February Snapshot

Saturday, February 28, 2009 Posted by Revanche 2 comments
Retirement Savings

Rollover IRA: $948
Roth IRA: $4,079
401(a): $4,629
403(b): $10,759
Total: $ 20,415 (22,027)

Emergency Savings

Catastrophe: $ 23,816
Problem Cushion: $ 1,000
Total: $24,816 (22,291)

Short Term Goals

Car Maintenance: $517
Car Insurance: $1,474
Travel/Con: $400
Taxes: $3,522
Moving: $1,465
Total: $ 7,278 (7,229)

Long Term Goals

House Down Payment: $101

Investment Loans

Prosper-ish: $12,630
Personal Loan: $4,000
Savings Bond: $362 (current accrued value)
Total: $ 16,992 (17,998)

Total Assets

Illiquid: $ 20,415
Semi-Liquid: $16,992
Liquid: $24,816
Expense Acct: $9,039
Goals Savings: $7,278
Total: $ 78,640 (74,072)

Debt and Liabilities

AX: $183
Citi 2: $122
Chase: $142
Rent: $1,360
Total: $ 1807 (2,525)

Net Worth

$ 76,833 (71,547)


This month's net worth brought to you by A Series of (Un)fortunate Events:

1 truck sale, rather nice, actually.
1 car crash and totaled car, rather unfortunate.
1 set of nervous willies wherein I call in the loan in $1000 increments. This doesn't affect the net worth as it's just moving the money from one asset class to another. Slowly relieving stress here.

The most significant factor was the truck sale. It simultaneously removed the rest of the loan (liability) and supplemented my raided expense account.

Salting away money into the emergency fund helps, but there may be a bit of a drop when I pay my taxes. I have to review the paperwork one more time, because I kind of think (hope!) the accountant did something wrong for me to owe as much as he says I do. Either way, I should start emotionally letting go of that money saved for taxes. Probably shouldn't have included it in the net worth to begin with, since it now feels like it's "mine." Well, it is, but you know what I mean.
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The car rental experience that didn't suck

Friday, February 27, 2009 Posted by Revanche 7 comments
My worlds of Twitter and blog haven't converged, though it may seem to have done so in my mind, so I'm posting thanks to a reminder from SFOrdinaryGirl about my recent car rental.

El papa forgot to mention that he needed a car all day on Saturday until Friday night. Yar! I was expecting some car rental fees over the weekends since they can just use my car during the week, but we don't share as well if I want to do anything but sit at home 7 days a week. With the pressure to job hunt, I've been doing that anyway, but I needed my car last weekend. So with about 12 hours notice, I had to get my bargain hunter on and try to find a cheap rental for the following morning.

My usual go-tos, Enterprise, Dollar, and Budget were all out because I required a one-day rental, and all their local offices were closed on Sundays. [Can I just say? That made me downright grumpy. How can you be a business that involves time-based charges and not be open 7 days a week? How can you be closed to rentals or returns on Sunday? GAH. It's a little bit like being charged in a hotel or a hospital where you have to check out ... except there's one day of the week you can't! Ok, enough ranting.]

Weekend rentals at Enterprise are usually 50% off, so the car would have cost about $70-ish Friday through Sunday.

Except 1) you can't return cars on Sunday and 2) it was Friday night and far too late to get a weekend rental.

On the phone with BFF, she suggested that I use her AAA discount to help defray the costs, and while poking around the internets together, she suggested Hertz. Normally, I avoid Hertz like the credit-card charging plague they are, but looked at their site anyway. I mean, I was striking out everywhere else!

And lo: the skies opened and brought me the Hertz One Weekend Day FREE rental deal. No kidding, they quoted me $13.99 in taxes and airport location rental fees for an economy car.

I searched for a catch, an obligation, a must-do and came up empty. They were serious about this "Buy None Get 1 Free" deal.

With no little amount of doubt and perturbation, the reservation was made. The next morning, other than a 45 minute wait in line thanks to a customer in front of me having difficulties with her reservation, the rental was simple. "You have a free day, sign on the line, you have an additional driver, sign on the line, go get your car!"

Huh. Well, no complications except they gave us a frickin' Toyota Prius and I had no clue how to turn it on. Power button? What? This is a for-real car, right?

Driving difficulties aside, the rental ended up being less than they quoted me, and they didn't even charge for my dad as an additional driver. (Normally a $10 fee. The agent didn't even mention the fee or the discount.) And it took me 36 hours before I asked myself, why did I even do that? Why didn't I just let him rent it in his name? It's not like I wouldn't have paid anyway. The whole ten bucks.

The promotion runs through the end of March, and is good once a month so if you had actual need for a rental this month and next, you could get your free day twice. You have this last weekend to get it in, though.

Caveat: I did not take any extras like the insurance, GPS or any other add-ons. The additional driver would normally cost you, I assume that waiting patiently for nearly an hour was my free pass. And I didn't even pay for gas because the 70 miles driven didn't put a dent in the gas tank.

Caveat Emptor: I'm not getting paid to promote Hertz in any way - I'm just happy about the deal and wanted to share.
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What an ordeal, Treasury Direct

Thursday, February 26, 2009 Posted by Revanche 3 comments
As I whined on Twitter, thus shall I whine here about the conversion of my paper bonds to electronic bonds:

1. Treasury Direct's log-in process is not unlike physically accessing a sealed vault, complete with codes on access cards, little remembered clues to the password you can no longer remember, and a virtual keyboard that doesn't obscure a single thing.

2. I am just as much of a dolt. My idea of a password hint? A string of words that rely on free association and a particularly on-point pop-culture memory. *shaking head* Honestly. I can hardly remember my name or the name of my company these days. The worst part was that as I reset the password, the last word I couldn't work out finally made sense. Dangit!

3. The conversion involves opening a Treasury Direct account. That took three weeks. I couldn't log in without my Access Code/Master Key card, after all.

4. Skip 17 months in which I completely forget about the card, the bond, the account and the password. [This step is optional, for the not completely dumb.]

5. Open a linked conversion account. Don't register yourself as an owner of a something-or-other twice. Upon registering twice, don't try to delete your original registration, it won't stand for that kind of behavior. Delete the second one. (Can you tell the difference? I couldn't.)

6. Register your bond by entering the serial number and issue date. This also shouldn't be as difficult as my brain made it out to be. If you have many bonds, do it all at once, up to 50.

7. Create a manifest. There's a button that allows the site to do this for you, actually.

8. Print and sign the manifest, keeping a copy for yourself, drop in mail with your unsigned paper bond.

9. The conversion should take three weeks. They will not notify you in any way of the completed transaction but are probably still more trustworthy than those Cash4Gold guys who also ask you to drop your valuables in an envelope and post it to them. After all, their website is a virtual Fort Knox. Ok, that doesn't prove anything at all, but it's worth reiterating.

Train talk

Wednesday, February 25, 2009 Posted by Revanche 4 comments
This morning, a group of parents were sitting behind me, and I could hear every word they said.

Dad 1: Boys are easier. But it's like they're brain damaged, the things they expect you to believe. I came home last night and my wife sends me to his room which means he's in trouble. I walk in there and half his head is shaved. So I asked him, what happened?
Son: I don't know!
Dad 1: You don't know? You don't know what happened to your hair? Son, was your head with you all day???

