• Home
  • About Tracy
  • Contact Me

Using Time Wisely

Organized to save money, energy, and time

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Document Organization
    • Overview
    • Box 1
      • Credit Report/Cards
        • Credit Reports
          • Credit Updates
          • Credit Scores
        • Credit Cards
      • Personal
      • Home Ownership
      • Vehicles
    • Box 2
      • Life Insurance
      • Major Medical
      • Tax-Favored Programs
      • Prescriptions
      • Dental & Vision
      • Special Health Policies
      • Short-term Disability
      • Long-term Disability
      • Personal Insurance
    • Box 3
      • Social Security Documents
      • Retirement
      • Investments
      • Estate Planning
      • Tax Records
  • Household
    • Cleaning
    • Maintaining
    • Organizing
    • Scheduling
      • Laundry
  • Event Planning
    • Assisting
    • Attending
    • Coordinating
      • Birthday Party
      • Christmas
      • Dinner Party
      • Fall Festival
      • Field Trip
      • Lemonade Stand
      • Thanksgiving
    • Learning
    • Preparing
    • Serving
  • Miscellaneous
    • Communication
      • Customer Service
      • E-mail
      • RSS Feed Reader
    • Goals
    • Organization
    • Time Management
      • To Do List
  • Food
    • Food Prep
    • Grocery Shopping
      • Lists
      • Pricing
    • Menu Planning
    • Recipes
    • Stockpile
  • Family Activities
    • Going Out
      • Free Outings
      • Inexpensive Outings
      • Summer
    • Rewards
      • Good Grades
      • Reading
      • Summer Reading
    • Staying at Home
  • Stretching Your Dollars
    • Daily Deals
      • Groupon
      • LivingSocial
    • Drugstores
      • CVS
    • Gas Prices
    • Gifts
    • On-line Shopping
    • Pictures
    • Products
    • Restaurants
    • School Items
    • Tips
You are here: Home / 2011 / Archives for May 2011

Archives for May 2011

Our Lemonade Stand – Part 2 of 2

May 31, 2011 by Tracy

Do you have a small business? If so, have you sponsored an event for advertising? I was thrilled with the opportunity to meet individuals who stopped by our garage sale. Our family was able to hand out about 70 business cards to spread the word about Using Time Wisely. The kids enjoyed taking turns helping: one serving the customer and the other handing out business cards. The partnership worked very well.

Continuing where we left off last week with the preliminaries established and the ingredients purchased, we were ready to prepare for our lemonade stand at our community garage sale sponsored by Using Time Wisely.

Ready to raise some money

THE PREPARATIONS

With all the ingredients purchased, I was ready to get started. First, I worked on the signage using rubber cement to adhere the letters to the poster board. When I decided to change the wording a little, I spent some time cutting out letters with scissors. We made one sign for the lemonade stand and one for the sponsor: Using Time Wisely. With two signs to make, I spent between 1-2 hours with interruptions completing the signs.

Lemonade Stand signage

When I baked the cookies, I made 24 cookies per batch. With 120 total cookies, it took about 6 batches at about 11 minutes each. While waiting for the cookies to bake, I was preparing the next batch and placing the finished cookies on the cooling racks. Making the cookies took about 1.25 hours.

Paul, my wonderful husband, helped make the lemonade while I gathered the cups, napkins, beverage container, and placed the cookies in two 9”x13” containers. When the preparations were completed and the kitchen cleaned, we had spent between 3 – 4 hours preparing for our event.

THE EXCITING EVENT

Generous Giver - full cups of lemonade

The next morning, my husband cut the lemons and prepared the beverage container. We setup in our driveway on top of our children’s play table. This table has a drawer where we kept the money earned. The picture embedded in this post is of my three children around their lemonade stand. Throughout the cool morning, we sold few drinks, but as the sun emerged from the clouds, our business picked up. Other families in our neighborhood had stands as well, so we had some competition this year. 🙂

Our son started off well, but he quickly got tired of asking, “Would you like lemonade or cookies?” Our daughter is a great salesperson. She would walk up and ask, “How many lemonades and cookies would you like?” She did not give them a chance to turn her down. She enjoyed filling up the cups, and I mean, filling up the cups. She would forget to release the dispenser, so she overfilled a few times.  With our daughter selling, our son advertised for the sponsor by handing out Using Time Wisely business cards. It was cute watching them participate and work together to raise money for this teacher.

