It was really funny that Max, my Compact friend sent me her boyfriend's collection of Star Trek action figures. But a year and a half later, they had turned into clutter. So what did I do? I gave each actor from last weekend's "Star Trek in the Park" their own toy. Now Spock has a Spock, Uhuru has an Uhuru and Kirk has a Kirk. The actors were super excited, and I received many Star Trek style hugs, which turn out to be remarkably similar to human hugs. (Who knew?) And the above photo was from the never televised pilot, "Jews in Space." 😉

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My Favorite New Frugal Trick

by Katy on July 16, 2010 · 4 comments

I have discovered that the garden department at my Fred Meyer store has a clearance area. First it was the $2 flat of lobelias, then it was the dahlias for $1 apiece. And the pretty glazed flower pot? It was lying unused in my mother's yard.

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Foodie Flower Arrangement

by Katy on July 15, 2010 · 10 comments

I think that freshly grown lettuce and carrots make a beautiful bouquet. Don't you agree?

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How Goodwill Underwear Cheers Me Up

by Katy on July 14, 2010 · 19 comments

I was on my way back from dropping my son off at his life guarding class this morning, when I  started to have a minor anxiety attack. This came complete with waves of nausea and a feeling that maybe I should start hyperventilating.

It wasn’t a good feeling.

I knew I had a ton of stuff to do in the next couple days, so much so that I had no idea where to start. So instead of heading home, I decided that a trip to Goodwill was in order. I’ve been really good about limiting my Goodwill trips, and haven’t set foot in my home away from home for a month or so.

I knew the timing of my day was tight, but frankly, I wasn’t up to facing my adult responsibilities without a little something something for myself.

My heart rate started to beat at a regular rate as soon as the automatic doors swooshed open.

Ahh . . . .

I ended up going to two different Goodwills, and here’s what I bought:

  • A pair of Nike brand basketball shorts for my younger son. They’re very cool and reversible. $2.50

  • A new looking pair of Crocs for my younger son. $3.99

  • A package of brand new Jockey brand underwear, marked $14.99 on the packaging. $2.99

I am fully aware how strange it may seem that I find it relaxing to shop for used underwear, shoes and shorts. Very few women would admit that this is their me time. But I can get a little nutso when I go too many days doing nothing but ferrying kids, cooking, cleaning, hostessing and housekeeping.

And to fully place me back in control of my sensibilities, I pulled the mini-van over to glean a nice big terra cotta flower pot from a free pile on my way home. (Which I promptly filled with compost soil and a handful of hens and chickens.)

I came home feeling somewhat in control of my life again. And all it took was a packet of Goodwill underwear.

Katy Wolk-Stanley

“Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without”

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Consumer Cravings

by Katy on July 13, 2010 · 24 comments

I choose to not buy anything new, but that doesn’t mean I’m immune to new stuff cravings. My always-has-been-cable-free household recently converted over to the dark side. (My husband loves soccer, and he really wanted to watch the World Cup games.) So not only was my home graced with the melodic beauty of the vevuzela horn, but Spongebob, iCarly and a huge buttload of HGTV somehow snuck into our lives.

My name is Katy, and I am a HGTV addict!

There does not appear to be even one show on that channel that I am unwilling to watch. I even got my husband in on the action, as Holmes on Homes is a fantastic show for anyone who is about to embark on a remodeling project, which is my husband’s unfortunate fate. (That, plus the man bears a striking resemblance to my husband.) The kids are even feeling HGTV’s sinister pull, as they guess which house the couples on House Hunting will choose.

“Mom, mom, did they pick the house with the big backyard?”

I don’t know what it is, but I feel the worries of the day melt away when HGTV is on. Ahh . . . other people’s home ownership.

However, even I am not immune to the consumer draw of having everything be new, shiny, functional and completed. I am suddenly seeing my house with a sharpened eye. The paint in the bathroom behind the sink is chipping off the wall, (caustic hand soap?!) our towels are stained and fraying; and our TV room is designed for two people to sit in comfort, while two others squirm uncomfortably.

What I had once been content with is now getting on my nerves.

I took needle and thread to the towels, which fixed the fraying issues, but did nothing to address the stains. I know the reddish brown splotches on the hand towels are from terra cotta clay, while others will assume it’s blood. Which it really does look like. I’m not sure when we last bought towels, but I do know it was at least a couple years before I started doing The Compact in 2007.

I have kept an eye out for new looking Goodwill towels for awhile, but have had no luck. I even looked on Craigslist this morning, which was fruitless.

Luckily, World Cup soccer has ended, which means our days of compulsive cable watching are coming to an end.

