katlupe
SF VIP
- Location
- Norwich, NY
I didn't buy it, but my bf bought a new 4 qt. crock pot/slow cooker for me. Being delivered Saturday. From Amazon.
No credit card bill for me..I prefer to pay cash for mine.. no nasty surprises that way. CC is kept for only emergencies should they ever ariseNothing, thank god. Got the credit card bill . . .![]()
I've got to get to Lowe's before you buy everything...lolTwo roses to replace a few that died-bigger roses. A lot of mulch missed the 5 for 10.00but these were 4 for 10.00 at lowes. Little seeding pepper plants were 4 for 10.00 and I got the,pots with 2 each in them so 8 for 10.00
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Don’t you have to use a Credit Card for Amazon or other online ordering?No credit card bill for me..I prefer to pay cash for mine.. no nasty surprises that way. CC is kept for only emergencies should they ever arise
No credit card for me either. On a forum about the era when men wore hats and big bands were all the rage, I came across a milliner who was a such a gifted artisan. She was/is a young Belgian lady and she speaks impeccable English. After a long phone call I learned that she could make a bespoke hat to my design but I had to pay by Pay-Pal. By what? She quoted a couple of other ways to pay, not in her native Flemish, more fluent Gobble-de-Gook. I asked her how much and to please include value added tax, delivery charge, this, that and the other. She gave me the price and I told her to leave it with me. A couple of days later she phoned me. "You have sent me cash!" She said, as though almost perplexed as to what to do with it. "I've never been paid in cash," she said. "First time that I have ever seen a Euro," I replied. We both laughed. She had told me the price, I went to the Post Office and bought the appropriate amount in euros, put them in a card with a message and posted it off. That to me was old school, to her it was beyond comprehension.No credit card bill for me..I prefer to pay cash for mine.. no nasty surprises that way. CC is kept for only emergencies should they ever arise
Debit Card, is what I use... the beauty of the Debit card is you can only spend what you have... you can't go into debt...Don’t you have to use a Credit Card for Amazon or other online ordering?
Of course. I should have thought of the DC.Debit Card, is what I use... the beauty of the Debit card is you can only spend what you have... you can't go into debt...
Except when you don’t have much you need a credit cardDebit Card, is what I use... the beauty of the Debit card is you can only spend what you have... you can't go into debt...
tbh..if you don't have much, unless it's an emergency, a CC is a very dangerous things to be using...road to debt hell....Except when you don’t have much you need a credit card![]()
I have never been in debt hell, but I have been in we have no food hell. Our first credit card was a 7/11 card and I was so happy and excited to get it. I had a couple of hundred dollars balance and they sold MILK and FOOD. Which meant when I ran out of both, I could still feed my children.tbh..if you don't have much, unless it's an emergency, a CC is a very dangerous things to be using...road to debt hell....
We mostly use cash as well since we seem unable to balance our checkbooks as we should and he frequently forgot to put debit purchases in the register. We use credit cards for large needed purchases. He bought a money pit house.When Barclays made the tap and go technology compulsory I refused. They had issued me with one of their first credit cards in 1966. A penniless student. In 2016 my new card arrived with tap & go. I cut it up and sent it back. They refused to issue an old style card so we parted, despite their protestations about safety.
For a while I would use my debit card, by now I was with another bank, NatWest. That's National Westminster. I had a phone call to stop by at the bank. When I did it was explained that using a credit card on line or over the phone is much more secure. A credit card also has a higher insured amount too. That's how I come to have a NatWest credit card. I rarely use it but they never object, it is also without tap technology.
Most of my purchases are paid in cash, that's the filthy folding stuff. It's not my actual preference, I would willingly use a card, but I hate it that my purchases are profiled somewhere by a faceless big brother. More cynically, profiles are bought and sold so that a bigger picture is built up. So by using cash and never holding a loyalty card, far less of my shopping activity ends up in big brother's file.
I've been in that position myself when I was a single parent... food or electricity bill... rob Peter to pay Paul...but thank goodness I never resorted to CC's.. too terrified to do thatI have never been in debt hell, but I have been in we have no food hell. Our first credit card was a 7/11 card and I was so happy and excited to get it. I had a couple of hundred dollars balance and they sold MILK and FOOD. Which meant when I ran out of both, I could still feed my children.
When used correctly CC are a great blessing, it’s when people abuse them that they are a road to debt hell. There is a difference between buying a 250 dollar pair of pants or shoes and a gallon of milk. You sometimes need milk, no one needs an expensive piece of clothing.
The interest rates on credit cards (at least in the US) are beyond the pale. Can't imagine how people manage to dig their way out if they're in financial trouble to start with.I've been in that position myself when I was a single parent... food or electricity bill... rob Peter to pay Paul...but thank goodness I never resorted to CC's.. too terrified to do that
My point being that if you have to use a CC to buy food you'll never be in the position to pay back the debt..or at least it will take forever to pay back at minimum payments, and in the meantime one would likely need more and more things... so IMO anyone who is poor should steer well clear of a Credit card if they want to remain without long term debt
I still disagree. It depends on too many factors. It never took us years to pay back the debt. My husband, when he got back from Vietnam, did day work. Just like in the movies he stood outside the gates of Budweiser and waiting to be picked to load trucks and deliver beer. Income depended on how many days he got picked.I've been in that position myself when I was a single parent... food or electricity bill... rob Peter to pay Paul...but thank goodness I never resorted to CC's.. too terrified to do that
My point being that if you have to use a CC to buy food you'll never be in the position to pay back the debt..or at least it will take forever to pay back at minimum payments, and in the meantime one would likely need more and more things... so IMO anyone who is poor should steer well clear of a Credit card if they want to remain without long term debt
Yes you were. I was never given a dime and I have a very well off brother and his son is a millionaire, cheap shits, all of them.The interest rates on credit cards (at least in the US) are beyond the pale. Can't imagine how people manage to dig their way out if they're in financial trouble to start with.
The times I lived on the financial edge everything was timed down to the wire. My mom also loaned or gave me money when things looked bleak. Bless her beautiful heart. I was lucky to have her.