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Updated: Sep 3, 2020


April 2, 2020: day of actual instacart shipment




 



What was happening at the time

  • It's the 3rd week into lockdown and newer estimates were starting to suggest that we may be under social distancing measures until June, potentially August, with worst-case estimates until the end of the year

  • I had only 2 weeks of food, as suggested by earlier measures, so I looked into delivery options






Please consider these recommendations before ordering:

  • Select the no contact delivery option to protect both you and your personal shopper (you can add instructions at checkout to have them text you/ ring the doorbell and leave)

  • Try to buy at least 2 weeks worth of groceries and minimize the # of trips. Personal shoppers are at continual risk for exposure

  • Tip!!!!!!!!!!!!


Other options I looked into that didn't work


  • Amazon: Everything on the Canadian website was pretty much sold out and I ain't paying $6 for 100g of organic, gluten-free, chickpea-based pasta

  • Walmart: I was really excited and actually built an entire cart but when I checked out I realized that all slots were entirely booked for the entire week. I couldn't subsequently get into any slots in the following days because they were snatched up so quickly. Delivery was also $10.

  • Metro: They DO deliver in other cities but not in mine! Tragique



So I chose Instacart -- but why Loblaws?

  • Look, Instacart only services Loblaws customers here in this city so it was my ONLY choice

  • And I NEVER shop at Loblaws because I'm not paying $5 for bread when the same bread costs $2 at Food Basics, when they're from the same company

  • With this being my only choice I went for it and accepted my fate.

  • Thank goodness Loblaws PC and Shopper's Optimum got combined because at least I can rack up those points. It's the only points card I got when I first became an Adult.




Step 1: Shopping on the Loblaws Instacart Interface


  • IDKY this is an option, but you can shop either on the Loblaws interface or the instacart interface

  • It's the exact same, at least in my limited searches

  • I ended up shopping on the Loblaws interface, hoping that it meant higher chance that I'd do the points thing right and earn some points


Step 2: The Grocery List Planning

  • I was actually buying for the month, and have a $100 limit on grocery budgets rn so I targeted the main food groups

  • I took stock of what was in the pantry and fridge first, and then constructed a list of what I wanted to buy...

Premade meals

  • I made the mistake of thinking I could go without frozen premade meals and I would cook every day. Even when I'm home though, this wasn't the case. I needed comfort food that I didn't make

  • + frozen dumplings


Carbs

  • Keep in mind that I am made of carbs and get really hangry without them

  • + pasta (shells!)

  • + oatmeal (for breakfast, bc I'm no longer buying bread weekly)

  • + noodles

Fruits

  • It as 2020 when I set intentional eating goals and started eating apples and tangerines, my least favourite fruits in my life

  • I'm not about to drop these habits y'all

  • + bag of tangerines

  • + bag of apples

Vegetables


  • Following my own vegetable life hack post and ordering the LUCY THREE categories of vegetables that will keep forever

  • + green onions (to grow, and keep and talk to as friend bc I live alone)

  • + frozen vegetables

  • + pickles

Meat + Protein

  • I needed toppings for my instant ramen and noodles sooooo

  • + eggs (I know these are potentially hard to come by but I LIVE FOR EGGS)

  • + corned beef (how 2 budae jigae if no off-brand spam???)

  • + dried chickpeas & lentils (I have canned but I wanted to learn how to use dried)

Other (treats + supplies)

  • + chips (or snack of a sort)

  • + coffee filters


Step 3: The reality of what I could order


Premade meals

  • [x] frozen dumplings

  • I found them, but they weren't the T&T brand (Loblaw owns No Frills, Food Basics and T&T so it carries the No Name Brand and T&T branded items)

Carbs

  • [x] pasta (shells!)

  • [x] oatmeal (for breakfast, bc I'm no longer buying bread weekly)

  • [x] noodles

  • This was a success, albeit a few cents more expensive

Fruits


  • [nope] bag of tangerines

  • [nope] bag of apples

  • instead: + yuja tea (for vitamin C + as a treat drink)

  • I WANTED TO BUY FRUITS but I actually did not end up buying fruits

  • Fruits at Loblaws are CRAZY expensive. Like I'm not paying $8.99 for a sack of apples and $1.39 PER ORANGE when it's like $1.39 per bag of oranges at food basics when it's on sale.

