Toy Story Moment

Remember the ending of Toy Story 3? Andy is leaving for college and decides to give away all his favorite toys to the little girl so they will be played with again. He stops by her house to introduce all the toys to her and then Andy plays with her with his toys one last time.

We experienced our own toy story moment yesterday…

We were out driving around to garage sales, which by the way A loves doing with us! He and I have been earning extra money dog walking together so he understood that he had some of his own money to spend if he found something that he wanted. We were at one of our last stops and A hit the jackpot! We found a huge bag full of cars!

My first thought was that more cars was the last thing we needed around our house. But then I spotted a police car among the bunch, I knew A would love to have that one! Then as we started looking through them we saw an ambulance and A found a GARBAGE TRUCK! He is so excited about garbage trucks these days.

Since the whole bag of cars was priced as a set we asked if we could just pick a few to buy. The seller was a twelve-ish year old boy and wasn’t sure what he should do about our request. What came next turned out to be very cool teaching moment. The boy’s mom came over and talked him through the fact that his goals were to get rid of old toys, make some money in the process, and she could tell that A would really make good use of these cars. They went back and forth and came to a price of $0.25 each or five cars for $1.00. Which was perfect because Jesse had just told me that he had $2.00 left in his pocket… so we told A he could pick out ten cars.

A went about carefully choosing his favorites. After the first couple of choices the older boy caught on to what A would be interested in and started searching for ones he knew that A would want. He showed him that the ambulance doors opened and how the dump truck could dump his load. So sweet!

new cars

A paid the boy the $2.00 and the boy handed us a bag with the ten cars. A could not be more happy with his purchases! All of his new rescue vehicles have been working non-stop and he is driving his garbage truck around his pretend city making all the truck noises the real garbage truck makes.

What a great lesson for him too! Even at his age it’s clear that there is something very satisfying to have bought the cars with his own money. We really want him to understand the value of working hard and earning the reward. It’s something we’ve been trying to teach him about since he often has a hard time when Jesse has to leave us to go to work. This turned out be the best way so far to illustrate that to A and a great teaching moment for both boys!

An Effective Coupon Strategy

I love a grocery shopping trip when I get to use a bunch of coupons. However, if you’re not careful you can end up wasting money on things you don’t really need to buy at all… just to make use of the coupon. The trick is to only clip coupons on things you were already planning to buy anyway.

Coupons

Coupons aren’t just out there to save people money for no reason. They are part of a marketing strategy for that brand or company. Companies use their coupons to get people to buy more of their items than they were planning to buy in the first place, and give them $1.00 off as a reward for spending. Companies also use coupons as a way to introduce new items to their customers. It feels easier to spend the money to try something new if you think you are getting a good deal on it.

I’ve learned to not let myself get distracted by coupons for things that I don’t actually need. The goal of using coupons is to save money, not find more ways to spend it. Even when I do have a coupon, I try my best to still wait until the store puts that same item on sale. I’ve found that I can often save more money waiting for a buy-one-get-one sale than I do using the coupon. The best deal comes when the store has the item on sale and I can use a coupon too… the most value for my money.

It seems almost counter intuitive to save money by buying things that you don’t need yet, but I think that it works out best that way. It takes a while to get ahead of the curve, but once you start following the sales you get an idea of when a particular item will be on sale again. That way you can buy extra so that you don’t ever have to buy it at full price. The other tricky thing is not being afraid to let good coupons expire. You have to evaluate if a coupon is really the best value or if a store sale will save more money. Not every coupon needs to be used… only those which are most beneficial!

What strategies help you save money at the grocery store?