Worthwhile Book Review
Aug. 10th, 2007 03:50 pmWell, I wanted to share this but haven't gotten around to it, but with
magnolia__'s rumination about thrift stores,
iamdamanda's rant against judgemental parents, and
rockonliz127's renewed environmental fervor, it seems now is most definitely the time.
The book, based on three separate books, based on a newsletter, called finally The Complete Tightwad Gazette by Amy Dacyczyn, has changed the way even a cheapskate like ME thinks about Things, and by Things I do mean it with the capital T (that rhymes with P and that stands for... products?). It's basically an exchange of ideas on how to save money by people who REALLY MEAN IT, as opposed to advertizers who try to convince you to Save Big by Spending Only Ten Dollars on this Twelve Dollar Thing That You Don't Even Need That Will Just Take Up Space In Your House!
Now, the book itself is full of a wide variety of ideas, many of which I'd still never actually do or have the need to, many of which I already do, and many of which I say, "Hey, that's smart, never thought of that," but the POINT of the book and the point I wish to discuss today is not the ideas themselves, but the general mindset, which is, in a word, Eyeopening.
It is amazing and frightening just how WASTEFUL our society really is! And not just on the surface, the usual things, but even people who think they're pretty conscious about waste, even people like me who have been pack rats from the time they were old enough to call anything their own, even we are wasteful in ways we completely take for granted!
There is SUCH a glut of overpackaging in stores that you really only think about when you try to picture a store of a hundred years ago, how were those things packaged then? And THAT suddenly makes you realize how many MORE products are around now, and THAT makes you realize how many of those products are REALLY NOT NECESSARY! You save not only money but also resources and landfill space by really stepping back and eliminating from your spending everything you can make yourself from scratch ("scratch" is more likely to be sold in bulk or be free-- even less packaging) or actually don't need at all, and then the packaging you DO end up with, how much of THAT can even be reused! I'd occasionally reused Ziplock bags before, and I'd used grocery bags for garbage, but why can't I rinse out ALL decent bags and use them for something else? Well, all bags except ones that hold raw meat (even the relative extremists of the Tightwad Gazette draw the line there).
And think about paper napkins and towels. It's one thing if you have to take your laundry to a laundromat, but if you have your own machines, why DON'T we use cloth more often? I started using cloth diapers in effort to save money, and I myself am kind of amazed how easy it actually is in practice, and I'm a person who otherwise forgets to do laundry until someone is out of some kind of clothes that they need. But now I'm rather ashamed at myself for using paper at all. Seriously, it's a waste! Now I don't really have enough cloth napkins to make it worthwhile to give up the paper right now, but maybe I ought to.
And how much stuff do people just THROW AWAY when it can be repaired or even reused as something else? And why do people insist on buying more and more new stuff when used stuff will do just as well? Or maybe isn't even needed?
Why do otherwise intelligent freethinking people keep buying into the System? All of us think we're pretty savvy about not being brainwashed by commercials but if we really think about it there are lots of ways society has convinced us of needing things we really don't, or that a slight improvement in quality or convenience justifies a large increase in price. And when I really think about it it's scary how dependent people are on the System. People can't grow their own and make their own anymore, they just assume they can buy whatever they want let alone need. And boy do we waste electricity! It's hard to get on here because I usually only have little pieces of time at a time, so I leave the computer on to save a few minutes, but it seems like the small time savings is not worth the large electrical waste, doubly so when you think how hot the computer makes the room, which makes the air conditioning run more. And air conditioning! I've been so oblivious to summer because we've got whole house air conditioning, but could we save if we opened the windows while it's cooler outside? (Figures, though, I come to this conclusion during the hottest week of the year, when there IS no cooler time outside). But I'm suddenly conscious about what little electrical things I REALLY don't need to be wasting, and think What can I do that requires NO electricity right now? on occasion.
I seriously just want to drop OUT sometimes. Get back to the Simple Life. Except with stereos and DVD players. Oh yeah, and refrigeration. :)
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The book, based on three separate books, based on a newsletter, called finally The Complete Tightwad Gazette by Amy Dacyczyn, has changed the way even a cheapskate like ME thinks about Things, and by Things I do mean it with the capital T (that rhymes with P and that stands for... products?). It's basically an exchange of ideas on how to save money by people who REALLY MEAN IT, as opposed to advertizers who try to convince you to Save Big by Spending Only Ten Dollars on this Twelve Dollar Thing That You Don't Even Need That Will Just Take Up Space In Your House!
Now, the book itself is full of a wide variety of ideas, many of which I'd still never actually do or have the need to, many of which I already do, and many of which I say, "Hey, that's smart, never thought of that," but the POINT of the book and the point I wish to discuss today is not the ideas themselves, but the general mindset, which is, in a word, Eyeopening.
It is amazing and frightening just how WASTEFUL our society really is! And not just on the surface, the usual things, but even people who think they're pretty conscious about waste, even people like me who have been pack rats from the time they were old enough to call anything their own, even we are wasteful in ways we completely take for granted!
There is SUCH a glut of overpackaging in stores that you really only think about when you try to picture a store of a hundred years ago, how were those things packaged then? And THAT suddenly makes you realize how many MORE products are around now, and THAT makes you realize how many of those products are REALLY NOT NECESSARY! You save not only money but also resources and landfill space by really stepping back and eliminating from your spending everything you can make yourself from scratch ("scratch" is more likely to be sold in bulk or be free-- even less packaging) or actually don't need at all, and then the packaging you DO end up with, how much of THAT can even be reused! I'd occasionally reused Ziplock bags before, and I'd used grocery bags for garbage, but why can't I rinse out ALL decent bags and use them for something else? Well, all bags except ones that hold raw meat (even the relative extremists of the Tightwad Gazette draw the line there).
And think about paper napkins and towels. It's one thing if you have to take your laundry to a laundromat, but if you have your own machines, why DON'T we use cloth more often? I started using cloth diapers in effort to save money, and I myself am kind of amazed how easy it actually is in practice, and I'm a person who otherwise forgets to do laundry until someone is out of some kind of clothes that they need. But now I'm rather ashamed at myself for using paper at all. Seriously, it's a waste! Now I don't really have enough cloth napkins to make it worthwhile to give up the paper right now, but maybe I ought to.
And how much stuff do people just THROW AWAY when it can be repaired or even reused as something else? And why do people insist on buying more and more new stuff when used stuff will do just as well? Or maybe isn't even needed?
Why do otherwise intelligent freethinking people keep buying into the System? All of us think we're pretty savvy about not being brainwashed by commercials but if we really think about it there are lots of ways society has convinced us of needing things we really don't, or that a slight improvement in quality or convenience justifies a large increase in price. And when I really think about it it's scary how dependent people are on the System. People can't grow their own and make their own anymore, they just assume they can buy whatever they want let alone need. And boy do we waste electricity! It's hard to get on here because I usually only have little pieces of time at a time, so I leave the computer on to save a few minutes, but it seems like the small time savings is not worth the large electrical waste, doubly so when you think how hot the computer makes the room, which makes the air conditioning run more. And air conditioning! I've been so oblivious to summer because we've got whole house air conditioning, but could we save if we opened the windows while it's cooler outside? (Figures, though, I come to this conclusion during the hottest week of the year, when there IS no cooler time outside). But I'm suddenly conscious about what little electrical things I REALLY don't need to be wasting, and think What can I do that requires NO electricity right now? on occasion.
I seriously just want to drop OUT sometimes. Get back to the Simple Life. Except with stereos and DVD players. Oh yeah, and refrigeration. :)