Treat Yourself with a Savings Plan

by Dana Joseph on February 13, 2008 · 1 comment

in Saving Money

When tightening the belt around your finances, many people start to feel that they will never get to splurge on something special again. Every penny counts when you’re trying to eliminate debt from your life. Does that mean, however, that you have to deny yourself any and all treats?

Of course it doesn’t mean that. Like binge-dieting, cutting all of the fun out of your budget is the surest way to guarantee that the changes in your financial diet will only be temporary. When debt elimination is your goal, you’ll quickly find you need to change your ways of spending and spending to saving and then spending.

Using this train of thought, you can still purchase the occasional treat for yourself without gaining any extra debt. You’ll just have to learn to control your impulse shopping. When you’re at the mall and feel the urge to purchase something, such as the sweater in the department store window, don’t rush in with your credit card. Instead, look at the sweater’s price tag; you now have your new savings goal.

The next step in your save and then spend plan is to start the saving phase. You can pick a place to put your savings, in a jar on your desk or in a shoe box in your closet are great ideas, and get started. Whenever you manage to save an extra dollar or two, sock them away in your hiding place.

Now, don’t be tempted to steal from your jar when you’re short on cash. In no time you’ll find that you’ve stashed away enough money to buy that sweater. Then feeling triumphant you can head back to the department store as you realize that goal you’ve been working towards. Imagine the extra satisfaction you’ll get each time you wear your sweater and remember how you sacrificed to earn it.

Once you’ve mastered the basics of the save and then spend plan, you’re ready to take on a larger goal. Do you need a new vacuum cleaner or sewing machine? These types of purchases are the perfect size for your next savings goal. Eventually you’ll work your way up to large savings goals like family vacations or home improvement projects.

Good financial principles like using savings to pay cash for your purchases will serve you as well as those good eating habits that dietitians tout. Once you’ve gotten used to paying for things as you buy them, you’ll finally find yourself on the way to freedom from debt.

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{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

1 KMunoz February 14, 2008 at 12:17 pm

A good thing that sometimes happens with this is that you save for that particular item… and then when you go back to buy it with real CASH, you realize it’s not worth your money!

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