ruadisneyfan2
DIS Legend
- Joined
- May 20, 2006
- Messages
- 17,248
I have been watching this thread and slowly have been working on our debt. Just when an end is in sight for the credit card and nearly for the student loan, we get our car insurance first bill following my husband's at fault car accident. This is our first surcharge with the company in 17 years, and w hile I understand the why, I don't understand why it doubled the cost of the insurance! Any suggestions on how to shop for new insurance? Is one better than another? We've had the same insurance for 17 years (me for 25 years). If we have to pay double, it surely is going to impact my plan for paying off the credit card and student loan in the next few months and working on my car payment. I swear, if it isn't one thing, it is another. I get so frustrated trying to do the right thing and get ahead.
Absolutely compare prices with other companies. We had AAA for years but once ds19 first got his DL, our rates nearly doubled and he didn't even have a car. I compared around and went with GEICO.
Just be sure you're comparing apples to apples. Get your policy out with details of all your coverage so you don't get stuck with less coverage than you currently have, while they attempt to low ball you.
Yes, it's definitely a lot. Too many!!
The student loans are actually somewhat consolidated. 5 (which are my husbands) are all under one provider and is one lump payment each month. But they are listed as 5 individual loans and it shows us how much of the payment goes to each loan. The same with the remaining two (which are mine) under a separate provider. I list them as 7 instead of 2 for a couple of reasons. One it keeps me more motivated to be aggressive in payments. Even though the balance is the same either way if I view it as 2 loans it doesn't seem as bad to me. Strange, I'm sure. Also, when the time comes to snowball into student loans I do have the ability to make extra payments on an individual portion of the loan instead of the entire sum which again will keep me more motivated since an extra payment will eliminate a $2,000 portion balance quicker than an extra payment to the whole shebang of $10,000 (just as an example, not real numbers).
We have looked into consolidating the non-student loans, but the last time we checked it actually wouldn't save us any money since several are on a no interest plan for the time being.
I definitely pray that I will be smart enough to never EVER have so many items of debt in the future though!!
*** Sorry for the long winded reply![]()
Try to stay strong.

It really can be done. For all my whining earlier, I am still glad I have paid off around 8 or 10 old debts. Our snowball was only a few hundred per month when we started and was up to more than $1700 per month back in February which I never thought I'd ever get to that point. I was really on a roll when we ended up needing to get ds a car and once he was out of college for the spring, the parent plus loan changed status to "in repayment".
I am certain I will get my groove back and you will too. The way I stay strong, usually, is to spend some time each day going over The Plan so I don't start to forget where I've been and where I'm going. "Out of sight is out of mind" so I definitely need that little reminder each day. When I don't feel like packing a lunch, it reminds me I need to. When I'd rather go through the car wash than do it by hand, it reminds me. When I feel like checking out all the stuff that's been sitting in my Amazon shopping cart for months, it reminds me. You get the picture.
If I shove it in the back of a drawer and only look at it once per month I would lose all strength & ambition.
I know I can't be weak with EVERYTHING. So I choose one weakness and that's vacations. DR would say to give all that up and get out of debt faster but I just can't go on such a crash diet for so long. We don't go crazy spending while on vacation, basically just grateful to be there, so when we come home from a trip I have a renewed strength to attack the debt.