TAINTED LOVE

The eBay for breakups lets you sell your emotional baggage

Bounce back.
Bounce back.
Image: AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda
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A bad breakup can turn treasures into trash. But before dumping mementos and your ex’s stuff on the sidewalk, consider getting paid for it. Like an eBay for broken relationships, Never Liked It Anyway is an online marketplace for the jilted, the forsaken and the lovelorn.

Items currently for sale include designer wedding dresses, lots and lots of jewelry, and a DVD collection. (DVD-seller Chelseajade, whose ex-husband cheated on her while she was on military deployment, captions the listing: “I don’t even wanna look at them, let alone watch them.”)

Never Liked It Anyway was founded by Bella Acton, a marketing consultant whose business breakthrough came after her own breakup left her with two unwanted plane tickets. “If you look at it, there’s $2 billion in the dating space and zero dollars in the break-up space,” Acton explains to Quartz.

But more than reselling emotionally-laden goods, Acton sees a greater mission to her business. A section on the website offers a place where the brokenhearted can recount their stories and unload some emotional baggage too. “We started Never Liked It Anyway to make moving on easier. It’s a place to shed the stories and the stuff,” says Acton.

Other websites like Cancelled Weddings offer similar services, but Acton’s site stands out with a deep well of articles and allied “break-up services.” Its advice section is packaged in a Bounce Back Stack card deck.

With aesthetics apparently borrowed from women’s fashion magazines, Never Liked It Anyway’s content is focused on women’s issues for the time being, though Acton points out that there’s currently one male seller has listed luxurious mink shawl.

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With the opening of Museum of Broken Relationships in Croatia, Leanne Shapton’s inventive love novella in the form of an auction catalogue, and Acton’s thriving enterprise, there seem to be promising opportunities in the underserved ”break-up space.” Naturally, Acton is also working on a book and a TV show.