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Everything I Never Wanted to Be
Everything I Never Wanted to Be
Everything I Never Wanted to Be
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Everything I Never Wanted to Be

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

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About this ebook

"Raw and funny." -- Joel Stein, Time Magazine columnist

"Like a maelstrom." -- Gary Klinga, ForeWord Review

"A life-changing experience. It will inspire you never to give up." -- Madeline Sharples, author of Leaving the Hall Light On

Everything I Never Wanted to Be by Dina Kucera is the true story of a family's battle with alcoholism and drug addiction. Dina's grandparents were alcoholics, her father was an alcoholic, she is an alcoholic and pill addict, and all three of her daughters struggle with alcohol and drug addiction--including her youngest daughter, who started using heroin at age fourteen.

Dina's household also includes her husband and his unemployed identical twin; a mother who has Parkinson's Disease; a grandson who has cerebral palsy; and other people who drift in and out of the household depending on their employment situation or rehab status.

On top of all that, Dina is trying to make it as a stand-up comic and author so she can quit her crummy job as a grocery store clerk. Through it all, Dina does her best to hold her family together, keep her faith, and maintain her sense of humor.

As you might imagine, a story filled with alcoholics and drug addicts includes a number of horrific events. But in the end, Everything I Never Wanted to Be is an uplifting story that contains valuable lessons for parents and teens alike, and a strong message about the need to address the epidemic of teen drug addiction in our nation. It's a book that can change behavior and save lives--and make you laugh along the way.

"Open and honest." -- Charline Ratcliff, Rebecca's Reads

"Malcolm in the Middle meets Cops." -- Jenny Mounfield, The Compulsive Reader

"So absolutely over the top that it makes readers laugh out loud and thank God it is not them." -- Robin Martin, San Francisco Book Review

If you want the inside story when it comes to life on the edge -- and if you want to laugh out loud in spite of yourself -- read this book.

3.87 Stars on 392 Ratings and 80 Reviews on Goodreads as of Aug 14, 2013.

LanguageEnglish
Publishermjomary
Release dateOct 15, 2013
ISBN9780982579466
Everything I Never Wanted to Be
Author

Dina Kucera

Dina Kucera was born and raised in Albuquerque, New Mexico. After completing a project to collect and identify fifty insects, she graduated from the ninth grade and left school for good. It seemed like a good idea at the time. Her first job was a paper route, and she has worked as a maid, bartender, waitress, and grocery store checker. She recently left her job as a checker to become a writer. She has also been a stand-up comic for twenty years, for which she receives payment ranging from a small amount of money to a very, very small amount of money. When it comes to awards and recognition, she was once nominated for a Girl Scout sugar cookie award, but she never actually received the award because her father decided to stop at a bar instead of going to the award ceremony. Dina waited on the curb outside the bar, repeatedly saying to panhandlers, "Sorry. I don't have any money. I'm seven." Dina is married with three daughters, one stepson, and one grandson. She currently lives in Phoenix, Arizona.

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Rating: 4.40909096969697 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Kucera's memoir is an honest and surprisingly hilarious account of her family's -- and her own -- struggles with addiction. A stand-up comic, Kucera has a conversational and off-kilter voice and a knack for capturing a telling anecdote. Though she doesn't hide the ugly realities of her situation, she finds ways to persevere and to laugh at herself, giving hope to other families in similar circumstances.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Great book, loved reading it to see what happened next! A really great read for families of addicts!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I loved this book. it had my attention from the first page and kept my attention all the way through the last page.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Very funny and a fast read. I really enjoyed it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I Really enjoyed this book. It was a great read
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    To say that this book was a difficult read would be a complete lie. Although the content of Dina Kucera's book can sometimes be a bit rough, it is written so perfectly that I honestly couldn't put it down. She has found the perfect recipe for this memoir. A healthy dose of hope, a pinch of religion, and a heaping helping of humor. Combined, these create an unforgettable journey for the reader.

