Posts Tagged ‘debt free

02
Jul

Beans & Rice

First and foremost, I have a victory to celebrate. I paid off another credit card last week! …and the crowd goes wild… Payment posted on 6/26 which was also 8 months ahead of schedule from what I thought when I started my debt snowball. That’s the power of hitting it with gazelle intensity for ya! Yay! So to Providian/WaMu I can now echo the immortal words of Clark Griswold from National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, “Eat my rubber!”

Second, I think that going through this whole deal as a single person has some definite perks (e.g. I don’t have to worry about getting and keeping someone else “on board”) but it also has its pitfalls. For one, if I start to falter in my motivation to keep running this race, there’s no one around to keep me from just sitting down on the bench and calling it a day.

Paying off that additional credit card (the first I’ve paid off since February, I might add) helped renew my energy for sure, but now I’m looking at probably 7 or 8 more months before I’m able to check another off. Upon this realization, I felt the vigor induced by my recent win start to fade. So in an effort to keep it alive, I decided to go back and try to figure out how I got to the place where I now have so much to pay off of this one last major card (I think the balance currently stands around $8,600 and was pushing $10,000 when I started). I mean seriously, what on earth did I buy for that much money? I mean, it’s not like I went hog-wild and upgraded my entire living situation. I didn’t revamp my wardrobe. I don’t have any shoes worth more than $80. I didn’t install some super-fab surround-sound home theater system. Nor did I put in the hardwood floors and tile I want so badly. And my backyard still sits patio-less. So honestly, where did all this credit card money I spent last year go?

Just to get some perspective around this, you have to understand that I started out 2008 with a total of almost $27,000 in credit card debt. Yikes. Makes me sick to even type that. This year to-date, I have paid off roughly $17,000 of that, most of which was done when my bonus/tax refund hit in February.

So for kicks, I went back and grabbed all of my credit cards’ year-end statement summaries where they kindly provide all of my transactions for the year and even categorize them for me. Of course I didn’t agree with some of the categorizations, so I consolidated them all into one Excel spreadsheet and then re-categorized them myself so they would fall more inline with the way I categorize my spending today. The sums of which resulted in a major “holy freaking cow” moment.

And so where did all my money for last year go? Apparently I ate a good chunk of it – like $500/month worth. Another decent portion went to travel (no surprise there). And then there were a lot of bits and pieces along the way which by their lonesome weren’t much, but added up over time. Would you believe over $100/month of the charges on the cards collectively were in fees?? Finance charges, balance transfers, cash advances, etc. Total, utter insanity and further evidence of my growing conviction that credit cards are, indeed, pure evil.

My “budget” (and I use that term VERY loosely) for 2007 was a total joke…and a bad joke at that. Granted, I had a lot of fun – one might argue maybe a little too much fun – but in looking back and weighing the cost, I have to admit that it really wasn’t worth it.

This year, I am THRILLED to say, is looking just a tad different. To give you some apples-to-apples, my average food spending so far this year is in the $200/month range (really closer to $150 except for the last two months were I kinda blew it) – that’s 40% of what it was last year. Travel is also averaging at about 0.03% of 2007’s total spending.

2008 is half over which means I’m now a quarter of my way to becoming debt free. Yes, I know when I first started blogging about this I thought I’d be there by next June, but after doing some more careful evaluating of my current debt, I discovered that I have more than I thought I did and so it will really be taking me through 2010 to kill it all

2011 and forward will be fun for sure (I still have an Antarctica trip to reschedule, after all) so it’s that debt-free side of the fence I’m trying to keep my focus on. But – and here’s the rub – in order to get there, I need to remain motivated to live like no one else (beans-and-rice, rice-and-beans) so that later I can live like no one else (wine-and-cheese, cheese-and-wine).

So pass the beans, please.

23
Jun

Budget Busters

Coming up on the end of June, I’m finding myself about to begin my 6th month of budgeting.  For the most part I would say so far, so good however for some reason I’m a little puzzled by one of my envelopes which has been totally blown away in May and June.

The culprit:  Food

And when I say “Food” this encompasses anything I buy at the grocery store so trash bags, etc. also fall into this category.  I know to some that will seem crazy, but trust me - I am NOT a detail person.  I can handle the details, but I hate them, so I try to stay in line with what I’ve heard Dave Ramsey say time and time again and I “KISS” everything I can (Keep It Simple Stupid).  My feeling is that I have enough balls in the air, so the more of them I can consolidate, the better.

