How Can We Get Through The Cost Of Living Crisis?

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  • Опубліковано 19 чер 2024
  • I give you the facts about how to cope with the inflation crisis we are in.
    Frugal Queen in France
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 659

  • @Babba08
    @Babba08 2 роки тому +77

    I'm about 5 years older than you guys and I remember going through some hard times with my family in the 60s but by the 70s we were totally spoiled. My father had a good job and we had central heat and AC and all the food we could want. My parents grew up during the Depression so they didn't tolerate waste, but we had it easy.
    Fast forward to today and my husband and I are on a fixed income and I am his full time caregiver. This winter we dress as you did in the 70s to go to bed so that we don't have to run the oil furnace. I get up at about 5:30am and physically turn the furnace on to heat up the house and go back to bed. It does not run during the night unless it gets below 20 degrees. We don't want the pipes freezing. We get up at between 6 and 6:30am. By then the house is fairly warm and we turn on some space heaters but depend a lot on the sunshine to do a lot of the heating. Cloudy days are tough. We live in a very small place so there isn't really any area that we can't heat.
    Every evening I have been wearing a knit cap while I watch TV as well as 3 layers under my bathrobe. During the day I wear 4 layers. The layer we wear next to our bodies are changed everyday, but not the other layers, just as you mentioned. I wash clothes only in cold water and when the weather allows I hang our clothes on the line outside.
    When I turn the oven on I cook a couple of different meals at the same time. I do tend to rinse dishes in hot water. I should do that in cold water. I spend a lot of time cooking and we simply don't eat at restaurants. It saves so much money.
    I avoid driving unless necessary. I drove so little in 2020 that my battery died and had to be recharged, lol. I drive the car, short distances, a couple of times a week to charge the battery.
    We are very low income but when we got the stimulus money from the government here in the US we donated a small portion to a local food bank both times. Whenever we feel we can we try to do that. We may not have a lot ourselves, but we have more than some. Especially people with kids.

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +14

      We’re the same, we donate at all the food collections, there’s hungry children out there

    • @lindab8078
      @lindab8078 2 роки тому +13

      Barbara, I loved hearing your story, you are so inspiring! Hugs to you and your hubby!

  • @karenbowden552
    @karenbowden552 2 роки тому +148

    Thanks Jane and Mike, you are so very right, we have had it so good for so long. A timely message about sharing what you have too, if you are able too. Cooking a meal for someone you know, buying a bag of shopping, popping a store voucher through the door, all ways we can help our fellow humans. When my kids were little, I came home to find a week's shopping on my doorstep. I never found out who left it... Little did they know we we had nothing in the bank, I was walking around with holes in my shoes and we nearly lost our home. I have never forgot that act of kindness.

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +66

      I was desperately poor when I only had my son, someone left a bag of coal on my doorstep, I’ve never forgotten that warmth.

    • @Dee-te9sj
      @Dee-te9sj 2 роки тому +14

      @@FrugalQueeninFrance yes, these acts of kindness mean so much when we are struggling. Thank you for the reminder to give

    • @jazzyk4046
      @jazzyk4046 2 роки тому +13

      I cried reading your comment 😭 God bless the good hearted people, and bless everyone!

  • @mariaevans5046
    @mariaevans5046 2 роки тому +135

    This has to be your very best video "ever". Well done Jane, and we have to remember to "give" to foodbanks

    • @lynncousley4832
      @lynncousley4832 2 роки тому +6

      I totally agree.I grew up in N.Ireland in the same time as Jane describes and everything she says is exactly how l grew up.No one l knew owned a house or had a mortgage. Council houses all the way!

    • @kerryjames4026
      @kerryjames4026 2 роки тому +8

      One of your best videisxx

    • @mariaguadagno9483
      @mariaguadagno9483 2 роки тому +4

      Hello! I'm new here,nice to meet you,and thank you very much!

    • @mitomom4947
      @mitomom4947 2 роки тому +4

      @@mariaguadagno9483 welcome! This is a wonderful channel. I learn from Jane and other subscribers all the time. 💜

    • @kristenacarbone7549
      @kristenacarbone7549 4 місяці тому

      Such wonderfully helpful tips! Beautiful quilts!

  • @maryness8957
    @maryness8957 2 роки тому +77

    Well done you two! Sensible advice for saving money, in good times and in bad. I was a young married mother in the mid-70's. Used cloth diapers, cooked from scratch, had cheap entertainment by going to parks, going to the library. I call those the "good old days". We all knew how to live inexpensively and were happy and less stressed. Love your videos!!!

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +19

      You’re welcome Mary. People have so much now, they might have to give something up to keep the bills paid.

    • @patmartin9727
      @patmartin9727 2 роки тому +6

      I too was a young mother in the mid 70’s. We had little access to credit so had no option but to live within our means. It gave us a good grounding and some of the habits I learnt in those hard times have never left me. Like everyone I was foolish enough to all the life style creep to creep in but in the 90’s when my husband was suddenly made redundant I had to quickly put them back into action. He found another job but it was what is now known as a zero contract job so income was very unreliable. Then in the late 90’s his health quickly deteriorated and this lead to me becoming a widow a few years ago. When his health deteriorated I became the bread winner, I have never be afraid of hard work but life was not easy juggling caring for him and bringing in an income. On lots of occasions over the years I have laid in bed and said a little prayer for my early upbringing and early married life because it taught me how to be frugal. I really feel sorry for the generation that followed that never experienced this. Like Jane repeatedly tells us we have had it too good for too long and for. People who have never known any different these next few years are going to be a big wake up call. The quicker people realise they need to change their ways of dealing with finances the better. Sadly we have a couple of generations of people who believe they are entitled to everything and if they can’t provide it someone else should. We all have 100 pence in our pound and people need to take responsibility for there personal financial situation and realise you can’t spend what you don’t have for too long before it all fall down around you

  • @lauravancea3935
    @lauravancea3935 2 роки тому +69

    Thank you Jane and Mike. Best video so far! Full of good advice and common sense. Hard times are ahead of us, with inflation, climate change and now war. I remember in the 80s, during communism here in Romania, a lot of cold, no electricity a couple of hours every day, two(2) hours of Tv in the evening and only the national romanian post filled with praise for Ceausescu, the empty-empty shops and hunger. We mended everything, everybody helped everybody with spare food, reused everything and managed to laugh between hard days. I was a child and then teenager until 1989 but for my family it was extraordinaly hard. Now we live the best life ever, with roof, food, heat, but very very carefully watching the pennies, the bills, the war news, the local farmers'produce. Take care and God bless.

