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Are You Tracking Your Debt?

January 9, 2013 By Shane Ede 5 Comments

I think we can all agree that most debt is bad.  Some of us might even agree that all debt is bad.  Nearly all of us will also agree that nearly all of us have debt.  It’s not a comfortable thing to have usually, and, since you’re reading this, I can only assume that you’re dedicated to paying it off like I am.

Like the debt conquistadors before us, we’ve learned that knowing your debt is key to besting your debt.  You can’t win a race without knowing where it starts and where it ends.  But, somehow, you’ve also got to be able to track yourself along the way.  You’ve got to track your debt, and track your progress in paying it off.

Many of my indebted blogging friends have gone so far as to track their debt on their blog.  Many of them have even gone so far as to create a nice progress bar that we can easily see how far they’ve made it.  I don’t do that.  Not because I’m embarrassed by the debt, or the progress we’ve made, but because I decided years ago that I wanted to keep it private.  You don’t need to know how much debt I have any more than I need to know how much you have.  We aren’t in a race against each other, and I surely don’t want anyone feeling badly about how much debt I have and trying to catch up. 😉

debt line graphNo matter how you go about it, keeping track of your progress as you pay off your debt is important.  If you’ve been reading Beating Broke for long, you’ve probably gathered that I’m a fan of budgets. I think they’re a useful tool to help people like me keep track of what they spend and where they spend it.  Budgets have helped me get control of my finances and move them in the right direction.  So, it’s only natural that I use my budgeting software (YNAB) to keep track of how much I owe and where.

There are tools all over the place to help you track your debt.  One of the sponsors of the Debt Movement, Ready for Zero, is a great tool to not only help you keep track of what you owe, but to also help you plan how you’ll pay it off.  Tools like Mint also do a really good job of giving you an online tool to track your debt (and other accounts).  I don’t use any of them.  Mostly because I haven’t come across one that actually connects to all of my accounts.  My local accounts at a credit union that is small enough to not be fully integrated (I guess) with the services that those sites and apps use to update accounts.

If you want to go really frugal, a simple spreadsheet can do the trick.  Just list out all of your accounts, how much you owe on them and then update it as you make payments.  Want to make it fancier?  Track them monthly, then make a colorful line graph of your progress.

It doesn’t matter what tool you use.  The point is that you track your debt.  Know where you started with your debt, and then track your progress as you make your payments and pay it down.  Even if you aren’t paying off accounts every month, it helps with motivation to keep going.

How do you track your debt?

img credit:blamevaraia on Flickr

Shane Ede

Shane Ede is a business teacher and personal finance blogger.  He holds dual Bachelors degrees in education and computer sciences, as well as a Masters Degree in educational technology.  Shane is passionate about personal finance, literacy and helping others master their money.  When he isn’t enjoying live music, Shane likes spending time with family, barbeque and meteorology.

www.beatingbroke.com

Filed Under: budget, Debt Reduction, ShareMe Tagged With: debt, Debt Reduction, tracking your debt

Are You Waiting on Your Finances to Change?

December 14, 2012 By Shane Ede 8 Comments

New years’ is just around the corner.  And along with it, a flood of new years’ resolutions about finances.  People around the world will make resolutions to make more money, save more money, and just improve their finances in general.  Something like 45% will fail within 6 weeks.  Within 6 months, a majority will have failed.  They’ll have failed because they’ve given up.  They’ll have given up because they didn’t take action (or enough action) to make the change that they were seeking.

In short, they are waiting on their finances to change.  Somethings are worth waiting for.  Red lights, for instance will change if you only wait long enough.  The weather, if you wait long enough is likely to change as well.  But, your finances aren’t going to change if you only wait on them to.  If you want them to change, you’ve got to make a directed effort to change them.

new years fireworks

If you’re planning on making a resolution this year, and it doesn’t have to be directly related to finances, make one additional resolution.  The resolution to make an effort to fulfill your resolutions!  Make changes, learn about the steps you need to take to get things moving in the direction you want them to go.  Stop sitting around and waiting on your finances to change for you.  You change them!

Sites like this one are chock full of information on improving your finances.  For most sites, you can easily subscribe to email updates.  Here, you can simply enter your email address in the box under “Subscribe” in the top of the sidebar and click on the “Subscribe” button.

Here’s a few posts to get you started.  (hint: you don’t have to wait until new years to start making changes to change your finances)

Got debt?  Get the debt repayment moving with a Debt Avalanche!

Once you get the debt repayment moving, you’ve got to stay gazelle intense!

