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Find A Roommate And Financial Freedom

By Frugaling 4 Comments

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As a student, I feel like a pinball getting smacked around from location to location. I’ve moved about 9 times in my adult life. I’ve lived with significant others, friends, acquaintances, and even by myself. I trekked across campuses, cities, and the country. After two years living alone, I found a roommate and will make my tenth move this summer. Today, I wanted to spend some time reviewing my current and future living situations, a hesitancy regarding roommates, and the effect on my budget.

My Man Cave

Two years ago, when I received my admission to graduate school and decided to move to the Midwest, I was ecstatic, but clueless about housing. I didn’t need much – just a roof over my head and basic utilities. I jumped at an opportunity to live in the university apartments. I hadn’t seen the outside or inside of them, but the price ($435 a month for a one bedroom) was unbeatable.

Look at these digs!
Look at these digs! Perfect for a window air conditioner.

What I found was both decrepit and lovable. The apartments bubble with rust. A perma-dirty linoleum floor greets my toes when I slide out of bed each morning – you never get used to the cold. The faucets run a yellow/red when they’re not run regularly. My circular thermostat doesn’t account for certain parts of the apartment, which seem to be unprotected from the harsh, Midwestern cold. Cinder blocks are stacked high on the walls, painted over in what can only be assumed to be lead paint. A thick coating of asbestos lines the ceilings.

Despite misgivings, it’s my home, and I love it. Actually, I find it comical how much I don’t want to leave my current apartment, and I’m only leaving because the university is demolishing them.

Forced to move again, while balling on a serious budget with severe time constraints, seemed impossibly difficult. Then, the university notified everyone that new apartments were being built in time for my departure from the old ones. I could just move right into them!

Luxury Living At A Price

Over the last decade or so, the university considered a construction project to repair and rebuild the flood-damaged, aged, asbestos-filled apartments. Year after year seemed to pass without resolution. When I moved in summer 2012, I heard the whisper of change – a private bidder on public lands.

Then, a resolution quickly swept over the university apartment system. New buildings, contractors, and contracts would be drawn. The private company would revitalize this community with opportunity, design, and (supposedly) affordability. Tenants would see a brightened exterior and feature-filled interior. The costs would unfortunately need to increase, but we were assured they’d be manageable.

Something seemed askew about allowing private bidders onto public, university property, but the messages seemed positive. A few months later I found out the price: $875 per month for a one bedroom. In other words, more than 100% what I paid when I first moved!

Despite balling on a budget, I resigned to the fact that my 60-70 hour workweek wouldn’t enable me to tour many places. I would accept whatever they required. I signed a lease last year, much to my dismay and confusion. How could the university charge $875 per month for student housing?

Wake Up And Smell The Budget

Even though the price of rent was steep, I relished my independence, at the expense of my budget. I wanted to be frugal, but not that frugal. This new rent would decimate everything I worked towards over the last 10 months. I balanced my budget and created a tiny surplus for each month. But paying $875 a month would mean losing about $3000-4000 per year, plus student loans with at least 6.8% interest APR. I can’t even calculate the true cost of this decision.

Over the course of this semester, I’ve been working hard at not working. Essentially, I reached burnout, and to counteract these notoriously awful feelings, I decided to spend more time going out with people. Being able to socialize and meet new people has been one of the best experiences of my life. It’s kept me sane amidst my crazy-busy life.

Thankfully, meeting people also meant finding those in similar situations: looking for roommates. Over time I found someone that was excited about living together and could afford to split a two-bedroom apartment. The mental math was easy: rent would be $550 per month.

The challenge for me was realizing my prejudices towards having roommates. In the end, I realized that opting for the expensive rent was a cop-out to finding a roommate and managing my delicate budget. The reality was that I didn’t have independence until I was free from debt. I’m looking forward to having a new roommate, paying off even more student loan debt, and freeing myself from the burden of an unbalanced budget.

What have you done to save on rent, housing, etc.? What do you think about living with roommates? Any recommendations for me?

