Showing posts with label Financial Freedom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Financial Freedom. Show all posts

Monday, December 21, 2020

I Am a Certified Financial Coach!

 I have recently become a Certified Financial Coach! I made my first video and uploaded it to YouTube. 

I am taking the blogs off of this site and making them into videos. Without this blog and my readers here, I am not sure where I would start! This has given me a great place to launch from so thank you for reading! I hope you will check out my videos. 

I also have a website here: https://lyohnk.wixsite.com/freedomfc 

Thanks for reading! 

Happy Savings!

Friday, September 22, 2017

Make $71.00 an Hour Tax Free! Or How I Purchased $286.07 of Stuff for $72.40 Today in Three Hours!

I haven't done too much writing this summer but I have been consistently saving money. This is how I live my life! For me, frugality isn't something I do once in a while but it is a lifestyle. I love to save money! Today, I went out shopping and here are some of the deals I got.

I love fall mums. These had been $3.94 but they were marked down to $2.76. I placed them on a table (that I got brand new for $1.99 a few years ago) with a pumpkin from my garden. (My garden has only given me this one pumpkin so far this year!)



My husband asked me to look on the "Oops shelf" for paint to see what I could find. He has been building a tree stand (with mostly scraps!) He said he wanted an exterior flat paint in either brown or gray or dark green. You can find paint that someone else rejected pretty inexpensively, usually in a corner somewhere in the paint section. I found this. However, it was tan. I asked them if they could make it more brownish. The man at the counter tried but I don't think he knew too much about mixing colors without a chart to go by. The first time, it turned out exactly the same color. The second try, he got it closer to a brownish gray and so I took it! This was normally $17.77 and I got it for $8.88.

The tan color is the original color and the grayish is the end result, which my husband was happy with!


Here is a photo of the tree stand in progress. All the lumber my husband had as scraps in his shed. He did have to buy some roof and side parts. I bought the carpet from a garage sale for $5.00. 

I found this beautiful oak rustic table at a garage sale today. They were originally asking $45.00 for it but had marked it down to $25.00 since it was getting late in the day. I didn't ask them to take any less since they had already marked it down. I love it! 

I got a lot of deals at some stores today. I have a photo of them below. Here are some of the deals. I will mark them as normal price/sale price:

Cranberry drinks: $4.95/$2.50
Sandals: $9.99/$1.09
Collagen Gummies: $14.99/$5.99
Let Freedom Ring Block: $3.99/.40
4th of July Window Decals: $1.99/.20 x 5= $9.95/$1.00
Christmas Present: $9.99/$1.59
Excipial Cream: $14.70/$3.49
Heart rate monitor: $29.99/$2.99
2 Folders .79/.08=$1.58/.16
Men's Shorts $13.93/$1.00
Women's Shorts $12.00/$1.00
Greens $18.99/$13.49
Pecans $4.98/$1.00 x 10=$49.80/$10.00
Almonds $4.98/$1.00 x 5= $24.90/$5.00
Christmas Present $19.96/$2.00
Erasers .97/.10
Toilet Brushes $4.98/$3.00 x 2 = $9.96/$6.00
Grapes $5.96/$1.96
Sunscreen $7.76/$1.00



I am only going to add up the regular cost and the clearance costs on the items I purchased today. I am not including sale costs on things I purchased such as cereal etc. There are a number of sale items I bought but it's just too much work to include it all! I am also not including garage sale items or items like the pair of Lee Jeans I found for my husband at Goodwill today. 

The clearance items were a total of $286.07 at regular price. I paid $72.40 for a difference of  $213.67. It took me about three hours to shop for these items. That works out to about $71.00 an hour tax free! 

Some people don't understand why someone would shop like this. They would rather buy things when they need them, one at a time. I understand that. It's easy and convenient. The reason for shopping like this is in the numbers. If you don't mind some inconvenience, shopping like this can really pay. And when you do it week after week, month after month and year after year, it all adds up! We all have to make our choices. For me, this lifestyle makes me happy! I would rather have some financial freedom and a little inconvenience. 

Happy Savings! 


Saturday, November 28, 2015

Buy Thanksgiving Items Now; Bring Out Christmas Items Bought Last Year



Now is the time of year to buy Thanksgiving items! As you see here, you can often get up to 90% off Thanksgiving items if you buy them after Thanksgiving rather than before! Usually for the first few days afterwards, they are 50% - 75% off but, keep your eyes out through the month of December and you can get items for up to 90% off their original prices!

