Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:oh great, "must have hit a nerve lady" is here
Seems like this thread hit the nerves of lts of folks...I'm shocked people think thrift store sales should be reserved for only the poor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kind of interesting that the two sides are judging each other. For those that buy new and spend more than $1,000/year on clothes for their kids, I'm curious if you are debt free, have retirement savings (significant), and have college savings (significant). I just want to know if you are making choices today that will have repercussions in the future...
I spend $1-2000 a year and yes we have significant cash saved up. With two of us working to earn over 400hhi we don't have the time to thrift. I don't have any problems with it and used to when I had less money but now I have more money than time.
Anonymous wrote:I swear, not all of us with high HHI are snobs. DH and I went from both working at nonprofits and counting every penny to DH getting VERY lucky in his career -- HHI of about $600K, $4 million invested in various places, and 529 as funded as it can be for our one-year-old DD. However, I have watched my parents' income level change dramatically multiple times, so I know how quickly good fortunes can change. I also do NOT want my kids to become the spoiled, mean kids who make fun of other kids for wearing clothing from thrift stores (or Target or Payless).
Thus, I am not cheap, but I try to be thrifty because it seems sensible in light of what I've seen and the example I want to set for my DD. I love clothes, and our one-year-old DD has super cute, high-quality stuff. However, I can count on one hand the things for which I have paid full price (sales, Zulily), have tons of hand-me-downs from friends (including DD's crib), and absolutely would shop at thrift/consignment stores if I had time to go to actual stores these days. The fact that I don't do so has nothing to do with thinking they're "dirty."
It's not like my way is the right way, though, and other people in my situation probably operate differently and raise lovely kids. However, judging people based on how they shop and going out of your way to make them feel "dirty" because they are thrifty, want their kids to be raised without a sense of entitlement, are environmentally conscious, like finding funky stuff, or have no other choice is just trite and sad.
Also, for those of you who donate stuff, here's a handy website for figuring out who takes what:
http://www.charitychoices.com/whoaccepts.asp
Anonymous wrote:oh great, "must have hit a nerve lady" is here
Anonymous wrote:Kind of interesting that the two sides are judging each other. For those that buy new and spend more than $1,000/year on clothes for their kids, I'm curious if you are debt free, have retirement savings (significant), and have college savings (significant). I just want to know if you are making choices today that will have repercussions in the future...
Anonymous wrote:oh great, "must have hit a nerve lady" is here
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I'd be curious to know how many other thrift store shoppers actually give back in this way.
We both shop at Goodwill / Value Village and donate there. We are regularly decluttering but need other things. Why not get them at a bargain, saving my family money and keeping things out of the landfill? We are environmentalists, frugal, nonprofit workers who also donate money to charities (the more we save, the more we can donate).
Anonymous wrote: I'd be curious to know how many other thrift store shoppers actually give back in this way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And what do you mean by household items? Furniture? Kitchenware? Would not want that in my house.
Bitch, please. That barely used stuff came from your house when you were dumb enough to dump it and get new just because your shitty life needed yet another makeover.
Keep on shopping for your feelings, sweetie.