Posts tagged ‘organization’

June 15, 2012

diary of a cheapskate

by katie savage

I am a cheapskate. Not Frugal or Careful with Money. Totally, unabashedly cheap.

I was raised to be this way. My dad wouldn’t deny it; he started a Christmas tradition a number of years back that he dubbed Dad’s Crappy Gifts, and he told us repeatedly that he wanted it to be “his legacy,” so I don’t feel too bad sharing it for all of you kind people (and anyone who Googles “crappy gifts”) to see. It goes like this: everyone is in charge of finding, purchasing, and wrapping 8 to 1,100 gifts that cost less than $5. The gifts should not be “good gifts” (read: something anyone would ever want) and you should leave the price tags on, especially if you got a really good deal. Sometimes the gift can be of the practical nature, like upholstery cleaner or a rubber band ball, but if all of your gifts are practical, you are cheating. One year, my brother bought eight lottery tickets, which everyone but Dad thought was a genius idea. Dad said there was too good a chance that someone would win, therefore making the gift less than crappy. The best crappy gift to date was given by my brother-in-law Tony, who, much to my father’s chagrin, isn’t even blood. Tony wrapped up a live goldfish and called it “The Gift of Responsibility.” Man, was that crappy.

You can’t really even blame my dad, though. Being cheap is in his genetic makeup. We invited my grandmother over one year for Dad’s Crappy Gifts. One of the things she opened was a tiny funnel, which is to be used for funneling tiny amounts of things into tiny containers (I really can’t think of an example of what one might use that sort of funnel for, making it extremely, excruciatingly crappy). Grandma opened it and had no idea what it was. She certainly would never have a use for it. She probably couldn’t even see it, as her eyes are failing her. Anyway, at the end of the night, she made sure she took the funnel with her. My dad told her to leave it, that it would just take up space in her little apartment, but she was adamant.

“Why do you want it?” Dad asked.

She looked at him as if he were the crazy one. “Well, I don’t have one,” she said.

So there you go: the cheapskatishness runs deep.

It can pose many different problems. (I order things I don’t really want in restaurants because they’re the cheapest options, I buy things on sale that don’t fit well because it’s only five bucks! Have you ever seen jeans for five dollars? You couldn’t even buy the fabric, etc., etc. My most recent problem involved organizing the junk drawer in the kitchen. (Yes, we definitely have multiple junk drawers for junk in different rooms. Don’t judge.)

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It was filled to bursting with packets of condiments from various restaurants. Now, I’m not embarrassed about the fact that I save these packets. This is an aspect of my cheaposity that makes total and complete sense to me. I feel like you’re getting screwed if you throw away or refuse things that people are trying to GIVE YOU FOR FREE. I’m also the person who will take all the tiny free soaps, shampoos, conditioners, mouthwashes, showercaps, and individual-sized coffee and tea from hotel rooms. If I feel I’ve overpaid for a hotel room, I will call down to the front desk and ask that they send me more of these items. Plus a toothbrush. And toothpaste. Bastards.

So I had a dilemma with the junk drawer. I had all this ketchup and I couldn’t throw it out. Luckily, I caught a story on the news a few nights prior that helped me solve my problem. It was a story on The Cheapest Man in the World. I have no idea if he was actually The Cheapest Man in the World, but he’d buy the cheapest toilet paper at the grocery store, then bring it home and de-ply the two-ply so that it was only one-ply. So I think yes, he probably was. I resonated with the guy. They kept showing examples of how cheap he was and, barring the toilet paper example, I kept nodding in agreement. And then they came to ketchup.

“I haven’t bought a bottle of ketchup in ten years!” he said. And they showed him squeezing individual ketchup packets into his ketchup bottle. It was a light bulb moment.

So that’s the story of how my ketchup bottle went from this:

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To this:

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All in the space of one nap.

I know.

You’re totally unimpressed.

The ketchup bottle hardly got fuller, and I totally destroyed the “No High Fructose Corn Syrup” claim on the front of my ketchup bottle. Plus, I have no idea the shelf life of ketchup, and whether I will give myself the ebola virus from consuming ketchup that’s expired. In fact, I will probably end up throwing that particular ketchup away, especially if it tastes weird or if friends start declining invitations to barbecue with us, or start bringing their own condiments. Some might also argue that I wasted a perfectly good naptime, which is an excellent argument. But, though it was a small accomplishment, I got one drawer clean, and I threw away all the spicy mustard and horseradish and stuff that Scott and I would never eat anyway.

