4 April 2025

You’ll save money by going back to basics

When I was doing the workshops and solo sessions, I had a couple of people whose main focus was on creating the fastest way to set up a simple life. You can't create a simple life fast, it's the opposite of that It's not one single thing either - it's a number of smaller, simpler activities that combine to create a life that reflects your values; and that takes a long to come together. When I first started living simply I took an entire year to work out our food - buying it, storing it, cooking it, preserving, baking, freezing, and growing it in the backyard. This is change that will transform how you live and it can't be rushed.

 

You have to work for a simple life and there are two main aspects to think about before you start. One is changing your mindset and your ideas of what success is. When you work on that, you can start thinking about practical things such as the work you can do that will make a difference in your daily life.  Decide what you want to change, that could be how you cook, reducing your debt, making simple cleaners, growing food in your backyard, not wasting food, decluttering, creating a strong family unit or a hundred other things that might be important to you. And while thinking about these things allows you to plan how to get what you want, it’s the work you do that makes it happen. If you scroll through Instagram or Facebook for hours every day you won't have the time you need to do it. This is life changing, so expect to make a lot of changes. If you're like me, the work you do will change you as well - for the better.


I make sure I have a good breakfast every morning. Sometimes it's eggs and tomatoes on toast, sometimes porridge, grilled cheese on toast or crumpets. When I finish breakfast I want to start work and I don't want to stop again until I cook my lunch.  BTW, this is a bread and butter plate, not a dinner plate.

Of course, your new life will grow according to the amount of work you can put into it. When I look back, we started changing our life around 2000 or a little before then. Our two sons were living with us then and I had to reduce our cost of living. I knew nothing about simple living back in 2000 so I returned to what I knew - cooking from scratch, eating leftovers and not wasting food. In that year I learned a lot about how to grow and store food, compost, chickens, baking bread and preserving. That worked well for us and we soon had a budget and stuck to it. We paid off our 20 year mortgage in eight years and that opened more doors for us.  I decided to close my technical writing business and work solely in our home. Hardly anyone was writing about housework or cooking from scratch then. There were a lot of permaculture people writing about growing food but very few of them wrote about the important connection between gardens and kitchens.


Cabbage rolls with pork and vegetable filling and tomato sauce. I added more sauce after I took this photo.

I started reading bits and pieces online about frugal living and worked at that for a while. Then I realised that most of the other people on that website were saving money so they could spend it on travel, cars, clothes etc. and that wasn't what I wanted.  All that was behind me, I could see how wasteful my old life had been and how absolutely wonderful I felt working in my home and taking control of our money. I  dived right in to do more and develop what we'd started. Then I started writing about it.

This is my work room, with sewing on the left and writing on the right. Gracie is pretending to be a guard dog under the desk, in reality she was watching the pigeons. 

You’ll save money by going back to basics.  Giving your time to your home saves the money you would pay to others to do that work for you. When you stop buying supermarket bread, cleaners, laundry products and start making those things yourself, as well as growing food in the backyard, sewing and mending, your living costs are less.  If you do that work instead of buying it ready made at the supermarket, you'll end up healthier, wiser and with more money in your pocket.



But it all depends on time. The time you give to work in your home will be determined by your current circumstances. If, like me, you've got all the time you want, you can create a wonderful life making your home your masterpiece, If you go out to work, your home time will be limited and you'll have to make choices on what you can do and when you can do it. Life is full of various stages, you may be in the stage of saving for a home deposit or paying off a home. But you can still do a few things that will help you save money and don't take a lot of time to do them. 

It takes ten minutes about every three months to make a batch of laundry liquid. The difference in price - the store bought laundry liquid will cost you about $90 for 10 litres and the homemade liquid will cost you about $4 for 10 litres. Imagine the savings that will add up over the years if you make your own. The bonus is no big plastic bottles brought home every week and thrown into landfill, and none of the strange looking ingredients listed on the commercial liquid. Homemade liquid contains three ingredients - soap, washing soda and borax. Making lunch for school kids and adult workers as well as a thermos of good coffee or tea will save money and give you healthier food to eat away from home.  Cooking from scratch will save you money and time if you have staples and back-up food in a stockpile cupboard. And don't make a single meal - make a batch and freeze some or make two meals instead of one and you've quickly cut your cooking time in half.  Cook once, eat twice. If you can freeze some of your extra meals, you could build up a very nice stockpile of frozen meals for the nights when you're just too tired to cook.  Cooking from scratch is cheaper and it won't contain all the preservatives and additives processed food has so it can sit on a supermarket shelf waiting for someone to buy it.





