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'Room to breathe has no price tag'

Posted Nov 14 2007, 01:01 PM by Donna Freedman
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A month ago today, I became debt-free – made the last payment to a relative who had lent me some money. This loan had allowed me to throw a big chunk of cash against credit card debt accrued during divorce proceedings. (Lawyers bill by the hour, you know.)

Once the credit card was paid in full, I started repaying the family loan. As money came in through diligence or chance, I’d let it build to $300 and then write a check. I'm not sure why $300 became the magic number; it just sounded good.

Now I'm debt-free: no student loans (I'm blessed with a scholarship), no car payment (please let it last another six or seven years), no credit card debt (and there won't be any more).

It feels about how you'd think it would: pretty darned great.

'A perpetual grin'
This relative wasn’t dunning me. But it bothered me to owe money. Some people count sheep; at night I would lie in bed counting ways to stretch available funds to reach the next $300.

Reading some postings from a Smart Spending message board thread, I found others who have recently come to share this worldview.

A reader posting as "luba30" changed her life in just six months. "I had no savings, no budget, no retirement, living paycheck to paycheck," she wrote.

So she created a realistic budget that prioritizes retirement funding and a savings account, while allowing for some discretionary spending for her and her husband. Currently they have more than $2,500 in retirement funds and thousands more in savings. And luba30 has "a perpetual grin."

Another reader, "Pepperdoo," hit the wall seven months ago. It happened when she paid a few bills -- not all of them -- and realized she and her husband had $25 left. For two weeks.

Pepperdoo started keeping track of every penny spent. She and her husband packed lunches and ate all other meals at home, allowing themselves $40 for groceries every week. Pepperdoo also combed the Smart Spending message board for tips on economizing, and threw whatever she saved at vehicle loans. Their car and truck are now paid off and the "extra" $500 per month goes into savings.

"Room to breathe has no price tag," Pepperdoo wrote. "It's hard to make the changes at first, but once you do you'll see results."

The choices we make
Without that family loan, I still would have paid off my credit card debt, eventually. But I would likely have paid several hundred dollars in interest charges. I also would have fretted, a lot.

Now it's my job to continue to live below my means. Not only will that keep me out of debt, it will allow me to put aside some money. I'm building an emergency fund, and recently started a Roth IRA to augment the retirement benefits I accrued during 17 years of newspapering. And some day I'd like to have mortgage debt like everybody else.

My efforts are neither unique nor remarkable. Plenty of people out there have been standing up under much heavier debt loads. A reader named "Kalikala1980" is paying down a credit card balance, a car note and a grad-school loan. To get there sooner, the reader has cut back on all unnecessary spending, while still faithfully funding a retirement account.

"It's all about the choices you make and how much you want to be debt-free," Kalikala wrote.

So if you're working to pay down debt, keep at it. If you backslide, start over. And if you think you'll never get out of debt? Please try it anyway. Get personal-finance books from the library, contact the National Foundation for Credit Counseling,  read the MSN Money message boards for tips and support.

Kalikala phrased it quite nicely: "While paying off debt is painful, the freedom of being debt-free is indeed priceless."

As we say in New Jersey, I'll testify to that in court.

Comments

 

I finally hit my breaking point a couple of months ago. I realized how much I earn in a year and how much debt I have. Funny thing was the income was rising and the debt was staying the same. I'm watching more carefully than ever where every dollar goes and have cut back on the (fairly regular until now) splurges. I'm on course to have a credit card (0%), a personal loan (12%), and my car (5.25%) -total just under 27k-paid off completely by Feb. '09 at the latest. Then it's on to retirement savings. I can't wait!

You are a very lucky person.  I too was debt free for a while.  Then I discovered I had debt that I did not know about.  Talk about going from the top to the bottom of the emotions ladder.  

Be that as it is I will be debt free gagain and when I am that will be the end.  I will retire in four years and I will not have debt when I retire.

Stay the course it is well worth the sacrifice.

Gene

Yes - It is great to not have any debt.  We have not had a house payment since 1990 (17 years) and have paid cash for our last two cars.  We both draw a nice pension with COLAs and also get a reduced Social Security income.  We both have IRAs and are having to withdraw RMDs each year - that money goes into our grandson's trust account.  

We have several credit cards as a matter of convenience but take great pleasure in paying off the entire balance each month and thus stiff the credit issuer with 0 interest.  I LOVE IT.

My major worry now with credit is identity theft.  Texas finally got on board with many other states and now allows you to freeze your credit for a nominal $10.00 to each of the three major credit outfits.  That is next on the agenda.  I don't want some loser opening up credit in our name and we certainly don't need any more credit cards.  

Once that is done, I will feel like all is OK.  GO SOONERS

If you don't have relatives to ask for help, use zero percent cards to pay off the other cards. I had $5,000 on a Sears card(thanks to my ex) that when I paid $200

a month for two years, the balance went down about $300. I found two zero percent cards that each took half of Sears. Then the same $200 I paid each month ate up the balances quickly. I did have to get creative after the first year whan those cards were about to go to interest accounts, so I found two other cards at zero percent for a year, paying off the Sears balance in just over 2 years and not paying any interest.

I'm about to where I can smile,nearly.With a child in collage,40,000 in combined unsecured loans,& 35,000 in cc debt I had finally hit bottom.My wife working 2 teaching jobs & myself 23 yr lineman,we made good money & couldn't understand where it all went.It was easy when the eyes came open,I was blowing it !! I left my 23 year career,took a job with a new co.in Dallas traveling.Its been a year & 7 months,the last cc will go next month & the 40k loan is already down to 32000.The kid graduated last semster & is doing well with little help.We think we can be debt free this time next year if everything holds together.The fingers are crossed.

I don't get it ... it's never been a problem for me to stay out of (bad) debt.  I use credit cards, but I pay them off every month.  I have debt, but for the most part it is good debt.  I have a $400,000 mortgage, and I just borrowed another $145,000 on another mortgage for an investment property.  I put away about 50% of my paycheck every month (1st paycheck pays bills, 2nd paycheck all goes to savings)

So I have over half a million in debt, but I have a net worth of about $100,000 (savings, mutual funds,retirement accts, market value of properties)

If I were to sell everything off, then I'd have no debt.  I'm 26 years old.  I'm actually having a hard time finding things to waste my money on because I have already bought a lot of the stuff I want ('cept maybe a nice new car).  Is it luck, hard work, or just good practice?  I'm a miligroup associate- www.miligroup.net

I currently owe 55,000 on my mortgage and 5,000 on my credit card. I've saved enough in my IRA to pay off both these obligations. I'm still deiciding if it is smarter to pay off my mortgage, or to invest the money in mutual funds and watch it grow. It is nice to know that in an emergency, I COULD pay off all my debt.

I've always been a smart cookie.  Never buy things beyond my means except a home.  Everything else can and should be paid with cash!!!  

I'd truly love to be in your place right now.  I have over $10K in debt, between old, unpaid (and unpayable) car loan, two ancient charge cards and a hospital bill.  I have no job, my husband and a small monthly SSI payment are our only income, and we're  at wits' end trying to figure something out. :(

It took me a while, but I became debt free many years ago. I now run all my month,y expenditures through a single credit card and pay it off each month and keep the balance each month to $600 or less. I like to hear some are contributing to some type of retirement account earlier in life. I wish I had started at 25 but didn't start till around 35. Always contribut the max if you are able. I finally realized that I do not have to be part of the consumer machine. I ser savings goals and allow myself an inexpensive reward for each goal. Usually a DVD. I also find that my employment is more enjoyable. I go to work because I enjoy my job, not because I am trapped by debt.

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