Mom: We had two girls, and when they were 2 and 4, their dad was working nights. He'd come home, put them down for a nap and then take his nap. One day, he's asleep, thinking they're asleep, and is woken up by my mom yelling at him.
MIL: Wake up!! The girls were outside!
Dad: What? What are you talking about? They're napping!
Mom: It turns out that 4 year old had woken her sister up, taken her little backpack, and took her sister outside in a diaper and were in the front yard. My mom used to come by in the afternoons to help him with the girls, so when she pulled up, there they are, standing in the front yard and she freaks out. When she asked them what they were doing, 4 year old replies "We're going to take the bus, to the beach!"

Dad 2: And Moms never stop, either. I was going to the mountains with some friends, so I called her up to let her know.
She immediately says: Ok, you're going to need your jacket, and don't forget some thermals, and ....
Son: Mom, I'm 33 years old. I got this.
Mom: Well, you're still going to need your jacket.
I'm 48 now, and she's never going to stop telling me when I need my jacket.
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Living expenses and emergency funds

Posted by Revanche 8 comments
On Twitter, @debthater asked: For all u personal finance peeps, is your 3-6 months of living expenses savings SEPARATE from your "emergency" fund? Curious
My answer was that my living expenses account ("cash cushion") and my emergency fund are totally separate.

Most others (@singlema, @wellheeledblog) keep their money all in one pot to keep it simple.

Is everyone else is more organized than I am?

My expense account was initially deliberately separated out so that it would be easier to track during the effort to break out from the paycheck to paycheck cycle. It's really sad to get misled into thinking there's more than there really is because of the bigger numbers of the emergency fund!

Now that the cash cushion is healthy, am I just complicating matters by maintaining two sets of accounts?

It's partly psychological, partly record-keeping. E-fund money is untouchable: it's for real emergencies ONLY. The expenses money is intended to be used for monthly costs and unexpected non-emergencies. If I keep it all in one pot, it seems like the whole pot is accessible, not just a portion of it. Also, there are enough miscellaneous transactions (deposits, usually) that it seems easier to keeo them separated.

What think ye? Should I just simplify matters and combine all the accounts? (By "all," I have to admit that my emergency fund is spread across 3 banks because I was worried about accessibility, low rates and the bank failures. I wanted to have access one way or another to some of the money I needed in case of problems.)

How do you handle your accounts? Do you simplify/complicate things?

Fat Tuesday

Tuesday, February 24, 2009 Posted by Revanche 4 comments
Two work lunches in a row: we're having gumbo today.

I know @mrsmicah got some beads today, (Twitter is so fun!) is anyone doing anything fun?

'scuse me, I have to go find food because I'm starving. As always.

Linkydoo:

Mapgirl's got some medical emergency stuff going on, please send good thoughts her way.
SFOrdinaryGirl's also got some stuff going on. She's not mentioned it on the blog, but please send some positive thoughts her way anyway.
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Weekend Tally

Monday, February 23, 2009 Posted by Revanche 5 comments
Egads, I spent a lot this week.

Monday night: a sushi dinner with friends, $10
Saturday: full tank of gas to go visiting, because my family uses my car and never fills up, $30
Sunday: a movie, $2
Philly cheesesteaks and fries, $17
groceries, $20

That's pretty much my month's allowance, so it's a good thing I loaded up on orange juice, Clementine Cuties, tuna and spinach for salads ($1/bag!), and whole wheat bagels. That'll get me through a week of breakfasts, snacks and lunches. We're potlucking one day this week: stew, brussels sprouts and french bread. I could only find french bread bowls ($1.25/2), so that's what we're having.

I was inadvertently out all weekend. A depressed friend needed some company, so I spent all Saturday afternoon/evening with her. She seemed in better spirits after that, though still easily fatigued, so I hope the fun of the weekend carries her through the week a little better. I know it'll help me keep a more even keel in these trying times.

On the plus side of the ledger:
The brother ponied up some cash, $200
Travel expenses were reimbursed, $315
Truck insurance refund finally in, $115

I guess I could afford to spend a little.

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Personal money methods

Friday, February 20, 2009 Posted by Revanche 5 comments
Stacking Pennies talked about avoiding money hacks, except for two, the other day, and J.D. shared the monthly checkbook sweep.

I wouldn't call myself a money hacker since I enjoy playing with money and methods to maximize savings with minimal effort. There's no need to thwart myself, unless we're talking about cash which just up and disappears, I just need to develop more efficient systems. Then again, a very efficient system kind of takes the fun out of the money bit, so if there's thwartion afoot, it's much like how I create messes because it's fun to clean. [Uh, yeah, I know that's weird.]

In that vein, I do a few things that allows me to create good surprises instead of obsessively tracking every penny.

1. Ignore the windfalls: they all go into savings. Tax refunds, money saved for specific goals that goes unused, extra paychecks, reimbursements, overtime. All go into savings.

2. Allocate money to be spent: After calculating monthly expenses down to the dollar, that total is all the money I get to keep from paychecks. Everything else goes into some kind of savings. This is akin to the monthly checkbook sweep, except the sweep happens immediately. A little remains as a cushion against uncashed checks - finally learned my lesson with this one - or is outgoing for bills.

3. Divert some e-fund savings into specific accounts: this way neither my e-fund nor my expense fund gets gypped when a regular, non-monthly expense crops up.

This works for me right now, but I'm looking forward to landing a job with regular salary and streamlining the system further.
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Interview: J. Money of Budgets are Sexy!

Thursday, February 19, 2009 Posted by Revanche 5 comments
Since my chat-interview with Karen was so fun, I thought I'd give it another go, this time with (the notorious??) J. Money of Budgets are Sexy. Happy Thursday, all!

Q: First up, taxes! Are you still worried about doing your own taxes and getting arrested? Is it back to the CPA for you this year?

A: Oh yes! I'm not *as* worried as I was last year at this time (the process is starting to sink in a bit more now), but I still don't trust myself enough yet - esp. now that I also have to account for the Mrs.' taxes! In a perfect world I'd just man up and force myself to learn, but unfortunately it's gonna have to wait 'til next year as I've already sent them on over. ;)

Q: I'm going to side with you on the taxes thing: the circumstances have changed with adding the Mrs. so I can see why you're not quite there yet. That's just to justify the fact that I'm using a CPA again this year. ;) And if we're gonna be lazy, at least we got the info out early!

So tell me, your blog is relatively new (almost a year old!) and you've already achieved MSN Money fame, as well as popularity in the pf blogosphere. Does this change your perspective of what you want to do on your blog? Or was this part of the journey you had hoped to take? You started out anonymously, do you think you'll keep hold of that anonymity harder than ever now that people know the name "J Money" or would you ever consider taking a step towards revealing your secret identity?

A: Oh man, how SWEET is that! All this blogging's actually being read by people - I love it. But as for my perspective - Nah, it'll remain the same. I've always been in it for the fun and learning aspect of it, so until both of those stop, I'll keep doing my thang. ;) And actually, between you and me and your readers, MSN said if it weren't for all my colorful words, they'd probably link back more! So if that doesn't change me, not sure what will...although I have noticed I stayed away from "Hooker" and "bitch" in my post today (although not on Twitter!).
And I think I'll continue to blog anonymously still....if I hadn't spilled my salary and all my assets and stuff I'd probably switch over time, but there are too many haters out there that would love to bring me down. So for now, I stay as "J. Money" until I can't tell the difference between the real person and the fake person ;) Or when I accidentally slip and accidentally blow my own cover! I wouldn't put it past myself...

