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Man Goes a Week Without Spending a Cent

by Jasmin Malik Chua, Jersey City, USA on 10. 9.08
Culture & Celebrity

Money photo
Photo credit: Getty Images

Unless you graze off your own farmland, you're homeless, or you're under 12, lasting a week without spending a single cent sounds like a Herculean impossibility. Still, one man, who is none of the above, gave extreme frugality the old college try, recounting his week without money in the pages of Real Simple's October 2008 issue.

If you expected earth-shattering revelations or heartfelt epiphanies about our first-world obsession with consumption and consumerism (which we sorta did), however, you'd be disappointed (which we sorta were). Not being able to pay for anything becomes a source of consternation rather than inspiration, and the author circumvents his inability to pull out his wallet with promises to pay up after his little experiment is over—or through plain ol' mooching. There was one moment of unexpected brilliance, though.

On the way home, we stop to pick up buns from Erin’s favorite Portuguese bakery. I could argue that I’m not buying the buns for myself, but rules are rules, so I beg Zach to pay for them.

“Come on,” I say. “I’ll pay you back next week.”
“Isn’t that just a deferred purchase?” Zach asks.

I ponder this question, weighing its logic against the prospect of returning home to my wife bunless.

“Listen,” I say. “The lettuce in our garden is going crazy. Buy me these buns and I’ll give you a bushel of romaine. Dude, that’s a straight-up barter.

Dude, you got that one right.

Could you survive seven days without dropping a single coin? How would you go about doing it? Sound off in the comments section below. ::Real Simple

More on anti-consumerism
The Compact: Buy Nothing New for a Year (or Two)
Living Without 'Made in China'
Bah, Humbug: November 25th is Buy Nothing Day
What Happens After Buy Nothing Day?
A Story about Losing, Leaving and Buying It All Back

Comments (22)

straight up barter, yo!

Am I allowed to stock up food before (not crazy, but enough to last for the next two weeks)?

If not no. Otherwise, probably. It would be nice to keep the car parked for a week (which I've actually done thus far without even trying).

jump to top Brian says:

Lesson learned: This was a half baked bun of a project.

Epic FAIL.

What an utterly useless waste of a week. Try a month, then we'll talk. Anything less, get lost, nobody's falling for it.

jump to top Willy Bio [TypeKey Profile Page] says:

Big deal. I do that all the time. It is called being broke a week before payday.

jump to top frazzledglispa [TypeKey Profile Page] says:

im doing this months at a time...and so are other homeless people.

free meals at churches, begging, mooching-it sucks but maybe karma appeases people, having a partner, you gotta do what you gotta do

i dont choose to live this way. its just what i have to do. no one has any money. i have many friends that are "mentally challenged" and get social security. im well educated and have gotten "sufficiant to excellent" grades my entire life, my dads a highschool principal, and i still cant afford to have a place to live or go to college. without proper financing knowledge kids are screwed

so that guy aint got shit, and knows that next week hell be rolling in monies...or just have family to fall back on.

nice try for an emic perspective.

jump to top WailerWoman says:

What!? I have a good paying job, I can go a week without spending a cent. Of course I, dont like to spend my money. Is purchasing stocks spending?

jump to top david says:

also i think it depends on how you define spending. I would assume he didn't cancel his internet, water or electricity for the week, or tell the insurance company he was only going to pay for 3/4 of the month that month.

he's still spending money even if he doesn't drop some cash on it. by his logic he could also drive his car around all week as long as his tank of gas can last 8 days.

jump to top Andrew [TypeKey Profile Page] says:

I'm sorry, but I too don't think this is much a big deal. I stock up enough food, and grow enough in my garden that I sometimes don't leave the hill I live on for two or three weeks at a time.

If I look back to the spring there was probably a month I went without spending money, and that was only to pay my bills.

My goal is to be able to live off my land one day, generate my own power, and essentially my only bill will be for internet access (someday maybe that'll be free). Personally I think that's an accomplishment. Not bartering and getting others to pay for your things.

If anything, all this guy proved is that he's cheap, but not afraid to let his frugalness negatively affect those around him.

I've done that before, plenty of times. I had plenty of money in the bank but thought really carefully whether or not I needed a certain item or not or if I could eat at home versus spending money eating out.

jump to top Courtney says:

Andrew hit it on the nail: While he may not have spent money physically, it was still spent from a monthly bill view. I've gone 2 weeks without spending cash, but I still paid for my car registration, insurance, the food I ate was bought previously, cell phone, etc. Prepare to be a luddite if you don't want to spend money for a month.

jump to top Craig says:

Why?

What's the point of not spending a dime if you can't feed yourself?
A truer task would be to go a week without spending except on food/water/housing.
As long as you're not buying an iphone every week, you're good in my book.

You may have to work to pay for your car, but if you give up your car you don't need to work.

jump to top Wuz says:

According to the article the guy still had a home. I wonder how he got out of having to pay for property tax, mortgage, rent, utilities, whatever for an entire week. I suppose if he had his wife paying for everything then but that's rather weak.

jump to top Doug [TypeKey Profile Page] says:

I agree with Andrew. If you don't count accruals, this is rather easy. I checked my accounting this year and I achieved this "feat" several times to date.

jump to top gjd says:

"If you you're not first, you're last."
WTF all? This guy tried something and it wasn't perfect so you think its crap?

Wrong attitude if you want to see change.

jump to top Jeremiah says:

Did he shoplift anything? He should have lived in a tent and stole everything he needed. I'd much rather read an article about someone committing petty theft to survive. Man vs Wild/Survivorman style. Those guys don't spend any money for a week, where's their article? FAIL

jump to top JohnK says:

I thought this was pretty unimpressive, especially when he offered to pay the guy back the next week - it definitely counts as a delayed purchase, just like if he used a credit card. And then I read frazzledglispa's great comment about doing this all the time, being broke before payday, and this guy's efforts seemed even less inspriing.

jump to top Courtney says:

There is no real way for a person who has a job and a home and transportation to just go out for a week and understand the woes of the homeless. However, I believe that the point of this article was supposed to show that ordinary people could go a lot longer than they think on a lot less than they normally spend. The lesson should be learned in frugality, not in abject poverty since I am assuming that most of us are not in that situation since we have the time to comment on the internet about how he should have done his experiment.

jump to top Bombera [TypeKey Profile Page] says:

This guy didn't really do anything. He didn't live off the land for a week or beg for food. He continued to use all the things he had paid for in previous weeks, and whenever he was inconvenienced in any way, simply got someone else to pay for him. I mean, he even got a haircut with the promise to pay the following week. At the very least the sort of frugality he's preaching would require that he go without a haircut or cut it himself.

jump to top Derek says:

While the title got my full attention and the guy did go a week without spending any money, it seems a little less exciting to know that he begged friends to pay for him and said he would pay back the next week. Nobody likes that guy who sponges off others everywhere he goes and that is basically what he did.

Hum the IRS in the US would have something to say about that barter and Yes they try to tax bartering too.

But it is a good call for the barter.

D~W

jump to top Draq Wraith says:

Yeah it would have to be a month to count. Let's try and see him "barter" with his landlord.

I've gone weeks without spending money. But in my current situation its difficult.

I could still go a week here and there without spending, but like someone else said, it'd come out before the end of the month.

moderate FAIL.

jump to top anymouse says:

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