Zibo** Zibo Evening News Expo News.
Reporter Wang Xiaonan.
The Chinese who have been frugal all their lives, are you talking about it?
The Spring Festival of the Year of the Dragon is getting closer and closer, and many people have completed the "house sweeping". Even office workers and returnees will definitely clean their houses before the Chinese New Year's Eve to welcome the New Year. In the face of the belongings that have been turned out of wardrobes, cupboards, and storerooms, do you continue to save or "give up"?
I have everything in my pocket, and I am reluctant to throw away anything, hot sauce bottles, tea cans, takeaway chopsticks, yogurt boxes, cardboard boxes, plastic bags, ......How many of these things can you find in your home? Some netizens sincerely asked, what are the cake ropes and crab ropes for?
Do you think this scene is familiar? When I was a child, I questioned my elders and became an elder when I grew up. The younger generation of netizens are already posting their old things for reuse, such as disinfectant bottles with hot water to warm their hands, old mobile phone cases to change wall-mounted storage boxes, and cake boxes to breed meat. The Chinese, who have been frugal all their lives, do not give up any plastic bags. The plastic bags for snacks and steamed buns can continue to be loaded with vegetables, and they can continue to be loaded with garbage after the dishes are loaded.
In fact, the "chicken ribs" items at home are generally divided into three categories. One is temporarily unused or replaced with new products, such as yogurt makers, bean sprouts machines and other popular small kitchen appliances, such as outdated clothes and shoes, tired mobile phone cases, etc. They are characterized by their ability to function well, and they can be worn and used. The other category is items that are broken, small, and unhealthy and not easy to use. They are characterized by minor damage, and some parts can be dismantled and can be used or reused. There is another category, which is completely rooted in the Chinese's thrifty bloodline awakening. Its best representatives are: plastic bags, cooking oil bottles, laundry detergent bottles.
Some netizens said that some things may not be used for a lifetime, but as long as they are lost, they will be of great use within three days. Some netizens said: If you save everything, you just don't save money. Some netizens said, "When I threw my shoes, I should be the only one who pulled out the shoelaces and kept them."
My mother would unpack the sweater she didn't wear and weave a wool quilt, saying it was fluffy and warm. My dad, anything that breaks can be repaired and reused with a pair of skillful hands. Today, I have inherited my mother's genes of saving bags and glass bottles. From questioning my mother, to understanding my mother, to becoming my mother.
Today's "Nan Said", I invite you to talk, what did you save and what did you keep for the New Year? What are those who want to throw away and can't throw away? What about the old things that are left behind and reused?
Friends who love to "break away", can I share my experience with you? What has changed the most in your home since the "break-up"?
The older generation is almost an excellent representative of thrift and thrift, and everyone is welcome to talk about their thrift spirit in the comment area.