Anyway, the question has been WHY.  Why has my food budget gone so terribly wrong these last 2 months when I was able to keep to it so well February through April?  True, it could be in part to the increase in cost of some food items due to rising gas prices, but I suspect it’s actually more simple than that.  I think this is because May was when I stopped paying for my groceries in cash and instead started using my debit card again.  In fact, May is when I moved all of my “cash” items back to the bank and was aiming to only use my debit card.

The studies done by Dunn & Bradstreet as well as Citigroup indicate that consumers spend 18-20% more when using plastic than when using cash.  That paying for things with actual cold, hard cash registers as pain in your brain receptors, but using a plastic card registers nothing.  Apparently using a debit card does register a little pain, but apparently not enough to cut down on the amount you spend.  Hm.

So, just for kicks I’m moving back to the cash envelope system for this month with items like Food and will just see what happens.  I’m still not finished June so I need to try and get creative for the rest of the month.  I wonder what cardboard tastes like…

20
May

Spiritual Mathematics

Heading past the middle of May with the half-way point of 2008 insight, I just wanted to perform a quick check-in with the whole Dave Ramsey budget radical life-changing stuff.

First off, I’m still following it. Second, it really has been life-changing.

I once heard someone talk about what they referred to as “spiritual mathematics” meaning that, when it comes to money, somehow God enables you to do more with less when you’re following His guidelines and principles. In other words, being a good steward or “manager” of what we’re given.

I am here to tell you that this is absolutely true…not only that, but I’ve found similar stories out there as well which helps to keep me from feeling like I must be crazy.

I’m still not exactly sure HOW this works, but since I have been following the budgeting principles, etc. as taught by God (via Dave Ramsey), I have watched this happen…and it’s been a little bizarre to say the least. Certainly the fact that I’m spending less has something to do with it, but it’s more than that. I may be spending less, but I’m also giving more, yet seem to always end up with more as well. One of the happy effects of this is that I’m paying down my debt faster than I would have originally thought possible.

Just to try and put this in some quantifiable terms… To date, I have paid off roughly 30% of the outstanding debt I started off with in January, and yet my net worth (which I’m calculating monthly as a way to help me see the progress I’m making) has increased by 102% in that same amount of time. What the…?! How the…?! It makes no sense.

It makes even less sense when you consider that I put a hault on all savings plans when I kicked my debt snowball into gear. So how on earth has my net worth more than doubled when I haven’t even been doing anything to make that happen? On top of which, the stock markets have been doing pretty poorly this year as well, so it’s not like the mutual funds in my 401(k) are just rocketing my account values up - in fact, it’s pretty much the opposite.

Would someone care to explain that to me?

Aside from all this, I find myself continuing to revisit what the Bible says about money. God talked about money a lot. I mean a LOT a lot - to the tune of more than 800 references. And when God talks, I listen…especially when He has something to say in an area where I haven’t always made the best decisions. As it turns out, God’s smarter than I am. Go figure!

Anyway, I just wanted to take a second and check-in and throw that encouragement out there for anyone doing FPU or following a budget but who might be getting tired or discouraged. Hang in there - it’s worth it! God’s principles for managing money are the only ones worth applying. And take it from me - although I couldn’t begin to explain the math of it to you, I know they work.

05
Mar

Better Than I Deserve

Well, it’s been my first full month of listening to Dave Ramsey and of plan/budget implementation. So far everything’s been going really REALLY well…

My official plasectomy* took place on February 15, but I had stopped using them on January 27. My full-out budget started around the same time I made confetti out of my credit cards, and as I’ve indicated previously, right now my budget is a pretty fluid concept, but is becoming more solid with each passing paycheck. The first 2-3 weeks, I think I was tweaking it almost daily. It has now dropped to a weekly tweak. I’m hoping that in another month I’ll be down to only checking it out when I deposit funds!

I’m also trying to find as many ways to bring in extra cash as possible. This is proving to be more difficult than I would like… Dave’s answer would be to start delivering pizzas or bar-tending. I’m not against those things, but my job is such that I cannot always guarantee being available for that kind of work. Additionally, I can’t be on my feet too much right now thanks to my still-broken foot. I have started selling a bunch of stuff on Half.com which so far has yielded about $100. I’ve also applied to become a Secret Shopper, but haven’t heard back on that yet. Anyone else have extra-money suggestions??

