Author | Message |
First Person: How We Cut Our Monthly Spending by $500 Thought this was good info to share for those finding ways to cut down on spending.
[Edited 4/10/11 8:32am] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
If people looked at their day-to-day lives more critically, I bet thousands of dollars in discretionary spending could be freed up and personal savings could really take off. I'll say it again: The stuff you own owns you. We should choose our masters more wisely. Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.” | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Zactly. I am shocked and amazed at the percentage of people who are not saving properly for their retirement. To say they are going to be sorry is a huge, huge understatement. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
This is a very good article and something we did when I got laid off last year. The only reason we hand a landline was because I had dial up at the time. We live in the country, what can I say? I checked with our cell phone company and was able to get an air card cheaper than what the landline cost us each month. Needless, to say I got rid of the dial up service and the landline which saved us $20 per month. It doesn't sound like much but if you add that up over a years time..I put this money in a Christmas fund so I didn't put anything on credit cards for Christmas shopping last year
The cell phone thing we did a few years ago. I finally went over the bill with a fine tooth comb. We also both used to smoke but quit almost two years ago. That saved us $400 per month and smokes are way more expensive now. We put that money in our savings each month instead. We now have a good nest egg which is a good thing. We need a new roof this year so we don't have to worry about covering that cost either.
I was worried when I got laid off on how we were going to get by financially. We are actually better off now because we have cut down expenses.
Now, if we could just figure out how to lower gas prices | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
The main reason that I have a landline is for the home security system. By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory! | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
That should've been the first thing on the agenda but I agree with this. Money is too much. And they make it worse on themselves upping the price amount knowing some folks can't afford that much for simple cable. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
hmmmm... there are major points forgotten in this article:
-GROW YOUR OWN FOOD! if you cannot, there must be someone in your community who does. CONNECT WITH YOUR COMMUNITY.
-buy in bulk, if you have access to a market which has this as an option.
-ride a bicycle, or take public transport, again, if you are physically able to do so.
-rent. if you 'own' a home you don't really own it, since the governement gets all your money.
-cook at home. find a community of people to cook with.
-buy local.
-handmake your stuff.
-do trades.
-thrift shop.
-handwash your clothes.
-insulate your home.
-ask neighbors/house-mates to watch the children.
-do thinngs that don't require electricity.
-etc., etc.
[Edited 4/9/11 23:04pm] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
nah... they know what they're doing... it's called supply and demand. it's the first rule of corporatism. the same thing happened with OPEC. those nationed jacked up the price of oil because they knew the west needed it, but they didn't wanna be taken hostage by the west. it's like AT&T holding congress hostage, making net neutrality vulnerable. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Oh but of course. The government sucks anyway lol | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Good article and advice. I also did this before and find ways to cut unnecessary things.
Also you can make your own cleaning products from vinegar and baking soda which is much cheaper than commercial products. Buy on sale and what you need.
[Edited 4/10/11 15:58pm] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
So, so true. We hear so often the statistics regarding people who barely scrape by living month to month, and I think that is such a dangerous, reckless high-wire act. Leaving aside the truly poor, it just shouldn’t be necessary. Have a plan. Have a budget and live by it. If your monthly expenses are the same as your income, then either get more income or cut your costs because the way you are living may have catastrophic results.
That article provides good examples of how savings can be found, but I think there are even easier answers. In the past twelve months I’ve saved 66.22% of my net income (I track it closely – I’ve come in around that % for the last four years, though this year is a little worse because my computer blew up ), and it’s not particularly hard for me to do. No cable TV, no car, a very modest apartment and a small allowance for and constant review of my discretionary expenses. If I go over my budget for discretionary expenses or if I have unexpected emergency expenses, then I make sure I cut back on my spending until I’m back within the percent allotted.
I’ve taken my commitment to saving to a fair extreme, and I know few people would live the life I do (I have specific objectives I’m trying to achieve), but I can’t find much sympathy for those that won’t make the rational decisions they need to make to ensure they at least have some financial buffer in their life.
[Edited 4/10/11 4:47am] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
We too have done most of the things on that list!
we have also downsized on our car... I had a larger car and the payment was 480.00... we traded it in, got cash for it cuz the trade in value was far more than what I had left on the loan, and are now leasing a brand new 2011 ford focus... I also work at a ford dealership so I got the D plan as well... My payments are now 250.00 a month..
We are pretty proud of ourselves... this is the ONLY debt I owe to anyone! ~~~~~ Oh that voice...incredible....there should be a musical instrument called George Michael... ~~~~~ | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
good tips! we haven't had cable tv for two years now. i don't use a cell phone very often at all, mostly because i hate talking on the phone and i did just fine all my life without one. i have a cell phone that you buy phone cards for, and i only buy a card when i need to travel out of town. we're also moving this summer to a place where we will be saving around $900 per month on rent. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I've done that for insurance, but also have no cell phone, and no tv service at all Now I'm older than movies, Now I'm wiser than dreams, And I know who's there
When silhouettes fall | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I hear you. I got rid of my landline phone 2 years ago. I have a regular cell, and I keep a prepaid one, which I never really use, for emergency, in case I lose my regular cell phone. Some parents may want to keep their landline if they have kids at home though. I don't so I'm okay with that for now.
Another thing I find totally ridiculous, is my cable bill. It is attached to my internet service. I reduced the bill last year, only for the cable company to increase it damn near $40.00 this year. Now my cable is back up to $188.00. My co-worker and I have been discussing ways to cut our bill for sometime now, and I'm working on cutting it down. I don't think there is a satellite cable company in my community, because my building management won't allow us to use satellite dishes, so I'm working on ways to cut some programs.
I was also told by my electric company, that it's best to unplug tvs, computers, airconditioners, when you're not home or during sleeping hours, because when left plugged-in, they're still pulling electricity, even when they are turned off (i.e. tv sets). I was also told that those air-freshener plug-ins add to the bill too, so the old fashioned, stick-ups or table-top air fresheners, sprays are best to use, if you want to cut down on your electrical power use.
It's bad enough food prices have been skyrocketing, so it's good to look around the house and see what it is your life could do without right now. I even put off buying new furniture for now, until things get a little better financially for me right now. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Yes! The landline. We don't use ours anymore, though we still pay $5 equivalent per month even though it's not even connected to a phone.
We've had to cut our expenses quite a bit, after last year was a bit of a struggle and we weren't being very disciplined, living as before but having less money and it not going as far, in denial that we needed to change. We just dropped some cable channels, stopped using the landline, ate out a bit less, went out less in general for drinks or whatever, looked in cheaper stores for basic t-shirts and stuff, ate more Thai food locally and bought less imported foreign stuff, and soon our monthly budget was down by, lemme work it out, about 25%.
MY COUSIN WORKS IN A PHARMACY AND SHE SAID THEY ENEMA'D PRANCE INTO OBLIVION WITH FENTONILS!! | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I have cable TV-but basic only. (15 bucks a month) Only use pre-paid cell phone. I use it for long distance and regular phone usage when out and about. But I keep the conversation short-unless I'm doing one of my long distance calls. (So my cell service costs me about 25 bucks a month). I have a land line w/no long distance for an alarm and for local calls. The only place I can truly save is my clothing allowance.
99.9% of everything I say is strictly for my own entertainment | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |