The Luminist
I was standing on one leg like an oversized flamingo, my bare foot on a wobbly disc of plywood while I tossed a rubber ball against the gym’s cinderblock wall. It was the last indignity of a balance training session Kavon had cooked up to get me ready for the pilgrim path. Thwack. Thwack. Thwack. “So what is it, exactly?” I asked curtly, doubly frustrated by the man who had given me this task, and by the topic we happened to be discussing. “Please explain this Costco thing.” Kavon shook his head, disappointed in my evident disdain. As a small business owner and dad of two, he ran through a litany of things he loves about Costco: predictable pricing, guaranteed bargains, almost everything he needs for home and work. As a true fanboy, he’d even listened to the Acquired [https://www.acquired.fm/episodes/costco]podcast episode [https://www.acquired.fm/episodes/costco] that outlined Costco’s strategy and business approach, rattling off their profit margin philosophy and fair wage ethos. (Subscribe to have the Luminist delivered to your inbox every Saturday, in both written and audio format, at https://theluminist.substack.com/ [https://theluminist.substack.com/].) Thwack. Thwack. Thwack. As he did his Costco rendition of ‘How Do I Love Thee, Let Me Count The Ways’, I didn’t dare nod my head for fear of falling off my disc. I couldn’t argue with his logic. Yet… it didn’t feel like enough. Enough to generate that baffling Costco ride-or-die passion I’ve seen in so many men, including one guy [https://theluminist.substack.com/p/2-why-i-wouldnt-trade-away-the-grief] who is no longer here. Then, Kavon surprised me with this: “I think what I also love is the discovery element: you never know what you might find. It doesn’t feel like shopping, it feels more like a warehouse-sized treasure hunt. Will it be a kayak? A giant wheel of cheese? A sample that a hair-netted lady gives you that changes your dinner plans? Four tires for your car? It’s the land of opportunity.” Thwack. Thwack. Thwump. I dropped the ball and lurched sideways off the plywood. Of course. Now it all makes sense. When Mike was alive and the kids were young, I let him drag me to the warehouse-to-end-all-warehouses once every couple of months. Not because we needed any more toilet paper. Because Costco was Mike’s happy place. Emphatically, enthusiastically, inexplicably his happy place. He’d load our cart with collared work shirts, underwear for the kids, sheets. He’d buy our TVs and our computers. Twenty-four packs of paper towels, ten packs of dental floss, three-packs of chicken wings, a case of wine. One time, he’d loaded so many beach towels into our overflowing cart that, when we turned our backs for a second, a lady began shopping from it, deciding which color combos she wanted for herself. For the entirety of our marriage, I did not get it. Costco’s so-muchness was too much for me: floor-to-ceiling jam-packed shelves, freezer after freezer of frosted-over foods, the random middle section of giant cardboard boxes spilling over with tube socks and camisoles. My brain found the lack of rhyme or reason overwhelming. I sulked through every single trip. I never once thought to ask him why he loved it. That version of me — the early aughts to mid-2010’s Sue — was harried. Underwater and breathing through a straw. I didn’t have much bandwidth for curiosity. I was just trying to do a killer job at work, keep the kids alive and thriving, and run a household on the weekdays while Mike was away. I write that sentence now and think, well, no wonder spending hours in a place that overwhelmed my senses sent me into a tailspin. In short, I wasn’t in the right headspace back then to wonder what about Costco delighted him so much, let alone ask. But my life now is different, and so am I. I’ve pivoted from corporate to creative work [https://theluminist.substack.com/p/70-taking-the-cycles-of-life-less]. I’ve returned to my beloved childhood pastime of reading endless books, seeing the world from a new angle in each one. I have new relationships, Kavons who generate unexpected conversations and insights. And my days are spacious, allowing me to enjoy noticing [https://theluminist.substack.com/p/157-three-years-later-i-finally-understand] and sometimes even solving mysteries. Like the mystery of Mike and Costco. Costco was never shopping for him, it was an expedition. And Mike — strategic, deal-loving, optimization-brained Mike, whose family nickname was ‘Action Adventure Man’ — was built for expeditions. From my new vantage point, I can see, in those final years, how Mike was breathing through a straw, too. That Mike’s life was full of constraints, just like mine. I can see why a super-sized warehouse gave him joy, how finding unexpected things to bring to his family lit him up, like a caveman dragging home the mastodon he’s just downed. Costco ticked all his boxes, allowing him to do the thing he loved most: provide for us. These realizations give me a thrill. My relationship to Mike still gets to evolve — my understanding and love of him still gets to deepen — simply because I’m still changing. He will never be frozen in amber as long I never give up growing myself. Hi Mike. It’s nice to see you, honey. Watch out for those other shoppers, they’re eyeing your cart… To new perspectives, Sue Subscribe to Substack to receive The Luminist in your inbox every Saturday — an invitation to notice reality, rather than the stories our minds and culture like to spin: https://theluminist.substack.com/ [https://theluminist.substack.com/] Order Sue's Book - Do Loss: A New Way to Move Through Change here: theluminist.substack.com [http://theluminist.substack.com] Find books and stories to support your journey in the Loss Canon: The Books that Got Me Through. You can find it on YouTube here: https://www.youtube.com/@suedeagle [https://www.youtube.com/@suedeagle] Get full access to The Luminist at theluminist.substack.com/subscribe [https://theluminist.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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