Enough of Mr. McCauley and his fifteen minutes of fame. May he enjoy great success drawing the people who admire his policies away from wherever I and my kids will be.
I was in Paulina Market today with one of my little perfect angels, and, almost as if they knew this thread was going on, they gave a textbook demonstration of how a neighborhood business that's been around for 60 years treats its smallest customers-- the first guy who helped us gave Liam a slice of bologna before taking our very first order; then, when he turned us over to another guy (to go on break or something), the second guy said "Would he like some bologna?" and when I said he'd already had one, the second guy said "But he hasn't had any from me!" and cut Liam
two more slices. Then he started telling me that Liam looked like his own grandson, and pulled out his wallet to show me the picture (he did look similar, vaguely); Liam of course got into the conversation and held him as long as he could with a typical four-year-old's stream of consciousness monologue. (Soon he'll have a cell phone for that purpose.) In the meantime a third guy came up and asked if Liam wanted bologna, and with perfect comic timing just as we were about to leave a
fourth guy walked by and said offhandedly "Does he want some bologna?" And that's without even mentioning the couple-- older, but not
that much older-- who beamed at every adorable thing he did, even if it wasn't particularly adorable. They never said a word, but gave me a couple of looks to say, lucky dad, appreciate it while it lasts.
Roscoe Village came in for a little bashing above as being less diverse than it used to be, and I suppose in some ways that's true, but this was a good example of what I like about it as a little suburb in the city, that its commercial sphere is not so completely divided by target demographics and marketing and us vs. them identity politics like some hot neighborhoods, that businesses exist that treat four-year-olds well because they simply expect to still be around by the time they're 40-year-old customers with their own four-year-olds; because it's in a community and people of every age are part of that community, period. It was just what I needed-- along with 3/4 lb. baked ham, a dozen slices of bologna, 1-1/4 lb. ground beef and some dill pickles.