Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Some days just call for an off-topic, poor T-Mobile customer service rant.


In November of 2012, Mark and I went to a T-Mobile brick and mortar location to purchase the new Galaxy III, which was offered with a rebate of $300, making the phone free.  We were adding Mark to my existing account, and the salesman gave us the phone, called in to add him to the account and get him a new phone, handed us the rebate paperwork and sent us on our merry way.

We filled out the paperwork and sent it in the next day. Two months later (January of 2013), Mark receives a notice in the mail saying the rebate had been denied.  I called T-Mobile for him and they said “oh, we can submit again, no problem”.  So, I had her do so.

Four weeks later (February), we receive another notice in the mail saying the rebate has again been denied, this time offering a reason; it’s because the rebate could only be honored if we changed the plan to a specific QUALIFYING one, and it had to have been changed at the time of service, or no deal.

I called T-Mobile again, ready to plead my case. How could this have happened when the phone was purchased directly at a T-Mobile outlet store? It’s not like we bought it at a Walmart or Best Buy!  After no less than THREE calls, all of which ended with the T-Mobile employee HANGING UP ON ME (most likely because they didn't want to deal with my drama), the 4th representative told me that she could get special permission to allow the rebate to go through, if I agreed to change my plan on the phone right there. She further said that once I have received the rebate payment, I could call back and change the plan BACK to what it was originally, with no penalty.

I agreed to the change, and had to agree to another two year commitment beginning that day. She assured me that it was indeed “pushed through”, and I should see the rebate in 4 to 6 weeks.

It finally arrived in late March. Good news, right?

I got around to calling T-Mobile back in mid-April in order to change my plan back to the original billing. I spoke to a very bright young man who first said “yes, I can do that right now for you” and put me on hold.  A few moments later, he came back on the line to say that the plan I was originally on, is no longer offered. In my head I am thinking; Oh jeez… c’mon….  are you serious?   He put me on hold, then came back a few moments later saying “good news, since you have been with the company for so many years, we CAN honor the change back.  I will do that now, and you will be good to go. He went so far as to say that my future bills will be $189.00, which is what I was expecting.

Fast forward to May 1st, when I receive a text message from the T-Mobile Billing Notification department. “Ken Kahle has authorized a recurring or scheduled payment of $389.40”

?! WHAT !?

I called them instantly, and another bright young man tells me that the plan I was changed to did not include unlimited texting and the $389 was the charge for the overages on texting. I had to review the entire story with the new guy from beginning to end, and he told me “I understand what a shock it can be when customers receive such a high bill.  I will make the change to your plan so that you have the unlimited texting that you were expecting, and if you will let me put you on hold, I will get Manager Approval to get your bill adjusted. A few minutes later, he came back on the line to say that his Manager approved the refund.  Before I hung up, I begged him to promise me that my plan was changed, and my refund would be made, and he said “I assure you, Mr. Kahle that your will receive this refund, and the changes have been made. You can log on to your account on our website four hours from now, and you will see the adjustments reflected there.”

Four hours later, I went to my account on the T-Mobile website. I see that there is a financial adjustment there in the amount of $218.64, but it says “credit” not “refund”.  So on Friday, May 3rd, I called them again. This time, the representative was on the not-so-helpful side. He quickly cut me off saying “T-Mobile does not automatically distribute refunds, they have to be requested.” I told him I am requesting it now. I was then required to give him my bank routing and account numbers and he said I would see the refund in 2-3 business days.

Three business days later, on Tuesday May 7th, I see no activity in my bank account, nor on the T-Mobile web page, so I called them again.  This time, I spoke to a man who took a full 13 minutes just to read through the memos and notes and account information associated with my phone.  Finally, he comes back on the line and says “your refund request has been denied”. 

?! WHAT !?

He further explains it is a T-Mobile policy that payments made by checking or debit accounts cannot be refunded until 10 days have passed.  My next step is to call back in 10 days (which will be May 10th), request the refund again, and then it should be received 2 to 3 business days later. Oh, guess what... ?  The rep then hung up on me.

This is unbelievable to me.
                They withdraw a sum of money that is MORE THAN double what my payment should be.
                I have had to call THREE times to request it back, but I still have to call a FOURTH time, and will be required to wait 2 weeks to get MY money back?

What kind of company IS this? I used to give glowing reviews of my experience with this company whenever friends or co-workers asked me about it. I've never been late with a payment, and I have to wait two weeks? My mortgage payment is due BEFORE the 10 day, plus 3 day waiting period.  Why doesn't anyone at this company think that their customers live off of the money that they withdrew, according to their own admitted error?

