Monday, March 14, 2011

The Story of Stuff







This Fun and upbeat film says it all!

How are the main American activities of watching TV and shopping contributing to our declining National Happiness?

Can a return to our Grandparents values of thrift and self sufficiency help us live a better life?

Watch this film to find out!
 

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Buy Nothing Day, Revised - Part II

What things will we stop buying? 

      Well for starters, BOOKS, I can satisfy my book addiction by using the free downloads from The Gutenburg Project, Google Books, and the once a week freebie from Barnes and Noble. Yes, there is the library in the county but we live quite a few miles away, and I have found the cost of gas and the fines for over due books tend to keep me away.

     Next on the hit list is CLOTHING, our closets are jam packed with things we never wear. We plan to shop at home when we think we need a new outfit, because with a little digging we may find that we already have something that will do just nicely.

      Next up is TOOLS. We do need quite a few tools around the homestead and often in the middle of a project we find we have to run out to Wintergreen Hardware Store to buy something. Again we plan to shop at home and try to make do with items we already have in the shed or blacksmith shop. I have heard it is a quite neighborly thing to borrow and lend and we plan on doing that more in the coming year.
     
     We spend a lot of money on MUSIC. Not only vinyl albums at garage sales and thrift stores, CD’s and downloads from the internet, but on the acquisition of new instruments and gadgets. Again we plan to do the shop at home technique and hunt though the music cabinet and drawers to find strings and other small items. In order to upgrade my mountain dulcimer or get that better sounding mandolin, I am going to have to use the money I get from selling some lesser used instruments or arrange a barter or swap.
 
     The money we spend on POTTERY and ART, I have justified as an investment in our local art community. I am saddened to not be able to give them that support this year. Perhaps we will be spurred on to create our own works of art and thereby not support a community but join one.
     
      FURNISHINGS will probably be the easiest things not to buy. In fact we may be selling some things as we attempt to simplify and de-clutter. We may not be true minimalists, but we could definitely learn from that life style.
  
     GIFT'S and PRESENTS are already low on our expenditures. We look on gift giving times as a chance to share some of our products from the homestead: mushroom logs, jams, jelly and preserves, potted plants. Any do it yourself project makes the list. Another favorite and well appreciated gift are photo's or CD's made of the recipient at family events.





     One large area of our spending involves our PETS. We currently have two large dogs, one cat, two laying hens and a rooster. Under no circumstance will we allow another stray to come inside our fence! I know I have said it before, but I mean it this time! No matter how cute, pitiful or supposedly temporary: I repeat we will take in no new pets!!! (PS, this does not include the creating and hatching of new chicks).
     We do have the expense of feeding the pets and except for the chickens we have to take them our vet, Commonwealth Veterinary Clinic for regular check- ups. We can cut back on buying them TOYS, but they really do love their stuffed friends. The dogs love them to death though licking and fleaing and taking them apart to get rid of that nasty squeaker and all that unneeded fluff! So, they need new toys on a once or twice a year basis, but maybe I can use my mom's old sewing machine to make homemade loveys.
     Chris reminds me that a good source for loveys is the Goodwill Store. Stuffed toys go for about a buck a piece! We could pick up a few when we are dropping off our donations gleaned from all this closet shopping and it's direct consequence - closet cleaning.
     
     We take this step toward a simpler, less consumer driven lifestyle with excitement and enthusiasm, tempered with just a little anxiety, that we have lived with too much for so long that like addicts, we will sabotage ourselves in little ways and resist change. That is why it is necessary that we share this journey with your our readers. A public resolution has much more power than a private one. There is strength in community. Here's to CHANGE!

   

Buy Nothing Day, Revised


      Tax Day Cometh! We took advantage of a dreary slow work day to do the yearly task of updating our budget and filling out forms for the accountant. We came up with a hit list of things to change which will help ensure the survival of our business and our Backyard Homestead. It's like making New Year's Resolutions, but with real consequences.
     First we printed out a list from Quicken of our past years spending habits. We found out right away that we were not doing a particularity good job tracking our spending. Second, we had a few ugly surprises in the form of how much money is unaccounted for and wasted. We began to ask ourselves: "How can we change our over-consumptive behaviors?"

           We have participated for years in the "Buy Nothing Day" event promoted by Adbusters and The Reverend Billy and The Church of Life After Shopping. Instead of one day, the Friday after Thanksgiving, my idea is to do it for one month and then another and another till we meet our goal of ONE YEAR without shopping. Each month we will assess our spending and buying to determine how successfully we are changing our lifestyle.
         
     
We already have a commitment to buy organic and local whenever possible. We frequent our Farmer's Market. Food and it's cost is not the issue, but we often turn a day at the market into a shopping spree buying CD's, pottery, art, and other locally made items. When we  make our monthly trip across the mountain to the feed store, we often stop at favorite shops and come home with many items that are not on our list. We are prompted not by need, but by our emotional state at the moment or by the effects on us of the visual displays and the perverse fact that shopping is fun. It is this spur of the moment shopping as recreation that we mean to curtail

    So to put the breaks on our wasteful spending we came up with this list:
  1. Use Quicken more efficiently by adding a memo to each expenditure
  2. Once a month print out a report and use it to assess our progress
  3. Research and find a more affordable health insurance plan
  4. Stop using credit
  5. Limit use of Amazon, E-bay, Pay Pal
  6. Buy only consumable products necessary for our life, homestead and business
      But wait, how can we justify spending and buying and still participate in the "Buy Nothing"? Well, because the items we buy must fit into a special criteria:
  • Food items that we are unable to produce on the homestead
  • Consumable products that make life bearable: toilet paper, shampoo, toothpaste,etc.
  • Products necessary to run the business: paper, ink, stamps, etc.
   Next up? A list of the items that will no longer be in our shopping cart!