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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

 

Congradualations! We just joined you and the feeling is great.  However, it took until we were 58 years old to do it.

i'm retired 4 years ago paid off our mortgage 15 years ago , send my two kids to college got some scholarship . no car note note , no cc own  3 properties kids got decent job and have family ,and still got saving and investment maybe 7 figure.and children got no student loan!!!!!

When my husband and I (both professionals) purchased a home, we selected one at less than 1/2 our total gross earnings. This allowed us to pay off the mortgage in 3 years. We've NEVER had credit card debt.  We buy small no frills cars with cash. It's really nice to say you owe no one anything. When having a bad day at work, you know you are working because you want to not because of a large debt payment over your head. What freedom!!!!

I also am debt free, and yes it is great. I have a couple credit cards and i pay off the balance each month i call it biting the bullet and i pay online so there is no turning back once i hit the enter key...my home is paid for and i never did any of those 2nd mortgages or borrow against it. I saw all the homes going up in value and i sat tight and said what goes up must come down and boy was i right about that....I even save more since i dont drive any more i got rid of my car and the maintenance and gas and insurance also now i ride with my family and friends..i give them for gas.. i keep my utilities down i watch how i use them and i look for bargains..if i need a piece of furniture i look on CraigsList first some great bargains on there...it can be done in my youth i was up to my eyeballs in debt but i got smart in my old age....

Donna-

I so admire what you are doing.  Good for you to be debt free.  My husband and I look forward to being in your shoes by January of 2009.  Just one more year of college tuition, boarding and additional expences.  We can't WAIT!!!

Keep us posted on your progress.  I'm curious  to see how you are dealing with medical insurance issues as soon as COBRA coverage ends.  You have TREMENDOUS strength and fortitude!!!  Keep it up and keep us posted.

Mary

(Another Half a Centurian)

I'm curious as to how many people out there do have significant debt but also have significant savings.

My husband and I (40s) have saved and invested, and we now have $600k in 401(k), $200k in home equity, but we also owe a lot due to bad cash flow management and bad luck -- job loss. We've struggled for over a year, but we now owe $130k (40k in student loans, 40k in retirement loans, & 50k in credit card debt -- two years ago it was only student loans, no other debt aside from the mortgage).

Our cars are boring but paid for.

We are still strapped even though we're starting to climb out of the job-loss hole (which occurred after a career change to a lower paying profession for my husband).

Our cash flow still stinks and we have some major bills (property taxes) coming due.

I'm tempted to cash out one retirement plan (90k) and take the hit on taxes to pay off the credit cards and to let the retirement loan on the other account lapse. But the taxes would really hurt.

being 100% debt free is a great feeling.  My Wife and I just paid off our house this year.  Now the only thing we owe each month is Car and home Insurance, Utilities, Property Taxes, Food.  I just don't understand how people can live each month knowing that most of their income is going to pay a mortgage payment, car payment, Credit Card Bills.  For those who can't seem to get out of dept, just remember.

Power is not in the consumption of goods and services.  Power is knowing you could buy something paid in full, then not buying it.  If something doesn't make you money, then its costing you money.  

I just love getting those credit card offers in the mail each day!  What I love even better is responding to them!~

I have a big rubber stamp that reads "DECLINED" and I use red ink to stamp "DECLINED" on the application.

I then attach a form letter that reads:

What's in MY Wallet?

It isn't a Capital One card!

It won't be your card.

"CASH IS KING-DEBT IS DUMB!"

I'm on the "Dave Ramsey Plan"!

I am happy to report to you that your credit card has been "DECLINED"

I just paid off my car a month ago after increasing my payments to $800/month the last (5th) year of the loan.  My next goal is to pay off the balance of my school loan that I've had since 2003.  I'm making $2000/month payments on this loan as of this fall and should be officially debt-free in six months or less.  I'm planning a BIG vacation next summer to celebrate (paid in cash!) then start saving for a house.  I have savings plus several retirement plans as well.  I'd like to think I'm fiscally-responsible ;)  Kudos to everyone else who watches where every penny goes and works towards/stays debt-free.  Cash is king.

I commend all for getting out of debt. But, the American way of life is debt. How do you think bush is paying for the war. I have 10,000 in debt and 60,000 in  retirement accounts.  

The issue is that without debt spending, the economy would crumble. All we have is debt.

The jobs are being farmed overseas, there is no pension funds, Big business has all but turned the average american worker into a mexican farm worker. There is no real tax base in America for the average person.

I love debt. away with all these big companies that sold us out for cheap indian labor and take benifits and good paying jobs away.

The only real revenge is to rack up debt and not pay it. Let the $1.96 workers in indonesia pay their bills.

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