I do this not because I cant afford it, but more because I hate giving these corporations my money more and more by the day. None of the advertising or gimmicks works on me.
While I was learning and changing my mindset. I turned it into a game. I’m not a creative writer so it was Who Gets to Keep My Money, Me or the Corporations?
Yeah seriously, like they need more money. For me, I'm kind of forced not to buy non-essentials because of my financial situation. If I did have disposable income though, I think I'd still thrift and I'd frequent more small businesses. I hate the waste that companies like Target and other large retailers create. So much useless junk.
To me it was a mind shift. I started seeing any offer, ad and shops as traps. And it is true. With distancing myself from this consumerism I realized not only I was able To save more Than I ever had, while growing a sort of pride of myself, like I woke up from a zombie like state breaking the cycle of wake up/go to work/ spend all your Money/repeat!
Bro the economy ain't bad the problem is corporations are profiting more then ever. I'm not suggesting things are affordable they aren't, but if the economy were bad McDonalds and similar wouldn't be posting record profits.
@@GeorgeWashingtonLaserMusket sorry to break your enthusiasm, but McDonalds and Starbucks making money from China... on contrary to numerous outlets shutdown in a merica, McDonalds and Starbucks opens up hundreds stores in China
Let me guess gen z? 😂 you obviously have no idea how national debt effects you.. because national debt is irrelevant to premise of this video or savings in general. Our GDP is 25 trillion, we could pay our debt off after a few years BTW..ALL of which doesn’t affect you in day to day.
@@SigFigNewton when you've had an incredible amount of inflation ushered in, in the past 2 to 4 years, and now that incredible amount is finally stopped escalating and has perhaps slightly started to fall, that is not at all worthy of being labeled deflation in my books.
They should just go work at a restaurant and eat for free 🤣 Save yah-self $12k/yr. I'm over here like this extra soft sliced potato bread I like increase by $2 so I ain't buying it -on principal and dis foo spending a G on take out. B -eeech! Eat a hot pocket! 😂
It isn’t that much if you think about the cost inflation. Eating out cost $20-30 on average each time x2 meals a day is like $50 x 30 days = $1,500 a month.
She said "we", so I'm assuming she meant at least 2 adults. I know couples who both work full time and buy lunch every day, let say $20 a meal, that's $800 a month already.
Don't forget us who make a good income and still save a good bit. 29, earn $120k, work from home. 13% income auto goes to 401k and Roth. Eat out 2x times a week. Mostly eat at home, never buy made coffee, use offer up for nice shoes, etc. drive a paid off used 2016 Altima. my net worth keeps growing and I love it.
I grew up as a child/teen in rhe 70's and 80's eating out was a treat we did a couple times a year. Going to the movies was once a year . Entertainment was in your backyard with your neighbors. Clothes you got at Christmas time. Every purchase was planned and thought out. Your money stayed in a savings account untill you knew what big purchase you were going to make. Nowadays there are so many tempting places for money to go and we live in a i want it now gratification society.
This is actually working to some extent to bring prices down. Stuff is still up compared to pre-pandemic, but in the past few weeks, I'm seeing a LOT of very good sales at grocery and big box stores. Things that were $20 a couple months ago are now all of a sudden more like $13 and change. 12-packs of soda that were $9.99 with few to no sales for the past year are now popping up regularly with deals like buy 2 get 3 free. I don't drink much sugar soda, but I like the bottles of Mexican coca-cola and for a long time lately you couldn't touch a 24-pack for under $40. Now I'm finding it for $32. I think retailers are getting really scared that their endless rapid price hikes are going to change consumer habits in deep and permanent ways. If people get truly frugal and buy only the bare minimum of what they need, big retail is toast. It's clear that a lot of what was passed off as "inflation" was really just opportunistic price gouging and profit taking. Retailers don't make their real money on bare bones necessities. They make it on discretionary items, stuff that nobody truly needs. Junk food, fast food, the latest and greatest gadgets, impulse seasonal items etc. The way to roll back stupid prices is not to pay them.
If it ain’t on social media, it never happened before. 😂 Not 20 years ago, my grandmother would tell me to give the neighbor some plantains and plums, and the neighbor would give her a live chicken in return. That was lunch and dinner for 2 days. But I digress, we’re in America where everyone has to have their own one of everything.
There was a time when most people valued what they owned, took care of it made it last and could loaned to neighbors who understood that concept. Too many return a rusted useless priced of junk that used to be a nice working lawnmower. You have to have your own, sad but true.
I love this trend! Consumption and consumerism is disturbing on social media. So many content creators/influencers have literally 500 bottles of perfume, 50 stanley cups, etc
As an investing enthusiast, I've kept aside a good sum of capital to invest for financial independence and early retirement, but my concern right now is the market rally being propaganda. Is this a good time to buy stocks, or do I wait for the crash?
The stock market can appear as a bewildering cauldron of fake news for new investors. I would advise using a CFP, giving him/her 2/3, and then investing the 1/3 on your own, but only if you have time to track stocks and educate yourself.
