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The Richness In Living Cheaply

Words and Images Daniel James Keeffe

Coming from the UK, in the context of the wider world, I have been remarkably privileged. In modern discourse, that should go without saying really. But it hits you in remarkable and unexpected ways after spending some time in a place where those immediately around you have comparatively much less.

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I have lived in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam for 5 years now. Like all modern cities, it is inhabited by a co-existing range of social and economic classes. Since 2018 however, I have lived in a lower income apartment complex whose residents and neighbouring establishment owners I became much closer with during the city’s intermittent Covid-19 lock-downs throughout 2020 and 2021.

As in English, The Vietnamese word for ‘cheap’— ‘rẻ/ rẻ tiền’, can hold the same, negative implications. To be cheap can be to have low standards, to cut corners, to be somewhat sneaky or even suspicious. And in the age of massconsumerism, unethical production and excessive transportation, the scrutiny is valid. But when living cheaply isn’t a choice, the definition shifts. To my neighbours, (particularly during these still ongoing, difficult financial times), living ‘rẻ’ implied something much more positive. Resourcefulness, money-smarts and what I interpret as a more mindful attitude towards resources and possessions in general. “Save that money for beer”, I’ve been told.

I obviously cannot speak on behalf of my dear neighbours. But these are some lessons learned from them that have inspired me and been genuinely character building. From my own experiences. I will follow this paragraph with sets of images and observations from within my neighbourhood during the 2021 Covid 19 lockdowns. If “cheap” is weighed down by negative associations, I’d like to hoist it back up with some counter-associations, a reconsideration of what it can also mean to live cheaply.

ĐẸP & RẺ (Beautiful and cheap shop): When cheapness is goodness.

MINDFULNESS

There is mindfulness in seeing beyond the standard function of an object. Recognition of diversity of utility is resourceful, economical and thoughtful.

CREATIVITY

Gather the tools you already have and do-it-yourself. The results are often far more interesting.

Bin Chair

Bin Chair

Curing Chair

Curing Chair

Guerrilla gas station

Guerrilla gas station

Chairs for dyring utensils

Chairs for dyring utensils

DIY signage using electrical tape

DIY signage using electrical tape

Packaging as milk and yoghurt

Packaging as milk and yoghurt

MODESTY

Casting pretence and the notion of what an object should or should-not be aside can be transformative.

Packaging as planters

Packaging as planters

Packaging as fish bank

Packaging as fish bank

JOY

(Rough translation)

Mr Cuong: Covid quick tests are common now, but can cost 200-300 thousand Dong a time. Save the money for drinking.

Packaging as planters Packaging as fish bank

Mr Minh: My test was 86 thousand dong.

Mrs Kim: Mine was 83 thousand.

Haye: Play the auction! Mine was cheapest! 75 thousand!

Apartment group chat: friendly competition for finding the cheapest COVID testing station

Apartment group chat: friendly competition for finding the cheapest COVID testing station

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