Filed Under: Save Money Tagged With: apartment, Budget, Burnout, Finances, freedom, Frugal, graduate school, housing, moving, rent, roommate, Student Loans, university

Burnout: My Into The Wild Craving

By Frugaling 8 Comments

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From Into The Wild Movie Burnout
Burnout makes me want to take off to Alaska, and have my own Into The Wild moment

Today’s diary-like article is brought to you by my head’s burgeoning desire to really see the world and diversify my experiences. As a student for about 21 years straight, I’m really starting to develop an itch for more. Stuck inside classrooms with esoteric professors (at times), and told to read ever-increasing amounts of onerous text, I’m burnt out.

My head keeps thinking about bigger questions:

  • Why are we here?
  • What motivates me?
  • How can I follow my dreams?
  • Why am I sitting in certain courses, losing an hour-and-a-half of life each class?
  • Am I benefiting from these more pedantic exercises in endurance for endurance sake?
  • How can I better help others?

Before I can focus on these questions, I’m swept away by the confining, time-limiting world of graduate school. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve heard this cliche: “Graduate school is like a marathon.” The purpose of this phrase is to both reassure and reevaluate your place. A marathon is all about pace; to finish 26.2 miles, you must have a perfect confluence of both time and energy. Just pace yourself in grad school, and you’ll make it through.

The analogy works, until I remember that I finished two marathons in the first two years of graduate school. See, I’d take a marathon any day over the drool-inducing caverns of classrooms. In these moments of both clarity and disillusion, I wonder what I’m doing and desperately want to buy a ticket to some far away place.

Dorothy from Wizard of Oz
Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz, clicking her red heels…

I want to see the world before it’s too late. I want to feel more before it’s too late. Life is finite, and precious. Being in a classroom, sitting through an incomprehensible lecture on a subject I will never apply to my work as a psychologist is hard to swallow. Like Dorothy, I’m clicking my shoes together, hoping to be anywhere but within these four academic walls. I want to be out there, helping people, and making a difference – concretely, directly.

That’s when my more frivolous self comes into the picture. That airfare to a remote destination is most certainly not frugal. The desire to experience, see, and do often comes with a price; frankly, Groupon doesn’t help. I’m in debt. Nothing is truly affordable; yet, I’m itching to get up and go.

Burnout is a warning. Burnout is when the presses stop, wheels cease to spin. Burnout can be disastrous to a frugal budget. That’s the last thing I need. Nowadays, my solution to these moments is to accept my body’s non-acceptance. My head and heart are telling me: something’s gotta give.

If you’re beginning to feel burnout, your body is communicating something about stress and flow in life. Likely, your time and energy is primarily going to tasks that aren’t fulfilling. The answer is simple: keep doing the same thing or change it up. Usually, it’s not about needing more time; rather, a reallocation of time. If you’re burnt out it’s probably time to starting saying “no” to certain projects, taking more time to pursue passion projects, and giving up a little bit of the expected path. It helps to remember that this is your path – no one else’s. You can change course whenever you feel like it.

Filed Under: Social Justice Tagged With: Budget, Burnout, Burnt out, Groupon, Into The Wild, Life, Marathon, money, Travel

8 Proven Purchases For Happiness

By Frugaling 8 Comments

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The Wolf Of Wall Street Movie Film

Happiness = Money, right?

Research suggests that happiness and money are poorly correlated. In other words, money doesn’t tend to make people happy. Pretty crazy, right? Everything about our society seems to be predicated around the synergy of these two variables. But most of the time, happiness is correlated to other behaviors (i.e., closeness to friends, enjoyment at work, and balance in life).

In this consumer-driven society, encouraged to buy from our very own presidents and leadership, we are primed and ready to spend and spend – well beyond our budgetary restrictions. Our world tends to eschew philosophical questions about why you need to have something, in favor of taking advantage of the present moment to spend.

Happiness is often a marketing tool, used to increase sales. For instance, a commercial may feature scantily-clad women partying with beers in hand. It doesn’t take a scientist to decipher the claim: drink more beer, get more women – prettier ones, too! But lasting happiness isn’t at the end of a bottle.