I know I will miss having endless TV watching options, but I am looking forward to seeing my house for what it is. Kind of rough around the edges, but perfectly fine otherwise. And those vuvuzela horns? I won’t be missing them whatsoever!

Katy Wolk-Stanley

“Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without”

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Thank you to everyone who entered to win a copy of Your Money or Your Life. Your comments about your relationships with money were, (as always) thought provoking and well written. The randomly chosen winner was Sherry, who wrote:

“I can be a control freak with money: making it and spending it. I wish I had a more holistic approach like it sounds like this book offers.”

The actual winner was my father, but felt that that wouldn’t go over too well. So I called him up, offered to lend him my copy of the book and randomly chose another reader comment. I suppose there aren’t any rules that say that immediate family are disqualified, but it would kind of defeat the purpose of sending this great book out in the world. Plus, his comment was not about his relationship with money, but was about how he was sick of reading about The June Food Stamp Challenge! Thanks dad, you made my day.

Here are just a few of the (on topic) reader comments:

From Rebecca:

“I’m expecting my first child in a month and my husband and I will need to adjust our budget to reflect our new priorities. It’s a constant struggle for us to be on the same page with our money, so maybe this book would help us get there!”

From Crystal:

“I haven’t always had a good relationship with money and I’m dealing with that now. But recently I’ve always seemed to have just enough to get my bills paid and start paying off debt. But for some reason whenever I have extra money, I feel the need to spend it.”

From Carla:

“Odd, because in my Bible reading this morning I was in a section where Jesus talked a great deal about money. I TRY to be wise in my money, since I am only the steward of it and of my possessions after all. I don’t completely have a handle on this yet but my goals are to be careful, to be wise and still, to be generous. I am not impressed by the miser, the hoarder. I had rather be a person who readily gives than one who keeps for one’s own pleasures. Having said that, I still find myself sometimes fearful of the future and wishing I could both have and be generous at once. This is my own struggle and is one I may never completely resolve.”

From Renee:

“Money is frustrating at times….if u have extra it calls to u and says “yes yes yes u can” when there isn’t any you feel low and almost shameful- even if your bills are paid- like telling friends “no i can not go out to eat I have already spent all my fun money this month”. I am working very hard along with my husband to make “responsible” money decisions. We are 27 and in the process of buying our first house, my parents gave us some money to help and we are really struggling with using it to make the house pretty or paying off more debt….”

From Maureen:

“I am nervous about money. I feel like I am overwhelmed with things at the moment. I am in a one income family due to a health issue on my part. we watch each penny we spend.”

From Ame:

“I was typing a response about how healthy my relationship with money was — how responsible we’re being, how much joy I get from my various frugalities or expenditures– but everything I was saying made me realize how unhealthy it possibly is. I realized that I think about money almost all the time, not in that I want or need more of it (except who doesn’t), but more in an OCD, calorie-counting kind of way. I check the balance of my student loan multiple times a week, even though I only pay on it once a month. I have taken on The Compact, and I love nothing more than to calculate to the penny how much money I’ve saved over my retail spending in the same time period last year. I look at our monthly grocery budget and calculate to the dollar what each meal is costing us. I feel guilt about every spent penny that *might* not have been necessary, even when I need or enjoy the things those pennies buy. I’ve always considered myself frugal, but maybe this obsession with paying less and getting the most is actually taking up valuable brain-space that should go to…oh, anything else! Naturally, it’s better to be “good with money,” but at what point have I potentially gone too far? That’s something for me to chew on today.”

From TraciFree:

“My relationship with money is love hate. Having money increases the siren song of MORE STUFF. On the other hand, not enough money puts me into full on panic/survival/hoarder mode. There’s got to be a happy medium.”

Thank you to everyone who entered to win a copy of Your Money or Your Life. I would highly recommend putting this terrific book on your library hold list! Click HERE to read all the reader comments, which were fascinating.

Katy Wolk-Stanley

“Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without”

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Non-Consumer Advocate Wedding

by Katy on July 11, 2010 · 12 comments

The following is a reprint of a previously published post.

Get Rich Slowly has a reader guest column today about how a woman raised with extreme frugal learned to spend. It also details her wedding, which reminded me of mine. Enjoy!

Wedding Cake

A few of my readers have asked for me to write about weddings and specifically about my own wedding. Although my husband and I married almost 16 years ago, the choices we made created a meaningful and inexpensive wedding would work well to this day.

Let me take you back to the year 1993.

