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heard of people saving money?LW: Whenever I told people about my book, they'd offer up great stories from their families. One person told me that his great aunt Sophie and great uncle Abe owned a fruit stand during the Depression. They gave up toilet paper and instead used the wax paper squares the fruit came wrapped in. According to another relative, the wax paper didn't work too well your tuchus never smelled so good! (Tuchus is Yiddish slang for derriere.)My friend Erik uses the milk left over in his kids' cereal bowls to lighten and sweeten his morning coffee. He also puts a jug underneath the faucet when he's waiting for the water to heat up for his shower, and then he uses the cold water for his plants and his dog's water bowl.Back in the 1970s, when postage was cheap and phone calls were expensive, my cousin Paul left an answering machine message for my father. Three days later, Paul received a postcard in the mail from my father. Instead of calling back, my dad had just written a short note and figured that would suffice.My friend Kiki's family used to go to Cape Cod every summer for a week. But her father was really cheap, and he didn't want the kids to use towels on the beach, because then they'd have to go to the Laundromat to wash them. So Kiki and her siblings had to air dry after getting out of the ocean. That story really stuck with me her family would splurge on a week by the beach, but then stress out about getting the towels dirty. At first, that story seems crazy. But I really do understand it. The vacation was probably a stretch for Kiki's parents, but they made it work