I truly
believe that there are signs in the universe that if you take the time to pay
attention and listen to them, they will let you know when things are going off
the rails or when you are heading down the right path. I don’t think I am the
only one who has beliefs that support the idea that you can manifest the good or the bad in your life
based on the messages that you are sending out.
Just to
give you an idea of what that might look like, believer or not, here is how we
spent one month listening, cringing, paying attention and then heading down the
right path.
Jeff
Foxworthy uses the phrase, “You might be a redneck if….” as a starter to his
many jokes, to help you identify the signs that you are indeed a redneck. Here are my signs that, “You may be in
trouble financially if….”
You max out your borrowing account to cover
your Mastercard payment. If you are playing what I refer to as the money game each month, with a
revolving door of money going around in circles from high interest credit
cards, to low interest borrowing accounts to zero percent interest credit cards
for six months only, and then back again….you may be in financial trouble.
You paid the Mastercard bill by mistake twice
in one month. How
often do you and your spouse have conversations regarding the accounts, bill
payments, savings and retirement? More importantly, how often do you have this
conversation uninterrupted by bigger priorities like work, sleep, appointments,
events and fighting kids?
There is a
horrible gap between the proportion of time that we set aside to discuss our
financial planning with each other compared to the relative importance of what we need to discuss.
The result of our lack of devoting the
necessary time means that I have left the retirement planning entirely up to my
husband. He has left the bill paying mostly up to me, but not always.
If he were
to die tomorrow, I would have little to no knowledge of what we have saved and
where to access the money we have in anything from RRSPS, to investment
accounts to life insurance to his own company’s benefit plan.
If we were
to both die simultaneously, I recently found out that our children would end up in foster care until the
courts decide who best to raise them and our estate would be up the air in
until the government gets paid and our funeral costs get covered. Even then, there is no guarantee without a
will that our children would receive anything that we own or be placed with a family member.
Kinda important?! No kidding, yet we dawdle like many others in
getting a will in place because we never seem to have the money for it. It’s outrageous!
The signs
of this lack of communication in our relationship shows up in small and big ways in our current
financial well-being. We both paid the Mastercard this month….someone, not
naming any names, neglected to write the payment down on the statement. (It
wasn’t me….but someone….) The result left a credit balance on our Mastercard
and our line of credit extended to its limit when it wasn't even necessary.
The cheques you gave your sister for your
nieces birthday's bounces and you are charged $90 for overdraft on your line of
credit. I can’t believe I am sharing this, because it
is SO stupid, it’s beyond embarrassing and I haven’t even had a conversation
with my sister yet. So the cheques I wrote in August, she cashed in
October…right at the same time that we double paid the Mastercard and maxxed
out our borrowing account to cover it. The shame I
feel is worse than the extra charges we need to fit into our budget for next
month to make up for it.
I mean the
timing couldn’t have been worse….this is like the perfect storm of stupid on so
many levels….I don’t know where to begin. Maybe I should have started with…..If
you are writing birthday cheques to pay for gifts on your borrowing account,
you may be in financial trouble. Or how about…If you are not checking to see
that the cheques you write are cashed on your account before you write more
cheques…... or best of all is,..... if your finances are
shaming yourself with other family members, you are definitely in financial
trouble…..
A lousy financial strategy leads you to put money
into a high interest saving account while you are paying fees on your chequing account due to overdrafts. Imagine my surprise when my husband
and I sat down to sort out this mess to find out that he had money being
deducted off his paycheck each month to go into a high interest savings
account. Yet he couldn’t keep his chequing
account from going into overdraft each month because of the deduction of income.
It’s so crazy, I can barely believe it!
We also
realized that the other reason the chequing account was overdrawn was because
the money being put towards the kids RESP was going into the wrong account and
has been for 10 months! It’s ridiculous, but so easily solvable once we made
the time to discuss it and fix it. There was also a windfall waiting for us in
the other account since the money was just sitting there, not being applied to
anything. Nuts!!
What came
out of this giant anvil on the head from the universe was that we seriously
needed to start talking more about where we are at financially and not once a
month….but rather, we decided, once a week. While it sounds like a big
commitment from two people who would be lucky to have had a yearly conversation
in the past, we both felt that by talking weekly, it gives us time to make the
adjustments we need before an entire month or better yet, ten months, is financially wrecked by stupid
decision making.
There are good signs as well....this is how you can tell that you are on the right track financially after going down the wrong path.....
You may be on the right track financially when
cheques from your health insurance provider start landing on your doorstep. Remember that HSA spending account
I discovered through taking the time to understand my company benefits? We
received five pay checks in the month of November that covered spending for my
entire family and topped up the benefits my husband’s company provides. It’s
like winning the Set for Life of Lottery at our house! I can’t believe how much
lost income we were missing out on because I didn’t want to take the time to
understand my policy….which I am paying for, by the way.
You review your bill statements and find a
windfall. We just
received our fuel oil statement this
month and because I was paying attention, not just filing it and forgetting it,
I uncovered another double bill payment back in July of almost $500. We must be
the most vigilant bill payers on the planet….that or we are the worst investors
ever. Say, honey…if we overpay Bluewave and Mastercard….do you think they will
send us profit sharing? Yikes, it’s painful. The silver lining was a windfall
in our bank account when we contacted our fuel supplier and politely asked for
the money back.
You increase your disposable income by finding
more affordable services or using less of what you have. By switching our Cable provider,
looking at our home heating costs, reducing our electricity consumption, making
tough choices about our childcare needs and getting smart about using the
resources we already had, we spent substantially less then every month
previous. Hard to believe it can be that
easy to slow down the bleeding when it comes to money, but it is. There are
always ways to spend less and in a way that makes sense for your family.
Finally, you finish the month, and there is still
money in your bank account and the bills are paid. Who knew we could stick to our budget one month
into the new plan?! But we have! We finished
the month of October with our first payments of 15% made to decreasing our
debt, paying all of our bills without credit and having 5% of our income saved
and in the bank. We also got the buffer back on our borrowing account by not having to pay anything on our Mastercard this month and by using our financial windfall.
Our Austerity Measures pantry and freezer cooking month paid
off too. We saved our entire grocery budget by eating only from our existing
kitchen inventory. We had some interesting meals (Pasta Surprise with three
kinds of noodles was a hit with the kids) and also some excellent ones (forgot
about some T-Bone steaks in the freezer that were a hit with the parents).
The
greatest thing out of the austerity measures pantry experiment was a turnover
of the product in our fridge and freezer, an immediate reduction in the food
being thrown out, an increase in our kitchen pantry space and our kids seemed more open to whatever was on the table
since we included them in the changes we needed to make along the way.
Our son who is six asked in the beginning of our Austerity Measures discussion, “So does that mean we are poor now?”, which gave us a
great laugh since we may have little money in the bank right now, but if you
look around our home, there is no poverty….all the money is around us.
We still
have a long way to go, but when I look at how many signs we have had that,
“things might be better financially if…”, I can’t help but feel empowered by
the changes we are making. No shopping spree for things we don't really need or impulse purchases on treats we think we deserve could make me feel this good.
We are your
average Canadian family and we make stupid financial decisions, sometimes
without even thinking about it………..
I'm crying and laughing at the same time. YAY for you all!
ReplyDeleteWe are hilariously sad....:) It's good to laugh at yourself and even better knowing that others can laugh with you. Thanks!
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