05.30.07
My Financial Goals
These are in the order I wish to achieve them. The first two should be done by the end of the summer.
A few things:
Thank God most of my credit cards had relatively low limits! I had a lot of them, but they could have been so much worse!
I’ve been out of college since 1993 and am STILL paying on this student loan! I had to get some forebearances and such and at some points I should have just scrimped and paid the payments. Oh well, can’t cry over spilled milk.
The last items, student loan and emergency savings, are split up so that it’s easier for me to get to goal. That way I can scratch off mini-goals without waiting to get to the end.
1. Get $1000 into emergency savings.
2. Pay off AmeriCredit – $335.14
3. Pay off old gym account – $444.89
4. Pay off Spirit of America – $478.53
5. Pay off Premier #1 – $570.89
6. Pay off Providian – $667
7. Pay off Premier #2 – $658.23
8. Pay off Premier #3 – $691.31
9. Pay off Premier #3 – $762.09
10. Pay off Orchard Bank – $1524.45
11. Pay off Capital One – $2047.42
12. Get student loan under $20k
13. Get student loan under $15k
14. Get student loan under $10k
15. Get student loan under $5k
16. Pay off student loan!
17. Save $2500 in emergency savings
18. Save $5000 in emergency savings
19. Save $7500 in emergency savings
20. Save $10,000 in emergency savings
Why I’m here
First, I’d like to thank Michael at It’s Your Money. I emailed him to thank him for such a fantastic website and he encouraged me to start my own debting blog. I debated for a while, and decided one that was a little anonymous is OK for now. I’m still a bit hesitant about putting this all out there as I’ve made some not-so-smart decisions in the past.
I’ve always had a bad relationship with money, which is why the title of this blog is “Healing My Relationship with Money.” Like all relationships, there are issues that need to be fixed. To be honest, if this was a relationship with a person, I would have called it quits long ago as I’ve always been bad with my money, since I was a kid. Even when I was making my own money I spent it without really knowing what I spent it on. However, money is a fact of life and I need to have a relationship with it, so I may as well make it a healthy relationship.
I grew up without a lot of money and as I got older always felt poor, even when I knew I really wasn’t. I wasn’t making a lot of money but was working two jobs for quite some time. Of course, I still hadn’t gotten to the root of my problem and was still struggling. Now I’m working at a job that pays a decent salary — not a huge amount, but the amount I always told myself, “If I can make $x a year, I’ll be fine.” Well, after a year of making that amount I was no better off than when I started, so took my New Year’s Resolution seriously in 2007. I decided to start paying attention to where my money was going and to stop putting my head in the sand and deal with the problem.
Since January, 2007, I’ve made quite a bit of progress. Some of it is financial, but much of it is my attitude. I have paid off 16 small accounts under $200. I have also been paying all my bills on time since then and sticking to a spending plan that also allows for going to a movie once in a while, buying a DVD, etc. If I’m too strict I tend to go on a splurge and give up, which is part of my problem from the past. So, I learned my lesson and realized I need to figure a little money into my budget for these items so I don’t go nuts all at once and blow the whole thing.
I do have several financial goals that I will be posting, but thought posting about why I’m doing this would help. It’s something I should have done sooner, but I’m trying to live my life not thinking about what I did wrong but acting on what I know to be right and moving on.