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Urban Homestead Over Rural Homestead

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Posted on 11th May 2010 by Mish in frugal | gardening | green

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It would be very easy for me to leave the city and head back to the country. It really would. I love a lot of things about living in the country. I love the quiet and the space. I’m still slightly freaked out by the amount of people who walk past my house each day and gaze into my yard – or windows (we don’t have a fence). In fact, I was so bothered by the idea of being on display that I was ready, as I said in my last post, to give up my third of an acre in downtown De Pere, and head for the hills.

But then I really thought about what that would entail. First, my kids really like it here. They ride their bikes on trails and paths and sidewalks (something they could never really do in Vermont). They walk to the library on a whim – and I don’t have to gather everyone up and put them in the car and drive 30 miles to a library that has more than 12 books. If I need a gallon of milk – or a package of marshmallows for Rice Krispie treats, there is usually a kid nearby willing to take a bike to the store and get it for me – or they’re willing to take a walk with me to go and get it. Except for large trips to the store and field trip days, we rarely use our car.

I used to feel stranded without my car. Now I feel liberated to not need it. My oldest daughter (my only schooled child) takes the city bus to high school in Green Bay and has learned the public transportation system inside and out. She’ll get her license soon, but probably not a car, as she knows the expense involved.
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How To Be Kind…

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Posted on 16th April 2009 by Mish in miscellaneous

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I loved this article from Zen Habits author Leo Babauta. He writes about being kind, something I have worked at being for a long time. Being purposely kind, I must admit, has been hard for me in the past. I did not grow up or live around people who were kind (except for my mother). In fact, in my younger world, it was always more acceptable to say or do the “mean” thing – and to try and tear other people apart. I think this was more a self-defense mechanism or a way to put aside insecurities, but whatever the cause, I have worked hard in my adult life to be kind and to teach my children compassion and kindness for others…even in the face of unkindness by others.
I try and do this with simple things, like letting someone ahead of me in line; allowing another driver to get into a traffic lane; letting pedestrians cross the street safely; picking up trash in my neighborhood – that kind of thing. I hope that my children will be purposely kind too – and will travel an easier path than I did. I have often told them things like, “if you are going to lend someone, particularly a friend, money, don’t expect it back – only lend what you can afford to give.”

My example was one time I borrowed $10 from a friend at a store. I didn’t need the $10. It was for an item at a thrift store that was a really good deal and she insisted I go ahead and purchase it “on her.” In fact, she went so far as to say not to bother giving it back – as I had babysat her child a number of times without asking for anything in return. Imagine my surprise when at a little league game a number of days later she made fun of me in front of a group of people for buying my kids cookies at the concession stand when I still owed her from a week before. I was embarrassed – and honestly, on the verge of tears. I not only wouldn’t have ever thought about the $10 again, I wouldn’t have mocked a person in front of others!
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Create Your Own Victory Garden

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Posted on 10th March 2009 by Mish in food | frugal | gardening

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A long time ago, when I lived in a small apartment with two small children, I found a book at a used bookstore called, “The Apartment Farmer.” Within days of reading this book, I turned my small suburban apartment into a small suburban farm. For the cost of the seeds and some containers I found at thrift stores, I grew tomatoes on my little patio in a five gallon bucket. I started seeds in egg cartons. I had peppers of all sorts. You name it, I grew it. I even grew two pumpkins in a huge whiskey barrel -type contraption. I cut down a bucket and grew small cukes, too.

Spoiled by the luxury of a huge garden area in Vermont, I am now faced with a small (in farm terms) yard once again. While I am enjoying the challenges of raising a family green and frugal in the city – I must say that I’ve been concerned about my ability to garden effectively and provide the amount of produce that I once did.

We are fortunate, here in Green Bay, to live very close to the “country” as it were – and a wealth of providers of various produce. But I like to grow stuff. I like the frugality of it. I like the exercise. I like to plant stuff and watch it grow. I like to roam around the garden early in the morning with a cup of coffee and debug a few plants and pull a few stray weeds.

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Top 5 Books for Living Simply

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Posted on 19th January 2009 by Mish in frugal

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I read – a lot. And because I am constantly striving to live more simply, more frugally and more eco-consciously – I read a lot of books about those topics.

What follows are my top five picks for some of the best reading for living simply and frugally. I have been inspired by these books and awed by them. I hope you’ll enjoy them:

An End to Poverty – On Consuming Less

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Posted on 1st May 2008 by Mish in miscellaneous

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Appeared in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer – Sept. 2006

We can end poverty in America. And in no way do we need help from the government to do it.

Lately, everywhere I look – books, radio, television – there is someone telling me how to “eliminate debt” or “build wealth.” And the majority of these programs are geared for people who have high-paying jobs, huge homes and new cars and are feeling the “burden” of too much debt. What I don’t see a lot of are books or shows dedicated to helping people live – and live well – off $10 an hour. In order to be on a “debt diet” one needs to be able to acquire debt. I dare say that most financial experts would argue that you can’t live well off $10 an hour. Those families who make $10 an hour are impoverished and should be educated as to how to make more money. And that’s where the help ends: “Get a better job, get some debt and then I can help you.”

So what is poverty? Is it families who try and exist on Mom’s salary of $10 an hour? Or is it not having food in the house? Or is it not having the house? Is it not having electricity? Running water? Heat?

