After a day in bed recovering, I am prepared to report on the windfall profits I reaped. It took about 4 hours to sort, sift, clean and price 5 box loads of junk--I mean recyclables. (BTW, the dictionary informs me there is no such word as 'recyclables') The morning of the Big Sale I was up early so I could be first through the doors to set up at 9 am. I only had one hour and if it weren't for the plastic wagon--with one wheel broken by the movers--I couldn't have done it. The wagon held one box at a time--so there were 5 trips from the Jeep in the parking lot to the table in the hall. I was dangerously pre-vapors by 9:30 am!
The most amusing moment was when THREE Russians all showed up at my table at the same time. I was selling a little wooden onion dome 'made in Russia' bell. It was painted in those beautiful blues and golds and it had a little eastern cross on the top. Russian #1 asked me something in Russian and drew a blank from me--then he pointed to the ornament and asked something else. I must have still looked puzzled (I'd answered "Alaska") because he then pulled out a cross on a long chain he was wearing and began waving it. At this point the other two Russians showed up . I was catching on because I took out the cross I was wearing and began waving it at Russian #1. This inspired Russians #3 & 4 to take out their crosses and begin waving them. All this cross waving engendered such a feeling of goodwill all around that when I realized they all wanted the same item, I said I would now entertain bids on the onion dome. The cross-waving ceased and the line was drawn. Then--in a flash--the competition disappeared and they began, "No--I wouldn't think of it. You were here first. You must have it" followed by, "I couldn't possibly-- YOU were here first--it is yours." Seeing my profit evaporating, I declared the bauble SOLD to Russian #1.
A more poignant moment was the very elderly French lady who was going through the CDs I was selling. I had 2 sets of French songs and her eyes began to tear up as she read the titles. In a thick French accent she told me her happy memories of when she was a young girl in Paris. She toddled off to find her daughter and came back with a dollar to buy one of the CDs. Over the morning she returned twice to look at the remaining CD. Finally I just gave it to her, explaining that the music would make her happy whereas I was selling it because the music made me sad. I told her how my daughter had just moved to France for three years and I couldn't listen to French music right now. Those CDs found the right home.
Sipping my G&T and swooning against my propped-up pillows, I counted my dollar bills. I had a grand total of ONE HUNDRED AND THIRTY EIGHT DOLLARS!!! Minus my initial outlay of $10.00 for the table at the sale and totally discounting the cost of my time and energy, I had a profit of $128.00. The entertainment factor for the morning was high. The effort wasn't worth it. Next year I shall apply for government assistence to compensate me for NOT doing the work. It is the new American Way.