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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To hate packing food to take to work

327 replies

waitingforautumn · 11/10/2022 08:50

I live just outside and work in central London. Cost of living rising means I'm starting to feel guilty about the money spent on coffee, breakfast and lunch at work. I do somewhat 'budget' for this (i.e. am single, no kids, don't care for designer stuff etc, walk where I can rather than train or bus). However I do realise how much I could save if I were really disciplined about going to the supermarkets and stocking up for a week of homemade lunches and prepped breakfasts, which do sound appealing in theory..

Only issue is, I REALLY tend to miss buying things out - esp lunch. Just being able to pick something new each day, made with ingredients I wouldn't usually buy. I just feel like I eat more healthily/get more variety when I allow myself this. There's the option of sandwiches and baguettes (Pret/Paul/Leon type thing) plus lots of hot options where I work. I also love a good old Tesco meal deal so often have that for lunch too (love the mix and matching element).

Can cheapen breakfast by stopping at a supermarket bakery on way (£1 for a pastry rather than say £2.50). And it's still lovely (am a sucker for pastries and now associate office days with getting one). In the past I've made overnight oats and did keep that up for a while but got out of the habit after the pandemic return to work, and also loathe the washing up part at the office sink.😆

Is it me or is there something nice about strolling to work with a coffee you didn't have to make yourself, a fresh pastry and picking up a lunch you didn't have to plan way in adv or prep?!

I do wonder if this is quite a London thing with all the variety around. Have to be up around 6.30 to get around without the trains/tubes being busy so it feels to early to eat something before leaving home - and I'm always hungry when I sit down having had to walk past upteen bakeries to get in! I feel stopping for coffee/food helps make the working day nicer, I can pick something I fancy there and then. Few colleagues bring anything to eat from home and get all their meals/drinks out for the day so this really feels like the norm. We must all be spending anywhere from £5-£15 a day on all this. 🤔

Nobody single from my generation can afford to get on the housing ladder here anyway, even with decent savings. Some of my friends easily spend £35 a pop getting nails done every 3 weeks, which is outrageous to me. So I'm inclined to say whatever treats get you through life?!

AIBU? Am I lazy? Do I need to find another source of joy in my life? Writing this on the train on the way to work obvs and I have absolutely nothing on me for the day ahead!

OP posts:
ZiriForEver · 14/10/2022 19:46

BarbaraofSeville · 14/10/2022 09:35

£5 x 5 x 47 x 38 = £44650

Say you reduced the cost by two thirds by bringing food from home, that still gives you £30k with which you could buy a car, even a Mercedes.

I have about £30k in premium bonds and investments and a large part of that is money I didn't spend on lunch over the last 15 or so years compared with DP (in our house the rule is that if you take your lunch from home, it comes out of house money, if you buy it, it comes out of your own personal spending money because it's so much more expensive).

Lol.
I would hate the car. Every time I'd see it, I would hate it. 40 years of not being able to afford nice lunch just for a pile of brass and rubber.

Emotionalsupportviper · 17/10/2022 19:37

So would I @ZiriForEver . Every time I looked at it I would feel resentful. "You piece of environment destroying junk - I REALLY WANTED THAT STRAWBERRY AND WHITE CHOCOLATE MUFFIN, YOU BSTRD!"

😡😡😡

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