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Living Within Our Means
by Member
britx18
I have always found it hard to
manage my money. No matter how much I had, I
always wanted more; mainly because I wasted it
all on frivolous items that I did not need or
never used. At the age of 18, I started working
at my first “real” job, and the owner once told
me, “You will never be broke as long as you live
within your means.” I thought I knew what he was
saying, but at this time I was still living with
my mom and putting myself through school. It was
only in the last year that I have come to truly
understood what he was telling me and the value
of those words. We are learning to control our
impulsive buying habits, put money into savings,
and control our overall spending with a budget.
Managing money is neither my husband’s nor my
strong suit. One of our biggest fall backs is
impulse buying; we see something we like and we
do not think twice about charging it to our
credit card. All of the sudden, a $20.00 movie
has cost us $40.00 with interest by the time we
can afford to pay our credit cards off. We are
now thinking about several factors before we buy
most items: do we truly need this or is it
something that we want right now, can we pay
cash for this item now, and can we get it
cheaper at another retailer. I have found that
stopping to think about our purchases has saved
us as much as $300.00 a month. We still do some
impulse buying every now and then, but I think
everyone is allowed to enjoy their hard earned
money with a few “non-budget” items.
With the way the economy is, who knows if there
will be social security for my husband and me
when we want to retire. I don’t want to spend my
time on earth working every day to survive; I
want to have the comfort of being able to retire
when I’m ready to. Also, I never know when I
might need some extra money for a surprise
problem that arises. There has to be a level of
safety, and my starting my savings account is
the biggest comfort. I put anywhere from $100.00
to $150.00 a month into my savings account. In
one year, I will have $1,200.00 saved. In twenty
years, I will hopefully have $24,000.00 saved.
This is nowhere near enough to retire with, but
at least I will have something to rely on, and
my husband is doing the same thing. It is the
biggest peace of mind I have had in a very long
time.
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