    What struck me most about Everything I Never Wanted to Be was the brutal honesty that is within these pages. Kucera pours her memories onto the page, bearing her soul for the reader. I'll admit that at times it was a bit overwhelming and I was in tears. I kept wondering how one person could go through so much pain and anger in their lifetime. However the one message that kept shining through was hope. No matter what else happens, you have to have that hope or you'll drown under the sadness. I think even those of us who aren't going through supporting an ailing loved one can appreciate this message.

    It was the humor in this book that really helped me make it through though. Despite everything that she had been through, Kucera always seemed to find some sort of humor in the smaller things to help her get by. My favorite part was at the very beginning, when she describes a normal day out with her three daughters. As they each bicker and moan in their own illness motivated ways, I had to laugh. It wasn't that it was funny that they were arguing, but more that we all know that happens in life. You just have to appreciate the time together and move on. It was a wake up call to me, reminding me that you can choose to take the good or the bad away with you from any situation. Dina Kucera asks us, why not make an effort to choose the good?

    This story is about the wisdom that comes through hardship, about beating the odds when it seems impossible. It is the type of story that has the opportunity to change lives. I can't even put into words what reading this book meant to me. I only hope more people out there, parents especially, take the time to read it.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Mildly entertaining, at best. This is not a book that grabs you, nor is it a book that makes you truly become involved with its characters. Sad, because the characters are real people. I think. That's one of the major problems with this book. Not the fact that it was written by a comedienne, with an author that warns you this book is the truth bent and twisted, but the fact that the truth is bent and twisted so far that one really can't tell where to draw the line. It would help if the exaggerations were funny, they aren't. The author also states that readers are intelligent enough to make the distinction between the truth, and what has been stretched. When you stretch the truth that far, it becomes difficult to believe any of the story. Yes bad things happen to good people, and those people have to find a way to triumph. That is not what this book is about. This is a book of bad decisions that continue to get worse, without a resolution. I would feel bad for the author, if I knew what to believe. Definitely not a book I would recommend for a first read, much less a second.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A great book for anyone that has ever had to deal with or have bee alcoholics or addicts. Dina writes about the ugly reality that people face as they grow up with or are alcoholics/addicts themselves. I am the daughter of an alcoholic and I have fought my whole life to make sure I don't go down that same path. I like how Dina doesn't sugar coat the raw feelings she went through in many different situations in her life including how she never stopped loving her children even as they went through some horrible situations in their life.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The struggle of one woman to keep her family from falling apart while she herself was also falling apart.If today for some reason you believe your life is falling apart, is not fair or you have been dealt a bad hand. Why is this happening to me you may say? If you may think your life is so bad, you feel you just don't know how you will get through the next day. I promise if you read "Everything I Never Wanted To Be," your outlook on life will change in an instant. Suddenly your life won't feel so bad and it might even seem like a slice of heaven. Dina Kucera has lived through hell most of her life and no hell is more real than watching your children and family struggle through addiction or mental illness, while feeling overwhelmed and helpless as you try to care for those members and try to be everything to everyone, until you yourself are run down into the ground. There is so much in this book I couldn't even begin to explain what Kucera has gone through. What I liked most about Dina's book is that it is raw and real, she did not sugar coat anything and honestly told her story completely from her heart and did not hold anything back. Was she probably embarrassed for herself, her family, her children when thinking about how the whole world would react once they read her story? Did she have doubts about writing this memoir, probably so? But I am more than sure that the weight Dina has been caring on her shoulders has gotten a heck of a lot lighter after writing this book and it will bring her much healing. I read this book without judgement and I still place no blame on anyone after finishing it. None of us are given a book at birth that tells us how life will be, how it should be or how we should behave. If you were blessed with good parents that raised you well, then you have been truly blessed. If you have not been born or have no family or friends that struggle with addiction or mental illness whether it be alcoholism, ADHD, autism, anxiety or any genetic or inherited abnormalities or metabolic disorders, then you are truly special. But the truth is the majority of people on this planet are not and the choices most of us make are mostly made due to how we feel at the moment, while