tony barnhill
Great Pumpkin - R.I.P
Offline
Banjo - been there, done that....the first thing is to recognize the situation & decide to make it better...lemme tell you what I did way back when (remember, I'm much older than many of you guys).
I started out by "paying myself first"...everytime I got a paycheck, I put 10% of my GROSS in a savings account - yep, GROSS...then, I paid my necessary bills & when the money ran out, I minimized my lifestyle by doing without.
I remember taking my lunch to work...I remember when we only owned 1 car...I remember taking Jerri & Shannon to McDonald's for a 'big night out' & ordering 1 hamburger for myself because I knew Shannon was too small to finish hers & I'd get it as part of my meal.
Then, I started looking for additional ways other than my Army salary to make money (ergo, theAutoist)....everytime I got a promotion, I took the majority of my monthly salary increase & bought a Series E savings bond...when I retired from the Army 20 years later, those savings bonds paid for our current house!
I've only bought 4 new cars in my life (I'm 62 & have owned a car since I was 15), & the 'new' cars - non-MG - that we buy are for her to drive....I always buy cars that are a couple of years old & have been traded in by the guy who buys a 'new' one every year, fool that he is....& I never make car payments to a dealership - I make them to myself! Still today, I have a savings account that is solely for buying a 'new' car & every month deposit into it so that when Jerri is ready for a 'new' car, we have the cash.
As my savings account grew I did put into another account 1 month's gross salary for emergencies, & then started looking for other investments beyond the savings account starting small at first & growing as I could afford to. Now, at retirement, I keep what, to us, amounts to a year's expenses in a savings account to cover emergencies (its grown over the years from a month's salary to a year's worth of expensies)...if I have to replace my HVAC like we had to earlier this year, I dip into that emergency account & then work to replace that amount over time.
I never considered a house as part of my investment plan (maybe that's because I always lived in Army housing on post) and even now I consider it a place to live & an endowment to my daughter after I die.
I could go on talking about developing a stock portfolio, 401K & 403B (I actually focused on 403B's more than 401K's) but you get the idea...
Frugality, paying yourself first, not trying to keep up with everybody else, reading, studying, learning are the keys to my success
I started out by "paying myself first"...everytime I got a paycheck, I put 10% of my GROSS in a savings account - yep, GROSS...then, I paid my necessary bills & when the money ran out, I minimized my lifestyle by doing without.
I remember taking my lunch to work...I remember when we only owned 1 car...I remember taking Jerri & Shannon to McDonald's for a 'big night out' & ordering 1 hamburger for myself because I knew Shannon was too small to finish hers & I'd get it as part of my meal.
Then, I started looking for additional ways other than my Army salary to make money (ergo, theAutoist)....everytime I got a promotion, I took the majority of my monthly salary increase & bought a Series E savings bond...when I retired from the Army 20 years later, those savings bonds paid for our current house!
I've only bought 4 new cars in my life (I'm 62 & have owned a car since I was 15), & the 'new' cars - non-MG - that we buy are for her to drive....I always buy cars that are a couple of years old & have been traded in by the guy who buys a 'new' one every year, fool that he is....& I never make car payments to a dealership - I make them to myself! Still today, I have a savings account that is solely for buying a 'new' car & every month deposit into it so that when Jerri is ready for a 'new' car, we have the cash.
As my savings account grew I did put into another account 1 month's gross salary for emergencies, & then started looking for other investments beyond the savings account starting small at first & growing as I could afford to. Now, at retirement, I keep what, to us, amounts to a year's expenses in a savings account to cover emergencies (its grown over the years from a month's salary to a year's worth of expensies)...if I have to replace my HVAC like we had to earlier this year, I dip into that emergency account & then work to replace that amount over time.
I never considered a house as part of my investment plan (maybe that's because I always lived in Army housing on post) and even now I consider it a place to live & an endowment to my daughter after I die.
I could go on talking about developing a stock portfolio, 401K & 403B (I actually focused on 403B's more than 401K's) but you get the idea...
Frugality, paying yourself first, not trying to keep up with everybody else, reading, studying, learning are the keys to my success
Hey Guest!
smilie in place of the real @
Pretty Please - add it to our Events forum(s) and add to the calendar! >> 

