It really sucks to return stuff to the dollar store. It's embarrassing. Lingering shame has probably kept me out of dollar stores since then, although I love grocery outlet stores, Goodwill and other discount shops.
But here I am again.
What I discovered? I've been paying way too much for hair elastics, plungers, balloons, school science-fair display boards, earplugs and Disney Princess tissues. Also for sale: an excellent selection of Halloween crafts, stickers and decor, along with candy, crackers, snacks, craft supplies, mylar balloons and a nice assortment of crossword puzzle books.
Legerdemain has to be one of the best unintentionally ironic names ever given to a slightly-scented something in a bottle. Yes, I smelled a bottle. Maybe three. I think I may have worn one of these in high school, when I only aspired to being a Nice Lady and Hot Thrill, as I obviously am today.
But I wouldn't buy this at any price. A fine print notification suggests that you wash your teeth before using; this package obviously used to include the teeth but cost more than $1. Also, I have my very own nerd glasses. On my face, all the time.
For sale in the food aisle: "Chef Swagger's Kitchen Soup Mix with Real Chicken Broth" which sounds like it could be both a lot of fun and a bad decision.
Sort of like these, which were pretty much the only food-like thing I would eat, as a kid:
Then there was the Color Eazy hair color treatment, also for $1 (hair coloring usually costs around $7-12/box). I looked inside, and apparently the cost savings comes from not including conditioner and having god-knows-what as ingredients. I don't know what state a person's hair would be in after repeated use, but I'm pretty sure I don't want to find out.
But the real discomfort came at the checkout stand. To get cash back, I had to agree to a $1 fee.
I've never seen a charge for cash back anywhere -- at standard grocery stores or anywhere you can get cash back after a purchase, there's no fee attached. But where shoppers are most cost-conscious, probably pressed for time and most likely to need quick cash, there's a fee.
Oh, and Dollar Tree made US$599 million in profits in 2015. Huh.
Legerdemain indeed.
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