Vegetables

  • [x] green onions (to grow, and keep and talk to as friend bc I live alone)

  • [x] frozen vegetables

  • [x] pickles

  • I bought a whole litre of pickles bc it as the only Good Value option (thank you, no name brand)


Meat + Protein

  • [x] 18 eggs

  • [ nope] corned beef (cannot budae jigae bc no off brand spam)

  • [x] dried chickpeas & lentils (I have canned but I wanted to learn how to use dried)

  • [x] hot dogs (if I can't have fried spam to add to my noodle soup I might as well make hot dog octopi)

  • [x] sardines (if you've never had it, rice & sardines & a pickle is a really good struggle meal)

Other (treats + supplies)

  • [x] chips (or snack of a sort)

  • [x] coffee filters

  • The coffee filters were actually the best value? Also packaged in cardboard, which I feel is more readily recycled



Step 4: When I got clowned by my personal shopper (and also myself tbh)


My drop-off window is 1-3pm, and at 2pm, I got 12 messages.


What I THOUGHT the messages said: Your item (e.g., sour cream and onion chips) has been placed.

  • SO NATURALLY I went out to check. Nothing at my entrance to the apartment. Nothing at the main entrance of the house (people get confused a lot). Nothing at my neighbours' doors. Where is anything???

  • So I DMed the personal shopper like, hmm please let me know where you dropped things off, and he proceeded to answer in ONLY punctuation marks and emojis until...

  • I FINALLY FIGURED IT OUT


What the messages actually said: Your item (e.g., sour cream and onion chips) has been replaced.

  • So I quickly apologized and was like sorry I was confused! Please carry on.

  • Guess how he responded?

  • With a single emoji.


🤡





Step 4: receiving the groceries -- a truly strange interaction

I haven't had social interaction with a real human being in 3 weeks but I swear this wasn't all me. This is how this unfolded.

  • I didn't hear when he first unloading the groceries. I had left a message being like, please ring the doorbell or knock loudly.

  • I did not hear the doorbell

  • I did absolutely hear the knock. I got up to get the door.

  • Before I got there, he tried the doorknob.

  • ??? What did he think would happen ??? That it would open ??? It didn't, which I hope wasn't too surprising for him, because he was in for an even more exciting surprise.

  • As I approached the door but before I opened it, I heard him speaking. He wasn't speaking in English and he wasn't looking at the door anymore after he tried to the doorknob so I didn't think he was speaking to me? I also didn't see a phone though so I was really confused?

I opened the door and immediately heard WHOAHOAHWOHWOAHAOAHWOHWOHAOAHAOHAOHWOWHAOHAA


  • my personal shopper had lined up my groceries against the door, and my door unconventionally* opens outward

  • He then proceeded to remove one bag (1) so that now I could shift all my groceries slowly, but only enough so that I could only crack open the door so that my head could fit through.

  • He then: leaned over the groceries so as not to step on them, placed one hand on the outside of the door for support and placed his weight against it (thus closing it), and then tried to shove a total of 6 bags through that door

  • 6 bags

  • SIX BAGS!!!

  • I'm marshmallow armed and cannot hold 6 bags of fragile glass and eggs so I politely declined and asked him to leave it on the floor as I grabbed 2 bags at a time to bring in.

  • Also so he would stop pushing on the door so I could open it large enough for the bags to fit through in the first place.

  • To add on to this, the most confusing thing is like, I was communicating important information to him while the entire time he didn't once respond because he was busy chatting over the Bluetooth in a language I didn't understand, which made it very difficult for me to convey to him that

  • if you push on a door, it closes the opening, through which you are trying to shove groceries through

  • but he heard none of that, and as soon as I said, "actually I can't hold 6 bags I'm gonna take 3 right now", he finally lets go of the rest of the bags, turns around and leaves.

  • we never once made eye contact

  • I yelled thank you after him ???

