Love this! |
If you are actually out of an item you like, it’s okay to buy more. The problem is having 5 varieties of product that all do essentially the same thing, and buying a 6th one because it looks interesting. Pick your favorite and buy only that one as needed. And it’s okay to donate or trash the ones that didn’t work out. It’s hard knowing that you spent money on them, but if you aren’t going to use them, you won’t get your money back by keeping them in a drawer. |
This may not be an option for you, but even more frugal would be a bar of Dove soap. |
Good advice, thank you. Last year I did a lot of research on products and bought too many, some which irritated my skin and ended up just sitting there. |
I am shifting more to ebay etc for clothing. Why am spending $300 for a brand new item when I see the same slightly used item on ebay for $100 or less? Really took me a while to realize it. A lot of great high quality clothing for sale on ebay and Poshmark. |
Like SUV truck or 18 wheeler? |
"Amazon is mostly all junk anyway." Amazon is mostly counterfeit junk from china. |
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No more Amazon purchases for me. Amazon makes impulse buying too easy.
If I need something, I can get it elsewhere, perhaps even forcing myself to go in person. That way I am more likely to pass up purchasing stuff I don’t really need. Plus, Bezos is sucking up to Trump and weakening the Washington Post. I don’t need to be economically supporting that. So abstaining from Amazon is good for my wallet and my conscience. |
I will chime in that I am under-taking a big house organization project and it does help me buy less. Now I know where everything is and how much of it I have, and I know when I need to re-order. Whereas before I was such a slob, I just wouldn't be able to find things so I would have to order more. That said - everyone else is probably less slobby than I was so you might not see such big improvements
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I'm prioritizing spending on experiences, food, and health. No spending on clothes (except for rapidly growing DS) or stuff that sits in the house. The things I am spending on are dates with spouse, fitness classes and health club, and a nice vacation this summer. We are doing a staycation for spring break and eating at home more. I removed my amazon prime app from my phone to make it more inconvenient!
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| For some reason, it is always easy to not spend money in January. Maybe because we got everything we needed for Christmas or because we are tired of all the holiday eating out and are happy to cook and eat at home. I stocked up on clothes for my toddler for the next year already (just bought oversized last year) so I’m hoping this year we will spend less on baby things! |
| I’m going to try to use up everything I have before buying more. All the travel size toothpaste, dental floss, shampoos, and skincare items. I have so many. That will last me 6 months at least! |
Minimal-ish PP and I agree. It also helped me consolidate all my “extras” of things in one place so I have a much better sense of my inventory. My husband does not like to run out of things, so it also helped show him “look we have 3 backups of that, we don’t need more.” |
| I will try to stop looking at social media “lifestyle” influencers who make you want to live in a house that looks sterile. Living in a well-loved home with functional furniture and decorated with family photos and children’s artwork worked well when I grew up. Not wanting more decorative “stuff” this year. |
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We bought a home last summer and then had several very large, well-budgeted expenditures in late 2024. We just have naturally cut back without a vow or resolution and all, but one unbudgeted purchase so far this January was due to an emergency.
Our biggest impulse purchases were food related. Meal prepping ingredients that can be mixed and matched has helped reduce that. Also, making DIY versions of convenience foods. Yesterday, I made 10 egg/bacon/cheese breakfast sandwiches. 5 on biscuits and 5 on English muffins. They went in the freezer and only take 2 min to microwave. I also made 12 frozen pucks of cooked oatmeal flavored with nuts, seeds, fruit, etc. these also take just a few minutes to nuke. With these on hand, we have filling breakfasts even if we are running late. And they cost a fraction of commercially prepared items or fast food versions. |