Sunday, November 9

Convenience v Organisation

I've been thinking lately about our 24/7 shopping culture, which is supposed to give us more time....but does it?

When I was growing up shops were open Monday - Saturday 9-5:30, if you ran out of anything outside of these times you either tried to borrow from a neighbour or went without. It made people far more organised, they planned for what they needed and most homes had a shopping list somewhere in the kitchen to put down things that had run out or was needed for the next week, so that they wouldn't be forgotten on the trip to the shops, which tended to be daily or at least a few times a week to the local shops, not many women with children worked in the 60s and 70s.

When I got married in the mid 80's (I was a young bride!) supermarkets tended to be open until 8pm but still no shops opened on a Sunday. You still had to be a bit organised.....no nipping to the shops when you find that you have run out of toilet rolls at 10 in the evening, and everyone had Sunday together.

By the early 90's shops were open on a Sunday, so what should be a relaxing day could now be spent wandering round the shops.

Now we have supermarkets open 24 hours a day and most shops now open on a Sunday, we don't need to be organised, we can buy whatever we want whenever we want it, Who needs to have a shopping list in the kitchen when you can just nip into the supermarket or all night attachment to garages if we run out.

Over the past 18 months, I have had to look closely about the way that I shop and become more organised. My employer has moved premises, instead of being within a 2 minute walk to town I am now based about a 20 minute walk away. Then for the last 6 months there have been major roadworks on the road that leads into the city, adding about an hour each way to a trip that should take 15 minutes.

Because of this I don't just pop into town on a daily basis in my lunch break to purchase things that we have forgotten, I go in when I have a list of things I need and in actual fact have only walked into town about a dozen times since we moved. I have also rediscovered a shopping list, I have a magnetic pad on the fridge and we write things down as they run out, everyone has learned that if it isn't on the list it doesn't get purchased, no telling me the day before a cookery lesson at school that there are some vital ingredients needed as they just won't be bought....a detention soon focused the mind into making sure Mum knows the week before what is needed! Also because of the queues, I my occasional use of internet food shopping has become a regular event.

Despite refusing to sit in queues of traffic to get to the big shops we are all still clothed, fed and watered. I have continued to shop locally for my fresh food, and have when we do need anything extra used the local market towns. I have become more organised, making lists of things we need and pre-planning for things like birthdays so that I get cards or whatever I need in plenty of time.

Guess what....instead of struggling with not using the convenience of round the clock opening hours, I have actually found that I have more time. I make plan, make lists and think about what we need...if we run out we do without until the next big shop, or a few items warrant a lunchtime hike into town. I still work a way out of town, but the road is now opened, but I will not be going back to my old ways. It seems to me that by the very nature of stores being open longer for our convenience to give us more time, it is actually having the opposite effect in many cases, we don't plan because we can buy anytime, but being able to do this is cutting into our free time and unless you live within walking distance of shops is costing you fuel and impacting on the environment, and unless you are a better shopper than me money as we rarely come out with just the 1 thing we went in for.

So give me a bit of organisation any day if it gives me back my free time.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

What you say is very true!
Furthermore..I hate the supermarkets and would love to get back to shopping at individual shops with good old fashioned service!
But talking about freeing up time...think about how much more time we would have if blogging was taken off the daily menu!! ;-)

Leanne said...

I agree with you too, I hate the dominance of consumerism in everyones lives. I dont go shopping unless I have to either, preferring an internet delivery for larger heavier items- dogfood, catfood, tinned goods etc, and I shop in small shops as much as I can for other goods.

leanne x

A Thrifty Mrs said...

I totally agree. Shopping has taken over so many areas of life. We now shop both for nesseccity and as a pass-time.

Sally Anne said...

Good for you, I totally agree with your thoughts, and not only do you end up with more free time but I bet you don't spend as much either.So, it's win, win !

Trace said...

Totally agree. However over here only in Auckland, Christchurch and Tauranga are shops open on a Sunday, the rest of the country doesn't. And I think we only have one 24 hour supermarket in the whole country!

Unknown said...

Here, Here!! I agree totally, in fact Saturdays and Especially Sundays it is far busier on the roads out there, If we can, we stay right at home and do our shopping on the way home on a Friday evening and hopefully dont have to venture out at all... we are a bit like hermits though!!! x

Kitty said...

I'm a big fan of the good old shopping list. I keep two - one for 'local' stuff and one for 'big shop' stuff. The only things I nip out for are milk and bread, and with the freezer, I don't often run out of those.

x

Kim said...

You are sooo right about being organised. I have a good little corner shop, butcher and greengrocer within easy walking distance. I try to get all my fresh foods from them, and big items from the Supermarket once a week. This saves me heaps of time and is far less stressful than popping out to 'the shops' constantly.

Thanks for your kind comments,too :)

Kim x

Indigo Blue said...

Well written and I completely agree. I can not bear to go to the supermarket more than once a week so if it is not on the list, tough. I have tried to make more use of internet shopping for christmas this year so as to avoid that annual rugby scrum round the shop. So far so good.

JuliaB said...

here here! I do my upmost never to go to supermarkets! I think it should be against the law still to open shops on a sunday. It just fuels our consumer society... x