He was loading my grocery bags. I’ll call him Michael. He was early twenties, wearing an apron. He has Down syndrome.
“How are you today?” he said.
“Pretty good,” said I.
“So am I!” he said. “I’m doing pretty good, too!”
I smiled. “How about that.”
The cashier was dutifully scanning my groceries, sliding them into the bagging area. Michael was loading my plastic bag slowly. And I mean extremely slowly.
One. Item. At. A. Time.
He was an artist. He packed my first bag like it was going into the Smithsonian.
“I’m trying to load it just right,” Michael said. “I’m supposed to take my time bagging. My manager said not to hurry. I used to rush it. But now I don’t rush it anymore. I go slow. Really slow. Like this.”
He placed a box of Cheez-Its into a bag so gently he might as well have been handling a live grenade.
Eventually, we were standing around waiting on him to finish bagging. I had already paid, but Michael was still packing my first bag, moving at about the same
pace as law school.
The bagging area was still brimming with groceries and there was a long line of customers accumulating in the checkout lane behind us, wearing aggravated looks on their pinched and sour faces.
There are two kinds of people in this world, those who slow down when they see a yellow light, and those who speed up. These customers were the latter.
The cashier asked Michael if he wanted help bagging to speed things up.
“No, thank you,” he said, placing toothpaste into the bag carefully. “I’m good.”
“But people are waiting,” the cashier said.
So Michael took a moment to smile and wave at everyone.
After what seemed like four or five presidential administrations he finished loading my first bag. He placed the bag into my cart. “There!” he announced, dusting his hands.
One…