How a 'No Buy" Brought Unexpected Results
Earlier this month, I talked about the
challenge I set for myself to do a “No Buy July” to save money and do a
mid-year reset. I got this idea from Kathi Lipp, author, and podcaster at “Clutter Free Academy.”
A
no-buy month is pretty basic: you pay attention to spending and do not make unnecessary
purchases. I thought this would be perfect for discovering where I was spending
money and what habits I may need to change. And the money saved is the goal!
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Photo by Sasun Bughdaryan on Unsplash |
My husband was supportive of this experiment, but he did not join me. While he was happy about my successes, his main concern was that he would still have dinner after work and clean clothes for the week! (And since he didn’t add “clean house,” I managed just fine!)
My
main tactics for the month: (1) refrain from drive-thru restaurants (unless I
had a gift card or reward points), cease online shopping (deleting those sale
emails before opening them!), and use up as much as possible from my freezer and
pantry inventory.
Did
I have success? July was the ideal month to complete this challenge, saving me
money in more areas than I thought!
Here
is a recap of just some of what happened this month. I referred to the saying
Kathi uses:
Use
it up,
Wear it out,
Make do, or
Do without.
Use it Up
With
only three grocery shops for staples and other necessities during the month, I
managed most of the family meals with food on-hand in the pantry and freezer.
Because
I couldn’t buy pre-prepared meals at the grocery store, I made extra dinner
servings each day to have leftovers for my husband and son to take to work.
There
was only one dinner emergency – when my 19-year-old son wanted spaghetti.
As
we grabbed ingredients, I went to the pantry to grab a sauce jar of sauce …
except there wasn’t any! I almost told my son that we would have to make something
else – when I realized – I could just make my own! I googled for a simple sauce
recipe (you can see it at the end of this post). It was quick, easy, and tasty.
Gold
star for me.
Wear it Out
On
July 20, I made another “shopping trip” to the garage freezer to take out meat for
dinner, but something wasn’t right. There was no collected ice on the sides of
the freezer and no blast of cold air when I opened the lid. The loaves of bread
were thawed (but the meat was still rock solid). I first thought it may have
been three months of 100-degree temps here in Texas that caused an issue. It
was the compressor.
The
good news: I had been checking the freezer daily, so I immediately saw the
issue before I had spoiled food. And – because I was emptying the inside
freezer, I now had room to bring in the food from the garage. No lost money on
spoiled food.
I
believe we can add the freezer to this category since we seemed to have worn it
out!
Make Do
Last
week, we ran out of bottled iced tea. We drink a lot of tea, which is hard to “do
without.” Typically, someone would have made a trip to the convenience store. I
remembered (from doing inventory at the beginning of the month) that there were
tea bags in the pantry. I dug out my ice tea maker, and we had more tea in 15
minutes. We “made do” without a trip to the store.
Gold
star #2.
Do Without
To
get rid of some clutter, I spent time collecting things to donate. We made one
drop at the Goodwill and a “Free-will” offer of things to my neighbors on our
community Facebook page.
We
could do without two streaming channel services, so they were canceled. We
haven’t missed them.
The
extreme heat in Texas kept me home often, which made it easy to stay away from
eating out. The bonus: I only had to fill the gas tank once this month,
saving money!
Lessons Learned
This
month was a great test to determine where the money went on unnecessary purchases. I
realized that I am definitely a convenience shopper. I purchase many premade
meals from the grocery store and fast food on the go. I grab bottled water when I’m out instead of using
my stainless-steel bottle from home. I make more runs to the grocery store
because I don’t plan ahead, and I shop for things online I really don’t need.
Doing
this challenge also made me more cognizant of other places to save money, such
as doing larger laundry loads and combining more errands in a day to save gas.
Money saved
The
best way for me to see if it was a good month was by checking my bank account
today.
Drumroll,
please . . .
I
saved $550! That amount was moved right over to the savings account.
Why
not try a “no-buy” month sometime this year? Choose a month where there are no
vacations or big events or holidays. Create a plan in advance – write down
categories where you want to save money (eating out, shopping online, etc.).
Also, list some ways to make money that month (holding a garage sale, selling back books
or technology, rebate apps,
or eBay.
Tell me in the comments if you may try a “no-buy” month and where you
will save the most money!
++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Quick & Tasty Spaghetti Sauce from the Pantry
2
tbsp olive oil
1 cup finely chopped onion
2 tsp minced garlic
2 – 15 oz cans tomato sauce (or crushed tomatoes)
2 – 15 oz cans of diced tomatoes
2 tbsp tomato paste
1 tsp Italian Seasoning blend (click HERE for my recipe to make your own!)
1 tsp salt
½ tsp black pepper
1 tsp sugar (or 2 tsp, to taste), I used Truvia
½ tsp crushed red pepper (optional)
Directions:
Sauté
the onion in the olive oil over medium-high heat, until tender. Add garlic and
cook until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Stir in remaining ingredients and bring
mixture to a low simmer, stirring frequently. Let simmer for 20 minutes,
breaking up the diced tomato as you stir.
I too stopped online shopping for the last 2 weeks of July and just looking at the cart I abandoned made me feel goof.An inspiration post for doing more with less.
ReplyDeleteI love this. You did great! Not sure how you saved $550 unless that's what you would have spent otherwise. I am impressed. Thanks for sharing
ReplyDeleteThat's awesome! It's amazing how much we can save but still not go hungry. LOL I'm glad you didn't lose any freezer food from the thaw!
ReplyDelete