Trends

Debates, discussions, news articles, cultural differences stories and everyday life blah blah.

On The Road

Follow me in China, in Central and in South America, in Australia, in South-East Asia or in Europe. Enjoy the pictures and some crazy travel stories!

Immigration

How to immigrate to Canada, how to apply for Canadian citizenship, and how to tackle the challenges newcomers face.

Just Blogging

Blog contests, memes, interviews, photography hunts, random facts… Let’s connect, share some blogging fun and some little snippets of life.

The Saturday Series

The ten post Saturday series: how to immigrate to Canada, how to find a job, interviews with immigrants… and more!

Home » Canadian Life

The Corner Store

Written by on May 17, 2010 – 9:55 am13 Comments | 18 Read this

Cana­dian Sou­venirs at a Busy Cor­ner Store on Yonge Street (Toronto)

In North Amer­ica, not spend­ing money is almost a sin – what, don’t you want to help the econ­omy? That’s prob­a­bly why every­thing is con­ve­niently set up so that peo­ple can shop any­where, anytime.

In France, con­sumers have to abide by retail­ers’ will. Not so long ago, stores were closed between noon and 2 pm so that shop­keep­ers could go have a lengthy French lunch. Most stores still close at 7 pm, and by law on Sun­days and for statu­tory hol­i­days. There weren’t as many chain stores as well – if your favourite baker wanted to take a month off in August, he wasn’t going to hire employ­ees to mind the store while he was away – he would just put a hand­writ­ten sign on the door, « fermé en août pour con­gés annuels”. Reg­u­lar cus­tomers would show up in the evening to pick up their daily baguette and see the sign: “ah oui”, they would nod. “He took his August hol­i­days”. If the bak­ery was really good, some would abstain from buy­ing bread for the month of August. Indeed, it would be very awk­ward if the backup bak­ery would turn out to have bet­ter bread. In France, cheat­ing on the baker is a sin, but enjoy it makes the sin worse.

This is not likely to hap­pen in North Amer­ica – at least not in cities. For a start, a lot of stores are chain stores. If your reg­u­lar Sub­way is closed, you won’t shed a tear hav­ing to walk an extra block to get your sand­wich fix. You will be served the exact same thing, no mat­ter where you go. Besides, stores always seem to be open. Super­mar­kets close late at night and open early includ­ing on Sun­days, some are even 24/7.

When­ever a statu­tory hol­i­day is com­ing up, stores post their open­ing hours way ahead of time, as if apol­o­giz­ing for hav­ing to close for a day. The evening before the hol­i­day in ques­tion, hun­dreds of peo­ple rush into super­mar­kets and stock up on non-perishable items such as chips, BBQ sauce, pops and frozen meals. It is as if the Ger­mans are tak­ing over the city. And the day after the hol­i­days, when the wartime-like shop­ping restric­tions are finally lifted, they shop their heart out, nos­tal­gi­cally remem­ber­ing the day when they almost ran out of food.

But rest assured: in the worst case sce­nario, there are always cor­ner stores, aka con­ve­nience stores. They are every­where: under a block of apart­ments down­town or in the sub­urb, on the free­way, nearby land­marks and on empty stretches of roads. Con­ve­nience stores are here to sell items you are likely to run off of at ungodly hours, such as milk, cig­a­rettes, toi­letry prod­ucts, gum, bread etc. There are one of the great things of North Amer­i­can life.

In France, the con­cept of the cor­ner store doesn’t really exist, and cer­tainly not in the form of chain stores such as 7/11. At most, in Paris, you can find what peo­ple unpo­lit­i­cally cor­rectly call “l’arabe du coin” (the Ara­bic cor­ner store). In other cities, you’d bet­ter not for­get any­thing dur­ing your reg­u­lar shop­ping trips: stores close early, period.

Con­ve­nience stores offer a fas­ci­nat­ing cul­tural win­dow on North Amer­ica. First, the demo­graphic: a large major­ity of con­ve­nience store employ­ees seem to be rel­a­tively new immi­grants, from all over the world. Sadly, the stereo­type of the for­mer engi­neer of doc­tor work­ing as a shop clerk is just too often true. And while there is noth­ing wrong with own­ing a con­ve­nience store, I’m pretty sure that work­ing there around the clock as an employee is not what most immi­grants had in mind before they came to Canada.

Sec­ond, con­ve­nience stores best-seller items cer­tainly tell a lot about the population’s tastes. While I can under­stand run­ning out of milk and bread (two items that fit with my Euro­pean taste), pop­u­lar items such as jerky (mar­i­nated dry meat) and slushie (flavoured frozen drink) baf­fle me. How­ever, you won’t be sur­prise to learn that a num­ber of con­ve­nience stores have a Tim Horton’s kiosk inside — this Cana­dian addic­tion fits anywhere!