Q: I did notice a migration of "hooker" and "bitch" from the posts to Twitter, actually. It's a happy way to greet Mondays :) [If you're not already following: J. Money, or me!]
Speaking of greeting Mondays, are you a morning person or a night owl? Coffee or tea? Motivated or lazy?

And haters? Real life haters or bloggy ones? It's sad but you do have to be careful of them. I wonder if the big names who aren't anonymous (like Jim from Bargaineering) have much of a problem. But it's so easy to confuse your secret identity with your real one; there are times I've nearly slipped with a "dude, [insert blog name here] just posted the most hi-lar-ious ... uh .... oh .. never mind ..." I nearly did that last night talking to a retired friend who thought that all high earning 20-year-olds were high rollers - have you encountered that attitude since reforming your blingy ways?

A: I'm like a hybrid. 10% morning person, and 90% night owl. If I am blogging, flying, or doing anything "fun" to me I can wake up and be there no problem at all. On all other accounts, I'm definitely a night owl. LOVE staying up late on weekends no matter what I'm getting into.
- Coffee all the way in the morning, and tea at night. :)
- Motivated 75% of the time, and 25% lazy...although this usually turns to 99% lazy the second I get in front of a TV! That thing sucks the life outta you - and not necessarily in a bad way.
- Haters are all over the place, but moreso in the "real" world where they know who you are and can track you down. I actually like a little hater-ism in the blog world. It spices things up a bit. ;)
Yeah, I came close to blowing my cover all last week when on MSN.com...do you know how hard it is not being able to tell anyone? It was crazy...but yeah, not sure how a lot of the big shots do it in the blog world - probably just fudge a lot of the specifics.

Do I get flack for rockin' the frugalness? Oh hell yeah. In fact I've learned to keep my mouth shut around a few friends because they always shoot back with "WHAT? But you make like $__ more than me!" - I really hate that. You don't have to agree w/ the way I handle my money, but you should certainly respect it. It's not like I'm all in their business ya know? Another reason I like keeping anonymous. ;) I can bitch and moan w/out knowing the person in question won't be reading it! Haha...gotta love that.

Q: LOL, I'm nowhere near famous and there are times I have a hard time keeping mum so I don't even know how you keep the MSN fame to yourself.

I have no idea if my friends would respond the same way because I've only shared a few financial details with them - good or bad - but they know that I've had an... interesting... journey so far. I agree with you, though, you should respect a person's approach to their money if it works for him/her. If they're idiots like my brother, though, flame away! :P

Alright, little birdie tells me your tax returns are in. ;) What delicious little plans do you have for it?

If you were crazy enough to splurge on whatever you wanted, what would it have been a year ago, and what would it be now?

And if you had to use it all on food, what would you be eating/drinking?

A: Yup, soon enough I shall have my grubby little hands on a cool $6k! I know people like to edit their stuff throughout the year to "not give the gov. a loan" and all, but the joy of getting a big chunk like this is SOOO worth it to me :)

So, what will we be doing with it? Whelp, the Mrs. and I will probably take around $2k each to do as we please with, and then the remainder will go into our "House Savings" account for who knows what down the line. And more than likely the Mrs. will hoard hers until needed for Grad school and/or her portion of our mortgages (we divide it up a bit to track better and allow for us both to keep extra "side accounts" where we can do whatever we wish, no questions asked), I'll pay off the remainder of my car loans ($1400ish) with it, and then save the rest for some extra padding. It's crazy out there these days, gotta make sure I'm fully equipped and ready!

Now, if this were a year ago? A good portion still would have gone to paying bills, but the rest would definitely have gone to Best Buy, TJ Maxx, and a number of other places. Maybe even on some new blingy diamonds for the ear - who knows. ;) And I couldn't even tell you what I'd splurge on today if forced to - my brain is too messed up with frugalness lately.

As for food, drinks, etc - it would go to eating out more often and drinking an unlimited amount of alcohol w/out worrying about the cost! I'm thinking Long Island Iced Teas, beers, whatever my heart desired at the time :)

Q: I love that you'll be able to close out a car loan - all about paying in full! That was a little bit of a test to see if you could still easily revert to your spendy ways. I want to start documenting how our brain chemistry alters when we're full on frugal. :) (But I just remembered that you haven't even managed to spend your birthday money yet!)

Does your House Savings account include your house maintenance money, or is that a separate account entirely? Are you gravitating towards breaking out more savings categories as your savings grows, or do you feel like keeping it all in one enormous pot?

On less responsible matters: what do you do for fun around the house? Are you a gadgets and doodads kind of guy, a go out and party sort of dude, or a world-wise traveler? Or any combination of the above with some other dash of ingredient for good measure? Is the Mrs. the yin to your yang, or are you two peas in a pod?


A: Haha, yes ma'am - I've been stuck on the Frugal roller coaster for months now and unfortunately (or fortunately?) I can't seem to get off! It does get sad when all I wanna do is blow through a little money.

Our House accounts cover it all - mortgages, maintenance, condo fees, groceries, you name it. We then both have our own separate accounts for all leftover money. I don't think we'd break it up any more than we already have or else it would get too complicated. We have 1 house checking, 1 house savings, and then 1 house credit card. So yeah, it would all build up in each specific account. :)

When I'm not blogging or salivating over finance (half-way a joke), you'll catch me glued to reality tv shows and all you can view Comcast OnDemand movies! It seriously gets to the point sometimes that I have to remind myself to walk outside or take a break, or else I'd be there for hours on end...which is really sad if you think about it. At least that's what I do on the weekdays. On the weekends, I like to stay up late either hanging with friends, going to bars, or just chillin' inside catching up on the shows I missed during the week! haha...and lately, it's been more of the later - hard to go outside when so butt-cold. I do like to travel and take random road trips as well, but definitely not a gadgets kinda guy. Although you won't catch me w/out my cell! Addicted to text messaging.

Yup - the Mrs. is probably more my Yin than my little pea. :) We're pretty much the complete opposite when it comes down to a lot of stuff, but then almost like "one" when it comes to family, religion, all the big things. So it works out well. Except when I want to talk during a movie or go on walks - the Mrs. can't stand either! Which is kinda weird right? At least the walking one - never met anyone who doesn't like that....but guess that's what makes us unique. :)

Q: Ok, J.Money, before we ramble our way right off the blog, is there anything you'd like to share with my readers?

Advice? Questions of your own? Recommendations for shows? Deuces? :D


A: Hum...something to share, something to share....okay, how about this.

A) Always go "ALL IN" if you're holding a pair of Queens in Texas Hold 'em and
B) Never gamble all your money away ;)
Also, make sure you save enough money so you don't have to worry about it for the rest of your life! (Sorry, had to throw something legit in here).

And yeah, I'd love to ask your readers something! Let's do a "would you rather" shall we? Okay, here's the question: "Would you rather be attractive as hell BUT you never make more than $30k a year for the rest of your life? Orrrrrrr, you're pretty damn ugly BUT you're as rich as Oprah Winfrey?" Ooooh, looking forward to these answers!


