Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm opposite you on clothes, OP. I wear and use things until they fall apart. DH just picked up my nail clipper and asked how old it was, because he claimed it looked worn. I got it around 12 or 13. He went to Target that week and got me a new one. I'm 46. He also nearly fell over when he found out my lip balms were about 5 or 6 years old. He bought me four new ones on that same Target trip and threw out my old ones. I only JUST last year got rid of the last of the white socks I had for gym in high school. I'm 47. When I finish a tissue box, I then use the box for trash before throwing it out. Still quite frugal, still take excellent care of everything I have because I appreciate everything I have so much.
I'm...confused.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up UMC and somehow that made me not care at all about brand names. I think quality shoes are always worth it, though. And I ate soooo much grilled cheese growing up, definitely not a “poor” thing!
I’m glad you were able to turn things around for yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up comfortable, but both parents told countless stories of hardship during the Depression & WWII. I embarrass wife & adult kids by wearing clothes that are falling apart & have food stains on them. My father died 20 yrs ago & I still wear some of his clothes. I’m in mid 60s & it drives me crazy to buy clothes I think I won’t live long enough to completely wear out.
I save up clothes that are on their last legs, & wear them whenever I travel (for a funeral or wedding—I never take an actual “vacation “), I wear them one last time & throw them away, so I’m not lugging around dirty clothes.
I grew up poor, but there is no need to wear stained and "falling apart" clothes. Go to the thrift store and find something decent. If I was your wife, I would be tossing these things in the trash.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up comfortable, but both parents told countless stories of hardship during the Depression & WWII. I embarrass wife & adult kids by wearing clothes that are falling apart & have food stains on them. My father died 20 yrs ago & I still wear some of his clothes. I’m in mid 60s & it drives me crazy to buy clothes I think I won’t live long enough to completely wear out.
I save up clothes that are on their last legs, & wear them whenever I travel (for a funeral or wedding—I never take an actual “vacation “), I wear them one last time & throw them away, so I’m not lugging around dirty clothes.
Anonymous wrote:But you are not now, what are some things you do that you know are directly related to how you grew up?
Me: 1.if clothes have any holes or stains they go right in the trash or get used for cleaning rags. I had to wear clothes until they quite literally fell apart as a child and now have an aversion to the thought of wearing clothes in disrepair.
2. Consistently working through “worst case scenario” for every financial situation even if it’s hypothetical. Worst case scenario was often a reality growing up and honestly it’s just how my brain is wired now.
3. Buying store brand of most things. We rarely got name brand groceries/cleaning supplies etc…growing up but with experience I have learned that there is only a difference in quality in few items-mostly still buy store brand even though can afford to not.
4. Making sure my kids have actual brand name shoes. It’s seems so stupid but growing up I ALWAYS had Payless/k mart/walk at shoes and kids know. They just know. Did not having name brand shoes growing up make me a better person? No it didn’t-it just made me have to deal with teasing from other kids on the regular about my cheap shoes.
5. Still have a taste for cheap foods I grew up with. Rice/beans, grilled cheese etc…and eat them pretty regularly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oddly, how much money you have doesn't seem to be correlated with how poor/rich you feel. My parents didn't have much starting out but we never noticed, we had whatever we needed, we were happy with less by today's standards. Now I have more money than they did, but feel poor. On paper I'm rich but can't afford to buy a home in this area.
If you always had everything you needed that’s all that mattered. Many of us grew up severely poor and did not in fact have everything we needed. And renting is just fine. I mean, my parents never owned a home when I was growing up and still don’t.
It’s not a need, but I never got yearbooks growing up because my parents couldn’t afford them. I asked for a yearbook every year. I got a job when I was 16 so I was able to get one my junior and senior year at least. I get my kids yearbooks every year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of mine are food related:
EVERYONE gets a drink at a restaurant. Kids want a Shirley Temple? Fine. Get a refill!
We don’t often WANT it, but dessert is an option that’s always on the table. Same with appetizers.
I will splurge on expensive spaghetti sauce and nicer pasta. I buy REAL Parmesan. I spend a small fortune on good EVOO. We buy the expensive ice cream. We eat some form of meat almost every single day. I buy giant roasts or steaks for the weekend. Quality cheeses, fancy crackers, nice cured meats. Things like that.
But I also panic like you about “worst case scenarios”. I have a number I like to keep in savings and I panic if something take us below it.
This one resonated for me.
We were not super poor but grew up in TX knowing we were on a strict budget.
When we had ice cream in the house, it was this cheap Borden brand, but I had a friend whose mom splurged on Blue Bell, which was the gold standard in Texas. I was in awe.
Buying Blue Bell ice cream always makes me feel like I’ve hit the big time!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: - I always have batteries at home.
- I have too much money set aside for a rainy day.
- I always want to steal mini coffee creamers (but don't anymore)
- I agree about shoes. Warm toes in the winter are important.
- Store brands rule!
Op here. I forgot about batteries! Yes! We have every kind at all times. Batteries were such a Luxury as a kid. In fact I remember my favorite toy running out of batteries and having to wait 6 months for new ones. I never want my kids to experience that. Mini coffee creamers for you-mini shampoo and conditioner bottles for me. Have to constantly tell myself that we don’t need to take it.
Me too, me too. So many unused toys because no one ever bought batteries!
I will never be so rich that I stop taking mini shampoos and conditioners from hotels.
- PP