Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My group jumped the shark when the needed to sprout or whatever it's called. And instead of splitting the group geographically they did it in a way that half of the "nicer" neighborhood and half the lower SES neighborhood combined. I get that they were trying to be equitable, but geographically it made no sense, and I'm not driving further for used stuff.
Arlington?
Anonymous wrote:I’ve seen people post nonstick pans that are peeling and am shocked when someone is interested.
I did see someone post half a bottle of Coca Cola once that she used for a recipe. That was weird.
But I have gotten tons of nice stuff. I mean tons. I have also posted tons of nice stuff also. MWe have a nice group. .
Anonymous wrote:I think 75% of the people who take things, especially the ones who comment again and again they want it, don’t live in the area. They have fake profiles and make a living off it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the hell is the problem with a used bathing suit? I don’t understand. Wash it and wear it.
WTF? And I’m not even a greenie-freakshow-buy-nothing weirdo. I just don’t see the big deal about a used swimsuit.
You are the weirdo. Its where her hoo ha juices are!!!!
Anonymous wrote:Um, you just wash the bathing suit.
I have give away used underwear but kinda the same thing. Just wash it. Especially kids, they may only wear it a few times. I have bought kids underwear and they wear it once and they don’t like the waistband and I’ve washed and donated.
I’ve gotten a Cheesecake Factory cheesecake someone had from a party and they only ate 3 slices. Some of these people I have gotten to knkw through BN I’m still alive to tell about it. I haven’t been poisoned.
Anonymous wrote:My group has not jumped the shark, but there are a few people that I recognize because they are always offering literal trash. "Gallon-sized bag of packing peanuts that came in a big Amazon delivery - please pick up by Sunday." "Four leftover paper Happy Birthday plates from a party this weekend - must take all." It's always the same two people, no one ever replies to their posts, but they're tenacious.
At this point I read their posts out loud to DH like "warm up the car, we'd better hurry if we want to get first dibs!"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the hell is the problem with a used bathing suit? I don’t understand. Wash it and wear it.
WTF? And I’m not even a greenie-freakshow-buy-nothing weirdo. I just don’t see the big deal about a used swimsuit.
You are the weirdo. Its where her hoo ha juices are!!!!
I own a washing machine, laundry detergent, and a clothes dryer. And since I’m an adult and not a five year old, I don’t worry about stuff like “hoo ha juices”. In fact, my own hoo ha makes plenty of it’s own juices, so I doubt any residual hoo ha juices from someone else could even make it’s way upstream.
While we’re on the subject, do you realize what gets left all over hotel bedsheets? Which just get washed and then reused? I’ve left plenty of hoo ha juices on hotel bedsheets along with what seem like buckets of hoo him juice too. Those sheets go in a commercial laundry and then go right back on the beds. The beds you sleep on when you travel. Someone like me got her brains F’d out on them and jizzed all over, they got washed, and now you’re using them.
So there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My group has not jumped the shark, but there are a few people that I recognize because they are always offering literal trash. "Gallon-sized bag of packing peanuts that came in a big Amazon delivery - please pick up by Sunday." "Four leftover paper Happy Birthday plates from a party this weekend - must take all." It's always the same two people, no one ever replies to their posts, but they're tenacious.
At this point I read their posts out loud to DH like "warm up the car, we'd better hurry if we want to get first dibs!"
In our group, boxes and any packing materials are always in demand. And any pantry items or food will also have multiple requests.