Tuesday, March 15, 2016

The Dreaded Budget Talk


Catching back up with the beginning stages of the buyer process, we are gonna make the dreaded dive into the less infamous budget talk. Everyone knows what it is but not everyone sees the value. To justify my viewpoint, let me tell you about a story of person I'll call Cotton. Cotton was excited to start college. Everyone told Cotton this is what he has to do because its the next step after high school. But Cotton lost interest in just following the "trend" and took a break. A concerned counselor met with Cotton emphasizing the need to continue to build his knowledge and to use college as a tool to lifetime relationships and personal growth. Cotton found his own value in the message and returned to flourish in his studies.

Now I say all that to say that when we have responsibilities with our income, the next step is budgeting. But people give all kinds of reasons of why budgeting is dreaded but we have to find our own value in it. Some may say its too much work, there's no room for error, its a boring way to live, they aren't discipline enough to keep to the budget, or it makes their money feel small. But to all those reasons, I have one response--cater your budget to you. By doing so, you can allocate money for miscellaneous or error, reward yourself to make budgeting fun, develop habits to create the discipline, monitor your spending to see all the many places your money is used, and understand there is value in pre-arranging your money. So if your dreading the budget just consider this...


picture courtesy by www.hypable.com

Budgeting is as instrumental to our finances as sleeping is to our personal health. The average adult should maintain 7-9 hours of sleep per day. Too much or too little will have an impact on our body’s functions. Too much or too little budgeting will cause over usage of credit cards, under-utilization of income, or inability to meet bill payments. So for our future home buyers and savers, budgeting is going to be key to achieving our goals. If you are a future home buyer; give yourself some "curb appeal" by showing great payment history and discipline with debt. If you are a saver, we need to continue to grow our disposable income. 

The principal of budgeting is to add up the income and assign an allocation for each thing that you usually spend your income on. Everyone's budget will be different, you can be general or you can be very specific. It can be from daily to monthly monitoring. So I’ll give an example of a balanced budget—one that can include personal interests and responsibilities...


Pay check for 3/12/16:      $1800
Item
Budget
Rent
$900
Utilities
$100
Food
$175
Transportation
$50
Subscriptions: Netflix, Kindle
$20
Entertainment
$60
Hair
$45
Credit Card 1-Discover
$50
Tithe/Donation
$160
Savings 1-Retirement
$70
Savings 2-Miscellanous
$20
Savings 3-House
$150

I now entrust you, my readers, to start or continue to budget to find ways to maximize your income. Theoretically, the budget should be categorized by the following percentages: 50% to bills, 10% to savings, 10% to personal wants/needs, and 30% to insurance, food, travel/entertainment. Catch our next post on March 30th about how much life insurance is enough? Comment or share below or on social media at Instagram @practicalwallet, Twitter @practicalwallet and Pinterest @practicalwallet.

Saturday, March 5, 2016

Recognition is Due!





Special shout out to a kind friend of mines, Sathiyyah that recognized me for a Liebster Award nomination via her great blog NichofTaime!! Since I'm so new to this blogging world, I did find it really refreshing that someone other than myself found my blog inspirational and worthy of their time. 

The rules of this award are as follows:
-Thank your blogger friend for nominating you
-Share the award on your blog and social media accounts
-Answer the ten questions you were given by your nominator
-Nominate 10 other new bloggers that you admire
-Notify your nominees via social media


So here I go...


1. How long have you been blogging? Just a little over one month.

2. What inspired you to begin your current blog? I like to help people. There are a lot of people who want to be home owners and financially secure but don't have mentors. I just want to reach people and encourage them to reach their potential.

3. What do you love most about yourself? My best quality is my resilience. I love that I inspire to be stronger and try to grow in areas of weakness. When I have an obstacle or challenge or sickness, I don't let it consume me too long, I seek help and take action.

4. What is your favorite hobby? I never had a consistent hobby or game that keeps me. My pet peev is repetition but I do enjoy home searching. I can go hours on zillow, homes.com, realtor.com, my credit union program, and houzz. Most of my search is based on me not being able to afford 90% of the houses and hoping the market will change lol.

5. What is one hair care product that you cannot do without? I always need a good deep conditioner. Right now I am using As I Am's Hydration Elation Intensive Conditioner which does wonders for my dry scalp.

6. What are a few long-term goals for your blog? Down the road I want to do interviews for success stories and maybe some celebrity cameos. If the blog goes well, I want to create products around the subjects like books and posters.

7. How much time did it take you to launch your blog after the initial idea? Probably about 1 month and half because I announced the idea and didn't want people to think I was flaking.

8. What is your favorite quote? What's meant to be, will be.

9. Where is your favorite place to blog? Starbucks? Panera? Reading nook in your home? Right at home with my hubby.

10. Are you an “as you go” blogger or do you prefer to schedule ahead? I don't quite have a pattern yet but hope to be a "as you go" since scheduling is not working out well for me :)

So I nominate the following blogs from friends and inspiring people that I haven't met yet.



 Dee Dee's SipShopVino


 Tiffany's Imbued, LLC


Sebastian's The Gay Bestie

Jessica's HERstory

the following are not new bloggers but definitely worth a visit as well:



 Smart Asset

My questions to my nominees are 1. How long have you been blogging? 2. What is the best advice some one gave you? 3. What is your biggest plan for your blog? 4. What is your morning ritual? 5. What is a great book in your current or past collection? 6. What age do you plan to retire and do you have a plan? 7. What helps you find your inspiration for your blog  and its posts? 8. Do you like oatmeal or grits? 9. Can you name place in the world you want to travel to? 10. What is your best blog post so far?



Does your debt nail you down?

 It's time to get MOTIVATED! It's time to get ENGAGED! It's time to be HOPEFUL!
Our current financial status whether good or bad is not a description or map of who we are. We decide who we are and we are in control at all times. Take back your control mentally by building confidence in knowing you can achieve your goals. Once we open our mind to it, we can begin to create the tools to knock our debt down and out. Debt shouldn't nail you down. By nailing you down, I mean debt should not control you and limit your personal life enjoyment.

Courtesy pic by www.animatedviews.com

Our financial status is simply a creation of past decisions and current income. If  we want to change it to make it better, we have to be optimistic. You can't win a fight if you think you are going to lose. If your money is limited, there are ways to have fun without spending money or by being frugal with your money. For example, try substituting a night out at the restaurant for a family potluck or substituting a day at an amusement park for a nature walk or picnic at the park. If your money is not limited but you make spontaneous purchases that limit your savings then you should put place your savings in an account before your go freely spending. 

The biggest way to fight debt is to increase our disposable income. Disposable income is everything you have after you pay your essentials. Three debt fighting strategies that have helped me are below:

      1.  Find out how much interest is added monthly to your credit card or loan account. Then pay the total interest plus your minimum payment plus a little extra cushion. These payments can be divided into weekly or biweekly submissions but will help you aggressively take control of the account.

Courtesy pic by www.idcwebs.com

                2.     Pay the account with the highest balance first; preferably the higher interest rate too. As you pay one account off, snowball the payment used for the previous account to remaining accounts. You can pay each credit card account until it is under 35% of the credit limit or you can pay it off to use only during emergencies.


3.      When creditors threaten to report you to the credit bureaus, be proactive early, and find out if you have other options. Ask for a payment plan to avoid reporting and see if you qualify for a reduction for being concerned about the account being paid.


Watch for our next personal finance post on ways to increase our income so we can begin to increase our disposable income. Feel free to leave comments on this post or social media on Instagram @practicalwallet, Twitter @practicalwallet and Pinterest @practicalwallet.