This post is from staff writer Sierra Black. Sierra writes about frugality, sustainable living, and raising children at Childwild.com.
My shower is broken. The water comes out just fine, and it doesn’t leak. But the temperature control is busted, so it only comes out at one temperature: as hot as it gets.
Here’s the embarrassing part: It’s been like this for a year.
Frugal or lazy?
When the temperature thingy broke (and here you see that household plumbing is not my strong suit — a year after this thingy broke, I still don’t know what it’s called), I made some small adjustments. I went downstairs right away and lowered the temperature on the water heater so that the water coming out would be hot but not scalding. That means no super-hot water anywhere in the house, but since we have small children I was keeping it on the low side anyway.
I let my husband know what had happened, and he declared that he would fix it himself. Household plumbing kind of is his strong suit; he fixed a similar problem with the shower at our old house. It’s kind of a difficult job, though, so I offered to have a plumber come in just to spare him the hassle. No, he insisted, he was up for doing it. Just not right away.
Then the task kind of got lost in his chore cloud. We grit our teeth and take hot showers. Every night when the kids take their bath, they make a game of dumping a few buckets of cold water into the tub to get it to the right temperature.
For months I’ve been embarrassed by this state of affairs. What kind of real grown-up lets a basic household repair go for a year? Clearly, my husband and I are being irresponsible ignoring the broken thingy.
Then yesterday morning, while taking a shower, I thought, “Maybe we’re not being lazy and irresponsible. Maybe we’re being frugal.” After all, the broken thingy isn’t getting any worse. It’s not leaking into the walls or damaging the house. It just makes showering extra hot. So far, we’ve done a fine job of making it do, leaving us free to put our money and time into other things.
Frugality is about choices
Now, I’m not suggesting that frugality is about ignoring regular home maintenance. One of these days, we’ll fix the shower. (And probably soon now that I’ve confessed to the world that it’s busted.)
What I am suggesting is that frugality is about making choices. Every frugal person focuses on what’s important to them, and cuts away the excess to do so. In this case, experience shows that being able to adjust the water temperature in our shower isn’t very important to my family. We’d rather spend our weekends playing music and gardening than get into this messy, time-consuming repair project. I could hire a plumber to do it, but I’d rather spend the money on yoga classes or a family camping trip. These fun things might seem like trivial luxuries next to the shower repair, but the truth is they add more to my quality of life than being able to adjust the temperature in my shower.
I suspect that every frugal person makes some odd choices like this one.
One of the tricks of frugal living is to recognize that with careful planning and savings, you can have anything you want but you can’t have everything you want. Making a commitment to conscientious, intentional personal money management means making some choices. You need to develop the skill of discerning what best serves your goals, and keeping your spending and attention focused on those things.
Another part of being frugal is being able to pare back your sense of what you need. My former, spendthrift self would have fixed the shower immediately, the next day, even if it meant paying the plumber with a credit card to do it. I’d have seen it as a need. I would also have needed to immediately replace several kitchen gadgets that broke over the winter, and to take my bike to the shop for a spring tune-up.
There’s nothing wrong with doing any of those things. It’s not spendthrift to fix a shower or replace a vegetable steamer. But nowhere is it written that they’re mandatory either. I’ve been getting clean just fine with a broken shower, cooking up a storm without those kitchen gadgets, and safely riding the bike that I maintain myself. Turns out, I don’t really need any of that stuff.
In contrast, I’ve been going to yoga classes three or four times a week. I paid for these with a deeply discounted Groupon, but I’ll probably buy a full-price membership when that runs out. Yoga is expensive. A few years ago I would have considered it an unaffordable luxury to pay for yoga classes. I could just do yoga workout tapes at home. Even a few months ago when I made it a New Year’s resolution to get back into yoga, I was unwilling to spend money on this studio. Now that I’ve tried it, though, I see what a big difference it makes to my quality of life. It seems like a bargain. I’m calmer and happier — more focused. Not only are those good things in themselves, but they support my career. I’m doing more and better writing because I’m so healthy. That translates to more money. I could argue that the yoga classes pay for themselves.