This is shameful customer service, and shameful treatment.  As a professional, who works in the field of customer service excellence, I am appalled at their behavior, at every step of this journey. This has been going on since November of 2012, and I still have no guarantee that it will be met with a resolution by Wednesday May 15th (according to their timeline).  Tell me, what working American can afford to have more than $200 suddenly tied up, and held from their use?

Shame on you T-Mobile.


UPDATE:

5/14/13    Phase 2 in the T-Mobile chronicle…

I called on the morning of Monday, 5/13 to make the official 2nd refund request of the balance of $218.64 since 10 business days had passed, and a very friendly “Brittany” said to me; “Thank you, Mr. Kahle, I have processed your request and you should see the refund in 2 to 6 business days.”

The very next day, Tuesday, 5/14 (yes, today), I went to check my T-Mobile account on the T-Mobile website, and the credit balance shows -56.84!  Unbelievable, that ONE day later this company issues my invoice for my next bill, and the day after I request my full refund, they apply my credit to pay their bill, a FULL TWO WEEKS before it is due.

I called T-Mobile Customer Care again, and this time I ask to speak to a Supervisor. He explains to me exactly what I have already determined. It seems it is their procedure to apply any account credit to a bill immediately when the invoices are created.  So, my questions is this; if they have a POLICY that requires a 10-day waiting period before credit refunds can even be made, plus a 2-6 “processing” time period, but they also have a POLICY that takes the credit away for the next bill 14 days early, where would my refund ever actually fit in there?  Effectively, this company has taken payment in full for 2 ½ months of service, and I receive no recompense for their multiple errors.  I have made NO error with this entire string of transaction, but it has cost me money out of pocket, far earlier than agreed upon, that is frankly needed elsewhere.

The call was wrapped up with another “promise” and another “guarantee” (yes, the word “guarantee” was spoken to me); the Supervisor told me that he had conferred with his colleagues, and they have agreed that I WILL be refunded the full $218.64 (in the next few days), and that my regular monthly bill of $160 will be due on June 1st.

I will believe it when I see it. 


UPDATE:


5/15/13 Phase 3, final phase in the T-Mobile chronicle…

This time the Supervisor was telling the truth, as my full refund was deposited back into my checking account this morning. 

Although I am happy that I have MY money back, I still think there are several people who work there that still deserve a spanking.

5/28/13  12:41pm

Wow... who knew there would be ANOTHER problem directly connected to this same problem:

On 5/28, just less than 2 weeks after being refunded the $218.64 credit, I was surprised to receive a text from T-Mobile that reads "Your bill is past due. Act now to avoid service interruption and $20 restore fee per line..."

I call immediately and speak to a young lady who says "Mr. Kahle, it looks like your account is 25 days past due.  Let me transfer you to a special account department and they can help you".

I was connected to Jennifer who took some time to research the account all the way back to December. She said everything looks exactly the way you described it, but there is one unusual entry, and that is dated May 15th, 2013. I don't understand what it means, so I am going to have my supervisor research the account and give you a call back.  I hope we can resolve this for you, Mr. Kahle."

Now, I am waiting for a call back, and for the NEXT domino to tumble over and reveal ANOTHER surprise that this company never bothered to inform me of.

I am paid in full as of May 1st, and my next payment is due on June 1st.  Because of yet another T-Mobile error, I am suffering the effects of more bad customer service.

I may have gotten a refund on my credit that should never have been taken in the first place, but this matter is NOT resolved...

I suppose I'll be back with another update...........

Ken Kahle
.... and now we return to our regularly scheduled program.....

Have a DISNEY day! 

Friday, April 5, 2013

Living a Namesake °o° *•._.•* ' *•._.•* °o°

I have a coworker/friend who posted this on my Facebook timeline recently. I thought I would share it on the blog because it is something that really helps to define the term and namesake of this blog "Living a Disney Life"...

(Click on photo to enlarge)


This is a part of what it means to live a Disney life, and Sheri is not the first person to tell me what she said above; "All things Disney make me think of you". It doesn't mean I am any less touched by the sentiment, however. In fact, it makes my week whenever someone associates me with Disney, the thing I am most passionate about.  It also helps to reinforce the idea that this path of moving to Orlando, FL to be close to Disney World is indeed my way of "Following My Bliss" (something I wrote about on this blog almost exactly one year ago: Follow Your Bliss blog entry - April 25th, 2012)

At least once a month, and sometimes more often than that, a friend will ask me how to maximize their one-day vacation to Disneyland, or where to eat while on a Disney trip, or how to make their trip as economical as possible. One friend even asked me to email her suggestions on what attractions her family should go to, in order, keeping in mind that they had both adults and small children going.

