Anonymous wrote:Limiting going out to eat to once a month.
Using up food, like the last bit of butter I might have tossed before.
Buying fewer clothes, making do with what I have. Getting clothes/shoes altered or repaired.
Not passing by the cheap gas station and filling up instead of just going where it's convenient.
Doing less and doing free things.
Buying a boring used car with cash. No loans or debts.
Anonymous wrote:I am so ready to do solar. We have the right roof for it but I'm so worried about choosing the right installer and how maintenance will work that I've never been able to pull the plug. (haha punny)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Using what I have.
Not buying pretty much anything and everything except food.
NOT shopping at the dollar store which is much more money for less now since they raised prices and are using smaller packaging it costs more to shop there. Plus you end up buying so much crap you don't need. NEVER shop the dollar store!!!!
Mostly just making do with what I have.
I still go to the dollar store for birthday cards; can’t beat the 1.25 as opposed to Hallmark prices.
Anonymous wrote:Using what I have.
Not buying pretty much anything and everything except food.
NOT shopping at the dollar store which is much more money for less now since they raised prices and are using smaller packaging it costs more to shop there. Plus you end up buying so much crap you don't need. NEVER shop the dollar store!!!!
Mostly just making do with what I have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm renting space in my garage to a company that does aquamation of pets. They have freezers with animal remains in my garage. Veterinarians drop the remains off and then the aquamation company comes and picks up the remains and brings them to their facility. The freezers are locked so my kids can't open them.
OMG.
Good for you on finding the craziest side gig I've ever heard of. But I'd have nightmares, lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We don’t go out to eat much like many of the other posters. It makes me curious about how restaurants and servers are faring; I used to waitress on and off in my teens through thirties as a second job and would make great money.
Restaurants are busy. We go out maybe three times a month. They’re full of people.
I’m sure the 11 remaining restaurants in the DMV are busy, lol.
I’m not understanding this post.
It was way overstating something to make a point, and the point is getting lost.
The point is that many, many restaurants have not survived, and there are less of them. Therefore, the statement that "they're full of people" does not mean restaurants are "faring" well, which was the question expressed by the prior post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't tip anymore. It was hard at first but once I realized servers make the minimum wage, I felt better about it. I don't tip hair dressers either. Mine owns her own chair and can charge what she wants....and she does.
You suck, and should feel bad about it. Do better, or stay home.
Actually it used to be that no one who was just working at a coffee bar would dream of asking for tips. This was mission creep during COVID for them being in person and they never gave it up. Tips are for table service and things like delivery men or hairdressers. I never tip for counter service it’s just an 18% upcharge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We don’t go out to eat much like many of the other posters. It makes me curious about how restaurants and servers are faring; I used to waitress on and off in my teens through thirties as a second job and would make great money.
Restaurants are busy. We go out maybe three times a month. They’re full of people.
I’m sure the 11 remaining restaurants in the DMV are busy, lol.
I’m not understanding this post.
Anonymous wrote:I am so ready to do solar. We have the right roof for it but I'm so worried about choosing the right installer and how maintenance will work that I've never been able to pull the plug. (haha punny)