Truelovernr1122
Raising Disney Lovers
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2007
- Messages
- 195
Well said! I couldn't agree more.
Let me give you an example, say you frequent a cash only food stand outside your office. You know what you order costs $3. You don't like to carry cash so you only have $3 with you. One morning you take your $3 and find out that the guy raised his price and so the new price is $3.05. That morning, no food for you. It doesn't matter that it's only "5 cents more," you don't have enough money. You could have plenty of money in a bank account but at that moment, you don't have enough.
My budget works a bit like that, in that after accounting for Housing, food, retirement savings, vacation savings, FSA, and all the other things that are higher priority items that the "entertainment" wallet is only filled with what's left. If what I want costs more than what is there, either the money has to come from somewhere else or there isn't enough money to get it. It doesn't matter if the deficit is a penny, a dollar or $100, it's not enough. It doesn't mean there isn't adequate money in the total budget. But I'm not going to start taking money from a higher priority wallet to put in the entertainment wallet.
This, "It's only $____ more" mentality, is where I think a lot of people get into money troubles. The money has to come from somewhere, otherwise you go in a deficit situation. People find themselves spending $3 more on one thing, $5 on another, $10 on another, and have not made any decreases in other areas. And then wonder why at the end of the month they're $100 in the red. Just like water, we'd all notice the gusher in the front yard, but the slow unnoticeable leak can add up to a lot of gallons in the monthly bill. So as it is with money.