Money management advice from mom |
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Live within your means
My parents were a good example of fiscal responsibility. They always lived well within their means and saved as much as
they could. They were do-it yourselfers (probably before it was in vogue). We were taught how to do many things that people
today have to pay someone else to do. We learned from their example.
As a result, even though we don't have a large income,
my husband (who also had the same kind of upbringing), myself and
our family has been blessed to live a very comfortable lifestyle.
-- Pat Trapane
Take action: Set a
savings goal and find out how long it will take to achieve it.
Learn about money.
My parents gave me four gifts to get me financially grounded as a kid:
- They taught me the difference between saving vs. investing. I lost my initial stock market investment (of $240 after about 24 months),
but I learned so much about how Wall Street functions!
- They taught me money doesn't grow on trees, but there are wiser
ways to earn money ... you can earn money through physical labor,
but you can also make money through wise investing, loans to my
brother with interest, etc.
- They made me work to help defray costs for my college education
... it made me study harder and this also kept me from partying
too much.
- They taught me about market elasticity (not in those words) as I established a budget and then went shopping for my "needs" (which
were really "wants" in most cases). I learned that I could buy a brand name, pay twice as much, or buy generic items and stretch my dollars.
Today, I'm diversified in my portfolio, financially quite comfortable and enjoy making monetary decisions. That's what I
call being empowered for life!
-- Lori Roberts, Atlanta
Take action: Diversification
is key to successful investing. Building your perfect
portfolio is easier than you think.
Save some money for a rainy day
My mom took 10 percent of every check I got from the time I got
my first job bussing tables when I was 15 to the time I left their
house. I figured she was buying food, clothes, heat/electricity
... never really questioned it.
The summer I graduated from high school, I was just keeping temporary jobs until I left for college. When I was at
my brokest during that summer, my mom presented me with an envelope full of money.
I thought she was being exceptionally generous, but she told me she had taken that 10 percent of every check, and put
it in an envelope in her sock drawer. Turns out she had done that for my four older siblings as well -- and no one ever shared the secret!
So I got a quick and easy lesson on the payoffs of saving money!
I now own three properties, my primary and two rentals, and am on track to semi-retire at 48!
Thanks, Mom and Dad!
-- Gina Helart, Colorado
Take action: Make your
money work for you via compound interest. Use Bankrate's compound
interest calculator to find out how
much you can earn.
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