
Guest post from Nancy of Blessed Earth
A few years ago, I gave a talk on simple living, and a man in the back of the room asked, “Are you Amish or something?”
Although I arrived in a Prius, not a pony, I do believe that the Amish hold many answers to both our budgetary and planetary woes. Frugality and conservation overlap about 90 percent of the time. When we conserve resources, we also save money.
About a decade ago, motivated by a desire for a more sustainable lifestyle, my family and I moved from our doctor’s sized house to a home the size of our old garage—eventually reducing our electricity to one-tenth the national average and our fossil fuel usage by two-thirds.
We did not make all these changes at once: for most of us, going green while saving green is a gradual journey. Try doing ten percent better each year — or changing one habit each month and watch the savings add up.
20 Simple Ways to Simplify Your Life and Save Over $5,000 Per Year
1. Make your own nontoxic cleaning products. Have fun! Host a laundry detergent-making party.
Possible Savings = $100
2. Dry clothes on the line. If my teenage daughter can dry her clothes in a dorm room, you can do it, too! Do laundry in cold water. Wash clothes by hand instead of dry cleaning.
Possible Savings = $210
3. Buy second hand clothes. Nearly all the clothes I wear are hand-me-downs or from consignment shops/GoodWill. Remember to dress in layers—climate control your body, not your entire home.
Possible Savings = $250-$1000
4. Borrow and buy used. Look for toys and sports equipment from yard sales and Craigslist. Visit library book sales, share toys and sports equipment with neighbors, and post items on www.freecycle.org
Possible Savings = $150
5. Reduce your refrigerator/freezer usage. Stop refrigerator gazing; turn refrigerator to warmest setting; unplug ice maker. Save more: Unplug your second refrigerator. Keep a list on the refrigerator of things you need so you can combine trips.
Possible Savings = $160
6. Stop buying drinks. Drink filtered tap water instead of bottled water. Make your own coffee at home instead of buying carryout coffee.
Possible Savings = $310
7. Don’t buy disposables. Stop buying disposable plates, cups, and utensils.
One small church did the research and figured out they could feed four families for a year if they used real plates instead of paper. The men in the church volunteered to wash all the dishes for the first year! Save more: Invest in cloth napkins and re-usable lunch containers.
Possible Savings = $50
8. Cook from scratch. Cook meals at home instead of eating in restaurants. Start a garden, purchase food in season, and avoid convenience foods.
Possible Savings = $1050
9. Install low-flow shower-heads and reduce shower time by two minutes.
Possible Savings = $130
10. Don’t run water while shaving or brushing teeth and stop buying disposable razors.
Possible Savings = $70
11. Buy tree-free toilet paper in bulk from an office supply store.
Possible Savings = $30
12. Adjust your thermostat. Turn up your thermostat three degrees in summer and down three degrees in winter. Use programmable thermostat to adjust temperature an additional 10-15 degrees at night and when not at home.
Possible Savings = $200
13. Switch your light bulbs. Switch to CFL bulbs — 75 percent more efficient — like getting 100 mpg instead of 25 mpg! Bonus: When summer comes, the A/C won’t be fighting the heat. (Ninety percent of energy of incandescent bulbs goes toward heat rather than light.)
Possible Savings = $210
14. Reduce electronic usage. Use power strips for TV, computers, and audio. Always completely shut down lights and equipment when leaving the room.
Possible Savings = $140
15. Insert a fireplace balloon or close damper when not in use.
Possible Savings = $200
16. Share or eliminate subscriptions. Share newspaper or magazine subscriptions with a neighbor. Save even more: read news on-line and get magazines from the library.
Possible Savings = $260
17. Recycle used printer cartridges, electronics, and cell phones. Buy refilled ink cartridges, and save more.
Possible Savings = $25+
18. Insulate hot water pipes and water heater.
Possible Savings = $120
19. Caulk around windows and doors. If you can’t afford to replace windows, make heavy, lined curtains; close at night in winter and open windows on cool summer evening.
Possible Savings = $100
20. Go on a spending fast. Register with www.dmachoice.org to remove your name from mailing lists and go on a spending fast one week or month.
Possible Savings = $600
Total Possible Savings = $5370
Nancy Sleeth is co-founder of the nonprofit, Blessed Earth, and author of Almost Amish: one woman’s quest for a slower, simpler, more sustainable life (Tyndale, April 2012)










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