For me, this gets at the core of frugal living: realigning all my spending to fit with my values. At first glance, the shower seemed like an essential, basic home repair. For me, it turns out, fixing it is really a luxury. I haven’t done it yet because it doesn’t directly support any of my financial or personal goals. I won’t be a better writer after it’s fixed, nor will I be closer to living debt-free. As long as we can make it do, getting it fixed is really an extra. One we haven’t decided to indulge in yet.
How to make frugal choices
The mechanics of conscious spending are pretty simple. Before you buy anything, ask yourself some simple questions:
- Do I have the money to cover this expense, or would I be going into debt for it?
- Does this expense forward my financial goals?
- Can I get this need or desire met without spending money on it? Could I spend less money?
- Does this money need to be spent now, or can it wait thirty days?
These questions can be very useful for curbing impulse buys and keeping you focused on financial goals. I’m finding they can also help with less obvious resource sinks.
In getting ready to plant my garden, for example, I found that several of my large pots had broken during the winter. My first thought was that I needed to replace them, right now. On second thought, I was able to dig up a bunch of old plastic storage bins that will serve perfectly well as replacement containers for my garden. They’re not as pretty as new flower pots, but they were already here. Now I’ve got less clutter, more money, and a garden that’s ready to plant.
The core motto of frugal living is “use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without”. How you’ll choose to live that motto is up to you. It’s important to question every expense and ask yourself how necessary it really is. Sometimes, the answers will surprise you.
This article is about Choices, Frugality, House and Home
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I’ll have to side with the folks who call the broken water heater a lazy option rather than a frugal one. However, that being said, this article was useful because it’s made me look at areas in my own life where I might be using “frugaity” as a cover up for laziness.
I strive to live with the sort of frugality that stems from making a conscious decision to live without frivolous luxuries . This story reminded me that I don’t want to gradually slip into a mindset where I’m saving a buck by living with broken necessities or suffering in silence while my home falls into disrepair.
Thanks for the eye opener!
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Recently, I started rifling through the small basement corner of “junk” I’ve piled up over 5 years. It seems that I like to use only 3/4 of the shampoo/conditioner bottles before I go out and buy a new flavor. I’m now making my way through those bottles and taking the new attitude of “Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without!” Great post!
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Shampoo also doubles well as hand soap and body wash. Conditioner is a great swap for shaving cream.
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It was driving me crazy to throw away shampoo/conditioner/lotion bottles with some still in it. Finally, I realized I wasn’t taking the bottle apart out of some weird hangup about destroying it to get at the leftovers (as if someone were going to use it after me at the dump or recycling center). I now cut off the bottoms and scoop it out into the newer bottle (I have to use the new bottle for a bit to make room). It’s so simple and obvious, but I didn’t think of it for years.
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Am I right that this part is about 20, maybe 30 bucks? I’m guessing they’ve spent more than that by now on extra hot water. If I’m right about the part price, the answer to the lazy or frugal question posed as a paragraph heading is pretty clear.
15 years ago when we first moved into our then 50 year old fixer upper home, our original wiring was declared unsafe by an electrician. We got the main floor of the house rewired. On our upstairs (where the bedrooms are) we had an overhead light fixture in each room as well as one working outlet in the bathroom – it was the only outlet on the whole floor. That was frugality.
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My husband – who did this repair once before – thinks it will cost around $100 and take him an entire weekend. My memory is that it cost more like $200 last time, when all was said and done.
We really do quite a lot of maintenance on our home. I just picked on this example because it was an obvious thing we “should” have done and haven’t. I wondered how real that “should” was.
I’m persuaded now to make it a priority, mainly by the argument that letting it slide sets a precedent and could lead to letting all kinds of home maintenance projects pile up, gradually chipping away at our quality of life.
