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Happy New Year from Nova Scotia where, like elsewhere, we are in the thick of the Omicron wave of the pandemic. I am happy to report I got my vaccine booster two days ago.
The last quarter of the year includes Christmas so it’s often difficult to meet a budget, but I participate in a low-stress gift exchange with family so the shopping (pre-Omicron) was all fun and not a big expense.
In October at the beginning of Q4, I also had more car maintenance* costs: the front brake pads and rotors were replaced, and the winter tires put on. The following week as I was driving through the downtown, I saw a hubcap rolling in traffic in front of me and a pedestrian chasing it. I decided I could trail the car that I thought had lost the hubcap and let the driver know what had happened. I hadn’t committed to how long I was going to follow the car on this little adventure when it turned off the main street. I was able to find the car in a public parking lot and let the driver know where the pedestrian had propped the hubcap. I guessed correctly that they’d just had their winter tires put on.
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With some of the monetary gifts I’d received for both my birthday in October and at Christmas, I’d treated myself to a few new hardcover books. But I realized something this week: since moving home almost five years ago, I’ve bought a lot of new non-fiction books and I have not finished about half of them. I realized something else: I wrote about this habit way back in 2014 in the early days of BITNF! I’m all over the place like I am on the Internet. I read a bit here, get distracted, pick up another book, read a bit of it, and repeat. So after donating most of my books in Seattle before moving east, I’ve already started a new collection of unread books!
Well, I like to challenge myself (no, this is not a resolution) so here’s my new-book challenge: for the entire year, I will not buy any new books (even with gifted money). I will borrow, use the library, use the Libby app (online library books), buy used, but mainly READ WHAT I ALREADY HAVE.
Two other habits I have acknowledged before and are related to each other are: 1) procrastinating and 2) driving myself crazy trying to time-manage the heck out of my day. After meeting my goal through September to publish twice a month on BITNF, things fell apart in Q4 due purely to distraction and procrastination and I only managed once-a-month posts. So, after buying another inspiring time-management book (that isn’t supposed to really be a time-management book), I’m ready to make another commitment: even if this book turns out not to be THE ONE that will CHANGE MY LIFE, it is still the last time-managementish book I am buying. Ever. And if it is THE ONE, I’m sure you readers will be the first to know.
*Expenses on 16-year old car still worthwhile at this point.
References and related links:
- CY21Q4: Calendar Year 2021, Fourth Quarter (October to December). Calendar Year distinguishes from a company’s Financial Year (FY) which has a different start date than January 1st.
- simpler-living report: CY21Q3 (post #172)
- to done (post #99)
- (re)learning how to read (post #15)
Dad says
You make your life sound more complicated than it should be. I know Enid is very demanding, and hikes and snowshoes beckon, but …. Your car has been and is remarkable, but perhaps you should start a saving fund for its replacement which will one day come.