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Buying and selling stuff online should be easy, right? That shirt you never wore? Someone out there wants it. Looking for a cute bag but hate the price tags? Just a few clicks, and it’s yours - or so you think.

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But add humans to the mix, and oh boy, things get wild. Buyers and sellers slide into DMs that feel less like chats and more like full-blown soap opera episodes.

Here’s a fun peek at some of the most bonkers, hilarious, and totally relatable moments from the world of secondhand shopping drama.

Yep, the sass and chaos in these messages remind us that people can REALLY lose it over secondhand stuff.

Who knew buying a used sweater could come with cliffhangers and dramatic returns?

Related:

    FYI, "thrift" is an old-school word from way back in the 1300s that basically means "doing well" or "saving money."

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    So thrifting started as smart and savvy - using what you have wisely to do better. Turns out, it’s been a fashion player for a looooong time.

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    Believe it or not, people have been swapping secondhand clothes since the 1300s! Back then, it was just practical and business-as-usual.

    But then came the Industrial Revolution, and everything changed. Clothes got cheap and disposable, which made secondhand stuff less cool and more stigmatized, especially for immigrant communities.

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    Fast forward to the 1800s and 1900s, and charities like Salvation Army made secondhand shopping a thing again.

    It wasn’t always glamorous, but during tough times like the Great Depression, thrifting became the budget-friendly star of the show.

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    The 1970s gave thrifting a whole new vibe - freedom and funky styles tied to counterculture movements.

    Hippies rocked secondhand threads as a way to stand out and say, "I do me."

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    Today? Thrifting is HUGE. The secondhand market is booming like crazy and expected to keep growing.

    Apps and websites make buying and selling from your couch super easy, with millions of people hopping on the thrifting train.

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    How do these apps work? Sellers list their stuff with their own prices, buyers pay, and the platform takes a tiny cut or a fee.

    It cuts out the middleman, so everyone kind of wins - except maybe your impulse control.

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    Why the big surge? It’s not just about saving money.

    Younger shoppers care about the planet and know buying secondhand helps reduce fashion waste and pollution. Saving money *and* the Earth? Score!

    But the best part? The drama! The platforms are slick, but the DMs are delightfully messy and totally human.

    Like when someone offers $3 for a vintage jacket and acts like it’s a personal insult when it’s politely declined. Priceless!

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