Tuesday, November 4, 2008

How to stay positive while living through a recession

According to Canadian Press our great country’s economy may not recover or crawl out of its current dismal state for two years.

“The Canadian economy has slowed to a crawl and isn’t expected to recover until 2010,” say The Canadian Press.

Oh, what to do?

Cry? Gnash our teeth? Save pennies for one monthly slice of Bondi’s pizza?

No way. Let’s stick together and get through this.


Save up for a whole pizza (Bondi’s is the best), cook up a batch of home brew (less than 50 cents per glass), sit around the kitchen table with a few friends and neighbours and talk about how to get through tough times.

Your little group will likely come up with ways to save $100 - $200 per month in 5 minutes and 101 ways to survive a recession in 2 hours.

Doing things as part of a group will also make it easier to say good-bye to TV cable, cell phones, street meat, fast food and so on ad nauseam.

Someone will say (surely), “I know how to make real oatmeal for breakfast at less than 15 cents per serving.”

“No way.”

“Way.”

Someone else will say, “I know how to brew my own coffee and tea and cook up my own lunch and supper.”

“Get out of town.”

“And we could borrow things from one another, like a lawnmower, rather than buy all the same items for each household.”

Really. People will survive and be better off than before the recession in many important ways.

I’ll make the home brew - though it might taste like Ollie’s feet.

.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Bondis is great pizza... but you could even make your own!

Funny how I have never thought of sharing a lawnmower, it makes perfect sense... neighbours share fences easy enough :)

Anonymous said...

And if they shared our mower (a push one) then we could sit outside in peace and quiet on sunday afternoons and hear ourselves think!

I like your thinking Mr H.

(note to self, try Bondi's pizza when I'm not round at Clevermonkey's eating hers)

bobbie said...

Sounds like a plan.

G. Harrison said...

i think my friends would prefer Bondi's instead of mine but I could give it a try. self-reliance is important but would I have any friends?

persuing a smaller lifestyle is more easily attempted with the support of friends and family; reliance on a group helps us drop dependence on individual consumerism.

the me generation ( or any other) didn't get everything right.

did you watch the election results last night? i was glued to the tv.

cheers,

gord h.