There was a toy sale my cousin and I went to in April, and as we were putting out our wares, we came across a Spongebob Squarepants Happy Meal toy that belonged to neither of us. As there were bound to be many children there that day (as well as rain, wind, and hail), my cousin figured he could put a sticker that said "Free" on it so someone who actually wanted it could take it off our hands.
Typical of me, I made a sticker for it that said "FREE (Warning: toy is cursed)" on it. No, not funny in the slightest, but when has that ever stopped me?
And a few minutes later, a child did indeed see the Spongebob toy and show it to his mother, who read my sticker and said, "No! Put it back, it says it's cursed." And . . . well, yeah, I guess that was a little bit funny.
Anyway, once the torrential rain came down, the ball was forgotten, and the next week, when we got together to sell, my cousin took the "cursed" sticker off of it, and just gave it away without comment. End of story.
But today was another toy sale, in a much, much smaller venue, and both my cousin and I had tables next to each other. The organizer of the event had found a little plastic ball while setting up, and put it on his desk so that anyone who wanted it could take it (for free). I mentioned it to my cousin, and we both had the same idea: the ball was free, sure, but it was cursed.
Anyhow, the toy selling day came and went without much incident.* I sold only two or three things (might only have been two), but my cousin did better, and I really see these as social outings more than all-or-nothing business trips, so it was a fair day. We were packing up our stuff and carrying it to my cousin's car, when I looked down at the gutter. There was the ball Jwill had had at his table, lying between the sidewalk and the street.
It was easy to imagine an unlucky child leaving the venue, his cursed ball in hand, and starting to cross the road before being flattened by a Cybertruck that, true to form, didn't even stop to apologize. And there was that ball again, just waiting for the next poor soul to pick it up.
*The only incident of measure, not really even worth mentioning, was that I had offered to bring an expensive toy (one selling for between $140 and $150 on eBay), but had told people I would be asking $120 for it, and when I spoke to my nephew about the possibility of it reaching $200 or so around Christmas, he said, "Then why let it go for less?" because he knows me well enough to see me selling it for $100 or even $80 because I'm incapable of sticking to my guns. So, I told him before I left that I would stick to my guns and not sell it for less than what I was asking for. My cousin told me the same thing ("Just say no when someone offers you fifty"), and I vowed to be tough for the first time ever. So, when a couple of people asked me its price (even though it said it had $120 right on it), I told them I couldn't go lower. But one guy wouldn't stop needling me about doing just that. I told him, "Yeah, I could go lower, but I'm not going to on this one." But he just wouldn't stop ("Nobody's bought it for $120 yet--just drop the price"), and toward the end of the day, after a stranger texted me and said he'd give me full price for it if I still had it that afternoon, this guy--who is not a stranger, and I have gone as far as to drive to my sister's house to get an item from her basement to sell to him--came up to me (this was maybe the fourth time that day), and said, "Okay, here's my final offer: $105," I said, "Sorry, it's not for sale anymore," and I took it off the table and set it aside.
He did not respond well to this. "Okay, great," he said, and angrily walked back to his booth (across the room), upset that I had wasted so much of his precious time (I had bought three things from his own booth, which I suppose I regret now). He hadn't previously been a friend of mine or anything, but after today, he never would be.


















