The end of 2010 was to start a budget. About all I learned from TMM as most of what it talks about works for people who have a decent income. Doesn't work for someone struggling just to put food on the table for years with nothing to sell and cut because most debt comes from life (groceries, diapers, formula, gas to get to work, car repairs, home repairs, etc.)
With the help of a huge bonus (to me, after the recent bonus thread, obviously you folks would laugh at what I call huge...) it jump started the budget at Christmas time. Goal for 2011 was to stay current on monthly bills as well as having the money for things that don't occur monthly like heating oil and car insurance. There was some hiccups, some car repairs that happened that was a struggle, but by the end of the year now, we just had an emergency septic pumping that we weren't planning on and an emergency furnace repair just 2 days ago that we weren't planning on having and was able to pay for them. Far better shape than we were this time last year.
Reorganizing bank accounts so I have monthly bills and weekly grocery and gas expense only to pay out of the local bank and money being saved from the rest of the paycheck in the credit union with a checking and savings account tied to each other. Plan is to finish off 2012 with several thousand $$ sitting in the bank as opposed to a $500 heating oil bill due with no way of paying for it like past years. Going to be a big difference.
So, TMM certainly did help me out in the fact that it opened up my eyes to financial budgeting, something that no one ever taught me at a younger age as I moved into adulthood, but it is kind of hard to follow the "sell everything" suggestions when you have nothing or the "sell the car and buy a beater" when living up here in the snowy north, a beater will cost you in car payments the same as a brand new car or else you are spending all of your spare time fixing a rustbucket so it doesn't fall apart on you driving down the road.