| ▲ | jancsika a day ago | |
Could work like this: 1. You help your friend wash the dishes and notice their hefty, 5-quart stainless steel pot. You look it up on Amazon and it's like $50. 2. At $store, you see something that looks like that size and style of pot, but for only $10. What a steal! It's even ultralight so it should be easier to load in the dishwasher... *Several months later* 3. Your pot is all warped to hell, making it difficult to cook evenly. But your friend's pot is probably fine for the next few decades if not longer. (Note: if this were an oven pan the warping would make it dangerous to use.) 4. To add insult to injury, $store got two more of your dollars just because. I picked the 5-quart pot because I've seen one of these with my own eyes. In any case, OP would have been better off paying me $38 for nothing but crushing their dream of buying a decent quality $10 frying pan. | ||
| ▲ | calvinmorrison 21 hours ago | parent [-] | |
That's what I think people don't really get about being poor. They _know_ they are cash strapped. and like a cash strapped business, managing cash flow is more important than log term investments. They _know_ buying a small bottle of dish detergent is more expensive per oz, but buying in bulk would require a 15-16 week lead across all their purchase categories. | ||