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A vibrant summer garden showcasing heat-loving plants like tomatoes, zinnias, and lavender thriving under strong sunlight, proving that high temperatures can fuel both beauty and productivity – Shutterstock Hot weather often sends gardeners scrambling for shade cloths, watering cans, and survival strategies for their plants. Some plants, however, do not just tolerate the heat; they thrive in it like they were built for summer dominance. These sun-loving varieties grow stronger, bloom brighter, and produce better […]

My Sweet Retirement Financial Planning Progress for June 2026 Financial planning has been the foundation of my journey toward achieving long-term financial stability, and June 2026 marks another meaningful step forward in my financial goals progress. This month, the total value of my financial … Financial Planning Progress for June 2026 My Sweet Retirement

Are You Ready to Spring Into Financial Stability? If your spending feels out of control and you’re not sure where your money is going, it’s time to stop guessing and start budgeting. A budget challenge is one of the best ways to take charge of your finances, and it’s more doable than you think. Let’s walk through exactly how to set one up. How Do You Start Your Budget Challenge? The idea of budgeting can feel overwhelming, especially if you’ve never done it before. But here’s the truth: you don’t need a finance degree or a perfect spreadsheet. You just need to sit down, get organized, and take it one step at a time. Start by thinking about your financial goals. What do you want your money to do for you? Once you know that, you can build a game plan around it. Step 1: Figure Out Where You Stand Before you can fix anything, you need to know what’s actually going on. Here’s how to get started: List all of your monthly bills List your weekly spending (gas, groceries, eating out, subscriptions) Identify what you can cut or reduce Round up any gift cards or coupons you already have Compare your total income to your total spending… are you in the red? Look at how much you’re saving each month (even if it’s $0, there is certainly no judgment from me!) Write it all down. Seeing it on paper makes it real, and that’s a good thing. Step 2: Set Your Goals Now that you know where you stand, decide where you want to go. An emergency fund is the foundation of any solid financial plan. If you don’t have one, start there. Even $5 from every paycheck adds up faster than you’d expect, and it gives you a cushion when life throws something unexpected at you. Beyond that, think about what you actually want. A vacation? New furniture? A car? Start a dedicated savings fund for it and contribute a little each paycheck. Try setting three savings goals and three spending reduction goals to start. Track them in a simple spreadsheet each month to see your progress and stay motivated. Step 3: Get Started and Stay Consistent You have your list. You have your goals. Now it’s time to actually do it, and that means breaking some old habits. That daily Starbucks run? It might need to go, or at least happen a lot less. Making coffee at home and putting that $5 toward your savings goal instead is the kind of small shift that adds up to real money over time. Take a hard look at what you’re spending on weekly (takeout, impulse shopping, streaming services, entertainment). Cut what you can. Stay consistent. Once you hit your first set of goals, set new ones and keep the momentum going. What If You Have Debt? Debt doesn’t disqualify you from budgeting. It just means debt becomes part of the plan. Add your minimum payments to your

Why AI Still Needs a Human Pilot on Tax Planning AI can read a tax return. It cannot live inside one. If you’re working with retired physicians who are carefully managing ACA subsidies, Roth conversions or contributions, HSA funding, and […]

Today we review the Emma Budgeting App, looking at if using the app to budget can aid your financial plans and help you save money. The post Emma App Review (2026): Is the Budgeting App Safe & Worth It? appeared first on The Financial Wilderness.

Your AI Retirement Plan AI is incredible at making financial planning look simple. For physicians, that’s exactly the problem. Most doctors who ask AI for help don’t need “explain a 401(k).” They need something far more specific: tell me what […]

Do you want to save money when flying with a low-cost airline, but you’re wondering: are low-cost airlines really worth it? Here is my experience and tips for flying on a budget with low-cost airlines. When we went on our mini-retirement in September (2019), we booked some last-minute deals just before we went. Of course, we went looking for low-cost airlines since other airlines were extremely expensive.  We decided to find cheap plane tickets and […]

Listen to the pod This week we welcome back Andrew Craig to the show to discuss why passive investing into index funds could actually be more dangerous than we might think. ———A huge thanks to the episodes sponsor – Trading 212. Get FREE FRACTIONAL SHARES worth up £100 when you deposit £1 with Trading 212  https://www.trading212.com/join/MGP If you don’t receive the free fractional shares – head to the menu and put the word ‘MGP’ into […]

Buying a Second-Hand Car at Auction: What You Need to Know Buying a second-hand car can be one of the biggest purchases many consumers make, yet it is also one of the areas that causes the most confusion. Your rights vary depending on whether you buy from a dealer, a private seller or a vehicle auction. Understanding those differences before you buy could save you thousands of pounds and help you avoid expensive mistakes. In […]

Amazon Prime Day is back, and this year it showed up early. Instead of the usual July slot, Prime Day … Read more

  Flying doesn’t have to cost a fortune. Over the past two decades, budget airlines have changed the way people travel by offering lower fares than traditional carriers. While these airlines may charge extra for baggage, seat assignments, and other add-ons, they can still help travelers save hundreds of dollars on airfare. According to the…

For many people, financial planning fails not because they are irresponsible, but because the process quickly becomes exhausting. The spreadsheets become another source of stress. Budgeting apps send constant notifications. Advice online swings between unrealistic discipline and extreme optimization. Somewhere along the way, managing money begins to feel like a second job. That is one reason many people avoid looking closely at their finances at all. Some put off checking their accounts after an expensive […]

The Trustees of the Social Security and Medicare trust funds released their annual report this month. The big headline finding: “The Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) Trust Fund will be able to pay 100 percent of total scheduled benefits until the fourth quarter of 2032, one quarter earlier than projected last year. At that time, the fund’s reserves will become depleted and continuing program income will be sufficient to pay 78 percent of total scheduled […]