we blindly walk our way through life, again unless we have good role models to teach us otherwise. Dina is a very strong person, stronger than she will ever know and I am sure if she continues to ask God for help for her family things will continue to improve. For God is all around us but we need to reach out and ask for help, for he wants us to reach out. Sometimes in my own personal life I have noticed God will not interfere unless I have reached out to him, sometimes in desperation, but I have asked for help. As we all have free will, and are free to pray and ask for that help. Dina and I share one thing in common and that is the stress of caring for an elderly mother in her home. Maybe Dina has never given this a thought, but Dina deserves a huge reward just for stepping up to the plate to care for her elderly mom who is also suffering Parkinson's disease. While working in the medical field I have seen so many cases of abused and neglected elderly. Most of these elderly had children who just abandoned them and never even acknowledged their existence. My life has not been roses either and I can surely write my own book as I myself have struggled through life while raising my own children, my first marriage was to an addict. We are all on this planet to grow spiritually, it just comes easier to some more than others, but no growth comes without God. After reading this memoir I will be sending my prayers to Dina and that Dina receives the healing her and her family so desperately needs.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book by Dina Kucera is a painfully honest and touching memoir about alcoholism and drug addiction, and a mother who desperately tries to keep her kids alive. Sounds dark, and it is. Reflecting on her own life which has been painted with alcoholism, the biggest focus is on Dina's daughters who also slipped into addictions, some very early on. And as much as any parent would hope that there love will heal, this just isn't enough to make your child whole and healthy again. You can literally feel the pain and the fear while reading, and then there is this fine line between such a serious topic and the use of humorous remarks which the author manages exceptionally well.Certainly not a light read I can only recommend this well-written and gripping memoir to parents who are going through similar situations. It shows them they are not alone and that they must never stop hoping.In short: A truly remarkable read on the love of a mother and drug addiction!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Everything I Never Wanted to Be is a look inside the cycle of substance abuse. Everywhere Ms. Kucera turned, there were adults using alcohol or pills to cope with life. It's no wonder that she ended up dropping out of high school after the 9th grade. There wasn't a parent responsible enough to counsel against it. From there, she ended up divorced with two daughters by the age of 19. She herself started using alcohol to get through each day. In fact, she wasn't sober until her youngest daughter was hitting adolescence. As her second husband abused marijuana until about the same time. Is there any surprise that all three of Ms. Kucera's daughters became substance abusers as well? In fact, what she found was that her children got involved with even more destructive drugs at an earlier age.She discusses how addicts can delude themselves into thinking they don't have a problem because they don't fall into X or Y category. She discusses the difficulty in raising children with dependencies. She had to work through a lot of blame because she found that blaming herself got no one anywhere. Most importantly, her humor was everywhere. Without that, she would probably be locked up and the book, which probably would never have seen the light of day, would have been much too morose.Ms. Kucera could have used a good editor. My main issue with the book was that she tended to wander in her storytelling. For example, from out of nowhere she mentions how she and her family spoiled her youngest brother as much as they could because they were poor. Just as quickly she's on to something else. I found myself in Sr. Irene Mary's shoes, mumbling about the benefits of using index cards to organize your thoughts. For example, I am sure that this fact about her youngest brother is important to her, but was it important to her story?As much as her tales of parenting drug addicts scared the death out of me, I am glad that I read it. While not perfect, Dina Kucera's story of her life surrounded by drug and alcohol abuse was quite compelling. I read it in just a day. She shows that it's never too late to make a change in your life for the better. I hope that she is proud of how she's turning her life and her family around. Her humor and her offbeat look at faith and God worked well for me. I wish her and her family health and happiness in the future. Here's hoping she never has to spend another hour working behind a checkout counter again.

Book preview

Everything I Never Wanted to Be - Dina Kucera

Everything I Never

Wanted to Be

A memoir of

alcoholism and addiction,

faith and family,

hope and humor

Dina Kucera

Dream of Things

——————————

Downers Grove Illinois USA

Copyright © 2010 Dina Kucera

Published by Dream of Things

Downers Grove, IL

dreamofthings.com

Smashwords Edition

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, except for brief quotations in critical articles and reviews, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

Kucera, Dina.

Everything I never wanted to be: a memoir about alcoholism and addiction, faith and family, hope and humor / Dina Kucera.