We did a ton of work here when we moved in a few years ago, so our project list for the house is blessedly short, but I can see how it could get out of control if we don’t stay on top of these medium-sized things when they come up.
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I let home maintenance things go a long time too. I chalked it up to laziness on my part (not saying that anyone else is lazy, but admitting that that was my issue). It was also another nail in the coffin of “I am not the home-owning type”. And allowed me to feel really good about my decision move out and rent it out and to hire an agency to take care of all that kind of stuff.
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I will be glad when the kids move out so we can go back to an apartment, or maybe get a townhouse or condo. I’m somewhat handy and husband isn’t at all handy. I can fix a lot of things, but being a small woman, a lot of fixes are just too difficult for me strength-wise. Neither of us likes landscaping or gardening.
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Love the confession on the broken shower, I don’t think it’s cheap or lazy at all. We all have our priorities. My car has had a cracked front windshield for over a year, but it’s in a place that doesn’t interfere with my field of vision, so I’m leaving it alone. It drives my husband nuts! But it’s not his car, so I tell him to get over it.
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Have you called to see if your car insurance covers the replacement? In FL, it does.
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Most states consider driving with a cracked windshield to be illegal if it is in your field of vision, or if it extends into an area that your windshield wipers cover.
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S – My deductible is big enough that the windshield expense is mine and mine alone.
Sara – The crack isn’t in my field of vision, but I’ll have to check if it’s in my wiper’s area of coverage. It’s down very low, so I’m not sure, thanks!
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Call and ask – in FL, the ins co replaces the windshield regards of deductible. One call might get it fixed.
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When I was a business analyst at work, we’d have the same thing occur with software.
A bug would be found, it would have a work-around. And rather than fix the bug, everyone would just use the work-around while waiting for a patch. The patch would get delayed for a long time and people would just adjust and forget there was a bug.
Then new users would come on and to them this would be ridiculous that it didn’t get fixed, but to old users it was no big deal to use the work around.
Patch the bug.
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I have to empathize with Sierra and her family. With both our house and my mom’s to tend to, there is a constant list of these nagging things that need doing.
My mom’s back door doesn’t close all the way in the winter because the mudroom it’s on heaves in the winter. Should we fix the door, yeah, but it’s not an easy fix. That coupled with the fact that when the summer rolls around to do that kind of work, the door shuts again and we forget about it til the next winter.
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Sounds like it’s used up and worn out to me, cancel a couple yoga classes and pay for a pro to fix it already.
We wanted to go on vacation last year, but our A/C was about ready to die. We sucked it up, bought a new system and postponed the vacation. It’s called life.
After April’s fantastic article last week, this is one of the worst I’ve read on GRS.
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Wow – seems like people are really jumping down her back. I thought it was a rather amusing story. Who among us does not have things we should have gotten around to and now that it has been a while we realize it’s just crazy to have gone that long? I do agree that it’s more human nature than frugality.
That said I actually found the chore cloud post infuriating (I suspect it’s because it sounds a little too much like my better half). Not getting things done is not “cloudy” or “arty” it’s just not getting things done. (if lists really get more stuff done make the darn list already!)
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I feel that you are trying to justify being lazy.
If this was a dripping faucet, I might feel differently. However, this is a MAJOR plumbing issue that is not only unsafe but most likely costing you extra money.
For me, major plumbing issues are exactly what an emergency fund is for. I have not had to dip into mine yet, but you can be sure I would for something like the above.
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This is just smart business. I have a cupboard that sticks out about a half inch and refuses to fully close like the others. I could take it apart and put it back on its hinge, but other than not being visibly perfect, it really doesnt affect anything… I would rather spend my time doing more meaningful home improvement projects, or having some leisure time after a 12 hour day at the office.
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Is it the hinge that is broken? If so, check the hinge manufacturer’s warranty. Ours has a lifetime replacment policy.