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +14

      Thanks Laura, your story perfectly exemplifies that in modern times, we really don’t know what going without means. Thanks for sharing your story.

  • @connieseward8773
    @connieseward8773 2 роки тому +28

    Mom would heat beach rocks in our wood stove and send me to bed with one. Not that we couldn’t afford heat, we were well off, but it was just a practical way to reduce energy costs. This was in the 70’s. I am very grateful for the frugal way she brought me up.

    • @katherinerichardson1767
      @katherinerichardson1767 2 роки тому +17

      Heating rocks reminds me of what a little girl did with hot baked potatoes. During the winter, she would carry a hot aluminum foil covered potato in her coat pocket when she walked to school to keep warm. Later at lunch time, she would add the shredded cheese and other items she carried in her lunch kit to the baked potato. {When she got to school, she put the potato in her lunch kit.} I never did this but I did think this was cool (or should say it was hot? lol).

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +6

      I love baked potatoes

  • @alyssajenaway3781
    @alyssajenaway3781 2 роки тому +23

    The only rail line (for food) into our city was recently destroyed by floods so the stores have been almost empty and prices have escalated and I don't think will go back down because of everything else. I went to the store to buy nappies for our twins the other day and found they have gone up 15% overnight, so it's onto full time, cloth nappies for us. And you inspired me tonight to buy a little egg timer for the shower, and going to invest in a little bucket for the sink to wash up in. It will be hard but I am determined that this will bring out the best in me, I'm cooking healthier already from this, and realizing how much money I have wasted in the past.

  • @kathryncooper4001
    @kathryncooper4001 2 роки тому +53

    Very good advice, Jane. One thing I did when faced with a desperate financial situation (divorce) was change to just two meals a day, what I called brunch and "lupper." The practice reduced energy expenditure and food expense. Brunch typically consisted of oatmeal flavored with fruit, or eggs and toast (from homemade bread) accompanied by some sort of fruit, and coffee or tea (had to switch to tea when money got REALLY tight). Late afternoon lupper was always a starch, a protein, a green vegetable, and a salad of some sort, and then I'd serve a dessert later in the evening -- seasonal fruit with cheese, homemade pudding, or homemade cookies. Cutting back to two meals a day served us so well that we never went back to three meals, even when finances were more comfortable.

    • @ohmcintyre2067
      @ohmcintyre2067 2 роки тому +4

      "Lupper"! I call it that, too! Oatmeal/"porridge" about 9a.m., lupper at 4, snack/dessert around 7 pm.

    •  2 роки тому +5

      I agree two meals a day is more than enough. Big breakfast full of nuts, dried fruits and seeds for me with a drink is more than enough to attack a full working day. A lighter dinner few hours before bed makes sure you sleep easily all night.

    • @laetitialogan2017
      @laetitialogan2017 2 роки тому +2

      Same in this house.. I give my 6 foot 3 son extra, but for myself..2 x meals is plenty

  • @jeanwhite2705
    @jeanwhite2705 2 роки тому +70

    Down to the basic nitty gritty, good sense choices. Not always the advice we want to hear but for many who have not lived the reality of central heating and hot water at the touch of a button, hands off laundry with steam dried clothes, and using up every bit of the oven heat with more than one item or meal, these words can help them find ways of living within their reduced means. Thank You Jane. It’s nice to have reminders and reinforcement that we are not the odd balls despite our grandchildren’s raised eyebrows about Gramma’s odd ways.

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +8

      Thanks Jean. We can get through this.

    • @barbarabruce7648
      @barbarabruce7648 2 роки тому +8

      @@FrugalQueeninFrance We weren't rich but my parents were experts at frugality that they made us feel rich. We got to do good stuff because they were smart. Didn't do everything I wanted but I was the only kid I knew who went snow skiing and snorkeling on the Great Barrier Reef every year. I was also the only kid I knew who wore (beautiful) second hand clothes and never ever ate at a restaurant and didn't have a home phone. That's how we afforded the ski trips.

    • @pigletsbank437
      @pigletsbank437 2 роки тому +4

      I am not a grandma by far but I do remember the 1980 as a child, my friends from almost the same age have frown upon my ways for years. ( even my sisther🤔) I hope they can embrace the old or should I just say economical ways soon enough, before they end up in even more financial trouble. It worth it to skip a "want" for a "need" .

  • @andietheowl
    @andietheowl Рік тому +3

    Haha you made my Alexa set a timer and I was lost in thought plating dinner and about jumped out of my skin! Thank you for a great laugh.

  • @nancisailormoy9135
    @nancisailormoy9135 2 роки тому +53

    I grew up in the 60's and 70's so remember all those frugal years that we just thought were normal. Having retired in late 2019 nothing has been normal for quite some time and there's nothing like living on a limited income to bring back your frugal roots. As the stock market turned south earlier this year I started to tighten the budget and got rid of a lot of those repetitive monthly luxuries ( Netflix, Onstar, Amazon prime, XMradio) and hope they will help to save some money. I have always cooked for myself and rarely eat out so I can easily stretch a whole chicken for about 6 meals. Growing up I remember my Mom picking every last peice of meat off the bones and then making stock for soup. I always saw my Mom as frugal but now I have so much recall to help me through these horrid days of inflation. Thanks for all the great tips.

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +4

      You’re welcome Nanci and thanks for watching

    • @kaydavis6752
      @kaydavis6752 2 роки тому +5

      You sound just like me, retired early mid 2019 and our childhoods taught us how to make do. We had several meals this last weekend from a small chicken, including picking the meat off the bones for a curry, hot dinners with mash and veg and several sandwiches. We have lived through high interest rates and suffered low interest on savings while the younger generations have bought large houses on low interest mortgages. Will be interesting to see how they cope if the cost of living spirals upwards significantly.

  • @chicagogran1164
    @chicagogran1164 2 роки тому +7

    Brought tears to my eyes, remembering nine little kids worried about where our next meal would come.

