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How We Got Here, part 3: Wes’s Edition

April 27th, 2009 By admin
This post may contain affiliate links, which means I will make a small commission if you click and make a purchase.

How We Got Here: Part 1

How We Got Here, Part 2: Kaley’s Edition

My wife has a way with words. On the contrary I only have a bad way with commas. I once got a 40 on an English paper in college due to my unabashed misuse of commas. To this day I am gun-shy when it comes to using them so I would suggest taking one BIG BREATH before trying to read the story of my life.

“I grew up frugal.”

It is what I know, it is how my parents taught me to live. My Pop worked very hard to provide enough income to keep my Mom from having to work. When my brother and I started school my Mom worked part-time jobs that would allow her to get back home before the school bus dropped us off. We didn’t have a lot, but we certainly had enough. My parents were the dog; they wagged money like it was their tail.

First off, I learned that lots of people throw away money and that I shouldn’t be one of them. There I was at the horse show hanging around the trash bin after lunch (isn’t every little spendthrift into dumpster diving?), like a cat ready to pounce. They would walk up and toss it in, before it could hit bottom I had snagged it. It was in my plastic bag, and my eyes were peeled for my next victim. Don’t they realize that with a little bit of effort and some sticky fingers they could have a nickel to call their own? I wasn’t about to tell them. The masses threw those can deposits away before recycling was cool, so I snagged them and turned them into video games.

Coupons, packing your lunch, hand me downs, washed out sandwich bags, hatching your own chickens, patched up pants… they all rang up as dollar signs in the Ehret household. A trip to the grocery store meant that poor lady at the register had to double and triple my Mom’s manufacturer coupons, whoo hooo FREE FOOD! Mom drove around in her Chevette, hunting the supermarkets for deals like Dirty Harry hunted bad guys with his .44 magnum.

A little extra time and effort clipping coupons was my Mom’s way of sticking it to the man, or woman in most cases. She stretched our $40 a week grocery budget like it was nobody’s business. It is only in looking back that I’m able to marvel at it now. My mom was willing to do the UNIMAGINABLE (clipping coupons, using buy-one-get-one deals, she bought in bulk, and exercised restraint) to increase our food budget by upwards of 25%. I’m glad she did too, because we loved that dish of ice-cream during The Cosby Show.

Secondly I learned that Kids = Slave Labor…I mean ‘Hard work can save a lot of money’. Growing up to us meant some chores intermingled with Scooby-Doo and WWF Wrestling, or maybe it was the other way around. My brother and I were scrawny but we could pull weeds, shell peas, and toss firewood with the best of them thanks to our plantation-owning parents.

Gardening, splitting firewood, raising chickens for the eggs, and milking goats all rang up dollar signs and exercise. News flash–when you grow some of your own food and chop your own wood for heat you don’t have to pay someone else nearly as much to feed you and keep you warm. Rather than seeing it as grueling work, we saw it as a way of controlling where we spent our money. We could hand it over to the “the man”, or our dirty fingernails and a little sweat could be turned into a new cd player, a swimming pool, or a week at camp. A little effort really does go a long way.

Thirdly, I learned the satisfaction of doing it myself –vs- paying some schlub to take my money. My first bike was a nice repainted compilation of bike parts, the greatest of which was a beautiful cushy white banana seat. My Pop spent a few hours putting that bike together for me to learn to on. I also looked on as he snubbed the Maytag repair man by figuring out how to re-wire our washer for the price of parts. Pop took on things he had no business fixing, he’d tinker around and a day later it was good as new.

Fourthly, I learned that a budget is a very good companion. Every Thursday evening, like clockwork, my Pop was at the kitchen counter with his checkbook and a stack of bills. He had it all worked out–what bill to pay when and which account to take it from.

“That money is already spent,” he’d say as he pointed to a lump of cash sitting in the ledger book. He knew the car insurance would need to be paid every six months so he saved every week and when the bill came due he sent that “already spent money” in to pay it.

I didn’t appreciate it as much then as I do now, but my Pop was exercising some serious wisdom right in front of me. Wisdom says you don’t spend money that you don’t have, save for an emergency, save for a rainy day, save for something of quality even if it takes a little longer.

These formative years of frugality laid the groundwork for ‘How I Got Here’.

TO BE CONTINUED…

Filed Under: About Us, Money Saving Monday Tagged With: how we got here

Cha-Ching Challenge

April 25th, 2009 By Kaley
This post may contain affiliate links, which means I will make a small commission if you click and make a purchase.

Cha-Ching challenge

Welcome to the weekly Cha-Ching Challenge!

Would you like to join us?

Simply copy and paste the image above (or the html code below) in a post detailing all of your savings for the week.  Each week I will choose one participating blog to highlight right here on Cha-Ching on a Shoestring. Please be sure to leave your comment no later than Sunday (4/26 at 12 p.m. EST).

Here are my savings for the week:

Savings from coupons and store sales: $69.92

  • We scored a 50% off coupon from oldnavyweekly.com.  I used it to buy some much needed summer clothes for my boys and socks that don’t fall off for my 8 month old!
  • Got two GREAT deals at Target this week:
    • Market Pantry Fruit Snacks (snack size located near the registers) – $0.89 each
      Use $1/1 Target coupon here.
      FREE after coupon
      (I ‘bought’ 5!)
    • I also got the Glade candle deal I posted about here.

