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I watch everything else on the web
I only have a few months left on my DirecTV - and then it's gone too!
Oh, and you say watch them online. Well, most of the things you can watch online, we can't cuz they're only viewable if you live in the continental US. A bunch of crap, I tell ya!!!! :-)
Also, you should look into hooking your laptop up to the tv...makes internet tv nice
I'm still wondering about the microwave, too. What's up with that? Is it just a decision to eat healthier? Use less electricity?
anyway, before i go on a tirade... great decision! and good luck with paying off that debt!
no microwave for me, either. you don't use it as much as you think you would.
We have been cable TV free for over a year just to save $$$. I like TV, but not $65/month worth.
I ride a scooter to work to save gas at 80 miles/gallon and have cut phone features down to nothing. Home phone is now only $15/mo. I'd have cut that too and gone cell phones only if it weren't for a surcharge from ATT for dry-loop DSL.
The one I'm having the hardest time with: we (fam of 4) dropped our gym memberships to save $120/mo. Major bummer, but I can still exercise at the tiny little HOA community gym. It's not THAT bad I guess.
Life is so good.
We canceled our home phone and also canceled our regular trash pickup, started recycling and started a compost pile in the backyard. After recycling and composting, we don't make much regular trash. We now pay $6 a month for curbside recycling pickup and when we have trash, we drop it off at the dump.
Neither of us has ever had a car payment (and we just bought a car), and we've completely stopped using our credit cards. Our one and only debt is our mortgage, which we pay extra on every month. By paying extra, we managed to make almost 100 payments last year.
But yeah, hook up your mac to your tv and surround sound. Even with TV, I still stream a lot of stuff.
No lie, it's been difficult, but worth it? heck yea!
$8K to go till debt free baby
*sigh*
Good call on the microwave... mine is about to die... I may not replace it... hmmm.
Taking that stuff out of the house can help you focus more on tree hugging, but eventually it just comes down to me surfing the internet more or playing RockBand more.
my husband is tech savvy, so for years we had high def tv without paying a cent, and tivo without cable too. however, moving to ga put us too far away from downtown to be able to get high def over the airwaves or any channel clearly (you should see the HUGE antenna in our attic that doesn't help at all!), so we went without for the first 2 years here. we just had netflix.
we caved in and got cable for the olympics. now my husband regrets paying the monthly bill. we may pay it off and go back to $3 a month with netflix.
i admire your decision to pay off debt. you're right about what you can get online, but i think you'll find you don't miss it as much as you think you will.
looking forward to meeting you at heather's blog party!
A good alternative to Netflix is the local library. Ours carries the latest movies and you can check-out 10 at a time for up to 3 weeks. Best of all they're FREE.
Congrats. We did the same kind of things when we were young marrieds / getting our family started and established. There are still many, many luxeries we do not have that modern america has. It is also overwhelming to me the amount of money we spend on our teen kids, who are by all intents and purposes walking around with portable offices. I know this is all relative as we are guilty of much indulgence. But we take a lot of heat from folks on being so conservative. Compared to my childhood, what my kids have in my eyes is a lot, so it is funny to me when folks tease me for being a tight wad. For example, when we were kids our bed room was our bonus room. Kids went to their room to play - not a seperate great room. Likewise, we did not have personal cell phones (it wasn't on the market yet - I know, I'm old); rather, we simply used the family land line. And sometimes even dialed our numbers, as in litterally, dialed the number around the circle. Anyway, all that to say, I am really proud of you. We spent many years taking turns with our single car with one of us riding the bus and we are the better for it.
Blessings,
Roxanne
get a few a/v cables for your computer and you can watch shows on hulu on the big screen. it's great!
People still look at me strange when I say we don't have a TV.
Not sure owning a house is an American staple but in the suburbs it sure seems like it!
Also, eating out. We eat out only on occasions such as birthdays or anniversaries. :)
We pack homemade lunches everyday for all the kids & for hubs. Hubs taking his lunch saves us about $5 a day. I can send lunch & 2 bottled waters for about $2 for hubs vs. the $7 he was spending. Not including saving about $2 for both kids to take a lunch instead of buying.
We also gave up on having a big bday party for each kid every year. They have big parties on even years. Small family parties on odd years. This saves me $150 per kid on those even years.