  • @helenwilkins4337
    @helenwilkins4337 2 роки тому +25

    My beloved Welsh Nian, who was born in 1900, always said I complained I had no shoes until I met a man with no feet. I’ve never forgotten it. Years later I found out it was a quote from Shakespeare and she left school aged 12 to work because she was the eldest child and needed to earn money for the family xx

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +8

      She’s right, we should be grateful, compassionate and certainly not selfish

  • @connieseward8773
    @connieseward8773 2 роки тому +32

    My mother is 96. She still collects knitted items, unravels them, and makes beautiful objects.

    • @marthaross6301
      @marthaross6301 2 роки тому +6

      I am frogger too❣️
      Great yarn source.
      Both mending and knitting or crochet 🧶

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +7

      Your mother is very resourceful

    • @katherinerichardson1767
      @katherinerichardson1767 2 роки тому +7

      Impressive!

    • @jennstovern5455
      @jennstovern5455 2 роки тому +3

      I do this also. I really dislike knitting with acrylics.

    • @marthaross6301
      @marthaross6301 2 роки тому +2

      @@jennstovern5455 I only do it with good wools, cashmeres, mohair, alpacas and silk or interesting blends.
      Special cottons
      Or it must be a specific weight or color for a project…..
      I also will felt them to utilize other ways than thread harvesting.

  • @adaly5115
    @adaly5115 2 роки тому +22

    Jane and Mike thank you for that. very true that there is always someone else worse off. My dad was out of work for almost 6 yeas until 1974 we didnt have to sell the furniture but some neighbours had to and all the neighbours gave them pieces of furniture so they didnt go without. I remember" nothing" sandwiches there was no butter on them and no filling and we thought that was great as children. Yes I well remember shaving my legs in the bathroom sink lol and all the washing routines. someone gave us a bottle of shampoo in 1970 and we didnt know what to do with as we used soap for washing our hair. when washing in the bathroom in the winter you were fast doing as there was no central heating. My husband was also out of work for over 2 years and with everything I learned as a child was all there for us to cope with not a bother why? there was always others less well off and never grumble as there is always so much to be grateful for no matter what.

  • @julibeswick-valentine3690
    @julibeswick-valentine3690 2 роки тому +26

    I am 68 and you basically told the story of my life 🤣. The very hardest time for me was in the 80's when the mortgage interest rate went up to over 15% , it was traumatizing.
    Hard hitting but sound advice Jane. Its tighten your belt time, the sooner the better. You do get into the swing of it very quickly. I am fortunate to have kept a lot of my frugal ways going to stretch my income but this is going to be the 1st time for many. Treat it as a challenge and keep your sense of humour.

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +4

      Indeed, we’ll all find our priorities if that’s all we can afford

  • @patmartin9727
    @patmartin9727 2 роки тому +16

    What a wonderful video Jane. I was a child of the 50’s and 60’s. My grandma lived with use and was the cook. My mum was also a great cook but she cooked for a living. They both were very frugal, gran knit for us all(I was the oldest of 5) mum was a sewer she made all our cloths, even our coats, trousers for the boys. It was luxury to get new underwear or shoes because they came from the shop. I married in 1970 and money was tight so I used tips from mum on stretching the money. By 1975 I was a young mum with a family to feed. My husband wanted a stay at home wife/ mother so I made keeping house and stretching the money my job. I am pleased to say apart from a mortgage we didn’t have debt, I scrimps and saved to buy things we needed. School uniforms were saved for throughout the year and handed down, even exchanged with friends who had children of different age to mine
    I totally agree we have had a good life for the last few years but this has breed a couple of generations of people with an entitlement mentality. I feel sorry for these people as they really will struggle in these times of rampant inflation.
    I am pleased I grew up in poorer times, it taught us to appreciate what we have. Once you have lived poor you can always go back to that. More should be taught about life skills. We were taught to sew, knit, cook at school. We had a school bank and we were taught to save. Yes we were poorer as children but we had a loving home were fed on good meals but we were taught life skills, we saw mum cooking from scratch hearty meals, dad growing veg for mum to cook.
    Thank you Jane and Mike for reminding us all how lucky we are even in these time of rapid price rises. We are still much richer than all lot of people the world over.

  • @belindacopson2390
    @belindacopson2390 2 роки тому +54

    I was a child of the 70s too, we did have central heating and modest holidays but many of your memories sound so familiar. My mother was a good 'from scratch' baker and many of the things I make are her recipes. Gifts to children were reserved for Christmas and birthdays, how we enjoyed our paintboxes and puzzles, no electronic toys then. I agree we all need to re-examine wants versus needs. I liked that you included giving to others. Too many people in the UK are not far off destitution.

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +9

      Awesome that you did. No one had any money where I lived. We were way better off than some families.

  • @patricianorton3908
    @patricianorton3908 2 роки тому +20

    Jane, you are a wonder! You are talking about circumstances and remedies that reflect all the ones that were/are in my own life! And I’m 80……….. I still get after my little/younger brother about his habit of turning on a minimum of 2 lights in a room and then leaving it shortly after - to actually leave the house! And he’s 78!!!!🙄🤭🙀🙁😳😳 My sisters and I have said for years that were "poor but didn’t know it". This subject is so important, so please address it frequently. Today’s youth look as though we are making these problems and solutions up! They think we should be immune to the fiscal difficulties that only happen to others. sigh….. Thank you again. Patricia from New Hampshire (US) 👵🏻 🤗 🥰

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +7

      You’re welcome. We didn’t know we were poor, as a family I knew kids who were poor. Holes in their clothes and shoes, dirty and often poorly. We were always clean and well fed. As for now, if we focus on our needs, we’ll get through this.

  • @annelisewhite6244
    @annelisewhite6244 2 роки тому +24

    Some great points made. When people say they could give up their Netflix subscription to save a little money, consider those in the world that don't have electricity in the first place to power a TV to watch Netflix and have never even heard of it anyway! At 35 I am just as guilty of growing up in an age/generation of 'entitled mindset' and fully admit to 0 hardships in life. I have never had to go without food or a roof over my head. Lots to think about, thank you.

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +7

      You’re welcome and many have never gone without anything at all

  • @leanefortune4024
    @leanefortune4024 2 роки тому +12

    So well said...perspective. What is better than a cup of tea, a warm blanket and a good library book, with a hot stew in the crackpot? The simple things.

