Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Free 21-Day Go To Bed Challenge and more...

 
Money Saving Mom

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Here's What's New
Free 21-Day Go To Bed Challenge
Top 10 Grocery Budget Busters
Free Printable Flexible Meal Planning Guide
Free Printable Kitchen Cheat Sheets
Free Time Blocking Printable Worksheets
Get Up Early Challenge: Day 2
How we discovered that a budget brings freedom, not restriction
500 Things Decluttering Challenge: Day 1 (64 items decluttered!)

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:: Free 21-Day Go To Bed Challenge

Free 21-Day Go To Bed Challenge

Sign up for a free 21-day go to bed challenge. This is a daily support and encouragement e-mail series, and you'll get one e-mail each day during the 21 days.

This is great to help with accountability on getting in bed on time, so that you can wake up early and make the most of your mornings!

:: Top 10 Grocery Budget Busters

Top 10 Grocery Budget Busters

Having troubles sticking to your grocery budget lately? Check out this great list of top 10 grocery budget busters.

21 Days to a More Disciplined Life

:: Free Printable Flexible Meal Planning Guide
:: Free Printable Kitchen Cheat Sheets
:: Free Time Blocking Printable Worksheets

Free Time Blocking Printables

Download a set of free time blocking printable worksheets to help you stay on task and make the most of your days.

:: Get Up Early Challenge: Day 2

Get Up Early Challenge: Day 2

It's Day #2 of the Get Up Early Challenge! This morning, when my alarm went off at 5 AM, I did not want to get up. My bed was warm. The house was cold. And I came up with a dozen other excuses as to why I should go back to bed.

But then I reminded myself that the first week of any habit-building is always the hardest. If I give up on Day 2, I'll not only set up today for failure, I'll also miss the benefits that are waiting for me in the coming weeks.

So, I got up. Reluctantly. And not with the greatest attitude. But I got up.

And that's half the battle. Sometimes, you have to just do the next right thing - and your attitude will change as a result of your actions.

It certainly did today! Because it's 5:45 am now and after spending time reading, praying, journaling, and thinking, I feel so much better. And I'm ready to face today!

I'll be hopping on Periscope at 7:30 a.m. to share some Morning Motivation encouragement and to some thoughts and insights from The 5AM Miracle book. I'd love for you to join me or watch the replay (just download the app and search for @MoneySavingMom).

Are you joining me for the Get Up Early Challenge? If so, leave a comment on this post to let me know how you did with your wake-up goal this morning.

We're in this together… And if you didn't hit your goal, that's okay! Give yourself grace, don't beat yourself up, and know that you can try again tomorrow!

P.S. Read more about the Get Up Early Challenge here. Need some help and inspiration to use your mornings well? Download Day 1 of Make Over Your Mornings for free (scroll to the bottom of this page to sign up for it!)

:: How we discovered that a budget brings freedom, not restriction

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As you well know, our family has become big fans of You Need a Budget over the past year.

YNAB aims to be a different kind of budgeting software - one that will help you break the paycheck to paycheck cycle, get out of debt and save money, and ultimately help you live the kind of life you want.

When I shared earlier last year about how much we love this software, I was so happy to hear how many of you also loved YNAB. We recently partnered with YNAB to offer $100 Amazon gift cards to the top success stories we received from readers about how YNAB has changed your life.

We received so many wonderful success stories and it was hard to choose just a few to share here! Thank you to everyone who submitted entries! (The winners have now been contacted, and we will be posting the winning success stories over the next few weeks for all of you to read and be encouraged by.)

Here's the first winning post…

We Discovered That a Budget Brings Freedom

Guest post written by Maria

My first attempt at budgeting was as a 24-year-old newlywed. It felt like going on a diet: restrictive, depriving, and definitely no fun!

I decided that budgets were bad and I concluded that budgets were for people who had money to actually budget. It took me over a decade to understand that it's actually the reverse. People who don't budget don't have money.

Though my husband and I were fortunate enough to leave college with good paying jobs, we also left with credit card and student loan debt and a largely unpaid wedding to boot. I did manage to pay off our credit card debt in 2 years through the "luxury" of living off one paycheck and allocating the second to debt. That was the extent of our budgeting.

A decade later we found ourselves under another $30K of credit card debt through the simple act of living just a bit above our means each month. We were still paying off student loans that now included grad school, except now it was without the luxury of being able to exclusively dedicate one paycheck to debt.

I decided to give the budgeting thing another try. After doing some digging, I came across YNAB. And that's when my relationship with money started to change.

YNAB flipped the script on budgeting from one of deprivation to one of empowerment.