ISBN: 9780982579466

Cover designed by: Megan Kearney, Cartwheel Design Studio

Book designed by: Susan Veach

First Dream of Things Edition

This book is for John and my girls.

In the end we may only have pieces of a great life.

But those pieces really kick ass.

Contents

Prelude

The Funniest Mom in America

Welcome to My Life

Divine Order

Chasing the Dragon

Assault, Mary Jane, and a Prior Conviction

Suck My Dick Van Dyke

High on Life

A Letter From Dad

Every Story Has a Happy Ending If You Tell It Long Enough

Epilogue

Acknowledgements

My husband, my daughters, my grandson, and my mother... thank you for all the material. Good and bad. Mike O’Mary... thank you for being the one who said yes, after seventy-four people said no. Thank you, thank you for your patience and editing and believing in me and publishing this little book. Mark Shelmerdine, thank you for being my mentor and friend. I do not believe I would have been able to continue forward without your encouragement and support. Thank you could never convey how grateful I am. Thank you my sister Lisa for making me laugh and think and suggesting that I smooth out the rough edges. Which often included lengthy vile rants that were heavily peppered with the F word. Thank you to the random people that have come in and out of my house with warrants, in ankle bracelets, and high, drunk, or detoxing. You looked me right in the face, grinding your teeth and falling asleep in mid-sentence, and attempted to explain the problem with trucks that don’t have cup holders large enough to hold a Big Gulp, and in the next breath wondered what we can do about the kids in orphanages in the Hamptons. And last, but sort of first, thank you stand-up comics across the country for making me laugh when I really didn’t have anything to laugh about. From the top to the bottom of this list, I truly love you all. I get far more than I give. Thank you.

Prelude

The doctor rolls the stethoscope over my stomach and then stops. He says, See. Right there. Can you hear it?

I listen. Then, as clear as day, I hear your heartbeat. It is confirmation that you are with me and I am with you.

As I listen, I try to picture you and what you will be like. And I know that whatever the future may bring, I will always be comforted by the sound of your heart.

I’m okay with the fact that I always give up.

I have a hard time believing I will ever have a good life.

I leave my family for people who don’t care about me.

I don’t have any real friends.

I’m attracted to the ugliest of people.

I’ve learned to like the violent fucked-up life style.

Shooting speed always comes first. It’s not up to me anymore.

I share needles.

I’m a cutter.

I’d rather be in pain.

I’m okay knowing I will die. It won’t take long.

I feel like I’m alive to show people what happens to those who never stop.

In some sick way I enjoy not knowing if I’ll make it through this shot.

I have decided that when I get caught doing something by the police I will kill myself right away.

I’ve destroyed my family.

I have become everything I never wanted to be.

Carly

Sixteen years Old

The Funniest Mom in America

Iwas doing the Funniest Mom in America TV show at the Laugh Factory in Los Angeles. They announced my name, so I got this burst of energy and ran up on the stage like I normally do.

I grab the microphone and... nothing. I stand there, staring at the audience. You could hear a pin drop. The longer I stare, the longer they stare.

Some young girl in the front row screams, Boo! Get her off!

I’ve been doing this for eighteen years! What the hell is going on? I could tell them about my day job as a grocery store checker, or about the family that lives under my mother’s bed, or about how my grandson’s leg brace gives him superpowers, or the time my husband attacked a drug dealer with a stick, or how a caseworker suggested Cosmic Bowling as a way to treat my teenage daughter’s heroin addiction, or the time I got drunk and gave my car away, or my stay in a mental hospital, or anything about life in a family full of alcoholism, addiction and mental illnessall of which sounds tragic, but to a standup comic, it’s a never-ending source of material. But no. I say nothing.

The young girl boos again. I see my daughter, Jennifer, in the back of the room, half standing, like she might jump on the horrible screaming woman.

It seems like seven hours later when a joke finally comes out of my mouth and I get rolling a little bit. But the damage is done. I am officially not the Funniest Mom in America.