@@MelindaMatsuda First two years, I lost money until I got my sea legs. My portfolio is well-matched by a certified financial planner for every season of the market, and just recently hit 7 figures after 5 years of subsequent investments. I'm retired and never leaving the market.
@@elegboozioma7267 Congrats! The market to me is like a lucrative chess game, incredibly difficult to outperform, it's all about understanding how the world moves, its history, and psychology... mind disclosing info about your CFP? I'm quite curious.
@@ShellyHuerta She goes by the name ‘Victoria Carmen Santaella’ I suggest you look her up. To be honest, I almost didn't buy the idea of letting someone handle growing my finances, but so glad I did.
@@elegboozioma7267 I feel thrilled about this, curiously inputted Victoria Carmen Santaella on the web, and spotted her consulting page ranked top. I've seen commentaries about advisors but not one looks this phenomenal.
Why yall hating on this? This is the very thing that puts power back in the hands of the people. Regardless of you can afford it, not giving your money away to gigantic corporations that will use that money to make your life worse is a win for everyone.
The real deal is that Americans have been on a spending spree for years. And now that we need to tighten up, everyone is in a panic. I'm guilty of it. I've been on a strict budget the last 5 years and glad of it, otherwise i would be in a bad spot now.
@@JeikuAnimeReview I understand your point. I would also say it’s possible to graduate college debt free in 4 yrs by working full time summers, living at home and going to local community and state colleges unless your degree requires 5 years like a few in my state. And, if you are willing to relocate you can find affordable, livable and safe homes that may require updating over time. Does it take effort, yes. Planning? Yes. But, it can be done. It has been done by others. People look around their immediate area and are overwhelmed. The internet has unlocked a world of information to investigate and find opportunities as never before.
Love how the reporter used "lacrosse stick" as an example. You know.....a typical wealthy family sport. These media outlets are so outta touch with the common American.
seriously. they're even stuck in the work mentality. most can't or don't know how to relax. it's something I personally had to learn and I'm a re-entry student.
Buy sale priced at regular stores. Boneless, skinless chicken breast $1.69lb, thighs $0.99 though I’ve gotten them for $0.69lb. Ground round sale $2.99lb.
I like to get my groceries delivered, that way I can take my time going through all the items on sale in the comfort of my own home. By the time I'm done, I usually save enough to cover the delivery fee, tip and a little more. Not to mention I save any gas I would of used, and avoided a store usually packed full of people.
Downsize your life......Know a need verses a want.........Stay clear of debt.......Always save money for emergencies.....keep a balanced view in life........plan and Count the cost......Prepare meals at home/do meal prep...........learn to be patient..............IT WORKS PEOPLE!
It’s the way people used to live. You might dine out once or twice a month. You definitely had less clothes. One car families. Smaller homes. Gardens. Try to grow a garden even if it is a patio garden. I haven’t been on vacation in three years and certainly have never gone every year. Many people don’t understand the role of church in their lives. At one time, the Catholic Church owned vast amounts of land in Europe. People could farm the land, build a home, and live even without much means. Even today, people in a church community provide a support system for each other. You also realize the importance of a spiritual life. I know atheists who go to church every Sunday just for these reasons. I’m a Protestant believer and a spiritual base keeps you grounded in what is really important. The goal used to be to save ten percent of your income. You should have five streams of income. They may be small, some of them, but it definitely helps pay the bills.
In addition to what you do, I have also kept a 3-12 month pantry and freezer. 3-4 month in youth and senior, 12 month when I had a family. The 3-4 month allows me to buy groceries at their lowest price in the sale cycle. Over time I know what those prices are. The 12 months were 3-4 months at the lowest price and the remaining 8-9 months were a savings/emergency fund. I also made gift packages for those in need, short or long term. During the C-19 crisis, I was fine. And even now, with inflation my budget was only up a little as I got the lowest price and switched out foods with other food as prices rose on this but not that. Buy eggs in the spring at $1.53 a dozen and freeze for up to a year, still fine for cooking and scrambling. I keep meat to $1lb, carb $1lb and veggies $1.50lb and fruit to $1lb average for all. Add in a little gardening and planning and I can still each steak and shrimp occasionally.
We cut of Pro Sports, Concerts, buying new cars etc. You will be surprised how much money can be saved, just with sports alone. Cloths are the same way, Older cars are just as good if not better etc.
@irememberla6460 I feel though that everyone should flourish in wealthy countries. Flourishing requires requires some degree of cultural experiences. Eating out is a cultural and social experience and well as a sensational one. But eating out is against bare minimum. Thus something more than bare minimum and spending on essential things is required for human flourishing.
Minimalism is the new Luxury. Peace of mind and Financial Stability are the real flex. People who do not seek validation are the ones who can save more. They do not care about what others drive, wear or where others go or spend their vacation. Focus and Balance are the key to life. ^_^
Spending doesn't have to be bad for your bank account. 1.) Buy used 2.) Think about the resell value of the item you are buying. If you buy a used item for $200 and sell it for $200 a year later, you won't lose any money buying it. 3.) If you have to buy an item new think about how long it will last you. I recently spent $100 on a men's wallet. I was tired of the $30 and $40 ones falling apart after a few years so I found one that for 2.5 times the cost had a lifetime warranty and was handmade with full grain leather. It is substantially better built and will last much longer than the cheap ones. In the long run, I will save spending a little more upfront.
