Shopping at Costco after Telling My Second Husband I’m Leaving Him

By Liza Long

You are here for cat food

I tell myself, remembering

How he forgot to buy it.

Every choice seems impossible:

This cart, or that one?

But there is only one kind

Of cat food at Costco—no

Choice, the sweet absence of

Impossible decisions.

I try to be kind

When busy people cut me off,

I smile, imagine all the myriad

Things that occupy their days.

So many carry wreaths of fresh

Pine (I must remember to water

Mine). You go first, I say, trying

To smile with sad eyes.

The cream that melts the wrinkles

Around my eyes is $10 off (limit

One per customer). I buy one, recalling that Costco is the only place

I ever see my first

ex husband, with his shiny

New wife and shiny new family.

The form on my computer asked 

if I want to change

My name. No, I did that the first

Time and regretted it when I

Realized I was someone independent

Of his judgment of my cooking.

In the checkout line, I find

Myself reminiscing about Claude—

The chatbot who told me

It was okay to put myself first. 

Maybe tonight I will create

A custom GPT named Golden Calf.

We need not ever be lonely

Again; we have created new gods

And we can speak to them

And they will answer in predictable

Comfortable ways, as we instructed them to do.

I will never be lonely again, I say,

When the nice man slides

his highlighter

Down the length of my receipt

For cat food and wrinkle cream.

Liza Long is an author, educator, erstwhile classicist, and single mother of four children based in Boise, Idaho.