As am I, J. Money! I hope you all enjoyed this as much as I did.

If anyone else wants to strike up an email conversation/interview, you know where to find me! Er.... you know, right here. Or at myname(dot)gs(@)gmail(dot)com.


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Holy crap, are we the Joneses?

Wednesday, February 18, 2009 Posted by Revanche 6 comments
Until my Twittered revelation that you can find a used car for under $5000, it never occurred to me to consider who the Joneses were in my (extended) family.

*gulp* I think it was us.

Why else would I have forgotten that cheap, used cars are not impossible to find? 12 years ago, I was happily perusing the ads for a used car I could afford in the $2-3k range. Fast forward to now and we: still rent, are down to one car (bought new) out of 3 cars and 2 trucks, and I'm the only one who has cashflow and savings. Pretty? Oh yeah.

How did this happen?
Growing up, we were poor enough that I remember my parents driving an old used car, wearing hand-me-downs and homemade clothes, and a steady diet of growing-up-poor-in-the-old-country stories. We lived in a two-bedroom apartment until I was 12 or 13. My uncle lived with us between (my) ages 3-9, so he got the second bedroom, my Dad slept on the sofa in the living room and my brother, Mom and I cordoned off the king bed in the first room. For a while, we only had a queen mattress, but getting to sleep in the bed frame next to the mattress was a treat: we fought over that little cubby-like space. Eating out was the treat of a bowl of pho ($3 each, back then) once in a blue moon, and I didn't know that people shopped at stores, not yard sales. I had 4 of 8 dresser drawers to call my own, and I owned 3 books. The ownership of a book was a precious thing, I would give up eating and sleeping to read back then, so if I could have a book for keeps, I was in heaven.

Then, after their business was launched and keeping them super busy: lifestyle inflation. Big money was not rolling in but they decided to move and get a new car. We moved into a rental home, we kids had our very own rooms, and the next car my parents bought was a leased sedan. Then a financed truck, maybe a year after. They felt like they needed to provide a better lifestyle for us, a more comfortable one. And maybe a more comfortable/convenient one for them as well.

I had no idea what leasing or financing was except that at the end of the lease, we would return the car. Sounded like sucky to me, but my parents said the lease made sense because they didn't want to commit to a car long term before we were old enough to pick what we liked.
Mistakes:
1. Leasing.
2. Taking on new cars without regard for the overall cost: interest, insurance, etc.
3. Even considering what kids that age might want in a car and house. We were not old or wise enough to be included in this kind of decision-making unless we were also learning to budget. Obviously, we weren't. They should have picked a modest home and bought it before the housing market went haywire, and invested their money in that, not in our opinions. Instead, we (sort of) practiced delayed gratification in the sense that we were willing to wait to own something really nice, but didn't understand the part where you do without to save.
My parents owned a small grocery store, and supported my mom's many siblings by hiring them to work at the store. They also helped pay for new cars, rent, school, time off, etc. Then they expanded to open a second, bigger store that was not in the best location, and coincided with the grocery store wars. (Which was followed by the major grocery store worker strikes. All ugly.) This was a bad business decision, followed by another bad one years later to sell the first (performing) business so they could focus on the second (underperforming) one.
Mistakes:
4. They were way too generous and didn't set firm boundaries early on. The siblings/family assumed that because my parents were business owners, they were wealthy. In reality, they were spending just as much as they brought in thanks to employing the family. Even if it was "for a good cause," they didn't build wealth or stability for their own family. Doing business with family = SUCH a bad idea.
5. Overextending themselves physically and financially without taking a step back to evaluate performance. My parents have a major work ethic which meant that they needed to be at each store, every day, all day. It was awful. They worked 18 hour days, 7 days a week, 365 days a year, for more than ten years, and still ended up with very little.
They worked so hard to make enough money to send my brother to private school. I know they worried about sending my brother to the local public school because one of my older cousins had fallen in with the wrong crowd there, and that led to his untimely death in his early twenties. But that wasn't the entire high school's fault! My three other cousins did well, and even I went to that school. (In fact, my social awkwardness in high school worked wonders at keeping me out of the wrong crowd. Hah!)
Mistake:
6. Ditto #3. Coldhearted though it may sound, investing their time and attention would have been more valuable than wasting the money on him. More specifically, wasting the money on an education he didn't appreciate or take advantage of. The money for 4 years of private high school could have been a decent amount of home equity, or retirement savings. Or health care!
During my second year of college, we had a truck and sedan, so I shared a car with my dad for several months. Then they told me that I should get my own car because sharing was difficult. Honestly, I thought it was silly because we had worked out a decent arrangement where I carpooled with friends, alternating driving days, or arranged my schedule to match my dad's. It was a good exercise in making the best of our resources, but they kicked me out and told me to buy a new car. And not just a new-to-me car, a brand new car because I'm "a girl and therefore not capable of dealing with used car problems."
Mistake:
7. Reinforcing the lesson that everyone had to have their own car, and that we always had to buy new.

My mistake:
Listening. BFF's family could have found a great deal on a used vehicle. I should have stuck to my guns but I was 19 and stupid. When I was 15, I was looking forward to buying myself a cheap beater car on which I could learn basic maintenance like changing tires, oil, wipers, and other troubleshooting. Instead, I obeyed my parents and bought new for their peace of mind.

We've gone through 5 new cars in the last 15 years. What a waste. Can you imagine the amount of money I could have saved instead of wasting it on a new car and insurance? At least $15k in car expenses alone. I love my car, but I wouldn't make that mistake again. [And I don't plan to because I'm keeping her forever. Amortize that $20K+ mistake over 20 years of use, and I'll get over it.]
When my freeloading brother finally moved out, they let him take the television and family furniture with him. I was livid: he thought he could mooch off the family, run up the bills, and then take off with anything he wanted? Yes, they let him, but what a selfish jerk. Call me a hardass, but if he thought he was so adult, then he needed to go and make it on his own. Not take whatever he liked, only to chuck half of it when he got to his new apartment, and then finance new furniture! Yeah. I lost it. My parents' response? Was to buy a new big screen to replace the one he'd taken. A $6000 big screen that they couldn't afford without financing. Because they thought the point of my protests were because I wanted "my" tv that I never watched.
Mistake:
8. Oh, for heaven's sake.
So, for a (really) rough family profile comparison: my aunt is the sole breadwinner in her family, and she kept them in an apartment that costs about $800/month, drives a used car they bought for $3000 cash 4 years ago to replace their 15 year old wagon, and pays $800 in car insurance for two people a year. (That's 66 dollars per month for two adults!)
Her two kids were each offered full-ride, merit scholarships to private schools (avg cost: 50k/year) with at least twenty thousand in additional private scholarship money so they're not paying a dime for school. Oh, can I brag on my smarty-pants cousins a little bit? The admittance rate is something like 16%. So they kick butt.
Housing: 9600
Car insurance: 800
Total: 10,400

We went from paying about $800/month rent in 1996 to $1360 now with an additional $300-400 in utilities. Our car payments were $400+ for the recently totaled sedan, and just under $400/month for the recently sold truck. (My car was paid off in three years, but that was an expensive mistake as well: $21K in total, with an exhorbitant $XK in insurance the first year. but let's not talk about that.....) Our car insurance was averaging something like $3400/year!
I personally paid for my entire state college education after the first year - I had scholarships and federal aid to defray the first year's cost. [I call that the cost of being not as smart as the young 'uns.]
Housing: 16,320
Car insurance: 3400
Total: 19,720
That's just using the most bare bones, easily verifiable, expenses as examples. It doesn't include any of the credit card debt that my parents had, which I think can be attributed to using cash advances/charging expenses for the business, to buy stuff for us kids, and cover unexpected expenses. Also, I'm sure that three international trips between the years of 1991 to 2000 to visit my grandparents, each costing in the neighborhood of 10K or more, were charged on the cards. By 2005, I had taken over at least 10K of their credit card debt, but you can be certain that that was not the whole of it. [Purely sentimentally, those trips were worth it because they were my only chance to meet my grandparents. Grandpa died not long after our first visit.]

