Saturday, June 30, 2007

Typical!

Hah! This is just typical.

Well, I thought and thought, and although I wasn't ready to cancel the entire cell phone account, I did decide to drop my husband's "add a line" that we pay an extra $10 a month for (which he never uses and rarely even turns on.)

The next day, my car broke down. At first I thought, "Well, that's just great!" But, you know what? It all worked out. And, if I had actually cancelled both phones, it would have worked out. I wouldn't still be standing on the side of the road waiting for help. I would have found someone, used a pay phone, or walked to the Burger King and asked to use the phone.

So, the lesson is this... there are only really 3 things you NEED in life: air, food, and shelter.

Everything else is negotiable.

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Cell Phones

Why do I pay $60 a month for a cell phone? I know...in case of emergencies, I have kids, it's a convenience, who doesn't have a cell phone?

Well, for the sake of emergencies, can't I have a 'prepaid phone' that I can use to dial 911?

The kids can't talk to me on the cell, and the only reason to use my kids as the excuse would be in the event there's a kid emergency, so the prepaid phone that could dial 911 (or my husband) should take care of that.

Convenience? Not really. HAVING that phone on me just means that I'm more inclined to ignore the people and events going on right next to me in order to call and talk to someone who will likely ignore the people and events going on around her just so we can talk about things that may or may not matter.

I haven't fully committed to the idea of getting rid of my phone plan, but I'm looking into it. Seriously, if I look back at the list of calls from my last cell bill, I am sure I won't find one single time or call that was SO necessary that it justifies a $60 bill.

I think if I look hard enough, I will find a marketing ploy that has successfully convinced me I 'need' to pay $60 a month to have a cell phone. (kind of like that great marketing ploy that told me 'these days you just have to have a car payment.')

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Another $200 to the CC

Yay!! I now have 2 schools that I proctor for, so the debt's just dropping like crazy now!! Yippee!!!

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Payday :-)

I got paid yesterday for test proctoring and my first week of tutoring a new student. Yay!! I'm putting $200.00 toward the credit card.

It is a wonderful feeling to know I'm doing what I can to help secure our financial future without losing sight of my most important job...taking care of my family. I work less than 10 hours a week outside of the house...just enough to bring in some extra money, enjoy some time away from home, and not overwhelm my schedule.

My blessings are abundant.

Monday, June 4, 2007

Changing your Thinking

I heard someone say once that you won't change the way you act until you change the way you think. This is absolutely true. For example, if you want to lose weight, but you see doing so as depriving yourself of the foods you love, you just can't act in a manner that will help you lose weight. You are THINKING about it the wrong way.

The same can be said for money matters. If the idea of a "budget" equates with thoughts of deprivation, loss of fun money, clipping coupons, and so on...you will never want to sit down and write out a budget. BUT, if you start to think about your money as YOUR money that YOU CONTROL, and you want to see where it's going and make careful decisions about WHO you give your money to (i.e. Starbucks, Sonic, Department Stores, etc.), it puts you in control. It's not deprivation. It's mindful spending.

I think the ONLY way to begin to change your thinking, and therefore change the way you act (aka spend) is to READ books on money!!! How can you change your thinking if you don't know what other thoughts are out there?

I would recommend the following (I have read all of these and taken pieces of each to formulate a new way of thinking about my family's money):

The Total Money Makeover
The Automatic Millionaire
The Millionaire Next Door
America's Cheapest Family
The 9 Steps to Financial Freedom
The Budget Kit


Think you don't have time to read these books? Just take 30 minutes a day (that's ONE television show) and chip away at it. What you DON'T really have time for is to continue spending mindlessly.

:-)