Good advice! My only additional recommendation would be to keep the receipt in a safe location and be sure whoever guarantees the item will be around longer than a year. One woman has replaced her Sears lifetime battery 18 times in 50 years. That’s value, lol. She has a lifetime warranty on her brakes that have been replaced multiple times free. She has either 530,000 or 580,000 miles on her car and has kept receipts and warranties for 50 years, lol.
Its not just for tha bank account, most of use already have way too much stuff included food in the fridge, we just don't need to shop more than once a month.
@@kenyonbissett3512 wow that's really awesome where did you you hear of this women? I would love to hear more on this!! As I too hope to do the same thing. I am financing my car and this car note ain't no joke I too will drive it till I can't drive it no more!!! 😅
I’ve been doing this on my own without realizing there’s a community on TikTok about it. It’s sort of like how long can I go without spending money and usually it’s for a few days until something comes up like necessities and I have to spend. But honestly, a penny saved truly is a penny earned. Don’t underestimate what you might save if you cut out certain things from your life from time to time
Remember everyone: every time you spend your money, you are paying with your time. You need to work to get that money, and you can’t get back the time you spend working. That is the TRUE currency - your time. It is up to you to decide how much your time is worth. No matter what people say or do, life is NOT about working and saving pennies. We made up the concept of pennies and sold one another the idea. Life is about living and enjoying each moment with your loved ones. It is about simple pleasures like how the sun looks on their face, not material gains. Material gains are an addition to the experience, NOT part of the experience we call life. Some people are lost in the sauce and you can’t change their minds about money, but we all have a set amount of time on this earth and no attitude or amount of work ethic can change that. Enjoy your time here while you can.
Reason why this is trending is because we’re broke in reality, inflation, cost of living too high. You think we just love this TREND?! spending is a luxury , but tight wallet/purse is called managing our or your money.
I did this naturally for almost two years when adopting my son. I really learned a lot about budgeting. I also hate how Corporations ( CEO, Stock buy backs etc) are keeping up with fauxflation to rake in the millions
i get this. i had my "$18 dollar big mac meal" yesterday, i went to whataburger for a meal and spent FOURTEEN dollars on a regular sized meal with no extras, thats with no delivery, no tip, NO EXTRAS.
A budget. That's what is needed. I've been on a budget for 5 years. All but one debt is gone. No mortgage. I've cut my food items, as the cost has gone up. Still keeping it below 300 a month, but it's no frills for sure!
This has been going on in simplicity forums and budget groups for over 25 years. This wasnt "invented" in 2013 thats just when somebody took it to facebook. I rember people doing it on the sadly gone simple living forum. I used to do this when I was young now its everyday living. My only thrill is library book sales
A simple basic budgeting would work without this trend. Get a spreadsheet for money in vs money out for bills and essentials. Whatever is left, divide it into 4 (budget per week). Have realistic expectations as well. If your money out is greater than money in, then you need to cut down on bills or aim to get a higher pay. It is what it is
The stock market is meaningless to almost all Americans. The top 10% of US households own about 93% of the stock market's wealth, with the richest 1% owning 54% of public equity markets.
Honestly ive been doing this especially when covid hit and everyone not in an essential business were laid off effectively or furloughed (i was furloughed for 3 or so months) and after i saw that happened i needed to do something about it. So i opened my first HYSA at minimal .10% APY that eventually grew to 4.35 (now 4.25%) and savings ballooned in 1 yr to oved 10k. Still growing strong. If people are going to do these 'challenges' then just open one or however many HYSA you want and automate and see how it goes.
Everytime I have an urge to window shop, I send instead 15-20euro to my savings account. I invest throught my bank and now yield is around 8% p.a. Since I started this, I realized I am actualy avaiable to save quater of my income without felling constrained about it.
@jaridkeen123 GDP could remain relative level. This is very similar to Degrowth Communism which rejects endless increasing production and consumption for only producing and consuming enough to live a good life. If we don’t consume so much, then we won’t produce as much, and if not then we have more time to live lives outside of work as well.
Consumer spending fuels our economy. Although I support this many of our jobs depend on consumer spending. This challenge is more than living beyond your means. This challenge is about restructuring how you spend. People making lite of this are also the people complaining that their favorite restaurants or department stores are closing. We are a service economy. This impacts a lot of our jobs. Judge, demean or criticize at your own peril. Your company could be the next to close because people don’t have enough money to splurge every now and then.
@@kenyonbissett3512you know moving is expensive soooo you want them to just pick everything up and have enough money for the move + security deposit to a new place??
@@MMMM-ui3ct I’m aware. But many broke people frequently have very little to move, pack a suit case or car. But the key to saving for a security deposit is a job. With no job she will lose her home also.
