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No-Spend Month Series

December No-Spend Month Week 2 Recap

Countdown to Christmas-

Hello again, savvy savers! What a hectic, busy, joyous weekend we have had here in Dixie. Tonight finds us with an update of this past weeks No-Spend December activities, events, and challenges.

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Day 5: Last Saturday, after an afternoon trip to library for the reading of Scrooge, our family attended our town’s annual holiday parade. We arrived early to reserve our favorite spot, on the local pavilion, where we enjoyed the comforts of home, by way of hot cocoa and blankets while we waited for the much anticipated festivities to begin.

downtown meridian holiday parade 2015

This year’s parade, in the style of most small town’s was full of festive lights, local business-sponsored floats, and even a ten minute showing by our local police forces motorcycle squad. Each year our town comes out to impress, and without fail, local debutantes and church groups alike, come out to spread holiday cheer throughout our local, historic down town area.

Each year I look forward to bringing the family to see the various floats, my greatest moment is always watching my husband Daniel’s face beam like a child, as he watches to the drum line from our local high school, his Alma mater preform holiday chorus classics. For those who may not know, Daniel was a member of this drum line while in high school, and went on to be on his collegiate drum line as well. Keep in mind, we live within walking distance of out local high school, and often hear the band practice in the late afternoon and summer hours on the high school playing field, but to hear our high school’s marching band in person is always an awesome treat!

Day 6: For Day 6, the family and I had a Movie Marathon (ABC Family’s 25 Days of Christmas), where we watched The Little Drummer Boy, How the Grinch Stole Christmas, and A Nightmare Before Christmas, with DIY popcorn bar. 

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After the movie marathon, I created DIY natural cleaning kits for friends and family. My thought was that so many people are in the throws of planning, preparing, and cleaning for house parties, out of town guests, and the end of this school semester, and baskets of homemade, natural cleaners would be a welcome change from the overpriced commercial brand in-store. I created six baskets, each contained DIY Holiday Scented Pine Sol, DIY Wood Balm, and DIY Grapefruit Counter Top Cleaner. Each basket cost under $3.00 per person, per trip of cleaners and decorative Dollar Tree baskets as well.

Day 7: Monday saw the beginning of another weekly menu, which was as follows:

Monday
Breakfast: Meatless Monday low-fat Mozzarella and Spinach Omelette, with Green Tea.
Lunch: Almonds, Cheese Crackers, Cheese rounds, with celery, and Crystal Light.
Snack: Almonds, and Gala Apple Slices.
Dinner: Crockpot Three Bean Chili, cooked with Boca Crumbles, with Diet Cola.
Dessert: Sugar-Free Dulce de Leche Cups.

Tuesday
Breakfast: Green Tea, Coconut Milk, and Strawberry Smoothie; made with Truvia.
Lunch: Freezer Cooking Chicken and Dumplings, and Crystal Light.
Snack: Frozen/Thawed Strawberries and String Cheese.
Dinner: Taco Roll-ups; in lieu of taco shells I use Romaine Lettuce Sheets.
Dessert: Gluten-Free Brownies.

Wednesday
Breakfast: Baked Frittata Cups, with Unsweetened Almond Milk.
Lunch: Taco Salads, with crystal light.
Snack: Grapes and apple slices.
Dinner: Crockpot Chicken Curry, steamed peas, and crystal light.
Dessert: Homemade Gluten-Free  Truvia brownies.

Thursday
Breakfast: Homemade Greek Yogurt, with fruit cup, and Unsweetened Almond milk.
Lunch: Tossed Salad with Turkey, light vinaigrette, and Crystal Light.
Snack: Grapes and apple slices.
Dinner: Grilled Turkey Burger Patties, sweet Potato Fries, with Crystal Light.
Dessert: Brownie flurries with leftover brownies; we use Edy’s Sugar-Free Ice Cream.

Friday
Breakfast: Homemade Greek Yogurt, with fruit cup, and Unsweetened Almond milk.
Lunch: Tossed salad, with homemade Greek Yogurt dressing, and Crystal Light.
Snack: Strawberries and two pieces of Sugar Free Chocolate; candy is used as melted drizzle for berries.
Dinner: Barbecue Pork, Steamed Green Beans, and Crystal Light.
Dessert: Diet Coca-Cola slushies.

Saturday
Breakfast: Homemade Greek Yogurt, with fruit cup, and Unsweetened Almond milk.
Lunch: Chicken Salad, and Crystal Light.
Snacks: String Cheese and grapes.
Dinner: Gift Card to local restaurant.
Dessert: Sugar-Free Dulce de Leche Cups.

Sunday
Breakfast: Bacon, Eggs, and Toast, with Unsweetened Almond Milk.
Lunch: Grilled Sausages, Steamed Broccoli, Crockpot Macaroni and Cheese, with Crystal Light.
Snack: Grapes and walnuts.
Dinner: Crockpot Orange Chicken with Almonds, Steamed Peas, and crystal light.
Dessert: Sugar-Free Dulce de Leche Cups.

Monday also our annual family trip to our local mall to pick out an Angel Tree recipient at local mall. When we returned home the family helped themselves to a DIY cocoa bar, and I a dozen and a half jars of DIY hot cocoa mix for church, PTA friends, and colleagues; the mix was placed in quart jars, which cost under $2.25 per person to bag, tag, and give!

Day 8: We held out family Holiday Music Party; diy music, dancing, and fun at home with just the family, fuzzies, and I. We also finished up creating out DIY palette holiday trees for our front display; the trees were adorned with solar lights. I love frugal, upcycled holiday decor!

Day 9: Our family attended the Christmas Open House for local Wesley House; we dropped off free items and kids toys we’ve collected this year from freebie offers, product reviews, and discount shops. 

lip balm

Later that evening, I created DIY manicure cuticle oil tins, which will be featured in mason jarred manicure kits for the You’ve Been Jingled baskets we will give out later this month to neighborhood friends; each jar cost under $4.00 per person to create. 

Day 10: Daniel and I attended a free outdoor light and laser show at local plantation home. What’s awesome is that Daniel and I’s tickets come from a Checkout51 rebate check from October’s No-Spend Month Challenge.

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Day 11: Family Trip to see Local Christmas Lights in town. We brought cocoa and blankets, and admittedly this was my favorite night thus far this month!

Day 12: Yesterday morning we attended our town’s Christmas festival at the Historic Temple Theater, and later in the evening we attended the Highland Baptist Church Annual Singing Christmas Tree pageant; tickets were budgeted from Mobisave savings earned in October and November. 

Day 13: This week ended with a family visit to Bethlehem revisited; a free living Nativity tour at a local church in my neighborhood. It’s always so exciting to see the beautiful, graceful animals, talented actors, and harpists too! 

Overall this week could best be described as productive. I was able to create half of this months gifts for family and friends for under $71.00 dollars from my budget envelope system, attend a daily activity, create upcycled, frugal holiday decorations, and saved my family $342.22! 

