Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to swipe Tylenol tablets from my parents when I was in grad school because I literally could not afford to buy a bottle.
Why didn’t you take the whole bottle and tell your mom you couldn’t afford one? Why wouldn’t she be happy to help?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:-ask for a cup for water at Starbucks instead of buying a bottle
-mapping out the the guy comes to the parking meters so I don’t needlessly pay
-refusing to pay for garage parking on Sundays when street parking be is free. I’ll sit in my car at the end of the block and wait for someone to pull out.
-Taking home the food people bring to the office to share (bags of open chips leftover from the office party, opened 2L sodas etc).
-taking everyone’s cash contribution at dinner and putting the whole tab on my card so I get the points/miles
-not rounding up for the sitter (3 hours gets her $45, not $50)
-Made a challenge to myself to not buy kid clothes until elementary school. Every item is a hand me down except shoes.
-same with toys- all gifts or hand me downs or if I have store credit somewhere
-knowing the cheapest place to get gas (without having to drive far and waste gas)
Every item, including underwear?
Lady, you have a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Hotels want you to take the name-stamped pens and pads of paper. It's advertising for them.
Anonymous wrote:Hotels want you to take the name-stamped pens and pads of paper. It's advertising for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: The vast majority of my living and dining room furniture is from Craigslist sellers.
I used to do this out of necessity and I got one of my favorite pieces of furniture this way. It is a dining room sideboard that is still with me ten years later after moving across the country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why we can’t have nice things. There’s a difference between cheap and theft.
Came here to say just this. The worst part is, so many of these degenerates are *proud* of their actions.
How is it stealing when Five Guys' has their cajun spices pre-packed in individual containers to take home? Same with the hotel stuff: the last place i stayed, they literally kept refilling toiletries that weren't even used or open.
Anonymous wrote:Took my kid to the ER in an Uber - and used UberPool instead of Uber X. We shared a ride with a young couple heading out to a restaurant on a date. The woman was rather concerned and offered to have the driver drop us off first.
Not as bad as it sounds: He needed stitches but wasn't in any pain; I knew we'd be waiting hours at the ER, so the extra few minutes didn't matter.
Anonymous wrote: The vast majority of my living and dining room furniture is from Craigslist sellers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:-ask for a cup for water at Starbucks instead of buying a bottle
-mapping out the the guy comes to the parking meters so I don’t needlessly pay
-refusing to pay for garage parking on Sundays when street parking be is free. I’ll sit in my car at the end of the block and wait for someone to pull out.
-Taking home the food people bring to the office to share (bags of open chips leftover from the office party, opened 2L sodas etc).
-taking everyone’s cash contribution at dinner and putting the whole tab on my card so I get the points/miles
-not rounding up for the sitter (3 hours gets her $45, not $50)
-Made a challenge to myself to not buy kid clothes until elementary school. Every item is a hand me down except shoes.
-same with toys- all gifts or hand me downs or if I have store credit somewhere
-knowing the cheapest place to get gas (without having to drive far and waste gas)
Every item, including underwear?
Lady, you have a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom taught me to always put a little water in an "empty" spaghetti sauce jar and shake it to get all the sauce off, then add that to the already-poured-out sauce.
First time I did that with DH he was like WTF? Why are you watering down the sauce?
But I still obsessively do it.
I do this to make soup.
