Anonymous wrote: 20 minutes a day is 140 minutes a week. We will round down that to 2 hours. You saved 150 dollars off your grocery bill. I make more than 75 an hour so in my eyes its not worth my 2 hours a week.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, so many judgmental comments! Granted, OP disappeared and hasn't really answered some questions, but someone mentions coupons and you assume she's eating boxed food?
I am a SAHM and have recently started looking in to couponing. The whole thing with stacking and double coupon weeks still eludes me, but I'm happy to buy 3 large packages of Bounty paper towels if it means Target is going to give me a $10 gift card back. I'm not contributing to the family wealth, but each little bit means that I can still have the cleaning service come monthly and take care of crap I don't want to do.
For those of you who do coupon, do you have any favorite sites where you get coupons or the best sites to search matchups? Do you use just the newspaper insert or are you printing at home?
Anonymous wrote:I think you are a bit cray cray. Obsessive and what not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
But they are stealing by not using the coupons for what they're buying. So for the third time, OP, is this what you do, or do you buy every item listed on the coupons you use? I'm thinking you don't, since you won't answer.
What does this mean? How do you use a coupon for something you aren't buying? The cashier or register will notice.
Example, Coupon may state "Not valid for trial size" but the coupon UPC will still go through even if the trial size is purchased. Cashiers usually only pay attention to the specifics if the register indicates some sort of error. Some people will intentionally use self-check registers to try & get away with it.
Anonymous wrote:MikeL wrote:Anonymous wrote:Companies have to make money, so all of us end up paying for people like OP.
Bullshit.
Companies want people to use coupons. They make money off of the purchase, even with a coupon.
You are a true idiot. You think companies will just eat the loss?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
But they are stealing by not using the coupons for what they're buying. So for the third time, OP, is this what you do, or do you buy every item listed on the coupons you use? I'm thinking you don't, since you won't answer.
What does this mean? How do you use a coupon for something you aren't buying? The cashier or register will notice.
Anonymous wrote:MikeL wrote:Anonymous wrote:Companies have to make money, so all of us end up paying for people like OP.
Bullshit.
Companies want people to use coupons. They make money off of the purchase, even with a coupon.
You are a true idiot. You think companies will just eat the loss?
Anonymous wrote:Companies have to make money, so all of us end up paying for people like OP.
MikeL wrote:Anonymous wrote:Companies have to make money, so all of us end up paying for people like OP.
Bullshit.
Companies want people to use coupons. They make money off of the purchase, even with a coupon.
Anonymous wrote:OP Are you a SAHM and this gives you a sense that you are contributing to the family wealth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was watching a daytime court show the other day where a woman was suing a shop owner because he harassed her after she took an entire tray of deli meats that were "free samples" and put them in her purse.
I don't think extreme couponers are that bad but it's the same ilk. You're not stealing but not really using the coupons in the spirit of what they are for and you're really annoying to interact with in the store.
But they are stealing by not using the coupons for what they're buying. So for the third time, OP, is this what you do, or do you buy every item listed on the coupons you use? I'm thinking you don't, since you won't answer.
Anonymous wrote:OP - I think there's a fine line between using coupons to save a few $ here and there vs. abusing it. One is fine, the other is not.
Anonymous wrote:Companies have to make money, so all of us end up paying for people like OP.