Debt gone?  First, congratulations!  Now, get your money working for you.  Perhaps investing in something like a Lending Club account?

Whatever you decide to change this year, make your resolution a true resolution and keep going with it.  If you’re still going strong on it at 6 months, you’ve already done better than the majority of your resolution-making peers!

Will you be making resolutions this year?  Have you in the past?  And did you stick with them?

Shane Ede

Shane Ede is a business teacher and personal finance blogger.  He holds dual Bachelors degrees in education and computer sciences, as well as a Masters Degree in educational technology.  Shane is passionate about personal finance, literacy and helping others master their money.  When he isn’t enjoying live music, Shane likes spending time with family, barbeque and meteorology.

www.beatingbroke.com

Filed Under: budget, Debt Reduction, Financial Miscellaneous, ShareMe Tagged With: debt avalanche, gazelle intensity, lending club, new years

What Christmas Expectations Are You Setting for Your Children?

December 10, 2012 By MelissaB 9 Comments

What are your children’s expectations for Christmas presents?  Do they expect many Christmas presents under the tree and their every wish to be met?  Do they expect a modest Christmas?

Believe it or not, the answer to this question doesn’t really depend on your kids; it depends on you.  From the time your children are small, you set their expectations, and what you set by example is what they come to know as “normal” (until they get married and find that their partner has a different “normal” than they do, but that is another post).

If you have small children, think carefully about what expectations you want to give your children.  Yes, retailers would prefer that you shop ’til you drop and give your credit card a work out, but it doesn’t have to be that way.  Here are what some people do who have chosen to have a different Christmas celebration than retailers would prefer you have:

1.  Give some new gifts, some used, and some homemade.

Amy Dacyczyn, the original Frugal Zealot and author of The Tightwad Gazette had six children to buy for.  Each child got one new gift.  Then, they got a few gifts that were used items that she had purchased at garage sales and thrift stores.  She also made her children a few gifts.  If I remember correctly, she spent $50 or under for each child.  (Of course, this was 20 years ago, so accounting for inflation, she spent no more than $82 for each child in 2012 dollars.

While you might balk at the idea of giving garage sale gifts for presents, I can tell you that I followed Dacyczyn’s practices when I had my own kids, and some of our kids’ presents are nice finds that we got at garage sales.  My oldest is 8, and he has yet to complain about it because it is what he expects.  He still does get new presents, but there are used ones in the mix.  (I like the term recycled better, though.)

2.  Give a charitable donation instead of gifts.

Ann Voskamp, the blogger behind A Holy Experience, recounts that one Christmas Eve 10 years ago, her son asked her, “Why don’t we give up things so we can give to Jesus for his birthday?”  The question radically changed Voskamp’s way of thinking, and from that year on, her family has foregone giving Christmas gifts to one another.  Instead, each day during Advent they make a charitable donation using the money they would have spent on gifts.

This is a radical idea, to be sure, but it is the norm now for her family.

3.  Only give 3 gifts.

Another idea based in Christian roots is to only give your children three gifts.  Some do this because the Wise Men brought Jesus 3 gifts.  Others take a spin on this and give their children three gifts–something they want, something they need, and something they can experience.

4.  Meet needs as gifts.

Gifts don’t have to be all luxuries and things you want.  When I was growing up, my parents’ money was extremely tight.  I got some new clothes during the back to school season, but my winter clothes and sometimes even my uniform clothing or new backpack were all given as Christmas presents.  I was always excited to get these things and never felt deprived.  My mom told me a few years ago that she had to give gifts this way because money was so tight, but I never knew.  This practice was normal for me.

Christmas gift giving was not always the extravaganza it is now.  As an adult, I reread the Little House in the Prairie books, and I was struck by how happy Laura was to get her very own handmade tin cup and an orange for Christmas one year.

If you are a parent of small children, you can start your Christmas gift giving traditions now, and they don’t have to involve credit card debt you can’t pay off until March or April.

What is your favorite way to give gifts at Christmas?

img credit: South Granville Live on Flickr

MelissaB
MelissaB

Melissa is a writer and virtual assistant. She earned her Master’s from Southern Illinois University, and her Bachelor’s in English from the University of Michigan. When she’s not working, you can find her homeschooling her kids, reading a good book, or cooking. She resides in New York, where she loves the natural beauty of the area.

www.momsplans.com/

Filed Under: budget, Children, Frugality, Giving Tagged With: budget, children, christmas, frugaler, Frugality, gifts, Giving

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