Do you hide
#101
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Central Florida
Posts: 1,472
I don't have to hide it any more. My husband encourages me to get stuff & often even buys it for me!! LOL! I used to hide it though when I first started quilting & was building my stash! I used to put it all in grocery bags & stuff it under my recliner. When we moved out of that home, I had to pull it all out & he was horrified!! LOL! He couldn't believe how many bags I pulled out from under there! :-) Yup, I was busted!!
#104
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Jozefow, Poland
Posts: 4,474
I understand your point, but I would, out of courtesy, consult my husband about a political sign in the yard, just as I would expect him to consult me--of course, when it comes to politics, we are polar opposites. I'm not under his thumb, nor is he under mine, but we both live here.
In our case, since we are foreigners living here, we actually didn't put the sign in our yard, exactly, but let them hang it on the garden fence, which is actually the other side of the road from our house (we have two pieces of land, split by a road).
#106
I don't hide. My husband is sometimes kinda smart about the fabric I buy. When I get a package in the mail, he comes through the door and throws it in my lap. Not so nicely either. I am paying for fabric I want with the money from fabric I sold. He buys all these stupid guns that he never uses so, I don't cut him any slack. I will buy what I want, when I want, just like he does. I have to fill out the paperwork when he buys those guns so technically, they belong to me!
Last edited by fayzer; 06-01-2015 at 07:28 AM.
#108
Power Poster
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Florida
Posts: 17,636
bear, my answer is the same as yours...NOW.
What's surprising to me is how, almost unanimous are the answers on this thread.
I think those that don't hide believe that those that do are immoral.
Not alway so!
At one time in my life,
(after a lifetime of never putting myself first in anything),
I had a LOT of stuff going on and had become not a new sewer,
but a new quilter.
With sewing you buy for the current garment or such.
With quilting you need a variety of fabrics and it opened a door...to shove the
stress of my life.
Somehow my newfound hobby became a vicious cycle of
stress reliever/stress producer.
I wasn't "sinning" and I have never been a bad person.
I just had more on my plate than I could handle and thought fabric shopping was an
answer.
This got all tangled up with my dreams for projects/gifts for my family etc.
Yes, I needed professional help with the 'real' problems and eventually I stopped
turning to shopping as a "fix".
I loved the video, but a problem like this is not funny. It made me cry and
depressed and broke sometimes.
It also kept me from being able to create
Don't judge ppl that lose control.
We are all doing something to excess,
whether eating, smoking, gossiping, swearing, not cleaning, driving
too fast...I bet we all fit into one of those categories,...or maybe two
at times?
P.S. Yes, I am fully recovered and haven't been in a fabric store
in ages. I don't slobber over catalogs anymore and I don't daydream
about my next excursion. I will say, my hubby knows about everything
I have and I know that his garage holds more (in value), than anything
I've ever owned, so no residual guilt problems either
Last edited by Mousie; 06-30-2015 at 06:30 AM.
#109
Super Member
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Here and there
Posts: 1,669
As several others have said in earlier discussion of this subject, I wonder what it means that "her husband lets" her? Is she a child to be given permission by the lord and master of the house? The last of the "lord and master" laws in the United States was not repealed until some time in the late 1970's, so I suppose the idea of "letting" someone buy fabric, have a puppy or kitten or anything else should not surprise me.
I wonder how many articles in Popular Mechanics or Field and Stream are devoted to helping husbands "hide" their purchases from their wives
Come on, Women. We are more than 15 yrs into the 21st Century in the United States of America! Let's hear you roar! froggyintexas
I wonder how many articles in Popular Mechanics or Field and Stream are devoted to helping husbands "hide" their purchases from their wives
Come on, Women. We are more than 15 yrs into the 21st Century in the United States of America! Let's hear you roar! froggyintexas
#110
Power Poster
Join Date: May 2008
Location: MN
Posts: 24,406
As several others have said in earlier discussion of this subject, I wonder what it means that "her husband lets" her? Is she a child to be given permission by the lord and master of the house? The last of the "lord and master" laws in the United States was not repealed until some time in the late 1970's, so I suppose the idea of "letting" someone buy fabric, have a puppy or kitten or anything else should not surprise me.
I wonder how many articles in Popular Mechanics or Field and Stream are devoted to helping husbands "hide" their purchases from their wives
Come on, Women. We are more than 15 yrs into the 21st Century in the United States of America! Let's hear you roar! froggyintexas
I wonder how many articles in Popular Mechanics or Field and Stream are devoted to helping husbands "hide" their purchases from their wives
Come on, Women. We are more than 15 yrs into the 21st Century in the United States of America! Let's hear you roar! froggyintexas
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