So, savvy savers… how has your holiday season been thus far? I’d love to hear all about it in the comments below!

Here’s to saving!

niki-name-design

 

  • December No-Spend Month Days 5-13
  • December No-Spend Month Challenge Day 4: How We Will Save $200.00 This Month With Our Advent Calendar Schedule!
  • December No-Spend Month Day 3: Giving Local Experience Gifts!
  • December No-Spend Challenge Day 2: How To Create Your Holiday Budget!
  • December No-Spend Challenge Day 1: Meal Planning & Pantry Inventory!

  • The December 31-Day No Spend Month Challenge Starts Tomorrow!

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December No-Spend Month Challenge Day 4: How We Will Save $200.00 This Month With Our Advent Calendar Schedule!

Countdown to Christmas- day 4

Good morning, savvy savers! Happy Friday! So for Day 4 of this months No-Spend December Series, I want to share with you all another way in which my family will save over $200.00 this month, and that is with a planned Advent Calendar Schedule. 

So, for those who may not know, Advent is the period preceding the Christmas season. It begins on the Sunday nearest November 30, the feast day of St. Andrew the Apostle, and encompasses the next four Sundays as well. 

Pulling from my early days of parochial school, I can tell you that the word advent, comes from Latin, means “the coming.” For over a millennium, Advent has been treated as a season, and has been a time of both spiritual reflection, as well as cheer, fun, and time with family and friends. While the overall Christmas season has become more secular-with advertisers urging holiday gift-givers to buy and buy some more-Advent still brings joy and the observance of old-fashion customs and traditions too!

As a child, each year we would always look forward to lighting candles in the Advent wreath, and we always used Advent calendars to count the days until Christmas.

Beyond this, here’s a little food for thought on the Advent season:

  • Advent has been observed since the fourth century.
  • Originally, it was a time when converts to Christianity readied themselves for baptism on Easter.
  • During the Middle Ages, Advent lasted from November 11, the feast of St. Martin, until Christmas Day.
  • Advent was considered a pre-Christmas season of Lent.
  • The Orthodox Eastern Church observes a similar Lenten season, from November 15 until Christmas, rather than Advent.
  • Advent wreaths have their origins in the folk traditions of northern Europe, where deep winters called for holiday decorations of evergreen and candles; the evergreen and the circular shape symbolized ongoing life. 
  • By the sixteenth century, they were making Advent wreaths much as we know them today. 

So, as times have evolved as have the Advent traditions. This leads me to introduce our tradition, the hanging Advent calendar. 

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So, why an advent calendar? An advent calendar is a card or poster with twenty-four small doors, hooks, clips, or fixings, one to be opened each day from December 1 until Christmas Eve. This popular tradition arose in Germany in the late 1800’s, which is based on the Hebrew Bible. In modern times, while considered a fun way of counting down the days until Christmas, many Advent calendars today have no religious content. Many stores, craft centers, and mass retailers display funky seasonal calendars alongside traditional Advent calendars depicting angels and biblical figures are those whose doors open to display teddy bears, pieces of chocolate, or photos of pop stars.

What makes the advent calendar special is that each door conceals a picture, scripture, or in our case, a scheduled outing or activity. 

How our family will use this calendar (or in our case two strings of felted clips for $1.00 each from Dollar General strung above my coffee bar) to save money this December, is by listing family-centered activities, all of which are free or nearly free, which will stand as food-centered alternative to sugary-commercial calendars well. The calendar, which can be seen above, is placed up on November 30th each year, stands for the heart this season and seasons to come. In years past we would have allotted upwards of $200.00 for a season of activities, but since become more and more of a savvy saver we have switched our focus to more cost effective means to celebrate our season. 

How our calendar is derived:

  • Each Day a message, note, or photo is placed on the next hook letting everyone know what we will be doing that evening; I generally add notes the night before when setting up my coffee maker and tea pot on my coffee bar.
  • Activities are found on our local chamber of commerce and city pages online, local newspaper, local Facebook pages, church bulletins, or from national advertised promotions.
  • Ad-on items, such as going out for hot cocoa, has been budgeted in from rewards app like Swagbucks and iBotta.
  • All remaining activities were pre-planned or involved already free activities.
  • Activities are created to move our family away from commercialized ideals and towards the true meaning of the season.
  • Twice during the season, my husband and I will utilize free photo credits from our CVS photo accounts to put up photos of the family days and outings in place of the advent schedule slips.
  • Funds saved from this days activities will go into a fund at our local credit union on 1/3/16 to jump start Christmas funds for the following season. 

Here’s what our schedule will (and has) look like:

Day 1: Making a list of what holiday books we will read each night (first half we had on hand, second half will come from library), and found a holiday scripture Bible Study for the Book of Luke, which Daniel will read aloud from each night this month; we followed this with cocoa at home on the coffee bar. Also, all Family trees, lights, and outdoor decor lit and photographed.
Day 2: Family Movie Marathon (ABC Family’s 25 Days of Christmas), Rudolph and Frosty’s Christmas in July, The Year Without Santa Clause, and The Polar Express, with DIY yogurt bar.
Day 3: My city’s annual Tree Lighting ceremony downtown; free hot coca and snacks were provided.
Day 4: Santa’s Christmas Factory Train Ride at our town’s Industrial Heritage Museum. Tickets free for kids and as Daniel teaches, my ticket comes from iBotta funds; free cider provided.
Day 5: Afternoon trip to library for the reading of Scrooge by local historian. In the evening, our town’s annual holiday parade. We will bring out own cocoa, chairs, and blankets.
Day 6: Family Movie Marathon (ABC Family’s 25 Days of Christmas), The Little Drummer Boy, How the Grinch Stole Christmas, and A Nightmare Before Christmas, with DIY popcorn bar.
Day 7: Trip to pick out an Angel Tree recipient at local mall; cocoa bar at home. 
Day 8: Family Holiday Music Party; diy music, dancing, and fun at home. 
Day 9: Christmas Open House for local Wesley House; we will drop off free items and kids toys we’ve collected this year.
Day 10: Free outdoor light and laser show at local plantation home for kids; Daniel and I’s tickets come from Checkout51 check in October. Free Cocoa provided. 
Day 11: Family Trip to see Local Christmas Lights in town; we bring cocoa and blankets with us. 
Day 12: Morning Christmas festival at the Historic Temple Theater, and evening at the Highland Baptist Church Annual Singing Christmas Tree; tickets budgeted in from Mobisave savings in October and November. 
Day 13: Bethlehem revisited; free living Nativity tour at local church. Free drinks provided. 
Day 14: Family trip to library for remainder of holiday books, and trip to Books-a-Million for drinks; drinks budgeted in from free Books-a-Million card for getting membership and iBotta funds.
Day 15: Morning trip to return presents to Angel Tree; cocoa bar at home. Evening, pick out recipes to bake for Daniel’s Holiday Party at work and for Santa.
Day 16: Family Movie Marathon (ABC Family’s 25 Days of Christmas), Nester the Long-Eared Christmas Donkey, Santa Claus is Coming to Town, and ELF, with DIY brownie bar bake.
Day 17: Capital Brass Christmas Concert at Saint Paul’s Episcopal Church; free admission. 
Day 18: Family Trip to see Local Christmas Lights in from several HOA-themed communities locally; we bring cocoa and blankets with us. 
Day 19: Place out You’ve Been Jingled Baskets for Neighbors; will use free items from gift closet and pantry.
Day 20: Family caroling at home; we light up our back patio with LED icicle lights, light the fire pit, roast marshmallows, and sing Victorian hymnal and 40-50’s pop holiday music. 
Day 21: Family Movie Marathon (ABC Family’s 25 Days of Christmas), Prancer, Frosty’s Shiny New Year, and Jack Frost, with DIY crock-pot cider and pumpkin bread bar.
Day 22: Cookies with Mrs. Claus; free admission at local Plantation home and tour, free cider and cookies provided. 
Day 23: Trees of Christmas Tour with local historic Plantation home, Merrihope; tickets purchased with Snap by Groupon savings in September, October, and November from paypal. 
Day 24: Make DIY appetizers, Virtual Christmas (Skype calls to family to virtually open gifts and see one another), reading of the Night Before Christmas, Cookies made for Santa, and watch It’s A Wonderful Life. 

