Give me something cheaper

Recently, while shopping in Lidl, I noticed the following thing, and there was no other way, for quite some time, for several years, since the beginning of the recent crises, the increase in prices and my unemployment, I constantly observe the people around me, especially when we shop for food in the store.

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A young man had entered the shop, perhaps on his lunch break, he looked like a construction worker because his work clothes were splattered with white paint. He had gone to the corner with the discounted products, looking at them in detail. This place is quite awkward because you have to crouch down to look at them. But there he was, crouching and rummaging through packages of hams and German sausages and pate and yogurt and all sorts of things.
Later he ended up at the same register as us, he was right behind us, so I saw what he had bought. He had taken only one tin of beer. Also one of the cheapest.
My partner said this is very typical of our latitude - to decide to spend your money on beer instead of buying something to eat.
I felt sad.

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While the man was rummaging through the discounted products, I went there too, either to support him or something. I know a lot of people wouldn't bother doing this, but I was. For a while. Then I saw how many other people were doing it - looking for things on sale. But not discounted because of an organized weekly promotion. I have told you before that we mainly buy such things, but they often turn out to be of low quality, wrong batches and so on, the sellers know very well which products to discount. And every discount has a price, nothing is free in this country. However, here I am talking about the discounted products due to recent expiration.
There are products I can only afford when they are discounted like this.

I saw a ham in the man's hands and wanted to see its reduced price. That's actually why I went to him. Its price, even reduced, was still quite high. In fact, quite a few of the products in this section were priced very high, even on sale, no wonder no one bought them. And no wonder the young man couldn't find anything affordable even there.

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As I said, I don't shy away from looking at these sections in the store anymore, they are spread out in several places and I go around and look at them properly each time.

I overcame this concern perhaps last year, when for the first time in the pharmacy my mouth uttered the words: "Give me something cheaper."
I was really amazed at these words, amazed to hear them from my mouth and felt quite strange.
However, the pharmacist then took out a product, very cheap, of whose existence I had no way of knowing. Perhaps it is almost no different from the expensive, let alone branded products.

I think that sentence had an effect. And I already say it quite often. Because we all know how artificially inflated our prices are and how traders speculate illegally. Every single one of them. Bulgarians have this bad habit of wanting to get rich quickly and easily, that's why they use every illegal or inhuman inflationary opportunity that opens up to them, the same disease infects foreigners who come to the country to do business.

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But I'm stubborn.
Since the beginning of the crisis, we have changed a lot our way of eating, more precisely shopping. We just stopped eating some things. For example, we don't eat milk and dairy products. The original reason was the skyrocketing price, then we decided, we have stopped eating them for health reasons. I'm happy with that.

For Bulgaria, milk and milk products are a traditional and integral part of every kitchen and household, Bulgarian yogurt is patented and protected, I think everyone has heard of it, if they haven't tried it. I say this because Bulgarians grew up with yogurt and cheese, and most people would find it very difficult, even unthinkable, to exclude it from their menu. That is why I am particularly sad when I see poor pensioners buying the expensive cheese, at a price higher than that of the same product in the same stores in Germany. Or even worse, to buy from an imitation cheese product because they cannot afford to buy real cheese, as the prices of real cheese are higher than in Germany, as is the price of fresh milk.
But once we decided that the price of milk in the country is not fair, we no longer buy such products, and as I said, I am happy about it for health reasons.

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It's the same with fruit too. I love watermelons and melons, for example, and only a few summers ago, watermelons were bought several times a week, and melons too, although more expensive. But this year, because of the high prices, I just decided that I will not eat these fruits anymore. I have an idea of ​​how much the rest of the fruits should be and I almost never take any of them either, because it's not fair to me.

Oh yes, I can imagine what that looks like - that I am depriving myself of the most useful and healthy things. But in fact this is not so. Fruit and vegetables in Lidl are usually poor quality and imported. Good Bulgarian fruits and vegetables are exported, of course. I'm not sure about the quality either in terms of poisons, pesticides, etc. And I don't want to go to the local market because I'm tired, I've told you before, of the bad and rude attitude of the sellers there, or of the price, quality and weight scams of random street sellers of local produce. There just isn't much choice.

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That's why I prefer to take cheaper things, they will be just as low quality as the expensive ones. 😃 That's the logic here, and it's very conducive to doing business (but not being a consumer).

Thank you for your time! Copyright:@soulsdetour
steem.jpgSoul's Detour is a project started by me years ago when I had a blog about historical and not so popular tourist destinations in Eastern Belgium, West Germany and Luxembourg. Nowadays, this blog no longer exists, but I'm still here - passionate about architecture, art and mysteries and eager to share my discoveries and point of view with you.

Personally, I am a sensitive soul with a strong sense of justice.
Traveling and photography are my greatest passions.
Sounds trivial to you?
No, it's not trivial. Because I still love to travel to not so famous destinations.🗺️
Of course, the current situation does not allow me to do this, but I still find a way to satisfy my hunger for knowledge, new places, beauty and art.
Sometimes you can find the most amazing things even in the backyard of your house.😊🧐🧭|

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These are difficult times, no matter where you are.

Here in the USA, I am often at the "reduced for quick sale" bin, looking at products that are on 50% off (or more) because the last good date is today.

So often, that bin/refrigerator unit at the supermarket is empty. It has been a long time since I have "just shopped" for food... these days it is all a carefully planned trip, and only getting things that are "on offer."

