I'm not content living that way that's why I've tried so many different things. I imagine that this is what chronic dieters go through, where they try a bunch of different things to varying degrees of success and in the end they have so many different strategies build into this frankenstein monster of attempted success and ultimately can't make the system run in unison to a desired result.
Any advice at all is welcome
It is very, very, very much like dieting. And just like successful dieting, the key is to learn to consume less than you earn without really thinking about it. How people do that is very personal.
The whole 50/30/20 thing, where you have less than 50% of your money committed at the beginning of the month is really based on that concept, that you're spending that money without feeling like you get anything for it.
So, you have a spreadsheet with everything you spend money on. What's the low-hanging fruit? Do you have a big cable package where you don't watch most of the channels? Do you have a big cell package and not use all your minutes? Do you really need a land line and a cell phone? Do you eat out a lot? Do you have a storage unit full of stuff that you haven't visited in a year?
Cut those things out and keep cutting until you run out of things you would consider "relatively easy" to give up. Take 80% of the money you were spending on them and transfer it every month or week (as soon as you get paid) into a savings account. The other 20% is your mad money - and you can splurge on any of those things that you cut that you really miss in any given month.
Stop buying things because "it's a good deal" and unless you want some poligrip, take that back to the store. In fact, everything non-essential that you buy - put in a designated location for a day or three, then look at it again. Is it really exactly what you wanted? Does it fit just right? Did you pay too much for it? Is it going to cost you money in other ways? A great dress on sale isn't so much of a good deal if you need to buy new shoes too, or have it altered, or a bra that doesn't show, or... If you've changed your mind - take it back. My last shopping trip, almost 50% went back the next day. I have an order in the mail, and I think that 80% of it will go back. Taking things back is money directly into your pocket.
Sell/Donate/Give-away everything that you own that you don't want. It sounds bizzare, but of all the things I did to stop spending random money, this worked the best. I -like- living with less stuff in my house, and everything I bring home needs a place to live. I'm moving into a small apartment in a high cost-of-living area, so I have a known metric. "Do I love that $30/square foot?" There's not much that I love $30/square foot.