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After the holidays, card-swipe-PTSD can make it a little easier to meet resolutions to spend less.
There is so much hustling around the holidays to part you from your cold, hard cash. Never mind what you intend to carefully select for your loved ones. Pre-holiday sales, post-holiday sales, even sales on the holidays themselves so
that neither the store employees nor your wallet get a break.
As a whole, it's enough to make you hate things.
But who wants to be a things-hating-post-holiday-Scrooge?
This brings me to this Sunday's free app: Wantful.
You could call Wantful a shopping app, because you can buy things, but that's not why I want to call attention to it.
Wantful regularly features stories their products and their creators every week. It creates a slowed down, reconnect with things experience.
I think that artists and designers might also enjoy this app. It is a good place for inspiration when everything feels a little too mass-produced, a little too sloppy on the edges.
The items are actually a little too pricey for my reality, but I do enjoy reading about how things are made and the creative minds behind them.
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Blog: Free app shows the minds behind design
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Kittens coming along after dumpster dispair
Now on the desk of Animal Shelter Supervisor James Kasper, seven kittens saved from a dumpster on Wednesday are making progress toward a time when they can be adopted.
After being plucked from a dumpster on the north side of town, seven kittens now sit in a green carrier in the Chickasha Animal Shelter with a new found sense of hope.
Continued ... - GCEM prepares for active shooter with excercise
- Lincoln student champion archer
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- Local News
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Kittens coming along after dumpster dispair
After being plucked from a dumpster on the north side of town, seven kittens now sit in a green carrier in the Chickasha Animal Shelter with a new found sense of hope.
Continued ... - GCEM prepares for active shooter with excercise
- Lincoln student champion archer
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Kittens coming along after dumpster dispair
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Plans to export US natural gas stir debate
A domestic natural gas boom already has lowered U.S. energy prices while stoking fears of environmental disaster. Now U.S. producers are poised to ship vast quantities of gas overseas as energy companies seek permits for proposed export projects that could set off a renewed frenzy of fracking.
Continued ... - Fracking criticism not true, expert says
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Plans to export US natural gas stir debate