You’re Doing It Wrong

Wolf Of Wall Street Leonardo DiCaprioIn Martin Scorsese’s The Wolf of Wall Street, Jordan Belfort wreaks havoc on financial markets, his family, and to anyone else in his way. He has a ruthless charm, narcissism, and greed. He spends and drives recklessly. Jordan is the living embodiment of a metastasized compulsion to capitalism.

What our antagonist fails to understand is that happiness, purpose, and meaning are not contained within another $100 bill (or, however many millions he makes). Who can blame him, though? When a society values money like we do, and encourages spending without regard for the future, he’s actually playing by our rules.

Moreover, he’s not alone. Many struggle to understand and say “no” to a society that propagates this need to spend and make more money. But what if money did actually make you happy? What if there was a way to make these two things more correlated?

An Action-Plan For Money And Happiness

Newer research suggests that money can make you happy, but up until now we’ve been spending it wrong. All the beer, fast cars, and yachts can’t make us happy. Instead, happiness comes from some specific action-oriented spending.

  1. Take the trip, ditch the tchotchkes
    When it comes to happiness, buying material goods rarely suffices. Whatever positive emotions are initially experienced tend to fade rapidly over time. In fact, 57% of people reported greater happiness from experiential purchases versus 34% for those purchasing material goods.
  2. Give a little, give a lot – just give
    Researchers found that personal spending – buying for yourself – did not relate to long-term happiness. On the other hand, those who spent money on others acknowledged greater happiness. When you think about all of your expenses for a month, it might help to think about how much of that is going to help others.
  3. The tiny purchases are more important
    Unlike Jordan Belfort and his bags of cash, you’ll likely be restricted by current bank account balances. When you purchase expensive, rare items, there’s a finality and adjustment that occurs – a new norm develops. If you buy smaller, more frequent items, you actually can take advantage of novelty and variability – both key health indicators.
  4. Avoid extended warranties and overpriced insurance
    Turns out that there’s quite a lot of psychological evidence to suggest that buying extended warranties may be an unnecessary “emotional protection.” Essentially, because we do not want to lose/damage our new purchase, these warranties pull out an emotional response regarding loss. Most of the time, buying or reacting to this makes you spend more than you have to and occludes happiness.
  5. Delay gratification, consumption
    Researchers suggest that “anticipation” is a key ingredient to a healthy, happy purchase. By waiting to purchase and letting that eagerness build, we may actually enjoy it more when we finally have it. Likewise, by delaying purchases, consumers may spend less – or not at all.
  6. Clear pros and cons
    Looking to buy that dream home someday? Where do you envision it? Maybe you want to buy a dream lakehouse? Researchers found that many people tend to downplay the negatives of an imagined purchase. What about the tax implications, a plumbing issue while you’re away, and/or an exceptionally mosquito-filled summer? Imagined happiness is often easier than the reality of an impending purchase. By trying to realistically imagine your purchase, while creating an objective, logical pro and con list, you may be able to avoid this pitfall.
  7. Don’t dare compare
    We’re notoriously awful comparison shoppers/buyers; at least, when we account for happiness. Dunn, Gilbert, and Wilson (2011) found that Harvard University students living in their residential system tended to downplay social ties and try to pick physical features of a building first.

    …when these students later settled into their houses as sophomores and juniors, their happiness was predicted by the quality of social features but not by the quality of physical features in the houses.

    The point is that even though the social features matter far more, before we choose something, we don’t always process and think about our own social needs. Interpersonal connections with others are necessary for most everyone, and they tend to bring greater happiness.

  8. Think of others’ enjoyment, too
    Online review sites and movie rankings bring swaths of people to rate their own experience with a product or experience. By utilizing these websites, you can measure your own enjoyment and future experience to theirs. If lots of people experienced happiness, odds are you will, too!

This action plan for making happiness from money is based off the research by Dunn, Gilbert, & Wilson (2011). They found that people were spending their money inappropriately, thinking they’d be happy, when there were better ways.

