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The difference between 'want' and 'need'? Three months

Posted Jun 16 2008, 11:57 AM by Donna Freedman
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A year ago, a regular reader who calls herself "SC CDF" really wanted an ice-cream maker. These days she can barely remember having wanted it. She proposed that we write down what we want and then check back later to see if we still want it. That's why in April I started a Smart Spending message board thread called "What do you want? Will you still want it a year from now?"

Readers posted their burning desires: a great camera and printer, electronic gadgets, new cookware, computers, automobiles, furniture. Most of those who reported back later on the updated thread said they did not get what they wanted. But all of them were OK with that.

The reasons varied, but all of them were good reasons. They changed their minds. They made do with what they already had. They decided to save up to satisfy those wants without going into debt.

Bunks and bags
Some wants were easier to dismiss than others. A reader posting as "Snoozematchit1" claimed to want a television. Several months after posting that, Snooze still doesn't have a TV but is "getting a good amount of reading done."

SC CDF, who started this whole thing, wanted a leather tote bag from L.L.Bean. However, someone gave her an Urban Outfitters bag for free and she found a leather Coach tote bag for 50 cents at a yard sale. SC CDF says she'd take the L.L.Bean bag if she could get it really cheaply. "But I think life will go on without it."

Making do and making plans are working for "YosemiteMom," who wanted a fenced yard, an elaborate bunk bed/climbing wall combo and a couple of extra mattresses. Her family had a garage sale to raise funds for the bunk bed, but they still don't have enough. So they'll keep saving. The good news is that YosemiteMom's parents are tearing down a fence, and she'll inherit the materials to build her own.

"Lehughe2" really wanted a new couch, but hesitated to pay the $1,000 or more that her favorite styles cost. Since she and her husband plan to buy a home in two years, she also hesitates to pay for sofa delivery and then have to move it again. "We'll eventually get the new couch, but the current hand-me-down couch is still doing the job," she says.

Save now, spend later
Sometimes there are good reasons to postpone a "want." Reader "jsjjkelly" craved a rain barrel even though she and her husband didn't have much in the way of landscaping. "I have nothing to water," she admitted, but even so had saved up $100 for the rain barrel. However, she couldn't "justify spending it."

Since then, the couple put in some raised beds -- and now she's "deliberating" about the rain barrel. The fact that it hasn't rained much lately may have something to do with her current hesitation.

"LibraryGoddess" originally wanted a new laptop plus a fancy picnic basket with dishes, silverware and napkins. Although the basket still sounds neat, she notes that she and her boyfriend "have gone to the park for a picnic exactly once … and paper plates and reusable water bottles in a Wal-Mart bag worked just fine." As for the replacement laptop, LibraryGoddess has set up an online savings account to save for it.

Reader "Sam O Ting" already had the money in the bank for the camera and printer he wanted, but he simply couldn't bring himself to spend $2,500 all at once. That's just as well. Sam had the chance to refinance a rental property at a favorable interest rate, and the closing costs ate up his photography fund.

Instead, he bought a smaller camera for $400. "In retrospect, for the little professional photography I do anymore, it suits me just fine," Sam writes. "I am still planning on getting the printer, though."

Holding off paid off for reader "GabbyMom," who wanted a graduate certificate in gerontology and a hybrid car but preferred to put the money she would have spent into her home. Since then she and her husband have paid cash for a new stove plus some new kitchen cabinets, countertops and flooring.

She has also set aside $3,000 in an education fund and investigated scholarships and other ways to knock down the tuition from $7,000 to as little as $4,500. (For help on reducing the price of higher education, check MSN Money's "Managing college costs" page.) In the past, GabbyMom writes, "I would have just applied and borrowed money for it."

Delaying tactics
How to avoid impulse buying, or at least lessen the pain of purchasing? Readers suggested a few tips:

•    Touching and talking. "MDSFL04" and her husband have a "three-time rule." They have to either handle the item three times or have three discussions about it before buying. They talked about a car for a full year before purchasing. "It really helps save on buyer's remorse," she says.

•    Score someone's discards. Check garage sales before buying retail, but keep in mind that a low price is no guarantee of satisfaction. "Lookylurker" had thought that grinding coffee beans at home would be great, so finding a new-in-box coffee grinder for $1 was cause for celebration. Thus far, it's been used to pulverize one small bag of beans. "The grinder sits in my cupboard," Lookylurker admits. "Thank goodness I only paid a dollar for it."