So, these measures help ensure that our family is just one step closer to not only enjoying a season of wholesome, affordable fun, but we are sending time together in the process. 

Here’s to saving,

niki-name-design

 

  • December No-Spend Month Challenge Day 4: How We Will Save $200.00 This Month With Our Advent Calendar Schedule!
  • December No-Spend Month Day 3: Giving Local Experience Gifts!
  • December No-Spend Challenge Day 2: How To Create Your Holiday Budget!
  • December No-Spend Challenge Day 1: Meal Planning & Pantry Inventory!

  • The December 31-Day No Spend Month Challenge Starts Tomorrow!

 

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December No-Spend Month Day 3: Giving Local Experience Gifts!

Countdown to Christmas december day 3
Good morning, savvy savers! For Day 3 of this months No-Spend Challenge, I’d like to share one of the ways I have found to cut back on my holiday spending, and that is with the gift of experience gifts for the kiddos!

Around here we like to give experiences as gifts because we aren’t ‘stuff’ kind of people; I don’t like to stare things and beyond this, months after the season, As well, after having spent half of this year painstakingly going over and re-over the Kon’Mari cleaning method,  I can admittedly state that I am anti-clutter, and intend for my home to stay as such!  In fact, I often tell people when they ask what someone in our home would like for the holidays or birthdays, I graciously request that everyone be taken out on the town for an activity and to lunch.  I mean isn’t a quiet home a gift for me too?

What’s really nice about experience gifts, from my own personal experience, is that these gifts tend to cost at least half of what traditional gifts (especially toys) cost, will be remembered long after the experience is over, and often snowball into “traditional gifts,” where family members are encouraged to repetitively give the same experience gift each year, revealing them of the task of guessing what overpriced, underutilized gift someone in our family will want for the holidays! In any event, here’s a list of ideas that your kiddos, young and old, can’t break, fight over, and that will last longer than Christmas Day:

  •  Zoo pass: This time of year many zoos will slash the price of 2016 zoo passes by half or more, and since passes can be further discounted in packs of four or more, consider having several adults go in on the price to make each ticket affordable and reusable! 
  • Skating rink passes: Just like with Zoos packs of tickets, including those to sleep-ins will be reduced in price, and some even come with discounted food vouchers. 
  • Lessons (art, dance, karate, guitar, swim, etc.): Consider giving the gift of beginner lessons, in the amount of a month of lessons to various activities, to see just how interested the kiddos might be in an activity; this also applies to adult painting and dancing classes as well. The nice thing about this gift is that most centers offer two-complimentary lessons, which tacked onto your two remaining weeks of lessons, should score you a month pass on the cheap! Be sure to check out Groupon, Living Social, and Amazon Local which always have holiday deals on local activity events. 
  • Children’s museum pass: It goes without saying that the world is simply not as spectacular without art, natural science, or applied sciences. Why not give kiddos of all ages the opportunity to check these events out later on during the year. Consider buying Spring Break passes, which are always slashed in price during December, and storing the tickets away for a raining Spring day?  Also, Bank of America this month will be offering free tickets nationally to several museums, and so you can score free, digital tickets perfect for gift giving this holiday season!
  • Day Ski pass: Know someone with a penchant for the powdery crests of snow? Did you know that this time of year you can score a free kiddo ski pass, along with free lesson voucher, and often you can snag one for yourself as well? Be sure to pick one up now, and use these passes for the snowy days ahead in Winter, such as MLK Day! 
  • National Parks: Did you know that on every Federal Holiday the National Park Service allows free admittance to parks? Or if you are a Veteran or Active Military (thank you for your service, by the way), you can also score free passes as well? Consider giving the kiddos an IOU for later in the year for a park of your choice, which will give you many months to plan a trip on the cheap around your IOU. 
  • Aquarium pass: Like with zoo and museum passes, now if the time to look for deeply discounted aquarium passes for this coming summer. Look for prices well below half now! 
  • Free or Cheap Gift card for their favorite restaurant: Consider taking your favorite relative out for a meal! Restaurant.com always features December deals for local eateries, often hosting certificates as low as $5.00 for a $25.00 certificate (tax and gratuity not included). Also consider cashing out your Swagbucks and iBotta savings for gift cards to Starbucks; one of my favorite gift ideas if pairing free Starbucks gift cards with outings to look at lights for the kiddos on my holiday list. This gift gives parents much needed time to themselves, and gives the kiddos a break during the stressful holiday season from their parents too! 
  • Water park pass: Consider giving the kiddos, and yourself, a summer water park pass for up-to 75% in the month of December! Pair this gift with a few kitschy things from the dollar tree, like a lea, sunscreen, and flamingo toy, and summer tote bag, and you are set for a summer of fun on the cheap!
  • Summer Movie clubs: Calling all movie buff families! Consider giving the gift of summer movie club passes for the kiddos later in the year. Regal Movie Theaters around the country sell not just in May, but also in December, $1 Summer Movies passes, per film, for kids this summer for the blockbuster 2016 Summer season. This begins in May or June, depending upon the theater. As well, Cinemark theaters will be running one children’s movie per week (rated G or PG) for 10 weeks during the summer. Tickets are $1 per person per movie, but you can buy a bundle in advance and pay $5 for all 10 movies! That’s 50¢ a movie! Showtimes and movie titles will vary by theater, so consider buying summer movie packs for this kiddos in December! 

So, those are some of my favorite budget-friendly gifts for the kiddos of all ages this holiday season. If you also give such gifts I’d love to hear about it below.

