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Economic Recession

Getting out of Debt after Christmas Spending

Are you like a lot of people that spent too much money for Christmas and now are wondering how you’re going to make ends meet, just to pay for Christmas spending? Here’s some help.

First, there’s no sense in beating yourself up over what’s done.  Just try to do better next Christmas and don’t  spend what you don’t have.

Now let’s get down to work. You spent money that you couldn’t afford to spend and now you’re going to have to make some adjustments to meet your financial obligations. Depending on your personal situation, you may need to make anywhere from tiny changes to some drastic changes, and fast.

First off – it makes sense to first stop spending money. If you don’t need it, don’t get it. If you can do without it, leave it. Stop the money flow that’s going out unless it’s something you need – like medicine or food (not eating out food, but food as in you cook it).  The more immediate changes to money going out is your eating habits and going places habits.  Cook and eat at home, don’t go out partying and spending, etc. 

Next, turn off or cut back on anything and everything that you can.  This means changes the $150 a month cable or Dish TV to the bare minimum, or ask if it can be put on hold, meaning no bill. Take a lower cell phone plan out, or turn off what you can. Trust me when I say that the kids do NOT need their cell phones and you don’t need a $400 a month cell phone bill.  Cut the kids’ allowance to half, or less.

If you’re in the habit of going out all the time, eating out all the time, etc., you CAN do without all that.  Imagine how much money you will save that you can put to the bills and get out of debt after all that Christmas spending!

With the price of gas per gallon, not going when it’s not necessary will save you a lot of money. Not eating out will save a lot also.  When shopping for groceries, buy foods that you actually have to cook, not premade or ready to eat.  Cooking meals will save you a lot of money. Sure it takes more time, but the savings are worth it!

For even further savings, you can go into drastic frugal living mode.  Believe me when I say that people have, can, and do live quite well practicing frugal living.  Of course if you’re accustomed to spending a lot of money on frivelous things, then the change to frugal living might be a bit of a shock to you (and the rest of the family) but you’ll make it just fine.

Reuse and make do with what you have, rather than spending on things. You can improvise on a lot of things. Reuse zipper freezer bags by washing them and letting them dry. Wash and reuse heavy duty foil. Turn the central air and heat so that it doesn’t run as much. Don’t run the dryer as much. Turn the hot water heater to a lower setting. Wash dishes by hand and don’t run the dishwasher as often. Groom the dogs yourself instead of paying a dog groomer to do it. Switch out babysitting by bartering with a friend or neighbor instead of paying for  it.

There’s a lot of ways to immediately save money and a lot of long term ways to save money. Depending on your particular needs and spending habits, you can make changes and get out of debt. But you’ve got to want to do this and be commited to making it work!

Sit down and make a list of everything that you can either do without (at least until you’re caught up on the bills) and everything that you can either turn off or put on hold. Then write the approximate amount that you’ll save on each of these things, and make a total.  Some of the savings will be immediate, some won’t be noticed until the following month.

Take the money you’re saving and pay towards the Christmas debts you made.  Do this as soon as you have the funds, not later.  If you wait, you’ll be tempted to spend as usual and you won’t get out of debt from your Christmas spending.

 

 

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Frugal Living Tips – Ways to be Frugal

There are a lot of ways to be frugal and practice frugal living in your everyday life. The short version is this – if you want to save money and live on less, you simply have to stop spending money. There are lots of things that we can be do to be frugal that can make for instant savings.

Of course, we can make a budget and stick with it. We can cut the credit cards up and stop maxing them out. We can pay more than the minimum payment on some of our bills. These are great money saving tips.  But the frugal living methods I am talking about today are more basic and something most (if not all) of us can do everyday (or at least often) to live frugally – saving money by not spending it to begin with.

If you want to have a frugal life and save money, then you have to make up your mind to stop spending money. Until you do that, your life will not change. You control you!  If you want to make a change, BE that change. Frugal living is something that all of us can do – we just have to want to.

