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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

 

john, why on earth would you pay off your mortgage ? are you getting a credit line on your house or do you already have one? 100k in your 401k account is very good justake sure your not reinvesting it into your company.

peace

It does feel good! We have one small credit card with a limit of $300.00 just for internet purchases. The cars were paid off years ago. The only big bill left is the mortgage at $500 a month and 10 years to go. We have just got to get started on the retirement savings again. Now if we could only reduce our medical bills we will be home free. The weekly gasoline purchase is something else.

Unless you stop the Federal Reserve from printing money, you will likely fall back into debt  Even if you stop using credit cards the fact that others use them bids up prices. If you doubt it, ask yourself how house prices outstripped inflation for many years.

The plain fact of the matter is that a debt based economy needs people to get into debt by taking out loans. If everybody stopped taking out loans , money would literally disappear.

In the future, bankers are working to control the food supply. That is necessary so that food  prices rise and once again people will have to take on more debt to survive.

It will be just like the Bible predicted when you will have to work all day for a loaf of bread.

That's very inspiring, including reading the comments posted regarding the article. For years I would build my IRA then cash it in to bail my business out of the hole- all to the tune of over $50,000. I am now 43 and starting over yet again... and yet, with a little savings savvy and self control around those 'gotta have' purchases, I have managed to put away about $10k again into retirement, and my boyfriend and I just bought a second home as investment property. Live and learn, and even if you trip up, keep learning!!

Since you paid your relative off, I don't suppose they would be willing to loan out some more money to a stranger in need? Be calm, I already know the answer to that! What if you don't bring in as much as you owe each month and it is because of roughly $100,000 in school loans? I'm happy for you, but sadly in very serious trouble myself and I feel I am not alone. Look at the sad shape our housing market is in...record #'s of forclosure!!! There is no answer for some people out there as they are always going to be in debt until the day they die. I can see that I am one of those, unless I win the lottery of course! P.S.- don't own a home and have nothing to my name except DEBTs! Any advice for me?

I remember back in 1989 I added up all the interest I  paid on credit cards during the last year and figured out that I could have bought the new couch I was currently paying off on credit,  outright. In fact, I could have purchased two chairs to go with it.  It's a sobering experience, and one that I wished I would have learned at 23 instead of 33.  We paid the cards off and vowed never to let our eyes get bigger than our pocketbook ever again.  In the process I learned how to cook instead of eating out as well as a number of cost cutting measures that might sound silly, but truly add up.  This is how I have raised my two children, and I can proudly say that they are financially astute young adults.  You really don't need half the stuff you think you do.

Great write up.  I was debt free once and get back into debt because of family but now I'm getting a hold of it again and soon I'll be in the promise land.  Yeah!!!

My wife and I are working the Dave Ramsey Plan and taking  his Financial Peace University class. We are paying off our Credit Card and Vehicle Loans and during this period, we have temporarily 0'd our 401k contributions, as Per Dave Ramsey, that gives a few hunderd more a month to pay off debt, then once we have 3-6 months of expenses saved, we'll hit the retirement w/ 401k's and Roths with 15% of our income. Can't wait to be debt free.

GOD IS GOOD!!!

Single dad/ been there/done that/ I like no debt/I hope young people learn it sooner! do a debit card. Mike Mccormack

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