Archive for the ‘frugality’ Category

Binge and Purge

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009

Today I’ve launched into spring cleaning mode. I purchased new cleaners yesterday, stacks of storage and organizational tools and today commenced my cleaning. I began with the kitchen, wiping down cupboards and window sills, cleaning off the many pieces of paper stuck to the fridge, cleaning under things that hadn’t been moved in some time and deciding to toss others.

I noticed yesterday that others had been purging as well. Cardboard boxes littered the lawns of many of the homes near us, the boxes typically featuring the word FREE on the side in black Sharpie and containing an assortment of junk that could possibly be considered treasure to someone else but was likely destined for the landfill.

I spent the afternoon cleaning various closets, purging items and packaging other items into storage bins to prepare them for storage in the basement. Other items that were too good to throw away, but no longer wanted by our family I sat down and posted on Freecycle. I’ve mentioned Freecycle before in other posts and I still swear it’s a wonderful way to encourage recycling and keep things out of the landfill until they’ve received their maximum amount of use. I’ve never received anything via Freecycle, but I’ve used it often to eliminate items from my home including a large storefront awning that was abandoned in our backyard when we purchased our home, and various bits of baby and kid stuff. If you haven’t yet tried Freecycle I really recommend it, especially during the spring cleaning season.

What do your spring cleaning rituals look like? Do you purge? Scrub down the house? Focus on the outdoor tasks? Or all of the above?

Will it really be fine in 2009?

Wednesday, December 17th, 2008

2009

Last year I wrote this post about 2008. I wasn’t sure  what the year had in store for me, but I did know a few basic things. Overall it has been a good year, although admittedly the last month or two have been a bit rocky with budget woes at work.

This year I can think of the following:

  1. My baby will turn 3 years old on February 2nd! He is a real kid with personality, opinions and conversation!
  2. I will turn 31 on April Fool’s Day
  3. I will have a new niece or nephew in May! Yay!
  4. I will finally finish our statewide conference in April and remind myself not to ever sign up for such an endeavor again.
  5. Cat will begin kindergarten in September. Suddenly when I’m in a school building and see school aged kids they don’t seem so big to me anymore.
  6. Cat will turn 5 on October 1.
  7. Chuck will turn the big 35 on June 21st
  8. We will have been in our house for 3 years already. That’s usually the longest we ever stay anywhere…hmmmm..
  9. John will start his junior year of college
  10. Phil and Allison will celebrate their first wedding anniversary
  11. We will pay off several loans and one vehicle.
  12. My parents will be married for 52 years, my inlaws for nearly 40. Yikes!

There are many unknowns. I won’t say with certainty that I know about either one of our jobs, the economy is too rocky to make a steadfast prediction. Whatever 2008 brings I hope that I find the strength to meet the challenges ahead and that I enjoy the milestones along the way.

Killing Me Softly…

Monday, November 24th, 2008

Yes, I realize it’s a horrible song…but it’s the first title that came to mind….

Like most intelligent Americans I’ve been following the entire economic crisis/recession/depression/or whatever the hell you prefer to call it with keen interest. I’ll even go far enough to admit that I might be getting addicted, at least in reference to policies that pertain specifically to New York State.

I’ve never been one for politics or economics. I’ve found both to be dull beyond comprehension, but this year it’s hard not to tie personal meaning to what I read each day. I compare so many stories to those told to me by my parents who lived through The Great Depression, although they were just tots themselves. I think about why I’m thankful for once that my procrastination paid off when it came to investments, but I wonder if now when the market is low should I reconsider and actually hand in my paperwork to buy into my 403B? I read daily about layoffs not just at national levels, but in my hometown, and in the community I currently live in. I’m thankful I’m no longer teaching in my old district as they face a huge state aid cut from the state and the impending closure of the GM plant in town taking with it not just jobs, but entire families and student enrollments as well. I’m glad I’m no longer paying college tuition as I watch the schools under the State University of New York take a huge hit and increase tuition universally. However I still bemoan the huge amount of student loans I still have to pay and wonder why no one seems interested in offering a bailout for education loans…then I realize that people may overindulge in their houses and automobiles but are probably a lot less likely to overindulge when it comes to education, especially in the era where parents pay such a tremendous part of the bill. I’m the exception, not the rule, even if it sounds pompous to say so. I do worry that in another 14 years (that I know will pass quicker than I like), I’ll be faced with possibly helping my children attend college and I’m fearful that the laws passed today may impede my ability to help them in the future. I worry as I read about cuts to medicare and programs to seniors that my parents will lose what precious few benefits they have as well. I’m fearful for everyone at the moment and feeling all the while like I should be doing more.

And above all at the moment, I fear daily for my own job. Not a topic I prefer to discuss, but nevertheless a reality as the funding for my program is listed in all of the newspapers as potentially cut IF and WHEN the NYS government make their final decisions. It’s not so much that I fear the loss of income, I have faith in myself to find employment somewhere doing something. The one thing I can say for all of us in my family is that we all have a strong desire to work and are typically quick to find some kind of employment. The part that is driving me absolutely crazy is not knowing. It’s the constant crunching of numbers, the constant emails, phone calls, and meetings and then the sitting around and waiting for something to happen and some final decision to be made. I’d almost rather have bad news than no news at all…and lately I’ve been living with this ‘up in the air’ feeling for months. It’s exhausting to say the least.

I have no problem with not owning new things…I grew up that way…I also have no problem with my kids not having the newest of everything either. I plan to pare down this holiday season. Over the years our family has grown. I’m not complaining by any means and enjoy having new family members to buy gifts for each time there’s a marriage or a new niece or nephew. I’ve always done a Christmas Club each year through my bank, one of the few times I manage to actually save money, and a trick I learned by watching my mother for years when I was a child. I went shopping with some co-workers about a week ago and spent the Christmas Club and am only part-way done with everyone. The positive side is that everything is paid for thus far without a credit card bill, the downside is that I’m not quite done yet. I may have to resort in future years to my old system of one or two gifts per paycheck beginning in September. My sister-in-law shops all year which is another smart strategy, although I’m not sure I have storage for the gifts throughout the year.

This article Parents Sacrifice to Shielf Kids from  Bad Economy from The Daily Journal highlights the fact that despite whatever sort of ‘crisis’ we seem to be in economically, the one entity that seems to not be affected are our kids.

The irony? How many times have you had a conversation with someone about how today’s kids are spoiled? How often have you caught yourself saying “Well, I never had new clothes all the time…I never received all of my toys from Santa…I never had everything I ever wanted and I turned out just fine.”

So why do we do this?

Especially NOW?

With Baited Breath…

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

I don’t often talk about my job on my blog. It’s one of my unwritten rules in an effort to keep myself out of trouble.

I’ve been sitting all day with baited breath waiting for the outcome of Governor Paterson’s cuts to the budget. Although people keep telling me that education funding is safe, people that work in education should know better. I become especially frustrated when those in the field make this claim to me.

Me? I sit in both a unique and somewhat precarious post. Although I work with schools I am state funded. I am not a grant, I am funded through state aid, but not the same state aid that schools receive. We have already taken a 2% hit this year and it looks like we’re on the verge of taking another 6% cut. We just don’t know if that cut will be across all of our funds or a smaller pool.

For me personally I don’t know what that means in my job. It doesn’t mean I’ll lose it. But things don’t look much better for next year and I may see myself moving from a 12 month job to a 10 month or taking a cut in hours or pay.

I’m not sure what the future holds. However as I watch schools all around me cut librarian positions because there aren’t strong mandates in place requiring them and fiscal time are tight, I realize leaving my position for another is riskier than just staying put and riding out the storm.

So I wait.