Oh, Land of the sun! I dream of seeing you, now that I find myself so far from you, shopping in a foreign supermarket. Everything is so coldly organized, sterile, functional that I am horrified. I ask myself what the hidden reason is behind this system of shopping. It seems that presenting food products in this manner has the objective of numbing our will and happiness. Upon seeing carrots, corn, lettuce, even cilantro, disguised to appear real even though they’ve been frozen for months, one feels that it’s all part of a big set for an American movie. It’s as if we are part of a huge superproduction in which we act as if we are choosing, buying, and eating these foods, but everything is simulated. In Mexico I am accustomed to going to the market every day, chatting with the merchants, tasting bites of fruit (real fruit) at each stand, running into my neighbors and talking to them among the magical smells and colors that are found only there. I am, essentially, accustomed to life.
Source: Esquivel, Laura and Stephen A. Lytle. “Lowfat Mayonaise.” Between Two Fires: Intimate Writings on Life, Love, Food and Flavor. New York: Crown, 2000. 125-26. Print.
Which statement explains Esquivel’s perspective in this excerpt best?
She believes that organization and cleanliness are to be valued and loves the convenience of frozen food.
She finds it a relief not to have to go to the market daily and haggle with the merchants.
She finds the foreign supermarket too sterile and cold as compared to the lively market she is used to in Mexico.
She is frustrated that she can’t find her familiar native foods in the foreign supermarket.