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I do that task list every weekend (I’m female). I end up jotting down my list of to-dos on an index card, putting them in the most efficient order based on location of the task. I like to know that, when I drive somewhere, I’m getting the most bang for my buck by grouping errands and also doing them at the most ideal time of day. (For example, I go to the post office right when they open, not at noon.) Efficiency pleases me on some deep, primal level.
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These comments seem harsh to me. Haven’t we all put off things that we should have done right away, and done something penny-wise and pound-foolish more than once? She let something slide, it turns out to be maybe not the best decision-in retrospect, and now she’ll fix it and move on. Live and learn. And it IS a good lesson to learn, to stop and think before we replace things and see if we can make do. This probably wasn’t the best example to show that. No need to judge the author personally, though.
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Frugal or lazy? I think sometimes doing less is more. Think about active trading versus dividend investing. In finance, like in life sometimes inertia is a powerful thing.
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Two things:
1. Give the author a break. She has 2 kids as I understand and having a sane mother in the house is a good thing, even if the house is a mess and kids have to pour cold water into the tub. Not ideal, but I see how life can get that way. I’d take a sane mom with a messed up house any day over a stressed-out creature in an impeccable house. So would my daughter. Maybe Sierra’s kids, too. If those who criticize have a perfect house and young children – more power to them, but we all have limited time and energy and try to use it the best we can.
2. Nothing against the cloud method – I am a “clouder” myself. But J.D.’s example is horrible – “chore cloud” should have CHORES in it, not “breakfast”, “walk outside”, “call friends”, “check email” stuff. Most people remember to eat w/o lists or clouds. And adding fun stuff into cloud lets one to cheat easily by spending a weekend on computer, walking, chatting with friends, napping, watching TV, etc. No problem really, UNLESS one is in a relationship where the other half winds up always mopping flours, doing laundry, cleaning and doing other non-fun stuff. Clouds, lists or binary trees – the work should be shared equally…
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In regards to point 1): Thank you!
To those complaining about scalding: It seems that her children are doing just fine. I’m not saying that burns on children aren’t horrible and they probably are preventable most of the time but that is not the case now. She dialed back the temp on the water to help take care of that. And her children are obviously aware of the situation and the importance of adding the cold water in order to protect themselves. Relax! This doesn’t make her a bad parent. That wasn’t even the point of the article. Like single ma said: If you have a perfect house and a perfect life, you can cast the first stone.
To those complaining about bacteria: You do realize that all of your water comes from the same source. The city/county/township treats all of the water and pipes it to the meter outside your house if your on public water. From the meter a single service line runs into your house where it serves everything from the hotwater heater, to the tap in the kitchen, to the toilet in the bathroom. In theory, you could drink from the toilet if you wanted to. (I wouldn’t try it unless I was desparate though.) My point is that the risk of bacterial infection from the water has not increased substatially. I don’t have any data but for the sake of arguement let’s say the baseline for bacterial infection from water in children in the US in a typical suburban home is 1 in 100,000. (I have no idea. I’m just making up some numbers.) Even if your chance for infection doubles because the water temp has been dialed back, you are still only talking about 1 in 50,000. This is about managing risk just like having money in the stock market or some other investment. You’ve never actually been 100% safe. You just live with a certain level of risk. Should you do what you are able to reduce risk as much as possible? Yes, to a point. In this case, it’s obviously an acceptable risk and that’s her and her husband’s call to make, not your’s to criticize.
Now about the issue of fixing the problem itself, it’s not being frugal. Yes frugal is about making choices and spending conciously. This isn’t about either of those issues. It’s about choosing not to take the time to fix a known issue. For example, the passenger side door on my wife’s car squeaks sometimes. It needs to be oiled. I know it needs to be oiled but I probably need to run to the store to pick up a can of WD-40. It’s not a matter of money, it’s that other things pop up and I “forget” about it because it’s not that important to me. (It’s not that important to my wife at this point either.) But I’m not being frugal by not spending the money. I’m being lazy by ignoring the issue. I have no problems with this other than it’s part of a larger self-discipline issue that I’m working on. Don’t confuse frugalty and self-discipline.