I want to just take a moment to indicate just a few ways in which I feel my life has changed in just these few short weeks…

  1. I’m relaxed. Not that I was particularly uptight before, but I can just feel myself relaxing on a deeper level than I feel I previously have. I’m not checking my bank account each day and breaking out in a sweat out for fear that something might be coming through throwing my entire account into a state of confusion and chaos.
  2. I feel in control. This may sound like an odd thing to say because one might think that, since I’m single, I’ve therefore always had control…and I think that before now, I would have agreed with you. However now I can see how much I was NOT in control. It’s like the quote that I heard Dave give during one of the FPU sessions - “Either you will learn to manage money, or the lack of it will always manage you.” Prior to January 27th, I would definitely say it was latter.
  3. I have hope. Again, it’s not like I felt hopeless before or that there wasn’t a light at the end of my proverbial tunnel, but I definitely didn’t see such a bright light! Nor do I think I realized what might be sitting at the end of the tunnel quite like I think I do now.

I’ve actually gotten to a point right now where I feel I’m no longer questioning some of Dave’s positions as I initially did. I’ve been listening to him so much and heard him explain his position so many times over these past few weeks, the “why’s” of what he teaches are becoming clearer to me. In some ways I feel like George in that episode of Seinfeld where he decides that nothing in his life has worked out for him so going forward he decides that he’s going to just “do the opposite” of whatever his natural instinct tells him to do. If he normally would say no, then he says yes. If he normally wouldn’t ask a woman out, he does it anyway. If he normally gets tuna, he’ll order chicken. I’ve not been so stupid that I haven’t done ANYTHING right in the past, but I did get to the point where I felt that clearly my way of managing my finances has not led me to the place I want to be and so departing from my standard behavior might be just the thing to course correct.

So there you have it… My first month up. Not missing my credit cards one bit and am actually enjoying telling myself “no” to things I want to do but don’t have the cash for.

This is getting fun… :)

*Plasectomy - a permanent removal of credit cards (or plastic) from the wallet and life of an individual.

22
Feb

Every Single Cent

Big moves in my Debt Free Journey this week! First off, I had already made hefty payments towards some of my credit cards with my bonus money which was paid out earlier this month, but today I got my mother-of-a-tax-refund deposited. Wahoo!

Now before any of you start to lecture me, I am well aware that getting a large tax refund is not a good goal. That I’m essentially providing the IRS with an interest-free loan. Yada, yada, yada. This year kind of caught me off-guard and I thought I had selected enough Federal exemptions to avoid a large refund, but apparently not. I have since corrected my exemptions and this should not be an issue next year.

Moving on.

Once these payments I’ve made clear, I’ll have wiped out 64% of my credit card debt in just 4 weeks! Of course the last 36% will take me another year, but so be it. Maybe it’ll take less if my budget continues to work and I can avoid getting smacked with some major expense this year…

Speaking of, let me just share for a moment how tough a “true” budget is! I must admit that, although I’ve sometimes thought I was on a budget before, I never have been. Not really. This budget that I’m on now is a REAL budget and it is taking some getting used to.

Thankfully, I listened to the “Cash Flow Planning” session of Dave Ramsey’s Financial Peace University. In it, Dave warns that your first time on a budget, the budget won’t work. “Stick with it,” he says. He goes on to say that you really need to give it 3 months before you’ll start to see it work. I can believe that. The last 3 weeks on this thing have been really crazy in terms of figuring out exactly how much I really do need to budget for items like food. But more than that, I’m learning that the key to this budget-thing is planning ahead. I had to sit down last week and think through all the weird, random stuff I have to pay for during the course of the year and plan out how much I need to budget monthly so that I’m not blindsided by this stuff (which is what has typically had me scrambling for my plastic in the past).

A good example for me is car servicing. It’s easy enough to budget gas - I have a pretty good handle on how much I spend on fuel, but when it comes to thinking of how many oil changes I need and what other possible service-related items may come up, I never previously thought about those. Now my car service “envelope” is getting $50/month for this item. That may seem like a lot, but, oil changes aside, I’m figuring on probably needing new tires this year. My car will also be needing its 50,000 mile service check-up sometime this summer. So, if I don’t put aside that $50/month now, I’ll be freaking out when I suddenly have to shell out a couple hundred bucks for tires or something else car-related that I didn’t offically plan for.

Point being that I’m quickly learning how important every single cent becomes when creating a full zero-balance budget…especially when you’re single and have cut up all of your cards! Probably the best thing about having done that is it’s forcing me to get creative in my spending. Nothing like going cold turkey!