  • confusion level: 92%


😵


Step 5: I disinfected the f*ck out of all the groceries (step optional dependent on pandemic status)





Website Ease: ★★★★☆ {4/5}

Price: ★★★☆☆ {3/5}

Usefulness in pandemic: ★★★★★ {5/5}

Personal Shopper Customer Service Experience Overall: ★☆☆☆☆ {1/5} there was an attempt

Personal Shopper Customer Service Experience Leading To The Most Exciting Event That Has Happened To Me All Week That I Could Blog About: ★★★★★ {5/5}



This was REALLY fun to review and I kind of want to do more! Let me know down below what I should review next!!!




I started out 2020 strong with a whole new {pretty heavy} journalling routine. Back in high school, I used to blog every day (possibly multiple times a day), and it really helped me process the day. I'm still in the process of archiving my old Blogger blog, and some entries were really good to come back to, for me to see the progress that I've had since then.


(Granted, 90% of the blog was just an early, longer version of Twitter where I dumped all my weird internal monologue and is very cringey to look back on. But there are some good nuggets in there).


So without further ado, here is my 2020 journalling routine. Which I can now call a routine because I've done each component at least 3x.





1. The daily morning journal

What & How

  • Morning pages where I dump my thoughts for 10 minutes

  • I try to include reflections on my goals for that day, including one strive goal (i.e., if nothing goes wrong and I still have time) and one definite goal (i.e., minimum that I need done)

  • Google docs, I add new entries at the top every day


Why:

  • Doing morning pages really helps me a) get geared up for the day and b) clear my mind of self-doubt. b) is especially helpful because it helps me lockdown and identify these thinking patterns and challenge whether they play a role in my life

  • I do mine digitally, which is different from the usual recommendations! (See the end of this post for the classic morning pages from Lavendaire) -- I do this because my typing speed is close to my thinking speed, especially my morning speed and I like seeing my thoughts visualized.

  • I get really frustrated writing things out by hand because I think a lot faster than I write and sometimes I want to write so fast that I can't go back and read what I've written. So that's why.


2. The daily "evening" journal

What & How:

  • I have a custom 5am to 11pm calendar that I printed from staples

  • It shows the entire week, at 1hour increments

  • I track the activity that took up the most time during that section

  • I also give a little symbol to represent how the hour made me feel: + = positive, ø = neutral, - = negative)

  • I jot down 3 things I'm grateful for that day


Why:

  • The idea of reflecting on +ve things that happened today to counteract my by default negative filter

  • I'm also tracking the types of activities that energize me vs. drain me. It helps inform me how I should plan my ideas (i.e., don't leave the heavy work towards the end of the day), and help me reflect on whether the draining stuff is worth it in the long run or whether I'm just doing it because other people are doing it also/ I feel some invisible social pressure to conform

  • I use a custom printed "agenda/planner" layout because too many agendas pretend that weekends don't exist and I don't vibe with that at all.


3. The weekly reflection

What & How:

  • (I repurposed and old lab notebook from undergrad for this loool so the first 50 pages of this journal are lab meeting notes but we'll ignore that)

  • Every Sat (though usually I procrastinate and do it on Sunday)

  • Section 1: reflect on my 3 intentions of the year (i.e., clinical skills, finish phd and self-care), and track how much time I spent on these intentions (which I tabulate from #2).

  • Section 2: reflect on a) what's working/ what do we celebrate this week?, b) what's not working, what should we let go of?, c) schedule + make time for what's important in the upcoming week


Why:

  • This helps me reflect on whether I'm still living according to my values, because life sometimes throws a lot of stuff at you and you kind of knee-jerk say yes and go with the flow

  • On top of daily gratitude, I'm making the time to celebrate the good things !!! Especially sometimes it's hard to celebrate at the end of the day because I'm T I R E D

  • I'm also making the time to honour and let go of things that aren't working, so that I can make time to say yes to the things that I want to do.

