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Extreme savings: Washed baggies and unflushed toilets

Posted Sep 22 2007, 08:06 PM by Donna Freedman
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Re-used any dental floss lately?

All together now: Eeeewwww!

Yet a reader of the Smart Spending message board knows a guy who did this. "There’s nothing grosser than dental floss hanging over the towel rack," said the reader, who posts as "Willowtears."

Sure there is. How about the folks who flush their toilet only once a day?  Or the guy who would re-use wash water "until it was black"?  Or the woman whose mom strained and re-used cooking oil regardless of pedigree: "Doughnut-flavored taquitos, yum."

All this came from the "Most Extreme Savings Tactics" thread on the message board.  I’m pretty extreme myself, but I flush my toilet each and every time, thanks.

I’d also like to note that floss is "a one-time-use item," according to my dental-hygienist sister.

That said, a number of the "extreme" suggestions seemed logical to me -- good ways to deal with temporary reversals of fortune or to help save for a long-term financial goal.

Besides, "it’s just stupid to spend more money than you have to on things you need," according to a woman posting as "ManyaP."  That’s why her all-purpose cleaner is a spray bottle full of a bleach-and-water solution. It smells like a product called Clorox Anywhere Spray.

Well, there’s one difference: Clorox Anywhere Spray costs $3, and ManyaP can make her version for about 3 cents.

TP is also a one-time-use item
People who wash and re-use plastic storage bags are the trainspotters of the frugality movement, derided as parsimonious kooks who waste time and energy to save a couple of pennies.  But compared to some of the stuff on that "Extreme Savings" thread, baggie-washers look downright mainstream.

Consider the paper-towel trisectioners and teabag triple-dippers, fridge-unpluggers and bathwater-sharers, spaghetti-sauce diluters and dryer-sheet stretchers ("three uses before they lose their ‘ability,’" according to one reader).

And then there are the toilet paper re-rollers, who turn two-ply paper into two separate rolls -- and at least one toilet-paper re-user. A reader posting as "ckf179" claims her elderly neighbor lets urine-damp toilet tissue dry for another go, as it were.

This is the sort of thing that gives frugality a bad name.  Yet it’s worth noting that some of these activities were only observed by readers, and actually performed by Depression-era parents or grandparents who did what they had to do to survive.

Not all of the old ways are good ways. As ckf179 noted, she’s learned a lot from her neighbor, but "I can’t quite convince myself to leave drying TP around the bathroom."

Build a cheaper pickle...
Smart Spending readers offered plenty of present-day ideas, too.  Some are clever, some obvious (turn off the lights when you’re not in the room), and some arguably false or unethical economies.  A few examples:

Stain won’t come out of your shirt?  Dye it black, suggests "Dallas1979."

After finishing a jar of pickles, "Jestjack" sliced half a 39-cent cucumber into the brine.  Two days later, he had more pickles.  He also "stretches" canned tuna with bread-heel crumbs, and re-sharpens utility-knife blades.

"E-Diva" has gone on "quite a few" dates with people she wasn’t interested in, just to get free dinners.

"CJs Babcia" volunteers to clean up after work-related parties, obeying the command to "throw out" the leftovers.  Kind of: "I throw it in the back of my car and then into my fridge."

Cute kids mean cut rates at garage sales.  Willowtears let her daughter negotiate for a small color TV.  She paid a buck, and has used it for more than a decade.

Buy only freezer-type bags because they’re strongest, advises "Ohio Belle."  She tosses hers in with the laundry.  "A box can last me for about a year."

(Full disclosure: My quart-sized Ziplocs are on their third tour of wild-blackberry duty.  However, I have never washed dental floss.)

I’m not cheap, I’m eco-friendly
Remember: You can always represent your tightwad ways as environmental awareness.  Explain that you’re being eco-friendly by shining your shoes with banana peels, wrapping birthday gifts in the Sunday funnies, and cutting the feet off worn-out socks so you can use what’s left as washrags.

