For impulse shoppers carrying credit card debt and a habit of buying things they don’t need, the path to frugality can feel overwhelming. If you’ve ever found yourself spending thousands of dollars in just a few weeks on frivolous things, you’re not alone, and there are practical, proven mental strategies that can help. Here are 10 mental tips for embracing the frugality lifestyle, even if you’re a terrible spender. Talk to a Therapist Impulse buying is rarely just about money; it’s often (usually) about the emotion behind your actions. The urge to buy can be extreme, and without addressing the underlying cause, sheer will may not be enough. Speaking with a licensed professional can help you get to the root of the problem. You’re buying these things to soothe an emotional need. If you don’t know what’s happening, you can’t create a plan to beat it. Once you understand what’s driving the behavior, you can create a real plan to overcome it. Set Goals Rather than making an impulse buy, try setting goals for items you don’t need but want. This approach saves you from buying now and scraping by until payday. The key is focusing on the timeline rather than the dollar amount. For example, if you can save $20 a paycheck toward a $100 item, think in terms of paychecks rather than dollars remaining. Your mind will find “three more paychecks” more reasonable to wait for than “I need $60 more.” That mental shift can make all the difference. Use Cash Envelopes The envelope system is a simple but powerful budgeting method. The idea is to keep separate envelopes for each of your bills, savings, and spending categories. Seeing your money, holding it, and feeling it makes your mind more aware of how much you actually have. In today’s world, it helps separate your money for easy budgeting and keeps your spending as cash. It also makes impulse buying harder. You can’t purchase online with cash, and at a store, you can only spend what’s in your envelope. Read More: How To Use the Cash Envelope System To Budget Your Money Effectively Keep Cash Only Even if most of your bills are paid online or through automated payments, that doesn’t mean your spending funds need to live in a bank account too. When you get paid, give yourself a reasonable budget for unnecessary splurges and then pull that amount out in cash. Research shows that people spend about 18% less when they pay with cash than with plastic. Keeping cash in hand rather than on a card creates a natural spending barrier. Stay in the Black Think of your monthly budget like a game: set it up and stay in the black. If you make it, you’ve won. If you don’t, look back and see what happened. Each month teaches you more about yourself and your actual expenses and where you should trim your spending. Over time, you’ll build a clearer and more honest picture of your financial

DW was chatting about the possible SpaceX IPO, having just seen a youTube video about it. I commented that IPOs are generally overpriced and have often not a great investment historically, but that although SpaceX isn’t yet listed, you can get some exposure via some listed investment companies that gained exposure to the private SpaceX shares issued during various rounds of capital raising, and

I suspect like me, most HD members are against paying large yearly fees to investment advisors. I have made all of our investment decisions and have done pretty well. I also do our taxes. While I have no immediate plans to stop, because my wife has no interest in any of it, and is considerably younger, chances are she will be left alone at some point to figure out RMDs, SS, taxes, asset allocation etc. […]

I’m a diy 66year old new retiree. I’m also a proud follower of Jack B. I started out investing with the mentally of invest first the live off the rest. Borrowing from my 401k wasn’t an option and it bothered me to see others do it with no problem. My annual salary during my working year never exceeded $40k. But we never had to live off a budget. If the money wasn’t there, we didn’t […]

Virtually everyone is interested in financial advice. The money we have and what we can do with it shape our lives and create opportunities. We all want more money, so how do we get it? There are numerous ways to help, including both mental and physical actions. Feeling overwhelmed by your finances? This simple, printable budget planner makes it easy to track where every dollar goes. Download it free now! Start Saving Young The magic of compound interest works best when you save early and save as much as you can. You always need to have some liquid cash that you can access if you need it. Invest What You Can In addition to your stash of accessible money, you also need to invest as much as you can. This helps your money beat inflation-induced depreciation. Treat Saving and Investing Like Bills You have a budget, and you know how much goes to whom every month. However, you also need to think of adding to your savings as paying a bill. That way, it will always get paid. Ready to get your money organized, your goals on track, and your life simplified? This 31-page Financial Planner is your ultimate tool for managing your money with confidence and clarity. Shoot for Saving 10% A good goal to aim for each month is to save and/or invest 10% of your income. If you have more to save, you can certainly do that. Eventually, your lifestyle adjusts to the amount you make minus your savings and investments. Read Up on Finances It’s helpful to know a good deal about how various investments work and what types you should have. There are countless books that can help you understand finance better so you can make educated choices. Read More: What Beginning Investment Book To Pick? Here Are 15+ Options Think About Every Purchase Even if a purchase isn’t that expensive, give it a lot of thought. We sometimes buy something just because we can, and this can lead to a lot of clutter and a consistent drain on our available funds. Do Anything To Avoid Credit Card Debt There are some times when you need a credit card, but it’s important to pay it back as soon as you can. Take on a second job if you need to. A credit card is a major drain on your earnings, and the debt just gets worse with time. Get this debt payoff tracker and payment tool that helps you plan, track, and pay off debt faster now! Live Below Your Means If you spend everything that you have coming in, you never get ahead. You never have money to save or invest, and you’ll end up with a lifestyle that’s too expensive for you. Make sure you can live on less than you make. Know What You’re Worth To make more money, people tend to leave their current company for a new one. It’s a good idea to know what the