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Here’s my advice on coping with a hot shower: get a low flow shower head for less than $10. It sprays water so finely it dissapates heat quicker, so the temp drops the further you are away from the shower head. If you’re too warm, just take a step back. As you run out of hot water and it starts to get colder, take a step forward. Problem solved!
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I’m not looking forward to Kris getting home tonight. Once she reads all of your comments in support of her, she’s going to lord it over me. If you’ll excuse me, I need to stop writing about money and go home to do some chores. (For real!)
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We’ll support her, too. I’m going to guess your readership is mostly list people, JD. Isn’t one of the cardinal rules “Have a goal and focus on it”?
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Ha! Do you know why that’s one of the cardinal rules? Because otherwise things get lost in the cloud.
You all might think I’m joking, but I’m not. By setting one goal, I’m able to stay focused and not get distracted. If I have lots of goals, it’s like they’re all swirling around my head like gnats. I swat at them, and I might get one, but all the others are still there.
Anyhow, I really did come home from the office to do chores today. You all made me feel like a bad, bad man for putting things off. But because I had prioritized my tasks this morning (in other words, I had a chore list), I hadn’t got to the outside stuff. By the time I got home, it was cold and rainy, and I wasn’t going to do more outside work, so I did inside work.
When Kris got home, she was a little perturbed to see the outside chores weren’t done yet. “I did a lot of other things on my list,” I said. “But the weather didn’t co-operate for the yard stuff. I’ll try to get to it tomorrow.”
“This why you shouldn’t have a list — you should have a cloud,” Kris said. And then she added, “It’s ironic.” And I came to post it here.
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Lucky you
Everyone wins sometimes.
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Hahahaha. I love the concept of the chore cloud.
I think it’s a bit of a mistake to align the “list” vs. “chore cloud” with women vs men. I think it’s more of a logical thinker vs. creative thinker situation.
I’m a woman, and I have a chore cloud, though I’ve never really thought of it this way. XD The next time someone tries to tell me that I should be doing it their way, I’ll just explain that creative people don’t work that way and tell them about the chore cloud.
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I totally have logical lists for my work work, but for housework I’m much more… creative.
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Nicole, if you’re an INTP/J – it probably means that you shift into “logical mode” at work and to perceiver mode at home. I’m kind of the same way. Unless it’s the weekend – in which case I stay in judging mode for at least awhile. Until I give it up with family demands anyway… I think of that as a good thing – all work and no play makes Jacq a very dull girl.
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Yah, my Myers Briggs answers are very dependent on context.
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I liked the post, it’s the things that are questionable that really make you think. If she had used as an example something that clearly falls into the wants catagory this wouldn’t be an interesting article. She found a way to ‘make it do’. By turning down the temp so it’s not scalding or inviting bacteria, she is ‘making do’. I had a camera that teh back hinge broke on, I took it to the camera shop to see if it was worth fixing (old camera, but I liked it and knew how to use it). The guy said it wasn’t worth fixing, but it was worth duct taping. I kept using it for 1-2 years with a strip of duct tape until I was ready to upgrade to the new one that I wanted. ‘make it do’. I’d love to see more on the other parts of this phrase.
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Would someone be willing to clarify this “chore cloud” concept for me? The link to the other site is Websensed from my work…and I’m *always* at work
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Like others, whilst I agree with the concept of this post, but I really wish it had been illustrated with another example.
Mucking around with hot water like that is dangerous, plain and simple, especially where kids are involved. How do you know that the “temperature thingy” which you assume is broken won’t break a little more and stop regulating the temperature to your lower set point? My mother worked on a burns ward at a children’s hospital for many years and the idea of your children having to pour water into a bath to make the temperature bearable fills me with dread. All it takes is one slip, one mistake, and you’ve got burns, even mild ones.