  • @Jennheartsqs
    @Jennheartsqs 2 роки тому +50

    Lots of great tips in this video. I'm lucky enough to live in a mild climate, so I've stopped turning on the heating in the evenings. I wear layers and keep a blanket on my lap when I'm working, and then I do my exercise workout at night which warms me up plenty. Then it's a quick 60 second rinse off in the shower before bed and I sleep in a hoodie (like a jumper but with a hood) so no money spent on heating. I've also taught myself how to make bread and tortillas from scratch.

  • @jenx5047
    @jenx5047 2 роки тому +12

    After reading all the other comment I think it would be a good idea to put your video on the bbc news to help everyone well done you

  • @jodeeseibert7200
    @jodeeseibert7200 10 місяців тому +1

    When I was a child I was a throwaway. I stole my food from the kitchen and the garden. You have to know what other people liked and not get it. But I learned to eat what I had to. Now I'm keeping an eye on my pantry. But I try to feed everyone.

  • @lisaturner8664
    @lisaturner8664 2 роки тому +42

    Another tip from someone in your age bracket. Turn off the oven 10 minutes before things are ready, the residual heat will finish cooking your food for free! Then, when you take the food out of the oven in winter, leave the oven door ajar to warm the room. Great video!! Love from Australia xxx p.s. also using cast iron pans. When you turn the stove off, they hold the heat for some time.

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +4

      Great tip Lisa

    • @fionauk4509
      @fionauk4509 2 роки тому +1

      You shouldn't leave the oven door open as you can poison yourself

    • @lisaturner8664
      @lisaturner8664 2 роки тому +5

      @@fionauk4509 mine is electric!

    • @sarahmc8309
      @sarahmc8309 2 роки тому

      In 35 and do this 😆🙈🙈🙈

    • @laetitialogan2017
      @laetitialogan2017 2 роки тому +5

      Same applies for the stove top rings, ie Pasta etc, bring if to the boil, turn off and cover, veg etc...residual heat

  • @lisap9437
    @lisap9437 2 роки тому +61

    Oh my , what a brilliant video. This should be a public service video! This really needs to be conveyed to a wider audience. I grew up in the 70s and relate to everything you've said and I believe I'm stronger for it. I've always been pretty frugal anyway but I've still gained so much from this. You and Mike should be proud of your channel, you will be helping so many

  • @serenitybay5544
    @serenitybay5544 2 роки тому +8

    First time I watched you, I was making a banoffee pie myself whilst watching. Tomorrow my daughter and little granddaughter are having a treat! For the last two years I have been baking my own bread, kefir and cooking all meals from scratch with very little meat. I feel I have had excellent practice as I watched my mother carefully manage her household on coupons and limited resources directly after WW11. I make my granddaughter’s dresses and crochet her cardies and socks. I love doing it! I also grow vegetables and medicinal herbs in a very tiny garden. It just takes a bit of faith in yourself that you can do these things and pass on the skills to the next generation.

  • @vickiem.6096
    @vickiem.6096 2 роки тому +12

    I remember 18-24% interest rates and my parents waiting in line to fill up the car. We ate head cheese, liver, heart, tongue, rabbit and cow's brains. We also the cheapest salad greens and generic everything.

  • @jenx5047
    @jenx5047 2 роки тому +33

    I loved this video, I’m in my 60’s and you just described my past I remember my mother getting up at 6 o’clock to light the coal fire. We used to scrape the ice off the insides of the windows, I lived through everything you said we were very poor but happy. Now I live alone mortgage free and live a frugal life style. I have learned a lot of tips from you in all areas that you talk about. Thank you so much.

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +14

      You’re welcome, if we have the lights on, food to eat, we can wash, we have a warm bed….we are rich indeed.

  • @rebeccablackhall-peters1843
    @rebeccablackhall-peters1843 2 роки тому +9

    Jane, I have to say you are sooooo good in front of the camera, really natural and a joy to watch. Thank you!

  • @user-yd3jd2em8e
    @user-yd3jd2em8e 2 місяці тому +1

    When I decide to make soup or stew, my husband helps by chopping veg, resulting in us enjoying cooking together. We cook with less meat substituting more lentils or beans and veg. We follow most tips you’ve shared here, a nice affirmation we’re doing our best to cut costs. Most important my spouse and I appreciate and help each other more. Don’t fight! We’re in this together ❤ 🇨🇦

  • @laetitialogan2017
    @laetitialogan2017 2 роки тому +5

    Keeping it real Jane. There's nothing like growing up in a household that's tight for money. It NEVER leaves you, but so handy in hard times..great job as always..

  • @tbarc1
    @tbarc1 7 місяців тому +2

    Hello Jane! I'm a new subscriber after being introduced to your UA-cam channel on a Facebook page I follow. I'm totally loving your vids even though for most of my life I've followed many of your advice while living a frugal lifestyle. Your commonsense encouragment is so uplifting! You've awakened me to some things I need to re-incorporate as well as some new things to practice. I always lamented over spending hard earned money on convenience foods AND paying others to do tasks I should have been doing myself...2 of my biggest pet peeves! Recently I chose retirement as I realize my naturally frugal ways can carry me through and prevent those bad habits because I've now re-gifted myself the time I needed for them. I have a longtime personal motto
    Empty Pockets, Happy Heart!
    Thank you for sharing and caring!

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  7 місяців тому +1

      Thanks so much for your feedback and sharing your journey

  • @unadempsey1542
    @unadempsey1542 2 роки тому +13

    Thank you for being the only common sense voice I have heard so far on this topic.Fostering the gratitude habit is for me vital to wellbeing and to empathising and connecting with others connecting with

  • @davidjenson7773
    @davidjenson7773 2 роки тому +18

    Jane you are a powerful teacher wow very helpful
    We are all so blessed and rich we are all spoiled as society and this is a wake up call for all.
    You are amazing!

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +6

      You’re right, we are spoiled, we’ve had it good and this is a shock.

  • @chasingsimpledreams
    @chasingsimpledreams 9 місяців тому

    my mom always said to me, "well, it can always be worse." i watch videos of interviews with homeless folks on Invisible People youtube channel and it makes me grateful for everything I have. i lived in a truck camper but it was by choice and i never forgot that.