I don't spend all of my free time watching Disney cartoons and wearing Mickey ears. In fact, one friend came to my home recently and commented that they expected to see much more "Disney" around the house. To me, Disney is nostalgia, it's history. It's entertainment, true, but it's interactive, even outside of the parks. Disney is worth studying and applying to life actions. Have you read Be Our Guest or any other book that details Disney's unique practice of customer service? I have, and I apply those philosophies every day at work (a big part of my job is customer service related).  Oh, and yes, I relish even the books that are anti-Disney as well. There is quite a lot we can learn even from our harshest critics, wouldn't you agree?

I have had countless friends tell me that they don't just want to go to the Disney parks, but they specifically want me to go with them, further explaining that they imagine I have a different perspective and view of the parks and they want to appreciate and see them the way that I do. How much higher praise could a Disney fan get than that? 


Comments are welcome. Positive feedback encouraged!

Mouseketeer Ken

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Monday, April 1, 2013

To Sell or Not to Sell... °o° *•._.•* ‘ *•._.•* °o°

... That is the Question.

The rummage sale occurred this last Easter Saturday. There have been a LOT of events going on in March and April, and this was the only weekend that we were otherwise NOT committed out, but would still be early enough in the year to avoid a scorching day. As you may have read in my previous posts, Mark and I have spent quite literally four months of Saturdays cleaning, pricing, and organizing our junk (treasure!) in preparation for the sale, only to be followed up by me dragging out more and more bins to add to the pile. It got so bad that I had to call in reinforcements to help manage the booty!

Thanks to the help and dedication of three of our "work" friends, Mouseketeer Trish, Mouseketeer Sheri and Mouseketeer Jen, we pulled it off and pocketed a sweet $500 profit! Just for fun, I took a few photos at different stages in the day:

(Click to enlarge photo)
This close-up of just one table is to illustrate how our buyer's shopping habits were that day. We had  a few items that I consider high dollar figure items (such as 3 pairs of vintage metal roller skates, an accordion, an antique wood carved Asian table, a large propane BBQ, and a stationary bike with a broken pedal), but for the most part we were selling items between $1 and $4. 



(Click to enlarge photo)
The morning started off overcast, even though the forecast was for a bright sunny day, with a high expected to hit 91 degrees (!). Turns out that for the most part of the sale time, it remained breezy and perfect. It wasn't until 1 or 2pm that we felt the full heat of the day. We were very thankful.

The shot above shows most everything pulled out and displayed by about 7am, although we still had several bins of items needing to be priced. Mark is wearing the skeleton shirt in this photo.




                                                               (Click to enlarge photo)
Look at the camera and smile Mouseketeer Mark!





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Oh, Mousekteer Trish is back there, too! Thanks for all your help, Trish..  you, with the dusty butt! (from sitting on the grass, cleaning and sorting CDs and DVDs).

(Click to enlarge photo)
We decided to use the neighbor's driveway for our truck bed to display the 50 or 60 puzzles we were selling. The house has been vacant for 10 years, so we knew the owner would not show up. There were another 30 board games that we displayed on the ground here, and 9 banker's boxes full of books of all types (there were approximately 250 books). Books, puzzle and games are the staple of my Amazon bookstore at Amazon.com and these were ones I had tried to sell for a few years, but they never moved for one reason or another. Nobody bought the 1980's vintage Maniac game! WHAT???!!!!

We had a few kooks show up (I guess this is the kind of event that draws them). One guy sat on the driveway and scanned the UPC bar code on every single book, obviously trying to find those with value on some resale website. I could have told him that they were the books with no resale value, but I was enjoying watching him far too much.

Several friends showed up from our Facebook blasts. It was nice to see Frank and Patti and their daughter, my actress friend Darcy, and several members of Mark's family. I think his Mom, brother and cousins left with more than anyone else that came to the sale!  They even bought the BBQ, one of our highest priced sales of the day at $40!

My initial goal was $1000 (and had we sold the Asian table, the roller skates and a few other key items, we would have met that), but I am NOT complaining.

In context of our Move to Disney Budget, that $500 from the rummage sale fully covers the cost of one Florida Resident Premium Annual Pass to Disney World!

If you don't count the Annual Pass charge in the moving budget, $500 covers the full cost of lodging and food for the four-night drive from Phoenix to Orlando.


(Click to enlarge photo)
(Click to enlarge photo)
At 4:45, one of the shoppers from earlier in the day drove up as we were breaking down the tables and asked if we would sell the stationary bike for $10 (we were asking $20).  Considering I was going to drag it to the driveway and leave a "FREE" sign on it, I jumped at his offer!  That last ten-spot brought our profit to that $500 total.

