
There is a lot of advice out there on how to live a frugal life. You can go from anything as simple as turning off the lights when you leave a room to grinding your own flour. There are forums out there where people discuss the way they use the rainwater they collect to do everything from watering plants to flushing their lavatories. These have their place. Being frugal is not about washing out Ziploc Baggies and reusing them. It is not about grinding your own wheat or collecting rainwater.

It is not even about that new dress you did not buy. It is about thinking before you spend. It is about conserving what you have. It is about saving money and managing your finances. The point is that every household has to look at their own situation and then decide where they can - or need to - become more frugal. Frugal living does not mean doing without. It does not mean that you do not have what you need. In fact, it means the opposite. Frugal shoppers are careful. They take care of their money and make the most of it. Many frugal shoppers actually have everything they want and the satisfaction that it does not hurt them financially. They spend time to make wise decisions. They learn how to make their dollars really work for them, instead of against them. They have more for less money. Frugal living is about ! reducing what you spend, living within your means, using what you have and taking care of your belongings, including your money. It is about making goals and working to reach them. Which would you rather be: the person who decides when and where to spend his money or the person whose money is spent before he makes it? .
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Are Plastic Ziploc Bags Suddenly Green or Greenwashed? Every year I visit the San Francisco Green Festival and wander up and down the aisles of vendor booths, looking for interesting plastic-free products but always finding a ton of plastic packaging. Organic foods packaged in plastic. Natural drinks in plastic bottles. Compostable products shrink-wrapped in plastic.
#19:: Reuse Ziploc Baggies ***I DO NOT OWN THE ZIPLOC BRAND NOR AM I COMPENSATED TO ENDORSE THEM*** Why toss them in the garbage after one use? Ziploc baggies are super expensive, especially the gallon ones!! Well guess what? You can wash and reuse them over and over. It's pretty simple: fill the baggie up with water and soap, slosh it around, empty it, and let it air dry.
Hey, Scrooge! 3 Signs That You're Too Cheap MJ Kim/Getty Images Frugality is a great thing. It can pave the way to financial freedom, security and even wealth. But it can also pave the way to madness, if you take it too far. Here are some signs you might be taking things to the extreme -- and what you should be doing instead. 1. You Put Way Too Much Time Into Penny-Pinching The internet is...
Whole Wheat Chocolate Chip Mint Cookies 1 cup chocolate chips (used Nestle brand) ~10 fudge mint cookies, crushed (used Nice! Walgreens brand) Directions: Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line baking sheets with either Silpats or parchment paper. In a bowl, combine baking powder, baking soda and salt. Sift using a fork or sifter, if you have. Combine butter and both sugars in a mixer bowl.
Saving Pennies or Dollars? Reusing Ziploc Bags Saving Pennies or Dollars is a new semi-regular series on The Simple Dollar, inspired by a great discussion on The Simple Dollar's Facebook page concerning frugal tactics that might not really save that much money. I'm going to take some of the scenarios described by the readers there and try to break down the numbers to see if the savings is...
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Image credits:
#PhotoADayApril Day 10 - Cold (Photo credit: JulieFaith)
Everything I took to study abroad / Todo lo que traje conmigo para estudiar en el extranjero (Photo credit: Trevor.Huxham)
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