I read a story in the newspaper recently about a man who didn’t have heat and was in line at soup kitchen. He didn’t have any money because he had to pay his electric bill and for his cable TV.

Think that’s crazy? How many Americans, when asked, do you think would pause if they were asked if TV, the Internet or their cell phone was a luxury or a necessity? I bet you just did. How many times have you cut back on your budget for groceries so that you could pay the credit card, cable TV or cell phone bill?

A professional man, let’s call him “Ben,” I once had a conversation with told me that cutting back on groceries was the only way to cut back on spending because all of the other expense were fixed. The car payment had to be paid, the credit cards, the TV. All of them had to come first.

But did it ever occur to him to eliminate the car payment by buying a used car and paying cash for it? Or to cut up the card, turn off the TV or use the Internet at the public library?

But Ben was right in one regard. Food is one area where we as a nation can cut back. I had always thought of myself as being pretty frugal. My family doesn’t eat out much and I don’t buy a lot of junk food. So I did a little “receipt” searching and after recording each and everything we spent money on for about two months, I discovered that I spent a little over $1,000 per month in food costs alone. No, we didn’t eat out at restaurants, but how many times on my way to a soccer game did I buy Gatorades to go all around, plus a box of granola bars or a bag of chips? That’s an easy $10 or $15 nearly everyday.

After careful consideration of our spending habits, I was able to cut our food spending – all of it – down to an average of $300 a month. That’s less than $100 a week for seven people. I also found that we eat healthier on less money than we ever did before.

By eating healthier – and teaching our young and new mothers how to feed their children healthier – we will curb our need for medical attention. I am horrified by the amount of mothers, particularly teen mothers, who are talked into formula feeding their babies because someone tells them that their baby will be healthier, or will gain more weight or whatever. Not only is this untrue, but by breastfeeding a child throughout the child’s first year or more (no, not until kindergarten!), a mother can, on average, save as much as $160 month. That’s an electric bill and a phone bill! That’s also money that can go towards the other children in the family’s food budget.

Children who aren’t breastfed are more susceptible to a wide range of medical issues from food allergies to illnesses. All of which put single working mothers in precarious positions with their employers because they constantly have to take off work to take their little ones to the doctor. Another point to be made is that if doctors didn’t hold such “regular” bankers hours, mothers who work might not have to take time off to get their little ones there – thus reducing the image that such mothers don’t care about their baby’s well-being.

Our nation’s desire to consume is overrunning a mother’s desire to care for her child. Commercials for soda are misconstrued by immigrants who think that soda is a suitable replacement for their baby’s juice.

I also hear stories from middle-class families – who know that soda doesn’t go in the bottle, but are just as affected by our nation’s need to consume. One mother I know, rather than stay home with her children (something she would like to do), works 50 hours a week, spends $300 a week on day care, $100 month on disposable diapers, $200 month on the “best” baby formula, $400 a month on a new car to get her to her job, $50 a month to insure that car and more in convenience foods and take-out because she’s too tired to cook and the like.

When I added it all up with her, we realized that she spends over $1200 a month on a job where she earns just over $1600 a month. Was the extra $400 really that important to her? Or could she maybe find a way to reduce their spending by $400 a month so that she could stay home with her girls?

She was shocked. It had never occurred to her that she could “earn” her family money by doing things other than working herself into a frenzy.

I would like to develop a handbook for all new mothers in this country that they would receive upon the birth of their child. A handout that distinguishes between the necessary and the unnecessary. A little book that lets mothers everywhere know that mothering can be done – and Nike sneakers, X-Box and Gameboy are not mandatory purchases. Neither are disposable diapers, cans of formula or any of a number of the pieces of flotsam that we, as mothers, are constantly bombarded by advertising with. By preying on our natural need to protect and take care of our children, advertisers use our guilt against us.

On both levels, the “lower” and “middle” classes, the forest is missed for the trees. The way to end poverty in America is not to pay for more – it’s to rise up and consume less.

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Simple Prosperity

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Posted on 4th April 2008 by Mish in miscellaneous

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Finding Real Wealth In A Sustainable Lifestyle

By David Wann

Editor’s Note: This article is an excerpt from Simple Prosperity, a new book by David Wann. It was originally published on the Simple Living Network and is reprinted here with the author’s permission.
simple prosperity

An Instinct for Happiness

To be genuinely happy, we need to actively create our experiences and our lives, rather than passively letting media and marketers create them for us. The pathway to greatest happiness goes beyond mindless consumption to the heightened, enlightened realm of mindful challenge, where we are engaged, connected, and alive.

To balance the precise, quantitative, and sequential mindset orchestrated for a millennium by the left-brain, here comes a troupe of story-telling, aesthetic, empathetic caregivers, visionaries, and creators. Though still ridiculed by policy-makers and engineers, and sorely neglected by test-crazy school administrators, it appears the right brain is rising. YES!

Creating a Great Life Story

In this world of media and mirage there are significant obstacles to “knowing thyself,” as the Greek sages counseled, because there are so many stories out there! (It’s like a room filled with hundreds of telephones — which one is ringing?) If we’re lucky, we figure out what we’re good at, what we believe in, and what we want to accomplish, joyfully, while we’re here.

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