Life

Keep Your Receipt

Last Updated on February 6, 2022

Last night, I realized that I needed to make a quick trip to Super Wal*Mart, where I do most of my grocery shopping.

I know, a lot of you hate all of Sam Walton’s properties. If other grocery stores kept Wal*Mart’s hours, I’d shop there. Given their hours and their prices, I can put up with a little in the way of annoyances if I can shop on my schedule. (And I needed a few non-grocery items, too.)

As I was leaving, the door greeter asked to see my receipt.

Well, that’s odd, I thought. He didn’t ask to see the receipt of the person ahead of me. And he didn’t ask to see the receipt of the person behind me. The stupid alarm didn’t go off, so he had no real reason to single me out.

(He was black, I’m not. I do not assume racial bias.)

But there was some reason that he would ask to see my receipt, and apparently only my receipt. And whatever that reason is, I have a problem with it.

I didn’t cause a scene, and I didn’t refuse to show him my receipt, an action that got a shopper in Illinois “illegally detained” recently in a story that has been blown far out of proportion. I showed the receipt. He looked at it, scanned the items, took a quick glance in the bags and thanked me.

I then called the manager the next morning. I pointed out how nice the greeter had been, and how much I didn’t appreciate being singled out. The manager asked if I had purchased any big electronics — a television, DVD player, or iPod, for example — because employees are instructed to confirm a receipt for an electronic item.

I told him that I had purchased some DVDs that were in a bag with several other items and that the greeter would have had to have had X-ray vision to have spotted them down in the bag. Maybe, somehow, this greeter had spotted them, I said, but I don’t think he could have. And the people before and after me had roughly the same amount of merchandise in their buggy and weren’t asked.

The manager apologized and said he’d talk to this employee to make sure he’s not just picking people at random. That’s all I ask: if I’m going to be stopped for apparently no reason, I expect everyone to be stopped for no reason. Nothing will get that policy changed faster.

the authorPatrick
Patrick is a Christian with more than 30 years experience in professional writing, producing and marketing. His professional background also includes social media, reporting for broadcast television and the web, directing, videography and photography. He enjoys getting to know people over coffee and spending time with his dog.

4 Comments

  • Thanks, Psych…the flip chart date is part of the whole template, iTheme. Click the link at the bottom and you’ll be taken to the designer’s site.

  • Oh man that stuff doesn’t bother me…heck at Sam’s club everyone is stopped to look at their receipt. And heck, Patrick you know you look like you would just be stuffing Elvis pj pants up in your shirt! Yep…I like the black & gold ones I saw at Wal Mart tonight but they didn’t have my size. Have to try some other stores…we actually have 2, yes 2 new Super Wal Marts being built within 15 min of each other opening in Jan & Feb wow!!!

  • One must present one’s receipt at the exit at Costco. I’ve never actually understood the reasoning behind it, but it is applied universally, so that’s OK, I guess.

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