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Cody N.'s avatar

I appreciated the permission in the original article and I appreciate the reflectiveness in this one. I was one of the people for whom the events around inauguration, as well as the DEI rollbacks, were the final straw of motivation I needed to get uncomfortable and change my habits. I cancelled Amazon prime (and stopped shopping there unless I couldn't find something anywhere else) and gave up Target at the same time. That meant I had to find new places to get like 90% of my household goods.

It has certainly slowed down my consumption and that has probably saved me the most money of all. And it kind of feels good to have to think a little and even be creative about where I could find what I'm looking for. I realize that I'm very privileged in the fact that at the time, my town had a lot of options within close driving distance. I've since moved across the country and during that time, signed up for a month long free trial of Prime which I've cancelled before I got charged, just to help me out when I was in a new city and most of my stuff in storage. Figuring out where else to buy things is helping me get to know my new city better!

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Deidre Woollard's avatar

I started using Amazon in 2000 when it was just books and shopped so much they gave me a free mug one year. I wish I had invested in it then. I find the proliferation of brands overwhelming and random so I don't use it for much. We have taken so much of the friction out of consumption that I think anywhere we can bring it back is probably a good thing.

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