(I will pause for applause here.)

There could be a bright side. As Mr. Cheapest Man in the World says, he really enjoys having a “mixture of all his favorite brands” of ketchup, so maybe this will become a habit for me. Maybe not.

April 6, 2012

the #2 stressor

by maria polonchek

This is going to be the most difficult post to write so far: more difficult, even, than getting that damn first one out of the way. (Of course, we’re less than four months in, so there will be more difficult times. I promise.)

As you know, we’ve moved again. For the second time in less than a year.  This one is very different from the last. The last one was across the country. This one is across Middlefield Rd. The last one had all of our belongings (some broken) arriving in a huge truck and unloaded into our house in less than three hours. This one took place over the course of a week, with Chris and I making no less than 8 trips a day in our mini-van. We had nine months to prepare for the last move, (The pregnancy metaphors abound with that one: I’ll post about it some time.) We had about three weeks to prepare for this one.

About the time I was at my most-stressed with our last move—we had been in California for just a few weeks—I read the status update of a friend of mine who has moved with her husband and three young children (the oldest is eight) AT LEAST six times since having her first child. (These weren’t “small moves,” either. I lost track of all of them, but it goes something like this: Colorado-Kansas-Colorado-Washington-Colorado-Colorado.) Anyway, she wrote, “No matter how many times you’ve done it, no move is easy.”

Indulging my own self-pity, I sort of blew off the comment. She was referring to her Colorado-Colorado move and I thought, at least she’s staying in the same state and I bet they’re moving this time because they’ve found a better house. (Heaven forbid, in the age of facebook, that I actually contact her myself to find out; instead I read her status updates, like all 432 of her closest friends, and feel like I’m all caught up.)

Well, here I am, freshly moved in the same area of the same town in the same state, to a better house, and I want to say: IT IS NOT EASY!!! It seems like we all know the statistics about life’s most stressful events: after the death of a loved one, moving is the #2 stressor, right? (If I had more time, I would look up verification and link to it here, but you will have to google it yourself this time and let me know if I’m wrong in the comments.)

The fastest way for me to explain the stress is to show you a picture of my “closet”:

My closet, my mind.

Each morning, I wake up and look for a pair of clean undies (that are MINE) in this pile, sometimes finding some, sometimes going without, and I consider wearing something other than the same pair of work pants and baseball shirt that I’ve been wearing every day for the past two weeks, but decide a uniform is best in stressful times, and then go on to look for my toothbrush, I think of how this mess is the perfect representation of my mind.

I wore this pretty much every day for two weeks when we moved across the country. And I am going to wear it every day for two weeks now.

Even in the best of times, I am not the most mentally organized person. (Right now my friend Rachel is reading this and thinking, That’s the understatement of the year.) So I try very hard to have an organized space around me. I use hooks and dividers and files and baskets. I identify clutter on a daily basis and put it in a box near the door that I take took Goodwill regularly. (One time I had to go back and reclaim a puzzle that Luke saw in the box, though, so I now I don’t take the kids on this errand.) And I am Very Slow To Unpack. This must drive Chris nuts: he wants to take a box and put it on a shelf and be done with it. But I insist I know what is inside every container, can assess whether we really need it, and then think carefully about the most efficient spot it can go. I don’t like things hidden in storage. To me this means we don’t really need them in the first place. (Except for our Christmas stockings. Those are in a box labeled “Christmas Stockings” in the “seasonal” section of the garage.)

So, my closet will get where it needs to be in time. The kitchen is done. That matters most when you have three children. And, since it’s in the kitchen, the junk drawer is done, too:

Hope for my mind?

But here is the difficult part. The stress of this environment is messing with me. I feel good at doing two things right now: making up excuses to go to Ikea and giving my therapist job-security.

Here is a comprehensive list of the things I DON’T feel good at:

(um…I just published this post on accident. I’m writing the list in a new post now. Stay tuned for, like, 20 minutes.)

*update! it’s published!*

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