Con­ve­nience stores also tell a lot about a country’s way of liv­ing and pas­times. For instance, I rarely see peo­ple buy­ing bus tick­ets (I always do), even though this is the most con­ve­nient place to get them. I guess Canada is a car cul­ture coun­try… How­ever, every time I go to the con­ve­nience store, there is some­one buy­ing lot­tery tick­ets: Canada’s two national lot­ter­ies, Lotto 6/49 and Lotto Max, are very pop­u­lar. And God for­bids you find your­self in line behind a lot­tery addict… val­i­dat­ing tick­ets and pick­ing new ones is a tedious process.

Hate them or love them, cor­ner stores are part of North Amer­i­can life. I had some deeply weird philo­soph­i­cal con­ver­sa­tions there. And they intro­duced me to a new coun­try and a new lifestyle. For that alone, I’ll keep on stop­ping by once in a while.

Related arti­cles:

  1. Chi­na­town In Ottawa
  2. Pic­ture of the Week: iSad
  3. Pic­ture of the Week: Lonely Dog
  4. Cig­a­rettes And Creationism
  5. Back to the Maya World: Chichén Itzá

Tagged with:

13 Comments »

  • Kim says:

    I’ve got­ten used to the clos­ing times here in France and I often for­get how con­ve­nient it is back home. Now that my par­ents are here I’m reminded of how easy it is just to pop into the store for some­thing that you’ve for­got­ten or run out of. My par­ents wanted to buy a bot­tle of wine on Sun­day to have a glass or two after din­ner, but they told me this at about 5pm — they were dis­mayed when I said to them that the super­mar­ket closes at 12pm on Sun­day so it wasn’t pos­si­ble. And also when vis­it­ing cas­tles etc. we found some were closed on Mon­days, some Tues­days, and some only open dur­ing July and August. Much to the delight of my Dad we’d arrive in the lit­tle towns at lunchtime to find that all the stores (except restau­rants) were closed. This doesn’t hap­pen with the larger chain stores in France but lit­tle boutique-type shops are closed for lunch. I was also sur­prised to find last year that my doc­tor was gone for the month of August and I’d have to find another doc­tor in the city to visit. August is very much a time when you’ll find lots of shops closed for hol­i­days. This baf­fled me but I think its nice that the French enjoy their hol­i­days with­out work stress.
    .-= Kim´s last blog ..They’re here! =-.

  • Ghosty Kips says:

    In New York, while there are tons of chain stores of every type, the local-owned fam­ily busi­ness is still king. And, they never, ever close — at least, not for the length of time you’re talk­ing about here. Maybe at night or one day on the week­end. Many I know stay open 24/7. Month-long hol­i­days!? Who gets rich doing that? :)
    .-= Ghosty Kips´s last blog ..I Hate My Phone =-.

  • We have 24-hour 7–11 in Malaysia but not Britain.
    We also have Car­refour in Malaysia! Can you believe it?

    Have you heard of Tesco? A big British super­mar­ket.
    We also got it in Malaysia! Ha ha…

    Appar­ently, Malaysian money is quite easy to earn?
    Hence, we have all sorts of over­seas com­pa­nies?!
    .-= Lon­don Caller´s last blog ..Glory from the past / 过去的光荣 / Kegemi­lan­gan yang lepas / 昔の栄光 =-.

  • Vagabonde says:

    Hi Zhu — I just came from DianeCA’s blog and saw your name in the com­ments many times, alors j’ai pensé venir faire une petite vis­ite à ton blog. Here in Geor­gia our super­mar­ket is open 24/7 but when I went back to visit my cousin in France, their stores still close for lunch and on Mon­days – she lives close to Melun in Seine et Marne. I’ll come and read more of your post – car je suis intéressée de lire tes obser­va­tions sur le Canada. A bien­tôt. VB
    .-= Vagabonde´s last blog ..Vis­it­ing our friends from the ‘60s at The Farm com­mu­nity =-.

  • Lizz says:

    Haha, that was a fas­ci­nat­ing post. I can’t imag­ine “cheat­ing” on my baker. I go to “Bread Talk”, a huge chain store that’s in every mall. The bread’s deli­cious, though. I guess Manila is very west­ern… everything’s open until 10 or 11pm, so you can really shop til you drop. Lol.
    .-= Lizz´s last blog ..Video Beauty Tuto­r­ial: Blue Sum­mer =-.

Leave a comment!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

All comments are welcomed!

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get yours, head to Gravatar.