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Frugal overspending is still overspending

Posted Aug 08 2008, 02:08 AM by Donna Freedman
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After a recent yard sale foray, I needed to squeeze what I'd bought into my gift closet. My "closet" is actually a big cedar chest bought for $15 at yet another yard sale. Because I'd been tossing stuff in higgledy-piggledy, I couldn't fit the new stuff in without reorganizing the stash. When I did, I was a little surprised to find out just how much I had.

Hardbacks bought at the dollar store (yes, they're by legitimate authors and no, there wasn't a mark on them) and at yard sales, plus quality fiction picked up for as little as 40 cents from the university bookstore's clearance table. Games, coloring books and a really cool fire truck bought pennies on the dollar a few months after Christmas. Unopened book-toy combos that cost as little as 50 cents at garage sales. Washable markers that were free after a drugstore rebate. Art card sets, gorgeously scented spa items, a craft kit, picture frames, candles -- all of it cheap. I felt like a frugal Santa Claus.

Once the lid was closed, barely, I congratulated myself for being all but finished with my holiday shopping, and for having enough kids' gifts to see my great-nephews through three or four more years of Christmases and birthdays.

I'm somewhat concerned, though, that I obtained all these things without being fully aware of how much I had.

Nothing succeeds like excess
I've written before that the trouble with yard sales and dollar stores is that things are too cheap. It's easy to overdo it and wind up with things you don't necessarily need. But if I see a set of pick-up sticks for 5 cents at a yard sale, well, why not buy it?

This particular time, it worked out: A young relative who's visiting this week was very excited to learn that I had pick-up sticks. A nickel to make him happy -- am I going to miss a nickel?

But when do I stop? That young man's mom might want to hit yard sales this weekend. Suppose I see killer prices while I'm ferrying her around. It's likely I'll be tempted when, after all, it's only a quarter.

Yet why buy it if I don't need it? Don't I already have enough?

Because it's hard not to buy at those prices, that's why. These days you can't buy much with a quarter, so the idea of getting an article of clothing or a book for two bits is very satisfying.

Yet that's the kind of attitude that could get a person in trouble. I'm afraid I might wind up with a house full of toys, books and fancy bath salts -- and there are only so many special occasions in a year.

There's also the cost factor. A quarter here, 50 cents there -- before you know it you've got some serious money stashed in a cedar chest in your living room.

Put it down and walk away
The big question: Will I stop buying?

Sometimes it's an easy choice, as with the dog statue I found at a yard sale for a quarter. Cute, yes, but I didn't have anywhere to put it and, more to the point, I didn't need it. I put it back.

It's harder to be smart when I'm looking at books. Many, many times I've had to remind myself that I don't have any more room for books, that I should be giving books away rather than buying them, and that if I really want to read that particular book, I can get it from the library.

Ditto children's toys, clothes and books. I'm discovering how easy it is to get carried away when young children are back in your life. When I see games or book-and-toy combos still shrink-wrapped at yard sales for 50 cents, the grandma gene is activated. I'm suffused with the urge to give presents to my great-nephews every time I see them, plus five or six gifts apiece for birthdays and Christmas.

Of course, I just answered my own question. The fact that those toys were never opened means that somebody else's kid received way too much. Imagine having so many things that you never got around to playing with them.

Right now, I'm imagining a gift closet that never empties. I'm imagining my great-nephews in college and me struggling to close the lid on a cedar chest full of "Go, Diego, Go!" checker sets and Maurice Sendak books. I'm also imagining the kind of monsters I'd be creating if these kids started to expect a gift every time they saw me.

Overspending at a yard sale may be cheaper than rampaging through malls with a credit card, but it's still overspending. I need to get a handle on it. That doesn't mean I can't spend money. I just want to spend it on things that matter.

Comments

 

You should take those kids, let them each pick out a gift from your chest, and then have them help you pack up the rest and take it to a women's shelter, or put together Operation Christmas Child shoeboxes. The point is in letting THEM help you give this stuff away, so they understand that not everyone has a chest full of gifts.

This blog is a good reminder that even frugality needs some boundries, and frugality is just not about the "stuff", even if it was bought at a yard sale or the dollar store. It gives me more incentive to keep on de-cluttering my life.

I liked your article Donna, I think I might show it to my BF, he does the same thing at yard sales and thrift stores. It's hard to make him understand that A) he does not need anything so B) he should not go to sales or thrift stores. Even if it's just "to look", then you want to buy because it's just such a good deal. If you don't go in the first place, you will never imagine how good you would look in that 4 dollar pair of jeans, how you really need a 5th black hoodie because your others have "zippers that stick out". So you're going to buy another 100% cotton hoodie that will shrink and the zipper will stick out on it too?

Please come to my garage sale this weekend Donna

Wow, when are you going to stop worrying about money?  What good is life if you are worried over spending 1$?  

Whether you buy designer clothes or garage sale toys, the point is the same: it's easy to lose track of your money and what you already have at home.  You're out money, and you have extra stuff that you don't necessarily need.  And a trunk full of 50-cent toys = a few tanks of gas in some people's minds.  

Okay, maybe losing sleep over a few quarters here and there seems excessive to a lot of people, but the "hard not to buy at these prices" lesson is one that can be applied at your local mall, too.  How often do people buy food they don't need at the grocery store because of specials, and then many times end up throwing it out?  That pack of pens at the cash register at Staples for 1.99...because everyone needs pens, right?  

I've never lost sleep over spending 50 cents on a toy I wasn't sure I needed.  Having said that, I'm also remembering the spare change jar I wrapped up after three years that added up to 600 dollars.  Either way, it adds up.

If you think you've spent too much, then just try not to do it again.  Don't dwell on it, just move on. :)

Actually, this is a great topic.  I've just finished emptying my parent's house of 45 years of "great deals" from yard sales and Goodwill.  My father used to say that "at that price you can't leave it laying there!"  Well, my sister's and I have had to deal with the aftermath of all of this bargain hoarding.  We were lucky growing up to have parents who didn't have a lot of money but kept us clothed and fed without us ever feeling deprived.  Later, when they were more financially comfortable they still couldn't stop picking up the "deals".  You definitely need to keep a lid on buying things whether it's $100 or .10.  I miss my parents everyday - not the stuff.

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