I took a trip downstate this last weekend and found myself in a shopping mall in Troy on Saturday afternoon. I hadn’t been to a genuine mall with more than 100 stores and a food court in several months.
It’s funny because that used to be a regular part of my suburban life in Atlanta. Now, when I enter these wondrous palaces of commerce and affluence, I feel like a country bumpkin.
My first taste of “otherness” came in Nordstroms. Fancy stuff, big prices. I stopped at a rack full of shirts, touched the fabric on one of them–a nice garment–and searched in vain for the price. A most efficient gentlemen came over, glanced at my appearance–my well-worn 30 dollar jeans, my 12 dollar shirt from Walmart, my slightly muddied shoes, my unkempt hair–and informed me, barely hiding his contempt, that this lovely shirt on the rack retailed for 165 dollars.
I thanked him and moved on, calculating in my head that I could buy 13 Walmart shirts for the price of that one garment, and I’d still have money left over to buy a latte.
Speaking of which, I found the Starbucks next. Is there a mall anywhere on earth that doesn’t have a Starbucks? In any case, I arrived there and found that the line went out the door. Twenty people in front of me awaiting their special cup of 4 and 5 dollar coffee.
The entire mall, in fact, was filled with shoppers, most of them loaded down with bags of recently bought goods. This, in a suburb of Detroit which the rest of the nation has come to regard as the center of a near economic depression.
Sure didn’t look that way to me. Shoppers looked happy and prosperous.
The most astounding sight was the Apple Store. It was absolutely jammed with shoppers trying out and buying the latest in iPads, iPods, iPhones, and iDon’t know what else. I felt like I was at a crowded party, forging a path for myself between shoppers, and constantly saying, “Excuse me…Excuse me…”
One other remarkable phenomenon about this mall: nary a book store. Apparently they don’t exist in malls anymore. Talk about a sign of the times–Apple is thriving, book stores don’t exist.
So after 90 minutes of window shopping and sipping my 4 dollar latte, this country bumpkin, emptyhanded, left the mall and headed back to the UP.
Yeah, I had felt out of place, but I was also relieved at what I saw. It looked like my fellow Americans had regained their confidence and their need to buy and consume.
Me? I kinda like my 12 dollar shirt.