We are grateful for having a large freezer, so when something like chicken or pork chops are on special, I buy a large quantity and put them in the freezer.

It seems so strange to look at life and realize this is how we live now. 20 years ago, it would not have been part of my reality.

I'm someone who seems to have a hard time adjusting to change because it took me a long time to get over and accept it all. I also take shopping as a trip, often it's just an informational tour between the stalls, to inform myself of the new prices, because I wouldn't buy any of it.
Personally, living in a poor country, I have always had a problem with prices, but I grew up thinking that things in life progress, that there is improvement, you know - you start a job, you get better, you get a higher salary, you start to afford better things, more food, etc.
But I kind of missed that progress, I didn't see any of it, on a personal level things got worse and worse and I got to the point of saying: Give me something cheap. Something really unthinkable to me, this lack of progress is completely unthinkable. But apparently I have to get used to that too. It's very unpleasant. Am I the only one horrified by this?🤔

I hope in USA 50% off is really worth it. Here with us, as I said, even that is sometimes quite expensive, and the weekly promotions are usually associated with artificially increasing the prices in advance, only to announce some kind of reduction later. If you don't keep a close eye on product prices, you can easily be cheated. Also, the quality is pretty questionable, so I wouldn't freeze meat here. Maybe I'm exaggerating, and my partner gets annoyed by it often, but I'm really questioning everything here because things are pretty out of whack.

It makes me a bit sad reading all that but this is how the modern world works nowadays... Making 99% of people poorer while the other 1% becomes insanely rich. Pandemics, wars, unnecessary space tourism for the billionaires.

The list could become way too long.

Now here is something funny to cheer you up!

There is this Bulgarian saying/joke that beer is called "liquid banitsa" (pastry) :)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banitsa

Have a great weekend.

I also check out the discounted stuff, especially food as it is too bad to let food go to waste, with all that processing, packaging, transport, etc. Most of the times, still good food. This is good for the planet. I suppose all that unsold and expired food would otherwise need more time, energy and money to get composted...

Oh yeah, I know about that joke. I can even be grateful that the Bulgarians have been given cheaper and more accessible alcohol. They need it! This is very sad and this is the situation in quite a few former Russian and communist countries in general. The population needs alcohol to survive mentally if they can survive physically before and after alcohol.

But I keep asking myself - is this really life? It starts with some high hopes, and it gets to a point where you can't buy basic things. I especially lament myself, because I am still young, in the prime of my powers, my brain and body work well, but I cannot find a livelihood that uses these still good functions. I think there is something wrong here, some broken pixel that is distorting the whole picture, I keep thinking there is something I can do to fix it, but nothing changes no matter what I do, that wrong pixel is still there, actually it's like a frozen desktop that doesn't change... Things look unreal and completely wrong.

I suppose all that unsold and expired food would otherwise need more time, energy and money to get composted.

Actually, I have no idea what happens to expired food. We know full well that some of the meat is marinated and repackaged, I don't know at what stage of its "life", but it certainly isn't the freshest meat. As I said, I question everything here and I suspect there are bad practices in everything and everywhere.
But you are right that it is good for the environment. Hehe, I hadn't considered myself an environmentalist from that point of view either. That's what cheered me up already 😃

The weekend can't be great, they turned off the water as usual and now I can't take a shower again. This is another wonderful part of the "high quality" life that goes on here.😕

You're right about the alcohol here. It is a great planning tool as well :)

I believe everyone has the power to make changes and steps into certain directions.

Yes, you have the power to change.

Oh, then let there be... water!

The days are hard everywhere. I understand fully why that man had to do that...

To survive now is even expensive, so going for less expensive stuffs is an ideal now 🤷‍♂️.

And NO, personally, I don't get shy on that, life is difficult.

Same situation in Nigeria. We have a lot of things in comon, the difference here is the name and skin colour.

The difference is actually in the numerical ratios, attitudes and mentality. It is very important to mention, when we talk about the minimum wage, what are the prices of basic products, of rents, electricity and heating, of course, the price of a liter of gasoline. Very often people from Western Europe cannot understand exactly this when they accidentally find out that many prices in Bulgaria are like theirs, a little lower or higher. This seems normal, but in fact the minimum wage is much lower, as an example - more than 4 times lower than in Germany.
Then you have to take into account people's attitudes and their way of life, their traditions and consumption, how they arrange their lives. Bulgarians are taught to arrange their lives in such a way that they always survive, no matter what. It is a complex skill, incomprehensible to many other peoples. 🤭 I see it's the same with Nigerians, so that's not in the 'differences' column.🙃

UMMER(4).jpg Team True Colours - @ wakeupkitty

Thanks for supporting me!🙏 Have a nice and sunny weekend!

I look at what I can get at the grocery store here in America for what my family's budget is and realize that just
4-5 years ago, I could get almost four times that. Something has to give!

This post has been upvoted/supported by Team 7 via @httr4life. Our team supports content that adds to the community.

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In "human" countries, as far as I've read, there are compensations for this. For example, the annual inflation compensation bonus of 3,000 euros in Germany, which is tax-free for employers. I am not saying that it should be this way, but this is also something against the background of countries with permanently low wages, high unemployment and lack of any support and assistance from the state.
Thanks a lot for your support! Have a wonderful day!