I love seeing how intentional everyone is being with their planned stimulus checks coming in! I have put my other two into particular savings buckets. That is what I have been planning with this one, too, although now that my DD20 is being included, I am putting hers in her savings account to go toward next year's college room and board expenses.
I was just going to plop my $1400 into savings. I am now thinking, "When do I ever plan on replacing my back door to my house and its storm door?" They are in terrible shape due to a variety of dogs over the years, both from me and the people who lived here before me who had two Great Danes and a third dog. They are scratched up, rusted, and my inner door panes were chewed through by my previous dog who had separation anxiety. They still work fine and I just usually don't notice how terrible they look, but really....
Anyone else get into such a savings mode that you are loathe to spend much...even with money that is meant to stimulate the economy? I have a million things wrong with my old house, and a HELOC sitting untouched because I just don't want to get into debt again. Yet, I will retire within a few short years and if I want to sell the house, this stuff is going to have to get done. I have enough money in my car "bucket" to pay off my car, but I just don't want to touch it. The car will be paid off next February if I just keep paying the note monthly.
Is this weird of me? Like once I got out of debt (other than two cars and mortgage), I don't want to spend any money anymore but, instead, build up my savings. House repairs are so expensive (not the back doors but re-plumbing, replacing floors, and other things I need to do) that I just stick my head in the sand and keep the purse strings closed. Now I am taking from savings to pay for a dental crown this week and in January I had to pay for an expensive surgery for my dog. But those are essential. I am definitely falling down on paying for house maintenance and repair.
Edited: I just counted up 11 months of car payments, and that number exceeds what I would spend to pay it off now by $300. So, that is dumb to not pay it off now, right? I could pay it off now, put the car payment amount back into the car bucket each month and by February have $300 more in there than I do now. So the smart thing to do is to pay it off now. Right?