Except for a couple of larger items, the two photos above show what everything boiled down to at the end of the day. Just imagine two or three times this amount of stuff filling your garage and closets. What a relief it is all done.

At 5:30, I had closed up the bed of the truck with the puzzles and filled it to the brim with the remaining board games and dropped them off at Goodwill.

An hour later, I was loading up the book boxes and we drove them over to the Lawn Gnome Bookstore, an independently owned bookstore in a converted historic house in the downtown Phoenix arts district. http://lawngnomepublishing.com/  I discovered the bookstore a few months ago, had met the owner Aaron and mentioned that I was looking for a place to donate my books. He was very appreciative of even the thought of it.

Now, we are left with the items in the photos above, which will be picked up by the Valley Big Brother/Big Sister organization on Wednesday morning. I used to volunteer as a Big Brother 15 years ago so I am happy to support them further with the donation of the rest of our junk (treasures!)

One more shout out to our friends Trish, Sheri and Jen. I hope we thanked you enough for your help!

Comments are welcome. Positive feedback encouraged!

Mouseketeer Ken

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Monday, March 25, 2013

HUGE Rummage sale to raise money for the move

Months in the planning, and the day is fast arriving! The mother rummage sale of them all will occur on Saturday, March 30th from 7am to 3pm. I have listed our rummage sale on several sites.
Here are 2 of my favorites sites, featuring our add.  

Thanks to our friends Trish, Jen and Sheri for rising to the occasion and helping a couple of Disney fans out! Those are true friends.

www.gsalr.com

and another favorite site is yardsalesearch.com. Here is our listing.

www.yardsalesearch.com


7am to 3pm.

We have so much stuff for sale that it took four people two weeks to price it all. 

  • Disney items sprinkled throughout most categories
  • Small home décor items
  • Small picture frames
  • 2 (non-matching) bar stools
  • More board games and puzzles than you can shake a stick at! (all are complete, most in very-good to mint condition.
  • 1970’s or 1980’s French Provincial style princess phone (push button keys).
  • 2 pairs of vintage 1950’s metal roller skates, $25 a pair
  • 3 non-matching wooden crates, perfect for home décor, $20 each
  • Carved wood Asian table (very ornate, vintage) $300
  • Tiffany style (Art Deco) reproduction table top lamp
  • Enough books to stock a small library, priced to move.
  • Battery operated, working megaphone
  • 2 matching Metal CD stands
  • Small stereo, great for garage or back porch listening (plays CDs and cassettes, includes speakers)
  • Tons of CDs
  • Christmas
  • Halloween
  • Stuffed animals
  • Entire library of Disney VHS animated films (and other animated films)
  • 40-50 DVDs ranging from B movies to horror. Some are still shrink wrapped from the factory - $1 each
  • Unused 50 qt. Igloo cooler (sky blue), $30
  • Accordion (circa 1970s or 80s?) that works but has no shoulder strap
  • James Dean collectible/limited edition pewter belt buckle
  • Vacuum cleaner that just needs a good cleaning to optimize
  • Sequined cowgirl hats (pink and powder blue)
  • Portable wood burning fire pit (showing age, but has several years of use left)
  • Propane portable BBQ (showing age, but has several years of use left)
  • Soooooo much more that I’m running out of room to list them. Things like planters, a color printer, drinking glasses, several Disney children’s bed sheets, glass punch bowl, rhinestone tiara, unused feather pillow, gently used clothing, lots of men’s ties…….. holy cow my fingers are tired from typing it all! 



If you are in the Phoenix Area, Mouseketeers, make sure you drop by!

Ken and Mark

Saturday, March 9, 2013

…and Now the Spending Begins… °o° *•._.•* ‘ *•._.•* °o°


It seems like money is just flying out the window right now, and everything is costing $200 or more! 

The kitchen sink suddenly backed up last week with no warning and no home remedy would work = $280 bucks. 

The truck’s front breaks suddenly start grinding LOUDLY = $225

At least we have a planned expense coming up, that will help with increasing the value of our home; a full replacement of our Central Air Conditioning unit = $3000!

Below are the before and after pictures of the job they did. It’s nice to know that we will have a final summer in the desert with a fully functioning, energy efficient A/C unit that we can brag is BRAND new the year we are selling the home.
(This is the BEFORE. You can see that we stopped painting the exterior of the house just where the evap coolor started because we knew we would be replacing it. The evap cooler stopped working back in 2001. The A/C unit is the bigger one on the right.)
(This is the AFTER shot and the new A/C unit which is about the same size but has a larger capacity for the size of the house.  It also comes with a smart looking digital thermostat and a ten year warranty).

