We just used the cash we were already spending on Disney to pay off the DVC over the course of the loan.
We were spending quite a bit going to
Disneyland (and when I say that, I mean on hotels...we didn't lump transportation, dining, and tickets into it). We knew we wanted to try WDW soon. We knew we would be spending quite a bit there. DVC showed up, we thought about it for 1.5 years. We kept spending quite a bit going to Disneyland. Realized hey, that money could be going towards DVC. And so it did.
I've been told I am personally the reason why the country is in the financial mess it's in.
Yeah, me staying at the Poly on credit is exactly the reason.
It's all your fault!
We withstood the immense pressure from family and friends for about 5 years; they really really really wanted us to do what they were doing, and get a mortgage. We were told it was soooo easy to get a mortgage, we sholdn't worry, just get one! They got one, we should get one! Owning a home was sooo much better.
sidenote: as a renter, no one suddenly wants us to buy a furnace. It's lovely, renting from a terrific landlady. I have never had to buy an appliance. One breaks, it gets fixed or replaced in days. Awesome.
Anyway, the peer pressure was immense. Instead, we continued happily renting and we financed DVC.
And then the bottom fell out. From our friends and family. But not us. And because we financed and then had a crisis post-rescission-period, we smartened up in other ways and are stronger than we might ever have been. MIL/FIL/BIL/his partner lost their house (Long Beach CU held the mortgage, it was $10K owed and SIX MONTHS from first payment missed to auction of the house, back in '05), dad nearly lost his (augh) second house (that he never should have bought), a friend freaked for months about her balloon payment, etc etc etc.... Meanwhile, we continued along in our rental condo with our awesome landlady. Taking DVC vacations.
So...which one was the big scary risk?
I get that some people were born with awesome saving brains, or married into a family like that and learned it, or learned it at their parents' knees. That wasn't me and DH. My mom was too busy working 6 days a week to keep us eating and dressed. DH's dad was too busy telling his kids that his money wasn't their business (his monkey business, more like, as we found out after he died). Not everyone learns it or just knows it.
For people with brains that allow for savings to be easy, they don't get that to some other people, a savings account doesn't work well. Money has to be going TO something. A savings account isn't *something*. It's amorphous and just there. So it gets raided. And raided. And again. Whereas a *payment* is something. It has to happen, no getting around it. So you can weather a "eek I need a new transmission" storm even with a DVC payment, when you couldn't do both "saving for future DVC" and the transmission. The savings account for DVC would be raided.
Think of the couple in Up. Their travel fund is raided throughout their whole lives. They probably, at some point, should have done something different, and the whole story would be different. But they kept thinking "we have to save up", while never thinking "hey, how about TWO savings jars? one for travel and one for life-junk". The amorphous and vague savings account is harder on some people than having a payment and then the rest of their money.
Not sure I'm explaining myself. It was interesting, to explore why we thought we needed A Savings Account without any sort of plan on what it was for. Dave Ramsey helped us a great deal, in that post-DVC-financing, oh-no-DH's-job-is-on-the-chopping-block time. Changed quite a bit! Savings for something in the future is still very very hard for us, so we have to label things. This account is for X. That account is for Y. etc. And we never once thought of that sort of thing on our own! Just isn't in our nature.