It’s this simple – if you’re not willing to stop spending, then don’t complain about your money problems. Yes, that sounds harsh. But I say it because of this – I have heard all too many times from people who ask how to save money, how can they make it on less money, how do they do frugal living, what can they do, etc. – and as soon as I tell them, they start: Oh no, I can’t live like that, I can’t do without this or that, I can’t not go shopping, I can’t not eat out every night… I can’t, I can’t.  But in reality, they are saying… I won’t, I won’t. So again, I say: If you’re not willing to stop spending, then don’t complain about your money problems.

That said, for those that want help, here are some frugal living tips that will help you to save money by not spending money:
1. Save scrap paper for notes. If you’re always buying notepads and sticky notes for your home, consider saving scrap paper to write on.  If you print coupons, you might have paper left after clipping them if they didn’t take up the entire page. Plus we all get junk mail. Cut it up and use the backs for jotting down notes.

2. Reuse plastic zipper bags. If you use a lot of plastic food zipper bags, you can wash and reuse them (if they didn’t have meat in them). Lots of times, I will open a bag of this or that and it doesn’t have a way to seal it, so I will put them entire bag into a plastic food zipper bag, just to be able to close it and seal it. Once the food is gone, the bag is fine and reusuable. I just wash it out and let it dry, and use it again.

3. Save plastic food tubs. You can save a lot of money and practice frugal living by saving and using the plastic food tubs that items such as margarine, sour cream, or cottage cheese come in. These are great for storing leftovers in or putting stuff into the freezer – meat, pasta, rice, veggies, etc. Once they get worn out, you can toss them – and you haven’t lost a penny.

4. Pay your bills online. Frugal living wouldn’t be complete today without adding this frugal tip. Granted, there are still a few companies that haven’t caught up with today’s technology and made it possible for their customers to make payments online – but more and more companies are getting there. Not only do you save money on the cost of postage, but the payment is usually instant, and even when it’s not, it’s still much faster than the week it takes for the payment to arrive in the mail. If you’re not sure if a company you do business with accepts online payments, do a search online or call and ask.

5. Cook at home and eat at home.  Yes, we all like the idea of eating out and having someone else cook for us, but that can be expensive, especially if you do it often.  Save it for special occasions or every once in a while – not all the time.

6. Make do with what you have.  Unless you truly need something, make do with what you’ve got.  Nothing screams frugal living more than this!  So many people think they just have to have this or that – yet they have no need for it, no use for it, and all too often spend money just to be spending it. Do you really need another pair of shoes? Do you really need another dress? Do you really need another car?  Learn the difference between want and need.

7. Look for free samples online.  Companies are always giving out free samples.  Granted, a lot of the samples are trial size, but you can also find full size free samples.  Getting free samples is good because obviously it’s a freebie, but it also allow you to try something before you buy it.  So if it turns out you didn’t care for the product, you don’t lose any money because you never spent the money on it to begin with. Free samples are also cool for gift baskets.

8. Do it yourself.  You can save loads of money if you simply do something yourself rather than pay someone to do it for you.  Of course, this only works if you know how to DIY or have access to DIY tutorials, such as online.  If you have something that needs done and you don’t have a clue as to how to accomplish whatever it is, simply do a search for DIY so and so.

9. Barter with family and friends. Trading things or services will save you money, along with whoever you barter with. If you need sewing done and are clueless, consider bartering with someone who sews for something you have or know how to do. If you know how to fix a leaky faucet, you could barter that service with someone who knows how to do something you need done.

Frugal living doesn’t just happen for most people – they have to want to live a frugal life. So many people today live such fast lives – buying, spending, going – and they wonder why they are in such debt, whey they never seem to have any money. If you want a frugal life, you’ve got to be willing to let go of the spending habits.

 

 

 

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Frugal Living Tips: Christmas without Going Broke or in Debt

 

Christmas is coming and with the coming Christmas holiday shopping season, a lot of parents will make the decision to once again go into debt to get their children lots of expensive Christmas gifts. Instead of going broke or deeper in debt, why not have a frugal Christmas?

A frugal Christmas doesn’t mean buying cheap toys that won’t last a week. It simply means having a holiday on your budget, within your means, with your spending dependent on your income and budget.

The problem that many parents face is that their children have seen so much advertising for toys and games, that they want anything and everything. And frankly, as parents, many of us at one time or another think our kids need and deserve loads of expensive gifts – so much so that we will go into debt to get them what they want, even when we can’t afford it and they don’t need it anyway.

