KiKi Mouse
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 5, 2007
- Messages
- 1,745
Wow. I wish that we could buy Disney gift cards in Canada. If a school was doing a fundraiser that would be great.
*sigh*
*sigh*
I have a savings account and follow the philosophy of "pay yourself first". I put money into my savings account every time I get paid. This is where my Disney money comes from -- no I will not charge vacation.
Totally agree with you. Its all about finding balance. I just find it curious to see how many "debt-free" vacationers we see on this board. But then someone asks if they should take a planned trip when they have encountered a financial setback and it runs 50-50, for and against. And almost every person who favors going anyway will argue that you dont know what life will bring and so the op should go and enjoy. Its that kind of live for today, "gotta have it now" mentality that has so many people in a financial hole today.Unless you are completely, 100% debt free when you vacation you are arguably using credit to vacation. Otherwise, you could use the money you are spending on vacation to pay off debt. Some people who make a big deal about "I would never go into debt to vacation" have huge car loans, etc. You are not financially better off than someone whose car is paid for, and they have little to no revolving credit balances but decide to put part of their vacation on a low-interest charge card and pay it off quickly.
Having said that, I think it would be a really bad idea to wait until you are totally debt free to vacation! People have to use common sense and look at the big picture. As a couple of PPs have mentioned, there are times that I will not pay off a credit card balance because it works better to not shift money from somewhere else that is earning more than the charge. We have worked hard and saved and fortunately have various nest eggs and funds available. There is not anything automatically bad about charging part of a vacation, the problem comes if you incur excess finance charges and/or don't have a sufficient cushion if something unexpected happened.
It's about finding the balance where you enjoy this life but do what you can to provide financial security for your family.
Unless you are completely, 100% debt free when you vacation you are arguably using credit to vacation. Otherwise, you could use the money you are spending on vacation to pay off debt. Some people who make a big deal about "I would never go into debt to vacation" have huge car loans, etc. You are not financially better off than someone whose car is paid for, and they have little to no revolving credit balances but decide to put part of their vacation on a low-interest charge card and pay it off quickly.
Marionnette said:Totally agree with you. Its all about finding balance. I just find it curious to see how many "debt-free" vacationers we see on this board. But then someone asks if they should take a planned trip when they have encountered a financial setback and it runs 50-50, for and against. And almost every person who favors going anyway will argue that you dont know what life will bring and so the op should go and enjoy. Its that kind of live for today, "gotta have it now" mentality that has so many people in a financial hole today.
Unless you are completely, 100% debt free when you vacation you are arguably using credit to vacation. Otherwise, you could use the money you are spending on vacation to pay off debt. Some people who make a big deal about "I would never go into debt to vacation" have huge car loans, etc. You are not financially better off than someone whose car is paid for, and they have little to no revolving credit balances but decide to put part of their vacation on a low-interest charge card and pay it off quickly.