  • I love this journalling time each weekend tbh, I LOVE IT


4. The monthly check-in

What &How:

  • I use IG: heyamberrae's (see resources in the footer for the March reflection prompt) monthly reflection prompts

Why:

  • She makes such an aesthetic monthly prompt and is so consistent in posting these

  • I no longer do them though, although I do use her reflection prompts to guide my weekly ones -- I realized I actually preferred the more frequent check-ins

  • It's not the end of this though, I foresee that if things calm down for me in the future that I might revert back to a sparser monthly check-in

5. The weekly blog

What & How:

  • That's you!

  • I learned to stop oversharing every small thought that came to my head on a blog because I soon realized that blogs have tangible storage limits and I ran out VERY quickly (I use twitter now, oops)

  • I jot down notes and ideas of things that really impacted my life that I want to share with other people!


Why:

  • Honestly, because my very supportive friend E. suggested it

  • Also because I honestly really enjoyed blogging in high school and wanted to continue the habit of sharing ideas

  • I just needed it to not be associated with my google storage (i.e., blogger) because man, I also hoard a lot of files on google drive (oops)



6. Talkspace therapy

What:

  • 2x daily text-based check-ins with a licensed therapist

  • I'm on the monthly plan that's $49USD/month and features a weekly check-in, but my therapist checks in 2x a day regardless, we just converse in smaller quantities and this feels more like a text message convo than like, the full plan, which felt more like emailing

  • Shameless plug but here's my promo code: https://talkspace.com/invite/1317883?p=2.

  • (Full disclosure: we both get $250* off the next plan if you use this link)


Why:

  • I see it more as maintenance therapy where if something arises and I don't know how to apply a skill, I have someone to check-in with to stay on track

  • It's also keeping me accountable TO check-in with myself on a regular basis on how my mental health is, instead of focussing on this eternal grind of academia where I become this emotionless productivity machine


7. My art scratchpad/ journal

What & How:

  • I have a little ikea notebook where I just draw and write ideas that aren't typable

  • It was my old morning pages notebook before I swapped back to doing an online typed one

  • I use a date stamp like this one to stamp the date bc I'm a fancy pants


Why:

  • Not all ideas can be typed and sometimes I just need to doodle as a mindfulness meditation thing


8. Research journal

What & How:

  • Google doc (this is where the idea of my digital morning pages came from)

  • I document everything in the science process, almost like a chemistry lab book, but more intense

  • In my research, this looks like: documenting all research related meetings, talks I attend (ideas and names and contacts!), ideas that I don't have energy or resources to do right now, rationales behind decisions made (e.g., why we set 2.0 as an arbitrary threshold and the exact citation and link to paper for THAT specific choice).

  • It's in google docs so I can ctrl+f easily and find the decision

  • It's also where I make research to do lists now e.g., if I need to visualize the steps I need to do for an analysis, or document where I saved something, then 1) I'm helping myself stay on track, and 2) if I get asked 5 years and 3 months later what parameter I entered into an analysis and it's not recreatable from the code I can consult my to do list to be like hey, I set it as this


Why:

  • The google docs idea of adding a new entry to the top is actually inspired by EMR (electronic medical records) systems that I've worked with

  • I REALLY LOVE THE IDEA of having a system where you can just add entries, tag different things, etc. and just document things and I was like, no one cares, but I need an EMR system for my internal thoughts

  • And thus the google doc of internal monologue of research thoughts was born, documenting all of my meetings, questions, important emails, successes, rationales, etc.


9. Budget journal

What & How:

  • Another one of those adorable ikea notebooks

  • I tape receipts to each page and reflect on each purchase

  • Specifically, I reflect on a) whether it was a planned purchase and whether it's a planned purchase I want to continue forward in my budget and b) if it's unplanned whether I should PLAN for it next time / whether there are alternatives that I can make more readily available so next time I resort to the alternative more easily than fall back into the habit of spending money

Why:


Wow, this was a long post so I'm going to wrap it here. Let me know what kind of journalling you already do or whether you have suggestions / resources that you really like!



Resources I recommend:

This is a compilation of all the things I've ever thrifted, because thrifting gives me joy.