This is how I clean my cleaning cloths and rags.  I use commercial cloths, scrubbers and sponges in the kitchen. In the bathrooms and toilets, I use rags that I cut up from old towels and sheets. That way I never mix up the cleaning cloths and use a toilet rag in the kitchen. Ugh!  I start by collecting the clothes over  7 to 10 days, hanging them over the side of the bucket if they're still wet. When I have enough, I add a scoop of Vanish (ocyclean) to the bucket and fill it with hot water. I tend to leave it to remove stains and disinfect overnight and then the following morning, I wash them with my regular wash.  When they go back in the drawer, they're clean, stain-free and germ-free, and much cheaper than continuously buying commercial cloths.

At first glance, a simple life seems like an easy goal. There are images of peaceful mornings and slow days. However, living simply is far from easy and uncomplicated because it requires discipline, intentional choices and hard work. It is a process of continuing to enrich life, building family strength and being able to remain productive and creative. And of course, over the years it changes because you change. What I do in my home now is different to what I did 10 years ago. It's a process of reinvention and improvement while keeping daily life as simple as possible and always keeping your values in mind.

You can reinvent your life, you don't have to live how others live. Deciding to change will give you a better life as long as you're prepared to work for it.

SOME OF MY OLDER BLOG POSTS FOR FURTHER READING ON THIS SUBJECT


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23 comments

  1. So soothing to read in these times thank you. When you have your cleaning cloths on the side of the bucket are you concerned about mixing bathroom/toilet rags next to kitchen ones? Sorry if it is a dumb question🥴 I agree that the simple life isn't the Instagram worthy drifting in a ditsy floral dress through a waving wheat field while your sourdough is proving back at the apple tree homestead (but wouldn't that be nice 🙂).But rather it is thought, discipline work and consistency, fulfilling and strengthening. It is so nice to see the link to your post Making the bed. It is one of my all time favourites and takes me back to the eureka and heart warming moment of your blog at that time in my life. Thank you for posting. I have been eagerly awaiting for your thoughts in these troubling times and I'm looking forward to the comments in this lovely online community. I just love that photo of your workroom. So confusing to productivity and daydreaming. NZ Ingrid

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    1. Hi Ingrid. Only the kitchen cloths go anywhere near that bucket. They stay on the side to dry out before soaking, after soaking they go in the washing machine. The rags from toilets and bathrooms go in another bucket I keep on the floor. I soak them in Vanish too and wash them in the washing machine, after soaking, along with Gracie's bedding.

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    2. That makes sense. I just wondered if I was over particular lol. Spell check changed conducive to confusing about your work room too which completely changes the meaning

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  2. Hello Rhonda, 'bloom where you are planted' was so helpful to me, back in the day.
    After may chops & changes & work, at 64 I am now in a simple - debt free home & co-gardening at a farm with a productive veggie garden, which I love. My life has turned around & I am so very grateful for your book DTE I read in 2013 - game chachanging & so inspiring!!! Sending you blessings galore!

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  3. This post came at a great time for me. I've been struggling with my patience a lot lately and honestly, it has thrown my routine off. Thank you. So good to hear from you

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  4. Thank you Rhonda, my husband and I work in our home and garden creating a simple, healthy and fulfilling life and it is always good to read your posts for a reset and affirmation. I am increasingly conscious of the damage being done to the planet and living simply helps reduce our footprint tremendously. Thank you for your posts and photos.
    Penny in the UK

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  5. Hello Rhonda. It has been far too long since I have replied to your posts and I enjoy your writings so very much and take so much value in content that you share with us all. My question is: has your methods of prioritizing and managing and accomplishing simple and valued home living changed over the years, particularly in relation to health and ageing as many of us are? I would love you to talk about this - nothing to personal but I am sure many of us have conditions eg: arthritis that can impact our accomplishments daily but we desire to maintain a simple and valued life. Kind Regards Julie from Mooroolbark.

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    1. Julie, I'm not really the best one to ask about health matters. Although I'm in my late 70s, I've never had arthritis, and the last time I went to hospital was when Kerry was born and he's not mid-40s. I do have a non-malignant brain tumour that makes me dizzy and I can't continually look up or down. I use a walking stick outside when I'm dizzy and that works. Things change as you age but that would be different for everyone - for me it's been slowing down and resting. It takes longer to do my housework now. That's fine by me, I know I'm not 25 any more. Whenever change is necessary, I change. I can see myself carrying on like that for a few more years making adjustments when they're needed. I like that housework makes me active. I can't think of much worse that sitting in front of a computer or TV all day.