How do you spend your money? What do you do to find long-term happiness?

Filed Under: Make Money Tagged With: Budget, cash, Consumer, Happiness, Life, Make Money, money, research, science, spending, wolf of wall street

5 Essentials For Paying Student Loans

By Frugaling 9 Comments

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Student loans net work Mint.com account
My student loans were careening out of control. Now, I’m looking at the finish line: zero debt.

Today, I paid off more student loans than ever before: $4,000, to be exact. This hefty deposit was made directly to my loan servicer, which will pay off federal aid debts. In May 2013, I had nearly $40,000 in debt. I was careening out of control, and my only solution was to take out more student loans. Instead, I started Frugaling and changed my entire financial future.

Even though I’m making more money than ever, it’s important to safely and smartly pay off debts. While it’s best to prevent excess debt via proactive budgeting, paying it off can be dangerous, too. In my situation, I paid off this huge chunk of debt by following the proceeding five essentials. Hopefully these will help you to safely pay off more student loans than ever!

1. Pay Off Active, High Interest Student Loans

Okay, I’m going to get a little technical here. I have two types of federal aid: A and B. My “A” loans are subsidized (no interest gaining) until I graduate from school. Unfortunately, my “B” loans are a running taxicab of interest and piling debt.

The first goal needs to be paying off high interest student loans that are active. My “A” loans are not active, and as such, do not need to be the focal point. Meanwhile, my “B” loans are ticking along at about 6.7% APR. All my energy and funds are going towards these second, active interest loans right now.

2. Pay Off As Much As Your Budget Can Bear

It’s tempting to start taking some of my newfound money and buy things. Somewhere between things I don’t need and things I’ve long wanted – oh, how wonderful that would be to buy the unnecessary but awesome!

To prevent this human reaction, I’m digging deep and paying off an uncomfortable amount of student loans every month. It hurts to pay this much because I feel uncomfortable having this little in my savings/checking accounts. Conversely, it helps me pay off more each month, and prevents needless purchases while my budget is being corrected. The less access to money you have, the less you’ll spend!

3. Subsidized Loans Are Free Money While In School

The “B” portion of my loans are my enemy, while “A” is a friendly sort. My student loans started out as a subsidized group, when the country cared about educating the masses affordably and fairly. That’s sort of changed.

I have $8,500 in subsidized loans that are protected from gaining interest until I graduate. Phew! This mass is scary and will be a priority at some point. While I’m in graduate school, I’ll aim to stock up my bank account, build an investment portfolio, and diligently follow my budget. Later, after I graduate and the interest becomes active, I’ll redirect this built up liquidity to quickly pay off the rest of my loans.

4. Keep Some Handy For Emergencies/Tax Season

This might seem contradictory, but part 2 says pay as much as you can possibly bear. Does that mean you should scrap any emergency funds to pay off student loans immediately? Well, it depends on your liabilities.

As a car owner, with certain financial obligations, I need to have some money on hand in case something goes awry. Likewise, this is the first tax season where I’ll be paying Uncle Sam. While I’m happy to do it, I need to prepare for significant budget buster in mid-April (when my payment is scheduled). The key here is to pay as much as you can, while insuring yourself against totally tragedy.

5. Recognize Your Accomplishments

giphy

Bring in the reinforcements! Good habits are largely built from strong, positive reinforcement behaviors. Pavlov and Skinner are the two psychologists credited with founding the field of classical and operant conditioning. If you’ve ever taken a psychology course, you’ve likely learned about them.

Those two stodgy, crotchety scientists were pioneers in the field of education and behavior management. Skinner’s operant conditioning reinforcement schedules are as important as ever. Simply put, when you’re done paying off a significant chunk of student loans, reward yourself! Today, mine will be an extra coffee before work. What’s yours?

Filed Under: Loans Tagged With: Budget, debt, graduate school, Habits, high interest, loan, positive reinforcement, skinner, Student Loans, subsidized, taxes

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