Sunday, 12 April 2026

A Choice



  • Why I Chose a No Spend YearEvery now and then someone will look at me with that puzzled, head‑tilted expression and ask the same question I’ve heard over and over this year.

“Why? Why would someone do something like that?”

Sometimes it comes out gently. Sometimes with a little disbelief. Sometimes with the assumption that something must have been wrong.

And I get it. A No Spend year isn’t exactly a mainstream hobby.

But here’s the truth — the simple, unpolished truth:

I didn’t do this because I had to. Not for financial reasons. Not because I was in trouble. Not because I needed rescuing.

I did it to see if I could.

I did it because something inside me was curious about what would happen if I stopped automatically reaching for more and started paying attention to what I already had. I wanted to know what lived underneath the habits, the impulses, the little comforts I didn’t even notice myself grabbing.

And honestly? I wanted to meet the version of myself who could do something hard just because she decided to.

This year has surprised me in ways I didn’t expect.

1. I had more than I realized

Not just in my pantry or freezer — though those have become their own little treasure chests — but in my routines, my creativity, my resilience. I wasn’t living in lack. I was living in autopilot.

2. Using what I have feels better than buying something new

There’s a quiet pride in pulling a meal together from what’s already here. A satisfaction in finishing a project with materials I forgot I owned. A sense of abundance that doesn’t come from spending a dime.

3. The “why” keeps evolving

What started as a challenge has become a practice. What began as curiosity has turned into clarity. And what felt like restriction now feels like freedom.

Somewhere along the way, this stopped being about money and started being about space — the kind you can see and the kind you can feel.

Spring cleaning has been part of that. Letting things go. Clearing corners. Releasing old versions of myself I didn’t need to carry anymore.

Every bag that leaves the house takes a little emotional weight with it. Every cleared surface feels like a small exhale. Every rediscovered item reminds me that I’ve always had enough — I just wasn’t seeing it.

So… Why Did I Do It?

Because I wanted to know myself better. Because I wanted to break patterns that weren’t serving me. Because I wanted to feel the difference between wanting and needing. Because I wanted to choose my life instead of drifting through it.

And because deep down, I knew I could — I just needed to prove it to myself.

This year isn’t about deprivation. It’s about discovery.

It’s about learning that “enough” isn’t something you buy — it’s something you uncover.

And I’m still uncovering it, one intentional choice at a time

As I move through this No Spend year, I’m realizing that every week teaches me something a little different. This week was about understanding my why — the quiet reason underneath the choice. Next week, I want to explore what happens after the “why” settles… when the dust clears, the bags leave the house, and I’m left standing in the space I’ve created.

There’s a moment when the noise fades and you can finally hear yourself again. That’s where I’m heading next.

4 comments:

  1. I like this "It’s about learning that “enough” isn’t something you buy — it’s something you uncover."
    I'm trying to spend less and get by with what I have, but I'm afraid this time of the year, preparing for gardening I find myself spending. Reading your posts on not spending has been a wonderful encouragement to me and I see more and more reason not to just buy things that I truly can do without. I'm so proud of you!

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  2. Thank you Connie, I will be your cheer leader, think of the money spent on the garden as going in the bank, you will grow healthy food you do not have to buy.

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  3. I'm glad your "no spending" time is working for you, Nonie. It certainly isn't easy to not buy anything, but you are doing a great job, and if one doesn't need something, then it's senseless to buy it. Many of us are going through things, sorting and clearing out, donating, and feeling much lighter in the process. Keep treading on, Nonie. It sounds like you are grateful for this journey you are on. : ) And I'm glad you are learning different things in the middle of it all. : )

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    1. Sheri, it sure isn't what I thought would happen. I just keep learning.

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