Anonymous wrote:I drive a 1999 Subaru Forester. It has 208K miles and handles DC snow storms easily. We recently replaced the clutch and front axle (about $2K of parts and labor). I don't want a nice car on the streets of DC and I like not having a monthly car payment. On average I spend about $1K/year on maintenance.
We have a standard Mr Coffee Machine from the mid 1990s. This is our everyday coffee maker and makes a fantastic pot of drip coffee. My DW inherited it from her grandmother and then took it with her to college and moved it to various apartments in NYC and DC over the past 20 years. We have broken the glass carafe a few times and I keep buying replacements on eBay or Amazon for $20. The machine was made in the USA and will last forever. Apparently, the new Mr Coffee Machines that are $40 are made in China and have a 2-3 year life span before the electronic components die out. We will use this machine until it's dead.
Anonymous wrote:I have the same laundry bags I took to college too! We have a cd clock radio that is our only cd player anymore that we still use. I have my sports walkman and my in laws found my husband's old walkman and the kids use them to listen to the radio or old cassette tapes. (I have my old "mix tapes" that I made by recording songs off the radio and you can hear the deejay talking at the beginning or ending over the notes of the song). I have my grandma's silver which is probably from the 60's and blankets she hand loomed which are also from the 60s, but I don't use those often. I have a Louis Vuitton epi leather bag that was a graduation gift in the 90s that I thought was too fancy to use for every day, so I rarely used it and it's still in great shape and I use it occasionally. I have a lot of jewelry from the 80s and 90s that was my mother's. My son has my Swatch Watch (it has no numbers or number markers, just hands, so it's a good challenge for him to tell time with it!) And I still wear the watch I received for my college graduation present every day.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of stuff. I'm old, but I also like to buy quality stuff and use it forever (and I'm actually whatever the opposite of a hoarder is):
LL Bean down sleeping bag
Lots of kitchen stuff (pots and pans, good knives -- I use cast iron pans that belonged to my great grandmother)
Golf clubs
Maglite flashlight
Sorel boots
Fountain pens
Hairdryers (I even have a couple of small travel hair dryers, because back in the day, not all hotels provided them)
Leather Briefcase
Alarm clock (it's in the guest room now, I use my iPhone as a bedside clock)