People Describe The Secret 'Black Market' Operations Kids Had At Their School

People Describe The Secret 'Black Market' Operations Kids Had At Their School
Photo by Vitolda Klein on Unsplash

There is always a way to make money.

We can start to collect coin as early Pre-K.

We just have to be creative.

And who is more creative than a person who thinks they have nothing to lose?

Every school has a black market system.

Things are being sold and traded for that would shock us all.


Redditor AWESOMEKITTY7364 wanted to discuss the school system's biggest entrepeneurs, so they asked:

"What 'black market' did kids at your school run?"

I know a friend who sold pickles laced with vodka in high school.

She made a killing.

Mixtures

Mix Lab GIF by BrownSugarAppGiphy

"Used to crush up warheads and mix them with sugar. Sold them by the straw with the ends melted. .50 a piece."

timelydemise13

'you got the goods?'

"I used to deal in whiteboard markers for teachers in high school. One teacher had a tendency to hoard them, leaving none for other teachers. I would take markers from him and provide them to other teachers in need."

"While there was no formal payment, I was given a little bit more leniency at times (e. g. Requests to leave the classroom for a moment etc)."

"Once the marker would start squealing on the whiteboard because it was almost empty, I'd get teachers giving me a nod as if to say 'you got the goods?' I'd then supply them with the marker color of their choosing (usually black)."

"It was actually a lot of fun, and I never heard teachers talk about my systems or chastise me for taking markers."

stoic4somethings

An Unfair Edge

"I was in elementary school when pogs were big. Everyone had cool slammers and stuff but I didn't have money for good ones. My dad made one out of 1/2' mild steel for me and used an engraving pen to make a simple pattern. Everyone was asking me where I got them from."

"I didn't wanna lose my unfair edge but i also knew i could make money. My dad had a big sheet of this 1/2' steel. I told them I was the only one who could get them. I sold them for 15 bucks a pop. My dad kept 10 I got 5. And thats when I learned what overhead was."

FNC1A1

Dress Code

"I went to a private high school with a strict dress code, ties, belt, etc. So I bought a bunch of ties and belts from a thrift store and ran a lucrative rental business out of my locker."

ccrawsh

"If you forgot your gym uniform more than once, you would get fined $5 to rent a uniform from the teacher or serve a detention. I would buy an extra set in the beginning of the school year of each size, and then rent them out/wash them myself undercutting the teachers 'fine' at a cost of $3. Very lucrative over my middle and high school years."

exorthderp

Got Pepsi?

Fail Diet Coke GIF by MOODMANGiphy

"I used to sell coke (the drink) because they didn't allow fizzy drinks to be brought in."

Seventy0

Everyone loves a good fizz...

Copy-Sell

King Yes GIFGiphy

"The only guy in the school who's family had proper TV channels used to tape wrestling events and rent them out."

221

Knock-Offs

"I have family in NY and would go visit a couple times a year back in high school. Every once in a while we'd visit Chinatown in NYC and I'd end up buying $100s worth of fake watches (Rolex, Tag, Gucci, etc) return to school and sell them for double than what I paid for them."

firkin_slang_whanger

"A lot of people still do this. They fly off to China, buy cheap knock-offs and sell them for a huge mark-up wherever they’re from. It’s big business here in the Philippines."

Mist3rTryHard

Currency

"My school used the metallic ends of pencils as a currency. Bronze was rarest, so it was the most expensive. Green was most common, so it was the least. We traded for erasers or pencil cases or a spot up in the four square line. Eventually got banned but we still operated with people acting as banks to keep the currency hidden and to keep transactions hidden."

Flavory_Boat50

Deals

"Pokemon cards we would hide under playground equipment and trade them because the teachers would take them if they saw them. So we always set up 'deals' in class and created a whole Pokemon card trading network."

immapengoon

"We did something similar in my school. We also bet cards on matches. That got shut down pretty quick. We didn't see anything wrong with it at the time. Ahhh, those were the days."

an_elaborate_prank

Bag Full

Black Friday Christmas GIF by TargetGiphy

"At my school they too all sweets out of the vending machines and replaced them with healthy snacks."

"In the local town there was a sweet shop where you could buy a kilo of mixed sweets for £5, so every week I would go there and buy £1 of small paper bags and spend the Sunday night before school repackaging them all ready for the week ahead."

"Come Monday I would go into school and load my bag up every day selling the bags for 50p."

HeisenbergCooks

Kids are shady, yet diligent.

What kind of sneaky operations did your school have? Let us know in the comment below.

Most of us have had a few jobs in our lives, and we've learned to be on our best behavior during the job interview.

But sometimes even when we're doing our best, we might make a mistake, like blanking on the answer to a question or spilling coffee on our pants.

There are other people out there, however, with far stranger stories.

Keep reading...Show less

It's so easy for us to get caught up in the negative things in our day-to-day lives, whether it's a bad day at work or an ended relationship, but it's important to remember what else we have going for it.

Sometimes the best thing to do is to listen to the people we look up to, and let their words help us move through the tough time.

Keep reading...Show less
IT workers
Christina @ wocintechchat.com/Unsplash

Few people earn a living doing what they love.

That's why those in the workforce call showing up for work "the grind"–which implies labor-intensive tasks for long periods of time.

However, there are situations in which employees love their jobs and don't even call their labor of love "work."

They just happen to earn money doing what they love. Who are these people? Where are these jobs?

Keep reading...Show less
Wikipedia page
Photo by Luke Chesser on Unsplash

Every now and then, who hasn't found themselves falling down a Wikipedia rabbit hole?

Even if the sources of information found on the page are dubious.

This doesn't stop people from using it as a quick source of information when necessary.

And with links to other pages readily available, people often find themselves learning information which was a far cry from their initial search.

Gaining information that these same people would no doubt be much better off having never learned.

Keep reading...Show less