At one particularly low point, probably around 2002, I remember numbers like $5-6K being discussed as the "minimum" monthly household expenses. That is absolutely insane.

When I review at their financial history, it's staggering. It's taken over 5 years to 1) identify all the leaks, breaks, and mistakes; 2) reduce or eliminate unnecessary expenses, and 3) see how much money was wasted as holes are plugged up.

It didn't appear to be a lavish lifestyle, but it was for our income. There was far too much money spent unwisely, no wonder they don't have a penny saved for retirement and my mom's health/mental health declined so precipitously. New cars, a house, new furniture, that was all money flowing out into consumables, and not a penny to securing the future. If I'd seen the whole picture, I might have passed out. More than once.

My family scares me. I think we were the Joneses for a good long while: lifestyle was a much more visible issue than living within our limited means.

We used to sit around together and talk about the future, and what we'd have when we were financially stable or successful. Unfortunately, it was all about the things, not the obstacles we'd face or the decisions we'd have to make with regard to school, careers, and family. It was the houses, and which of the kids the parents would live with. [If we accidentally got one thing right, it was the joke that I would get the parents because I'd have worked my book-smart ass off to make the money, get the big house, and never give my brother the address. It was funnier back then. Also, I was a lot smarter pre-13-years-old; after that, it was all downhill.]

I wish we'd talked about making smart money choices, and that all choices have consequences. I wish we'd talked about making practical life choices. I am grateful that they were liberal enough first generation parents to see that a medical profession does not happiness create. For example, they never said I had to be a doctor to be good enough which is what many of my peers were told. But I wish they'd also encouraged us to make decisions based on the bigger picture, not just "do whatever makes you happy," and realized that each money decision they made for us was a money choice they were making for themselves. And vice versa.
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Lunch Break

Tuesday, February 17, 2009 Posted by Revanche 2 comments
1. Positively antsy to get my/family taxes completed. Yes, this is my confession that I did not offficially file my taxes myself, again, this year. Gah. I'll feel guilty about it later. I did my usual dry-run, and I think I've finally gotten things straight. If they match the accountant's, I'm filing my own next year. *goal set!*

2. Got two ING Direct referral bonuses in the last week, courtesy of Flexo's awesome link-sharing policy. Thanks Flexo! [If anyone wants one directly from me, I'd be happy to send you one!]

3. Still waiting to see my check for the truck insurance refund. How sad, just $115. Stinks that they refunded it to a card I canceled, so I have to wait for that card to send me the check.

4. Expect to be doing the same run-around with the insurance refund on the sedan.

5. Food makes everything better: we're going to potluck next week. This should be good.
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Check Number 846

Posted by Revanche 7 comments
Between online billpay, Yodlee, and automatic credit card billing, I rarely write checks anymore. At most, I write two checks a month, so I'm pretty laissez faire when it comes to balancing my checkbook. Lately, all I do to balance it is highlight uncashed checks and cross out cashed checks. Plain and simple. 1) Make sure the money's transferred in to cover the check, 2) put a line through it.

If this seems a little flippant for a normally neurotic financier, there's a very good reason for it. I'm breaking myself of the habit of tracking each single penny in my checking accounts because I'm normally tempted to mess with the cushion in there. It kills me to see any balance that's not earning its keep. Never mind that it IS earning its keep by serving as insurance against those times I have a boneheaded moment and pay bills in my sleep out of the wrong checking account, the risk of assuming that I won't screw it up this time is too great.

Clearly that upsets the delicate balance of my banking system, so I intentionally close my eyes to the checking account. Mostly.

I'm on check number 863 now, so I keep checking back on that single uncashed check from seven months ago. I had a sneaking suspicion that if I looked away, it'd jump up and go commit dastardly deeds. And so, it's with great relief I raise my arms in triumph and announce, the man has finally cashed his check!!

I can now go about my business. Halleluhjah!

Must ... stop ...

Monday, February 16, 2009 Posted by Revanche 6 comments
Seriously need to stop these consumerist cravings:

1. Electric blanket
2. Down comforter
3. Duvet cover
4. Water bottle/thermos
5. Cheese grater
6. Cheese slicer
7. Lifetime supply of block cheddar cheese and Jeno's pizzas (at 50 cents a pop).
8. Oversized mugs
9. Cool new Tupperware
10. All new cooking implements of my very own
11. A new home to put everything in!
12. Chibi Chun Li keychain
13. New Lone Wolf and Cub books
14. Cinnabon
15. Full sized bed
16. All new bedding (but I still love my memory foam pillow)

Someone please make the list stop!! At least I still have my two front teeth. *sigh*
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The older generation

Sunday, February 15, 2009 Posted by Revanche 4 comments
While arranging a baby shower, I sent out all the emails to the family invitees, but had to call the grandparents because they don't use email. The extended family is like my adoptive family, and I've celebrated countless holidays and life events with them, but I'd never really just called up and chatted with them. Sent holiday, birthday and thank you cards, talked to them on the phone when they called friend's home, yes, yes, yes, and yes, but this was a first.

You know you've got an entirely different generation on the phone when the second question they ask, 90 seconds into the conversation is, "where are you calling from? Home? This call is going to cost you a fortune!"

:)

"Sorry, I misunderstood what you were asking; I'm on my cell phone and have unlimited minutes, don't worry!"

And with that, I had a lovely 30 minute conversation with each grandma, each happily assured that they could chat with me as long as they liked without incurring long distance charges. They're great!

The first one wondered why I was doing "so much work" for the shower, and why I was doing it. Well, I said, gosh, her momma told me to. ;) Oh, and besides, she's my BFF. (Haha, her mom really did, but I would have anyway. The girl's like my sister, and her family's always been so good to me, there's no hesitation in making parties happen for her.) She cracks me up, she told me that Grandpa wanted someone in the family to marry me so they could keep me around. Well, the boys are like my brothers, so that's totally out.

The second one wanted to know all about how I was doing, and we talked about the economy, the family, her kids, how she's taking care of herself. I subtly suggested that we get her computerized to get rid of her paper files since she was having trouble finding some boxes since the holidays, but she's a packrat. The second I asked, so you really want to do this? She backed out! Oh well, thought I'd give it a try! :)

Sometimes I forget how great family can be when they love and support you. And they're hilarious too, because G2 tried to freak me out telling me that she was fine because all her investments were "with Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and AIG. You know, all the financials."

