Topic: What cheap thing did your parents do when you were a kid? | |
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wheat bread instead of hamburger buns
clothes from the thrift store and hand-me-downs bunk beds i had a cheap lunch line card, and everyone else brought lunchboxes with goodies neighbors had a pool and we had to use the sprinkler |
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HAH!!! Drive in movies. It wasn't my parents but....
4 kids in the trunk and they made ME make a HUGE grocery bag of popcorn before we left. LMAO |
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Now that I am grown up & realize how normal people live, I am too embarrassed to tell what it was like. I am very thrifty, but my Mom was a crazy tightwad.
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HAH!!! Drive in movies. It wasn't my parents but.... 4 kids in the trunk and they made ME make a HUGE grocery bag of popcorn before we left. LMAO |
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Now that I am grown up & realize how normal people live, I am too embarrassed to tell what it was like. I am very thrifty, but my Mom was a crazy tightwad. |
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Cheap? Well, IDK.
We lived without a microwave, dishwasher, cable or air conditioner...even in the car. We had a washing machine, but no dryer, so we had to hang clothes on the line in the warm months and in the basement in cold months. My mother hand made all our clothes until we were past 6th grade, and then store bought clothes were bought at least one size too big so they could be hemmed and taken out to go one more round. We grew our own veggies in the back yard. We ate tons of beans, rice and taters with those veggies, saving meat dishes for two days of the week generally. My father repaired everything, so we didn't buy anything unless we didn't have one to begin with. We never bought books, but were the #1 best library customers. Other than some texts and a bible that was gifted to me at 10, I don't think I OWNed a book until long into adulthood. The reason I say IDK, is that we watched every penny in my house growing up because my parents chose to live house poor so we could move into a safe and friendly neighborhood with the best schools in the city at the time. So, cheap? I don't think so, cause it sure cost THEM a lot! |
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Cheap? Well, IDK. We lived without a microwave, dishwasher, cable or air conditioner...even in the car. We had a washing machine, but no dryer, so we had to hang clothes on the line in the warm months and in the basement in cold months. My mother hand made all our clothes until we were past 6th grade, and then store bought clothes were bought at least one size too big so they could be hemmed and taken out to go one more round. We grew our own veggies in the back yard. We ate tons of beans, rice and taters with those veggies, saving meat dishes for two days of the week generally. My father repaired everything, so we didn't buy anything unless we didn't have one to begin with. We never bought books, but were the #1 best library customers. Other than some texts and a bible that was gifted to me at 10, I don't think I OWNed a book until long into adulthood. The reason I say IDK, is that we watched every penny in my house growing up because my parents chose to live house poor so we could move into a safe and friendly neighborhood with the best schools in the city at the time. So, cheap? I don't think so, cause it sure cost THEM a lot! |
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drive in movie take r own food and could list a lot of stuff,so how much u want to know
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drive in movie take r own food and could list a lot of stuff,so how much u want to know |
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Cheap no poor yes, your cheap when you can afford it and prefer the cheap alternative my parents (mum mostly) did all they could with what they had. I admire my mum for raising 4 kids on almost no income she did a lot of sacrifice for us and i will always be proud of her.
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way to many painful memories to walk down this lane SORRY
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I think I was more cheap than my parents were.
I dont think it being cheap as more for survival. I was a single mom making less than $12000 a year. I would use bread as hotdog buns,shop for clothing at thrift stores, make "welfare" Mcdonalds, lol. I find nothing wrong with it and it hurt no one. And even though I make alot more money now, I still am thrifty in alot of ways. |
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