It sounds like this TikTok "No Spend" sudden notice is a cold-turkey approach. Many people are used to only using money for their needs - so, it's really not a "wonder-incentive". Problem with "cold-turkey/no-spend approach is, if you do it at will, without any foresight planning, you can dip into a typical "over-spend" phase - because you see the "no-spend" as reward for not spending. That's just a hormonal / adrenalin rush kicker - which is not productive in the long run. I think if splurging or continual spending is a result of impulsive buying or emotional spending, and if you want to save money - you need to do your homework: Review your spending habits, review your cashflow pattern, review your priorities and set out goals that don't suddenly impact your spending patterns. Try it out for a short period, review if any changes need to happen, and develop your spending. I think credit card "No Spend" should be more of a specific spotlight area to condone - rather than blanketing "no spend" in general.
A lot of you are missing the point. Yes, many people do this out of necessity, not out of a trend. I myself have been positively influenced by this “trend” on TikTok. I am 29 years old and have followed influencers since I was 14, before the term “influencer” was used regularly. It caused me to expect perpetually manicured nails, new clothes for each season, seasonal decor, etc. My parents could not afford these things for me growing up except on special occasions, but when I became financially independent, I went crazy and accrued a sizable amount of credit card debt because I wanted to obtain all of the things my parents couldn’t afford to give me. These spending challenges from people in similar circumstances as me have encouraged me to be mindful of my spending and treat myself in meaningful ways rather than spending impulsively. I have tackled half of my debt so far. All this to say that yes this is a trend, and yes it resonates with some people.
Remember what Bezos said, "Every amazon customer and employee made this happen." If we the people can do that for one person, imagine what we can do for ourselves.
feel like I’ve been doing this challenge my whole life
Same here 😊
Yeah I’m REALLY good at this. If the simulation is keeping track, I think I already won! 🥇
Just like social distancing...I've been training for this my whole life 😂😂
haha yeah exactly - its literally how i have lived for years
me too
I love how the media spins everything as a cool trend instead of a devastating reality.
Lol exactly. You got it!
Absolutely!!
It’s not that serious Ashley
I didn't think of it that way but yes lol, sad and true
Facts. This is a way of life for many not a trend or hobby
It's called saving money. People have been doing it since money was created.
Except it was way easier before.
Especially today’s younger generations
C
Certainly a large part of the population.
Except for Americans. For the majority this appears to be a revelation
THIS IS NOT A CHALLENGE, THIS IS REALITY. AN EVERY SECOND OF THE DAY CHALLENGE.
Right! These people are just finally opening their eyes to what majority of us have been doing our whole lives.
Some by choice, most by necessity.
YES it is
Its life now
Thus a challenge💁♂️
@@diegovisoso4587 what a pathetic challenge then
I do this not because I cant afford it, but more because I hate giving these corporations my money more and more by the day. None of the advertising or gimmicks works on me.
We should all resent the fact that they casually ask us to trade time with our loved ones for the crap they are trying to sell us.
While I was learning and changing my mindset. I turned it into a game. I’m not a creative writer so it was Who Gets to Keep My Money, Me or the Corporations?
Yeah seriously, like they need more money. For me, I'm kind of forced not to buy non-essentials because of my financial situation. If I did have disposable income though, I think I'd still thrift and I'd frequent more small businesses. I hate the waste that companies like Target and other large retailers create. So much useless junk.
Me too. Fight consumerism
To me it was a mind shift. I started seeing any offer, ad and shops as traps. And it is true. With distancing myself from this consumerism I realized not only I was able To save more Than I ever had, while growing a sort of pride of myself, like I woke up from a zombie like state breaking the cycle of wake up/go to work/ spend all your Money/repeat!
My grandparents, who lived through the Great Depression, just called this living.
Many of us now going through this second great depression also call it living
@@hippoge7987 what 2nd Great Depression is that?
I call this living too 😅
with the bad economy, credit card debt, student loan, mortgage hike and feds USD 36 Trillion in debt, this is essential
Bro the economy ain't bad the problem is corporations are profiting more then ever. I'm not suggesting things are affordable they aren't, but if the economy were bad McDonalds and similar wouldn't be posting record profits.
@@GeorgeWashingtonLaserMusket sorry to break your enthusiasm, but McDonalds and Starbucks making money from China...
on contrary to numerous outlets shutdown in a merica, McDonalds and Starbucks opens up hundreds stores in China
Let me guess gen z? 😂 you obviously have no idea how national debt effects you.. because national debt is irrelevant to premise of this video or savings in general. Our GDP is 25 trillion, we could pay our debt off after a few years BTW..ALL of which doesn’t affect you in day to day.
If this becomes a majority habit for all Americans, low prices will be flooding and deflationary pressure will be eventually present.
Goods deflation is sorta already happening.
Inflation is hanging on in services.
@@SigFigNewton when you've had an incredible amount of inflation ushered in, in the past 2 to 4 years, and now that incredible amount is finally stopped escalating and has perhaps slightly started to fall, that is not at all worthy of being labeled deflation in my books.
@@badmanners7652 well, it’s the definition
Lol who tf spends 1000$ a month eating out?!