Here’s to saving,

niki-name-design

 

  • December No-Spend Month Day 3: Giving Local Experience Gifts!
  • December No-Spend Challenge Day 2: How To Create Your Holiday Budget!
  • December No-Spend Challenge Day 1: Meal Planning & Pantry Inventory!

  • The December 31-Day No Spend Month Challenge Starts Tomorrow!

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December No-Spend Challenge Day 1: Meal Planning & Pantry Inventory!

Hello again, savvy savers! As many of my readers and online friends may know, I am always juggling several projects, business opportunities, scholastic goals, and home projects at any given time. With so much constantly going on, it’s sometimes easy to forget one of my main passions, and antithesis for this blog, the ability to save money, while live a better live, in hopes of having a “whole living blog,” to help me have a better run life. So, I have decided to take an old-school approach to spending, and so today finds us with the first day of my last NO SPENDING month cycle for 2015! 

Why this crazy idea? Well, a month of NO spending is an awesome way to both reset your spending patterns, as well as to either kick-start your budget or revamp and make changes to any existing budget you or your family may have. This is also a great challenge for personal responsibility; you can track what you have been spending your hard earned funds, and keep yourself on track, in terms of responsible spending thereafter. 

I will be blogging daily about my NO SPEND struggles, victories, and suggestions from the previous day, and will be posting easy-to-follow daily challenges for my readers during my no-spend months. As well, each Sunday will share what I’ve learned, saved, and gained from this challenge as part of my Weekly Goals & Reflections Posts. I hope that many of you will join me in this challenge, as we can all you use more ways to save around the home.

The rules are pretty simple:  

  • No spending on anything  beyond absolute necessities.
  • Eat from your pantry & freezer as often as you are able.
  • And make changes to the way you purchase and consume goods, services, and commodities in your home. 
  • The idea of the challenge is to keep up with your daily activities,, but the main goal is simply to stop spending.  
  • This challenge can be a life changing experience, as you may just be amazed at how your mindset and perspective will change after just a month of seeing how you can enrich your life, without spending more!

There are a few exceptions to the rule as follows:

  1. Unavoidable expenses related to employment, such as gas, are okay.
  2. Unavoidable school related expenses.
  3. Doctors appointments, veterinarian appointments, co-payments, family/pet prescriptions, and therapy sessions are okay.
  4. Do keep existing service and repair appointments that can’t be rescheduled to “Spending” months, such as hair appointments, lawn care services, trash removal, in-home repair services, etc.
  5. Do keep existing tithing and charitable giving.
  6. Do have an adequate stockpile of necessities prior to beginning this challenge, such as pet food, bedding, litter, laundry detergent, dish soap, snow salts, bottled water and emergency staples (if you live in areas frequently affected by seasonal weather), etc. 
  7. Do keep up with healthy living habits. I will continue to use my envelope saving system to fund app purchase rebates (iBotta, Shopmium, Snap by Groupon) for fresh produce and milk savings that may pop-up during my no-spend months; due to my PCOS I need several servings of fruits and veggies daily, and these app savings help keep my freezer stocked on a budget. 
  8. And it goes without saying, please do pay all of our monthly obligations; rent, mortgage, insurance, utility payments, banking fees,  student/financial/business loans, medical expenses, and assumed or credit card debt. 

December is not just about not spending, although that will be our main goal, but ways to budget this holiday season, and start 2016 without the pervasive, oppressive debt of this current holiday season.  As always challenge each of you to find ways to live well, live better, find new sources of joy, will spending less. You may just find out just how much we already have, and how little more we really need.  And hopefully, by the end of this month, a life rich with family, friends, and creative planning, secured by fiscally responsible measures, will be who we truly are.

This month I will be setting a personal challenge to earn, save, and reallocate $1,000.00 to be used towards my families holiday expenses. Today’s challenges will help me create one-third of this funding. Here’s how:

Challenge 1: Part 1, Commitment

This first challenge has two parts. The first part of the first challenge is committing to the challenge itself. Knowing that starting any personal challenge, starts with following through with the challenge itself, and this no-spend month is no exception! 

Also knowing that this October is not just about not spending, although that will be our main goal.  I always challenge each of you to find ways to live well, live better, find new sources of joy, will spending less. You may just find out just how much we already have, and how little more we really need.  And hopefully, by the end of them month, a life rich with family, friends, and creative planning, secured by fiscally responsible measures, will be who we truly are. In addition, I hope to make my posts comments section a place of encouragement and accountability for us all, too!

I’m not gonna lie, there presumably will be tough moments, and for that reason, with one week remaining, stock-up on any items you currently feel you cannot do without. But the biggest reason for following through with this month daily challenges? In the month of February, I was able to save $1,456.87! 

This month is not about thinking what you won’t be spending and economizing on, but what you are saving for!

The second part of this challenge? To physically take a few  minutes to make a list for this month, to include the following:

  • How much you plan to save this month.
  • What are your long-term financial goals.
  • What activities will you plan this month, to take the place of your spending.

So, for this part of the challenge you should create a simple, one-page spending commitment sheet. Keep in mind that this challenge is family-centered in nature. For it’s always easier when savers help to keep one another accountable. So be sure to discuss your plans with your immediate family, those living in your home and who will be enveloped in your pursuit of this month’s challenges. I’ve already filled my sheet out, and will have hubby sign our pledge this evening as well. For those who have signed their pledge, be sure to post a picture of your pledge to Instagram with the hashtag #DebtFreeHolidays2015.  

Part Two: Meal Planning and Inventory:

The bulk of this month’s challenges will be holiday related, but in order to get onto the tinsel and bows, we must first tackle the practical issues first. If your families budget is anything like my own, then food, and its initial cost, is a big part of this budget. For this month’s challenge, we will be looking 

Before beginning this challenge, we will need to address pantry and stockpile organization, meal planning, and freezer cooking meals. 

Step 1- Pantry Organization:

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My stockpile, though hard earned, is an immense blessing to my home. And as they say, to whom much is given, much is asked, and this rule equally applies to my stockpile! My stockpile saves my family thousands of dollars a year, but I must honestly admit is the most neglected area in my home. But no more! So today, I challenge you all to clean up your stockpile! 

Here are a few tips to get you started:

  1. Rotate your stockpile. “Rotating your stockpile” means rotating your stockpile per season. You will need to place goods in order of expiration date, my seasonal usage, as well as keeping climate into consideration; you may need to start storing it in one location for summer and another location for winter, in terms of baking tools, cans, chemicals, etc.. 
  2. Long Term Storage: If you plan to store any item for longer than a week or two, you need to know its long-term storage requirements. Some items will only last months or longer if stored in a cool, dry place. Some items must be stored in a refrigerated or frozen environment in order to last longer. Make lists, and create sub-areas in your stockpile; examples are canned goods, cosmetics, paper products, etc.
  3. Take Note of Patterns: Start a list of your product usage, this will allow you to see what you need, will use in a years time, and what should be donated accordingly. Unused goods are cash wasted.
  4. Last Forever Items: Nothing lasts forever. Even goods such as bottled water, start to have an altered taste after a decade, so keep this in mind.
  5. Canned and Preserved Goods: Keep inventory and note the dates of home-preserved items; a rule of thumbs is to keep items no longer than eighteen month. 
  6. Pests: Pests love your stockpile, almost as much as you do! Be sure to check goods monthly, especially in Summer, and any goods that look altered, chuck immediately! 
  7. Dehumidifier: Humidity can alter and mold many goods, so consider running a dehumidifier twice weekly. When able purchase an energy saving dehumidifier with accumulated survey gift cards for free, then deduct part of the cost off your tax return; the deductible amount will pay for the power used to dehumidify your stockpile space!