My husband and I were both in college. He was getting his BFA in photography, and I was mid nursing school. We’d been in a terrible car accident the year before and had just received an insurance settlement totaling $15,000 between the two of us. We were spending the summer in Portland, Oregon working for our respective parents. (He was scraping paint off his parent’s new fixer upper and I was working as a receptionist in my step-father’s law office.)

We were aimlessly driving around town together one afternoon when we decided that this was the perfect time to get married. We had time, we had money, we were in love and we’d been living together for five years. Why shouldn’t we get married?

There were no rose petal strewn bedrooms, no engagement rings hidden in a glass of bubbly. Just two adults making an important decision together.

It was June and we decided to marry in August. I considered two months to be plenty of time to pull together a wedding. Others felt differently.

I had never given a single thought to my dream wedding. I was simply not that kind of girl. I wasn’t a tom-boy, but I wasn’t a girly-girl either. This made the planning of the wedding kind of difficult because there were 10,000 tiny decisions to make. Many of which I could care less about.

First stop was the downtown Powell’s City of Books to look through wedding magazines with my mother. We scooped up a few magazines and brought them into the in-house coffee shop. The owner was a friend of my mother’s, and she got all excited when she spied our reading material.

wedding-house

“Have you found a place to get married yet?”

“Um, no . . . we’re just getting started on the wedding planning.”

“You should get married at my house! I live in a huge gorgeous house and you can use it for free.”

Okay, cool. We just found a place to get married for free.

The magazines got put back.

After that, most everything fell into place.

My father’s next door neighbor offered to do the flowers for free. (Many of the flowers were hydrangeas from my father’s garden.)

We bought blank invitations at an office supply store, and my artist sister designed the border and script.

A cursory look into the price of wedding photographers made us decide to provide film to certain wedding guests who were known to be excellent photographers. All happily agreed to bring their cameras. I am not a fan of the formal style of traditional wedding photographs, so I was really happy with the results. The photographers all had very distinct styles and our pictures are truly unique. One guest even brought her 3-D View-Master camera, which means we have three actual View-Master discs of wedding pictures which are super fun to look at.

I didn’t want to register for gifts. I like a gift that reflects the giver, and I feel that registries sap all meaning from a gift. (Who was this pepper grinder from?) But certain family members insisted that I provide this option, so I compromised and gave to my mother a list of things we wanted. This way, registry insistent guests could choose a gift, and could even decide where to buy it. Most people chose not to use my mom-registry. Because I did a non-registry wedding I received wonderful gifts that I would not have known to choose for  myself.

For food we hired a caterer to put together a couple of huge platters of poached wedding-food

salmon. We fleshed this out with large wheels of brie, homemade bread, an enormous fruit salad, a couple of homemade cheesecakes, and a few unremembered miscellaneous extras. The cake was made by a friend who has made wedding cakes professionally. I paid for her ticket to fly up from New Mexico. The cake was her gift to us.

We rented the dishes and silver wear, which gave the table a very formal look. People fed themselves buffet-style. The napkins were nice paper. (I would rent or make cloth napkins if I were to do it now.)

My dress was made by my mother. It cost a few hundred dollars for the fabric, plus we hired a last minute seamstress to fine tune the fitting of the bodice. It was gorgeous! The veil was from a thrift store and cost a couple dollars.

wedding-rings The rings were simple since we both just wanted gold bands. The store we went to was having a 50% off sale, which meant that my ring was $40, and my husband’s was $30. We were both stunned how cheap the rings were, but happy to spend so little.

For booze, we bought a keg of local micro-brew and bought a few cases of local wine. We had an enormous amount of leftover wine and drank it for at least a year afterwards. (Waste no wine challenge!)

judge who was a friend-of-the-family performed the ceremony. Which was short. (I can’t sit still for long weddings)

For music, my sister’s then-boyfriend made a mix tape for during the reception. My cousin played the flute while we walked to the altar.

Katy and an attendant or twoI hate bridesmaid dresses,and told my attendants to just wear a short sleeve floral dress. The dresses looked fabulous all together, almost as if the they’d been chosen to coordinate, even though they hadn’t.

My husband wore a suit. He invested in a high quality suit jacket and dress slacks which he still wears for formal occasions to this day. The groomsmen also wore suits. Not only did this save money for us, but also for our friends and family. Renting a tuxedo is a waste of time and money.

No one is happy to spend money on clothing for a wedding that’s never to be worn again.

wedding-pix The hit of the wedding was most definitely our limo-service. Our friend Chuck has a wacky art car, which sportsthousands of tiny toys, bowling trophies and odds and ends glued here, there and pretty much everywhere. He drove us from the wedding to the hotel.