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My daughter, Carly, has been in and out of drug treatment facilities since she was thirteen. Every time she goes away, I have a routine: I go through her room and search for drugs she may have left behind. We have a laugh these days because Carly says, So you were looking for drugs I might have left behind? I’m a drug addict, Mother. We don’t leave drugs behind, especially if we’re going into treatment. We do all the drugs. We don’t save drugs back for later. If I have drugs, I do them. All of them. If I had my way, we would stop for more drugs on the way to rehab, and I would do them in the parking lot of the treatment center.

I’m fumbling around, going through Carly’s things piece by piece. I look in books, shoes, jacket pockets, DVD cases. I look in holes in stuffed animals. I see a box in the top corner of her closet. I open the box and see piles of papers.

I shuffle through them and see cute little cards, letters from friends, funny little notes from her old life. Dear Justin. Do you like me? I like you. If you don’t like me it’s okay. But I will not be your friend. Ribbons, stickers, and glitter line the bottom of the box.

Then I find this... this list of what Carly feels about herself. I read and my heart begins to beat really fast. Toward the end of the list, I have to blink to allow the tears to roll down my face so I can see.

I am holding in my hand the truth. There are a million ways to get to the truth. The shittiest way to find the truth is to stumble upon it accidentally while sparkly glitter falls all over your lap.

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The last few years, I thought Carly was just going through a stage. It was a nightmare that would end some day, and it wasn’t as bad as I thought. But Carly simply could not stay clean. She would use meth to get off heroin, and then use heroin to get off meth. I have become so desensitized to drug use that I would feel much better if I thought Carly was high all day and having the time of her life. But that’s not how it was.

Of the three times Carly was in intensive care, one of those times was a suicide attempt. The fact that her drug use made her so sad that she didn’t want to be alive anymore broke me in half.

The day Carly tried to commit suicide, she came to me and told me she couldn’t live the rest of her life as a drug addict. She had just taken every drug she could get her hands on. Heroin, Xanax, OxyContin, Fentanyl. She had a variety of drugs in the house, and she had taken all of them.

I take Carly to the emergency room. She tries to tell them what she has taken, but she can hardly speak. They immediately admit her. They have a nurse sit by her bed twenty-four hours a day in case Carly goes into cardiac arrest.

Three days into her stay, Carly begins having seizures. It is a horrible thing to watch. I ask when the seizures will stop. The doctor says they may stop, they may not. It depends on what level of damage she has done to her brain.

When a seizure starts, Carly’s eyes flicker and her head falls all the way back, as if her neck will break. She can’t talk. This happens every half hour or so.

I sleep in the hospital in a chair next to her bed. Late one night, Carly wakes up and looks at me. She looks like a little girl. A pretty, pretty little girl. The room is dark except for the light coming from the nurse’s laptop computer, but I can still see Carly’s face and striking green eyes.

She is slurring her words, but I’ll never forget what she says: I wish I was like other girls. The girls who go to the mall or to the movies. They’re all bright shiny stars. And I’m like this. I don’t have a best friend. I don’t have any friends.

Carly rolls over facing away from me, begins to fall asleep, and mumbles, They’re all bright shiny stars. As she speaks, I can feel my heart crumbling.

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The hospital stay happened to fall the week before I had to go be the Funniest Mom in America. I told my husband, John, I shouldn’t go. He said I would hate myself if I didn’t, and that I couldn’t cancel on such short notice. So I decided to go. But I had slept on a chair for a week in the hospital and had to be in Los Angeles the following day. I didn’t feel great, so Jennifer drove me.

We got a room in the ghetto because it didn’t look like the ghetto in the picture on the Internet. The picture on the Internet had a beautiful family sitting poolside drinking exotic drinks. That family was not there, and the view from the only window in our room was of what we eventually figured out was a payday loan store—although we couldn’t be sure because the sign was in Spanish. As a matter of fact, every business in that area had a sign that was in Spanish. That explained why when Jen and I walked into the motel lobby, the illegal immigrant desk clerk backed up against the wall with his hands up.

I said, We have a reservation.

He put his arms down and breathed a sigh of relief. They have reservation. Oh my Got. That scare the sheet out of me.

We were scared, too. The Internet also said you could walk to shopping from our motel. Any time you stay at a motel that advertises, Walk to shopping, be afraid. If we were shopping for crack cocaine, they were right, we could walk. Probably down the hall.