So, all-in-all, not bad for a mornings work! Keep in mind, this project took me a little less than three hours, during which time I was able to clean out three shelves of goods, and the best part… I assembled sixteen boxes worth of goods which are being donated today to a local women’s shelter and homeless pantry! This project took three hours, I was able to clean out three shelves of goods, and the best part… I assembled sixteen boxes worth of goods which are being donated today to a local women’s shelter and homeless pantry! Also, if you chose to donate goods to a registered non-for-profit with a 501 (c3) tax status, you can claim your goods at half the current market pricing value (so be sure to price goods, save receipts, and use price point guides as you prep items for donation), and the tax receipt you receive can ultimately reimburse you for all of the good, gas, ink, and paper expenses for your coupons thus far this year! Woohoo! 

I have to admit, donating goods is an awesome feeling, but cleaning out my stockpile did take a good bit of work… because I’m a definite a stockpiler with clutter tendencies! The problem is for me, that I never seem to realize I have an issue with stockpile clutter, until the stockpile is well established and taking over multiple places in our home.

Keep in mind, three years ago I started off with a small shelf about three and a half feet long, but now I have a pantry, a set of five shelves, designated basement space, two build in cabinets, two refrigerators, and a deep freezer! This is in addition to the personal hygiene items are hiding in the bathroom cabinets. 

You may think that stockpiling is 100% beneficial because of the money you’ve saved, but this is only until you find yourself drowning in groceries and perishable items! So, with this in mind… here are a few additional tips to help keep the clutter out of your stockpile going forward. 

  1. Not Having A Stockpile Limit: Your stockpile is out of control when it exceeds your storage space, period.  If your stockpile is getting out of control, simply redesign your storage space. I looked at my available storage space and made a vow not to exceed my limits again. If you have a small space to work with for your stockpile, limit your goods by checking expiration dates, and anything that is set to expire in the next season, donate to a local charity, food pantry, or women’s shelter in your area. 
  2. Don’t Keep Items Past Their Expiration Date: Keeping your stockpile clear of expired foods will save space, money, and prevent you from eating stale, not so tasty foods. To prevent this, simply create a spread sheet or clipboard chart, and whenever you purchase a vast quantity of goods, write down their dates, and check over your sheet seasonally. Also, be sure to rotate goods quarterly so you are consuming or utilizing set-to-expire goods sooner than later—this will also allow you to evaluate what you have, and how much you’re actually using, before you go out and buy more in-store.
  3. Don’t Stockpile Goods You Won’t Use/Donate: Items thrown away, is always equivalent to throwing cash down the drain. To prevent this, simply remember that all sales are cyclical and are guaranteed to rear their heads again within 3-4 months time. Also, when you are able to score freebies with deals, rebates, and coupons in-store, consider only purchasing goods you will be able to use with 12 months, or will donate within 6 months. 
  4. Weatherize Your Stockpile: One of the pitfalls of stockpiling is the location of your storage. Certain foods have to be stored in specific temperatures or not exposed to excessive heat. Not storing items at the proper temperature can cause food to expire more quickly and go to waste. A rule of thumbs, foods that are susceptible to insects or heat, such as most baked supplies can be bagged and frozen. Also, please click here to read my post on which goods from you stockpile can be winterized this season, too! 
  5. Give Your Stockpile A Safety Inspection: The most important thing to remember, stockpiles serve families, and should be safely stored for all members of your family, human and fur-babies alike. If the stockpile is stacked so high that items could fall and hit you on the head—it’s not safe. If your stockpile blocks a path you would need to exit in case of a fire—it’s a fire hazard. If you have flammable products near a fireplace or gas stove—you guessed it, a hazard! Organize goods in a safe, usable, functional manner. 

Step 2- Meal Planning:

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 Starting earlier this morning, I utilized the #31DayLWSZ Pantry and Freezer Inventory Sheets (recycled from my October #LWSZ challenge), to help me compile a month of meals, using the discovered on-hand goods logged on my inventory sheets. 

So, aside from this challenge, why menu plan? I generally consider menu planning a staple in my home budgeting arsenal, but for those who may now, here are three key points to keep in mind, in terms of both this challenge, and going forward:

1) Your Health: Your health should be one of your main concerns, as with most people,  and one way to ensure your health and well being is in good working balance, is healthful food preparation. Having a menu plan in place helps you avoid sodium and fat-laden take out and fast food, and instead opt for a more balanced and nutritious diet.

2) Budgeting: Groceries cost a lot, period.  Even with coupon shopping and app rebate deals, constantly going to the store can negate all of your best budgeting plans. Save yourself some financial stress by planning your meals in reverse; shop for cyclical deals, plan meals around what you have on hand, and essentially plan “pantry-ready meals.”  By shopping in reverse, I generally spend $30.00 or less per week, for a family of four on groceries.  

3) Time Management: Your time is important. Whether you work outside the home, from a home office, are a busy entrepreneur, or you’re a stay-at-home parent, we all juggle an endless task sheet on a daily basis.  While planning a menu in the first place takes a bit of time, it will save you double that amount of time in the end. For when you have planned, purposed meal lists and ingredients on hand, you essentially eliminate the need to run to the store for a last minute item, saving you both time and money in the process.

With a plan in place, all you have to do is to look at your proposed weekly menu, prep, and serve! 

So, today I came up with:

  • 13 Breakfasts
  • 13 Lunches
  • 13 Snacks
  • 13 Dinner Options
  • 13 Desserts

Here are a few tips I used to plan my monthly menu:

1.Each option will be eaten twice for the remainder of the month, as the entire month will be rotated bi-weekly. 

2. No-spend months are a great time for 5-can soups, dump cakes, casseroles, and pot pies. 

3. This is also a great time to consider “Food Swapping,” with family, friends, and neighbors, where you will prep meals and then exchange the meals accordingly. 

4. This is also the time to consider menu streamlining; eating the proper amount of meals, as well as small snacks throughout the day, as well as cutting your dependency on carbonated beverages, and instead eating healthier options all around, will not only fill you up more, stave off food cravings, which will ultimately end up costing you less the month over. 

5. Consider using “Meatless Monday,”  food options; you can save up to $240.00 annually using this method once a week!

6. If you have saved gift cards to local restaurants, calendar cards (such as from Chick-fil-a), or the like, this is the time to use those cards. I’ve planned dinner on Saturday’s out, which will be free including tax and gratuity, using gift cards (and coupons if applicable) I’ve earned from Viggle, surveys, or calendars. 

