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How To Stick To
Your Budget
By Terry Rigg
I've had a lot of people tell me that setting up their budget was simple but
when it came to living by it payday after payday they admitted losing interest
in a very short time.
Let's face it. The day to day drudgery of trying to figure out how
to best spend your money isn't the most interesting aspect of our lives.
Let me see if I can make the budget process a little more appealing to
you. I don't have any magic or secret process to tell you about but I do
have a method that will show you why a budget doesn't have to be boring.
I can do this with one word. GOALS
When we think of goals most of us look far into the future to our
retirement. That's the problem. It's hard to imagine when your 20
what you will need when you are 65.
Accomplishing your goals doesn't have to take a lifetime. Even when they
do you can set milestones along the way to break it up and get a sense of
accomplishment much earlier.
If you have problems staying on a budget try setting some short term
goals. We can start with an easy one. Try to save $100 without
missing it.
Unless you have no income at all this is easy. Don't spend any
coins for any reason. If you buy something for 25 cents break a dollar.
Then all you have to do is put the change out of your pocket or purse in a jar
every day.
This sounds simple enough and you've probably heard about saving change
before. If you are a skeptic like I was you probably think that this isn't going
to lead to any real savings at all.
Let's get back to that $100 I was talking about. How long do you
think it would take you to save enough change to equal $100. 6 months?
1 year?
The fact is that the average person can save $100 in less than three
months. In some cases even sooner. That's not very long to
accomplish a goal.
Now let's look at setting milestones using the same method. Roll your
change once a month to see how close you are to your goal. Write down how
much you saved that month on a piece of paper and put that and your rolled
change back in the jar. Keep doing this until you've reached your $100
goal.
Now, what do you do with that $100? You could put it in a savings
account and earn a little interest but it still wouldn't be worth much more than
$100 even after a year.
My suggestion would be to pay it on one of your credit cards. That way
you could turn that $100 into much more with the interest you would save.
It may sound like I strayed from the topic of this article by talking
about saving your change. Actually a budget is just a system of reaching
goals. You do this by working backwards. You decide what it is you want to
do and then make all of your money decisions based on that end.
Setting up and maintaining a budget is going to take organization and
discipline. This task will be much easier if you are working toward
something you really want.
To learn more about Budgets you can visit
The
Complete Budget and Bill Organizer to find Budget Stretcher's free budget
system complete with all of the forms and worksheets.
About the Author: Terry Rigg is the
author of
Living Within Your Means - The Easy Way and editor of the Budget
Stretcher web site. To Subscribe to The FREE Budget Stretcher Newsletter and
receive The Complete Budget and Bill Organizer absolutely free just visit his
home page at
http://www.homemoneyhelp.com
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