A Table Runner for $2.59 rather than $12.99.



Place-mats for .59 each rather than $2.99 each,



Now is also the time of year to bring out the Christmas items you bought last year for up to 90% off. Now is not the time of year to buy Christmas items. I would suggest going without what you want this year if you did not buy them on clearance last year. This is an exercise in self-discipline. If you buy what you want now because you forgot or didn't do it on clearance last year, you will likely overspend and not have the desire to buy more when it is on clearance. If you wait and make do this year, you will have given yourself the incentive you need to remember to buy clearance. 


Christmas cards for .39 rather than $3.99.



A tablecloth for .99 rather than $9.99. 

Ornaments for .79 rather than $7.99.

 When you are tempted to buy what you want at a convenient time, rather than waiting for sales, remember that buying like this is going to save you money for other things. Try to give yourself a thought of what you are going to do with those savings to better your life. Are you going to pay bills you would otherwise have to worry about? Are you going to pay down debt? Are you going to save your pennies so you can invest? You can buy smart and still enjoy almost everything you otherwise would. If you really wanted a certain color scheme this year, tell yourself you will in time. There are some sacrifices to be made to live frugally, but in time, you should be able to turn things around for yourself and be able to have what you want. In the meantime, you are being smart and having goals that will take you places.

Happy Savings!


Wednesday, August 12, 2015

The Key to Success: Living Below Your Means

Many people are simply having a terrible time making ends meet month to month. People have boatloads of bills and some people have late payments on top of them. House payments, car loans, electricity payments, food, gas, student loans, on and on and on it goes.

People are drowning in debt. The average student loan debt for 2014 graduates is $28,000. http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2014/11/13/average-student-loan-debt-hits-30-000

According to one source, the average American credit card debt is $7,200.00. http://www.cbsnews.com/news/americas-skyrocketing-credit-card-debt/

People are drowning financially and no one seems to want to talk about it. It's the secret struggle of many.

What is the answer to this? The answer to this is, more than anything, living below your means. I can already hear the cacophony of protests. "There is no WAY I can live below my means! I can't even live within my means much less below it!"

The truth is, most everybody can live below their means. This doesn't happen by itself, however. A strategy needs to be created. The first thing to do is the last thing some people want to do. That is. sit down and look at all the bills and create a budget. This might be terribly scary, to find out exactly where you are financially. The second thing to do is create a list of three goals.

Once you list all of your bills, take the smallest credit card owed on and think about how much you could put on it extra every month. In order to do this, you will have to cut out something else. Stop buying Starbucks and make your coffee at home. Stop buying those convenience foods and spend a little extra time on the weekends making meals and lunches. There is almost no one who can't cut back something. Learn to use what you have instead of making new purchases. Once you find something to cut back on, take that little extra and place it on the smallest credit card you owe money on. If that's $10.00 or $20.00 a month, that's fine.

If you owe $300.00 on that credit card and you usually pay about $20.00 a month, now you are going to pay $40.00 a month. You will pay this card off twice as fast. After you pay it off, you will then have $40.00 a month to put onto the next card. This is a snowball effect. Once the ball gets rolling, the feeling of being in control of your future should encourage you enough to keep going! The peace you feel will be worth it!

Don't get discouraged! This is a long slow process, but in the long run, you will be so glad you did it!

Look up Debt Free on Youtube and find videos to watch to encourage yourself along the way. You are not alone! Many people have been where you are and have worked hard to change that.

Happy Savings!

Monday, September 15, 2014

How The Joneses Got Out From Under a Financial Snowball One Coffee or Mountain Dew at a Time!







Debt can be like a snowman. It starts small with a few snowflakes bound together which becomes a snowball. As this snowball rolls around in more snow, it slowly grows, almost imperceptibly. Before you know it, this snowball/debt is big enough for the bottom of a snowman, much larger than a snowball.

The snowball works both ways. People can snowball into debt, but amazingly people can snowball back out of it too. Of course snowballing out of it takes more planning, dedication and work, but people still can snowball right out of debt just as they snowballed into it. The key is managing the debt.

