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Finding wealth in a frying pan

Posted Jan 21 2008, 01:33 PM by Donna Freedman
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Last summer I found a cast-iron skillet in the "free" box at a yard sale. It was slightly rusty, but a little steel wool took care of that. I'd wanted an iron skillet and had been keeping my eye out for an affordable one. What's more affordable than free?

Never having cooked in cast iron before, I'm really enjoying this pan. It's as useful as I'd hoped it would be. Having a new kitchen tool makes me happy.

Betsy Teutsch, who writes the Money Changes Things blog, had the same kind of skillet epiphany, except hers was a Teflon pan from the supermarket.

Frugal schnitzel
In an article titled "The two fry pan theory of feeling rich," she wrote that she likes a dish called chicken schnitzel. Because she'd cook two pounds at a time, the chicken wouldn't all fit into the frying pan at once. A few years ago, she finally invested in the additional skillet.

"What an improvement! I could start the second pan while the cutlets in the first pan were finishing up," Teutsch wrote.

"For $15.99, I felt incredibly rich."

My skillet makes me feel rich, too. But so do a lot of other things that cost little to nothing.

Radio station KING-FM makes me feel rich: It's like having a tremendous collection of classical music, plus a staff to spin it for me. Ditto the Seattle and the University of Washington libraries: books, CDs and DVDs all catalogued and maintained just for me. Free, too, unless I miss the due dates.

Bus rides, sugar scrubs
The chance to attend the university is an immeasurable enrichment of knowledge, made even more luxurious by the scholarship I won in 2006; when I graduate at 51 or 52, I will do so debt-free. The bus pass included with tuition lets me travel to school or anywhere else I want -- for example, downtown to the Seattle Symphony for a $10 student ticket. What richness!

Using the grapefruit-scented sugar scrub my daughter made for me is like having a spa treatment. Yard sales that offer up perfect, still-shrink-wrapped Christmas gifts let me buy for friends and family without worrying about the cost. Rich people don't worry about the price of anything, right?

Having no consumer debt definitely makes me feel rich. But the main reason I have no debt is that I have been able to define my financial goals and values clearly, and find ways to fulfill them without breaking the bank.

Talk about wealth.

What price frugality?
Carried to an extreme, frugality may have negative consequences. Teutsch noted that she could have purchased the second pan years ago, if she hadn't been "so cheap." While she's glad to be frugal, she also realizes that frugality has "limited my imagination."

Extremes of any kind can be damaging. As my friend Linda Billington says, "Moderation in all things -- including moderation." If you practice a take-no-prisoners kind of frugality, you'll probably miss a lot of opportunities. You could save a lot of money by never traveling, for example. But then you'd never get to see the Grand Canyon, the Smithsonian, the Tower of London.

Never spending money on the arts could improve your financial bottom line while impoverishing you culturally. Never donating to charity would strengthen your personal economy, but deprive you of the chance to experience compassion.

And denying yourself something that you need, or that would improve the way you live, might not be frugality so much as perversity.

So pick your spots. You might find, as Teutsch did, that it doesn't take much to feel rich. Some people's definitions of the luxe life are much costlier, and their effects much more fleeting. For some of us, a feeling of wealth can last a long time. As long as, say, an iron skillet.

Comments

 

thanks for giving me a new perspective.  I guess I'm rich,too.  I'm retired: living in central Florida, and because of happenstance, I have enough money to live comfortably.  I retired from teaching at 60, my husband, deceased, left me part of his pension.  With my pension, a part of his and my social security, I have enough.  I am truly blessed.  Yep.  rich, that's me.    Dolores

Thank you for making me take a look at what is going on financially.  As a first year teacher at a very small school with GIANT student loans every penny counts, but somehow I always put enough aside every month to go to the bookstore.  I never get anything expensive, but that one brand new book each month, as a little something extra as a reward for all my savings, really does a world of good.  I never would have seen it as a big deal, but now I realize that it really is.

Thanks

I am rich because I have a warm house. My residence is grandfathered under an old utiility rate and I can stay toasty. I also invested in wool socks. I love winter. We made smore's by the fireplace this weekend. Enjoy today.

I found wealth in a second muffin tin. For years I could only make 12 cupcakes. I always wanted another pan. Before Christmas, I went to pick up my prescription at K-Mart. They had 4 of 5 of our family's meds, and gave me a $20 gift card because the 5th was not ready in time. I bought a super duper Martha Stewart cupcake pan. Yeah! I just was inspired to bake 24 cupcakes. It is funny how little things make you happy.

By the way. Donna, if you find a second smaller skillet you can make great panni's. Nestle the smaller on in the larger one while they heat. Take out the smaller one. Insert sandwich then replace the smaller skillet on top.

Thanks, Donna!  How nice to bond over frying pans.  This post had a lot of resonance.  One wealthy friend quoted back to me the line about "sometimes a second fry pan adds more to your quality of life than a second home."  

This post was featured in an eco-feminist forum which you might enjoy.

They nicknamed me the Two FryPan Bhottisatva.  :-)

www.lilith.org/.../EcoUshpizin.pdf

Thanks, Donna.  Check the bottom of your pan for markings as to maker.  A Griswold is a colletor's item. If so, find a no-namer, and sell the collectible on ebay.    Yard sales are the best way to find such wealth.

HOW VERY NICE TO GET TO SPEAK WITH A NICE NON-THREATING REAL PERS0N. I MUST HAVE BEEN VER LUCKY. I FOUND A GROUP OF THREE SKILLETS TOGETHER AT OUR LOCAL K-MART. MAYBE, THERE ARE SOME DOWN YOUR WAY. A CALL TO  YOUR LOCAL SIGHT  COULD  BE A STARTING POINT.  GOOD LUCK

Buy a skillet??? I just borrow my roommate's.

For two years my wife and I had to live apart, in different cities 300 miles apart. This meant furnishing two residences. I sought to get by as cheap as I could in furnishing the second place with necessities. I found a microwave for $10, a clothes dryer for $25, a rebuilt washer for $165, lawnmower for $35. For while I even used a single mixer beater (25 cents in a box of misc. at a garage sale) in my cordless drill until I found a mixer for $1. (the single beater in the drill was still great for some things, but that may be a "guy" thing).

When I was able to get a job near my wife's residence, I was able to sell the big items (micro, W/D, mower) for nearly what I paid for them. We expect to have a garage sale this spring and clean out the little extras plus a whole lot more of unused, no longer needed, items.

Some things need to be purchased new, but there are plenty of ways to save by checking around.

Does anyone ever pay full price for something purchased at JC Penny?  It seems like every week their ad says "Biggest Sale of the Season." Before Christmas I got cup the $10 gift certificate from their ad. It said good for any single purchase of $10 or more. I found a bundle three pairs of socks for $10 and used the certificate to get them for nothing. I once said if their sales get any bigger they would be giving me their clothes. I guess they were right.

I totally agree that the radio and libraries are amongst the best things in life and we get them free!  I would also like to add Going to the Beach as another free luxury in life.  Aloha

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