Entries Tagged as 'education'

The Code of Silence

If you’re involved in any type of long-term committed relationship (married, living-together, whatever), you need to get current with each other about your money. Talk about your past mistakes and successes, your present situation, your future goals, and your individual money habits. Many people come from families that treated money as a taboo subject. If you came from one of them, it’s time to break that destructive family tradition. [Read more →]

Consumer Be Aware

Every day, you are exposed to hundreds if not thousands of marketing messages. You see and/or hear them on TV, on the computer, as you drive down the road, as you browse through the newspaper or magazines. They are literally everywhere. Are you even aware that they are there? Maybe not. To you, I say, “Consumer be aware!” which is my version of the latin “Caveat Emptor” you may have heard before. Its translation is “buyer beware” and it is often used as a reminder that the buyer has the responsibility for educating themselves when making purchases. But we are consumers more than just buyers and we have a personal responsibility for noticing when we are being marketed to. [Read more →]

Maintenance

Maintenance is a word usually prefaced by “car” or “auto” for most of us. We maintain our vehicles with regular oil changes because we know that if we don’t, our transportation will be sitting on the side of the road getting us nowhere. The added benefits of regular maintenance is long-term savings: fewer trips to the mechanic, longer vehicle life, higher resale or trade-in value.

What about other areas of maintenance? [Read more →]

In The News

As I was running through some headlines for online news articles yesterday, I was pleased to find some that related to topics I’ve talked about here in the past couple of weeks. For instance, on the subject of layaway, which was my November 2 topicSears is reinstating its layaway program starting tomorrow. Of course, they’ve got restrictions so you can’t put a computer or refrigerator on layaway, but something’s better than nothing, right? Perhaps they’ll add options for those items if the program turns out to be popular.

I also discovered [Read more →]

Don’t Make Allowances

Most of us grew up in households and were educated in schools where we didn’t learn about money. We were never taught how to budget, how to balance a checkbook, how to save for the future, how to invest for retirement, or any of the other “money basics” that help us to get along in the world. For the most part, we have stumbled through those lessons ourselves, making our own mistakes and hopefully learning something along the way. Fortunately, we have the opportunity to break that cycle with our children. [Read more →]

Reading: Financial Peace Revisited by Dave Ramsey

I’d probably have to say that the first book I read—really read—on money was Financial Peace Revisited by Dave Ramsey. At that point, I’d already been through a first marriage and divorce that had left me with over $30,000 in debt to pay off. I was in my second marriage, all the previous debt had been paid off, and my new husband and I were trying to make sure we were on the road to sound money management. We’d both stumbled along until then, gleaning what we could from family and friends, trying desperately to learn from other people’s mistakes as well as our own so we wouldn’t be repeating them. [Read more →]