Savings from cutting costs:  $30.00

  • Wes learned a new skill this week: coloring my hair!  I got some hair dye free at Rite Aid last week and suckered him into asked him if he’d help me use it.  I figure this saves us the $30 we would have used in a salon.  Wish I had a picture of this one!

Savings from shopping the deals: $59.20

  • If you missed my post on the Deckers Leather sandals I scored for $5.80, you missed out!  Check it out here.  Let me know if the deal still works.

TOTAL SAVINGS: $159.12

TOTAL SAVINGS FOR THE YEAR: $1063.33  (WE BROKE $1000!)

HOW DID YOU DO? Leave a comment with a link to your blog and let’s celebrate our savings! Be sure to add a link to this post to your blog so others can join in.

Here is the html code for the button above:

<a href=”https://chachingonashoestring.com/2009/04/25/chachingchallenge/” title=”Cha-Ching Challenge“><img src=”https://chachingonashoestring.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/button-challenge-125.png” title=”Cha-Ching Challenge” /></a>

Filed Under: Uncategorized

New Code for Huggies Rewards Program

April 24th, 2009 By Kaley
This post may contain affiliate links, which means I will make a small commission if you click and make a purchase.

Sign up for Huggies Enjoy the Ride Rewards program and enter code: WPBXZ-RDDNS-PPPGB to receive 2 additional points.

Note: A friend e-mailed last night to ask where the codes are on the diapers.  After tearing my sons Pull-ups package apart, I realized that indeed, there are no codes on the diapers.  I did some investigating and it appears that the codes are only going to be found on Huggies advertisements and e-mails from the company for now.  Let me know if you have heard anything differently!

Filed Under: 'Free Money' Tagged With: Huggies Rewards Codes

How We Got Here, part 2: Kaley’s Edition

April 23rd, 2009 By Kaley
This post may contain affiliate links, which means I will make a small commission if you click and make a purchase.

You can read the first part of this series here.

I’ve always been a fan of the “This is Your Life” concept. If there were a made-for-tv movie highlighting all of the events in my life leading up to my current state of frugality, I think it might look something like this.

Cue soundtrack. Cut to slideshow of old family pictures. Begin voice-over of Kaley speaking.

The early years–I’m the one with the finger in my mouth

“I grew up poor.

Wow, that feels weird to say. I think I had no idea how poor we were. My parents worked hard to find creative ways to keep us from feeling poor. And rarely did we talk about money being tight.

But, the salary of a small country church pastor is small and our family was large, so we were definitely poor.

If I had to do it all over, I think I might grow up poor again. (Although I might choose to be filthy rich the third time around!) For a lot of reasons.

First of all, I learned how little I really needed. Cut to scene of young girl sitting contentedly on ugly orange carpet. I was the kid who wore her sister’s hand-me-downs with pride, had no hate about the ugly orange carpet in her teeny tiny bedroom, and was completely unfazed by the fact that the guy she dated in high school had a brand new red sports car. And I promise I wasn’t weird.

I also learned that I liked to save my money. At some point when I was younger, my parents gave us a set of three envelopes to keep track of our money. We labeled them Savings, Tithe, and Spending. I would separate any money that I earned into those three envelopes. My favorite envelope was the one for savings. Maybe I was secretly hoping to save enough to replace that ugly, orange carpet…I don’t know.

Being poor also meant that I saw God provide for me a lot. When I was in college, my parents moved overseas to become missionaries in Korea. So our family’s pay scale changed from poor to dirt poor. To be honest, I’m not sure how I was able to afford college. But, over and over, God showed His care for me in the form of financial provision.

Cut to scene of college-aged girl in line at the grocery store, searching through her purse. Whether it was the $.25 that I found on the day that all I needed was a quarter or the $100 bills that would show up randomly from a secret provider or the woman behind me in line at Kroger who paid for the rest of my grocery bill when I didn’t have enough money–I knew my lack of funds was not a problem that was too big for God.

There were a few things that being poor did not teach me, however. Learning to be wise in my money management was one of them. Cut to scene of girl standing in the middle of a bank, crying. Loudly. The day that I stood in the middle of my bank sobbing uncontrollably because I had bounced my first check was one evidence of my lack of money sense. (I’ve always felt sorry for that poor bank teller.)

Cut to scene of girl devouring a pack of Twizzlers. I also signed up for a credit card in college because by doing so, I would get a pack of Twizzlers. By the time I was done with college, that was the most expensive pack of Twizzlers I have ever purchased. I had a good chunk of debt and little idea of how to get rid of it.

Then I married Wes.”

To be continued…

Filed Under: About Us Tagged With: how we got here

Coupon Database

April 22nd, 2009 By Kaley
This post may contain affiliate links, which means I will make a small commission if you click and make a purchase.

Just a heads-up that I have updated my coupon database.  You can view it by clicking here.

These coupons are from my Sunday papers, beginning March 1.  Yours may vary depending on where you live.  Feel free to check it out to see if it can be a help to you!

To find out how I use this database and organize my coupons, go here.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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My  name is Kaley. Wife, Mama, and Dreamer, I have a passion for saving money, living simply, and helping others find creative ways to live large on a limited budget.

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