 

[1] Porcelain Pourover

Original price: $20 - $30 CAD

Thrifted price: $2

Source: Value Village


I used to live with roommates and so they had a Keurig that we shared

There was also free coffee in the lobby at my apartment

So I never had my own coffee thing


But when I moved out I had minimal counter space

so I went with getting a pourover for space issues

Compare this to spending $20 (for a cheap coffee maker) to $100 (for a Keurig)


[2] Fall Peacoat (Generic Brand)

Original Price: $50 to $200 CAD (Generic Brand)

Thrifted price: $8

Source: Value Village


This is cheaper than my accompanying scarf, ngl

I bought my purple scarf on sale at Giant Tiger for $10


I think this was priced down for the flaw,

but the flaw was a tiny ballpoint pen line beside the inner pocket

and no one ... is gonna see that and I don't care also


I mostly don't care because

I would have done the same damage to the coat within weeks of having it anyway

so it was On Brand (tm)


[3] Knife Sharpener

Original Price: $10 to $55 CAD

Thrifted price: $3.99*

Source: Value Village


Note that it was 3.99 for a kitchen bundle*

that included:


- 2 potato peelers, 1 brand new (full price ~4 at Dollarama to $10 on amazon)

- 1 unidentified contraption, later identified as a cocktail strainer (full price ~$11)


I already have potato peelers and I don't need a cocktail strainer

so I'm fully gonna just re-donate these items a second time

I was defo happy to just pay 3.99 for the knife sharpener but whoa

I got all these extra items too


[4] Indoor/ Panini Grill

Original Price: $25

Thrifted price: $10

Source: Facebook page for university student


It was basically brand new

and I got it from a girl who posted it because

EACH of her roommates' parents bought their daughters their own panini grill

and they didn't need 4


I chose to get a panini grill over a toaster actually

because a toaster oven was too big and extra for bread (I have an oven)

and the bread toasters are single use

and I don't have the counterspace for single use items


so I toast my bread each morning in the panini grill

it makes great paninis

you can also do other things with a panini grill:


The best thing about a panini grill re: cooking steak is

IT COOKS FROM BOTH SIDES !!!!!!!!!!!


If you grill tofu sticks you only have to flip it once !!!!!!!!!!!


[5] Microwave

Original price: ?? a new microwave = $100 to $230

Thrifted price: $10

Source: facebook group for uni students


I had to include a visual of it (stolen from the internet)

because I had to illustrate how vintage it looked

(In that now taken down listing they sold it for $35)


For something so cheap this is so functional

that every day I'm just amazed and grateful at

how this beautiful machinery is still just chugging on


I don't think I would have the same sense

of daily gratitude for a completely new microwave tbh.

I'd probably resent every day that I spent $50+

on it and expect it to live up to my standards idk


It was made in the era of tv meals and microwave cooking

When items were made to last


And my fave part is they have specific buttons for:

- popcorn (okay, normal)

- frozen dinner (sure, makes sense for the time)

- reheat (yep)

- baked potato (this is oddly specific for me but I guess people love potatoes)

- rice (you can COOK RICE in a MICROWAVE?)

- soup (sure)

- fresh veg HARD (what)

- fresh veg SOFT (wait what)

- frozen veg (look, this is the 3rd setting for veggies what)

- fish, seafood (dear lord who cooks seafood in a microwave but ok)

- ground meat (!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)

- hot dog (yes, a whole setting, a whole button JUST for the hot dog)


[Honourable mentions]

  • Really cute bell sleeved blouse

  • Really cute floral summer dress

  • Really cute short shorts that are too scandalous to wear in public bc I have long legs but are perfect for hot summers at home so I expose as much skin for sweat evaporation thank you



 

also when I buy used I'm always like

SO GRATEFUL

that the previous owner treated an item

so lovingly and carefully that it's in mint condition

and to have donated the barely used item

to charity so money can go towards people in need

and tHEN

I CAN SNAG AN AMAZING DEAL AT A FRACTION OF THE COST


vs. when i buy from amazon

and it's not 100% perfect

im like fuck you 1 star, bad review, was smelly

 

Note: None of these are affiliate links I am simply providing *evidence* for my claims of how expensive things are :)

I used to do Amazon Affiliate links but it ridiculously flopped relative to my previous Ebay affiliate stint so I am reflecting on my marketing strategy shhhhh. Might also blog about that later.



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