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A World of Cash Only

December 17, 2010 By Shane Ede 11 Comments

What if you couldn’t use a credit card.  What if you couldn’t get a loan?  Imagine a world where “credit” as we know it no longer exists.  Or never existed in the first place.  Would that world be better or worse than what we live in now?

visa signatureIn many ways, credit that is used wisely can be a benefit to our lives.  It allows us to get a house without having hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash available.  It allows us a car without having to have tens of thousands available.  I know, if you purchase smartly and within your means, you don’t need hundreds of thousands of dollars for a house and you don’t need tens of thousands for a car.  But, for those that feel that they can afford to pay those payments, credit makes it all possible.

What would a world where there was no credit look like?  Instead of spending our last dollar to pay off the loans we get with our credit, we’d spend more of our time working for fulfillment.  If we didn’t have the ready cash available to pay for something, we’d have to save for it.  Or trade for it.  And we’d do more for ourselves.  We’d mow our own lawns.  We’d do our own handyman work.  Do-it-y0urself tasks wouldn’t be something of a novelty, but more of a normal thing.

For some, it may seem trivial.  What difference does it matter whether I use credit or not.  I’m responsible and pay my bills, they’ll say.  And then, they’ll get up on Monday morning and go to the job that they’ll freely admit they don’t like much, but they keep it because it pays well.  But, if there was no credit, they wouldn’t need a job that pays well.  They probably wouldn’t need any resume tips. They’d have the ability to find a job that they enjoy.  A job that is fulfilling and rewarding.

And that makes a difference.  The stress and turmoil that a job you don’t like can bring into your life is not only unpleasant for you and those around you, it can actually be fatal.  Without credit, keeping up with the Joneses becomes a thing of the past.  You only need to keep up with what skill sets they have that you don’t and find an amicable trade.

Will this world ever exist?  Wholly? No.  There are way too many hands in the pot of credit for it to ever go away.  Too many millionaires made by taking advantage of other people through credit.  But, that doesn’t mean that you and I can’t strive to lead our lives in the direction of no credit. We can take control of our finances through good financial management principles and lead a life as free from credit as possible.  And, it is possible.  Don’t be afraid to dream of that.  And don’t be afraid to guide your finances with intention.

Breaking free from the harness that we’ve given ourselves can lead us to a better life.

photo credit: TheTruthAbout

Shane Ede

I started this blog to share what I know and what I was learning about personal finance. Along the way I’ve met and found many blogging friends. Please feel free to connect with me on the Beating Broke accounts: Twitter and Facebook.

You can also connect with me personally at Novelnaut, Thatedeguy, Shane Ede, and my personal Twitter.

www.beatingbroke.com

Filed Under: budget, credit cards, Credit Score, Debt Reduction, ShareMe Tagged With: credit, credit cards, intention, loans

Financial Intentionality

December 10, 2010 By Shane Ede 6 Comments

Financial bloggers, myself included, speak rather frequently about setting goals for your financial life.  Goals are super important.  If you don’t have a goal, you have no direction.  Further, if you don’t have a goal, you have not intention for your money.  You are intention-less.

What is your intention for your money?  What purpose should your money serve?
Pay-offA typical goal for money is to pay off this or that.  To save for this date, or this item.  But, deep down, there is an intention there.  If your goal is to pay off a debt, the intention is for your money to make you debt free.  If you’re saving up for something, the intention is to buy what you want without adding debt.  If you’re saving up for a date, the intention is to reach that date with some amount of money to pay for things without adding debt, or having to live in a trailer.

Financial Intentionality, in my mind, is more important than financial goals.  If the intention is all wrong, it just won’t help you out.  I don’t think that it’s black and white.  Call it karma, or morality, or whatever, but having a good intention will always get you farther than a bad one.  Not only that, but I think that intentionally guiding your money is a better way.

My intention with my money is to facilitate a debt free lifestyle where I can enjoy what I do, and not have to worry about where the next payment is going to come from.  There are sub-intentions.  Or, rather, intentions that lead towards that grander intention.  I intend to use my money to pay off my debt.  I intend to use my money to provide for my family in a way that allows us our necessities and a few luxuries without causing us to go further into debt or life extravagantly.

What are your intentions with your money?  Are the goals that you’ve set in line with those intentions?

Study what you do with your money.  Are your spending habits in line with your intentions?  How about your goals?  Perhaps your intention is to become debt free, but, one of your short-term goals is to save up for a new HDTV.  If you don’t really need that TV, your goal is way out of line with your intention.

Spend your money with intention.  Keep your intentions in mind as you set your goals and spend your money.

photo credit: Truthout.org

Shane Ede

I started this blog to share what I know and what I was learning about personal finance. Along the way I’ve met and found many blogging friends. Please feel free to connect with me on the Beating Broke accounts: Twitter and Facebook.

You can also connect with me personally at Novelnaut, Thatedeguy, Shane Ede, and my personal Twitter.

www.beatingbroke.com

Filed Under: Debt Reduction, Saving, ShareMe Tagged With: budget, goals, intention, Saving, spending

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