I deliberately don't look at my electric bill! It's on a pay-as-you-go meter where you pay at one of the local shops and swipe the card in the meter when you get back. It was in when we bought the place and there is NO WAY I'm paying the utility company £700 to change it for a normal type. We put about £40 pw week in it @ £0.07/ kWh. I'm not going to work that out!
At present in our 'burb renovation project (£70,000 equity and counting! :-) ) we have three kids and 3 adults. Me and Zoe have cottoned on to turning everything off when not in use, except for the PC. That never gets switched off, ever! Admittedly, there are days where I'm not using it much...
The kids don't seem to realise that switches have an off function! They leave all the lights on, TV on, Playstation, XBox and Gamecube on, wall warts all plugged in even with nothing on the end...
I've swapped all but the bathroom light for CFs, except for the kitchen which has 6 50w halogens on a dimmer. I know this is BAD, but I do all the cooking and I like to be able to see what I'm doing with a 10" chefs knife!! There is also a 12v 1 foot fluorescent that runs off an old car battery in the meter cupboard, trickle charged by an old battery charger for 1 hour a day, on a timer. It has a pull cord, so you can see what you're doing at night. (I get batteries for nothing from local junkyard, so I just change them when they're ruined!)
I intend to put the kitchen mains on a timer, so the halogens will be locked out from 11pm until 7am. Kids come down in night, as our bathroom is downstairs behind the kitchen, and leave the bloody things on when they go back up.
We're currently insulating everything that can be, getting quotes for double glazing manufacture (I can fit them. Done it lots of times) and generally sorting out the draughts and chilly little corners.
We've just bought a Class A energy efficiency fridge / freezer. Even the light inside is a CF. It uses 160 watts when it's running, which seems to be about 12 minutes an hour. The sides and doors are really thick and heavy and seem to contain a lot of insulation. It has spiral hinges and fairly powerful magnets in the door seals too, so they will pull themselves shut if you don't close them properly.
The new range is dual fuel, gas rings with electric fan ovens. Not plumbed that in yet, so not sure what sort of energy efficiency it has. It's Class A rated, though!
We have a condenser dryer and a Class A washing machine and Dishwasher, too. Again, they're new so...