7. My best tip for today’s challenge? Use “Rollable Meals,” or meals that leftovers can be made into different meals using the same ingredients; for example on day 1 you make double the amount of hamburgers and a pan of brownies for dessert. On day two, you can take one patty, broken up and make breakfast tacos, and as a beef topped salad(s) for lunch, and using your additional reserved patties, make crock pot beef patties and gravy for dinner, and using your leftover brownies you can make two additional desserts to last the remainder of the week, brownie parfait cups, brownie flurries, or brownie and berry trifle!

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To get started:

  • Make a boxed grid; 11″x 8″, divide into a calendar, with seven boxes across, and four boxes down, and there you go!
  • I also list our families meals on a meal plan chalkboard, in our kitchen, so everyone will know what to expect for dinner, and when. 
  • I also use my home recipe binder, with index, to browse through clipped, copied, and stowed away recipes I’ve put back for rainy days. 
  •  Have odds and ends you aren’t sure how to combine into meals? Check out sites like SuperCook, where you can add the ingredients you have on hand to their database, to find recipes to suit your stockpile of goods!

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And for anyone curious, here’s what we will be having:

Monday
Breakfast: Meatless Monday low-fat Mozzarella and Spinach Omelette, with Green Tea.
Lunch: Almonds, Cheese Crackers, Cheese rounds, with celery, and Crystal Light.
Snack: Almonds, and Gala Apple Slices.
Dinner: Crockpot Three Bean Chili, cooked with Boca Crumbles, with Diet Cola.
Dessert: Sugar-Free Dulce de Leche Cups.

Tuesday
Breakfast: Green Tea, Coconut Milk, and Strawberry Smoothie; made with Truvia.
Lunch: Freezer Cooking Chicken and Dumplings, and Crystal Light.
Snack: Frozen/Thawed Strawberries and String Cheese.
Dinner: Taco Roll-ups; in lieu of taco shells I use Romaine Lettuce Sheets.
Dessert: Gluten-Free Brownies.

Wednesday
Breakfast: Baked Frittata Cups, with Unsweetened Almond Milk.
Lunch: Taco Salads, with crystal light.
Snack: Grapes and apple slices.
Dinner: Crockpot Chicken Curry, steamed peas, and crystal light.
Dessert: Homemade Gluten-Free  Truvia brownies.

Thursday
Breakfast: Homemade Greek Yogurt, with fruit cup, and Unsweetened Almond milk.
Lunch: Tossed Salad with Turkey, light vinaigrette, and Crystal Light.
Snack: Grapes and apple slices.
Dinner: Grilled Turkey Burger Patties, sweet Potato Fries, with Crystal Light.
Dessert: Brownie flurries with leftover brownies; we use Edy’s Sugar-Free Ice Cream.

Friday
Breakfast: Homemade Greek Yogurt, with fruit cup, and Unsweetened Almond milk.
Lunch: Tossed salad, with homemade Greek Yogurt dressing, and Crystal Light.
Snack: Strawberries and two pieces of Sugar Free Chocolate; candy is used as melted drizzle for berries.
Dinner: Barbecue Pork, Steamed Green Beans, and Crystal Light.
Dessert: Diet Coca-Cola slushies.

Saturday
Breakfast: Homemade Greek Yogurt, with fruit cup, and Unsweetened Almond milk.
Lunch: Chicken Salad, and Crystal Light.
Snacks: String Cheese and grapes.
Dinner: Gift Card to local restaurant.
Dessert: Sugar-Free Dulce de Leche Cups.

Sunday
Breakfast: Bacon, Eggs, and Toast, with Unsweetened Almond Milk.
Lunch: Grilled Sausages, Steamed Broccoli, Crockpot Macaroni and Cheese, with Crystal Light.
Snack: Grapes and walnuts.
Dinner: Crockpot Orange Chicken with Almonds, Steamed Peas, and crystal light.
Dessert: Sugar-Free Dulce de Leche Cups.

Also, bee sure to check out my Weekly Menu Section and Pinterest Menu Idea Boards for more simple, affordable meal planning options. 

Step 3- Freezer Cooking:

1-Hour

This is by far one of my biggest secrets in being able to stay on track fiscally during no-spend months, and that is with freezer cooking meals. I use my investory sheet to see what staples I have on hand, and using these items create freezer meals with what I already have at-home for week 2-3 meals. 

For those who may wonder, why freezer meals? Here’s why. After a few year of being married I  began to become both a work-from-home legal position, as well as a full-time caretaker for my grandmother. This new season of life turned my ordinary world, my ordinary life into a busy chaotic whirlwind of facsimiles, schedule medicine sessions, cleaning, care-taking, all while trying to cook dinner for my family. Often times, when I had an especially busy exhausting day I would turn to fast food, or home cooked fast food for dinner like boxed Mac n Cheese, hot dogs, or dare I say cold cereal.

In my heart, I knew this wasn’t the food I wanted myself or my family to eat, but because of being mentally, physically, and emotionally exhausted I took the proverbial  easy way out. It was during this time I heard about easy freezer meals, meal plans where in under a few hours I could cook, prep, and freezer crock-pot ready meals in under an hour, which would yield a months meals. I decided to try it out.

My first experience: I cooked for a whole morning in my kitchen, finished 30 meals, and was no worse the wear for having done so. I felt so wonderful and the rest of that month I didn’t dread the dinner hour. The biggest change? My husband was so happy to have real cooking again, he began requesting freezer-ready meals be placed onto our month menu planning sessions; this in turn spurned my love of freezer cooking. So, you may be thinking, are freezer-ready meals great for my family?

Make ahead freezer meals for a month are great for people:

  • Who have busy lives and don’t always have time to cook a nice meal.
  • People who eat at fast food a lot but want better healthy meals quick.
  • Brand new mothers who just had a baby and need to rest or enjoy every precious minute of a new one.
  • Folks who are sick, elderly or injured and cannot cook.
  • People on a limited budget.

What can be frozen and what cannot:

  • There are a few items that don’t freeze well: Lettuce, cucumbers, bean sprouts, and raw potatoes .
  • Egg-based products: Hard boiled eggs & Egg based sauces like mayonnaise will separate and curdle.

What containers are good to use for easy freezer meals:

  • Gallon or quart sized plastic or re-usable freezer safe bags.
  • Aluminum pans, with crimp lids.
  • Lidded plastic containers. 

