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Counting My Blessings

Posted by Lizzie on May-28-2008

I have issues with budgeting and planning. I don’t like to do either. However, with the way gas prices are today, I think it’s a good time to start. My husband and I aren’t going to retire any day soon and we’d like to keep our home, so this is something I really need to get a grip on. Right?

Lately I’ve seen a lot of people asking “What are you doing to cope?” That’s a good question. The economy is tanking and people are feeling the pinch. It’s come down to “Do I keep all 5 cell phones? Cut down to basic cable? Eat day old bread?” While I’ve been trying to learn to cut down on our expenses and find extra dollars here and there, I’ve been thinking of what my grandparents had to endure. And somehow managed to survive.

My great-grandmother was born before the Great Depression. They managed to live on $2-5 a week- if that. They didn’t have a car (much less two) and couldn’t afford to buy their children a different pair of shoes for each different outfit. As a matter of fact, my grandmother once told me that they had their “Sunday best”- which was only worn on Sunday - and their everyday clothes. Two outfits. That’s it. How did they do it? And meat was only eaten once a week- or twice if there was a holiday. They convened at the neighbor’s house when there was an interesting radio program playing, otherwise they did without (no TV mind you).

I look around my house and realize that we’ve got it good. I’m typing this on a PC and posting it via the Internet and if we were really that bad off, I would have neither of these luxuries. I wouldn’t have a special shampoo or be able to choose whole grain bread over white bread. I wouldn’t be able to say “Hey! I need new sandals because these are just ugly!” Nope. I would be canning and hoarding and scraping to make sure my kids had a roof over their heads, not worrying about going to basic cable instead of America’s Top 150 on Dish. My children have closets full of clothes and have milk and meat everyday. I’m scrimping and saving to keep these things. So they don’t go without them. Not so they’ll survive. Because I have no worries that our money woes are going to cause our kids to get sick, go homeless or die. We are LUCKY. I don’t think enough people realize just how lucky they are.

I’m still coming up with a budget, though. I like our little luxuries and don’t want to have to give them up. I like having cable and the internet and being able to buy my kids little cheap toys every so often. I like being able to choose between good food and processed. I like that I can take my girls to a decent doctor and not have to worry about them dying from an ear infection (my great-uncle died from an ear infection when he was 1 year old). We have one car (and it runs!), two tvs (we married our households so one of them is 15 years old), and one PC. Our bills are paid on time every month and our refrigerator is always stocked. We’ve got it good. I’m not complaining. I’m counting my blessings.

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May
14

Post-Birth Baby Shower?

Posted by Lizzie in Miscellaneous 

We didn’t get to have a baby shower for Pee Wee and KJ. Money was a little tight there towards the end of her pregnancy and then POOF! He’s here. So, now I want to do a post-birth baby shower of some sort. A kind of “Welcome to the World” kind of thing. But what do you put on the party invitations? Who do you invite? How much hand sanitizer is needed?

She has everything she needs right now for him, so I was thinking we could request diapers in various sizes1. When I had Pee Wee I purchased most of her baby items second hand, then spent a lot of my working time putting a lot of diapers on lay-a-way. Unfortunately, Pee Wee had to stop working in February and there’s no where around here that offers lay-a-way anymore (Curse you, Wal-Mart!!). If we invited 25 people and asked each one to bring an economy pack of diapers of various sizes, we could be stocked up for a little while. Yes? At least until Pee Wee is able to get back to work.

She, of course, is not keen on that idea. She wants even more clothes. I don’t blame her. But, shoot, diapers are expensive and if we can get them for free why not? When she gave birth to the little cutie she only “needed”2 two things. Thanks to the extreme generosity of a friend of mine, she was able to purchase those two things. Diapers aren’t so cute, but they sure are necessary and anything else is gravy. Right?

I think I’ve made my decision. :)

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  1. I’m an advocate of attachment parenting and exclusive breastfeeding, but cloth diapers are out of my arena of advocacy. []
  2. Read: REALLY wanted []



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