Goodwill. We live in a nice area. Goodwill rocks here. I buy stuff on 1/2 off day & use my 1/2 off coupon. I then rip apart & repurpose clothes for the girls. I made summer dresses this year out of men's hawaiian shirts. They were adorable & only 1.25 each.
I truly believe it will work wonders to improve your happiness in life. Not only because you'll create more time to spend with your family, but you also won't be subjected to the doom and gloom in today's news reporting or the bombardment of advertising telling you what you need to purchase to live a happier and more fulfilling life.
When I was living solo, I dropped both my television and internet service. It took some getting used to, but I decided I didn't need it anymore and I lived fine for several months without it. I picked up a roommate who couldn't live without his incessant desire to play World of Warcraft and his aircard just wasn't giving him enough bandwidth. So, I've got the internet back, at least but I only spend an hour or two (tops) cruising the web and that's usually catching up on all my tech reading.
The big change for me was deciding to commute year-round, rain or shine, hot or cold on a motorcycle. While the discomfort and inconvenience for doing so isn't for everybody, saving a minimum of 60% in gasoline (and who knows how much for maintenance costs) is well worth it.
While I'm glad the price of gasoline is dropping, it's somewhat sad to see it low instead of high. I think it's time for Americans to really make hard decisions about their life and find a new appreciation for what their time and money is worth.
we go without: cable. home phones. new cars (Go Junky Car Club!). new clothes every season. we only "rent" videos FREE from the library. and rarely go see a new release film opting for the $3.50 theater - and even then it has to be a GREAT movie.
I have it on Mondays and Tuesdays because I have to go to NP in the mornings.
She has it the other days.
She drops Seanna and I off at Buckhead on Wed and TH since Seanna goes to PreSchool.
I take the train to the bus and then walk 20 minutes home.
She wakes up at 6 am to get me to church with all 3 kids.
That is the roughest day.
But we make it work and are saving BOAT LOADS of money.
You can do it!!!!!!
The tv thing is out of the question.
I did sell my tv, in hopes to watch it less.
It was a 50/50 success.
My next step is downgrading vehicles from a Yukon to something decent on gas.
I'm a Work-In-Process, that's for sure.
I hope your new step takes you where you wanna be man.
http://vagabondrunn.wordpress.com
oh, and at 38 i'm starting to cook... it is consuming my life. it's all good though... i'm actually pretty decent at it.
count down is on. hubby getting laid off in two weeks... here we grow again! can't wait to see how this turns out.
Alot of changes. All good.
I can't remember the last time we went to the theater, and if we do go for food, it's usually Subway. We split a footlong sub and drink water instead of soda.
We honestly thought we would miss cable and the restaurants more than we do. It's been great, and we should be able to pay off our car sooner than expected now!
wingnut
I don't pay our sattelite bill, but I don't think I'd want to cuz they don't have my soap opera online, and I don't think Doctor Who is online, either. I think everything else is, though, once those two shows are online, then I'll be willing to get rid of Satellite!
http://www.morethandodgeball.com/?p=4360
www.boxee.tv
Apple TV
Netflix
The tools are out there. The way we think about home entertainment is changing.
ditched the home phone line too...
gave one of our cars to the womens shelter...
stopped using the dishwasher and instead have a competitions with the kids on drying dishes...
stacked our kids on a bunkbed to save space..
oh yeah, and just leased out our house to another family.
We're moving into a 400 square foot RV. Goodbye trappings, hello freedom!
God Bless. See you on the road.
now it is helping us with the money
We don't do credit cards.
We garage sale for needed items.
We have been known to use FreeCycle.
Not often do we buy anything new.
We limit ourselves to budgeted TracFones.
We don't buy many pre-made meals and rarely eat out.
And Dave Ramsey's system works baby. Cash only. Credit/Debit cards are for suckers.
Best decision we ever made. 5 kids, 2 adults in our family. We read, do devotions together, sleep more, etc.
We get our news from the net.
It was mostly because of philosophical differences with tv programming, and the realization that the US has more propaganda coming out of that box than Communist Russia in its heyday.
Welcome to freedom.
We often hook our apple computers to the tv to watch tv on computer on the tv (clear as mud, right?).