by jdmartin » Tue 07 Jun 2005, 23:09:22
I live in the mountains of Northeast Tennessee, close to 2,000 sf house on a little more than half an acre. Not anywhere big enough or suburban enough to be a McMansion, as I'm kind of out in the middle of nowhere. Nothing close enough to walk to and you wouldn't want to anyway, since everything is tall hills and mountains and blind curves that are suicidal.
Travel 50 minutes to work, each way, Monday-Friday. As I work as a municipal executive, it is difficult to continuously live near your job unless you never change jobs or move every couple of years (city management is a mobile field). No one I know walks to work because there's no possible place to work where I live closer than 2 miles away. If we had a reasonable public transportation system I could easily take it, since I live directly between 2 major cities in the only valley between them; rail lines have existed here for 150 years and are still used on a regular basis (but not for people transport, only goods).
My vehicle gets lousy gas mileage (16mpg pickup) but was chosen because it needs to fulfill a whole bunch of different needs, including hauling the trash to the dump, moving people around in my job (my vehicle is used for work also), and getting me over the mountain twice a day in any kind of weather. Before I bought this vehicle I had two different vehicles to maintain and keep up to fulfill all those needs.
Monthly bills include:
$640 mortgage, includes property tax and insurance
$150 gas bill in winter, 20 in summer
$50 electric, fairly even year round
$40 telephone
$75 cable and internet
$30 monthly water
$70 month car insurance
$350 month gas, estimate, for 2 cars/2 people
Vehicle payment covered by job
couple of credit cards and student loans
food, usually eating out once a week
With all of that my wife and I are still able to put money in savings every month, pay cash for things that come up like vet bills or car repairs, and have some fun with the excess. Naturally I'm in no position to stop working, though my wife could stop working and we'd still get by but not quite as well.
If I was going back in time, I would have most certainly done some things different, but it is what it is now since real estate is not real hot where I live and I've built up considerable equity in my house to just take a loss.
In my opinion, we live reasonably frugal, since many of the things that other people listed for themselves or neighbors is not part of our lifestyle. For example, we have no cell phone (though I have one as part of my job), two cars of which one is paid for, no SUV, rarely use air conditioning as we bought a house surrounded by trees in the mountains that keep it cool in the summer, I cut my own grass, repair and maintain my own vehicles, have the cheapest cable package, etc.
It does bother me that I burn through so much gasoline, but there's no way I could live close enough to my job to walk anyway since the area I work in has become ultra wealthy and I could never afford to live there. I do the best I can under the circumstances. We buy almost exclusively organic & free range foods, use chemicals as rarely as possible (no real cleaners, pesticides, lawn fertilizer except organic), don't shop at Walmart or other hellholes like it, etc.
After fueling up their cars, Twyman says they bowed their heads and asked God for cheaper gas.There was no immediate answer, but he says other motorists joined in and the service station owner didn't run them off.