They should just go work at a restaurant and eat for free 🤣 Save yah-self $12k/yr. I'm over here like this extra soft sliced potato bread I like increase by $2 so I ain't buying it -on principal and dis foo spending a G on take out. B -eeech! Eat a hot pocket! 😂
For a family of 4, that's eating out 5-8 times a month. Even eating out at chick-fil-a for 4 costs over $50
People with disposable income
It isn’t that much if you think about the cost inflation. Eating out cost $20-30 on average each time x2 meals a day is like $50 x 30 days = $1,500 a month.
She said "we", so I'm assuming she meant at least 2 adults. I know couples who both work full time and buy lunch every day, let say $20 a meal, that's $800 a month already.
This is not a trend. Financially responsible people that don't earn a lot of money have been doing this for as long as civilizations existed
Don't forget us who make a good income and still save a good bit. 29, earn $120k, work from home. 13% income auto goes to 401k and Roth. Eat out 2x times a week. Mostly eat at home, never buy made coffee, use offer up for nice shoes, etc. drive a paid off used 2016 Altima. my net worth keeps growing and I love it.
0:55 Some people struggle to afford even the essentials; while others brag about being able to save, some just want to survive.
Bidenomics
I grew up as a child/teen in rhe 70's and 80's eating out was a treat we did a couple times a year. Going to the movies was once a year . Entertainment was in your backyard with your neighbors. Clothes you got at Christmas time. Every purchase was planned and thought out. Your money stayed in a savings account untill you knew what big purchase you were going to make. Nowadays there are so many tempting places for money to go and we live in a i want it now gratification society.
So very True!!
Absolute truth!
This is actually working to some extent to bring prices down.
Stuff is still up compared to pre-pandemic, but in the past few weeks, I'm seeing a LOT of very good sales at grocery and big box stores. Things that were $20 a couple months ago are now all of a sudden more like $13 and change. 12-packs of soda that were $9.99 with few to no sales for the past year are now popping up regularly with deals like buy 2 get 3 free. I don't drink much sugar soda, but I like the bottles of Mexican coca-cola and for a long time lately you couldn't touch a 24-pack for under $40. Now I'm finding it for $32.
I think retailers are getting really scared that their endless rapid price hikes are going to change consumer habits in deep and permanent ways. If people get truly frugal and buy only the bare minimum of what they need, big retail is toast. It's clear that a lot of what was passed off as "inflation" was really just opportunistic price gouging and profit taking. Retailers don't make their real money on bare bones necessities. They make it on discretionary items, stuff that nobody truly needs. Junk food, fast food, the latest and greatest gadgets, impulse seasonal items etc.
The way to roll back stupid prices is not to pay them.
Finally, a challenge I have been already doing for most of my life.
If it ain’t on social media, it never happened before. 😂 Not 20 years ago, my grandmother would tell me to give the neighbor some plantains and plums, and the neighbor would give her a live chicken in return. That was lunch and dinner for 2 days. But I digress, we’re in America where everyone has to have their own one of everything.
I think its a dependence on instant information that has reduced the need to delay gratification in folks,
There was a time when most people valued what they owned, took care of it made it last and could loaned to neighbors who understood that concept. Too many return a rusted useless priced of junk that used to be a nice working lawnmower. You have to have your own, sad but true.
I love this trend! Consumption and consumerism is disturbing on social media. So many content creators/influencers have literally 500 bottles of perfume, 50 stanley cups, etc
As an investing enthusiast, I've kept aside a good sum of capital to invest for financial independence and early retirement, but my concern right now is the market rally being propaganda. Is this a good time to buy stocks, or do I wait for the crash?
The stock market can appear as a bewildering cauldron of fake news for new investors. I would advise using a CFP, giving him/her 2/3, and then investing the 1/3 on your own, but only if you have time to track stocks and educate yourself.
@@MelindaMatsuda First two years, I lost money until I got my sea legs. My portfolio is well-matched by a certified financial planner for every season of the market, and just recently hit 7 figures after 5 years of subsequent investments. I'm retired and never leaving the market.
@@elegboozioma7267 Congrats! The market to me is like a lucrative chess game, incredibly difficult to outperform, it's all about understanding how the world moves, its history, and psychology... mind disclosing info about your CFP? I'm quite curious.
@@ShellyHuerta She goes by the name ‘Victoria Carmen Santaella’ I suggest you look her up. To be honest, I almost didn't buy the idea of letting someone handle growing my finances, but so glad I did.
@@elegboozioma7267 I feel thrilled about this, curiously inputted Victoria Carmen Santaella on the web, and spotted her consulting page ranked top. I've seen commentaries about advisors but not one looks this phenomenal.
This is good to see. $$ is our power. The less we spend the more they lose!!
I am very happy that am now a minimalist. No challenge for me. It naturally comes to me. Best thing I’ve ever done❤
Why yall hating on this? This is the very thing that puts power back in the hands of the people. Regardless of you can afford it, not giving your money away to gigantic corporations that will use that money to make your life worse is a win for everyone.
The point Is people are having to do this whether they'd like to or not because everything has become so expensive under trump and joe biden.
I love how the video frames the economic situation as a "spending spree" rather than a real cost-of-living crisis.
The real deal is that Americans have been on a spending spree for years. And now that we need to tighten up, everyone is in a panic. I'm guilty of it. I've been on a strict budget the last 5 years and glad of it, otherwise i would be in a bad spot now.
