KAREN WIGHT -- No Place Like Home
My kids love garage sales. It’s so much more than the exchange of dollars
(or cents) for merchandise. Garage sales are opportunities for them to
practice negotiation techniques, fraternize with neighbors, hone math
skills and learn about commerce in their own frontyards. Memories from
garage sales mark stages in my children’s lives.
Over the years they have passed through many garage sale mind-sets. We
started with rampant accumulation. My oldest, Annie, is an Alex P.
Keaton. She scares me. She is the type of person who could sell ice to
the Eskimos. As a mother, this is cause to worry, but on the other hand,
I know she will be fine in the big world.
Annie once sold to one of the neighbors their own newspaper from their
own frontyard. They gladly paid her for it. Now, I’m sure the Johnsons
were just being supportive of her efforts, but what worries me is that
she thought to do it in the first place.
So, to Annie, a garage sale was an opportunity: to accumulate great toy
wealth, to exercise her negotiation tactics and to schmooze with the
adults on the street. This quest for enormous toy wealth rubbed off onto
the other two children and soon we were awash in others’ discards.
Dusty stuffed animals, games without all of the pieces and Happy Meal
treasures were added to our own cache of marginal “stuff.” At some point
my patience abruptly ran out and I put an official moratorium on
purchasing the neighbors’ junk.
Thus ended the Age of Accumulation. Not to be stifled, Annie and her
siblings moved onto the next opportunity: rampant sales of rampant
accumulation. The thought occurred to the kids that their items might be
of value to children whose mothers were nicer than theirs. I was
supportive of the closet cleaning and they had an opportunity to
experience capitalism.
This took an unfortunate twist at some point, however, when they would
attempt to sell their newly acquired birthday gifts for a fraction of
their worth, just to make a buck. Many arguments of “but, it’s mine to
sell” ended with another moratorium, and the Age of Sales officially
passed.
The next stage was a valuable one. Instead of planning garage sales of
our own, Annie and crew would help other neighbors plan theirs. Annie
would act as director of sales, Breck would be the sheriff, and Mary Rose
was added for curb appeal.
They were the roving band of garage sale organizers, quickly moving up
the ladder of garage sale success. They started at a flat hourly rate.
But my Alex P. Keaton quickly discovered that the world of commissions
was far more appealing. She would negotiate a commission structure days
in advance, help to price the items (and since she was on commission, you
can imagine what the pricing structure was like), and make posters to
advertise the great opportunities awaiting the lucky attendees.
Annie would arrive very early on the day of the garage sale, for she
discovered quickly that the really serious buyers arrive at least an hour
before the sale is advertised to start.
She learned that everyone likes a bargain and more likely than not, the
price needed to be somewhat flexible. She learned that the guy in the
Mercedes station wagon was the toughest sell of all and the lady in the
turban would stake out the house days in advance, looking for a peek into
the garage or carports.
I think valuable lessons were learned in sociology, psychology, math and
economics. In addition, my children got to know their neighbors, their
neighborhood and appreciated their parents’ efforts to earn a living.
Now that the kids are a bit older and less likely to hire themselves out
we often laugh and reminisce about our “Garage Sale Days.”
No one has replaced Annie and crew on the street, yet we see some
potential. Maybe the next stage for my children will be Trainers of the
Younger Generation, imparting knowledge and hoping for the future
entrepreneurs’ success.
Perhaps it’s not about the accumulation of goods, but perhaps the
gathering of life skills that makes a garage sale so worthwhile.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column appears Saturdays.
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