25 November 2006 @ 01:10 am
Post-Thanksgiving Bliss  
Oy. Shopping today was insane. I hope the local news programs asked those insane people who spent the night outside Best Buy what in the world it was that they hoped to purchase. We pulled into the parking lot of our local Best Buy at 5 a.m., the magic opening hour, and realized there had to be more than 1,000 people waiting in a line that stretched across the strip center parking lot and down a couple of blocks before disappearing into the dark beyond. Holy shit.

Being the shopping wimps that we are, Joe and I promptly abandoned all hope and opted for breakfast instead. :) Obviously, gift shopping was the motivator, but I also wanted another external hard drive. I take a lot of pictures and it has come to my attention that I'm running out of space on my existing external HD. Best Buy had some good deals and good selection of things on my various lists, but not anything to wait outside all night for. But maybe I'm missing a gene and this behavior makes sense to others.

I'd already found alternative sources for everything on our lists from Best Buy ("minimum 10 per store has," in my experience, has meant, "we'll sell 10 at this price and restock after the sale is over") so I wasn't unduly phased. Target and Radio Shack filled in nicely. Unbeknownst to me, Joe was shopping today for a Play Station 2 for himself. Obviously he wanted one as he waded into the quagmire of people at Target buying 19" LCD TVs. We may have been the only people in the store without at least one in our cart. I felt like may I, too, needed a 19" LCD television. Weird psychology but I'm blaming it on lack of sleep.

Nothing like a system being obsolete to bring the price of a Play Station 2 down to something almost reasonable. He has, since then, played Grand Turismo non-stop. Me? I have the new hard drive plugged in to my ancient computer's USB (so ancient it doesn't have USB 2.0*; the card I installed to upgrade never took despite our futzing) so transferring two years' worth of photos looks to be a really, really long process.)

While waiting in line to pay at 6:45 a.m., my phone rings. Must be Mom. I was greeted with, "I want you to know that waiting in line is part of the gift." I heart my Mom. She was - surprise! - at Best Buy. No line down in Corpus to get in but the line to get out? Two feet forward in 45 minutes. My mom loves us. :)

Got lots of gifts today - yay!. Still have lots to go *whimper* and I'm reminded of why I shifted to online shopping. Amazon is my friend. Land's End is my friend. Deep Discount DVD is my friend.

I extorted gift lists out of all five nephews in attendance at T-giving dinner. You know what they all want? Best Buy Cards**. Thank god I can get those at the grocery store when I check out. Makes my wrapping duties manageable, too.

I see I owe lots of people comments, which I shall get to as soon as I can. Tomorrow I'm making a pilgrimage to Fort Worth with my long-time friend Amy to gaze upon the Hatshepsut exhibit. I expect to find, upon my return Sunday evening, that Joe has melded with the Captain Kirk chair in our living room from having spent endless hours playing with his PS2.

* Perhaps I've answered my own question? Maybe those people outside Best Buy need a new computer, too, but they're just more determined than I?
**Okay, one wrote, "CASH $$$" large enough to fill the page. But then he wrote a tiny, "Thank you!" next to it. ♥
 
 
Current Mood: exhausted
 
 
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[identity profile] tubin.livejournal.com on November 25th, 2006 06:31 pm (UTC)
So yeah, I can't imagine getting up before 5 to go shopping any day. And doesn't Best Buy have an online store? (Checks) Yup, http://www.bestbuy.com/
seems to be offering a T'giving weekend sale...

Gift cards... was thinking about whether I should wimp out and do gift cards for the nephews this year. Don't like the fact that it advertises how much I spent on them; do like the fact that it makes it clear that all is equal. I'd like the idea of taking them shopping at Best Buy or something, but I won't be there this year. So am dithering...
Mish[identity profile] hsapiens.livejournal.com on November 30th, 2006 02:48 pm (UTC)
You were assuming that I "got up" to go shopping. *grins* Seriously? I could never do that. Rather I stayed up because once it got to 11 p.m., I knew I was hosed if I wanted to take advantage of the specials.

Best Buy is online but those special deals, the ones I'm guessing people slept outside for, weren't available online. They're all about whipping people into a shark-like feeding frenzy AND corraling them into your store.

I'm undecided on gift cards. Part of what used to be fun for me in gift shopping was trying to get the very best item I could for whatever my budget was. "Very best" might be an incredible deal but most often it was about getting someone something they dearly wanted. With nephews across the age spectrum, it might mean older ones got a slightly pricier gift but everyone got something that made him happy. It was never about the money to me so much as the happiness the gift gave.

So, yeah, just chunking a piece of plastic at them takes a lot of the fun *for me* out of gifts -- but it also relieves a lot of the stress of finding "gems" on a deadline to mail packages. I won't be facing Target on Christmas Eve to buy a Nintendo game because I finally got the last kid's wishlist. That's a Good Thing(tm).

So, yeah, I'm similarly ambivalent.
[identity profile] tubin.livejournal.com on November 30th, 2006 04:20 pm (UTC)
As a curmudgeon: if a kid waits until Christmas Eve to send me a wishlist, he or she doesn't get something from the wishlist for Christmas. I'm a little ambivalent about wishlists in the first place but the late delivery suggests the kid wasn't that motivated to get those particular gifts from me.

Unless, of course, it was a parent's fault or something, I suppose.
Mish[identity profile] hsapiens.livejournal.com on November 30th, 2006 07:17 pm (UTC)
It was very much a parental problem. The kid was 6 at the time and the youngest of five nephews who would be at Christmas. Not having a gift for him was not acceptable to me -- and I didn't deem it acceptable to just get him something to wrap when I'd worked hard to get others stuff they really wanted.

I was complicit in my gift shopping misery because I preferred to get him something he really wanted over ease of shopping for me -- and I've changed my behavior since then. Thus, my T-giving antics to get lists. I really would have hated getting anyone a Barbie doll that he didn't want, but I would have done so to make a point. The kids are between 10 and 16 now so I would not cut the same slack as before and I have no qualms about extorting lists.

I've always relied on lists. I don't see the nephews often enough to know their interests. With little kids, I like having the parent filter so that I don't accidentally buy a verboten item. With teens, I have no hope of knowing what's in or cool. So long as everyone knows this isn't a demands list, it's good. That's something Joe's sisters have been very good about teaching their kids.