  • @dawnmorandin541
    @dawnmorandin541 2 роки тому +8

    Wow, have you got a camera in our house...lol...everything you mentioned we do to save money..I made a left over soup this morning, cleaned out the fridge. Homemade bread tonight, soup. Dessert will be Homemade cake, jam and cream. Heats on low, sweater on, blanket on the sofa, shower only every 3 days, retired, not too dirty. I don't think people are ready for all the stuff they will need to do, too spoilt over the years, bankruptcies are going to increase. Excellent video, you read my mind.

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +3

      Yep, I didn’t say people will have to make the best of it but people have had it easy.

  • @ashjoma
    @ashjoma 2 роки тому +9

    Fabulous video and I will watch again. I’m the same age as you but I grew up in Australia. My parents were English and emigrated in the 50’s. Dad found work, bought a bush block of land in Sydney and built the house as he found work.. mum and dad never had any credit card. Dad called a credit card the “never, never”..
    I know now things must have been tight but I never knew any hardship, mum always had a hot meal on the table.
    I think things here must have been much better than the 70’s UK hardship sounded.
    Dad would give mum an ‘allowance’ each week from his pay and mum made that work.
    I know mum got a child allowance from the government.
    My school uniforms were usually second hand but I preferred them as they weren’t scratchy.
    But for me, summers were long and spent playing in the National park bushland opposite. Mum and I would walk in the bush and look for tadpoles in rock pools and I’d swing on the rope swing on the big gumtree. We had a cat who turned up one day and stayed.
    I didn’t find out until years later that mum took a job in the school canteen making the sandwiches to pay for my braces. They never told me.
    They are both gone now and I miss my parents. They left school, age 14 or so because of WW2 but they were both smart and made the best of things.

  • @MelissaPhillips-nj5sb
    @MelissaPhillips-nj5sb 5 місяців тому

    Thanks especially for the reflection Jane.
    When i was a child we could not afford to heat at all. It could get so cold we had to go to my mom's best friend's. She afforded one room. Mom's in the bed, kids on the floor. Not for days or weeks, but sometimes months, as the pipes had frozen and burst and we couldn't go back.
    Shower saving idea. Years ago we lived on a sailboat. We didn't even have hot water but needed to conserve water religiously. We still use this trick of installing a hard shutoff at the shower head. I shampoo and rinse, then turn water OFF. I put my conditioner in and have all the time in the world to soap, scrub and shave. Then rinse. I'm still quick. I have long hair too and we know we can both shower in under 5 gallons!

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  5 місяців тому

      Proof we can endure and survive hard and minor shortages. Thanks so much for watching and commenting

  • @leannec2120
    @leannec2120 2 роки тому +31

    Love this video Jane! I also was a child of the 70’s, it was a great time to be a kid. My parents were frugal out of necessity but I learned so much from my parents and grandparents on how to be careful with your money, grow your own food and live within your means. My great grandfather came to Canada as a Barnardo boy at age 7 to work on a farm. His mother had to surrender him and his siblings to an orphanage after his father died as she couldn’t feed them. You are so right we have so much to be grateful for nowadays!

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +10

      Thanks Leanne, we really don’t know what hardship is in these modern times.

    • @laetitialogan2017
      @laetitialogan2017 2 роки тому +2

      Yes..very hard on those Barnardos children... we have no comprehension of hardship. I hope he did well for himself as he grew up, he certainly deserved it, best wishes from Ireland ( plenty of our children were exported also )

  • @isabelserrano6018
    @isabelserrano6018 2 роки тому +4

    You've bought back such memories of a maths teacher I had in the 70s (her name was Mrs O'Carroll). She would share her wise experience, being close to her pension at the time. She would say our head was like a teapot, so cover it as you do to keep the tea warm with the tea cosy. Drink plenty of tea it'll warm even you toe nails, her piece de resistance was dress like an onion wear many layers. So funny for a teenager, but this wise lady knew it all from hard experience.

  • @christinephillips3435
    @christinephillips3435 2 роки тому +1

    I have just undone a cardigan to make myself another jumper and I have to do all my cooking don't eat out at all.

  • @charleneherman5609
    @charleneherman5609 Рік тому +1

    When I was a kid we would go to Grandma's on the weekends and she had a cookstove. She had enamel bowls she would heat water to rinse the dishes. Was so hot you had to take a utensil go get the dishes out. It was too hot to put your hands in. Nobody ever got a cold from Grandma's

  • @gailgriffin-ballew6247
    @gailgriffin-ballew6247 2 роки тому +23

    I think this was perhaps one of your best videos! These were really good tips, and yes there is ALWAYS someone who is worse off. Thanks!

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +5

      Thanks Gail. Even if we stripped our lives back to our needs only, we’d still be better off than millions of people

  • @laurabeetschen2828
    @laurabeetschen2828 2 роки тому +21

    Thank you Jane, a voice of sense. I have very little spare money - I am trying to clear a hefty credit card debt whilst being on benefits. I cook from scratch almost everything. I am lucky that there is only me to think about except when my youngest daughter is home from Uni. I must be a similar age to you. My mum was remembering feeding the family on very little in the 70's and how she used to stretch everything. I just remember a happy childhood.

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +5

      I don’t know how our parents did it, they must have been magicians

    • @lynnoorman2144
      @lynnoorman2144 2 роки тому +3

      Wow! That is really hard work Laura- I have done this too. It can be done (after a divorce in my case) but it is hard work. My best tip for you is to be consistent. Best of luck.

  • @SuperNorini
    @SuperNorini 2 роки тому +7

    I find having to make sacrifices keeps me grounded and present. I like the feeling of creating something mindfully from very little... Usually the quality of homemade food is significantly higher than anything shop bought. And I appreciate it more.

  • @gwenfehr9156
    @gwenfehr9156 10 місяців тому

    We have been living with one vehicle for about three years now. We make it work. It helps that we both work in the town we live in.
    My mother-in-law wanted dinner rolls (buns), but neither of us really wanted to buy them. So this morning I decided to bake her a small batch of buns. I made 2.5 dozen bun. Total cost was under $2 CDN, it would have cost $7-8 to buy the equivalent. I also make egg noodles. A 906 gram bag sells for $12, I can make the same amount for under $1.