"........ you're just trying to give me a heart attack."
"haha, no no no .... ok, yes, I am."
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Ironic silver lining

Friday, February 13, 2009 Posted by Revanche 3 comments
It just occurred to me that the silver lining to the car thing? Is that it eliminates the car payment, due to end in August, right now. The total amount deducted from the insurance settlement is a blow, as long as we get a used vehicle for less than $5000 - I'm willing to kick in a few hundred, up to a thousand - it increases their cash flow.

Now I can reproject the 09 family budget. Happy Friday?

Oh, and I guess I won't be paying for car insurance in the meantime, either.


Forget luck, starting to feel downright persecuted

Posted by Revanche 11 comments
Am I numb because I've balanced out negative thoughts with positivity this week? Or is it because ... well ... it figures??

The car is totaled. It will cost more to fix than the book value. After the deductible, after they cut the check, after the car is paid off, we'll have a bit more than $3000 in cash. Instead of a working family sedan.

Now we need to car hunt.

I'd curse but I just don't have it in me.
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The good die young

Thursday, February 12, 2009 Posted by Revanche 5 comments
but that doesn't make the bad guys immortal. Which is my melodramatic way of saying that even though crap happens, and it sucks when it takes you by surprise, good stuff sneaks up on you, too.

Like payday. :) While I still have a job, whether I'm there to pick up the (figurative) stub or not, my direct deposit still goes into my bank account. And for a brief day or two, my expense fund balance hovers just about the 5 figure mark. Amazing.

In you go, $55, into my wee savings account. Up-sa-daisy!

And other links to make you smile:

+ Money Funk has a great example of what I'm talking about: good surprises!
+ There's at least one person in the banking world who is doing right by his bank, his community and his reputation: Steven Pearlstein of Citizens (thanks to Mapgirl for the heads-up)
+ FrugalCPA is all over getting things done. Makes me feel strangely as though I'm resting for him, rather than just a lazy sickie.
+ mOOm is adventuring in Cairns/Kuranda.
+ Mr. Tough Money Love has paid off a mortgage. I might feel pangs of sadness to see the cash go, but the relief of debt payoff is nearly indescribable.

Wow, for having been in such a funk about reading bad news, there's actually quite a bit of good news out there as well. Should do this more often!

TIdbits on a flu-ish mind

Wednesday, February 11, 2009 Posted by Revanche 4 comments
Gripey: Upon receiving my email about feeling worse than yesterday, I got a call from work: "Well, I just wanted to talk to you about [whole slew of projects] before [that person] leaves."

Yeah, no. I'm not going to remember anything from this conversation so let's try this later. I might even be less grumpy about it. C'mon people, I'm home SICK. Not home until you think of something for me to do!

Gravy: Food! There's food in the house. I so love food. Whole wheat bread, peanut butter, eggs. Leftover tofu soup. Leftover pasta and meatballs. Bin bin rice crackers? Where have you been hiding? Peach carrot juice. Um, what? Whatever, tastes fine.

I'm going to be eating myself into oblivion if you don't mind, and perhaps even sating the craving for an awesome bacon cheeseburger later this afternoon if my friend will indulge me and go with. In my diseased state of mind, $4 doesn't sound bad at all for what I'm assured will be a Fantastique! burger experience.

P.S. I love Twitter right now, it's slowly making me feel human again after not talking to anyone for what feels like days on end.
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Little luxuries: sick at home

Tuesday, February 10, 2009 Posted by Revanche 7 comments
Status: Miserable

But am seriously glad I'd the luxury of deciding at 6:30 am that, no, the hour+ long train ride to sit at my desk and be miserable, possibly a little productive and a whole lot irked was just not worth it. With plenty of sick hours on my account, there's no financial reason to be torturing myself.

And thank heavens for my FSA and that stop at the CVS over the weekend: I picked up two boxes of Nyquil/Dayquil combo packs which I've already gone through half of, and will be set for a few more days.

I only wish that I were coherent enough to use this time to get better and apply for more jobs. Drat. No multitasking for me today.
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Boring Financial Milestones

Posted by Revanche 9 comments
MSN Money's 6 financial milestones before 30 seem a little.... well .... blah. They really don't light up the fire of my imagination, really.

1. Scale back the credit cards.
2. Own a home -- or have a plan.
3. Have skills.
4. Give money away.
5. Know thyself.
6. Know smart people.

It's not bad advice, it's just kind of vague and run of the mill.

Then again, who am I to complain in this economy, right? Let's see what we can do to personalize it a little, instead.

1. I don't have credit card debt, and have canceled a number of cards that I don't use. Where possible, the credit lines were transferred to the remaining cards to preserve the illusion of higher credit available. This inadvertently messed up my insurance premium refund, unfortunately, because they credited an account that no longer exists! We'll see if I can get the insurance company to cut a check.

2. Um, I have a whole hundred dollars put away in lieu of a plan. So a plan might be a good idea. In fact, this will regain line item status on my next budget whenever I land a new job. More concretely, I would like to have my down payment (20% of course) and house maintenance saved, apart from my emergency fund. That's a lot of cash!

3. Oh, I have skills. They're good ones, too. But they could use some flair and I do have a plan for that. Girlfriend of mine has the Adobe Creative Suite with extra downloads and she offered one set to me when the new laptop was up and running. It is, now, so it's time to take her up on that offer and start learning how to Photoshop and maybe even InDesign. And a friend's friend is a web designer who might be willing to teach me some of his awesome designer skills; that would come in handy in any number of ways. Can you say (watch out, corporate speak!) value-add?

4. I'm guessing that giving money to the landlord, the electric company, the city, and gas companies don't count, huh. Nor does feeding my family. I could and must do better here. In the past, the NYC medics were recipients of my generosity, as best as I could afford, as well as my extended family. My goal is to comfortably afford to give an average of $50/month. I know it's not much, but it's a start and y'know, family to feed and house. Another budgetary line item.

5. Ok, this one is a little tougher than it sounds. For me, anyway. It's easier to know my goals, my challenges, and my shortcomings than myself as a whole person. It's been years since I've asked myself what I wanted or dreamed, and I've only just begun to explore that area this year. Turns out that I'm a bit more complex than my finances: I am not my money, nor am I my family or my job. So what am I?? This could take a while ....

6. Yep, I know all of you smarties, and my high school friends are no mental slouches either. I like being surrounded by smart people, and sometimes even smart people who disagree with me. ;) This is great advice because I firmly believe that you rise and fall to the levels of the people around you; so you can only rise naturally if you're learning from wise people in a learning environment. It's a tough climb, and lonely to boot, otherwise.

Items 3-6 are all actions I can begin now and should continue well past my thirties. I'd love to be well on my way to achieving Item 2 in the next three years, and have a more developed career plan on the table by that time as well.

Let's not limit this to your thirties: what's on the horizon for you? What does your five or ten year plan include?

New (to me) Thank You point redemption options

Monday, February 09, 2009 Posted by Revanche 3 comments
It just occurred to me that I should take a look-see at my Thank You points: earnings rates and redemption value.

The rate of TY points accrual depends on two things: my spending and my use of Citi products. The former is dictated by monthly expenses and needs, so it ebbs and flows naturally. The latter is dictated by whether or not I remember to pay at least one bill from my Citi checking account. When I remember, I earn 400 points a month, when I don't, it's only 200. With the addition of a Citi CD, though, I've been bumped up to the 600-points-per-month tier. Miniscule, but still points.