Make this the year that you break the cycle of going into debt and going broke, just to buy Christmas gifts that will probably just be shoved to the back of the closet in less than a month anyway.

The idea here is to have a nice Christmas and save money while doing it. Remember what Christmas is all about – it’s the day we celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ. The wise men brought gifts to Jesus, our Lord and Savior. It’s not about going in the hole financially just to buy Christmas gifts and then not be able to pay our bills.

Here are some frugal Christmas tips. Depending on your family’s finances, you can trim these ideas back or expand on them.

1. Draw names. Stop buying a gift or gifts for everyone in the family, all your friends, neighbors, and the pets to boot. Get everyone together that normally buys in this manner and put their names in a bag or bowl and have everyone (not the pets) draw one name out. That’s who they buy for, period. This works for families with lots of children also.

2. Tell the kids something to this effect: This year, instead of buying lots of Christmas gifts, we’re going to do something for someone that needs our help. This could mean making meals and taking them to someone, visiting with people who have no one for Christmas, donating their toys to kids who are less fortunate, etc.

3. Shop the sales and bargains. If you can’t find it on sale or clearance, leave it. This can be online or in the actual store.

4. Make it yourself. Homemade gifts are so much more thoughtful and caring than most store bought gifts, simply because love, care, and thought went into creating the item. Get the family together and tell them that this year you’re making gifts for each other. Use what you have (or can afford) and make something with the gift recipient in mind.

5. Have a story telling or singing. Make a new tradition of the family going out (or staying in) singing Christmas songs. Let the children create and put on a Christmas play or puppet show.

There are so many frugal ways to celebrate Christmas, without going into debt or going broke! Sadly, so many parents believe that if they don’t spend money on their kids, that they are depriving their kids. Actually, it’s quite the opposite! They are teaching their kids that Christmas is about one thing – money. It shouldn’t be that way!

There’s nothing wrong in buying Christmas gifts – to some extent. But when parents end up in debt, year after year, just to buy gifts, there is something wrong. When we go broke to get our kids loads of gifts, yes there is something wrong.

This year, make a difference! Have a frugal Christmas, and feel the difference that it makes when your kids are seeing more of what Christmas is really all about.

 

 

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Frugal Simplicity is on Facebook – Follow Us!

http://www.facebook.com/frugalsimplicity

 

Frugal living just got a little more convenient!  Frugal Simplicity is now on Facebook!  With more than 800 million active users, Facebook is THE place to connect and socialize, and that includes finding and sharing frugal living tips and frugal living ideas, plus printable coupons, freebies, thrifty tips, etc.

Come on over and LIKE us, and be sure to share the page with your friends and family that are into frugal living (or need to be!!).

 

Frugal Simplicity – It’s Not Just About Saving Money, It’s a Way of Life!  Let’s Be Frugal!

Be Frugal, Frugal Living, Frugal Living Tips, Frugal Recipes, Better Budgeting, Money Saving Tips, Frugal Column, Simple Living, Budgeting Tips, Frugal Blog

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Paperless eCoupons – Free Coupons that You Don’t Have to Print

Have you heard about, or used, the new paperless coupon company called SavingStar?  They recently launched. SavingStar makes it really super to save money on groceries.

This is another way to be frugal and practice frugal living!

SavingStar’s e-coupons aren’t printable coupons. In fact, they’re totally paperless. There’s nothing to clip or print because the coupons are 100% digital. Plus they will work at over 100 grocery store chains in 24,000 stores across the nation.

Here’s how it works:

First, just select all of the e-coupons you want from the website, or from the mobile app, and they will then automatically be linked to your store card, right then.

Next, when checking out at the grocery store, simply use your card at the checkout and the money is added into your SavingStar account. Unlike tradittional printable coupons, when you use the SavingStar card, the savings won’t change your grocery bill amount at the register and the amount you save isn’t printed on the receipt. Instead, the amount you save each time you use your card at the checkout gets deposited into your SavingStar account within 2-30 days, depending upon where you shop.

Last, once your SavingStar account reaches at least $5 in savings, you can pick your payout from a bank account deposit, a PayPal account deposit, an Amazon gift card, or a use it to make a donation to charity.

 

 

 

 

 

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