Unless there are further unforeseen expenses, The A/C will be the biggest out-of-pocket expense that we have to plan for. From here on out, I am expecting routine purchases like paint, spackle, or gas for the lawn mower. I have a short laundry list of small projects to get done around the house, but they are all easily manageable (knock on wood).


Comments are welcome. Positive feedback encouraged!

Mouseketeer Ken

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

BLOG milestone - 2000 views today.

Congratulations "Living a Disney Life'. With only 3 actual subscribers, we still hit 2000 pageviews today.

The next milestone in my mind will be 5000 and 10 subscribers!

Thanks to all of you "hit and readers" out there. Keep coming back, we appreciate it. Don't forget, we are still hoping to find Florida locals to Dis-Friend!

Mouseketeer Ken and Mouseketeer Mark.

Monday, March 4, 2013

Sometimes You Need a Hand °o° *•._.•* ‘ *•._.•* °o°

Every weekend we have been working on the rummage sale.  This is the BIG one, folks. There is so much stuff on the back porch and in the two car garage, that it is just overwhelming. This is years of hoarding, items that were once for sale in my Ebay store, and just things I had collected that I thought I would use at one time. I have been fairly ruthless about moving things out so that we won't have to move quite so much on moving week.

I have been hounding Mark to help me with it nearly every weekend, but there always seems to be something else that has to be done instead. With Spring quickly approaching, that means summer is only a few short weeks away and rummage sales in summer in Arizona are just not a good idea. We are quickly losing our window of opportunity to hold the sale.

The biggest problem is that we have to wipe everything down, before it can be priced. Arizona is a desert, and dust gathers very quickly. This is going to be quite a large yard sale, so I am counting on bringing in several hundred dollars and that just won't happen with filthy, dirty, dusty items for sale. After spending another two hours on Sunday afternoon with Mark, I finally had a mini-mental breakdown. There is FAR TOO MUCH for only two people to handle.

Let me illustrate with pictures.  This photo is everything that we have cleaned, priced, and organized:

 (click to view it larger)

Nice and neat, ready to be carried out to tables in the front yard, right?


Oh.. except for this:

 
Yeah. that's at least TWICE as much still to be cleaned up and priced.
 
So it was finally time to call in reinforcements... Now we have yet another Saturday afternoon planned, this time with friends coming over ready to dig in deep and get the project off it's feet. This has been such an ordeal that I feel like progress is being held up simply because of the mountain of junk (treasure) that has been in the way. 
 
More updates coming soon. Phase One begins on Saturday at 2pm. Then I'm hoping the sale can occur on the 16th or the 23rd of March.
 


MouseketeerKen and MouseketeerMark

Comments are welcome. Positive feedback encouraged!

 

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Living a Facebook Life °o° *•._.•* ‘ *•._.•* °o°

Did you know that we have a Facebook page that is dedicated to this blog and to the smaller details that relate to Living a Disney Life-the blog (as well as living a Disney life)?
  1. Do you already live in the Central Florida area and are interested in quality friends?
  2. Do you dream of relocating to the area in order to be near Disney?
  3. Are you just an über-Disney fan that loves to talk Disney even though you don't have plans to relocate?
  4. Are you a GLBT Disney fan (or GLBT friendly), and also fit into category 1, 2 or 3?
Then we wanna be friends with you!

Please come over to Facebook and "like" our page. We want to built a community of like-minded friends. The link is below:

http://www.facebook.com/LivingADisneyLife


Hugs to all of our MouseketeerFriends,


MouseketeerKen and MouseketeerMark

Comments are welcome. Positive feedback encouraged!

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Disney Summit Meeting, Spring 2013 °o° *•._.•* ‘ *•._.•* °o°

We are at a period along the relocation timeline where we find it is time for serious discussion now about putting plans into action. This weekend Mark and I sat down to discuss options for how we will make this move, logistically.

One of the scenarios and the one that I happen to like best is that Mark graduates on June 30th, and within a week or two, we relocate him to Orlando.  I can take a few days off of work, and the both of us will fly out and spend 4 or 5 days looking for a residence and setting him up with everything he needs to settle in. If we are able to schedule a few interviews during this time period, we will at least have a rental car for the week to get him to the interview.  We bide our time until he gets a job offer, and once that comes in, the house in Phoenix goes up for sale.  When the house sells, and it’s time to pack up the dog and the furniture, Mark will fly back to Phoenix so that he can help me load a U-Haul truck and make the drive across country to Florida. Done.

