I'm surely not looking for advice. I do wonder, though, if anyone else has a similar story to tell....

So what big-ticket purchases have you talked yourself into buying recently?
By the way, some of the things we're doing to try to help things along, in this case, include casually asking a beloved cousin if they might be interested in a gift of a used television. If that doesn't pan out then we'll check with the church board to see if the church could use it. We can't use the old television ourselves... it's too big.
If it sounds like I'm trying to talk myself into something, then you're understanding this correctly... read the title of the thread.We're looking for an excuse to buy a new television.
This was mostly prompted by a news story, which actually was over a year old, about what to buy "before the economy improves"... so I suspect we may be a little "too late" but perhaps not completely "too late". The list included some big ticket items, like diamonds, vacations, cars ... and televisions.
It was also prompted by a looming deadline. We bought a DLP HDTV in June 2006. DLP was great stuff, I gotta tell you: Super picture for an incredibly low price, as compared to plasma and LED HDTVs, with the same screen-size, that were available at the time. However, while DLP was, by far, the best value, it did have significant draw-backs: It has a lot of moving parts and other mechanical dependencies that would tend to lead to lower reliability in the long-term. Knowing this, going into the deal, we bought a five-year extended warranty (which has paid for itself ten times over, due to a light tunnel collapse) that expires in a little less than a year. We essentially bought the DLP in 2006 planning, in advance, to replace it by 2011.
As I mentioned in another thread, recently, though, I really have a hard time rationalizing replacing something that is not (yet) broken! I'd tend to run things into the ground, and then get upset with myself when, in doing so, I effectively leave myself high-and-dry. Combined with the likelihood that an improving economy always makes discretionary purchases more expensive, since consumers have more money to spend, there is really a lot of incentive to take advantage of lower prices now, rather than waiting for the imminent failure, at which time prices may be higher, in general, and we'd be "forced" (note the quotation marks around that word) to buy something without the normal amount of waiting-for-a-good-deal-to-pop-up that we would normally engage in.

So what big-ticket purchases have you talked yourself into buying recently?
By the way, some of the things we're doing to try to help things along, in this case, include casually asking a beloved cousin if they might be interested in a gift of a used television. If that doesn't pan out then we'll check with the church board to see if the church could use it. We can't use the old television ourselves... it's too big.
. We need a new dishwasher but it keeps plugging along and we can't replace all the appliances right now so we just keep hoping it keeps plugging along.
).