  • @lindab8078
    @lindab8078 2 роки тому +2

    I also grew up in the 70's, here in Canada, but thanks to frugal parents I don't remember ever going without. There were 8 of us children and we always went on a summer holiday, usually camping or meeting up with our cousins in the States but we always had a great time. We didn't go to summer camps but we had music lessons, played school sports, swim lessons and we all owned bikes, usually a hand me down from an older sibling. We grew up on home cooked meals and treats (cookies etc) and homemade bread (the envy of all our friends). Christmas' and birthdays were celebrated but simple. We had a large garden and canned fruits and vegetables to use through the winter. My mother was a talented seamstress and knitter and made many of our clothes. I appreciate the lessons I learned from my parents.
    More now than ever we need to look out for each other, help where we can. I believe in the power of a good attitude and an attitude of gratitude. Thank you for the straight talk. I think we have lived with abundance and an attitude of maybe entitlement for too long. As you say if you can have the basics life is good because there are many with much less.

  • @suzanneroberge494
    @suzanneroberge494 2 роки тому +14

    Excellent, practical, frugal advice. Thank you for being honest. And some of this will be hard for some folks to even wrap their thoughts around! But it's all true if you want to make your dollars stretch. Thanks also for the list if budget friendly meals. I'm in the U.S. & there are lots of even basic items that are getting hard to come by at times. But yes, aren't we STILL blessed with so much! Wouldn't it be nice if this taught the younger folks how to be more frugal? A lot of them really don't know what doing without means- they haven't had to. Always love to see your quilts. So pretty. God bless.

  • @gigihanley9757
    @gigihanley9757 2 роки тому +18

    Excellent content! Another factor is credit cards. As far as I know no one in my parents circle had a credit card.

  • @maryrickles9717
    @maryrickles9717 2 роки тому +7

    Growing up we had one bathroom the whole family used. There was one brand of toothpaste, one brand deodorant, one brand soap and same for shampoo. These days I see young families where everyone has their own brand of everything so there are multiple items of the same thing in the household. It costs a lot of money to have separate items for every family member. Thanks for this super helpful video.

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +2

      Good point Mary, we only had one toilet and bath, one tv and one fire.

    • @sarahmc8309
      @sarahmc8309 2 роки тому

      Really good point !
      I just do different shampoo as I colour my hair twice a year myself but when a shampoo didn’t work for me and was a large one to last a year I kept it and used it on my sons hair :) I buy one massive large bottle of shower gel for my son and I to use and that’s it ! I did buy him different shampoo as liked this life shampoo but was large bottle that last him 6 months but now I said myself I am going to use the shampoo that doesn’t work for me on his hair instead ! It costs a lot money is right ! I alway bulk buy in large sizes on sale once a year . Ever use deodorant . I do buy body cream for body and feet :)

  • @jeannetteshahenkari265
    @jeannetteshahenkari265 2 роки тому +36

    Wow!!! What a powerful video you and Mike have presented. Thank you for the time and effort that you have put into this. It was definitely a motivational reality check!

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +9

      Thanks, no matter what we go through, there’s always someone worse off than us.

  • @sheila1013
    @sheila1013 8 місяців тому +2

    Another great video Jane and Mike. I think very much the same as you and reduce costs as much as possible. I was a 60's child who was raised in a coal fired house, which at that stage, had an outside toilet. We had no central heating but we was always warm in the main living room and wore layers in the cold weather. Think people were tougher in those days and yes, everyone I knew had little money and lived well within their means, often resorting to measures such as the wool unravelling you mentioned. As you also said, nobody ate out during those times and meals were made from scratch. I was lucky in that we had one holiday a year, but many didn't. With regards to now, I also spot wash clothes as you do and put the washer on, only when I have a full load. I do have a dishwasher but as I live alone now, I more often than not wash up in the bowl. During the summer months, I then use the water on the outdoor plants. I also use a combined shampoo and conditioner which works well for me and lasts ages, as I don't need to use that much of it each time. Less rinsing off. I am on a water meter and doing things like this makes such a difference. Thanks again to you both for another interesting and clearly explained video. 🤗

  • @johanneperry3912
    @johanneperry3912 2 роки тому +5

    I agree with you wholeheartedly, Jane, and wish more people would talk about this subject like you are - going DEEP into frugal living. There is so much superficial advice out there. I think you're wonderful for putting yourself out in the world! Bravo!!!!

    • @maureenmannion6748
      @maureenmannion6748 Місяць тому

      Agree about superficial advise. I find most U.S. advisors on frugality haven't experienced what you have. Your perspective and advice brings me back to my roots. Now, I realize I am well off compared to my childhood conditions.

  • @carol.luna.stella
    @carol.luna.stella 10 місяців тому +1

    I recently started watching and am catching up on all your videos. Thank you for all the useful information and for your happy, upbeat attitude. I wish you were my neighbour!

  • @normanschranz4599
    @normanschranz4599 2 роки тому +1

    My Swiss father who passed away at age 87 never heated his home above 50°. He said it was 0° outside 50 as a heat wave. He would also throw coffee grounds into boiling water on the woodstove, cover, then use a sieve
    Into a coffee cup so he wouldn’t have to buy coffee filters. I learned a lot from that wonderful man

  • @MaryKane-qv5vz
    @MaryKane-qv5vz 4 місяці тому

    Greetings from Ireland. Great Video. Everyone should see these Videos. Older people are much more capable of dealing with these expensive times and we can be happy, contented and grateful for everything we have. Economy at home and in the kitchen, as suggested by you, is second nature to some of us and may be required more and more.

  • @hillcountrycottage
    @hillcountrycottage 2 роки тому +11

    I'm in complete agreement with all of the comments here, Jane.....I think this is one of your best videos ever. Lovingly straightforward and strengthing! Thank you not only for your wise and balanced perspective, but for these practical tips as well. I also love reading the comments....such wonderful insights!

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +2

      You’re welcome. I haven’t heard much perspective just every man for himself and fill your pantry

  • @michellerubadue9620
    @michellerubadue9620 2 роки тому +3

    This was great! In the 70’s I remember being in the car for hours waiting our turn for gas and praying they didn’t run out before our turn. I also want to remind people that soups stretch and will feed your family for a lot of meals.

