Beautiful and a bit chilly day today. Works for me, I like to walk when there's a bit of nippiness in the air.
We gave DS $300 of the stimulus checks for him to spend on whatever; $300 food and pet good donation to the local food bank/animal shelter; and we each took $600, to spend on whatever. He bought a bass guitar (yes, another...

) with it and the extra end of year bonus he got. I bought a bunch of new piano books, some clothes for me (hooray Kohls clearance!), some small muffin tins that will fit in my new Ninja oven, a new color book and markers, some Yankee Candles (hooray clearance sales!) and.....a lot of Amiibo cards for my Animal Crossing game.

Don't judge me. I need all their pictures in the game.
Anyways, the candles came in, all except one. They said that one was out of stock (even though it still says for sale on their page); so they are shipping me a replacement candle for that one, and they didn't charge me for it. Also, I discovered one of the candles just had hardly any scent, lit or unlit (and I burned it for 3+ hours); and they are sending me a replacement for that one, at no charge. Excellent CS there...some companies could take a page from their book on how to do things right.
We took a loan from DH's 401K and paid off all the credit cards, except for the furniture one. We now only owe the loan (which the 'interest'...much lower than the credit cards...goes back into the 401K), our car, the ongoing medical bills for DH, the furniture card (will be paid off by December 2021; it's no interest so we aren't rushing to pay it off) and his student loans (which we are trying to get dissolved, as there was a bunch of issues there with the shady technical college signing him up for multiple loans that he didn't need, among other thing). The credit cards have now been removed from all the shopping sites, and are moved to a locked box in the bedroom closet...so now it take effort to purchase something. LOL Gives me time to think, do I really need that? The amount we are paying on the loan is what we were paying IN INTEREST ONLY on the cards, so it's a definite win.
DH got a small bump in pay (3% annual; everyone in the company did) and then they are starting back with regular reviews/raises this year. The company didn't bill out what they had planned to in 2020; but with the savings from not hiring as many new people (planned to hire 500, only hired 200), not paying for people to work out of town, etc....they actually hit their projected profit margin! DH wants interns back though, lol; he hates doing the 'scut work' on his drawings.

He says it's a waste of their money, as he bills out between $150 to $300/hour (depending on the work he is doing, and the company it is for); when he's doing 'scut', it's on the lower end, so the company makes less for his time. In other news, I realized someone values my husband's time at $300/hour....and I find that incredibly amusing.

(ETA: he doesn't get paid that much; just wanted to clarify that. He's on salary, but the hourly rate comes out to much much less than what he bills.)