Kahuna
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 270
- Location
- Moscow, ID
Wow, I'm surprised at all the posts since I last visited. Apparently thrift has been brought up before on this forum but, since it seems to have stirred up some interest again, lets keep wringing more thought out of the topic.
I try for that as well. It is exciting for me when I can find new uses for stuff I already have on hand.
I don't look down my nose at anyone who truly needs a cell phone. I had one myself for three years when I really needed to have one. Haven't had one since because I really don't need it. What I question is whether most people truly need to be that connected all the time. Recently I saw two teenage girls walking side by side each talking to someone else on their cell phone. There's something perverse about that. I wonder if cell phones are causing us to lose the ability to be in the moment face-to-face with people.
I guess my issues with cell phone have more to do with how they're used than whether they are a good tool. I have sat next to someone in the library or in the movies having loud conversations about their personal lives way too many times and, regardless of what drivers think, studies have shown that driving skill is severely impeded by carrying on phone conversations while driving (even with hands-free sets).
I don't see thrift as being about deprivation. Rather I see it as being about knowing when you have enough. The doctrine of manifest destiny is still shaping American thought, the idea that it is our God-given right as Americans to have something even if the rest of the world doesn't have enough. One of the reasons we have to be thrifty is we sponsor 9 kids. One of our kids in the Philippines has a household income of $22 a month. I have my own weaknesses for "stuff" but I always try to keep in mind how little other people have when I get whiney about what I don't have. An eye-opening site that calculates where your personal income stands in relationship to the rest of the world is Global Rich List http://www.globalrichlist.com/
To me, thrift means *not buying at all* if I can possibly figure out a way not to. That, to me, is the most effective way of practicing "Use It Up, Wear It Out, Make It Do, or Do Without."
I try for that as well. It is exciting for me when I can find new uses for stuff I already have on hand.
CELL PHONES. I need one because my husband is at basic training right now and there is NO TELLING WHEN he will get phone privleges so I have to have a phone with me ALL THE TIME. I would hate to miss his call. Call me a loser, turn your nose down at me, but I am dependant on my cell phone right now.
I don't look down my nose at anyone who truly needs a cell phone. I had one myself for three years when I really needed to have one. Haven't had one since because I really don't need it. What I question is whether most people truly need to be that connected all the time. Recently I saw two teenage girls walking side by side each talking to someone else on their cell phone. There's something perverse about that. I wonder if cell phones are causing us to lose the ability to be in the moment face-to-face with people.
I don't care if anyone else has them, as long as I don't have to listen to them discuss all their family issues on it while we're out to dinner.
I guess my issues with cell phone have more to do with how they're used than whether they are a good tool. I have sat next to someone in the library or in the movies having loud conversations about their personal lives way too many times and, regardless of what drivers think, studies have shown that driving skill is severely impeded by carrying on phone conversations while driving (even with hands-free sets).
Being thrifty in of itself and being miserable is not something I want to do. Being thrifty is a means to an end, to make life better for myself and my family. I'm not going to make due to stuff it in the bank for no purpose and put my life on hold, I've only got one life.
I don't see thrift as being about deprivation. Rather I see it as being about knowing when you have enough. The doctrine of manifest destiny is still shaping American thought, the idea that it is our God-given right as Americans to have something even if the rest of the world doesn't have enough. One of the reasons we have to be thrifty is we sponsor 9 kids. One of our kids in the Philippines has a household income of $22 a month. I have my own weaknesses for "stuff" but I always try to keep in mind how little other people have when I get whiney about what I don't have. An eye-opening site that calculates where your personal income stands in relationship to the rest of the world is Global Rich List http://www.globalrichlist.com/