  • @annmcnitt8749
    @annmcnitt8749 Рік тому +2

    You're perspective is so encouraging. We ARE blessed, and I hope that I can keep my eyes open to those who do need help.

  • @ninajohnson6578
    @ninajohnson6578 2 роки тому +9

    Great ideas and perspective. Can I add to unplug toasters, blenders, printers, lamps, phone chargers etc? It is so easy and mindless to leave everything plugged in. Plug them in when you are using them only. Same goes with gardening. Put food and flowers and herbs in pots and water them only. Water here is so expensive! And to your point if others having less…share what you have with others. I make two quiches and drop off one to a friend living on too little. Or a big batch of homemade oatmeal cookies and add some flower or veggies seeds. Hope is so important to our friends and family and everyone else. Food pantries are lifesavers for so many people here. Thank you for mentioning them as a reminder to all of us…

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +1

      Hope is all some people have to sustain them

    • @ninajohnson6578
      @ninajohnson6578 2 роки тому +4

      @@FrugalQueeninFrance so true Jane and critical during hard times. One added thought if I may, contribute pet food to food banks or to friends. I have two elderly friends who live alone with their cat. They struggle to make sure they can keep their companion kitty and they mean everything to them.

  • @berniceoconnor5381
    @berniceoconnor5381 2 роки тому +2

    I was born in 1960, and remember everything you said. Waking up in the morning to ice on the inside of the windows. Freezing bathrooms. Clothes drying all around the fire, so the windows were covered in condensation. Always having to check there was hot water before you could have a ( shallow) bath. Sharing bathwater etc etc. Well done Jane. An excellent video. I do all your tips naturally: filling ovens, dishwashers etc. A big shock to my children's generation though, I think. Well done. You have stepped off the hamster wheel of full time paid work to buy things, which requires funding by more full time work...

  • @catinacheatwood3084
    @catinacheatwood3084 2 роки тому +9

    If I could give you 10 thumbs up 👍 I would. This video is so needed for many people. Thanks for sharing.

  • @wendyajj1085
    @wendyajj1085 2 роки тому +5

    You really seemed in your element when delivering this brilliant mid-week money chat. Lots of great tips, and especially useful perspective. Thank you.

  • @georgiawise8375
    @georgiawise8375 3 місяці тому

    Best advice for todays times.
    Remember so many life stories from my grandma and mother. Yes we were frugal many times.
    Thk you so much🎉

  • @cathymillar9900
    @cathymillar9900 2 роки тому +4

    If you use an apron when cooking, you reduce the risk of staining your clothes. I use an old short sleeve shirt from my husband. Works wonderfully.

  • @coun_rylady9098
    @coun_rylady9098 2 роки тому +10

    Good common sense video! But in this day and age it is uncommon sense and this generation is going to have to learn frugality!

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +2

      They need to, too many people have no idea what it is to go without anything at all, they had it good.

  • @eileenmcgowan284
    @eileenmcgowan284 2 роки тому +16

    Amazing video -------so well presented, so much wisdom and so so true. I belong to the 60s and all you said resonated with me. I congratulate you Jane. Im a dedicated follower of your channel. Thank you from Eileen ,west of Ireland

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +9

      You’re welcome Eileen. We have to give up luxuries, focus on our needs, eat well and stay warm. What else do we need?

  • @RhondaTowanda
    @RhondaTowanda 2 роки тому +13

    Excellent video Jane & Mike!
    My mom was a single parent back in the ‘70’s.
    She did adult foster care, we had a bout 4 meals that she would rotate. We had a week, every month, of cornbread and Pinto beans. That was my most favorite week of all!! I never knew we were poor. We didn’t have a TV. We played outside. We went to bed at 8 pm.
    Live was good back then!

  • @julies3223
    @julies3223 2 роки тому +4

    I had hubby watch your video too. The look on his face afterwards was that of stress. I asked him why he felt that way. He said we work so hard. It’s interesting that I don’t look at it as a negative being conservative of water, gas, electric. I look at it as a positive challenge to myself. How much less can I use in order to not just give our hard earned money away to these companies. It’s all about how you look at the big picture. Our bath night was on Saturday night with my sister. Then having curlers put in our hair so we were clean and curly for church on Sunday. 1965 girl here🙂 We grew up when life was simple
    Best video Jane and Michael!!

  • @jeanfrench-turner6768
    @jeanfrench-turner6768 2 роки тому +15

    Jane, I love you and the lovely life you and Mike share with us all! Thank you very much for your honesty and insights... it made me think - we do have it much better than most of the world- even if things are tight... The water bills here in our tiny town on the NC coast just went up a lot... the minimum monthly charge is 130.00 a month (which I think is double the national average) but can run up to 40% higher if you go over!. To make sure we don't go over the minimum, we let the yellow mellow in toilets, (eeks but I keep the lid down!), installed a low flow shower head, keep a bucket in the tub to catch water while the water heats (which we then use to water plants, mop floors etc.,) for a "sea" shower, even then some days I take a '"sponge bath" , we have a dish pan in kitchen sink in which a small amount of soapy water goes so that we can rinse before we put into dishwasher. We wash linens and dirty clothes once a week. Years ago, before the automatic washing machine was invented, my mother used to change bedsheets (top and bottom were flat) every other week without laundering by putting the top on the bottom and flipping upside down and head to foot to save laundry! Have you mentioned making a MONTHLY menu plan with repeats for the month? It takes some serious planning but it save substantial money for sure. I do one big shopping trip at the beginning of the month and then some fill-ins when we need them. We intermittent fast from dinner time to lunch the next day. We eat a lot of vegetarian meals which saves a lot- love Mexican dishes as they have a lot of flavor and are very filling. Again, thank you for your inspiration!

  • @luba-healthywithluba6866
    @luba-healthywithluba6866 Рік тому +2

    When I was in school, the other girls' mothers took all the girls in the class out for pizza for a birthday party. My parties were always at home, and my mom would make homemade food. My classmates loved her cooking. I thought it was normal to have a mom who cooked.

  • @LimousinLife
    @LimousinLife 6 місяців тому

    I'm slightly younger than you but my god you have just described my earlier life. What a good reality check for gen z!
    My wife and I find ourselves nodding in agreement at your comment and advice.

