One cheap coat rack, one questionable backyard meetup, and one identity crisis later
I love a bargain as much as the next person but after this week’s $10 disaster, I’m wondering if Facebook Marketplace is a recycling hub or a social experiment. Columnist Emma Cam explains.
I swear Facebook Marketplace is the Wild West. One minute you’re scrolling for a second-hand plant stand, the next you’ve accidentally agreed to meet a stranger behind a shed at dusk to look at… “lightly used” bed slats.
And look, I’m a trusting person. Too trusting one might say. The kind of trusting where you catch yourself walking into a complete stranger’s home thinking, “This is how every true crime podcast starts,” but you keep going because the listing said BARGAIN in all caps.
My latest Marketplace misadventure began with a simple dream: stop throwing my jacket over the back of my office chair like a feral animal.
I wanted a little coat rack so my blazer wouldn’t collect crumbs, hair, and the emotional residue of every interview I’d had that week.
So when a sweet little old woman posted a bunch of coat racks for ten bucks each, with only one left, I thought, Yes. Finally. A sensible adult purchase.
I show up to her house, seriously, sweetest woman alive...and she leads me to the backyard where the coat racks lived.
I say “lived” because these things had clearly been outdoors longer than most retirees in Cairns. That should have been my first clue.
Weathered. Sun-baked. Rusty. Basically the human equivalent of a man who’s tanned himself into leather.
I did not want it. At all, but let me explain friends the thing is: it was $10. I’d spent that in petrol getting there.
And the idea of saying, “Actually no, I don’t want this anymore,” fills me with the same level of dread I get when someone tries to haggle at overseas markets.
I know haggling is normal. I respect the culture.
But I would rather pay quadruple the price than argue with a stranger over fifty cents. Truly. I am weak.
So yes… I bought the sad, sunburnt coat rack.
I thought, Okay, maybe this is a sign. Maybe this is the start of my the new hobby I’ve been wanting to start for years now — restoring furniture.
Cute, right?
Wrong.
The wheels didn’t roll. The poles fell out one by one like a collapsing game of pick-up sticks and by the time I got it inside my house, I was basically performing emergency surgery, gluing it back together and wrapping the joints in black tape.
But it looked… not awful. I got confident. I hung two tiny coats on it to test the strength.
For a moment a brief, shining moment — it stood tall. I text the girls in the office thrilled with my developments.
Then it collapsed dramatically, like it had fainted from the stress of existing.
I spent more money fixing it than I did buying it, and honestly? I should’ve just gone to Kmart and saved myself the heartbreak.
But noooo. I was trying to “reuse and recycle” and save the planet. Meanwhile, the planet was like, “Babe, not like this.”
And it’s not even the worst Marketplace moment I’ve had. When I first moved to Cairns, I once went to pick up furniture in a very dark, very quiet street.
So dark and so quiet I texted my friend the address with:
“If you don’t hear from me in 30 minutes, this was the last place I was seen.”
Guarantee you dear read, have likely done the same at some point. Why are we risking our lives for a second hand toaster?
And selling is just as chaotic.
Before I moved up here, I sold a desk to a lovely man who showed up on time, paid full price, didn’t haggle and I thought, hooray, it’s going well.
Then as he was leaving my shambles of a room (mid packing) he asked for a photo with me because he “recognised me” from Beauty and the Geek.
“My wife’s a big fan,” he said.
Sure, mate. Meanwhile I looked like I’d been dragged through a hedge and was selling furniture like I was mid-divorce.
It’s also the only place on Earth where you can get into full arguments with strangers over who messaged “FIRST” or get ghosted by someone who was meant to pick up a lampshade. WHAT is with the ghosting people, come on!
None of this should surprise me though as my sister and I didn’t exactly master “Stranger Danger” as kids.
One day we decided to set up a roadside business selling — wait for it — ice cubes. In summer.
Not lemonade.
Not snacks.
Just… ice cubes. For 50 cents.
We had a single customer: an individual who pulled over and chatted a little too long and was way too keen on the melting ice cubes. So truly, Marketplace chaos was in my DNA early. But really at the end of the day, I love second-hand shopping. I think it’s great for the environment, and I’ll keep doing it.
But good lord, Marketplace is a wild place. A magical, terrifying, hilarious jungle of bargains and weirdness.
If shopping second-hand builds character, then I am one more coat rack away from being a saint and I know I’m not alone. What’s your wildest Marketplace moment?
Email me at emma.cam@news.com.au or drop a comment below.
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Originally published as One cheap coat rack, one questionable backyard meetup, and one identity crisis later