Jen and I both wake up the morning of the big funny event with fevers. I am so dizzy I can’t get out of the bed, so we both go back to sleep to the sound of gunshots and police sirens.

Jen gets me to the comedy club where the other funny moms are already waiting to go on. I still have a fever and am dizzy. All the moms are pacing back and forth, thinking about all the funny things they are going to say, but I am thinking about Carly. I have my cell phone in my hand the entire time, calling and checking on her every fifteen minutes. One time, I get her on the phone. Carly says, Just be funny. You can do this, Mom.

I get off the phone, and I am pacing back and forth, completely blown away that only a week ago, such a beautiful, intelligent, amazing person tried to commit suicide. And I am that person’s mother. The tears come and I sneak out the side door and walk around the corner of the club to shake it off. Then I put on a smile and walk back in. My hands are shaking from the image of Carly and the sound of her voice.

A few moms go on before me and it’s almost my turn, and I suddenly realize I should have also been pacing and thinking of funny things like the other moms had been doing. But I didn’t and now here I am. On stage. Unfunny. I think of something funny, but then I have a tiny flash of Carly having a seizure and my stomach rolls with anxiety. I have been a comic for eighteen years and I have never felt so unfunny in my life.

I do my silent set. I am like a mime that doesn’t do any mime movements. I’ll remember that the next time the joke doesn’t come out. Just mime Trapped in a Glass Box.

I look at the other moms afterwards. I’m sure they are funny all the time. I can see the women and their husbands and kids just laughing and laughing all day and night. I bet not one of them has a seventeen-year-old at home shooting up heroin. Not that they know of at least.

Jen and I are driving home the next day, and I can’t stop ranting about what happened the night before.

Jen says, It’s okay, Mom. You’re not the Funniest Mom in America. But you are the Funniest Mute in America.

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Welcome to My Life

See, this is actually my life. I’m not a writer. I’m a checker in a grocery store. I’m surrounded by these strange people who claim to be my family. My crappy leased house is on the busiest street in Phoenix, and I can hear the traffic and ambulances like they’re driving through my living room. When I hear a cop siren, I check to see if they’re stopping at my house, and then I’m relieved when they pass to go and ruin someone else’s day. My life really starts when I get home from work, but first, I have to spend eight hours checking on the express lane... eight hours smiling at idiots.

My customer counts out ninety-six cents in change. Can I get rid of this?

Of course you can. The express lane is the perfect place to unload your enormous pile of change.

Ten items or less. It ain’t brain surgery. I wish I had a dime for every person who says, I might be just a few items over the limit. Forty items later, I’m still scanningand because I haven’t evolved into the person I want to be, I scan slowly so the other people in line can burn holes in my customer’s head with their angry eyes. I smile and scan and say a prayer that God will help me be a better person after this order.

At least twice a day someone says they did my job in high school. What they are saying is that when they were a dumb teenager, they did my job before they became an important member of society. I just smile and act interested.

When I get a break, I sit outside on the tiny bench that is the only place designated for smokers in the giant parking lot. I light my cigarette and Random Man passes by. He says, Good morning. The Dow is down thirteen points.

This man always has a fact to give me. He comes in two or three times a day. He’s a very nice man so I act really interested: Thirteen points? That is ridiculous.

I go in the store and I start scanning things. Millions of things. It never ends. I scan about a thousand things and then I look at the clock. I’ve been at work five minutes. I look down, scan more, and wonder at what point my life veered this horribly off course. Then I remember and keep scanning.

I say to a customer, Two dollars and twenty-nine cents.

She says, What! What did I buy! I hear this twenty times a day.

I say, You bought cheese.

She shakes her head and hands me the money. You may as well hold me at gun point.

I think, For cheese?

The next customer: No, no, no! That was ninety-nine cents! Go look at it!

I go look at it. It’s three dollars.

You’re robbing me. I’ll shop somewhere else!

I think, I really hope she doesn’t shop anywhere else.

The next customer walks up smiling about the previous customer. He says, Some people are crazy. I know because I did your job in high school.

A girl walks up on her cell phone, acts like I’m invisible,

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