Money Management – Part 1: The Big Picture

When you have a small and sporadic income, budgeting isn’t easy.  To be honest, even when I was employed fulltime I was never the poster child for budgeting.  You know how we’re told by all the personal finance gurus that you need to have 6 months worth of living expenses saved in case of an emergency or lay-off?  At best I managed 3 or 4 months.  Periodically I got hooked on some new financial management software or gimmick and, as with exercise programs, followed it religiously for a few months before reverting to old habits.    Money management wasn’t really part of my education – it was one of those subjects that wasn’t discussed much at home and in school the only part of the curriculum that came close was learning to balance a checkbook in home economics class.

Nevertheless I was relatively responsible in how I handled my money – tucking some away in savings, never coming close to the extravagant credit limit on my cards, and paying my bills on time.  I did enjoy browsing through stores and sometimes indulged in a little ‘shopping therapy’ when blue or to mark special occasions in my life.  I had a laid back attitude about money because I had a healthy and regular income.

To say that’s changed is an understatement.  These days financial issues are my biggest stressor.  Nothing keeps me awake late into the night, or makes me as anxious and irritable as wondering about whether I’ll be able to pay the bills.  With over 20 million Americans out of work, I figured others are probably having the same concerns so I went looking for tips and advice.

The blog, Living ‘Poor’ and Loving It, caught my attention by virtue of the title alone as we are living poor and I’m not loving it!  Unfortunately the blog’s author’s three rules consist of 1) Have Very Little Money; 2) Live on it; and 3) Rule 2 will change your life if you let it.  These are rules for people who have some money but live as though they have more.  People who run up their credit cards buying things they don’t need but think they want.  People who need to pare down their expenses by not eating out, buying sporting tickets, and going on vacation.  The author says “My most important money-management tool hasn’t been figuring out how to get more but rather discovering how little I really need and how much I already have.”

Been there, done that. We passed this phase of living poor during the first year after I was laid off.  Thanks to unemployment benefits we were able to ease into being poor (although it didn’t seem like it at the time) and as I detailed in several early blog posts we learned to live with much less – in possessions, space and income.   We gave up eating out, going to movies, subscribing to cable TV.  We clipped coupons, shopped at thrift stores, and ate a lot of beans and rice. If we were careful we could afford small luxuries like buying yearbooks for the kids or eating out on a birthday night.  We made do.  It wasn’t easy but it was bearable.

Now we have entered (sunk to) a new level – with no guaranteed income, some fixed expenses, some variable expenses and the occasional emergency.  We very much live hand to mouth.  My income (mostly from writing and editing jobs and the odd sale of a cat bed) is uncertain, frequently comes in very small amounts and goes as quickly as it comes.  When someone pays you $30 and you have a quarter tank of gas in your car you don’t worry about trying to save – you just head to the gas station.

When I have a slightly larger payment or a windfall I always put aside money for rent, stock up on necessities and use part of it to pay forward on whatever bills I can (after getting caught up on whichever bills I’m behind).  I find that paying two months of internet service, or car insurance, for example, relieves some of my anxiety and a less anxious mom is definitely a good thing for the family!  But sometimes I’m too eager to get caught up and paid forward and am then caught short-handed when, as happened last week, the car battery dies and needs to be replaced or the computer crashes and needs expert care.  Then, with no credit or borrowing power, I need to borrow from the rent money, hoping that another job comes along in time for me to replace it.

I believe we are on the edge of moving from living poor, to survival living.  It’s a scary place to be – I don’t like the view from here.

  1. Pam McCormick’s avatar

    First and foremost I love your writing! I also love Morrison’s writing both you gals are in the “excellent” class.However it still just blows my mind and how close you come to well…disaster I get how difficult it is because of your writing not my own experience.I am frightened for you and others battling situations like yours.I am scared to death it will happen to me, you never know what circumstances will be coming down the road.I will never ever again feel safe and anyone who says “not me” “couldn’t happen to me” “not my company” meet the millions of people who have gone before you.Right now I am just sad . . . for the state of our country,for the dreams lost,for the sadness in peoples lives…but that will pass and most of us are strong and resilient.But for a moment I just want to be able to dream about utopia where everyone has what they need and we are happy and healthy.

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  2. Maryl’s avatar

    Wasn’t Donna an apartment building manager who got free rent in return for her labor?

    Reply

  3. morrison’s avatar

    I’d be very wary of what Donna Freeman write on her blog ‘Living Poor & Loving It’. She has a good job now and makes money convincing others money is unimportant. What she left out is how she used to sell her blood to buy food and stuff. And that her education was paid in full by a govt grant. But rather work to subsidize her govt grant, she just learned to live off the govt grant AND get educated.

    So, IMHO, don’t believe much of what she writes about. Remember, she’s writing to make money.

    Keep plugging along. Things will get better for you. Success is right around the corner. Please just keep holding on. Good luck is coming your way. I can feel it.

    Reply

    1. boxcarkids’s avatar

      I kind of figured she was probably doing ok (and to be fair – her blog post is several years old) but I found it a good jumping off point for my post.

      Reply

      1. Maryl’s avatar

        Actually, Donna could be a great resource for you, BCKs, because she lives in Seattle, which is one of the places you mentioned to which you’d be interested in moving.

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