|
What the Great Depression Can Teach You About Managing
Money Today
Saving is a tough state of mind for most of us. Saving
requires calmness, confidence, and a willingness to
put up with some inconvenience and do a little work.
For most super-stressed, overcaffeinated Americans,
saving is just too much trouble.
Shower curtain rips? Buy a new one. Feeling hungry?
Let's go to a restaurant. We toss thousand-dollar birthday
bashes for preschoolers and put our high schoolers in
designer gear so they can be bored in a drab classroom
(and we buy them a cell phone so they can text dopey
messages to their friends).
Our Depression-era ancestors would shake their heads
at such nonsense. It's no wonder Americans can't save
their money.
Now, to be fair, people in the Depression did not save
much, either. They didn't have much. They learned a
lot of skills that got them through the year with minimal
expenditures.
If you can do that and still earn what you earn, you'll
have saved a whole lot of cash. So what can you learn
from the Depression to make your present day more comfortable?
If you have frugal friends, try to shadow them for
a while and pick their brains. Where do they shop? How
do they live?
Repair things that break or try to make do without
it rather than replacing it immediately. Buy clothing
at yard sales and thrift stores, at least for a season.
Start to find creative ways to amuse yourself (play
cards instead of going to the movies) and cook rather
than eat out.
Most people hate the thought of that sort of lifestyle
and for good reason. It seems boring. It seems harder
than it needs to be.
But the trick is that every time you do something like
this you should reward yourself by taking the money
would would have spent and stashing it away. If your
checking account is a bottomless pit, try to take some
cash and put it away in your room.
For instance, if you normally eat out four times a
week, switch to home cooking and then calculate your
savings. Let's say you used to spend $160 a week on
eating out and you're now spending about $60. Make sure
you pay yourself that $100.
That's saving!
It's so far removed from the way most of us think today
that you have to discuss this strange new concept to
get it!
Let's say the toaster breaks and you fix it. If a new
toaster might have cost you $30, put $30 in your savings.
If you need jeans but get them at a yard sale for $2
instead of a department store for $200, put $198 aside.
At some point, you'll need to transfer your wad of
cash to a more reasonable holding area. Open a special
bank account or, better yet, start a brokerage account
and put it in a stock or mutual fund.
A good method for doing this is to keep cash up to
about $400 (or whatever amount you prefer) and then
deposit it.
If you have a lot of debt, you can take this savings
and deposit it into your checking account and then quickly
write a check to pay your creditor. Imagine if you could
live more or less at the same level and pay down your
debt.
Frugality is one of those things that does not sound
like as much fun as it truly is. In the Depression,
people skrimped because they had to. But for us, the
decision to save is about personal choice and a desire
to be free of debt and build up savings for the future.
We can view frugality as an expression of our own creativity.
Here are some more creative ways to simplify your
life and save money:
Rent movies instead of going to the show; better yet,
start a home movie group with other families so you
can do a pot-luck dinner and take turns being host.
Not only is this more fun (and more likely to make real
memories and friendships), it's cheaper.
Read books and magazines at the library instead of
seeking your entertainment outside.
Learn to sew. Repair your own garments and learn how
to make adjustments to get yard sale stuff to fit just
right.
Learn a craft that is suitable for gifts. For instance,
you can knit baby blankets for showers or needle point
art work for Christmas.
Forget coupons, learn to buy in bulk and cook from
scratch. Invest in a freezer, if you can afford it,
because it's cheapest to buy staples, cook in large
batches, and freeze. It's healthier, too, plus you'll
develop a real knack for cooking.
Savings is a mindset. Change your mind about your money,
and you can change your financial future.
Author: Jo Ann LeQuang
If you want to know more options about managing your
money, check out http://www.debt-consolidation-diva.com
. We don't make loans, it's pure information on debt
consolidation, which is an option for dealing with debt
for people with good (or growing) ability to save money.
Keywords : debt, debt consolidation, frugality,
saving money, saving
Content Provided By : SubmitYOURArticle.com
|