•    Wait it out. Suffering from new-car fever, "cat00" decided to pick out a fabulous ride and wait for the price to drop. "Fabulous" turned out to be $40,000 worth of wheels, and even after five years the price had dropped only to $30,000. Cat00 thought about wants (a fabulous car) vs. needs (how to fit car payments into the budget) and decided on a used car for $10,000. Waiting and shopping around meant no car payments, which can make any vehicle fabulous.

•    Don't buy it -- try it. Borrowing an item can be "the best way of scratching that itch and not purchasing something," notes SC CDF. Or consider renting. A four-hour contract on a rototiller could save money if, for example, it helps you realize that the machine is not a good match for your arthritis or repetitive strain injury.

In the original thread, I posted that I wanted a laptop -- kind of. It might make my life a little easier. I could write and/or check e-mail on the bus or between classes. But it would be one more thing to carry -- not good for my repetitive strain injury -- and paying for it would have made a big dent in my emergency fund.

The upshot is that I didn't buy it and I'm doing fine. My grades are excellent and I haven't yet missed a class assignment or Smart Spending deadline. I doubt that I'll buy a laptop as long as I can make do without one.

The above readers seem to have come to the same conclusions: Do I really need this? If I get it, will my life be significantly improved? If I don't get it, will my life be substantially diminished?

It's up to you what you buy. But being cautious about how you buy may keep your life free of clothes you don't wear and appliances you rarely use. Or coffee you don't grind.

Comments

 

I believe I can live a year without any wants, but when I want something I write it down on a 5 X 8 card and look at it everyday.  Usually after a couple of weeks I decide I really don't need the item right now and  it can wait 3/4 months or longer.  What we all need is the basics of life, and save save save.

I really WANT a new, bit, front-loading washer and dryer. I don't NEED them, because my 19 year-old good-ol' Sears Kenmores are still doing the job. When it costs more to fix them than to replace them, then I'll get the new ones, or when the cost of the extra water, gas and electricity gets too much, I'll get the newer, more energy-effecient models. Until then, I can't justify the expense. Thingking of getting a clothesline.

At the moment I want a man; not just any man but, someone that I'm attracted to at my job.  I think he's a really nice and sweet guy and I can't help but feel a closeness and connection to him as though we were made for each other, but of course that's just me.  He is oblivous to my feelings for him, even though I think he suspects, but is not sure.  The only draw back about this is that I'm the only one who feels this way; he in turn is interested in another.  All I can do is try to keep these feelings from surfacing and admire him from afar until I stop wanting him.  

P.S.

I know this may not have been what you might have been referring to in regards to wants and needs, but it's the only thing that I want at the moment.

Kel, I agree that Costco is one of the worst.  I find that impulse purchases are kind of forced on you, because they have limited stock and often sell out quickly on seasonal items.  I have been in situations where I have regretted not acting on an item, but also bought too quickly to discover I really didn't want it.  Thankfully they have an excellent return policy, but I intend to be more discerning so they don't get ticked off with all of my returns.  As a note, I keep all receipts so if I discover I don't need it then I can return it no matter where I bought it from.  We are also working on not impulse buying so we can teach our daughter that you can't just buy everything you see, to save up, and not cave in to being a mindless consumer.

Earth Muffin...I have had 2 sets of front loaders (moved) .  One was kenmore now its fridgidaire. Never has a purchase /splurge been more worthwhile.  They use way ess water,spin efficient to hang dry in about an hour and use 1/4 amount of detergent and softener.  They are fun to watch and I can fold clothes on the top leaving them side by side.  Unless you plan to use an old zinc bucket they are the way to go. good luck

The measure of a man's wealth is in proportion to the number of things he can do without.  --Thomas Jefferson.

think about that for a few minutes, and then decide if you want to be wealthy, or just have alot of stuff.

Oooh....Donna Freedman writes great stuff.

My coffeemaker died and I really want a new one.  I know it's not expensive but I have to hesitate on it since I am a single Mom with heavy expenses.  Not sure how I will pull this one off but I am contemplating it.  I have only one credit card and it has a $500 limit.  I use it sparingly but I may break down for this.  Any suggestions?

Yeah I stopped eating microwave popcorn because I heard that it was bad for your heart...so I bought a popcorn popper...I'm back to microwave pop.

To Evelyn,

Try looking for your coffee maker at the Salvation Army Thrift Store if ithey don't have what you want, keep going back, their merchandise changes daily or if you don't work on weekends, try getting up early on Saturday morning and go looking for yard/garage sales.  Many of the small towns where I live in the Southern Tier of NY State have town wide yard sales.  Check out your local free penny saver newspaper for locations.

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