So click on the Smart Spending thread and read some of the other extreme advice.  Some may strike you as hilarious, or appalling.  But it’s also optional.  Frugal tips are like any other financial advice: try what might work for your particular situation, ignore the rest.  You may be surprised to find what a difference it can make in your bottom line.

And speaking of the bottom line: Please feel free not to dry your toilet paper.  Or to use both sides of it.  (Eeeewwww!)

Comments

 

only oil well owners fromm opec would make up such star getting headlines as these.

I don't think there's anything wrong with taking food that was going to be tossed out anyway - that's such a waste!  And I do re-use dryer sheets for small loads of laundry, but I draw the line at re-using dental floss or toilet paper!

Okay. So I can here to see what other tight wads do just to hord away pennies that they plan to take with them when they die. Well, that might be a little judgmental but, after being married (and now divorced) from a young (in his 30's) selfish, greedy fool I have little tolerance of most of this type of 'recycling' of stuff that was purposely designed to be a 'throw away'.  Chuck K. who lives in a prominant part of Tpa.,FL. will blow his nose into a tissue more than 3 times before tossing it in the trash...he could get by using less than 100 gallons of H2O as he times his shower with a 1 minute egg timer and in luke warm water because 'hot water' costs money. Or how about using the same glass for several days before thinking of washing it. He refuses to launder socks even after sweating in them mowing lawns for a living. The soles can be hanging off his $10 _mart special sneakers before he will try sell them in a yard sale!

I feel that it is not a bad idea to conserve, recycle and save as long for the futures sake. But, when people have the money to replace worn items...give the items to a charity...the idea is to be able to live with in your means. Oh, I did mention how I am divorced now...funny how he would 'throw away' a beautiful family but not part with his facial tissue.  PEOPLE...DON'T PUT MONEY BECOME YOUR IDOL...IT'S OKAY TO LET GO OF THE TISSUE NOW CHUCK!!

Hey, I admire frugality! Nothing wrong with diluting the shampoo or turning that hot water heater down a bit. But I do have a problem with unsanitary insanity! Re-using toilet paper? Ughhh.

I just love it when people make me laugh!!!

...and so those who are all so worried about saving every last dime and would not even think to stop for someone in need...build their own living karma...they die alone, with their wealth or leave it to their dogs, or some charity because their family has long since abandoned them because they were so fed up with being cursed for their carelessness and waste.  In essence, what they pass on, if they do to anyone close to them is 'dirty money', that is the only thing worthy of conversation after they have passed.  Most everyone has some sort of compulsive tendency...that is theirs, rather than checking the locks 5 times before going to bed, they are absorbed by money that has no real use to anyone, not even them. My heart goes out to them. Would rather live paycheck to paycheck enjoying life and those around me, than push away life to save a dime.  Life is a gift, to learn, grow and share, to evolve, but we all have our own interpretations. Their money, their choice.  Make your own money, live your own life, make your own choices, and those that make their choices to be frugal - that is their choice.  Don't make yourself a victim of their selfishness. We all know someone such as mentioned in the article, learn from them.  We see what they do as a waste, they see us and our careless spending as a waste.

You reuse your toothbrush don't you? Is that any cleaner than washed floss? Why is a cleaned baggie any dirtier than the top of that jelly jar you just licked?

Flushing the toilet once a day is perfectly doable with no inconvenience and no bad hygiene whatsoever-at least for males-and should be the norm. All males need is a big plastic bottle with cap; females, perhaps, need something similar. You urinate into the bottle then cap it and empty it once a day into the toilet when you need to do number 2.  The tiny smell escaped from the bottle when you urinate into it is actually much less than the smell when you urinate into open toilets, or better hygiene if you flush your toilet only once a day.

Re-use toilet paper? Yuck!  What is available for their guest to use?

this was so funny to read.  We recently bought a house.  Our utility bill is half the bill of the previous owners.  We have energy star apliances.  We changed our light bulbs.  Oh, and we did turn off our water heater.  The Texas heat keeps our water quite warm actually.  We keep the thermostat on 77 degrees.  The Texas heat keeps our water quite warm actually.

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