Showing posts with label debt snowball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label debt snowball. Show all posts

Monday, November 26, 2012

My Tortoise Thoughts



Honey Smith over at getrichslowly.org posed an intriguing question last week. When attacking a large ticket debt item, what is the turtle thinking as they move along? This question is based on the premise, which I subscribe to, that when it comes to building overall financial security the tortoise wins the race. Being slow and intentional over a long period of time builds wealth.

It caused me to reflect on the process that was obliterating our debts through Dave Ramsey’s debt snowball process. Dave’s debt snowball works like this. I lined up all of my debts one by one. I paid minimum payments on each debt and with every extra dollar I could squeeze out of my budget I paid extra on the smallest debt first. Once that smallest debt was paid off I would repeat the process moving from the smallest to the largest debts until we were debt free.

Between my wife and I we paid off and closed 3 credit cards and 2 student loans that in all totaled just over $80,000. The process in its entirety took us three and a half years to complete. The credit cards and 1 student loan were the easiest and quickest to payoff. With deadline dates in hand and gazelle intensity in our hearts we annihilated 4 of the 5 debts within 6 months. What remained was the largest and last debt that mathematically was going to take us a few years to payoff even with paying extra every month.

So what was this turtle thinking during that time period? I knew that the road ahead for this final debt payoff was long. But I also knew that with a final payoff date on the horizon that there was light at the end of the tunnel and that we were going to be ok and we would be debt free. Since this last debt was going to take us more than 2 years to pay off we went back to our emergency fund and raised it from $1,000 to 6 months worth of expenses. We also began to contribute to retirement savings. Though short of Dave’s recommended 15%, in gearing up for the long haul of that final debt payoff we decided to put ourselves on a firm foundation.

But we also budgeted and planned to live life. We saved for and paid cash for our wedding and honeymoon. We took small trips to Mackinac Island, Charlotte and to visit my family in California. We treated these small trips as ways to keep us motivated and give us breathers in between the extra payments and long sprints of gazelle intensity.

So even with the aforementioned plans we still paid off that last student loan faster than expected. To seal the deal we took our 6 month emergency fund down to $1,000 to pay off the last of the loan. And then we swiftly rebuilt the emergency fund. It was a long couple of years to focus on one goal. The “attaboys” through small vacations and even the birth of me tracking our net worth helped us feel that we were moving in the right direction every month and passing quarter.

Now that we are living life after debt the opportunities before us seem limitless. When we want to travel to far away destinations we save up, pay for it and go. Our next milestone is saving up to pay cash for our home. While I am still taking a turtle’s approach to this goal, there is a great deal of comfort and peace knowing that we are accomplishing this and all of our goals without debt and with carefully calculated and intentional actions. We are going to start having some more fun along the way and coming up with joyous and unique ways to give. Dave Ramsey says there are only 3 things to do with money in life after debt: Invest, give and have fun. For 2013 our household is ready to start doing a little more of each than we did in 2012 and that is what this turtle is looking forward to in the coming year.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

My Refreshed Motivation

I knew I had some fight left in me. My wife has FINALLY reached the point of compromise and agreed to let us drop an avalanche snowball attack on her student loan. On paper, this is OUR last form of debt of any kind owed. And now that my wife has given the green light for me to set my gun scope on OUR last outstanding debt, I am happy to share this tale with you (as it is a story that is a nice example of what I call the APPROVED Dave Ramsey debt snowball exception).

In its full balance this single debt totaled close to $60,000. It is a personal non-interest bearing loan from a single member of my wife’s family. In Dave Ramsey’s debt snowball rules (Baby Step II), once you’ve finished Baby Step I. $1,000 emergency savings in a bank, you pay minimum payments on all outstanding debts, and every extra dollar that you can squeeze out of your budget you throw extra and focus on the smallest outstanding debt, and once that is paid off you move to the next, and then the next and before you know it you have an avalanche of freed up income helping bust you free of debt.

THE EXCEPTION is that you DO NOT INCLUDE any single debt that, by itself, would take longer than 2 years to pay off using the debt snowball method. In my opinion, Dave wants you to use all out and focused effort which includes: selling things, working overtime, working extra jobs, cutting the entertainment budget, all for a set period of time. If you focus on a single debt for longer than 2 years with ALL OUT gazelle intensity you will burn out. Also, 2 years is too long of a period of time to only have a $1,000 baby emergency fund. Life happens, you will get sick, the car will die, clothes wear out and family emergencies will occur. $1,000 can’t cover you for more than a 2 year time period.

So once we completed our debt snowball (which consisted of about 4 credit cards between the two of us and my student loan), we immediately completed Baby Step III. Establishing a 3 – 6 month emergency fund, and consequently completed Baby Step IV. Saving 15% gross income for retirement. Which brought us to the dilemma which until recently has been resolved.

In my eyes we had two goals before us: (1) pay off the last student loan, and (2) save to pay cash for our first home. There were arguments, theological discussions, feelings hurt, lots of yelling, lots of making each other feel guilty, basically a self-taught crash course in Negotiating 101. Ultimately, over time, I came to understand my wife’s wants, needs and desires. I took to heart her reasons for not wanting to snowball the last debt.

In Ramsey world the decision would have been easy: Armed with a fully funded emergency fund and while saving 15% for retirement, above and beyond all budgeted expenses, attack the LARGE loan with unrelenting ferocity. But in marriage I had to weigh this approach, with the needs and concerns of my wife. So together we made the decision to pay minimums on the student loan and begin saving for our house.

A few years have now passed since that decision was made and our “house account” is flirting with the overall number we would like to see for us to make our home purchase. With all things considered, a little luck and a lot of steering in the right direction from God, my wife confirmed with me today that she would like to snowball this last student loan and projections have us, together for the first time in our marriage, being debt free in October of this year.

I have never been more proud of my wife. I know the decision was not easy and she holds a lot of the issues that kept us from snowballing it close to her heart, but her desire to be debt free is simply inspiring to me. And in turn it’s like I received a cortisone shot and am even more amped up to continue on with 2012. I think I foresee a trip to Nashville, Tennessee in the late fall accompanied with a WE’RE DEBT FREE scream/phone call to my favorite radio show in our future J