Monday, March 30, 2009

Find a way to do what you love

This post is not about personal finance or frugality per se, but I believe it is relevant because the benefits of sound personal finance and being frugal are related to living a joyful life and not a life tied only to money or material things.

Is there something you enjoy doing and have a passion for? What are you doing to follow your passion? Years ago I was really interested in crafts but never really did anything with them. After a family tragedy I took stock of my life and thought about all the things I wanted to do and wished I had done. I decided that I did not want to get to the end of my life and regret that I had not used my time well. Here's what happened:

I started doing crafts again. I found several crafts I really liked and eventually narrowed my focus to a few things on which I could focus my energy. Then I discovered the internet, including craft websites and blogs. I was inspired to develop a comprehensive body of work worthy of a website. I developed a narrow field of focus and put my efforts into doing just a few things but doing them well. I searched for people with similar interests and contacted them. Like minded individuals (not a lot, but more than I expected) from countries all over the world discovered my work and appreciated it. When I couldn't find needlework patterns I liked I started designing my own. I found an opportunity to teach a class in my specialty (not for money, but it will be practice and exposure) in a few weeks and having that deadline is forcing me to get my patterns fully developed and ready for publication as handouts. I am also making kits so beginners can make my patterns and end up with a useful item. One of the contacts I made is the editor of an obscure online needlework journal and as she is going to feature the type of work I do in an issue she is going to feature my work in the issue. The proprietor of my local needlework store also admires my work and has offered herself as a resource if and when I decide to publish patterns professionally. I am now at the point where I can see potential income from my hobby. Probably not much, especially because my field of interest is pretty obscure and limited. But I'll enjoy doing what I do regardless of wether I make money or not so that's OK. All of this has taken uncounted hundreds of hours of work on my part. But because I enjoy what I do so much it doesn't seem like work at all. Even the small recognition I have received so far is deeply fulfilling and only serves to motivate me to do more, and better. I don't know where this is going but I am enjoying the process and the journey, and I now understand how those who succeed are driven by passion for what they do rather than having making money as an end goal.

Lessons I've learned so far:

1) It is easy to work hard at something you love.
2) It is important to be good in a field where you want to succeed.
3) It is really important to communicate in order to get noticed. Put yourself out there!
4) Contact people who share your interests. People who enjoy what they do also enjoy talking about what they do and can be really helpful not to mention good sources of information.
5) It is really amazing how one thing will naturally lead to another. Each little step is the building block to reach the next step.
6) Success is a lot of little steps, not one giant leap.
7) Success is as much about the journey as reaching the goal.

Friday, March 27, 2009

California refund and shopping

After stating it would hand out IOUs to taxpayers due refunds, the state of California is finally paying out the money it owes. I received my tax refund last week after filing at the end of January. It was about time!

I already adjusted my withholding so that hopefully I will be due little if any refund next year. I used to like getting a Federal refund because I always used the money for something constructive like paying down loans but I believe I am now financially disciplined enough to put that money mind game away and put my money to good use as soon as I earn it.

Speaking of putting money to good use, I actually went out and spent some money. My wardrobe was looking pretty raggedy; not a single outfit fit for being seen in except by supermarket clerks and people who already know and love me! $150 at Old Navy bought me enough clothing to make several nice outfits. I bought the clothes in colors which match accessories I already own so I didn't have to buy any accessories. Two good things came out of this experience besides refreshing my wardrobe and having clothes I am not embarrassed to be seen in: 1) Spending the money was stress free because I have a savings fund for clothing and 2) I was reassured that I have not become such a tightwad that even sensible, planned, justified spending feels wrong. The whole point of being careful with money is to enhance my quality of life, not just to have more and more money. I don't want to end up one of those wacko bag ladies who live like beggars but have millions in the bank when they die.

My frugality goal is to be logical, not pathological.

The title of this post seems to imply that I spent my tax refund on shopping. Not so. The refund is a few thousand (my first full year with mortgage deduction plus changing jobs plus fear of not withholding enough = way overestimating my withholding) and I'm not sure what to do with it. Pay down mortgage? Home improvement? Savings? For now it is going to be parked in a savings account. I'll decide what to do with it later.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Discovering the second "R" in Reuse, Reduce & Recycle

During the time of my moratorium of fast food I found myself spending less money in general. In addition to the obvious benefit of saving money I noticed another benefit when trash day rolled around: saving the environment. When I went to empty all the trash cans I discovered that there was not enough trash in the house to fill the under-the-sink kitchen trash can. I emptied more garbage out of my cat litter box over the week than I did in the house. My recycling can held the week's newspapers and junk mail, a few empty bottles/cans, and little else. I was amazed at how little trash my household produced.

It felt like a revelation to me but it really should have been obvious. When you buy less there is less packaging to throw away. Especially with fast food, it really is amazing how much packaging it takes to contain such a relatively small amount of food. Some of the packaging is recyclable but a lot has to be trashed. I've always felt good about trying to recycle as much as possible but it would be better if I didn't have anything to recycle in the first place.

Monday, March 9, 2009

First Harvests


In addition to the winter arugula we planted, and the lemons and oranges, these flowers are the first harvests of the new year. We planted bulb flowers so we have freesia in addition to the lilies. The blossoms are from the branches of the peach tree which were hanging into my neighbor's yard. The lavender we cut back after a bad January frost is starting to bloom as well.

It is nice to see prior planning pay off so early in the season. I am looking forward to a nice harvest this year!

Sunday, March 8, 2009

How far would you go to cut back?

