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Mrs Cris: Look into cleaning with diluted vinegar. My niece is "medically complicated" and they have to avoid all the modern "anti-bacterial" cleaners as part of an effort to avoid MRSA. *Nearly* all the household cleaning is done with a diluted vinegar solution that is just as effective as somethings and better than others. It's Ridiculously cheap, too. The house sometimes smells a little pickle-y, but it's not any worse than the clorox/pinesol/windex smells.
As a last resort, eat the cat.
As a last resort, eat the cat.
I've been thinking about making my own cleaning products, but probably not with vinegar, because my mom used to do that and it made my stomach turn to catch a whiff of it. Though, I usually just use bleach, magic erasers, or dish soap to clean most of the time, but even those few things on my grocery budget are too much. I'll have to look into homemade cleaners, thanks for the idea
As a fellow feline I cannot endorse the ingestion of any feline matter.
I can endorse bent-and-dent stores, aka salvage groceries. If they have any in your area I'd recommend it. You have to look at each can you buy and I wouldn't buy anything TOO bent up, but it's way cheaper. And you can find some neat stuff you'll never find in your local grocery store. I actually shop at them more to find neat stuff than to save money.
I remember stories of my grandparents going through the depression, eating peanut butter sandwiches for three meals a day. Gotta do what ya gotta do... I shudder to think how my generation would make it if they had as little as our ancestors had. But we may find out, if the economic doom-sayers ever turn out to be right.
I can endorse bent-and-dent stores, aka salvage groceries. If they have any in your area I'd recommend it. You have to look at each can you buy and I wouldn't buy anything TOO bent up, but it's way cheaper. And you can find some neat stuff you'll never find in your local grocery store. I actually shop at them more to find neat stuff than to save money.
I remember stories of my grandparents going through the depression, eating peanut butter sandwiches for three meals a day. Gotta do what ya gotta do... I shudder to think how my generation would make it if they had as little as our ancestors had. But we may find out, if the economic doom-sayers ever turn out to be right.
And speaking of cleaning - most cleaners are variations on a theme. You don't have to buy seventeen different bottles to clean the house, you don't have to buy official laundry detergent (hint: Borax is a wonderful thing, and the internet can give a lot of help in how to use it) and if you use your head you don't have to get specialty shampoos, body washes, face creams and etc. Know what I use to shampoo my oily hair? Dawn dishwashing liquid. It works, it doesn't take nearly as much as I would have to use of shampoo and one small bottle lasts three months. It's strong stuff...
I actually do surprisingly well at not buying frivolous or excessive or expensive toiletries...you know, for a girl. I don't really care what kind of shampoo or body wash I use, so long as it smells pretty and doesn't make me break out in hives (or cost more than a couple bucks).
Oooh, Borax...my step-dad used to put that in his work boots and let it sit over night...every night...it never occurred to me to use it to wash clothes hahaha.
Thanks for the tips and whatnot, I'm going to look into some of this stuff