In this edition of the reader story, we have “a late-starter story with a few bruises, some luck, and a system that finally makes sense”. About this series: I am grateful to readers for sharing intimate details about their financial lives, which benefits us all. Some of the previous editions are linked at the bottom of… The post Late Start, Real Mistakes, and a Better Plan Now — Our Financial Journey as Doctors appeared first on […]

I think budgeting kinda has a reputation problem. Like if you mention the word “budget” to most people and you get a look like you just suggested they give up coffee, cancel their streaming services, and move into a van. It totally sounds like restriction. Like punishment. Like the financial version of eating those styrofoam plain rice cakes while staring at a wall. But it really doesn’t have to be. Budgeting doesn’t have to be […]

Don’t forget to make sure your budget is ready when the calendar changes to April! Here are some potential expenses you may need to include in your April budget. The post TIME TO GET YOUR APRIL BUDGET READY! appeared first on a life on a dime.

Stir crazy, yes. Emotionally drained, yes. Itching for something unknown, yes. And missing my kids, yes. Needing a break from the pressure, yes. All those and more are the reasons for this road trip. The Weekend with Princess Princess and I will be meeting up to attend a weekend Christian women’s conference. We planned this last fall. I was going to go whether she went or not. The cost was just over $500 for the conference and hotel for two of us. This has already been paid ($300 was covered by my Christmas/birthday money.) Princess paid for her own flight to and from. And I’m driving up. It’s a 10 hour drive for me, and I anticipate that will end up costing right at $70 in gas. I am going to take 3 days to drive up exploring some parks and trails along the way. Our breakfasts are included with our hotel, and I imagine we will eat out at some point both Friday and Saturday. Budgeted Money for the Weekend: $140 One more thing I forgot, Addie (my dog) is joining me on this trip. She will be boarded while we are at this conference. I used Rover ( Vegas. Time = 1 week The post Texas to Missouri to Vegas – The Plan appeared

For those of us who travel infrequently, taking a flight can be a budget minefield. It’s not just the constantly rising price of airline tickets, either. If you don’t plan ahead the next time you fly to Aunt Sylvia’s for the holidays, you may find that the associated costs of flying — from checked luggage to parking to food — may just put a big hole in your travel budget. Here are the ways frequent […]

Image source: Amazon Something interesting happened after 2024’s Deadpool and Wolverine; multiple comics that inspired the scenes would spike in value during a speculation rush. In 2023, after James Gunn’s DCU announcement, Batman #655 from 2006, the first appearance of Damian Wayne, sold for $500 in an after-announcement speculation rush. Comics that inspire the MCU had a temporary spike in value, even though many of those films won’t happen now. I say this because there […]

Planning for healthcare in retirement is difficult because there is no clear answer. You are preparing for something that may never happen, could last a short time, or could become a significant expense later in life. That uncertainty is what makes long-term care difficult to plan for. It is not just about cost, but also timing, duration, and how those expenses interact with the rest of your retirement plan. What Long-Term Care Insurance is Trying to Solve Long-term […]

For years, the FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early) movement has been framed around one big, seductive idea: escaping the daily grind. “Retire from the 9-to-5.” “Retire from the soul-crushing meetings.” “Retire from the boss who doesn’t get it.” It’s easy to see why this “retire from” mindset catches fire. Work can feel exhausting, repetitive, or misaligned with our deeper values. Saving aggressively and investing wisely becomes a heroic battle against the clock—an escape plan from […]