Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Where We Came From, Where We're Going

This is a tough one for me to post. It's always embarrassing to admit your past mistakes, especially when you knew better. If this keeps someone from making the same bonehead moves, it's worth it.

Jim and I have never been classic 'spenders'. We don't go for the nicest cars, both our current house and the one we had in New York are average fare. Nice but not ostentatious, plenty big enough for us but not a palace. We never had a lot of expensive electronic equipment or toys like boats or snowmobiles. I say all this to show you that you can make a wreck of your finances even if you're not a 'spender'.

We also were givers. We supported missionaries, our local church, and others that we personally knew were in need. So that wasn't an issue that caused the floodgates to close or anything.

We ate frugally. Didn't eat out much. Rarely did expensive activities. Most of our furniture was handed down to us. We went for years on just one car for the six of us...even walked five miles with four kids to get to the dentist(uphill both ways,LOL).

So what happened? Actually there were a few things. The first being something that never happened, as in.....a budget. If you don't figure out ahead of time where your money is going to go, it goes everywhere and leaves no trail of breadcrumbs so that you can find out what happened to it. More on that later.

We lived from paycheck to paycheck, put nothing in savings. We viewed things like car repairs as catastrophes, which is just silly, seeing that all cars eventually need repairs, new tires, brakes, etc. Instead of budgeting for that and expecting it, we'd panic every time our cars needed something saying, "How could this be happening?". I don't know....maybe we thought we were going to be like the Israelites wandering around the desert for 40 years without their shoes wearing out like everyone else's. Anyway, the transmission would go and, bang, it's on a credit card. The heat bill would be a little high and the balance wouldn't get paid in full on the credit card. Or we'd have a big dentist bill and hit the overdraft in our checking account. Nickel by nickel, supposed emergency upon emergency, the credit card debt grew...I'm too embarrassed to tell you how high. We ended up with two cards.

Jim saw that the place he worked for our whole married life would not be the place for him long term and he ended up completely switching careers. We moved out here to Michigan. We had to pay more than double what we sold our house for,for a similarly sized house out here. The salary,although good, wasn't following suit. After working for them for around six months, Jim could see the writing on the wall and foresaw that they would eventually close the Detroit office. He got a new job but had to repay several thousand dollars of moving expenses. Hmmm.....how about we put that on the credit card? (by the way, they did close the office soon after and leaving was a great move)

So what did we do about it all? Nothing yet. Jim was extremely successful at his new job and kept getting promoted. The salary kept going up. He was eventually making double what he did in New York, which is all well and good except that we felt like we could relax a little financially, so we did. Around this time, Jim and I were just floundering spiritually and that didn't help matters. (My 100th post is coming up soon....I'll tell you all about that then.)

When I got pregnant with Carrie at 41, I was exhausted and sick a lot, so we ordered lots of pizza and went out a lot. We still weren't buying extravagant things, we just had no budget and no idea where it was all going. Our income was very high, we had nothing to show for it, and we were still living paycheck to paycheck.

Around the end of 2004, we said, "enough is enough" in many areas of our lives. We recommitted ourselves to the Lord, started losing weight, and decided that we weren't going to live on the financial edge anymore. Yeah, baby!

Around that time, Jim heard Dave Ramsey on a radio show or something. We purchased the book and attacked the debt with a vengeance. Here's quick rundown of how it works. Not gimmicky. Very do-able. The first thing we had to do was write a written budget. Part of the thing that had kept us from doing this before was that we both hated paperwork. Now that we're on the budget, we essentially have none. Instead of keeping track of every dime we spend, I go to the bank at the beginning of the month, take out the cash that is allotted to things such as groceries, kid expenses, clothing, eating out or family fun, pretty much anything we pay for with cash. I divide it up and put it into the appropriate envelopes. When the money in the envelope is gone, I'm done spending. No writing anything. It's graphic and it works.

Okay. So, first we did the budget. We tweaked it a little the second month because we just weren't real sure about all the numbers the first month. We stuck to that baby like glue.

Next thing was to set up an emergency fund of $1,000. I can't stress how essential that was and always is. Many people give up on programs like this because something unexpected happens that throws them off. This helps to prevent that. Case in point: we started this thing and put our emergency fund together. One month later our transmission blew, and a month after that our roof started leaking. Believe it or not, we were so intent on getting out of our mess, that we scraped up enough money for both those things that we didn't even have to touch our emergency fund but it was nice knowing it was there.