Here is a list of my favorite freezer meals:

  • Freezer Cooking Session: Crockpot Pork Loin & DIY Cranberry Sauce
  • Crock Pot Moroccan Tagine Chicken Recipe!
  • DIY Chef Boyardee Ravioli! #TBT
  • Cinco de Mayo Couponed Crockpot Chicken Mole!
  • Reuben Casserole!
  • Crockpot Stuffed Cabbage Rolls
  • Cleverly Couponed Crawfish Etouffee!
  • Punxsutawney Meatless Monday Crockpot Chili!
  • Throwback Thursday’s: Cheesy Buffalo Wings!
  • How To Make Smoked Chicken Stock!
  • Throwback Thursdays: Homemade Easy Bake Oven Chocolate Cake Mix & Frosting Kits, For Only $0.20!
  • Completely Couponed Coconut Mango Chicken Crockpot Curry
  • 1-Hour Freezer Cooking: Chicken and Dumplings!

So, that’s today’s challenge. If anyone else is gearing up to take this month’s challenge with me, I’d love to hear about it. 

Here’s to saving,

niki-name-design

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The December 31-Day No Spend Month Challenge Starts Tomorrow!

Hello again, savvy savers! As many of my readers and online friends may know, I am always juggling several projects, business opportunities, scholastic goals, and home projects at any given time. With so much constantly going on, it’s sometimes easy to forget one of my main passions, and antithesis for this blog, the ability to save money, while live a better live, in hopes of having a “whole living blog,” to help me have a better run life. So, for 2015 I have decided to take an old-school approach to spending, and so for every other month this year, for the months of February, April, June, August, October, and December I will be participating in a NO SPENDING month cycles! 

Why this crazy idea? Well, a month of NO spending is an awesome way to both reset your spending patterns, as well as to either kick-start your budget or revamp and make changes to any existing budget you or your family may have. This is also a great challenge for personal responsibility; you can track what you have been spending your hard earned funds, and keep yourself on track, in terms of responsible spending thereafter. 

I will be blogging daily about my NO SPEND struggles, victories, and suggestions from the previous day, and will be posting easy-to-follow daily challenges for my readers during my no-spend months. As well, each Sunday will share what I’ve learned, saved, and gained from this challenge as part of my Weekly Goals & Reflections Posts. I hope that many of you will join me in this challenge, as we can all you use more ways to save around the home.

The rules are pretty simple:  

  • No spending on anything  beyond absolute necessities.
  • Eat from your pantry & freezer as often as you are able.
  • And make changes to the way you purchase and consume goods, services, and commodities in your home. 
  • The idea of the challenge is to keep up with your daily activities,, but the main goal is simply to stop spending.  
  • This challenge can be a life changing experience, as you may just be amazed at how your mindset and perspective will change after just a month of seeing how you can enrich your life, without spending more!

There are a few exceptions to the rule as follows:

  1. Unavoidable expenses related to employment, such as gas, are okay.
  2. Unavoidable school related expenses.
  3. Doctors appointments, veterinarian appointments, co-payments, family/pet prescriptions, and therapy sessions are okay.
  4. Do keep existing service and repair appointments that can’t be rescheduled to “Spending” months, such as hair appointments, lawn care services, trash removal, in-home repair services, etc.
  5. Do keep existing tithing and charitable giving.
  6. Do have an adequate stockpile of necessities prior to beginning this challenge, such as pet food, bedding, litter, laundry detergent, dish soap, snow salts, bottled water and emergency staples (if you live in areas frequently affected by seasonal weather), etc. 
  7. Do keep up with healthy living habits. I will continue to use my envelope saving system to fund app purchase rebates (iBotta, Shopmium, Snap by Groupon) for fresh produce and milk savings that may pop-up during my no-spend months; due to my PCOS I need several servings of fruits and veggies daily, and these app savings help keep my freezer stocked on a budget. 
  8. And it goes without saying, please do pay all of our monthly obligations; rent, mortgage, insurance, utility payments, banking fees,  student/financial/business loans, medical expenses, and assumed or credit card debt. 

February is not just about not spending, although that will be our main goal.  I always challenge each of you to find ways to live well, live better, find new sources of joy, will spending less. You may just find out just how much we already have, and how little more we really need.  And hopefully, by the end of them month, a life rich with family, friends, and creative planning, secured by fiscally responsible measures, will be who we truly are. In addition, I hope to make my posts comments section a place of encouragement and accountability for us all, too!

I’m not gonna lie, there presumably will be tough moments, and for that reason, with one week remaining, stock-up on any items you currently feel you cannot do without;  I will buy an extra pack of Cherry Coke Zero, Brumble & Brown Strawberry Spread, and a large bag of Life Should Taste Gluten-Free Chips! This planning also lends itself to the 31-day cycle, for months with less than 31 days. 

I’m not sure how many of you are on board for this month’s challenge but the gauntlet has been tossed, and I am calling on all of you all to try this challenge, in your own way, with your own rules, and just to do this with me. Right here, right now let’s both commit to a whole month of no spending, starting in February!

Here’s to Saving,

niki-name-design

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What I learned from October’s No-Spend Monthly Challenge!

Hello again, savvy savers! October’s No-Spend Daily Challenge, as part of the #31DayLWSZ Challenge, is now over! I want to discuss my experience this past weeks savings victories, challenges, and learning curves this past month of challenges. 

The rules were pretty simple:  

  • No spending on anything  beyond absolute necessities.
  • Eat from your pantry & freezer as often as you are able.
  • And make changes to the way you purchase and consume goods, services, and commodities in your home. 
  • The idea of the challenge is to keep up with your daily activities,, but the main goal is simply to stop spending.  
  • This challenge can be a life changing experience, as you may just be amazed at how your mindset and perspective will change after just a month of seeing how you can enrich your life, without spending more!

There were a few exceptions to the rule as follows:

  1. Unavoidable expenses related to employment, such as gas, are okay.
  2. Unavoidable school related expenses.
  3. Doctors appointments, veterinarian appointments, co-payments, family/pet prescriptions, and therapy sessions are okay.
  4. Do keep existing service and repair appointments that can’t be rescheduled to “Spending” months, such as hair appointments, lawn care services, trash removal, in-home repair services, etc.
  5. Do keep existing tithing and charitable giving.
  6. Do have an adequate stockpile of necessities prior to beginning this challenge, such as pet food, bedding, litter, laundry detergent, dish soap, snow salts, bottled water and emergency staples (if you live in areas frequently affected by seasonal weather), etc. 
  7. Do keep up with healthy living habits. I will continue to use my envelope saving system to fund app purchase rebates (iBotta, Shopmium, Snap by Groupon) for fresh produce and milk savings that may pop-up during my no-spend months; due to my PCOS I need several servings of fruits and veggies daily, and these app savings help keep my freezer stocked on a budget. 
  8. And it goes without saying, please do pay all of our monthly obligations; rent, mortgage, insurance, utility payments, banking fees,  student/financial/business loans, medical expenses, and assumed or credit card debt. 

This NO Spend month was not just about a decrease in spending, but a  challenge to find ways to live well, live better, find new sources of joy, will spending less. This month proved to be a time of being able to a life rich with family, friends, and creative planning, secured by fiscally responsible measures. This month was made all the better by the amount of encouragement and accountability shared by all of my readers, too!