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    2. Thank you Rhonda. Firstly I am sorry that some of my draught comments got sent by mistake as I was formulating my comment to you. What I appreciate from your response is clarity of household tasks that can be an achieved even at a slower pace, flexibility and adjustments in the way household tasks are undertaken probably just like our elders did with their routines and commitment and appreciation of their homes and they certainly kept active with the manual work without our mod cons of today.

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  6. Great question Julie. I would find that an interesting and helpful topic too. I have fibromyalgia which impacts what I am able to do day to day. NZ Ingrid

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    1. Wish you the best Ingrid. I walk your path in a similar way. A legacy of past cancer treatment. I am going to strive to appreciate even the smaller achievements and there is always tomorrow for tasks that are beyond me today and to keep active even though my capabilities may vary each day. Rhonda's blogs are so inspiring and such a practical learning tool for our homes that are very much central to our lives, our independence and wellbeing going forward.

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  7. Today we drove past a business where there are usually at least 100 cars on the parking lot. I commented that there was almost no one working today and Hubby said it is lunchtime. Wow all those people went out to lunch! I packed Hubby's lunch for 40 years and he often thanks me for doing that which I appreciate. It is crazy how much grocery money is spent ton thing alike a pack of muffins that are more than $1 each and they don't even taste good. Muffins and other simple baked goods cost so little to make and are so delicious! My husband actually bakes all our bread. His bread is better than mine so he took it over many years ago.

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  8. Rhonda, you mentioned the idea of people being frugal so they could spend on vacations etc. vs. frugality as part of a simple life. That struck me because I've felt that too but have never quite managed to put my finger on it. It's still within the whole culture of consumerism, and I have gotten to the point that I want no part of that for many reasons. I don't want to be controlled and manipulated like that, I don't want to be part of a system that is, especially at the moment, sowing discontent and fear. I want to be independent of and outside of all that as much as possible. My husband and I were talking recently about how wonderful it is to not feel that pull and to actually prefer, for example, a simple meal at home over going to a restaurant, or anything that lets us stay home and away from all that, really. Simple and calm :) Thanks for another inspiring post!

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    1. I love this comment 💕NZ Ingrid

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  9. Great post Rhonda, I love re reading your older posts too, whenever I need some inspiration and a reminder of why I chose simple living. Your books are constantly consulted and never fail to buck me up. My children are almost 30 and 27 now and we have been living a simple life since they were born. Like you we have adjusted and made many changes along the way. I'm still learning new and better ways to do things and hopefully never stop. Simple living isn't always easy but it is always interesting, and mostly very enjoyable and I feel it is the best way to live for our own health and that of the planet.
    Lots of love, Aisling Kiernan from Ireland xx

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  10. Good reminder ❤️

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  11. Thanks Rhonda for your wisdom. It is always a pleasure to read your writing, so meaningful, thoughtful and practical. I have not long found your web site and it has made me think differently about house keeping. I want to learn to slow down and not have half a dozen jobs going at once and none finished, or rushing through the task without enjoying the process. Your words in this post about taking change slowly made me reflect.
    I read your Making the Bed post and that is where I’ll start. I’m not a bed maker, but a bed ‘puller upper’. That will change. I do love that first sleep in sunshine sheets.
    Thank you for taking time to share your knowledge.

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  12. I love love love the idea of reinventing my life an making it into how I want it to be. I make my own washcloths and in fact, need to do a few. They are crafted out of old towels that have become holy. I usually add a bleach pod into my load of whites and use very hot water. Plus, one rag per day means I can go a good 2 weeks before I run out of them and need to do a load. If they are stained, I don't sweat it.

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  13. Great post as always - thanks Rhonda!

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  14. Hi Rhonda, it's been a long time since I've read your blog, I did purchase your book "Down to Earth" when it came out too. I was very sorry (after clicking on the About Me section) to learn of your husband's passing!

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    1. Thank you Kate, I miss him. It will be three years in May.

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  15. Hello my dear Rhonda. Another article that I loved ! Would you believe me if I told you that when I make my bed I often think of you ? LOL. This morning, I just cut up some old towels to make rags.
    My house looks more and more like what I wanted. I know I still have a lot to do there and in the garden, but I like it ! I would be so bored if everything was perfect... Now I'm going to continue my sowing and planting in the garden, because here in France, it's spring. Thank you for this motivating article.

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  16. Hi Rhonda, inspiring as always, thank you.

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