Let's say that a person has a home loan, a car loan, some student loans, and some credit card debt and some medical debt. It's very easy to have debt in all these areas and many people do. It started small, maybe as a car loan and a student loan, then a little credit card debt. Then, a person got married and had a couple of kids and took out a mortgage. Then, they had a couple small medical emergencies and gained some medical debt. Because of this they also got behind on some bills and ended up charging some things and only making the minimum payments for a few months. This is the danger zone where things can spiral out of control. It can easily happen and does to people who really try and keep things under control, but, life happens, and if a person has not truly planned ahead for emergencies, a person can find themselves in a bad state in not too long of a time.

So, this hypothetical person takes their budget and looks  at it hard. How to turn this around?
Providing the person has a regular income, it can be done. A few things to look at are:

1. Any expendable income. People will often say there is no expendable income which is why they are in this fix. They will say this sometimes with a Mountain Dew or Coffee in their hands they bought at the convenience store. What they have in their hand is expendable income. It is unnecessary. So, what a person wants and what a person needs are two different things. So a person needs to take a serious look at this. This is probably the hardest part because people like to reward themselves after they work hard because it keeps them feeling like they have something to work hard for. Cutting back the small rewards makes them feel demoralized and like giving up. Here is where you change your thinking (Change your think into a thunk!). Right now, for this time, the reward is seeing the debt paid down. THAT is the reward! And what better reward can you have than being able to someday buy that reward you want without guilt. So, nearly anything from a convenience store besides gas=expendable income. Those new clothes=very likely expendable income. That extra box of cookies=expendable income. They key is to cut expenses back until you have something, anything to go towards your debts. So, let's say my hypothetical family (The Joneses) can cut back $75.00 a month by stopping the "rewards" to themselves. The Joneses struggled with this as it was kind of depressing to acknowledge where they were but they figured they had $75.00 to work with towards more financial freedom.

2. Which loans have the highest interest rates? This is generally going to be credit card debt. (And if my hypothetical family, The Joneses, has ever missed a payment or the debt is spiraling up, the credit card companies are going to see that and since The Joneses are a "higher risk" they are going to take well advantage of that and raise their interest rates.) So, The Joneses have 2 credit cards and they begin to take that $75.00 a month and pay it to the highest interest rate card they have. They do that until it's paid off. They had been making a $35.00 a month minimum payment on that but since they paid it off, they no longer have to. So now they have their original $75.00 extra plus the $35.00 a month they were paying on the card they just paid off. This is now $110.00 a month. Now, they take the $110.00 a month and put it on the next credit card until that is paid off. The snowball against debt is growing bigger.

3. The Joneses also look for not just the first expendable income they found, but more ways to save and stretch what they already have. Mrs. Jones had a car she was making payments on at $500.00 a month and this car got 24 miles to the gallon. Mrs. Jones sold that car and bought a car that costs $425.00 a month and it gets 32 miles to the gallon. Now, she has $75.00 more dollars a month plus whatever she is saving on gas per month...lets just say $25.00 for ease. Now Mrs. Jones has $100.00 more dollars a month to pay down debt.

4. Mr and Mrs. Jones are on the same page with this. Of course if Mrs. Jones saved and Mr Jones spent it would not work very well. But the Joneses are on the same page and they do this for a few years and now they have their credit card debt paid off and their medical debt. The Joneses now get credit cards at 0% (yes it really can be done!) and they charge everything (groceries and gas) and get cash back and airline miles. So, whereas they use to pay to use credit cards, they now get paid to use them.

5. The Joneses have been able to save up a small nest egg and pay off Mrs. Jones car and now they have $425.00 extra a month + the $100.00 a month from switching cars plus the original $35.00 a month credit card minimum payment plus the $75.00 a month expendable income. Now they have $635.00 a month expendable income.

6. They keep saving and paying down debt. They have saved enough to make a down payment on an investment that creates cash flow. This might be real estate or some other business that brings money in for them every month but where they don't have to leave their jobs.

7. This snowballs until ideally all their debts are paid and they have a good living and retirement fund. Pretty good for giving up that Coffee and Mountain Dew and making some changes.

Mr. Jones had to consider that maybe he really couldn't afford that coffee that is "only" $4.95 that he "treated" himself to every day. It began with the small things and snowballed slowly over the years to bigger things. It was empowering to say no to the small things while the eyes were on the bigger things. Because once those things were mastered, Mr Jones bought himself a very occasional coffee that came with great satisfaction and no guilt. The Joneses changed their think to a thunk and snowballed their way out of depressing debt that had a stranglehold, one Coffee and Mountain Dew at a time.