Looks like my Diamond Preferred card is still earning me two points per dollar, that's cool. The double points promotion was a result of my cancellation spree last year, who knows if I can sweet talk them into giving it to me for another year.

On to the rewards!!

I just want a GC that will defray my everyday costs: nothing frivolous and at a 1 point: 1 dollar redemption ratio.

Gas cards are my first choice now .... and completely gone. No BP, no Shell. Dang! Oh wait, they have a Sunoco card, but I don't think we have that here in California. After checking the site, it looks like their cards can only be used at Sunoco stations, unlike BP cards which can be redeemed at Arco stations. Ah well.

Retailers:

If that no-wrinkle ladies' shirt from Brooks Brothers truly doesn't wrinkle, it might be worth picking up a $100 card. I used to like ironing, but not anymore. Bed, Bath and Beyond and Macy's are still going for $100/10,000 as well.

Amazon: $50/6000 - handy for ordering birthday and Christmas gifts
CVS: $50/6000 - if I wanted to start doing the CVS Extra Care game, this could get me started without using cash of my own.
Banana Republic: $50/6000 - nice to have one or two GC for BR around in case of awesome clearance sales.


It's a shame that the redemptions are getting both scarce and ... sort of pathetic. It's the ongoing entropy of any loyalty program, though, they always tend to reduced value over time. Meantime, I'll keep an eye out for newer, better programs, like Chase's Cash Plus card which gives me five points per dollar at gas stations, grocery and drugstores. That gives actual cash back.

Note: The WSJ just ran an article on the banks' pulling back of rewards.

Little things

Sunday, February 08, 2009 Posted by Revanche 7 comments
Mostly a small change weekend. On my part, anyway.

+ Received a $1.10 refund from the loan company. I guess I overpaid the payoff?
+ Treated myself to a 33 cent cup of Lime Chicken Maruchan ramen - So(dium) delicious!
+ Had some really good (and cheap) dim sum - Less than $14/person including tip.
+ Tank of gas, $18
+ Paid a $1 Fandango service fee for a free movie ticket at Regal. Exchanged for a free movie voucher because my parents smashed up their car right before the movie started and I had to leave and pick them up. They're bruised and sore, but I think they're alright. No other cars were involved, either, thankfully. Put them both to bed with Tylenol and dinner, and stayed home to watch 2 more episodes of Firefly and House. Free TV via Hulu is a blessing and a curse!
+ Finished two of three loads of laundry. Waiting 3+ weeks to really do laundry meant I could finally sort into lights and darks! Smaller loads than usual, but I've been worried about the agitator in the machine and its ability to handle the big loads lately.

Big bills, pending:
+ Trying to decide what to do about a rental car. Just a weekend rental for them since they can use my car during the week? Or a weekly rental with unlimited mileage?
+ $500 deductible, family car. Sadly, my auto maintenance fund is not quite there yet so I'll have to steal from the expense fund again.
+ Rent

Back to hanging up laundry, and plotting which errands to run today. All week I've been fighting off the office creeping crud that everyone else harbored, and ran out of Day/Nyquil doing it. Without it, the cough and sore throat are developing. Must. Not. Succumb!

A few links to brighten a cold, gloomy day:

+ Please welcome FrugalCPA to the fray.
+ FrugalTrenches could use a little pick me up, not that she hasn't had scores of well wishers, but any good thoughts you can send her way would be lovely!
+ It looks like Escape Brooklyn's really going to sell her place and escape after all!
+ Almost Frugal's looking on the brighter side of the recession.
+ J. Money's got His and Her money combined and things look really good. See? I guess marriage IS good for the pocketbook.

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When down and out, don't blame luck

Friday, February 06, 2009 Posted by Revanche 7 comments
JD at Get Rick Slowly's post on luck and the associated article from Newsweek "What it takes to survive" really struck a chord with me.

In the last several years, there've been challenges in droves: health, family, bankruptcies, debts, tragedy. You name it, we had it. We managed, sometimes by the skin of my teeth, but the toughest recurring theme throughout was the devolving relationship with my mom.

Once my biggest inspiration and help, she changed dramatically as the difficulties ate away at her self esteem and faith. When faced with a new obstacle, she began insisting that "bad luck" was to blame for all our problems. At one point, she began to blame the house and its "bad karma" for the bad luck. I wanted to scream/cry: this is the person from whom I learned to pick up and solve the problems, no whining. (Or rather, no whining unless you're multi-tasking. That was ok.) What was this madness?
In the article, Professor Wiseman states:

"Luck is not a magical ability or a gift from the gods," Wiseman writes. "Instead, it is a state of mind—a way of thinking and behaving." Above all, he insists that we have far more control over our lives—and our luck—than we realize. Going back to the Italian Renaissance philosopher Niccolò Machiavelli, great thinkers and writers have argued that 50 percent or more of what happens in life is determined entirely by chance (or Fortuna, the Roman goddess of fortune). Wiseman says no way. He believes that only 10 percent of life is purely random. The remaining 90 percent is "actually defined by the way you think." In other words, your attitude and behavior determine nine tenths of what happens in your life.
I absolutely believe that life can be mostly determined by your choices. It drove me nuts that my role model was trying to convince me, the last person standing, that there was nothing effective I could do to turn around our situation.

Her mindset meant that she was handing off all responsibility for their/her decisions. With it went the ability and willingness to learn from the mistakes and effect change.

She chose to resign herself to my brother's irrational and selfish behavior, to allow him to run roughshod over them, instead of standing up to him. He was only nice to her when he wanted money or help.

She would choose to forgo medical treatments to give him money, and he actually took it! (*banging head against wall* This. Is. NOT. OK!)

She railed against the whatever-you-want-to-call-it for my dad's stupid decisions instead of refusing to bail him out. If she wanted to shelter her money from his failing attempts to make money, all she had to do was give it to me.

She had some nominal control but gave it all up because she couldn't control other people and the outcomes of her decisions. Instead, everything went wrong because of "bad luck." I finally realized that the sense of helplessness had overcome her ability to see solutions. I totally understand, sometimes I feel helpless, lost, whatever, you all see it here. But there is always something that can be done. Always.

~ work to build my professional reputation,
~ reduce expenses,
~ protect & preserve my emotional sanity,
~ take care of my family to the best of my ability,
~ establish firm boundaries with each family member,
~ scan the horizon for more opportunities to learn, build and flourish.

I'm sure that luck has its place - getting the prime parking spot when you least expected it, coming into a windfall, etc., but it should not be granted the power to dictate your life, not if you have any aspirations at all. That'd be the greatest tragedy.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I found this paragraph particularly interesting:

Third, lucky people persevere in the face of failure and have an uncanny knack for making their wishes come true. They're convinced that life's most unpredictable events will "consistently work out for them." Their world is "bright and rosy," Wiseman writes, while unlucky people expect that things will always go wrong. Their world is "bleak and black." When Wiseman gives lucky and unlucky people a puzzle that is actually impossible to solve, the reactions are very telling. "More than 60 percent of unlucky people said that they thought the puzzle was impossible, compared to just 30 percent of lucky people. As in so many areas of their lives, the unlucky people gave up before they even started."


