I write this every year. Someday they'll listen.
Someday things will change, and July will come and go, and people will say "Summer seems longer. The children are happier. Could it be? Did one man really make a difference?"
And the answer will be yes. That man was me. Or the senior executive in charge of seasonal marketing, which could be a woman, I don't know. But possibly me.
On the third of July I went to Target for one of those boxes of fireworks — you know, $1,237 value! Only $16.99! (The greater price is what it would sell for on Mars, what with shipping and handling.) I noticed that the summer section had been gutted and shelves set up in Seasonal for Back to School. Because everyone wakes on July 5th and prints off the supply list and heads out — Lord knows they might run out of glue sticks this year, and then nothing would stick together for the whole school year! Say goodbye to Harvard.
Target's not alone. All the stores are ramping up the BTS, which either means Back to School or Bring the Sorrow, depending. But there's something about that enormous pencil hanging over the Seasonal department that looks like the No. 2 Sword of Damocles, and there's just no reason for it.
On the other hand, we were late shopping last year — second week of August — and all the good lunchboxes were picked over. I was at Target on Wednesday and texted Daughter (TM) a picture of one she might like.
NOOOOOOOO was the response. OK, this one? NOOOOOOOOOO! Ah. Not an aesthetic evaluation, but a cry of despair over the very idea that school is nigh. Got it.
Does this make sense? Is this helpful? Let's say you think "Either I left my gardening gloves out in the rain and they shrunk, or I am retaining water like the river after they built the Hoover Dam." You realize the gloves are also disgusting sheaths encrusted with muck, and while that's good for digging, a new pair for light duty would be nice.