Birdie dog
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2015
- Messages
- 712
I imagine the answer is yes, and that it's probably how a lot of us ended up here, but does anyone else struggle with spending as a coping mechanism? I feel like emotional spending is my downfall. Nothing huge, but there's been some stress for me lately and I'm never more tempted to spend than in times of stress/ sadness/ anger/ etc. How do you guys combat it?
There are definitely times that I want to shop. The desire waxes and wanes. I think when I divorced, I was determined that my life would be "better" not married than when I was and I wasn't going to be "poor". I wanted my kids to live lives that were what they were used to (hence my first budget idea all those years ago was a Christmas club that I still keep). I think somewhere in my head having things became synonymous with living a good life. Now I realize that a bunch of stuff is simply a bunch of stuff and a good life will be keeping my money for things I really want - mostly travel.



Also still under original warranty and because it's certified pre-owned, it had additional warranty. Also we bought extended warranty so it's covered until Dec 2025. I put $17k down and part of that is $4k I promised to help ds but he doesn't take his road test until March. In the meantime I'm saving our snowball toward that.
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I did consider it when I was forced to move last spring and contacted a few people (some were teachers sharing houses since teachers get paid crap here and can't afford places of their own) but it never worked out. Having a 100 pound dog and a cat were the issues. Allergies to cats, or they already had a dog and didn't want another one in the house, the list went on. Plus, as I mentioned before, I'm an introvert and really do best when I have my own place to wind down. I always feel a bit on edge when sharing a place with someone, like I can never completely relax. For me it is worth it to pay more for that reason. It just means that it will take a bit longer to pay off my debt.