The second scenario is identical to the first, except that Mark does not relocate to Orlando UNTIL he secures a job. Once that happens, we move him there, and the house goes on the market, it sells, and then we coordinate the moving truck and the cross country drive.

I like option one because it means that Mark will be able to establish residency right away, and he will be more likely to interview well in a face-to-face meeting.  From some web research I have done, I have learned that many employers will not even consider you for a position unless you are already a resident and have a local address. Mark will also be working in the culinary field, which is an industry that has high turnover.  Considering Orlando is already on the record as having the most hotels in the country after Las Vegas, we have a good feeling that Mark can land a job within a couple of months, if not sooner.

This gives us the following time line:

June 30th – Mark graduates
July 15th (or sooner) - Mark moves to Orlando
September 1st (or sooner) – Mark is employed
September 2nd (or sooner) – Phoenix home goes on the market

*** unknown factor: the house sell date (current average is 69 days, depending on what website you are reading), which means I could be moving by mid-November.

Another adjustment to the scenario is that we put the house up for sale upon Mark’s graduation and before he receives a job offer.  Considering the time it takes for a home to actually sell, we may want to take advantage of the summer time when most homes sell, so that we would have a potential move date of mid-August to mid-September.

So many factors to consider and worry about! Forget Space Mountain, THIS is the real roller coaster ride!


Comments are welcome. Positive feedback encouraged!

Mouseketeer Ken

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

Focus and Balance °o° *•._.•* ‘ *•._.•* °o°


This blog has been on my mind almost daily since I put it on a fall hiatus. I discovered that I was writing too long before the move to keep the subject of my postings related to relocation, and too many entries were veering off into other subjects.  They were all Disney related, but they did not serve the core reason for the blog.  Once Mark and I have settled into our “Florida Compound” and have started to get to know the area, I plan on changing the direction of the blog, but before the move, I want to keep the focus with fewer off shoots into other subjects.  I think we are now at a point in the timeline that I can start up again, but don’t worry if I still occasionally veer off into other directions just for the fun of it (alright, I’ll admit that Mark and I have a few non-relocation blog postings already in mind). Among other things that are simmering on the burners are these thoughts:


·       Boy, I can’t wait to get my hands on some of the home-improvement and furniture refinishing jobs that I have planned.  I have started some of them, and I’m itching to dive back in again so that we can make the house as re-sellable as possible. 


·         I am also an artist, and now that the overtime at work has ended, it is a personal requirement to get back to my art.  All of this is about balance, and not tipping the scales with any one project so that it becomes a detriment to other tasks that also need attention.  My first project is a pen and ink Mickey head silhouette that will be embellished with a swirly design and mounted in 3D, in a shadow box. I’m planning on a series of them.


·         Oh yes, the damned rummage sale…  This thing really needs to be a priority. I have 13 years in the house we live in now, and it feels like I never threw anything away in that 13 years. I have completed a sifting of the first layer and it’s enough to fill the back porch, and about 15 bins. We’ve been going out to work on pricing everything for a few hours each weekend, but I keep finding more to drag out. Sometimes I look at it all and I just don’t know where to start. Where the hell did I get that accordion?!?!


·         I’m also focusing more attention on my on-line bookstore through Amazon.com.  Last week, I mentioned that we spent a few hours digging through Goodwill bins for games to sell and we made a great haul. I’ve made the first sale from that batch of games today; The Game Of Preferences for $38.99, plus shipping. I see that as $39 bucks more towards the Move to Disney fund!  Oh, and as an aside, that $39 dollars covers the entire cost of last week's Goodwill haul, gas included; all other game sales from that haul are pure profit.


Please help keep up the blog-o-sphere morale by commenting every now and then, even on old posts; knowing that people are out there reading (or even FOLLOWING the blog-hint hint) is really a great confidence boost!

 



Comments are welcome. Positive feedback encouraged!
Mouseketeer Ken
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Saturday, January 19, 2013

Making Money to Move to Disney World °o° *•._.•* ‘ *•._.•* °o°

We are still socking away money for the move to Disney. To make additional money on the side, I sell books, games and puzzles on Amazon.com. Last weekend was a 50% off day at Goodwill, so Mark and I made a trip to 7 different stores and came back with the 21 items you see pictured here.


The great part about our haul is that we were able to scan all of the UPS numbers with our smart phones to check the value on Amazon.com, so that we could pass on items that were not worth spending the money on.  Some items here were for sale for $100 or more!