We had our budget and our emergency fund set up so were ready to start paying down all our debt. We took the smallest debt and worked on that with the intensity of a gazelle. Once that was paid off, we took the next smallest debt and threw everything we could at it. Success bred success, and we knocked that one out. All the money we used to use to pay the monthly payments on debt #1 and debt#2 could now be used to tackle debt#3. Next thing we knew, that was gone. We tackled what we had remaining on both of our vehicle loans. In 17 months, we were free and clear. We slept better at night. We weren't living paycheck to paycheck. We were no longer slaves to MBNA or Chrysler Financial. No more Ford Credit Corp. or Citibank. DONE. Forever!

Jim was laid off in May of this year while we had three kids in college. He was without work for three months. God provided for us. Had it been four years earlier, we would have squandered His provision by having to take care of all those stupid debts as well as our present expenses. Wow. I can't even imagine putting myself in that position again.

We are now working on a fully-funded emergency fund (3-6 months of expenses), and then we will begin throwing extra on our mortgage.

So, there you have it. Our embarrassing money foolishness.

We were very honest with all of this with our older kids. It was great for them. They saw first-hand the consequences of debt and the calm that ensued once we had done the work to overcome our initial money stupidity.

That's it in a rather large nutshell. If you have any specific questions, please ask. I've bared my financial soul. Thursday is your turn.

24 comments:

Susan said...

Wonderful story of recovery.

Here is our story of stupidity!! In 1997, when Mickey retired, we sold our larger home where our children were raised. We wanted to travel so didn't need the house while doing that and when we were through traveling we wanted to buy a smaller home that was not on 1 1/3 acre. Less house and yard work. This was a very good decision for us.

Our blunder came in this fashion. We put the proceeds of our house sale, which were substantial, in stocks. All well and good. They began going up and we were please. In 1998 when I decided that I did not like the idea of not owning a home we decided to buy the home we now live it. Our choice of home was a good one. Not too big, not too expensive and in a smaller town. Our mistake was this: since the stocks were doing so good we decided to not pay cash for the house we were buying but assume the existing mortgage and keep our money in the stocks. All I have to say now is: Stock market tumbling after 9/11 and essentially loosing most of our savings.

IF we had it to do over we would pay for the current home. Luckily we did not overspend beyond our budget on the house and assumed low payments but we lost a lot of money!!!!
Susan

Karen said...

Oh, Susan! That is a big OUCH!! Unfortunately, I think almost anybody who had any money to put inthe market back then did so. So many people I know lost so much. Isn't it nice that God takes care of us anyway?

Thanks for stopping in and telling your story!

Anonymous said...

你打死不承認你的外遇,甚至出手打我,抓姦也要在床是嗎?
真的要抓姦在床你才肯承認自己的背叛?我想要抓姦
不僅僅是為了讓你啞口無言,抓姦也是為了要讓自己出一口氣!
我想要抓姦,我想要讓你知道,外遇不是沒有代價的!

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Anonymous said...

結婚、離婚、結婚又離婚...
陳經理喜孜孜的帶著他的新婚妻子參加公司聚餐
陳經理一直是身邊親友茶餘飯後的話題
這是他的第四任妻子
背叛似乎是總慣性
也似乎之於陳經理而言,離婚也能成為一種慣性
他總是因為外遇而離婚
一次又一次
當女人渴望名分,他就要求另外一個女人成全
他流連花叢,女人不因他的離婚紀錄而卻步
似乎卻總是認為自己能夠成為那個「特別的人」
結婚、離婚對他而言不具意義,只是一種手段
反正他總是能找到另一個傻女人

Anonymous said...

許多人的婚姻因為伴侶的外遇而殘缺不全,
於是許多人只能夠藉由抓姦來保障自己,
專業徵信人員針對不忠伴侶進行外遇蒐證,
並依照您的需求進行抓姦行動;
確定適當時機時,會與您一同報案,
尋求警方共同抓姦,我們合法對外遇對象進行抓姦
外遇抓姦問題,讓我們給您最專業服務!

Anonymous said...

因為她,你變得冷漠不已。曾經我也不想去抓姦
因為我還存有著絲絲希望你回頭,所以一直不願意抓姦
然而兩年過去,你以為我不敢抓姦而誇張甚至與她同居在外。
我真的不敢抓姦嗎?我只是不願意;我想,該是抓姦的時候了,
打開這扇門,是該面對現實的時候了...

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