posted 2 weeks ago
Coming from "the old world", my mindset has always been on "setting money aside". I thank my parents for teaching me to be a squirrel. Perhaps it's because when they lived under the Occupation in France, they had to make do with not much, so my mentality has always been that of a miser: I can live on "not much", so I've been able to manage fairly easily and never feel deprived:
Maybe that's what happiness is...
My tastes are not extravagant, especially now that I'm retired and in my late 70s.
I hate numbers, so I've never made a budget, but except for my first car, I never bought on layaway or installments. I think of layaway as a scam: It is a luxury, a convenience that we pay dearly for
Perhaps it's a cultural glitch in this country where we are constantly tempted to buy this or buy that: these commercials are a veritable assault on us (and on our wallets).
You know the "Never a lender or a borrower be"? Well, that's my mentality, and it has served me very well. I'm almost physically ill at the idea of owing money.
Not every decision of mine was good: I remember my twenties and how I felt it was "cool" to smoke cigarettes. For a couple of years, there, I smoked close to a pack a day. When I learned that the tobacco companies had been aware of the connection between cigarettes and lung cancer, I got really upset and felt that the only way to "punish" them was to not purchase their products. I quit cold turkey. (Well, in all honesty, my fiancé at the time helped. He said he really loved me, but kissing a chimney stack did not appeal to him..) That was an easy decision.
The most important expenses go to my health: fixing my teeth, my knees etc., that's priority #1.
I've bought cars and motorcycles, (maybe just shy of a dozen of each over the years) never on credit. As soon as I bought one, I'd start a fund for the next one, and I didn't buy until I could just buy cash.
Even for my homes, I was parsimonious in how I used credit: I put up front all the money I could and made sure I repaid the principal first. The home I bought in between 2 marriages all by myself cost $120,000. I put $60,000 up front, which lowered my payments (a lot) and paid the other $60,000 in 2.5 years. It was work, (don't buy much, no restaurants or cinemas, no travel). But for those couple of years, I worried. "What ifs" were on my mind constantly. I celebrated with cake the month after I paid my final installment.
I made mistakes too. I was young and in love when I bought my first timeshare. I tried to cancel it. It was very hard. but the second time I fell in love, I did it again. I ended up getting rid of the second one but I was hooked pretty hard on that first one and they didn't make it easy to cancel that share (It's a real sinecure for these crooks!). I ended up walking away from it. I still get bills and I throw them regularly in the circular file: I told them I felt hoodwinked and I gave it all back to them (They refused to hear me, so now, I refuse to hear them).
My advice, if you can call it that , is to examine what you are getting for all these "conveniences". You may be appalled at what you pay for it
$10.00 is a donation. $1,000 is an investment, $1,000,000 is a purchase.