So Arizona has a Buccees open out west of Phoenix. It's on the news. Okay.
People camped out for hours before it opened.
Why?
The news cameras are showing the avalanche of people going in. Okay, black Friday vibes. Whatever. Novelty. Okay.
But the looks on their faces.
Madness.
Manic faces. Orgasmic faces.
I can't help but chalk this up as evidence that our society is broken.
Manic, obsessive behaviors at a gas station to buy shit they don't need and at least some can't afford.
A certain % of our people are unwell. They have a job, they make kids (a lot more kids than the well), they obey some traffic laws. But they are unwell.
----------
I know you guys will just roll your eyes at this, and I honestly didn't think much of it - stupid people obsessing over a fucking gas station, blah blah.
But the looks on their faces as they entered concerned me, genuinely.
I heard it was like this when the first White Castle opened around here.
Who is this population of zealots who obsessively value literally anything novel to them? What is that mindset?
I wish I hadn't seen the footage, to be honest.
Humans are social animals. Some have overdeveloped and some have underdeveloped that aspect of their brains, but ultimately this sort of behavior is prevalent enough that I don't think you can claim it's evidence that our society is "broken".
The truth is that we are all, to a greater or lesser degree, drawn to communal experiences. For some, that's church. For others, it's sports. For others, it's things like raves or nightclubs. For others, it's Star Trek or Comic Con conventions. For many of these things, the value is not just their inherent nature, the value is experiencing them communally.
Even sports, watching your team on your own TV at home is not the same as being in the stadium. But for you as a Florida fan or me as a Purdue fan on the opposite side of the country from where our teams are is still a communal experience. Because even if we're not physically connected to it, we feel that connection to the fan community. We have left it, but it hasn't left us.
This is built into our biology.
"Grand openings" are things I largely find to be stupid... I generally like to wait until the hype and the crowds die down before I go someplace.
But I understand that for some people, wanting to be "part of something", even something as trivial as a gas station grand opening, is a natural thing. Maybe they're just people who grew up with Bucees and moved to a place where it doesn't exist, and this is nostalgia.
I remember the first Chick-fil-A opening in CA (which was in Irvine where I lived at the time) was a HUGE thing... I find it silly, but other people found it meaningful. There are so many transplants here in CA that I think mobbing the grand opening was a way for people who aren't from here to commune with other people who aren't from here around a shared experience. Yeah, it's just a damn chicken sandwich. But that doesn't matter. It was something that they grew up with and was therefore a [minor but extant] part of their identity.