Thursday, February 28, 2008

Credit card debt down another $1000

With the extra money coming in this month, we were able to put another $1000 on our credit card debt. We also put extra toward my student loans and toward the mortgage. We are slowly paying things down, and I'm looking forward to adding up net worth for February!

Here's a few things we did this month to further reduce our cost of living:

*I pulled out our old bread machine and started making my own bread. At 86 cents a loaf, I can make whole wheat, all-organic bread for 1/5 of the cost of buying it at the store.

*I started making things in bulk. I made homemade macaroni and cheese, which seemed more expensive at the time (about $8 in ingredients), but one recipe made a giant pan and it lasted for several meals. I also made pinto beans from dry beans -- 3 lbs of dry beans = $2.00. My kids absolutely love refried beans, beans and eggs, beans and quesadillas...you get the point. Since I make the beans myself, I get to control what goes in them. I put 2 strips of bacon in the entire pot, and the bacon flavor...mmmmm. And instead of one person eating 2 strips of bacon for breakfast, we ate the "taste" of the bacon in the beans for over a week. This saved money AND was better for us. (tip: I froze pints of beans, which were enough for about 2 meals. This kept them fresh, and the freezing actually makes the beans better for refrying.)

*I started making my son's lunches for school. This week I made him a lunch 3 days out of 4, and not only was he thrilled, he got fresh bread, fresh fruit and a healthy snack of root vegetable chips instead of his usual lunch at school -- pizza, pre-made bean burritos or a hotdog. I also put a note in his lunch, which made him really happy.

*I tried to get by on as little as possible. When I went to the grocery store, I stuck to fresh foods and bulk items. I found that, when I avoided the doomsday aisles of chips, crackers and juices, I could get everything I needed for under $50 a trip, or for around $100/week. This worked even at Trader Joe's.

*I bought in bulk from Amazon.com. This helped alleviate the costs of dry goods items like diapers and paper towels, and it allowed me to buy unbleached, recycled products like 7th generation. I didn't know at first if it would really reduce our total costs, but it truly has.

*I cancelled our YMCA membership. This was hard to do, but I have to go at least 10 times in a month to justify the $60 monthly cost, and it wasn't happening. I did use it last fall, when I went to Pilates 3x a week (and I loved the class!), but the nursery uses bleach and it made my daughter break out a lot afterwards, so I finally stopped going. I can still use the Y for $6-8/day, depending on which one I go to, but it was hard to give up the membership. However, $60/month was a pretty big expense -- $720/year. It is more than the insurance on our Volvo, and we're selling the car so we won't have to pay that expense, so I decided it had to be.

Those are some of the things I've done the last 6 weeks to try to save money, and it really has worked. It is surprising how the small things make a difference, and even more surprising how your attitude changes. I "treated" myself to a lunch at Barnes & Noble, and I was terribly disappointed in my $6 half-sandwich that was overcooked and drowning in cheap Italian dressing. The kids got a cookie, and for $1.95 I expected a good cookie, but it was stale and tasteless, and I thought, how their quality has gone down! But then I realized that the cafe has not changed -- I've changed. Making my food from scratch, and realizing the actual cost of a thing has changed how I look at things.

We are waiting on a possible buyer for the Volvo, so that, combined with (hopefully!) a tax return could pay off a pretty big chunk of debt. I'm feeling good about our 'debt snowball' at this point; next stop, reducing our energy bills.

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