I was reading this article on MSN about a woman trying to survive on $32,000/year and how the first crisis for the poor was the gas prices of last summer, not the stock price and housing collapse of now. This woman went from being able to put away $40 per month to draining her savings to pay for expensive gas. I was sympathetic with the woman until the point in the article where it said that this woman, poor woman, had to switch to Kool-Aid packets instead of soda for her kids to drink. What!? To me, this right here is symbolic of something wrong in America. We regard luxuries as necessities and cry "poor me" when forced to curtail any luxury.

If it came right down to it, where money was that tight, what would you plan to change in your life to decrease your expenses? To, in the words to one of my favorite songs (by Bad Religion, from their "How could Hell be any worse" album with a picture of downtown L.A. on the cover) "dig real deep, and give until it hurts"?

Here's what I would do:

No more cable, because TV is not necessary. If I want the internet I can go to the library or go to work early and do my surfing before my shift starts. No more eating out, period. Purchase staples such as rice and oatmeal in bulk, cook a big batch at the beginning of the weak, and eat it all week long. Cut down on eating meat to three days a week or so. Utilize more of the produce that grows in my yard: almonds, oranges, lemons, peaches, plus my vegetable beds. Cancel the house phone, switch the cell (have to have a cell for work) to pay as you go and use it minimally. Use the free bus pass offered by my work even though taking the bus makes my commute three times as long. I could also earn more by taking a second job and only giving myself one day off a week. Life would be less pleasant if I did this but I could shave about $500+ from my budget, or more, and increase my income by $1000/month or more with the extra job. I call that painful but it would still leave me with my own roof over my head, a full belly, and still making contributions to my retirement plan as well as making additional principal payments on my mortgage. If I stopped contributing to my 403(b) and stopped making principal payments I could save another $1400 per month. Overall, if I was super hurting for cash in the short term (and still had my job) I could find an extra $1900+ in my budget with the possibility of more if I work another job.

Until I really looked at it I had no idea there was so much wiggle room in my budget. How much room is in your budget?

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Change I can believe in

I seem to be on a stream of consciousness kick this week...

I only made the first ten minutes into Alexandra Pelosi's "Right America" documentary following the McCain Campaign (it was after midnight and I was too sleepy) but I wanted to laugh out loud at all the quotes from people talking about how the number one issue in America is abortion, or gays. The campaign was just last summer; just a few short months later, would people be saying that now? I don't think so. I think the #1 issue in America is the economy. It was laughable, in a sad way. Now that I think about it, how many women will have abortions who otherwise would not have because they are fearful to raise a child in this economic climate? I would argue that people are more likely to welcome children when times are better.

But I digress...

All this rescue package stuff makes me feel so frustrated and sad. I wanted Obama to make rousing speeches about Americans taking responsibility for the mess we are all in, and telling us to own our responsibility and pay the bills that are due. I was hoping for an encouragement to dig deep and find our ingenuity to develop new businesses to replace all those that failed (thinking, as an example, of the new Tesla car company versus the failing Detroit companies). From the ashes of our mistakes we could rise like the phoenix, new and glorious and strong. Cleansed in the fire of all that was dead and dragging the economy down we rise with the energy of our own internal fire. No such luck. Just like I have seen in many a Code Blue at the hospital, we keep on resuscitating past all reasonable hope of bringing the dead and dying back to life because we cannot let go. In the end, the dead are dead but it cost a lot more money than it needed to.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Mr. Tough Money Love recently wrote a post about financial discipline being the key to success and how seeing the mistakes of others, particularly "experts", can lead us to be a little too forgiving of our own mistakes. Yes, it is good to forgive yourself when you make a mistake but I agree that too much forgiveness can be a bad thing.

#1 Self: "Put down the cookie. Cookie is bad for you, make you fat."

#2 Self: *whine* "But I want cookie, it is soooo yummy."

#1 Self: "Put down the cookie."

#2 Self: "But I want cookie."

#1 Self: "No! you can't have a cookie."

#2 Self: "I think I am hungry. Yes! I am hungry! I need cookie! *CHOMP* Not my fault!"

#1 Self: "Dangit! I told you not to eat that cookie!"

#2 Self: *licking crumbs off fingers* (inside voice: mmmm.. good cookie...) "I'm sorry I ate the cookie. Please forgive me?"

#1 Self: "OK, I forgive you, but don't do it again, alright?"

#2 Self: "Yes, I promise. No more cookies."

#2 Self: "There are more cookies. They look so yummy. I think I am still hungry. I want cookie."

#1 Self: "No more cookies!"

#2 Self: "Just one more..." *munch munch* "...sorry..." *munch munch* "...sorry"

{NEXT TIME STEPPING ON THE SCALE}

Self #1 "What?! Up five pounds! It was those dang cookies!"

Self #2 "Why did you let me eat those cookies! You knew they were bad. They were so not worth it. I hate you."

Self #1: "Why wasn't I more disciplined? Then this never would have happened. I am SO angry with myself."

Self #2: "It's OK, I forgive you, let's be better from now on."

Self #1: "Yes, let's be better. But first let's have a doughnut, I need some cheering up."

Now just substitute words like subprime mortgage, new _________ (unneeded item purchased with credit), et cetera for cookie; and words like bailout, rescue, and stimulus for doughnut. You now have an illustration of how we all got into trouble with our money and (for a huge percentage of Americans) with our waistlines.

In order to change our bad habits, financial or otherwise, we really need to be a little stricter with ourselves, and not so easy with the forgiveness. A period of good effort and progress followed by a tiny slip-up immediately followed by getting back on track and demonstrating remorse and a willingness to change; forgiveness granted. A series of constant slip-ups followed by insincere apologies and no demonstration of change; no forgiveness. (Hello, Bank of America...AIG...Citicorp...)