After 3 days of sorting, part-counting, cleaning and listing, all of them are available for sale and the grand total for all 21 gems is $950!  Even if I sold only one quarter of the haul, I would still have profited by more than $200!  I currently have 700 books and 50 games/puzzles/toys for sale, for which all profit goes right into savings for the Disney Move. Everything not sold by the time we move will be donated back to Goodwill, unless we find the room in the moving truck to keep a few things. Those books are heavy!

Go ahead, take a guess: (click on the photo to see it larger) Which game out of the ones you see here do you think is the most valuable? Comment below!


Comments are welcome. Positive feedback encouraged!

Mouseketeer Ken

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Saturday, August 4, 2012

We are still on track

Hello Mouseketeers,

Have no fears, none of our plans have changed. You may have noticed a lack of postings lately, and it is because we started to notice that our own blog postings were becoming less and less about the relocation plans, and more about things unrelated.

Our vision for the blog is to document our journey every step of the way. Occasionally, we thought we would include some fun postings (Disney pictures, Hidden Mickey finds, Disney cooking), but it became clear that since we are still more than a year away from the actual move, we didn't have enough happening to sustain the blog in these early months.

So, we are still here, still making plans, and still saving money.  But we will not be posting again until we can contribute on a regular basis on the subject that was planned.

I'm hoping that what we HAVE written will still attract readers, so if you have just found us, please drop us a line. We are hoping to make many friends local to the central Florida area, as well as Disney fans in all parts of the world.

I am hoping that we will return in just a few short months.

Ken 

Saturday, June 2, 2012

Photo blog - Hidden Mickeys °o° *•._.•* ‘ *•._.•* °o°

Oh yes, the most popular of secondary Disney activities; hunting for Hidden Mickeys.

These photos are from my own collection.  Feel free to send yours to me, I'd love to feature a post with all of your great finds!

Here are the first five:




This one was the hardest to capture.. it's found on the Big Thunder Mountain Railroad, and the coaster goes by the hidden Mickey very quickly. You need to know where it is to get the photo.



This one is in the queue of the Matterhorn. I was directed to this by the cast member when I asked him if there were any hidden Mickeys on the mountain.






And this last Hidden Mickey, was staged for the EPCOT International Food & Wine Festival. Photo credit: http://www.myhiddenmickey.com/ blot.  Thanks, My Hidden Mickey dot com!!!



Send your Hidden Mickey photos in, and I'll give you a shout out.  You deserve it!



Comments are welcome. Positive feedback encouraged!

Mouseketeer Ken

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Thursday, May 31, 2012

Where Are We Going to Get the Money For This? °o° *•._.•* ‘ *•._.•* °o°

It will come from sacrifice, pure and simple. When the decision was made that we would be moving to Florida, we immediately imposed a freeze (or at least a chill) on movies, eating out on a Friday or Saturday night and internet shopping (that was a hard one). Of course, freezing your frivolous spending doesn’t really earmark the savings, so we put a more formal plan into action as well.

Just around the time that we started dreaming about the move, and wondering how we would ever afford it, I was reviewing a history of book sales that I had made in the past year on Amazon.com. I have been selling books for several years now, and I have been able to afford some things that I otherwise may not have been, including trips to Disneyland in California. I was looking at the numbers and wondered to myself how much money I had earned in one full year. I added up the  and found the amount was just slightly over $1400!

This boggled my mind. Had I stashed that money away into a savings account and not spent it on things that are unaccounted for today, I would have that money right now. Suddenly, I had a savings-account epiphany – what if I saved my earning for the upcoming year? How much would I have at the end of the year? If sales maintained at the level that it has been, then I could easily have the same amount by the end of 12 months, without any more effort than I was used to.

Then, another thought popped into my head. What if I wanted $2000 by the end of one year instead of just $1400? I did some quick math and divided the $2000 dream total by 24 (the number of paydays in one year). I would need to earn $83.50 every two weeks.

When I first think about socking away $83.50 every pay period on my current salary, my excitement kind of evaporates.  However, with the kind of sacrifices that I have been making recently, I might be able to supplement the balance of my book sales, UP TO the $83.50 goal. So for example, if I have a slow book sale week, in which I earn only $40, from my following work paycheck, I would transfer the difference ($43.50 in this case); a prospect much easier to swallow.

On good sales weeks, I might even go over the goal amount, in which case I would not need to supplement any deficit. Of course at the end of the day that translates to earning MORE than my goal amount.

The first thing I did was to adjust my half.com payments account that that all deposits were made straight into my savings account, instead of checking. This way, I save myself the added effort of doing it, and I’m not tempted to hold any amount back when things are tight. I made a plan, and I need to do everything I can to stick to it.

The year was already two months in by this time, so I had missed three or four deposits and I wanted to make them up.

