Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Tough times...

 November 19, 2025


My mother was born between the Two Great Wars, in May of 1919. She was a girl of ten in 1929. Being a child of a that era, by the age of ten she knew how to work around the house, how to do some of the day-to-day jobs of living. Cooking and cleaning, and the mending and making of clothing would have been her afterschool lessons and activities. As a Canadian-born child of European born immigrant parents, and a child of the last century, she would have been expected to do “women’s work” and then eventually marry and become a wife.

But my mother also, with the full blessing of her parents, as a young woman of eighteen went away to the next city to attend nursing school. She became a registered nurse, and in fact met her future husband (my father) at the hospital where she trained at. He was a doorman there.

The lessons of living through a world-wide depression, which was then followed by the austerity years of the Second World War, ensured that her ways when it came to cooking and shopping were frugal indeed.

You can imagine that such a woman would raise her daughter to be frugal as well. She had three absolute rules when it came to grocery shopping and cooking. First, make a meal plan for the period of time for which you’re shopping, and based on the available funds. Second, make a list of the items you need to purchase, based on the available funds. And third, never shop on an empty stomach.

As an aside: that last is the most important rule of all. You need only break it once to find out just how important a rule it is.

I lived by those rules too, and for the most part, I still do. They have served me well. We weren’t raising our children during a depression or a global war, but we had three of them, and somewhat spare means. We got through it all, and I have always believed that if one can successfully navigate tough economic times, one will never truly be frantic during such times again.

Our dollars have shrunk, our expenses have grown, and we here in the Ashbury household have tightened our belts accordingly.

I still know how to stretch a grocery dollar. I have no qualms dropping “luxuries” from our shopping list. Chips, desserts, and other little extras are nice, but not necessary. It is important to treat oneself, but this can be done simply and frugally when necessary. The secret is to plan for it all.

There are three adults to feed in this house, and we manage to keep sufficient stock on hand, because I never really strayed from my core practices. If I see a cut of meat on sale, i.e., 25% off, I buy it and freeze it as soon as I get home. We now have a vacuum sealer, and what a money saving device that is!

Sale items are only sale items if they are items that you would normally buy.

Reducing portions in recipes that call for meat is another trick easily done. Instead of spaghetti and meatballs, one can have spaghetti and meat sauce. To make enough meatballs for three, for example, one might need a pound of hamburger. Spaghetti with meat added to your sauce, instead? A third of a pound of meat is plenty. Making beef stew? Use a half pound instead of a pound and add extra veggies. Not only money saving, but healthier!

When making scrambled eggs for yourself, instead of two eggs, use one with a bit of milk mixed in. Growing up, we used evaporated milk in our coffee as it was far less dear than using real cream for that, and the evap did well in the eggs, too.

If you have access to the internet there are a lot of places there to find hints and tips and hacks that will save you money. You need only to look and then apply.

There is one more thing that my parents had to their credit that helped them weather the tough and sometimes uncertain financial times, and it is probably the most important asset of all.

They had a can-do attitude. They believed that if they worked hard enough and smart enough, that there was nothing at all on God’s green earth they could not accomplish. And that, my friends, is my most important tip to you as well.

Too many people these days seem to be allergic to hard work. Just because something is hard to accomplish is no reason to quit. Nothing good comes easy, and not much in this life is free, or guaranteed.

Make a plan. Learn to adapt when necessary. And expect to have to try and try again until success is yours. There are benefits to accomplishing something against all odds, and those benefits cannot be purchased for any amount of money.

 

Love,

Morgan

http://www.morganashbury.com

http://www.bookstrand.com/morgan-ashbury


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