While I do tend to expect things can and will go wrong, and spend plenty of time figuring out how, when and why, I think of it as disaster planning. Even if I think something's impossible, I'm still too obstinate to give up before I start, unlucky or no.

Would you ask a lady her age?

Thursday, February 05, 2009 Posted by Revanche 9 comments
I am 45
in credit years!
Credit Curious

Credit Age Quiz by SpendOnLife.com


No? How about a gentleman? Still awkward? Yeah, I don't like getting caught in that "Well, how old do you think I am?" trap. For the record: I cannot accurately visually judge age, race, weight, or even, embarrassingly once, gender. [That last was NOT entirely my fault; the guy's friends admitted that it'd happened to him before.]

But, you may ask about my credit age! Er, you could if I hadn't already proudly posted it up top, there. Clever Dude posted about his credit age recently and I popped in to try it out.

It's an online quiz that asks several questions about your credit and spending history, try it out and let me know how old you are!
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Cancelled, cancelled, and cancelled

Wednesday, February 04, 2009 Posted by Revanche 2 comments
Just cancelled the rest of my business credit cards: Chase Freedom & CitiBusiness (2). They'd cancelled the Citi Premier Pass card product, so my beloved Premier Pass was changed to a CitiBusiness. Exercising my right as a consumer not to accept the inferior product, I decided to get rid of the rest of my unnecessary business cards at the same time. It's only about 10k worth of credit lines, I've eliminated all debt in my name, and still have quite high (enough for me) consumer credit limits. Last time I checked, less than a month ago, none of the business cards appeared on my credit reports either.

*dusting off hands*

Another part of clean-up taken care of. Slowly getting everything in order!

Next up: scheduling life insurance medical exam, revising the will, organizing a How-To guide with account names, numbers and necessary information to all my finances to be included with the will for the executor. Or whoever. (And a medical instruction letter in case of incapicitation. Is it strange that I'm considering appointing only friends to these responsibilities, not family? I just don't trust family to follow my wishes.)

Moving in is for other people

Tuesday, February 03, 2009 Posted by Revanche 4 comments
Found this article: More families move in together during housing crisis over at Boston Gal's.

This made me laugh that I'm completely poised on the edge of the diving board, just waiting for my chance to move OUT.

It's so ironic in that I'm finally emotionally ready, and more than ready, to stop (mostly) coddling my family, spread my wings, and discover the world on my own, right when the economy is swirling down the drain and I can't find a job to suit my next career move.

Yes, I've always had good timing.

In keeping with BG's other post recommending that we try not to focus solely on negativity, though, I can be grateful that I've had some darned good training in Financial Savvy!

Can't beat the School of Hard Knocks :)

Here's an excerpt (hee):
I'm not one of you. Okay? I can't relate to who you are and what you've been through. I graduated from the University of Life. All right? I received a degree from the School of Hard Knocks. And our colors were black and blue, baby. I had office hours with the Dean of Bloody Noses. All right? I borrowed my class notes from Professor Knuckle Sandwich and his Teaching Assistant, Ms. Fat Lip Thon Nyun. That's the kind of school I went to for real, okay?

......

[SINGING]
Now don't hang on, nothing lasts forever but the Harvard alumni endowment fund.
It adds up, has performed at 22 percent growth over the last six years.
Dust in the wind, you're so much more than dust in the wind.
Dust in the wind, you're shiny little very smart pieces of dust in the wind.
I particularly like the song. :)

The experience of moving out, whenever it actually happens, may not look anything at all like I envisioned, but that's not necessarily a Bad Thing. It could be better! (As a perpetual realist, that's my biggest concession to optimism, ever.)


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What to do with budgetary surplus: another bailout?

Posted by Revanche 9 comments
The truck sold. What's next?

Well, I'm pretty sure that the sale price didn't come close to breaking even against the amount of money I've expended on the truck payments since last July, I'm not even checking, but it did cover the lump pay-off sum of $2356, with some cash to spare.

The question is: what do I do with that "extra" money?

My first reaction was to kick that money over to pay off the family car. It's just about the right amount to pay it off, and would remove one more loan from the family resources. (That car is currently my parents' responsibility, and not under my name.) It would free up cash flow about 7 months earlier than expected.

My second reaction was to put it in the emergency fund because I'm neurotically squirreling money away.

My third reaction was to leave it in the expenses fund because that's where the money came from in the first place, and I'm a BIG fan of paying myself back.

Lastly, there's a hybrid option. I could give them some partial assistance monthly, depending on how much they need to break even between my mom's (piddling) disability money and my dad's erratic income. By my calculations, it appears that they should only be running short a hundred or so each month until April. At that time, another monthly obligation falls off the balance sheet, and they should be fine with regards to the few debts I don't pay for them.

As much as my gut reaction is just to pay it all off, I don't want to nip this budding sense of responsibility that my dad's developing. I want to encourage him to work with me because I'm just not up for ANY more shenanigans.

Thoughts?

We interrupt your regularly scheduled post

Monday, February 02, 2009 Posted by Revanche 6 comments
to announce: THE TRUCK IS SOLD.


I'm actually sad that I didn't say goodbye to it myself. But I was determined to a) relax this weekend before I imploded, and b) let my dad handle all the necessary dealings. Not 'cause I'm a wuss, or because I'd be pissed that I didn't get a better deal and it's easier to blame it on him. I just didn't need one more thing on my plate.

So the payoff amount was reimbursed, as were about 8 months' of payments that I hadn't signed up for. No, I didn't break even, but whatever, I'm not even thinking about that anymore - it's a done deal. The truck is gone. The payment is gone. No more registration fees, no more maintenance. The insurance can be reduced.

"O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!"

January Snapshot

Sunday, February 01, 2009 Posted by Revanche 4 comments
>Retirement Savings

Rollover IRA: $1,019
Roth IRA: $4,143
401(a): $4,856
403(b): $12,009
Total: $ 22,027 (21,950)

Emergency Savings

Catastrophe: $ 22,291 (25,000)
Problem Cushion: $ 1,000 (1,000)

Short Term Goals

Car Maintenance: $494
Car Insurance: $1,357
Travel/Con: $400
Taxes: $3,515
Moving: $1,463
Total: $ 7,229 (7,273)

Long Term Goals

House Down Payment: $101

Investment Loans

Prosper-ish: $12,630
Personal Loan: $5,000
Savings Bond: $357 (current accrued value)
Total: $ 17,998 (17,998)

Total Assets

Illiquid: $22,027
Semi-Liquid: $17,998
Liquid: $23,291
Expense Acct: $3,527**
Goals Savings: $7,229
Total: $ 74,072 (74,315)

Debt and Liabilities

Truck: $0!!!
AX: $158
Citi 2: $735
Chase: $272
Rent: $1,360
Total: $ 2,525 (5,336)

Net Worth

$ 71,547 (69,325)



**Holy cow, the truck's OFF the ledger! The sale hasn't been completed yet, but replacing that money in the expense fund will be a huge relief. I feel exposed with such a small expense cushion, that's only about 1.5 months' worth of expenses now.

About half the increase was due to some overtime money (~500), the holiday gift (300), and diligently saving my transportation reimbursements (250). Everything "extra" from the paycheck and from reimbursements went into the emergency fund.

The other half looks like some gains in the portfolio, surprisingly enough.

All in all, an increase, so really not bad.
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