The moment I walked in, I knew I was in trouble. Rows of tables. Blinking LEDs. A man selling “mystery boxes” of cables (none of which had the right connector). Another man with a table full of rice cookers that only sing in Cantonese.
I hadn’t.
The silence that followed was heavier than the shrimp lamp. I confessed everything. The lies. The drive. The robot vacuum that won’t stop trying to climb the wall.
I told myself: Just looking. Just browsing. I am a responsible adult. Then I saw it. Tsuma ni Damatte Sokubaikai ni Ikun ja Nakatta ...
I walked in the door. My wife was folding laundry. She looked at my empty hands (I left the bags in the garage). She looked at my guilty face.
Last Sunday, it happened. A local electronics surplus sale. The kind of place where “unclaimed luggage,” “overstock from bankrupt factories,” and “slightly cursed robots” go to die. A flyer appeared in my social media feed at 2 AM. I was weak. I was foolish. And most damning of all—I decided not to tell my wife. I told her I was going for a “morning walk” to clear my head. She smiled, handed me a water bottle, and said, “Don’t buy anything stupid.”
Just don’t tell her I’m going back next month. Next time, buy two mystery bags. One for you. One for her. The moment I walked in, I knew I was in trouble
A box. A large, unassuming cardboard box. On the side, in sharpie: “AS-IS. ROBOT VACUUM. MAYBE WORKS. ¥500.”
“Very… walk-like,” I said.
I kissed her forehead, lied straight through my teeth, and drove 45 minutes to a convention center that smelled of regret and old dust. A man selling “mystery boxes” of cables (none
The seller, a man with no eyebrows, said: “It worked once. Probably.”
Five hundred yen. That’s less than a convenience store onigiri.
Here’s a complete blog post based on your title, “Tsuma ni Damatte Sokubaikai ni Ikun ja Nakatta…” (I Shouldn’t Have Gone to the Surplus Sale Without Telling My Wife…). Tsuma ni Damatte Sokubaikai ni Ikun ja Nakatta… Date: October 12, 2024 Category: Confessions of a Middle-Aged Otaku Let me start with a simple truth: I am 43 years old. I have a steady job, a mortgage, and a wife who has the patience of a saint. You would think I’d know better.
She didn’t yell. Worse—she sighed. That long, tired sigh of a woman who has married a man-child. Then she asked: “Did you at least get me anything?”
I opened the box. Inside was a robot vacuum that looked like it had fought in a war. Scratches. Duct tape. A tiny, hopeful LED that blinked “HELLO” before flickering out.