The key is to spend less not stop completely.
Utilities have tripled in costs no one has money to spend
Retailers need to feel the pinch so they lower their prices.
Houses now cost over x8 average American wages, college had increased by nearly the same amount.
wrong, spending zero = save more
@@JeikuAnimeReview I understand your point. I would also say it’s possible to graduate college debt free in 4 yrs by working full time summers, living at home and going to local community and state colleges unless your degree requires 5 years like a few in my state.
And, if you are willing to relocate you can find affordable, livable and safe homes that may require updating over time. Does it take effort, yes. Planning? Yes. But, it can be done. It has been done by others. People look around their immediate area and are overwhelmed. The internet has unlocked a world of information to investigate and find opportunities as never before.
Love how the reporter used "lacrosse stick" as an example. You know.....a typical wealthy family sport. These media outlets are so outta touch with the common American.
Uh, lacrosse is now in 1000’s of public schools.
If consumers buy less it’s better for the environment
I remember when people bought homes jewelry vacation cottages sports cars. Now we work to sleep and eat. This sucks.
It’s not a trend ….. it’s actual reality because a lot of us are struggling.
I only eat 1 meal a day now.....
Inflation is corporate price gouging. Just stop buying stuff you don’t need.
So budgeting and saving, normal and systematic components of regular finances, are becoming viral.
The working poor “no spend” is easy for them, especially cutting out fancy vacations
seriously. they're even stuck in the work mentality. most can't or don't know how to relax. it's something I personally had to learn and I'm a re-entry student.
Never occurs to a lot of people to ever own more than two pairs of shoes.
But we can keep pretending that when people are poor it’s due to bad spending habits if you want,
The cost of living is double if not quadruple what people make in wages . America we're disgusting.
How about increasing people’s salary , stabilize rents, lower grocery prices
It's simple.
America: Business > People
Grocery prices are STILL increasing. Meat prices jumped 20-60 cents a lb depending on what cut at the wholesale store this week its crazy
True statement! Especially chicken and ground beef.
Buy sale priced at regular stores. Boneless, skinless chicken breast $1.69lb, thighs $0.99 though I’ve gotten them for $0.69lb. Ground round sale $2.99lb.
And shrinkflation!! Our butcher cut two burgers from their packs just a few days ago, same price. I actually inquired & he was honest.
We unite on the "No spend challenge" but we can't come together to fight the corporate and political greed that is killing us. We deserve to be poor.
Keep voting the way ur voting
@@lanacastillo49 Thanks for proving me right.
Stop buying garbage you don’t need
I like to get my groceries delivered, that way I can take my time going through all the items on sale in the comfort of my own home. By the time I'm done, I usually save enough to cover the delivery fee, tip and a little more. Not to mention I save any gas I would of used, and avoided a store usually packed full of people.
Downsize your life......Know a need verses a want.........Stay clear of debt.......Always save money for emergencies.....keep a balanced view in life........plan and Count the cost......Prepare meals at home/do meal prep...........learn to be patient..............IT WORKS PEOPLE!
It’s the way people used to live. You might dine out once or twice a month. You definitely had less clothes. One car families.
Smaller homes. Gardens.
Try to grow a garden even if it is a patio garden.
I haven’t been on vacation in three years and certainly have never gone every year.
Many people don’t understand the role of church in their lives.
At one time, the Catholic Church owned vast amounts of land in Europe. People could farm the land, build a home, and live even without much means.
Even today, people in a church community provide a support system for each other. You also realize the importance of a spiritual life. I know atheists who go to church every Sunday just for these reasons.
I’m a Protestant believer and a spiritual base keeps you grounded in what is really important.
The goal used to be to save ten percent of your income.
You should have five streams of income. They may be small, some of them, but it definitely helps pay the bills.
It’s almost as if the gal and people are advocating degrowth communism???
In addition to what you do, I have also kept a 3-12 month pantry and freezer. 3-4 month in youth and senior, 12 month when I had a family. The 3-4 month allows me to buy groceries at their lowest price in the sale cycle. Over time I know what those prices are. The 12 months were 3-4 months at the lowest price and the remaining 8-9 months were a savings/emergency fund. I also made gift packages for those in need, short or long term. During the C-19 crisis, I was fine. And even now, with inflation my budget was only up a little as I got the lowest price and switched out foods with other food as prices rose on this but not that. Buy eggs in the spring at $1.53 a dozen and freeze for up to a year, still fine for cooking and scrambling. I keep meat to $1lb, carb $1lb and veggies $1.50lb and fruit to $1lb average for all. Add in a little gardening and planning and I can still each steak and shrimp occasionally.
We cut of Pro Sports, Concerts, buying new cars etc. You will be surprised how much money can be saved, just with sports alone. Cloths are the same way, Older cars are just as good if not better etc.
Income disparity is worse than it was during the French revolution. Maybe we should look to history for inspiration on what to do
BINGO!
@@A-Wesker-5 Are you saying you think the French revolution was an act of terrorism?
