…Or "garage sale finds cost more than you paid for them."
Here’s the deal– I think freecycle total rocks. Free stuff is great– most of the time. If you are getting something for free that you really need/want/are dying to have then whoopee! you have arrived. But you need to know one thing about free stuff– it is rarely, actually free.
Example 1: I recently acquired a freecycled ceiling fan. Thinking it would be hot around here sometime (joke’s on me and everyone else in Seattle) I felt it would be good to have one in the house. After significant driving to pick up the fan, I immediately went out and purchased supplies to repaint the "treasure" that now sits in a box in my garage. I have also noticed some missing wiring that will need to be replaced if it is even possible to do so. Cost so far: $10 and counting.
Not free.
Example 2: I bought an Oreck vacuum at a garage sale for $30 and also got a free handvac from someone else. Vaccuum bags anyone? That little steal just doubled in price.
Not as cheap as I thought it was.
I keep seeing things on the freecycle that I think would be great for me, and I keep re-evaluating the actual cost. King sized mattress? I’ve always wanted one, but I don’t have box springs or King sized bedding or a place to put my perfectly fine queen sized bed. Gas grill? Oh, well, I don’t have a propane tank. Size 2 designer dress? Can’t afford the personal trainer, darnit.
Seriously. The free? Not so much.
Free is good, my friends, it often is. However, I would advise that you Freecycle wisely.
(And have you ever noticed how people want their c-r-a-p picked up immediately? That always cracks me up.)



I’ve come to decide that nothing in life is truly free!!!
Comment by Heather — June 12, 2008 @ 12:26 am