Since book sales had been decent, mostly approaching the goal, I didn’t need to supplement much more than 10-20 dollars, but there were those first few weeks in January and February that I needed to make up. It took some belt tightening, but I was able to double up on savings transfers and I matched the half.com deposit, to the penny for the weeks that I was missing.

Of course, second-hand books don’t list themselves, and they also don’t shop for themselves to be sold in my store.  As they say, your success is dependent upon the effort you put forth, so I started increasing my efforts. I had rummage sales to visit, and thrift store bins to dig through. Church and School fund-raisers were priority because they are usually on a much larger scale than a garage sale, and there is usually no shortage of books they are trying to unload and the church or school staff don’t mind taking lower price offers when I come up with a huge box of books and a five or ten dollar bill in hand. Rock bottom discounts are usually more frequently accepted as it gets later in the afternoon; no one likes to pack up heavy book boxes at the end of the day.

The rest of my afternoon is spent inspecting my booty, getting them listed for sale, then stored in the garage, awaiting their new owners. I like to think of myself as a book-broker; someone who goes out and finds an unwanted or abandoned baby, cleans it up, and gets it into the hands of its rightful owner; someone who will appreciate the beauty of the thing… at least until they have finished reading it and the cycle starts again; hey, kind of like Buzz and Woody and the toys of Toy Story 3, eh?

 
Comments are welcome. Positive feedback encouraged!

Mouseketeer Ken

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Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Cooking Our Way to the Magic Kingdom (Meatloaf) °o° *•._.•* ‘ *•._.•* °o°

Mark and I decided that since it’s Mark's dream to work for Disney in the culinary arts, we would build a portfolio of culinary experiences.

Until we have more blog-news making experiences in the area of our relocation, this will be an ongoing feature (as budget permits), where we will choose a recipe that looks good, cook it up, take some pictures for you, and then include our review of the finished product.


We thought that a fun way to share these adventures (and to relate them to our theme-blog) would be to look to the Disney catalog of recipes, namely “Cooking With Mickey” volumes 1 and 2, and “Delicious Disney”, which collectively contain hundreds of park favorites.




This week we made an easy, comfortable choice; meatloaf! The comfort food of comfort foods. This relatively easy recipe was featured in Orlando at the Disney Village Market place in Chef Mickey’s Village Restaurant.




Unfortunately, Ken is STRONGLY anti-onion... and mushrooms, celery, bell peppers, and most seafood (and as Mark says, "basically, the fundementals of all cooking-the mirepoix"), so we will be cooking slightly altered versions of the Disney recipe, but we plan to stay as close as possible to the original.

The recipe was for a family of six so since there are only two of us, we decided to cut it in half. The full recipe is at the bottom of the post.



Photo credit: WDWnews.com


Sadly, we do not have photos to share.  The day after baking this dish, we had a computer crash, and lost everything from the last 24 hours.  We were lucky-we didn't lose much, and we were able to recreate everything EXCEPT the meatloaf pictures. Thanks, WDW News!

This photo is courtesy of me.  Since the back cover lines up with the front to make one great Disney scene, I thought you would like to see it laid out.


RESULT: We had very good results for our first meatloaf.  The half recipe was the perfect size for a meal for two, and then left overs for lunch the next day.  The texture was surprisingly smooth, and the herbs and spices were just great. 


We cooked our loaf for one hour as called for, and it looked perfect, but we like a more crispy outer shell, so we gave it another 15 minutes.  That gave us a perfect, juicy inside with a crunchy outside.  I would suspect that if you were making the full recipe, you will probably need to bake for more than one hour in order to cook all the way through.


THE RECIPE:


Meatloaf
Chef Mickey’s Village Restaurant
Disney Village Marketplace

Yield: 6 servings

2 pounds ground beef
1 pound ground pork
1 ½ cups onion, diced
1/8 teaspoon garlic, granulated
2 cups bread crumbs, fresh
2/3 cup cold water
1/8 teaspoon thyme
¼ cup parsley, chopped
1 whole egg
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
1/8 teaspoon salt

Soak break crumbs in cold water and set aside.  Sauté diced onion until tender.  Set aside and allow to cool.

Preheat oven to 350 degree.

In a large bowl, combine ground beef, ground pork, onions, granulated garlic, and bread crumbs mixed with water.  Mix well and add remaining ingredients. Mix well and mold into loaves.  Form in either loaf pans or in a meat pan with sides high enough to hold juices.

Bake for 45 minutes to 1 hour.

Comments are welcome. Positive feedback encouraged!

Mouseketeer Ken

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We highly recommend this recipe!  8 Mickey Heads out of 10!