It's called being middle class. All of us have been doing this for a a couple of years
oh, im good at this, cus i got no money to begin with... 😂 😂
So get a job, a better job, or multiple jobs if you are able bodied
😂you act like its easy@@firstlast8258
@@firstlast8258 Man, you don't even know their situation...
Just spend on essentials
@irememberla6460 I feel though that everyone should flourish in wealthy countries. Flourishing requires requires some degree of cultural experiences. Eating out is a cultural and social experience and well as a sensational one. But eating out is against bare minimum. Thus something more than bare minimum and spending on essential things is required for human flourishing.
I've been living like this for a couple of years now. You only spend if you've got some
Minimalism is the new Luxury. Peace of mind and Financial Stability are the real flex. People who do not seek validation are the ones who can save more. They do not care about what others drive, wear or where others go or spend their vacation. Focus and Balance are the key to life. ^_^
Didn’t know this is a new challenge. I have been doing this for 28 years
40 years here, lol.
Doing this all my life!!!!!!
Spending doesn't have to be bad for your bank account. 1.) Buy used 2.) Think about the resell value of the item you are buying. If you buy a used item for $200 and sell it for $200 a year later, you won't lose any money buying it. 3.) If you have to buy an item new think about how long it will last you. I recently spent $100 on a men's wallet. I was tired of the $30 and $40 ones falling apart after a few years so I found one that for 2.5 times the cost had a lifetime warranty and was handmade with full grain leather. It is substantially better built and will last much longer than the cheap ones. In the long run, I will save spending a little more upfront.
Good advice! My only additional recommendation would be to keep the receipt in a safe location and be sure whoever guarantees the item will be around longer than a year. One woman has replaced her Sears lifetime battery 18 times in 50 years. That’s value, lol. She has a lifetime warranty on her brakes that have been replaced multiple times free. She has either 530,000 or 580,000 miles on her car and has kept receipts and warranties for 50 years, lol.
Its not just for tha bank account, most of use already have way too much stuff included food in the fridge, we just don't need to shop more than once a month.
@@kenyonbissett3512 wow that's really awesome where did you you hear of this women? I would love to hear more on this!! As I too hope to do the same thing. I am financing my car and this car note ain't no joke I too will drive it till I can't drive it no more!!! 😅
@@vanessa6236 RUclips video, YT algorithm
I've been doing this most of my adult life.
I’ve been doing this on my own without realizing there’s a community on TikTok about it. It’s sort of like how long can I go without spending money and usually it’s for a few days until something comes up like necessities and I have to spend. But honestly, a penny saved truly is a penny earned. Don’t underestimate what you might save if you cut out certain things from your life from time to time
Remember everyone: every time you spend your money, you are paying with your time. You need to work to get that money, and you can’t get back the time you spend working. That is the TRUE currency - your time. It is up to you to decide how much your time is worth. No matter what people say or do, life is NOT about working and saving pennies. We made up the concept of pennies and sold one another the idea. Life is about living and enjoying each moment with your loved ones. It is about simple pleasures like how the sun looks on their face, not material gains. Material gains are an addition to the experience, NOT part of the experience we call life. Some people are lost in the sauce and you can’t change their minds about money, but we all have a set amount of time on this earth and no attitude or amount of work ethic can change that. Enjoy your time here while you can.
We have been living like this already I have $50 for groceries for our 3 person family this week
Depending on your area, sounds like plenty. Even room for a homemade or sale ice cream dessert
Reason why this is trending is because we’re broke in reality, inflation, cost of living too high. You think we just love this TREND?! spending is a luxury , but tight wallet/purse is called managing our or your money.
I'm glad they're giving themselves goals and challenges... some of us have been at it for years.
I hope ppl buy on this hype bc that’s the only way corporations bow down-without our spending they’re nothing
I did this naturally for almost two years when adopting my son. I really learned a lot about budgeting. I also hate how Corporations ( CEO, Stock buy backs etc) are keeping up with fauxflation to rake in the millions
I’ve been doing the challenge for about 5 years now.
i get this. i had my "$18 dollar big mac meal" yesterday, i went to whataburger for a meal and spent FOURTEEN dollars on a regular sized meal with no extras, thats with no delivery, no tip, NO EXTRAS.
We should all be more frugal great job!
A budget. That's what is needed. I've been on a budget for 5 years. All but one debt is gone. No mortgage. I've cut my food items, as the cost has gone up. Still keeping it below 300 a month, but it's no frills for sure!
This has to spread like wildfire across the country, across the board.
I've been doing this very well. I spend my money on whole foods I love fruit. Mmmmmm Juicy delicious friuts
Stop spending money
Hopefully for some of them, this 'challenge' will be a gateway for long-term positive changes.
This has been going on in simplicity forums and budget groups for over 25 years. This wasnt "invented" in 2013 thats just when somebody took it to facebook. I rember people doing it on the sadly gone simple living forum. I used to do this when I was young now its everyday living. My only thrill is library book sales
I think the challenge is great…some on social media follow every trend
Wow ! ! ! That is a fantastic idea... C'mon people we can do it.. Discipline is the key
What if rent was reasonable tho
$1000 a month?? My family of 4 doesn’t even spend that much.
Healthier too!