  • @mariannewesten3638
    @mariannewesten3638 2 роки тому +4

    In a little City nearby,there is a little wardrobe,where you can put food in,That you have too much.like Apples in autumn.

  • @rebzeb5814
    @rebzeb5814 Рік тому +3

    We're experiencing now in Australia. This is a great video. Telling it like it is.

  • @shirleyschaeffer1769
    @shirleyschaeffer1769 2 роки тому +5

    Wow, and I thought $3.20 was high for a gallon of gas. A lot of great ideas! Thanks

  • @katherinerichardson1767
    @katherinerichardson1767 2 роки тому +8

    Thank you for sharing---it's nice to know I am not the only one who does these. Support is so important.

  • @lisashepherd3411
    @lisashepherd3411 2 роки тому

    Thank you Jane and Mike,Love your videos.

  • @josephinesage8301
    @josephinesage8301 2 роки тому

    Absolutely brilliant Jane.

  • @jbrab401
    @jbrab401 2 роки тому +5

    Such a great video! This so needs to be heard by so many people! Thank you!!!

  • @avir2us1
    @avir2us1 2 роки тому

    I appreciate this courageous conversation. Excellent points of reflection. Thank you!

  • @saramarchand2683
    @saramarchand2683 2 роки тому

    Brillant Jane, you've nailed it! 👍

  • @loisjaeger9059
    @loisjaeger9059 Рік тому +1

    Love the quilts on sofa❤️

  • @mariannewesten3638
    @mariannewesten3638 2 роки тому +6

    My Parents Always learned us to help other people who we're in Need .
    And I'm very thankfull for that one.❤️

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +3

      It’s vital right now, I haven’t heard that message on some videos, we need to give now more than ever

    • @mariannewesten3638
      @mariannewesten3638 2 роки тому +1

      @@FrugalQueeninFrance It is really sad ,That there are people who have nothing to eat.And That in our luxury world here.

  • @marjorielass3118
    @marjorielass3118 2 роки тому +1

    Excellent video, everyone should listen to it, and reflect ! Thank you!👏👏

  • @tamandaflynn6090
    @tamandaflynn6090 2 роки тому +1

    Fantastic job. Well done both of you ❤️

  • @leandramartelly1105
    @leandramartelly1105 2 роки тому +3

    Very well said Jane! Congratulations, we need to go back to basics. Plain and simple.

  • @Tess-FrugalLiving
    @Tess-FrugalLiving 2 роки тому +3

    I recognize so many of the things you have talked about in this video Jane. No central heating, coal fire in the living room and that was it. So many experiences that help me to appreciate what we have now. Thank you. 🙂

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому +3

      I enjoyed my family all being in one room as a child and with my children

  • @stuartmoppett2076
    @stuartmoppett2076 2 роки тому +1

    I am disabled and to my suprise I can prepare vegetables sitting in an easy chair on my lap tray with a good cutting board. I wish I had done it when I was working. I would have saved a lot of money. I prepare a week's vegetables and then pack in portions and freeze. I can make quick convenience meals without the extra expence.

  • @annetteseiler9787
    @annetteseiler9787 2 роки тому +3

    Such a reality check. Thank you Jane, for your down-to-earth take. How we’ve changed over time! I am also in my fifties and remember well how we did things back then, and we were fine! So we can be fine now too. Maybe this so-called crisis may do us all a bit of good, realizing what is necessary to live a satisfying life, and what is not.

    • @FrugalQueeninFrance
      @FrugalQueeninFrance  2 роки тому

      Personally, it’ll feel like a crisis to some people but it isn’t actually a crisis, it’s a pain in the neck.

  • @IntentionAndAdventures
    @IntentionAndAdventures 2 роки тому

    Amazing perspective. Thank you.

  • @chasingsimpledreams
    @chasingsimpledreams 9 місяців тому

    we totally did he same growing up. plastic on the windows and my gma would then put the blankets behind her insulated curtains and close off rooms we didn't use

  • @em6259
    @em6259 2 роки тому

    Thanks for reminding me how different things were when we were kids. I remember hearing how good we had it because it was so much more than our parents ever had. I think we are very lucky that we had that upbringing and those stories of even harder times because we are better suited to weather this storm.

  • @kindcounselor
    @kindcounselor 2 роки тому

    Brilliant reminders. Yes I remember those times too. Sincerely....thank you.

  • @rebacarmack8335
    @rebacarmack8335 Рік тому +1

    Sorry to be so chatty; we have 4- vehicles- there’s only two of us? Trying to get hubby to sell 2- of them but he’s a bit of a “keeper”. It seems to be hard for him to let things go after he gets possession of them. I’ll keep trying. Definitely can’t be picky or lazy if you want to save money.

  • @joannapatterson4625
    @joannapatterson4625 2 роки тому +4

    Some people need to realize the difference between needs and wants. Be content with less. In some of the groups, people are complaining because fast food prices have increased. We don’t actually need that.

  • @rubytimbers397
    @rubytimbers397 2 роки тому

    Thanks Jane for all your wonderful advice 🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽❤️

  • @sylsuthss
    @sylsuthss 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you so much for a great detailed realistic video, much appreciated

  • @victoriablanc761
    @victoriablanc761 Рік тому +1

    we only heat our main floor and never heat our second floor. we also have curtains that keep the warm air in certain areas. we block off our second floor stairwell with a curtain for example and keep our heat downstairs. Upstairs we heat our bed with an electric mattress cover an hour before bed and keep heating pads and blankets on our computer chairs which are recliners. Much better to heat you than the whole floor. We also plastic our downstairs windows every fall. Wrapping your hot water heater in a padded cover really helps your water heater to retain heat. There are so many ways to save money around the house. Crazy that people are having to re-evaluate every dollar again. Lessons from the past are so relevant again.

  • @jojoP720
    @jojoP720 2 роки тому +2

    This is a very thought provoking video and really has made me think exactly how lucky myself and my family have been. Thank you so much for giving me a very good kick up the bum. I make most of my meals from scratch but I am guilty of throwing leftovers away - I made a Thai curry tonight and while I was listening to you I was preparing to wash up and I very nearly threw the leftover curry in the food waste bin - instead I equalled out 2 portions into containers to freeze. Now I am actually looking forward to me and hubby having a lovely massamam curry during the week. Thank you 🙏