A budget was a money plan. The simple act of assigning each dollar a job gave me the sense of control over a situation that felt hopeless.

I started the first month with the goal of entering all of our transactions. I asked my husband to give me all of the receipts, and I did all of the number entering. I thought it would be easier to enter the receipts all at once at the end of the day.

I started off the month with the full intention of entering each day and for the first few days I did. But my commitment - like my energy at the end of a long work day - quickly fizzled. I fell behind and by the time I caught up, it was too late.

We had exceeded our take home for the month. Frustrated and disappointed, I committed to try again and again, continually finding ourselves behind. Two months in, I declared to my husband that this system was not for us. Then my daughter was born.

It's funny. They cover everything in childbirth classes: labor, feeding, and sleeping. The one thing they don't talk about is the staggering cost of daycare.

I knew having a baby was expensive, but it turns out I only thought I knew. We were now facing the credit and student loan debt, monthly bills, and childcare costs. There were moments when I thought, "My goodness, how could I bring this kid into a family so burdened with debt? I should have gotten my act together before I had her!"

The beautiful thing about motherhood, though, is that you only need a few seconds of a smiling baby to make it all better and to be reenergized with the fact that you now have the biggest motivator to do better. All I could think was, "I don't want her to grow up not knowing how to manage her money. We have to learn so we can teach her."

And that's when we gave YNAB a second chance. This time we did a few things differently. Here's what we learned:

1. There's no "I" in budget. For years, I had handled the finances because I thought it would be easier for one person to do it. It turns out that it takes two to budget in a marriage.

Spoiler alert: It isn't pretty, especially if one partner has been doing the lion share of the finances. You'll often hear, "How did we spend that much on restaurants?" It's not fun, but it gets better!

2. We have to keep it real. We entered expenses in real time. Because of the wonderful mobile app, there was no more waiting to get to our home computer to enter the pile of receipts. My husband became obsessive with this, literally entering purchases at the cash register, which fueled me to become equally neurotic.

3. Flexibility is the spice of life. A budget is a living document. Flexibility is key for success and YNAB is built for that.

Spending too much in one category? Adjust from another.

Christmas was a true test. For the first time ever, we created a budget for gifts. Even so, we realized that at the current rate we would still end up over budget for the month. We worked together to readjust categories and consider pending income to make sure that we would enter the new year with a balanced budget from December.

4. Let YNAB be the bad guy. Nobody wants to be the bad guy and have to say "No, you can't buy that or no, we can't go out to eat." Now we say, "We have to ask YNAB if we can buy this" or "YNAB is going to yell if go out to eat again this month."

It may sound a little infantile, but we are the parents of a toddler and sometimes you just need to have some humor to get through the tough parts. It gives us a good laugh and takes the pressure off.

We have been successfully YNABing for three months now. When I first read about this contest, I thought, "I'm not successful yet because we are not debt-free." But then I thought about how much better we are doing and realized that success is defined by each of the milestones that you achieve to reach the goal. The goal is simply what happens when you have successfully completed all of the steps to get there.

We still have a long way to go, but like the saying goes: the journey of a thousand miles starts with a single step (or two, or three).

Sign up for a free 34-day trial of YNAB!

Interested in trying out YNAB? Go here to sign up for a free 34-day trial.

This post is underwritten by YNAB. Read our disclosure policy here.

:: 500 Things Decluttering Challenge: Day 1 (64 items decluttered!)

500 Things Challenge: I decluttered 64 items today!

It's Day 1 of the 500 Things Decluttering Challenge!

Today's project was to declutter at least 100 pieces of paper. This could be any kind of paper in any part of your house - paper scraps, magazines, newspapers, junk mail, etc.

I'm pretty much a fanatic about staying on top of paper piles (see my system for staying on top of paper clutter here), so I wasn't sure if I'd come up with 100 pieces of paper to toss/recycle. Then, I remembered the junk drawer in my kids' bedroom… There was more than paper in there to declutter - I found candy wrappers, jar lids, and even an empty medicine bottle.

Today's total: 64 items decluttered (yes, I counted candy wrappers and all! Because I get to make the rules on what counts!! ;))

I'm going to keep a running total of all my items decluttered during this challenge as I thought it would be fun to not only do Daily Totals but also Overall Totals.

How many paper (or other!) items did YOU declutter today?? Leave a comment and let us know. 

P.S. You can read more about the Decluttering Course I'm going through here. If you'd like to join me in going through it in January and get the videos, information, and printables every day, you can go here to purchase to get it for just $5.99 right now!

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