On a necessary venture into the coronaviral miasma, I found myself in a line that seemed stretched a mile away from the register. Sounds bad — but because we were distancing, there were only four people ahead of me.
There were marks on the floor to indicate where we should stand. Helpful! At some point, the manager had tossed a roll of tape to an employee, said, "Mark 'em off, 6 feet apart, because of plague," and the employee hopped to it. Otherwise we would all be carrying yardsticks taped together, tucked under an armpit, perhaps with a bell on each end.
The trouble with these spaced-out lines became apparent when someone tried to zipper-merge from an another aisle, and, let me tell you, the line was on high alert to let her know that wasn't going to happen. But a clerk opened up another register, and the interloper made her move before any of us could react.
Well.
Well I never.
Well isn't that different.
On the way out, I shot her a look, which pinged off like a BB hitting a battleship. For a moment I felt a bit abashed, being so petty in these times, but then I realized that it felt wonderfully normal to glare impotently at someone over a trivial matter. Besides, when we rebuild society, someone will have to restore the old norms, and mute, powerless disapproval is one of those Minnesota things we must cherish.
"I'm sorry," you're thinking. "I lost you at yardstick. Who has yardsticks? There's a thing called a tape measure, you know. Why, my phone can measure distances with an app. A yardstick, boomer?"