you should have snuck up behind her and then startled her with this question, " :wtf: are you doing!?!?"

Andara Bledin
04-24-2008, 12:36 AM
BTW whoever invented wonderbread should be shot!! They put waaaay too much soy lecithin into it for it to be used for sandwiches. (Soy lecithin softens the bread. Too much and the bread falls apart.)

I often say that I wonder how they can call it bread. It's far too soft and flimsy for my favorite use of bread: peanut butter & jelly or honey sandwiches.

^-.-^

justZu
04-24-2008, 12:47 AM
Maybe she is related to the guy in Clerks who was testing and examining all the eggs individually. That was my first thought. :lol:

Pagan
04-24-2008, 12:48 AM
That is really tripped out.
Something a bit off with that woman.

That has got to be the understatement of the century! "A bit off"? Damn, she's so far 'round the bend, she can't even see the corner anymore! :roll:

And I've been known to squeeze a loaf here and there. But not the ones on the shelves, the ones over in the bakery, though.

Although, knowing me, I would have been doing what Brightglaive said. Just because the curiosity would have killed me.

Phone Jockey
04-24-2008, 01:32 AM
It sounds like this woman may have some OCD issues. Maybe she really feels like she has to touch all of the bread...

mattm04
04-24-2008, 03:00 AM
Who is the goood loaf a bread, yes you are, yes you are.

Couldn't resist, sorry.

Umingmaq
04-24-2008, 04:52 AM
Ah yes, Wonder Bread. The wonder is that they don't get sued for false advertising on the name alone. I once watched a friend fixing a toasted cheese sandwich (for his father - one did not argue with Senior when he told you what he wanted) with Wonder Bread. The stuff melted. Not just the cheese, the bread-like substance itself.

But back to the subject in the OP, at least the woman was hung up one something that provided a variety of tactile feedback to her fondling. "Stroke a loaf. You'll feel better."

draftermatt
04-24-2008, 04:01 PM
I keep picturing the big woman in Duece Bigalow who was petting the pig on the table with the apple in his mouth

Becks
04-24-2008, 04:04 PM
Cool. I've been looking for a new creep out at work, and now I have it.

I can fondle bread.

Thanks!!!!!!!!!! :D

Ironclad Alibi
04-25-2008, 03:05 AM
This look like a job for Mr. Whipple (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._Whipple)!

Geek King
04-25-2008, 08:11 PM
This look like a job for Mr. Whipple (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._Whipple)!

Do we really want an undead Mr. Whipple wandering about the isles? I mean, the poor zombie might starve if left to subsist on SC brains.