By the end of the morning, Paul and I remained at the lemonade stand. The baby was taking her nap, and the older two were inside playing. They had enough selling and were ready to move on to playtime.

THE RESULTS

After cleaning up from the garage sale and eating lunch, we unloaded the money from their table. Having learned to count money this year, my son stacked the quarters and counted his earnings. He and his sister raised $25.01 for his teacher’s mission trip. Their sponsor agreed to match their earnings up to $25. The result: $50.01 hand-delivered to this appreciative teacher.

Counting the blessings

We were thrilled with our fundraiser’s results. Even with the cool morning and competition with our neighbors, we did well. For Paul and I, the bigger picture is that our children are learning how to give to others. When you don’t have the resources to give, you can be creative! What creative ways have you used to raise money for someone else?

Filed Under: Event Planning, Coordinating, Lemonade Stand Tagged With: lemonade stand

Happy Memorial Day!

May 30, 2011 by Tracy

Photograph Credit: Jon Sullivan

On this Memorial Day as I honor those who gave themselves for the freedoms my family enjoys, I want to thank every man and woman, who has selflessly used their time wisely by serving our country at home and abroad. Thank you!

Happy Memorial Day!

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Memorial Day

Maintaining: Kitchen Cleanup – Part 1 of 3

May 30, 2011 by Tracy

When my kitchen is a mess, I cannot cook or prepare a meal until the mess is cleaned up. There is something about a messy kitchen that drives me nuts. (Yeah, I know . . . I’m probably nuts already, but I get worse when my kitchen is a disaster.) To help me stay on top of the food, dishes, and stuff placed on my countertops, I follow a different cleaning routine after breakfast, lunch, and dinner. In each part of this three part series, I will share one of my three different routines for keeping my kitchen clean. I’ll begin with my breakfast routine.

Breakfast Routine:

  1. Clear off the table. After being excused from the table, my two older children carry their dishes to the counter by the sink. Paul and I usually clear off the rest of the table.
  2. Wipe down the table.
  3. Put away any leftover foods.
  4. Rinse each item and place it in the left-hand side of the sink.
  5. Clean all the countertops.

At the conclusion of this routine, I have a clean table, countertops, and right-hand side of the sink. Spending time cleaning up saves me time and energy. My time is saved at lunchtime from having to cleanup from breakfast. I can just start lunch preparations without working around a mess. I also save energy since I don’t need to scrub off dried on food. For me this system helps me to spend my time wisely.

Though I have a routine in place, there are days when this routine does not get finished. Some of those days are when I’m running late, the baby needs assistance eating, a spill needs to be cleaned up, or I just choose to leave the dishes until lunchtime. On those days, I attempt to get the dirty dishes rinsed. This one task saves me the most time.

Remember this breakfast routine works for ME, but it may or may not work for you. These are just my tips for helping me stay organized. Next week, I’ll share my lunch routine.

Filed Under: Household, Maintaining Tagged With: clean, kitchen, maintain

Personal: Other Certificates

May 29, 2011 by Tracy

Photograph Credit: Microsoft Images

As we complete the fourth file slot in our first accordion-style filing system, I hope you are getting energized. Organizing your personal documents will save you money, energy, and time when accessing those documents.

In this fourth slot, I have our birth certificates, driver’s licenses, passports, marriage license, voter’s registration cards, and our other certifications: child abuse history clearance and CPR cards and copies.

CHILD ABUSE HISTORY CLEARANCE: When Paul and I lived in Pennsylvania, Paul taught elementary through high school, and I occasionally substitute taught. As part of the school’s requirements for each teacher and substitute teacher, we filled out paperwork to obtain our clearance to teach. When we received our official clearance, I kept the originals and have placed them in this file.