We did splurge on a night at the historic Heathman Hotel, which was a treat. The best part of this was that the one-and-only Johnny Cash was standing in the lobby when we entered the hotel. I was still wearing my wedding dress, and he walked over to congratulate us. And don’t you know, we had no camera on us, so this was a wholly non-documented aspect of our wedding day. (Grrr . . . . )

For our honeymoon, we went to the beach the next day with some dear out-of-town guests. We did fly to New York to visit my sister a few months later, and referred to it as our “honeymoon.”

Guest after guest came up to us to tell us that it was one of the most beautiful weddings they’d ever been to. Most people assumed the grand home was a rental, and everyone raved about the food.

The wedding was a hit.

The only regret I have is not hiring someone to do dishes. A few guests ended up spending a fair amount of time in the kitchen, which to this day still makes me cringe.

Total cost for our wedding? About $2000. (This includes flying my friend up to do the cake.)

We could have afforded more, but neither of us had any interest in have a big overblown wedding.

One thing I did notice is that every wedding has about the same number of decisions to make, whether you’re having a small or large event. This is true whether you’re getting married in your parent’s backyard or The Plaza Hotel. It’s what you do with those choices that matter.

Are you planning a wedding, or have you married recently? Would you change your wedding to match up with current frugal and green living leanings? Did you hang out with Johnny Cash on your wedding day? Please share your thoughts in thecomments section below.

Katy Wolk-Stanley

“Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without.”

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Sad Computer

by Katy on July 10, 2010 · 6 comments

In case you thought I was making up the whole, “My computer is dying” thing.

Katy Wolk-Stanley

“Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without”

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Bowling for Frugality

by Katy on July 10, 2010 · 3 comments

I feel like I’m still having PTSD from the June Food Stamp Challenge. Not doing the challenge, mind you, but from writing about it. I sit down at the computer and my first reaction is ARGHH! I took the excuse yesterday of my computer being at death’s door to take a break from blogging, but the computer seems to have taken a turn for the better, and is allowing me to write again. Granted, half the screen is covered in digitalized bits of flotsam, but I think I can get through a quick column.

I’ve had a very nice week, with two really rewarding work days, which were made all the better by one of the women naming her son the same as my 12 year old. His name is somewhat out of the realm of ordinary, and I can only think of maybe one other namesake in my 15 years as a labor and delivery nurse. AND they even spelled it right! Cool.

I’ve been a bit of a couponista this week, using an online bowling coupon I bought for $8 that included four games of bowling for up to four people and even included the shoe rental! This was a screaming deal, as we would have had to pay around $50 had we gone the retail route. Being the type to squeeze the very last drop of goodness from every penny, I met up with my friend Sasha and her two sons and let the boys all bowl together while we chatted and gossiped up a storm. We ordered a single pitcher of root beers, which not only set us back an additional $8, but appeared to be at least half-full of ice. And when the waitress returned to ask if we wanted a refill or or perhaps to order some mommy cocktails, we declined.

I stopped on my way home to pick up bagels, as I not only a had gift card, but had also squirreled away a 15% off coupon from a booklet I received in the mail from the electric company as a thank you for choosing clean energy. Unfortunately, this bagel joint and I do not have a positive history, as the staff there is bizarrely rude and is often befuddled by the slightest change off the norm.

Yesterday was no exception.

The clerk made a big point in telling me that there was no way she could tell me how much was left on my gift card, (I hadn’t actually asked) and then informed me that the 15% off coupon was only good for the amount I was paying in cash. I patiently explained that the 15% should be good for the entire amount, as the gift card was not considered a discount, and had been paid for at full value. We dickered back and forth, brought in her supervisor and finally finished the transaction. And yeah, she forgot to put the bagel in the bag that my younger son had chosen. But there was no way I was going to turn the car around at that point. This is like the third time that I’ve had odd transactions at this bagel place, and I really don’t understand why. I’m the Sally Field of retail transactions!

“You like me, you really, really like me!”

Oh well . . . the gift card is fully spent now, so I won’t be going there for awhile.

Okay, my computer is seriously on the fritz now. I’m getting about 15 seconds out of every minute where the screen looks normal now. I guess that means I gots to go.

Have a fantastically frugal day!

Katy Wolk-Stanley

“Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without”

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Laptop Dying!

by Katy on July 9, 2010 · 2 comments

My 2005 Macintosh iBook is at death’s door, so my blogging may be a bit sporadic over the next few days. I am buying a refurbished one from Apple, but it will take awhile to get here.

I am in deep mourning. Sob. However, I’m happy to report that I’m able to pay cash for the new one, plus I called customer service to find out about any special deals going on right now. Which helped. 😀

Katy Wolk-Stanley

“Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without”

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