

The problem is that regardless of whether you favor the right or the left, there is no quick departure from this mess. OK, now I'm back to the "Saturday Night Live" skit with the financial expert's advice: "Fix it, just fix it!" You see, I will miss the political parodies more than you know.
I've been trying desperately to see where the silver lining is here, and I may have found it. Perhaps this is what many of us needed — myself included — to slap ourselves back into the practical world of sensible spending, one where you actually have to budget and wait for things. Imagine? I'm annoyed if I have to wait in line to purchase something that I decided I needed five minutes ago.

My parents really had it right when they had a young family; they kept their cars for 10 years, put money into maintaining and fixing items rather than replacing them, and actually did their homework to uncover the best deals before buying higher-priced items. I wouldn't know a Consumer Reports magazine if it hit me in the face; and it should.
Just to illustrate my point, let me give you a couple of scenarios and describe how my parents versus my own family would react to them:

You buy a new sofa for your living room. If you are my parents, you wait until next year to buy a new leather chair and that nifty coffee table you've been eyeing. If you are me, you buy it all in the same day. Once you get the new furniture home, you realize that the rug will need to be replaced and the walls painted a slightly different shade of ecru. Oh no, the curtains aren't a perfect match either ...
Look, the truth is I've never defaulted on a loan or bought a house I couldn't afford, but I've certainly not been as frugal as I ought. And I ought. Even though the market is sure to rebound over time, I am still a bit dazed from that death spiral we took.
And I don't want to recover all that quickly.
What I mean is that I need this experience to be vile enough to actually change my long-term spending habits, to create an internal pause button that is activated when I am about to book that Caribbean trip or buy those black leather boots.

hay
ReplyDeleteisn't this double dipping?
lol...hay hows the movie plans going?
Yes it certainly is!!
ReplyDeleteI know I owe you a movie don't I?
Sue
'recycling' is frugal, nice start Sue!
ReplyDelete