Christmas With the Relatives…

December 24th, 2007

…at that nice mountain cabin everybody rented…

PapaElf

During this 2007 holiday season, it seems the children are all nestled asleep in their beds, with visions of sugar plums dancing in their heads… oh, wait. You say the “children” are all teenagers now, terminally bored with Christmas and expecting a 10-gig iPod loaded with every album too objectionable to be played in public, plus keys to your a car and $400 worth of “Prison Chic” pants that hang somewhere around the thighs and show off their underwear?

LogX-mas

Did the fudge never set, so you had to run to the store to buy enough ice cream to disguise the un-set fudge as super chocolate syrup? Were those tollhouse cookies hard as a rock, breaking grandpa’s dentures with the first bite? Did cousin Jim finish off the entire bottle of rum you’d brought for eggnog before passing out under the tree? Did the dog eat that perfect glazed ham before you could get it into the oven to heat? Did it snow during the night and hide all the firewood you’d stacked somewhere in the yard for the Christmas Eve fire? Are the in-laws insisting on watching Enemy of the State as a “Christmas Movie” instead of It’s a Wonderful Life for the 16th time?

Be of good cheer, enjoy yourself anyway, and…

Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night!

Taking Control: Energy Independence

December 17th, 2007

Analyzing Your Usage and Expense

SolarCabin

In the 21st century almost all of us are acutely aware of the challenges of global warming, unsustainable consumption habits, the real human costs of petroleum dependency and the ever-rising cost of all forms of energy. When it’s difficult for regular middle class city and suburban dwellers to maintain their few hours of home down-time due to rising costs, the burden on rural dwellers can easily be impossible to bear.

Anyone committed to sustainable and self-sufficient living should have already begun planning their energy strategies. There are many things to consider before investing in energy sources. One of the first things a homeowner needs to become aware of are the various federal and state incentive programs available to them if they choose to meet some or all of their own energy needs with ‘green’ sources. These incentives have been fluctuating at the same time the per-watt price of the technology has been steadily falling. In some places the cost trade-off - where the cost to install is paid for by the incentives and further energy is basically free-for-upkeep - is down to 3-5 years. Which is a point when someone planning to live the whole rest of their lives on their homestead has no really good excuse not to invest! The Database of State Incentives offers a clickable map with details for all 50 states and is updated as incentives are tweaked or changed.

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Free Yourself from Debtor’s Prison

December 10th, 2007
DebtPrison

I was in my late twenties when I finally grasped a tiny bit of the Mystery of Mammon - the magic of money. It occurred to me while awaiting a payment for services rendered that the person who owed me money was waiting on someone who owed him money too. I realized that among the full-time residents of that small New Mexico town there was never more than about $5,000 in circulation on any day of any month. That money made its rounds every month starting at the top and ending right back there when the month was over. The only new money anybody ever saw came in by way of tourists from Texas, but that got immediately swallowed up by big bank accounts in somebody else’s town.

Many regular people have a certain psychological aversion to money, or to the idea of allowing money to rule their lives. The capital class depends upon this deep psychological aversion to empower the “money myth” they depend upon to amass ever more of it in their own coffers. Terms like “filthy lucre” and traditional religious prohibitions of usury speak to this deep uncomfortableness with artificial value, yet it is the general public’s uncomfortableness with artificial value that allows the capitalist system to operate.

People who are not comfortable with artificial value don’t tend to amass much money and are prone to use the artificially valued paper to purchase things that for them have actual value. A home. A reliable means of transportation. Nice clothes, big televisions, enough food to make themselves obese, computers, entertainment, toys… it’s what makes our consumerist lifestyles hum and it’s every bit as unsustainable - both personally and economically on the national level - as chemical-intensive force-farming. These days a college graduate begins his or her working career deeply in debt and remains deeply in debt for most or all of his or her life. And it never seems to matter how deeply in debt you are, there are at least 10 new credit offers in the mailbox every week to dig you deeper.

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The Payoff: Thrifting and Re-Selling

December 3rd, 2007
estatechina

I’ve written a bit about The Art of Thrifting, purchasing clothes, appliances, knick-knacks and gift items at secondhand outlets, garage sales and through auction outlets. I’ve also written about Alternative Economies and how systems like barter and straight trade can keep your family going without the exchange of cash or credit.

This post combines both of these approaches to make a talent at thrifting into an actual income. Over at Apron Thrift Girl blog there is a wonderful post describing one adventure in estate sale thrifting entitled Seeing What Has Always Been There that I recommend to readers so as to get a feel for how to make money by picking out bargains and re-selling them at a hefty profit.

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