I’m gonna pop some tabs….only got $20 in my pocket…

That song used to be my theme song. As in….it was my theme song before it was even a song. I was a hardcore thrift shopper in my 20’s – especially when I lived out in Washington State.
Fun fact – I actually recognize most of the thrift stores in Macklemore’s thrift shopping video because I was a repeat shopper at those thrift stores in Seattle (and for the record Seattle has the most amazing thrift stores ever).
I stopped routine thrifting when I had kids because, well – at thrift stores, you tend to have to be focused and have time to really search. Kids tend to put a stop to all that. Plus, in addition to amazing finds, I was bringing home junk. Impulse buys.
Around this time, I was also reading The Life Changing Magic of Tidying Up by Marie Kondo which meant I was trying to get rid of junk rather than bring it home.
I’m not going to lie; with people being hardcore into her Netflix show right now, it makes me want to go thrifting even more because I imagine there’s some amazing finds right now.
One of my favorite things that we’ve found at a thrift store is our tree table:

And we turned the very wobbly, unstable benches that came with it into raw edge shelves:

Seriously, those benches were really unstable. As in, I fell off them. A lot. I don’t feel anyone else fell off of them…just me. So my husband made them really stable by drilling them into the wall.
My husband and I also got a crummy cedar chest on our 6 year anniversary (we thrift together…it’s sometimes our thing) that I was finally able to sand it down and seal it last summer:


I got my kids’ bunk beds at a yard sale, their train table off Craigslist, and my antique buffet that is our TV console out of my parent’s basement. And loads more. Moral of the story, I’m by no means opposed to bringing home secondhand things. Or dumpster diving. I pulled this kitchen cart out of my parents’ neighbor’s garbage pile one day:

It was in great shape, just needed a little cleaning, and has been super useful for me for these past few years.
But I have a few problem areas in my house right now (including the above kitchen cart). I had been looking for new furniture items to solve these problem areas because I wanted a solution NOW.
My 3 year old is currently very into games, but when games are left out at kid level, they get scattered and destroyed. I’m still finding pieces to Candyland all over the place. So they’ve been regulated to the top of the refrigerator:

I had been looking around online for a bookshelf to put in place of the above dumpster-fished out kitchen cart in order to keep these games out of the reach of tiny, sticky hands.
I was also looking online for a bookshelf to house these books that are stacked up in a corner in our bedroom:

And this area by my front door has become a super annoying dumping ground. We seriously need a better storage solution for backpacks and shoes:

Even though I had been looking for “new” furniture items to problem-solve these areas, my plan now is to start searching thrift stores to try to keep from adding to the “waste stream”.
How ya like that? “Waste stream”. A month ago, I had never heard the term “waste stream”, and now I use it all the time. …Ahem…in my head.
While this isn’t a “hey, check out my solution” kind of blog post, I want to document how I’m trying to change my mindset. Or well, revert it back to what it was previously. I’m planning to live with the “annoyance” of these areas until I can find a viable, second-hand solution. And I do have some ideas of what I’m looking for in all these spots or what I may try to recruit husband to build. 🙂
I also had been looking online for a new picnic table tablecloth for camping this summer, but I’m hoping that I’ll be able to find one second-hand before any trips.
And avoid all the junk while I’m on the hunt. 😉



























