3290560161 2d6d820070 What I learned from being broke

By Mike Barclay of 10CentsWorth.com

A lot of you may be surprised to know that I’m not the most financially savvy person. What might floor you even more is that I’m still learning. Here’s what I’ve learned and where I need your help. Deal?

Priorities and Will Power

 

If you were faced with the choice to pay rent or your cell phone bill, which would you choose? The logical choice should be rent, right? For a while, I would actually choose my cell phone. I figured it was okay to accrue late fees so I could text my friends. Well no more!

I have a file on my computer that sums up my bill priorities in the order they need to be taken care of and reminders on my calendar to check it periodically. Here are the top 5 things on my list as of right now:

1. Rent (I always make sure my rent is set aside. Being homeless = not a good idea.)

2. Court Fees (Speeding tickets people, speeding tickets. I’m no criminal.)

3. Cell Phone (For me, I need my phone on for potential employers, etc.)

4. Car Insurance

5. Credit Card Bills

I’ve conditioned myself to take care of the important priorities by having my friend reward or punish me with small things, like taking away my laptop  for a couple of hours, or we’ll grab a bottle of wine as a reward. With proper budgeting I have enough to take care of everything.

Planning

 

I was an impulse buyer. I’d go grocery shopping with no list, a rough idea of what I needed, and a wad of cash. I’d walk into the market and out with a whole bunch of random food, inevitably forgetting an essential, like milk. I’d end up spending way over what I’d planned. Now, any time I go grocery shopping, I make a detailed list beforehand and, most importantly, I don’t deviate.

Banking Alerts

 

If my bank gave me the money they charge for over drafting, I’d be sitting on a beach somewhere drinking wine and doing nothing. I was horrible at looking at my account balance daily and making sure I had enough to spend. Thankfully, we now have modern technology. If you bank online, there’s a way to set up email and text alerts if your account drops below a certain amount. And (depending on the bank) you can even make it send you your balance text after every purchase. I don’t have an excuse to over-draft anymore.

Savings Accounts

 

My dad taught me the value of a savings account, I just never paid attention. “Have money, will spend” has always been my mentality. What I’m trying to do now is put away 10% of my check into a savings account and never look at it again. If I ever need car repairs or have an emergency, I’ll have money ready to go.

Some of these strategies I practice now. Others, I’m not fully on board with yet (e.g. putting money in a savings account).  Do you have any advice to make it easier to manage my finances? What have you learned from your moments of weakness?

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