There is a difference between suffering mild inconvience or putting up with a cosmetic issue and justifying leaving an unsafe lack of basic functionality in your house.
You asked if it was frugal or lazy? I think it’s lazy. Hey, I’m frugal AND lazy sometimes too, but I don’t try and pass off one as the other.
I’m glad some commenters chimed with some more reasonable examples. Myself, I have a toaster that has a middle element that doesn’t heat. It’s mildly annoying, I take twice as long to make toast. I let it cook one side, pop and then flip the bread around. But I eat toast about once a month at most so it’s not worth the $30 for me to replace.
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We recently bought a used washing machine for under $200 (our previous one was even more of a clunker, but that one was free). It kind of….leaks. The taps drip a little bit when on. So we only turn them on while a wash is actually funning.
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Oh for goodness sake, it has NOTHING to do with gender – or laziness – or anything – other than that something like a “chore cloud” will be used by someone who has the personality that’s more of a perceiver, rather than a judger. (Myers Briggs.)
Judgers will make a list, get stuff done, focus to the max. Perceivers are more “live in the moment” – and there’s nothing wrong with either style. You can’t make yourself into someone – or something – that you are not.
If you’re an engineer type (I’m talking like Tyler K.) – you are HIGHLY likely to be a strongly expressed judger and can’t understand those flighty perceivers who can’t get to this kind of stuff. Their brain doesn’t work that way – and guess what? They still manage to muddle through life.
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Part of being frugal is keeping things in good repair so that the repair doesn’t escalate into something that will eventually cost MORE than the initial repair. I know this first hand from experience
J.D. – if you want to fix that washer, I recommend this website => http://www.repairclinic.com/ Not only does it usually have the parts you need, but you can track them down by model or serial number, and there is a corresponding YouTube video that shows you how to do it (I replaced the timer knob on my dryer earlier this year).
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I don’t understand this concept. How does NOT fixing a shower that only spits out extremely hot water become a frugal choice? Do you realize how much energy is being wasted because the shower head hasn’t been fixed? How much money is wasted to heat the water? Where is the frugality?
Have you calculated over the year how much extra you have been paying in energy costs to shower with such extreme hot water? I’m certain it would total up to more than what a repair would have cost.
You’ve turned down the water temp in your whole house just to accommodate one unfixed shower head? That’s like turning up your refrigerator to the max just to keep ice cream frozen (rather than place it in the freezer part because your freezer part was broken).
Fix the darn shower head, girl! Are you daft or something? You’re preposterous. And this blog is non-sensical for even publishing such rubbish. Gosh, how the quality of this blog has deteriorated.
If you truly want to save money and be frugal, you fix things as they break. Time, in some instances, may not be on your side.
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It’s my first time posting here although I’ve been lurking for a long time (more than 3 years).
What prompted me to take part in this discussion is that I can identify with Sierra.
In my first home, we did not have a sofa or coffee table for two years. Reason: lack of cash (we could have afforded it but I preferred to build up our emergency fund – I’m the sort who don’t feel secure till I see five digits in my emergency fund [before the decimal point]) and lack of time (or was it laziness?)
Fast forward to our second home. We’ve been living in this apartment for more than 6 years. In the last year, the lock to the communal toilet dropped out. I did get a handyman to come in and replaced it. He claimed that our lock was one of those newfangled ones and needed to be replaced. He did fix it but warned that it was a short-term solution. In the meantime, he said he would try to order a replacement lock.
A year later and we’ve yet to hear from him. The repaired lock has seen dropped out again and we’re living with a toilet that cannot be locked. It gets quite embarrassing each time we have a visitor. When (s)he wants to use the toilet, we would have to warn him/her that it can’t be locked and promise that we have no intention of peeping in.
My point – it IS laziness but I try to console myself and tell myself that I’m being frugal instead.
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Did anyone else notice that there was an article that followed Sierra’s lead-in story about the shower?
Best example or not, I thought this article made a really good point. Sierra noted, “Another part of being frugal is being able to pare back your sense of what you need,” and observes that in the past, she would’ve put the repair on a credit card whether she could afford it or not. (That’s almost a more interesting argument – how many readers would argue it needed to be fixed immediately if it would have to go on a credit card with a 19% rate and outstanding balance?)
I think this is interesting to me because we’re at this transition point right now. No, we don’t really NEED to buy fresh mulch this year. No, we don’t really NEED to go out to eat (again). No, I don’t NEED to buy those maternity clothes new… etc. It reminds me a little of the article by the Eastern European poster a couple weeks ago (I’m sorry, I’ve forgotten the name). We Americans think that we NEED an awful lot more than we do; I find it refreshing to think about what we can do without.
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.. i know right! the body sprays in my shower have been broken for 8 months now.. and i have been suffering with just a regular shower head.
poor me!
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That’s hilarious! When I first read the post, I thought “The author and her husband shower, and the kids bathe all in the same bathroom?”
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We recently had to replace our leaking kitchen faucet. Of course, I bought a much more expensive (but better quality) faucet than the one I was originally going to get…
A few years ago, we had a non-functioning and demolished powder room. Although my DH wasn’t particularly happy about it, I hired someone to finish the job. If I had waited for my DH, it would still be undone.
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I like the “Chore Cloud” concept. It helped me understand my husband better. Now I just have to figure out how to get him to do the things in his chore cloud that matter most to me.
I definitely have a spooky hybrid. I make lists without listing priority because I intuitively adjust the priority based on the time and circumstances. I occasionally add “fun” stuff to the list, but since its not likely I’ll forget the “fun” stuff, I don’t usually need to add it to the list. Mornings are devoted to getting as much of the unpleasant stuff done as possible. But I do allow myself short fun breaks after each longish task. Early afternoons are for my free time. Late afternoon and early evening are for spending time with the kids, although if they have an activity I will catch up on listening to podcasts while I’m waiting to drive them home. Night time is dinner and kitchen cleanup and then either time with husband or down time for me.
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This whole concept reminds me of the Jimmy Stewart movie “It’s a Wonderful Life.” Do you remember the broken knob at the end of the bannister at the bottom of the staircase? When George Bailey comes home, he is so happy he kisses the broken knob. Soon he is reminded of what is truly important.
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Love your honesty! My partner and I only just had our porch, driveway and bedroom lights fixed after 12 months of getting by. The funny thing is, while it’s been glorious to see where to put the keys in the door when we get home at night, I didn’t actually miss any of the lights while they were gone and the only reason we bothered to get them fixed was because we needed some major work done on our system at the same time. Part of me felt embarrassed, but most of me got a little angry when friends mentioned how long we’d left it. It didn’t hinder our lifestyle, we never fell over in the dark, so their only justification was the laziness and cheapness of it all. (But putting it off until we had a bunch of jobs to do meant saving call out fees)
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Get your affairs in some order. If you can’t maintain or fix common appliances, what will happen when the furnace goes out?
Find a competent SOMEBODY in the vicinity to help at a reasonable rate.
Otherwise, visit a local library and learn on your own accord. I have a microwave, toaster/convection oven, power washer and 3 ten speed bicycles that have been picked out of neighborhood trash and converted to useful…. oh what the hell, if you can’t help yourself that much, you’ll never help yourself at all. Good Luck to ya’.
Frugality and -Pure Laziness- is not a fine line; it is this with the chalk and grease of the hands that have defined it.
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I am all for frugality, but I won’t allow saving money to take priority over safety. You made a good choice to turn down the water temp, but JD should have uncaulked the windows immediately!
I’ve seen people put their kids in the wrong car seats or no car seat in order to save money. Sometimes we have to spend money to avoid larger expenses or serious consequences.
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