I’m not gonna lie, there were tough moments, moments I felt I was simply doing without;  I longed for Cherry Coke Zero, Brumble & Brown Strawberry Spread, and a large bag of Life Should Taste Gluten-Free Chips!

This month I was able to save a total of $1,021.34, and some of the ways I did this were by:

  • Pantry Organization
  • Utilizing On Hand Food Options To Help Make Weekly Menu Ideas Sheets
  • Learning Home to “Dine Out At Home”
  • Working on a personal #Choose30 Challenge
  • Creating a local Coupon Swap
  • Rain-Check Shopping for next months needed coupon staples and groceries
  • Learning ways to  Save On Monthly Utility Bills
  • Learning ways to better clean my home
  • Establishing Cleaning Routines & Decluttering Zones)
  • Establishing new, lasting ways to organize by Bathrooms & Linen Closet
  • I clean off my Counter-tops
  • I Clean Out my Closet
  • I organized my Home Office & Craft Room 
  • I sold my closet finds on Facebook Local Groups, Craigslist, and eBay which garnered $213.00
  • I sold crafts on ETSY totaling $109.00 from items I had on hand
  • I started selling patterns on Crafsty

All-in-all, I am pleased with this months progress and will be thinking of new and better ways to save come December’s next No-Spend Month Challenge! The funds from this challenge went towards my yearly savings goal for acquiring a rental property/tax sale in the year and a half to come. I am proud of myself, and so proud of you all as well. If you were able to follow along with this challenge, I’d love to hear about it!

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Last month my top new ways to save a total of $838.46 by:

  • Pantry Organization
  • Utilizing On Hand Food Options To Help Make Weekly Menu Ideas Sheets
  • Learning Home to “Dine Out At Home”
  • Working on a personal #Choose30 Challenge to be more positive daily.
  • Rain-Check Shopping for next months needed coupon staples and groceries from this last weekend.
  • I clean off my Counter-tops to use as workstation areas for donating, sorting, and prepping donations.
  • I listed and sold items via eBay, Craiglist, Facebook Local Groups, and Craftsy patterns. 
  • Had an in-home spa day and saved $32.00! 
  • Upcycled several new home projects. 
  • Our family ate from our crock-pot for a week! 

I did have a few set backs this week though. My husband needed to take the entire $80.00 cushion I set aside for this months produce and incidentals budget for an impromptu school robotics club he is the sponsor of, as well as the funds needed for an oil change (for his car that was suppose to have previously been taken care of). Mind you I was a little taken back to find my home stripped of cash, sodas, and my pre-purchased Halloween candy (candy and sodas to help supplement our family and his 14 students going with him on this trip). My saving grace? Three hours after he left for his day-trip, I received not one, but four ETSY shop orders (that I already had the materials on hand for, score!), which not only reimbursed my budget, but paid for the missing household staples, and set my savings goal ahead by $27.00!

So, all’s well that ends well here is the Roberts household. 


PicMonkey Collage

As well here are a few ways I have been able to accomplish my no-spend goals this past week: 

  1. I woke up at 6:25 daily, walked my fur babies, showered, & dressed to my shoes. (Thanks, Flylady!)
  2. Worked on my daily Motivated Moms Planner.
  3. I read three review books. 
  4. I finished today’s Day 1-7 No-Spend Challenges!
  5. I enjoyed a free Chik-fil-a- frozen latte!
  6. I cooked from my pantry, eleven times.
  7. I walked for three miles every other day!
  8. I finished all of my daily blog posts on time!
  9. Read my daily devotional.
  10. I cleaned out my coupon cabinet, paper files for my ETSY business, and recycled numerous bins of random scraps of fabric around my craft room, too! 

My tally of last weeks savings are:

  • I was able to procure 16 new rain-checks savings $54.00 in savings.
  • I completed 2 surveys online via Ipsos-iSay, and earned a $1.00 towards my next Amazon gift code.
  • I eat at home thirteen times, saving our family $77.93. 
  • I recycled, upcycled, and composted one bins of deluge, and saved $1.20, the cost of 6 trash bags. 
  • I enjoyed a free Chik-fil-a frozen latte, for free, a savings of $2.99!
  • I received $32.98 worth of product review items, which can be placed in my home gift closet!
  • My family drank water for one, and saved $7.30, the cost of a five 2-liters of soda.
  • We made DIY fireplace starters, savings $12.98 over commercial pricing. 
  • We used earned gift card dollars at Sam’s Club to buy gas, saving us $20.04.
  • We made DIY hand sanitizer bottles, saving our family $7.98.
  • We made DIY wet dog food, saving out family $19.98 over a case of pet food cans. 

So, overall my family saved $138.38

This months savings goal remaining: +$49.62 for this month. 

All-in-all, I am pleased with this past months progress and will be thinking of new and better ways to save come the next months ahead! Mind you this progress is in part due to my families use of earned and gifted survey cards; I’ve read a lot of people state that they will not be using them on the challenge, but for me and mine, we love them. I legitimize these cards as ALL were earned from taking surveys, using savings apps, or by wining contest, paid affiliate campaigns, and giveaways. Free money is just that, free. 

I’m excited to note that these funds will be able to be allocated for last-minute holiday gifts, holiday donations, and Angle Tree presents this holiday season. As well, a fourth of the funds from this challenge went towards my yearly savings goal for acquiring a rental property/tax sale in the year and a half to come.  I am proud of myself, and so proud of you all as well.

If you were able to follow along with this past weeks #31DayLWSZ challenge, I’d love to hear about it!

Here’s to Saving,

niki-name-design

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October No-Spend Month Challenge Day 27: Free Online College Courses

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Hello again, savvy savers! A new day, and a new challenge! Today, I want to switch topics, and discuss a way you can save money, and that is by taking a refresher course from one of America’s best colleges and Universities. As part of today’s No-Spend Challenge, I want to post about an awesome at-home learning tool many users may be interested in using, Coursea.com.

  • Coursera is a for-profit educational technology company offering massive open online courses founded by computer science professors, Andrew Ng and Daphne Koller from Stanford University.
  • This online course directory offers persons from all walks of life the ability to sample, full-length classes, webinars, refresher courses, or to browse syllabi and test prep, in a full range of Liberal Arts topics, from many of the national top colleges and universities, including Duke University, Yale University, Vanderbilt University, and Johns Hopkins University.
  • There are also courses focused on music education, art appreciation, small business management, and anthropological studies.

For those interested in this site, click here.

So, for today’s challenge, I encourage you all to check out this site, and see if you may be interested in taking a new online course on for size! Good luck! Be sure to check back tomorrow morning for the final day of this months No-Spend Challenge!

Here’s to saving,

mbnlogosm

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About Me

Hi there! I'm Nicole. I'm a fun-loving, zero-waste, minimalist writer, blogger, and podcaster living in the deep south. Where there's an adventure, you'll find me there. More About Nicole

Want to chat? Email me: Nicole@theladyprefers2save.com

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