I tried a 2-week spending freeze and the hardest part wasn’t groceries—it was all the tiny “harmless” purchases I usually justify.
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Get it on Play StoreSo I did a 2-week spending freeze. No coffee runs, no random Amazon clicks, no “I deserve this” snacks at the checkout. Just essentials: rent, groceries, transport, bills. That was it.
And honestly? I expected the hard part to be saying no to a big purchase.
It wasn’t.
The hardest part was all the tiny stuff I usually don’t even think of as spending. A ₹120 drink here, a ₹300 impulse add-on there, a “just this once” food delivery because I was tired. Those little leaks were way sneakier than I wanted to admit.
I kept it pretty simple:
I still allowed myself essentials. I wasn’t trying to become some monk who eats plain rice and stares at a wall.
I was trying to see how much of my money was going out because of habit, boredom, stress, and convenience.
And wow, convenience is expensive.
The first few days were the most annoying.
I’d open apps without thinking. I’d go to checkout just to “see the total.” I’d feel the urge to buy something the second I got bored, tired, or mildly inconvenienced. That’s when it hit me — most of my spending wasn’t planned. It was emotional.
That was the biggest eye-opener.
I wasn’t always buying because I needed something. Sometimes I was buying because:
That’s a rough mirror to look into, but it’s useful.
If I had to pick the single hardest thing, it was late-night food delivery.
Not even fancy food. Just those “I’m too lazy to cook, I’ll order something small” moments. That little decision used to be my weakness.
One night, I almost ordered a ₹450 meal I absolutely didn’t need. I wasn’t hungry. I was just tired and a bit annoyed. That’s when I realized how often I used food delivery as a comfort blanket.
So I made a rule: if I wanted to order food, I had to wait 20 minutes and drink water first.
And honestly? About half the time, the urge passed.
This part surprised me.
I wasn’t broke. I wasn’t in an emergency. But the freeze still made me feel deprived at times. Not because I needed the thing I wanted — because I liked the feeling of being able to buy it.
That’s such a weird truth, but there it is.
Sometimes spending is less about the product and more about the identity. The “I can afford this” feeling. The “I’m treating myself” story. The “I work hard, so why not?” excuse.
And when you remove that, you realize how much of your reward system is tied to money.
That’s a little unsettling. Also kind of freeing.
This one got me too.
People suggest going out for coffee, getting snacks, splitting dessert, grabbing a quick drink. None of it sounds huge in the moment. But if you say yes to 5 small social spends in a week, it adds up fast.
I had to get comfortable saying stuff like:
Some people get it immediately. Some act like you’re making it weird. But you’re not. Your money, your rules.
You do not need to spend money to participate in your own life.
That line helped me a lot.
I didn’t rely on willpower alone. That never works for me.
Here’s what helped:
I deleted food apps for 2 weeks. Not forever. Just long enough to break the reflex.
That one move saved me from multiple “just checking” purchases.
I wrote down what counted as essential:
If it wasn’t on the list, it waited.
If I wanted something that wasn’t essential, I wrote it down instead of buying it.
Most of the time, I forgot about it within a day.
This was huge. I noticed when the urge hit:
That pattern was way more useful than tracking rupees alone. Trider (myhabits.in) actually makes this kind of tracking easy if you want to keep an eye on habits without turning it into a spreadsheet nightmare.
I saved around ₹6,200 in 14 days.
That number may be small to some people and huge to others. For me, it was a real wake-up call. I didn’t feel deprived in a dramatic way, but I did see how quickly “small treats” become a serious monthly leak.
And the wild part? I didn’t miss most of the purchases.
I missed the habit.
This freeze taught me that spending was doing a job in my life.
It was:
That’s a lot for something as ordinary as a checkout button.
So the real question wasn’t “Can I stop spending?”
It was “What am I using spending for?”
That question changed everything.
Here’s the practical version, because vague advice is useless.
Start with 7 days if 14 feels too hard. You can always extend it.
Write down exactly what counts. Don’t leave room for “technically this qualifies.”
Delete shopping apps, mute sale emails, and hide saved cards.
A spending freeze gets way harder when you’re hungry and unprepared.
When the urge hits, do something else first:
You need a substitute, not just a restriction.
Write down when you wanted to spend and why. Patterns show up fast.
Don’t just look at the saved amount. Look at the behaviors you interrupted.
That’s the real win.
Yeah. Absolutely.
Not because I loved saying no to myself — I didn’t. But because the freeze made my habits obvious. And once something is obvious, it’s easier to change.
The hardest part wasn’t missing stuff. It was facing how often I used spending to regulate my mood.
That’s uncomfortable. Also incredibly useful.
If you’ve been meaning to get a handle on your money habits, try a short freeze and track the patterns as they come up. And if you want a simple way to stay consistent, give Trider a shot at myhabits.in — it’s a nice little nudge when your willpower starts acting up.