They didn’t seem like people I would like. I was walking down a long aisle at Walmart behind a couple and a boy who I assume was their son. They were snapping at each other about some disagreement.
He called her a “bitch” several times. She had a choice word she called him, but I won’t even repeat that one. They didn’t seem to care that anyone else was around. The young boy just walked in silence.
Then I noticed the back of the woman’s t-shirt. I had trouble reading the typeface at a distance at first, but then I realized what it said.
“Take me as I am or watch me as I go.”
My first thought was to laughingly think a man would be lucky to watch her leave, but then I thought more seriously that the slogan sounded like an attitude they might both share. And then it occurred to me that this is a common attitude among modern people who don’t want to see their own flaws and their own responsibility to improve themselves.
Visit with high school best friend leaves me pondering my old fears
If you repress feelings long enough, depression attacks without warning
There’s a lot to complain about, but miracle is so much goes right
Is it abuse to force atypical kids to conform to norms of society?
Why is real love so hard to find? Look into a mirror for the culprit
Memory Lane is seductive when
Confessing my ego’s old desires reveals hidden fears of my past