Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Walmart has very fast shipping and a lot of the same stuff
Walmart is also a trash corporation so I don't really think that solves for concern wrt Amazon.
+1 it’s crazy when we think ordering from Walmart is an act of conscientious objection.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Walmart has very fast shipping and a lot of the same stuff
+1
And you can also do curbside pickup for a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Not gonna lie, I’m not sure what to do about Amazon. I don’t just use it because it’s convenient; the two main reasons I use it are to research ratings/reviews on products before purchasing (and yes, I know a lot of reviews are fake, but when a product has thousands of ratings, I’ve got to assume there’s some truth there), and to get my hands on items that are not widely available — things I’m not going to find in a brick and mortar store near me. I don’t want my purchases to be limited to the 4-5 brands I can find in stores and I don’t want to make purchases blindly and hope for the best.
However, I don’t like making Bezos even richer and more powerful. I may just cut back on Amazon purchases where it’s easy to do so, but still keep Prime.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve been at this for awhile and the two things that have helped me the most are reviewing my orders over the last year, and staying ahead of my calendar.
I organized my purchases into categories of
-stuff I bought because I needed it quickly
-stuff I didn’t want to think about buying (subscribe & save)
-stuff we didn’t really need/want
Most of the need quickly things are things I used to plan ahead for, but Amazon has trained me to go, “Oh, heck! Next week is St. Patrick’s Day and kid needs shirt ASAP. With my older children, I planned ahead. So I’m back to that.
I’m an xcel girl, so I keep a spreadsheet for the year, and I check ahead. I’ve also added stores and suppliers I like. I also organized a group of parents to ask the school to try to give us at least two weeks notice on spirit days and the like that might require a purchase.
Subscribe & Save I replaced with a quarterly Costco run.
I’m spending less and after the initial planning, I’m not having to think that much. I also don’t spend nearly as much time opening boxes and dealing with packaging.
It feels good. I don’t feel like I’m doing without or working harder. This is how I used to do things and I’d forgotten how orderly it felt. Amazon dependence actually made me feel more chaotic.
+1 I am a planner too, and you end up buying much less.
Although I have a "we don't buy anything for spirit days" policy - they wear what they have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh wow - I didn't know this was a thing. I just asked a similar question about Amazon Prime Video on another thread. So glad that others are dialing down or kicking the habit. That company needs to feel some consequences.
I believe in living your values, but the reality is they could lose a ton of regular buyers and barely feel it.
Anonymous wrote:Walmart has very fast shipping and a lot of the same stuff
Anonymous wrote:I am very dependent on the convenience of using Amazon. Everything I need gets shipped to me on a regular cadence. This helps because it’s one less thing I need to remember when running low on supplies.
I just paused my subscription so it will not renew in July. I found a few products directly through the manufacturer who also provide subscription shipping for cheaper. I still need to break my habit and find other vendors who carry my products. I hate being inside brick and mortar stores.
How have you been able to kick your Amazon habit?
Anonymous wrote:I’ve been at this for awhile and the two things that have helped me the most are reviewing my orders over the last year, and staying ahead of my calendar.
I organized my purchases into categories of
-stuff I bought because I needed it quickly
-stuff I didn’t want to think about buying (subscribe & save)
-stuff we didn’t really need/want
Most of the need quickly things are things I used to plan ahead for, but Amazon has trained me to go, “Oh, heck! Next week is St. Patrick’s Day and kid needs shirt ASAP. With my older children, I planned ahead. So I’m back to that.
I’m an xcel girl, so I keep a spreadsheet for the year, and I check ahead. I’ve also added stores and suppliers I like. I also organized a group of parents to ask the school to try to give us at least two weeks notice on spirit days and the like that might require a purchase.
Subscribe & Save I replaced with a quarterly Costco run.
I’m spending less and after the initial planning, I’m not having to think that much. I also don’t spend nearly as much time opening boxes and dealing with packaging.
It feels good. I don’t feel like I’m doing without or working harder. This is how I used to do things and I’d forgotten how orderly it felt. Amazon dependence actually made me feel more chaotic.
Anonymous wrote:Oh wow - I didn't know this was a thing. I just asked a similar question about Amazon Prime Video on another thread. So glad that others are dialing down or kicking the habit. That company needs to feel some consequences.