View Single Post
BonsaiGuy
Member
 
BonsaiGuy's Avatar
 
Member Since Jan 2019
Location: Ohio
Posts: 184
5
193 hugs
given
Default Feb 03, 2019 at 10:20 AM
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by WishfulThinker66 View Post
My favourite thrifty buy was a $400 Le Crueset roaster I got new in the box for $5. Obviously the pricer had no clue what it was.

In my mother's last days she was delusional and always in a state of dementia. Dad used to take her for her weekly treat to the big local thrift store which she loved - likely because the older items evoked memories for her. She would buy stuff and forget about it when she got home and dad would donate it back. There were multiple occasions she kept re-buying the same thing over and over again.

I have a friend with her own 're-liked retro and vintage' shop and she does quite well and manages to still give a lot to charity by paying herself only a minimal living wage.

I do try to stay away from the big chains myself though, like Value Village which is even on the stock exchange earning billions in profit for share holders giving very little for charity.

I encourage you then to check the charitable status Vs for profit status of the bigger chains before you donate or purchase. Perhaps instead deal directly with the little mom and pop operations which turn over a portion of their gains to local charitable organisations. You would be surprised about the Salvation Army too.

Surprises you might find are organisations which make money for charities only on the weight of recycled fabric.

I myself donate to the local Cummunity Living which provides people with cognitive disabilities jobs and will in turn resale on a sliding scale or even give away furniture and kitchen stuff in addition to clothing to those actually in need.
I am so happy to hear from you, @WishfulThinker66.

I agree with you that it's important to look at the structure of the organizations and their charitable status before committing to shopping with them. The main three where I like to shop is the Salvation Army, Goodwill, and the Volunteers of America. I support all three of these organizations because of their commitments to the homeless population in my city as well as their focus nationwide. They also sponsor drug rehabs, metal health clinics, and services including assistance for the less privileged in my area. I am incredibly grateful for this and I even have a few friends who have gone through a rehab program through one of these organizations and believe that it saved their life. There is also an organization that has the sole purpose of providing jobs to those who otherwise wouldn't be able to or would have a very hard time finding work (felons or those who we're convicted of retail theft for example).

Overall, I think shopping at these stores is a hug win for everyone involved!

__________________
Recovering from the past. Growing in the present. Planting seeds for the future.

Dx: Bi-Polar II, PTSD, ADHD, SUD
Rx: Methadone 100mg, Lamictal 300mg, Abilify 10mg, Buspar 40mg, Clonadine 0.3mg, Trazodone 50mg, Nexium 20mg, Allegra 180mg
BonsaiGuy is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote