FIRST PERSON | How stubbornness and stale cereal help me fight inflation on a fixed income | CBC News (2024)

Calgary·First Person

The pandemic, combined with the soaring costs of food, utilities, mortgages and condo fees, has been hitting many people hard, especially those living on a fixed income. I’m one of them, writes Jan Rose.

Writer Jan Rose says the pandemic has pushed her to creative extremes

FIRST PERSON | How stubbornness and stale cereal help me fight inflation on a fixed income | CBC News (1)

Jan Rose · for CBC First Person

·

FIRST PERSON | How stubbornness and stale cereal help me fight inflation on a fixed income | CBC News (2)

This First Person column is written by Jan Rose, a writer who lives in Calgary. It was originally published in December 2021. For more information about CBC's First Person stories, please see the FAQ.

Above the L-shaped kitchen cabinets in my condo, there is a one-foot space where I've stashed what seems like enough pasta — elbow macaroni, fusilli, spaghetti — to feed the entire Italian army.

That space holds nearly a dozen boxes of cereal, bags of oats and various other dry goods — emergency rations that have likely gone stale but still give me a sense of comfort in the knowledge that I will never actually starve.

In the pantry proper are stashed other cans and dried goods, all reasonably fresh. That is the go-to supply for preparing meals. My habit for years has been to always have a one-year supply of food on hand since this is not my first go-round with tough times.

The pandemic, combined with the soaring costs of food, utilities, mortgages and condo fees, has been hitting many people hard, especially those living on a fixed income. I'm one of them.

Luckily, I grew up in the bush in the earlyto mid-1960s in an old log house south of Grand Centre, which is now part of the city of Cold Lake, Alta.

  • The high cost of food: Read all the stories in CBC Calgary's series
  • No bus ride, no forms, just food — how tiny charity startups have pushed big players to change

At that time, our home didn't have modern amenities orelectricity. Heat was from an iron stove, light from kerosene lamps. The outhouse was 12 metresout back.

That upbringing helped me weather the current hardshipsand keep meeting all my fixed financial obligations: mortgage payments, condo fees and ever-rising property taxes on a small pension and some freelance writing — a monthly income of $1,300 to $1,600.

FIRST PERSON | How stubbornness and stale cereal help me fight inflation on a fixed income | CBC News (3)

I'm in my 70s now. My career was in broadcast journalism. I also worked as a legal assistant in general litigation, personal injury and family law.

The pay was not great given my broadcast journalist career started on the ground floor, but it was a training ground in economics. Without a lot of money, a person learns to stretch every dollar to the maximum.

How do I do it? First of all, I live in a cold condo with sporadic heat. I let the furnace run for only 10 minutes per hour, if at all, depending on the temperature.

  • GIVINGHelp out by donating to the Calgary Food Bank through CBC Calgary's Make the Season Kind campaign
  • Make the Season KindNeighbour saves the day when it pours and other random acts of kindness by Calgarians

If it's bitterly cold, I sometimes spend the day under the bed covers hibernating, mentally running through tasks to finish or startand mulling over how to generate some income. Dressing in layers gives betterinsulationeven though it makes you feel like a trussed-up chicken. Another is to use as many comforters as required. I started doing that during COVID-19 and the economic downturn.

Since taking showers can gobble up gallons of water, the next best thing is to take a chilly sponge bath.

Utility bills have many fixed costs, but the Scrooge in me demands some effort to lower the bills even if it's a few pennies.

FIRST PERSON | How stubbornness and stale cereal help me fight inflation on a fixed income | CBC News (4)

I also keep the utility bill down by restricting computer use, and I don't pay for cable, so no television.And if you're in a similar situation and want to really push it, buy a small flashlight with a row of LEDs. There's your reading light.

Given the cost of food now, my best strategy is to buy canned or frozen foods since they will last exceptionally long. I have recipes for stews of various kinds. That yields the best bang for the buck.

  • Cheap winter gardening is possible even in Alberta — these residents are doing it
  • Want to save $600 on your family's grocery bill? A Calgary mom says it's totally doable

All these actions could be termed extreme. Perhaps they are, but the alternative — being homeless for want of a few dollars —is too scary to contemplate.

About 40 years ago, I had my first scare because of budgeting. I did not realize the value of a dollar, spent frivolouslyandnearly lost my apartment and car. I only had to go through that once to have the fear lurking in my head. My retirement savings need to last.

When I look around, I see many people having the same struggles.My advice? Hang in there, baby.

It's to encourage myself more than anything else.

Oftentimes I wake up in the morning and struggle with depression, thinking of the many essentials I need such as a good pair of winter boots, new shoesand a warm sturdy coat.

But my stubbornness and refusing to let my situation drag me down helps weather the storm.

The school of hard knocks is a formidable teacher.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

FIRST PERSON | How stubbornness and stale cereal help me fight inflation on a fixed income | CBC News (5)

Jan Rose

Freelance contributor

Jan Rose is a Calgary senior, a writer, a former legal assistant and broadcast journalist who has seen her bills surge upward while her income is frozen.

    Corrections and clarifications|Submit a news tip|

    Related Stories

    • Read more First Person columns
    • First Person Should I pay for gas or buy fresh fruit for my kids? These are my impossible choices
    • First Person The love of my life died. My grief had to take a back seat to putting food on the table for my kids
    • First Person Did I make a mistake by not investing in a house?
    FIRST PERSON | How stubbornness and stale cereal help me fight inflation on a fixed income | CBC News (2024)
    Top Articles
    Latest Posts
    Article information

    Author: Nicola Considine CPA

    Last Updated:

    Views: 5813

    Rating: 4.9 / 5 (69 voted)

    Reviews: 84% of readers found this page helpful

    Author information

    Name: Nicola Considine CPA

    Birthday: 1993-02-26

    Address: 3809 Clinton Inlet, East Aleisha, UT 46318-2392

    Phone: +2681424145499

    Job: Government Technician

    Hobby: Calligraphy, Lego building, Worldbuilding, Shooting, Bird watching, Shopping, Cooking

    Introduction: My name is Nicola Considine CPA, I am a determined, witty, powerful, brainy, open, smiling, proud person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.