5 Former Must-Haves We Decided To Ditch

“5 Former Must-Haves We Decided To Ditch” is locked 5 Former Must-Haves We Decided To Ditch

It is pretty incredible, as you begin to downsize and purge yourself of non-necessities, what you find you no longer need or haven’t even used. We have uncovered entire boxes we hadn’t unpacked in years. Clearly the items packed inside weren’t important. I feel certain you have an attic or basement stockpile like we did. Most people do.

So here are the five former must-haves we decided to ditch. Some of them may surprise you!

Multiple Seasons/Sizes of Clothing

Full transparency, if left to my own devices, I can be a hoarder. Growing up with limited funds taught me to be thrifty and responsible. This includes couponing for groceries, buying in bulk, and snagging deals on clothes or shoes before my kids can even fit into those sizes.

Now that we live in under 300 square feet, my storage has drastically decreased. This means, aside from our dresser and closet space, we have exact one drawer (I repeat: one.) for the next season’s items. So, when I change over from winter to spring, everything that can still be worn next winter must fit into the drawer.

This mindset has cut down on excessive spending as well as allowed us a true picture of what we actually wear. Lean in close: It’s not that much!

Extras of Everything

It shocks me to say that my son does not, in fact, need over 20 pair of underwear and our dog will not actually drop dead if she runs out of dog treats. Say whhhaaattt!? I know. Stay with me here.

As a former bulk and budget shopper, I might have 9 bags of dog treats or an entire shelf filled with toilet paper just because it was on sale. It pains me to admit that all of those things just took up space that could have been used for something else and never did we find ourselves in a state of dog treat-less panic.

So, my fellow saving-savvy friend, step away from the Chich fil a sauce packets. It’s fine. You have BBQ sauce in a bottle in your fridge. You will make it through this nugget crisis without taking 13 extra packets home with you. Trust me.

Trendy Toys and Gadgets

Maybe it is a good thing we Roadschool because my six year old son will not be another cell phone toting elementary student. Nope. Not happening. Our kids watch Netflix so they don’t see commercials marketing the latest and greatest toy with flashing lights and obnoxious noises because we don’t have room for them anyway!

Each of our kiddos has two fabric bins each for toys. If they don’t fit, they don’t stay. If they get something new, something old is replaced. We go through and purge toys about once every 6-8 weeks and they know this is coming. It has been pretty freeing because we keep a box of their old toys at my folks’ so every visit they take things and trade them out. It’s like a toy library system and it always makes them feel like they are getting to play with ‘new’ things for my favorite price of free-ninety-free!

“Just In Case” Items

For the love of first aid kits, when has there ever been a need for 2 Ace bandages, 3700 bandaids, and 10 double thick gauze pads during one accident? I couldn’t tell you either, but I certainly had that many or more on hand at any given time when we lived in our larger home.

Friends, natural disasters occur but they are rare. So, it is unlikely we will need to make the space for a ‘Go Bag’ or the 30 pieces of fine china most people keep in a specially designated cabinet in case the queen comes over. You don’t need these things so rid yourself of them!

Often Buying In Bulk

As previously stated, I am a natural hoarder. At any given time in our pre-tiny living years, you could’ve basically shopped my pantry or medicine cabinets as if they were an extension of Target.  This had to stop.

Since going tiny, I no longer buy things in multiples unless they are on budget and on my list. If we don’t have plans to use them in the next week (or month, depending on the item), they remain on the shelf.

It hurts my heart sometimes, but it is the right move.

 

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