Showing posts with label creative. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creative. Show all posts

Monday, 17 April 2017

Saving is boring! Stay on track

Alright guys, I have a confession to make. I am bored of savings. Putting aside $20k for my emergency fund is easily the most dull and meaningless savings goal I've ever had. I love investing, pushing money into accounts that fund my retirement is thrilling. I've had to slow that down to save for my emergency fund and I'm bored.

So I prowled the internet for some tips. While there are plenty on ways to change your saving / spending habits, finding ways to stay motivated was harder.
Let me start by saying that I haven't held more than $10,000 in cash since I discovered that I could invest. At first I thought the money on a high interest account was exciting and at 18 I had something like $30,000 in my account earning 6% (from memory). At the time it was great, but then interest rates dropped and I discovered shares and bonds. The first set of bonds I bought were paying 8.7%. From that moment I was hooked, I kept $5,000 in my account for 'emergencies' and every time I hit $10,000 I pushed half of it into an investment.

That system worked for me for years, until I refinanced my home loans and forgot I had to pay for my renovations on my rental property. I had approximately $15,000 free in those home loans, then I refinanced and had nothing. Then the renovation bills came in for $10,000. Oh, and I was about to go on three weeks unpaid leave. In short it was monumentally stupid.

I scraped through on a combination of credit cards and goodwill (renovations went on a payment plan, Mr. FIRE picked up the slack). I managed not to pay any interest on the credit cards but it was a close deal, in some cases by a day or two. So I understand the value of having an emergency fund with six months worth of expenses, but it's just, so, boring.

Stay accountable

My 2016 savings chart
The green line is total of all accounts,
the black line was my target.
Firstly, it's a pun, so this is clearly the best trick. Get it, account-able? Oh never mind, it's a bad pun... I have filled my life with ways to keep this goal in the fore-front of my mind. I have a giant multi-page google spreadsheet that tracks my spending. I have another one on my home computer that tracks and charts my savings. I have this blog. I have a note pinned on the side of my computer (It also tells me to buy an investment property and renovate my bathroom before the end of the year). I have this blog. Writing about this goal is keeping me interested in it. And it stops me from throwing the whole thing out the window and investing, just, it's a close thing...

I also have charts, I love charts!

Colour me rich

With the surge in popularity of adult colouring books it's not surprising that someone figured out how to link colouring to their savings goals. Amy Jones has even kicked off an online business devoted to colouring in bit by bit to track her progress. She sells really cool progress maps that you can download, print off, stick to a wall and colour in bit by bit as you march towards your goal.

Of course, you'd have to pay for Amy's designs, which is probably not the greatest move if you're swimming in debt, even if they are only $20. You can buy a whole book of kaleidoscope patterns for $2, but then you have to count all the spaces and decide how you're going to represent each savings goal on it. Or you can just start one from scratch on your own.

Grab a sheet of paper, decide what appeals to you, how you're going to colour it as you go and sketch away. You'll be far more invested if you drew the progress map yourself, and you can make it the right size for your needs. Plus if you're savings for a house, you can colour in an actual house, rather than something abstract.

I have to admit though, I absolutely suck at art. As much as this is a super cool idea, i don't think it's for me.

Roll six for rewards

Combining my love of board games and conventional motivational wisdom I have just come up with this idea on the fly. Turns out most motivational information on the internet is abstract and boring. Here's what I've just thrown together for myself to get through the last couple of months.

So, here's how it works. At each goal point ($13,000, $15,000, $17,000 and $19,000) I roll two dice. The dice on the left tells me what reward table I get to use. 1-3 is a boozy reward, 4-5 is a fancy dinner, and six is both! The next dice then tells me what reward I get. So in the picture I've rolled a five (fancy dinner) and a three. So I get to have roast for dinner! As dinners go it's on the more expensive scale, especially compared to our usual meals like Chilli Con Carne, so we don't have it too often, but it is delicious!

To be honest though, I really want nachos for dinner, so I might give myself the right to re-roll each dice once when picking rewards, haha, oops! Since I record my current savings once a week, I should have plenty of chances to get some tasty rewards!

What works for you? How do you stay on track for these long drawn out goals. Savings takes time, are you straying off track?

Sunday, 1 January 2017

SMART new years goals

I never make New Years resolutions. It strikes me as quite foolish to say that since the number in the date changed, you have to change too. But my partner went white-water rafting over the break, and I stayed home because I had no annual leave. I also didn't want to die, but that's besides the point. Not that the rafting was going to be terribly dangerous, but the guy leading the trip has a track record for near-death experiences for him and his friends. Think abseiling and getting knocked unconscious, misreading a river and getting sucked through an underwater channel. That kind of near death.<br />
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So I spent New Years at home, alone. It wasn't too terrible at first. I was puppy-sitting and since I had no idea how he would react I wasn't going anywhere. Apart from a bit of shaking we were fine, no barking, no whining. So if I have him visit again I know we'll be okay for fireworks.<br />
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I also had a really good New Years Eve. I took the puppy for a giant walk, caught plenty of Pokemon and got sunburnt. I went to Bunnings, bought some summer veggies (finally) and got them planted, as well as making a frame for the zucchinnis to climb. I made myself some decent coffee (latte art continues to elude me) played some video games, and watched some movies. I drank a bit, and went to bed around 1:30am feeling a little lonely, but really tired after a busy day.<br />
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And then New Years day I watched movies and started to binge watch True Blood. I only walked the puppy for about 15minutes. I did drop by a skate park, but the swarm of school holidays kids convinced me not to even try.<br />
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And then the New Years day public holiday I watched more True Blood. I did manage to get out to the skate park for about 20minutes, but only cause a friend got there first and asked me if I wanted to come by.<br />
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In short, on New Years Eve I created something. I exercised a lot. I lazed around a bit, and I had a great day.<br />
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The other two days I lazed around <i>a lot. </i>I created nothing. I exercised a little. They were really disappointing days. They weren't bad days, but I didn't feel excited or fulfilled. I did download 3 versions of Candy Crush.<br />
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So, I'm not going to make any resolutions to be 'more productive' or 'exercise more'. But I am going to set myself a couple of Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Rewarding and Timely goals.<br />
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<b>Create something every month</b><br />
I know how to knit, I have all the supplies to make basic chainmail or jewellery, I can code and could make a really basic game, I love building things (basic, messy, functional woodwork) and I have a rough idea in the back of my head for a DnD campaign. Just writing this sentence has given me about twelve ideas, one for each month!<br />
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<b>Do something fun and physical 4x a week</b><br />
I try and rock-climb once a week. Roller derby is starting up again and training is 3x a week. I love slacklining and have the all clear from my doctor. Plus the local skate park is about 10minutes away. This isn't really a stretch goal, but a reminder to myself to make sure I get out enough.<br />
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<b>Apply for at least one freelance contract a week</b><br />
And finally, on a less fun more financial note. I have intermittently worked from home on freelance contracts. I enjoy short-term creative work. I hate data entry. I generally apply for data entry work because it's easier, then I get a decently sized job, get bored out my brain and stop working for a couple of months. I'm going to put some more effort into apply for contracts that interest me, not just ones that seem to pay well for easy work. I do this for bonus income, but also to make the most of my free time. I'd rather work on contracts that count towards my one creative item per month, than just get a couple of extra dollars for mind-numbing monotony.<br />
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Oh, and this is on top of the financial goals that inspired me to start this blog (20k by 1st July). Because what's life without too many goals<br />
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A quick 2023 check-in

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