Sentences with phrase «stop buying stuff»

My plan to stop buying this stuff is two fold: 1.
I keep saying we need to let the gov shut down, stop paying taxes, pull all our money out of the banks and stop buying stuff.
(Still, stop buying stuff.)
I try to pay off my credit cards in full each month and if I notice I'm unable to do so, I stop buying stuff I don't need.
Stop buying stuff online, and make saving your only priority for at least one year.
Over a few years (my habits have changed slowly) I finally realized that I simply had to stop buying the stuff all together.
Now, thousands people are adding their name to petitions asking the government stop buying this stuff.
The reason people stop buying stuff is because they either don't need it anymore, or that it sucks and no one wants it anymore.
We always do it the day before, we keep our gifts small + we stopped buying stuff for each other years ago!
Of course if we just stopped buying their stuff then that'd achieve the same thing:)

Not exact matches

People stopped using them to try to buy stuff, hoarded them for speculative gains instead, and then grumbled when exchanges were hacked, their windfalls stolen or frozen and many of the altcoin offerings turned out to be blatant frauds.
If people stop buying the gender - targeted stuff, and start buying the creative play stuff instead and tell your children WHY... kids will benefit, and companies will start to get the message.
you can buy some stuff call fray stop at most craft stores or Walmart rub it on the ends and they won't fray
I'm not against shopping or buying stuff, and I'm certainly not suggesting you stop giving gifts.
When we do the shopping, we only buy what we need for the 8fit recipes and have stopped buying unnecessary stuff.
My 2011 resolution package is all centred on February: I will join Febfast (no drinking) and also during February, to maintain my alcohol - free commitment, will join a local ladies exercise class, walk the dog, eat only good foods and stop buying «stuff» (unneeded items).
You used to could buy it in the lawn and garden section of Home Depot but they stopped carrying it about 5 years ago so I buy my off of mynaturalmarket.com this stuff is amazing and it does absolutely everything.
I heard about your plan of Lose the Wheat and Lose the Weight, got the book read it cover to cover, got the cookbook, bought all the stuff I could afford, stopped all the wheat, made the food in the cookbook and guess what?
I know right!?! My husband is so hard to buy stuff for:) Thanks for stopping by my blog, I appreciate it!
I'll say more NO to: doing things which I don't want to but usually say yes to so I wouldn't disappoint others, feeling down or beat myself up over every little thing which didn't go right or as planned, being a perfectionist every single moment of every single day, going places or meeting people just because of FOMO, eating foods that physically don't make me feel good, no matter how big the cravings might be, buying new stuff unless I really, really need them or can't stop thinking about them, emotional vampires who suck the life out of me and never bring anything good or positive along with them...
Then I rummaged around my fall decor stuff and found that I had a lot of old faux foliage I could use instead of buying new (whenever I stop using a faux floral arrangement I save pieces of it that I might be able to re-use).
Stopped that process as I bought too many other stuff along the way.
I've made a commitment to myself to stop buying formal stuff until I have a specific occasion for it, otherwise I would so buy that satin maxi.
I buy a snow brush at a truck stop, as I know at some point on our approach to Michigan we'll probably run into more white stuff.
In 2012 Target stopped selling Kindle devices because they acted as a gateway to the Amazon ecosystem and Target wanted everyone to buy stuff from their stores.
With all three restrictions in place, you can stop kids from surfing the web, lending / borrowing books, buying stuff, and using share features.
It doesn't stop people finding stuff, sharing stuff, and buying stuff, in ever - growing numbers.
Inevitably the solution for conquering clutter requires that you buy more stuff: there's the drawer décor kit that will let you trim - to - fit a silicone mat to stop your utensils from rolling around the in the drawer.
Completing a planet rewards you with a chunk of gold that can be used to buy new stuff, but there's also an interesting risk vs reward mechanic at play on the planet's surface as you can send humans to mine gold deposits as well, which obviously stops them from gathering the materials required to build your defenses.
With no stuff to make, the makers of stuff would stop buying the raw materials used to make stuff.
So Eli did the manly thing and went and bought about a hundred bucks worth of tools, observed that the toilet not only didn't flush down, but also needed a complete gut replacement, went back to the hardware store, bought a complete set of innards, stopped by the bookstore to get a book on useful expletives for when nothing works and took the damn thing apart getting the blue stuff all over himself and the floor, that book came in useful, and we learned that contrary to rumor brass screws used in toilets do corrode so you have to go back to the hardware store and get WD - 40 and when that doesn't work you go back yet again and get a nut cracker (nononono, not that kind).
Corporations spend billions of dollars a year to get people to buy their offerings, but when things go wrong, Mr. Pifko wondered what individuals can do when they need to get recalcitrant companies to «do stuff,» like refund money and stop unlawful practices from continuing.
All that being said if you're just buying your first property don't let trusts and all this exotic stuff stop or even slow you down.
ORE needs to keep the casino gamblers out and encourage those with the right stuff to become professional Realtors as a «first» choice of vocation instead of a hail - Mary stop - gap job and / or a last ditch money - grab attempt that anyone can buy into to hopefully keep the wolves from the door (with a quick big hit), because, in the latter instance, your stereotypical Realtor in the public's jaundiced communal eye fulfils its expectation as just another desperate commissioned sales hack... just another product of the CREA / ORE dues / fee - producing professional never - ending spin cycle.
When I lived in NC, my husband would stop by the thrift store frequently and buy me stuff... just because he loves me.
(I actually found when I started buying food at the local organic market my grocery bill did not go up by too much, because I stopped buying a bunch of stuff that eventually just got pitched.)
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