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April 30, 2004
Buy High and Sell Low

I've not yet had the need to plan my own funeral, but I suspect that when I do it will be much like preparing for a yard sale. There's the general sense of getting one's affairs in order, tidying things up a bit -- not because I really care whether some slob I don't know thinks that I am a untidy, but simply because that's what decent people do -- and putting everything in its rightful place.

There's also a Judgment Day air infusing it all, as my possessions -- extensions of me, or at least what gift-buying members of my family think of me -- are separated, some for service in their father's house, others to be cast into the 25-cent bargain box.

I only hope that when I get to the Pearly Gates, assuming some angelic security detail doesn't stop me on the outer grounds, there is someone like Caleb waiting to argue against my dismissal. He's been watching the growing pile of sale items with a wary eye, registering periodic protests and -- we suspect but cannot prove -- developing a plan to smuggle out whatever refugees he can lay hold of before the hour of peril arrives.

"Are you going to sell my [name of toy deleted because relatives may be reading this] in the yard sale?"

"Yes. You never play with it, and it's made of plastic."

"But I'm not done with it."

"You never play with it."

"But it's mine."

"You can use the money we get from it to buy something you like better."

"But I like it."

"You. Never. Play. With. It."

Little hands on hips. "But. I'm. Not. Done. With. It."

"Go play."

Exit one child with bottom lip firmly protruded.

There's the lingering guilt over selling my children's toys, and there's also the cold reality that some of those relatives with very poor ideas about gift-giving may actually visit one day, and have memories so sharp that they think to ask, "so where is the bright orange Ronco Combination Paintball Gun and Phonics Primer, the one that fires projectiles at 110 miles per hour and plays Snoop Dogg at 85 decibels when your child pronounces a syllable correctly?"

"Um, it broke. In several pieces. And caught on fire. There was only a puddle of plastic left."

"Really? It sure looked sturdy enough. Oh well, I was thinking of getting the boys that new George Foreman Veggie and Candy Bar Fryer -- the one they can operate themselves. It plays an educational jingle when the oil reaches its boiling point."

It's easier just to keep this stuff in a big box, with names of the givers attached, so that it can be dragged out when the relevant visitors make their appearance. Being economics-minded, however, we'd prefer to sell the $89.99 Barney and Friends Sing-Along Cattle Prod and use the 75 cents in proceeds to buy the boys something more edifying, like a few of the Lego blocks our neighbors up the street are selling so they can make room for their Squiggles Holographic Dress Up Like a Girl and Shake Your Booty Dance Machine.

And then there's just the deep shame of it all. How could we have acquired so much stuff?

If I were a leftist, I would falsely assume that we could lift entire nations out of poverty simply be sending them our excess belongings. This is a false notion, of course, because people are only lifted out of poverty when they are given the tools and opportunity to produce for themselves. If we send them shiploads of noisy plastic trinkets, we'll only depress their prices and drive nascent indigenous crap-makers out of business.

Being a conservative curmudgeon, however, I look at the rows and boxes of junk that have been extruded from my open garage like some slow-motion home colonic, and extrapolate to the millions of homes across the U.S., and I think: If we weren't so hell-bent on increasing our GDP by acquiring more and more colorful distractions, we might actually be a country that has the time to read.

Which we aren't, at least not in my house this week, because we're busy putting little price stickers on all our junk, and hoping that the old Middle Eastern man down the street doesn't show up with his fourteen family members to haggle over our ugly candlesticks.

I shouldn't complain. I'd much rather be reading right now, but I know that when tomorrow morning arrives and I'm standing, a pouch of change strapped to my waist, amidst my platoons of Care Bears and dragoons of plasticware, that I'll be in my element.

This is because I, like every good American, am an entrepreneur at heart. A French guy would look at my garage right now and think: Sacre coeur, might we be reed of zeez possessions if our country would but adopt a three-day work week? An American looks at it and thinks: Oh, the profits I will reap, thanks to the bad taste of my fellow countrymen.

God bless America. And please let it be sunny tomorrow, at least until we sell the Power Rangers.

Posted by Woodlief on April 30, 2004 at 09:58 AM


Comments

Yeah, now I was with you all the way up to when you mentioned getting rid of the cattle prod. You'll regret having done so when your boys hit the magical age of 13. Trust me on this one.

Posted by: greg at April 30, 2004 10:23 AM

Love to help, Tony, but since we have enough toys for an army at my house, we'd just be increasing our own problems!

Yesterday my youngest was carrying around a white plastic hanger, pretending it was a gun; he could not have been any happier. That's my kind of toy; hang up clothes with it and kill bad guys!

Posted by: Jeff Brokaw at April 30, 2004 11:32 AM

How true the statement, "Oh, the profits I will reap, thanks to the bad taste of my fellow countrymen." Just this morning I noticed a few oddly parked cars in my neighborhood, and after some investigation, which consisted of standing in each street facing window in my underwear peering out, I realized that my crap collector neighbor was having a garage sale. I thought there was a law about garage sales during the week, but apparently in this county Fridays are legal. Anyway, my first thought was, why would anyone buy this guy's crap, its just some stuff he bought at another garage sale!

Posted by: Josh Harmon at April 30, 2004 12:23 PM

Did you tell Caleb that he can get more toys with the money he makes off of selling his old ones? Not that it would give you any relief, since they end up bugging you about the money, and then when they actually get it they think $5 can buy a whole Wal-Mart shelf full of toys. Nothing like daily lessons in market economy.

If you get TSN (Turner South Network), they have an interesting show called Junkin' that follows a "fake" couple (not actually married in real life) as they pursue flea-market and yard-sale bargains. The stuff that they do buy ends up on E-bay and people can pay even more for that junk. American culture at its finest!

Posted by: MarcV at April 30, 2004 1:14 PM

Garage sales are exhausting. Good luck and may you make thousands of quarters. Can you say babysitter for tomorrow? My son had a screaming fit when he saw someone leaving with one of his toys. It was the one he played with the least.

Posted by: Katherine at April 30, 2004 2:48 PM

Garage Sale? Do you mean Garbage Sale?

Posted by: Sandee at April 30, 2004 5:59 PM

I thought there was a law about garage sales during the week

What? I've never heard of such a thing, but of course each town has the right to set their own rules. I know some towns require people to get a license, some limit you to two a year, and at least one has banned them, but I've never heard of one that regulated the day of the week.

I would think most people have garage sales on the weekend simply because that is when more people have time to look.

Posted by: Admiral Quixote at May 1, 2004 11:03 AM

Shame on you and you know why! Bottom lip out indeed!

Posted by: debbie at May 2, 2004 5:22 PM