(Written Jan. 31st, posted Feb. 1)
Starting tomorrow, Wed. February 1st I embark on
a month-long quest to attempt to keep my purchases to mainly essential
items. Inspired by the book, “Not Buying
It” by Judith Levine where the author actually devotes a year of purchasing only
essentials, I figured I could try something similar for one month. Notice I choose the month of February which
is the shortest month of the year, a mere 28 days. I figure if Judith made it for a year, I can
make it 28 days. My boyfriend is going
to attempt this feat with me so luckily I have some moral support from him.
My goals are yes, to save money, but also to find a little
extra time to devote to things I never seem to have time for. I also hope to find some sort of spiritual
realization that the important things in life are not things we buy and that
happiness can be found in simple things if we take time to slow down and enjoy
them.
The rules I’ve come up with thus far:
1) 3 of the 5 days of my work week
I must get myself to work, not using my car.
Since I work just over a mile from where I live, I can easily walk, ride
my bike, or even hitch a ride with my co-worker or boyfriend. Now a mile walk may sound easy enough, but
remember, it’s February and I live in North Idaho
where it can be a chilly and snowy more often than not.
2) I can only use my car to run
errands (get gasoline, groceries, run to appointments) 1x per week. So I’ll have to do a little bit more planning
to consolidate my errand running or choose to walk or ride my bike somewhere if
I’ve all ready used my 1x per week car allotment.
3) No buying non-essentials. No clothes, no gifts (I can make gifts if
necessary), no household items (I should have plenty to make it through the
month with what’s in my house).
4) To avoid going cold-turkey crazy
on this “non-spending month”, I’m giving myself a $50 weekly budget to spend on
non-essentials. This budget has to cover
any food I eat outside of the house (going out for dinner or a cup of coffee),
entertainment, say if I want to go out to the movies or go snowboarding, and
anything else. For example, I am pretty
sure I will need a hair-cut this month so $27 of my $50 that week will be spent
on getting my hair-cut. That leaves $23
left for that week…ouch.
5) I have to blog about this
experience 3x or so a week. At this
point if I cannot figure out how to make the blog live, I will at least will
document it to later post online for my friends and family and anyone
elses reading pleasure.
That the gist of my experiment. I have a feeling it will be a slightly frustrating
yet eye-opening experience for me. So
here goes nothing and bring on Frugal February 2012!
Hate to break it to you, L-dawg, but you chose the leap-year February. Hope you can hack it!
ReplyDelete(Love the blog idea, by the way!)
Oh sadness, 29 days to February 2012, Well, thanks for the heads up. I better mentally prepare for one extra day, eh?
ReplyDelete