Nothing new. People in Venezuela, Argentina, Cuba, Lebanon and many other third world countries have been doing this for decades.
Tell me you don't know about responsibility without telling me you don't know about responsibility
Ive been doing this for years
It's funny how this is called a challenge
Except for a 3 month trip to Europe in 2022, that's what I have been doing. I feel like I already have everything I need anyway.
A simple basic budgeting would work without this trend. Get a spreadsheet for money in vs money out for bills and essentials. Whatever is left, divide it into 4 (budget per week). Have realistic expectations as well. If your money out is greater than money in, then you need to cut down on bills or aim to get a higher pay. It is what it is
Why does it have to extremes? Gotta enjoy life somewhat
The stock market is meaningless to almost all Americans.
The top 10% of US households own about 93% of the stock market's wealth, with the richest 1% owning 54% of public equity markets.
This should be standard, though. America is way too materialistic. Focus on helping yourself and the planet by utilizing stuff you already have.
Honestly ive been doing this especially when covid hit and everyone not in an essential business were laid off effectively or furloughed (i was furloughed for 3 or so months) and after i saw that happened i needed to do something about it. So i opened my first HYSA at minimal .10% APY that eventually grew to 4.35 (now 4.25%) and savings ballooned in 1 yr to oved 10k. Still growing strong. If people are going to do these 'challenges' then just open one or however many HYSA you want and automate and see how it goes.
theres just no self control. if you want money, you need to be disciplined with your money.
Can’t help but notice mainly women are advocating on this challenge..
Everytime I have an urge to window shop, I send instead 15-20euro to my savings account. I invest throught my bank and now yield is around 8% p.a. Since I started this, I realized I am actualy avaiable to save quater of my income without felling constrained about it.
It's almost as if the economy is NOT DOING SO WELL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This was big in 1970 with Earth Day to do the no spend month at a time and bartering.
Immigrant families: "This is a challenge?" ,,🤔
That’s called my every day life
This trend could cause a recession
Too late for most 🤓 🖕
@jaridkeen123 GDP could remain relative level. This is very similar to Degrowth Communism which rejects endless increasing production and consumption for only producing and consuming enough to live a good life. If we don’t consume so much, then we won’t produce as much, and if not then we have more time to live lives outside of work as well.
Amen! Great idea!
We save about 2k per month. It feels amazing.
What about the people with no money. They can't spend anything!!! This is not a trend.
Consumer spending fuels our economy.
Although I support this many of our jobs depend on consumer spending. This challenge is more than living beyond your means. This challenge is about restructuring how you spend.
People making lite of this are also the people complaining that their favorite restaurants or department stores are closing.
We are a service economy. This impacts a lot of our jobs. Judge, demean or criticize at your own peril. Your company could be the next to close because people don’t have enough money to splurge every now and then.
I'm broke! And jobs have become more scarce. Of course this is enticing but also demoralizing
My area has jobs. Perhaps consider moving to an area with jobs.
@@kenyonbissett3512you know moving is expensive soooo you want them to just pick everything up and have enough money for the move + security deposit to a new place??
@@MMMM-ui3ct I’m aware. But many broke people frequently have very little to move, pack a suit case or car. But the key to saving for a security deposit is a job. With no job she will lose her home also.
It sounds like this TikTok "No Spend" sudden notice is a cold-turkey approach. Many people are used to only using money for their needs - so, it's really not a "wonder-incentive".
Problem with "cold-turkey/no-spend approach is, if you do it at will, without any foresight planning, you can dip into a typical "over-spend" phase - because you see the "no-spend" as reward for not spending. That's just a hormonal / adrenalin rush kicker - which is not productive in the long run. I think if splurging or continual spending is a result of impulsive buying or emotional spending, and if you want to save money - you need to do your homework: Review your spending habits, review your cashflow pattern, review your priorities and set out goals that don't suddenly impact your spending patterns. Try it out for a short period, review if any changes need to happen, and develop your spending.
I think credit card "No Spend" should be more of a specific spotlight area to condone - rather than blanketing "no spend" in general.
Even started growing my own food this year.
A lot of you are missing the point. Yes, many people do this out of necessity, not out of a trend. I myself have been positively influenced by this “trend” on TikTok. I am 29 years old and have followed influencers since I was 14, before the term “influencer” was used regularly. It caused me to expect perpetually manicured nails, new clothes for each season, seasonal decor, etc. My parents could not afford these things for me growing up except on special occasions, but when I became financially independent, I went crazy and accrued a sizable amount of credit card debt because I wanted to obtain all of the things my parents couldn’t afford to give me. These spending challenges from people in similar circumstances as me have encouraged me to be mindful of my spending and treat myself in meaningful ways rather than spending impulsively. I have tackled half of my debt so far. All this to say that yes this is a trend, and yes it resonates with some people.
Remember what Bezos said, "Every amazon customer and employee made this happen." If we the people can do that for one person, imagine what we can do for ourselves.
Saving money is great for you personally but devastating to economy which is built on spending and debt.
For the first time a trend I’m for. I am undefeated
This is not do much a challenge but out of financial necessity and boycotting corrupt corporations.