HEARTSAVER CPR: During our first pregnancy, Paul and I took advantage of all the prenatal classes offered through the hospital systems in our area. The CPR class resulted in our certifications. Even though these certifications are now expired, I still keep our certification documents for the date we decide to renew.  In additional to the certification cards, I keep a copy of the cards in this file. When we renew, I will have copies of our prior certification to submit with our registration.

This concludes the items I have in the fourth file slot under the second category of Personal Important Documents. If you have completed organizing these documents, then celebrate! You are doing a great job getting these piles of paperwork sorted and organized for easy retrieval later. Next week, I’ll reveal what is housed in the fifth file slot under the Personal Important Documents category. Congratulations on staying organized!

Filed Under: Document Organization, Personal Tagged With: personal documents, organize, cpr, child abuse clearance

CVS: Prescription Gift Card Coupons

May 28, 2011 by Tracy

CVS: $3 ExtraBucks Rewards Coupon through April 25, 2014

Photography Credit: CVS

At my son’s soccer games, my oldest daughter loves to go play with the other kids. She traipses through bushes, climbs over rocks, and slides down the hill. Having a great time comes with consequences. In this case, she acquired a nasty bug bite. Paul and I kept an eye on it. Two days later it was bright red, warm, and had blisters on top. When I took her to the pediatrician, our doctor put her on an antibiotic for the infection.

When I got the prescription, I checked to see if this was one of the free medications offered through Publix. It was not. The next option for savings was looking in my CVS envelope where I carry my coupons. In the envelope, I found a K-mart coupon for a $10 gift card when you fill a new or transferred prescription. This was very exciting. Here is why I get prescriptions filled at CVS:

  1. Our insurance carrier will process prescription claims according to our contract terms when I use a CVS pharmacy.
  2. CVS will honor competitor prescription coupons. Since K-mart is a local competitor, CVS will honor the K-mart coupon.
  3. When I use my Extra Care Card, I will earn an additional $1 Extra Buck for every two prescriptions purchased.
  4. When I use my CVS Green Bag Tag, I will earn $1 Extra Buck for every 4th visit. You can only use your Green Bag Tag once a day.
  5. I love to shop at CVS and will use the $10 gift card.
  6. CVS has a drive-thru. Yeah!

Since I pass about 3-4 CVS Pharmacies on the route to and from school, I dropped off the prescription through the drive-thru before afternoon pickup. On my way home, I drove through the drive-thru and handed the cashier my Extra Care Card, my reusable bag with Green Bag Tag attached, the K-mart coupon, and my flexible spending credit card. During my transaction, I purchased the antibiotic medicine for $9, got my fourth scan of my Green Bag Tag, and obtained a $10 CVS gift card. The results of this transaction were my daughter’s medicine, a $10 CVS gift card, $1 Extra Buck printed on the bottom of my receipt for using a reusable bag, and 1 credit toward earning $1 in Extra Bucks for every 2 prescriptions you have filled.

If I purchase another prescription before the quarter ends, then I will earn $1 in Extra Bucks. Those Extra Bucks will not print at the bottom of my receipt the day I fill the second prescription. I will get that $1 Extra Buck at the end of the quarter. Once every 3 months my Extra Bucks will print at the Coupon Center (big red machine at the front of the CVS store) or at the end of my receipt. Included with my “$1 for every prescription filled” bonus, I also earn 2% on most of the items purchased with my Extra Care Card in those 3 months.

Though I did not plan to visit the doctor’s office, I was prepared and used the resources at hand to stretch my dollars. All in all, I spent $9 pre-taxed and received $1 in Extra Bucks, a $10 CVS gift card, and 1 prescription credit. Not too shabby for an unexpected expense. Please leave a comment sharing ways you save money when filling a prescription.

Filed Under: CVS, Drugstores, Stretching Your Dollars Tagged With: CVS, prescription

Next Page »

Welcome to Using Time Wisely!

 

Presenting organizational tips and tricks to save you money, energy, and time.

To access 5 Ways to Using Time Wisely Today, click "like" on my facebook page and join in on the journey of Using Time Wisely.

Looking for something?

Email Newsletter

Sign up to receive email updates and to hear what's going on with us!

Copyright © 2026 · Lifestyle Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in