Category Archives: Practical Things

Practical ideas, approaches and tools for a Rice and Beans Life

His, Hers, and Ours: What started our Rice and Beans Life

When we first started on this road to a Rice and Beans Life, my husband and I were broke. Dead broke. Broke as a joke. And sadly, I don’t think we really knew just how broke we were. We didn’t have any idea what our debt tally was. When we got married we’d known each other for about ten years but neither of us really knew our own finances nor, really, the actual debt load we each brought to our marriage (we had a vague estimate). Of course, love would conquer all! But, as it always will, eventually reality sets in. And the bills must be paid. Suddenly we realized how much we didn’t know about our financial beliefs. Being a reader by nature, I figured there must be an answer in a book (of course this was long before my first instinct was to search the internet!). I found a book that was helpful by a financial guy named David Bach (you may have heard of him) and it was focussed on couples. One of the first chapters asked the most important questions I’d never even considered: “How did each of our respective families handle money as we grew up?” and “Is this still how each of us assumed money should be handled?” Wow. We had a decent income and the bills got paid so we hadn’t really considered it.  I thought all married couples sat down the way my parents had and worked on their finances together. He assumed the wife did it mostly. That’s how each of us were raised. The good news is-these questions opened up a good and clear discussion for us. In this discussion I learned that someone who mattered a great deal to him (someone other than one of his parents, actually) had told him “Well, you’ll always be in debt so why even bother trying.”  He didn’t really have a lot of experience with finances so he believed it. After all, everyone he knew held a car note and a credit card or three. For myself, I assumed the only way through college was through student loans since I hadn’t managed to get any scholarships. I’d been told it really did take 20 years to pay off a college loan and so I believed that, too. I don’t think either of us are naive or unintelligent. We just figured those around us knew better than we did. Now, all these years later, I credit those first questions: “WHY do you each believe what you do?” and “Where did that belief come from?” with starting us on the road to understanding where and how we learned some of our financial beliefs so we could take a close look at them-each and every one of them-and start asking do they really make sense? And is there another, possibly better way? Over the course of our years together, we’ve continued to ask these questions of each other and of ourselves and it has refined our approach to life and our finances. We are more deliberate now. We know why we believe what we do about our finances and that the beliefs we have fit and are taking us in a far better direction.

So my challenge to you today is where did your financial beliefs come from? And do they still fit? Are they taking you where you want to go?

You’ve gotta learn to walk before you can run…

And even then…at some point your shoes get worn out and the manufacturer discontinues them or upgrades them and you face a little bit of a set back where that groove you’d found isn’t feeling quite so groovy. Getting started on a budget is not an easy thing to do. And it won’t be perfect. Even when you’ve been doing it as long as I have. But take it from someone that has been at this a while: the setbacks become fewer and farther between; Murphy camps out less in your backyard because it’s just not as fun for him anymore. And when you start to see a little success in each of your small victories then you it will keep you going. You will fall down. Get back up and try again. It’s worth it. I promise.

Old shoes with too many miles. Don't let it stop you.

Even Elmo is doing it!

This morning I turned on Good Morning America. It was actually on in the background as I buzzed around getting ready for our schoolwork today. As I stood in the kitchen pouring a second cup of coffee I heard my oldest son call out “Hey Mom! Even Elmo is doing it!” I joined him in the living room to find out what exactly Elmo was doing that had him hanging out with the Good Morning America folks. Turns out Elmo has jumped on the bandwagon for learning how to use money wisely! Very cool!  He talked about his Save, Spend and Share plan and the jars for each. I had to laugh. This is great stuff! We recently invested in the Dave Ramsey Financial Peace Jr. Super Pack collection-on sale of course- (for ages 3-12) as part of his first grade curriculum which teaches how to Save, Spend and Give (so pretty much the same kind of thing). When the set arrived in the mail he was over the moon (which of course thrilled me because I wasn’t sure how he’d like it). In less than two weeks we’ve gone from him thinking that money is just given out at the bank to him starting to get a good, rounded understanding of money as a tool and a responsibility. We’d been trying for a long time to help him understand but somehow Dave Ramsey’s character Junior connected better with him. And now we can add Elmo to the mix. My oldest is five and a half. He’s at that age where Elmo is still enjoyable but not really his thing anymore. Dave Ramsey’s set is geared more toward older children so it’s a good fit for us. In the last two weeks we’ve seen an amazing growth in his understanding and character building with being a good steward of money. And it helps him understand Mom and Dad’s goals for our family and why we feel it is so important to get out of and stay out of debt. I’m thrilled to see Elmo putting this out there too.  Elmo’s program is officially called The Sesame Street For Me, For You, For Later Kit and it’s FREE . (And we all know FREE is budget friendly!) Teaching kids about money is smart way to help your kiddos embrace a Rice and Beans Mentality and these programs make it so much easier to teach great financial principles and make it fun! (And just for full disclosure-I’m not benefitting from either of these companies-I just find their programs to be fantastic and helpful!).

Checking out Elmo's program online.

Dave Ramsey's cool Give, Save, Spend banks and my kiddo's cool wallet.

FREE Books!!!

Well. For a little while anyway. Usually three whole weeks. And with amazing modern technology you can usually renew your items at the end of your three weeks for more time. Where can you get amazing FREE books? Are you ready for this?? Your LOCAL LIBRARY. If you haven’t stepped into your local library since card catalogs were the kind you pull out of drawers and were actually on CARDS then you might just be in for a treat. Libraries, even the ones in the smallest of counties, have a surprising number of free resources. Most libraries now let you browse their catalog online from home, some let you reserve books from home and some pull the books for you in advance to pick up at the front desk. If you get close to the due date and you haven’t quite finished your selection (or started on one as sometimes is the case with me!) you can log in from home and re-check your items. Libraries these days have a ton of great books, DVD’s, CD’s that can be checked out.  Most also have free Wi-Fi. I live in a very rural area and even our quaint, small public library has some fantastic resources and plenty of current movies (including some great foreign selections if you like!). When I lived in a more metropolitan area I could “order” the books I wanted and pick them up at the desk without having to wander the stacks (unless you want to and I often do just to lose myself for a while). If you have children there are often great programs and story times and the librarians are usually wonderful resources for where to find out what is going on in the community. The last time I walked out of my library (last week) I had more than twenty books (many for my children, but at least six for myself). If I’d walked out of a bookstore with this many books I cringe to think of the money I’d have spent. While I do buy plenty of books, I usually only buy the ones I want on my bookshelves for years to come. The rest I find at my wonderful local library.  Free entertainment  fits in very nicely into anyones budget! Free is budget friendly.

I’d love to hear your thoughts: Do you have a library card? Why not??

A Plate of Pancakes

One of our household favorites for eating on the cheap-breakfast for dinner! How can you miss with a mouse shaped pancake with a few chocolate chips tossed in? And yes, they were whole grain and from scratch. We don’t do box mix pancakes here-the ingredients are surprisingly simple and, most often better. And if you’ve got the makings for most any kind of cookie in your house I’m pretty sure you’ll have the makings for pancakes too! Most prepackaged food is strictly about convenience and convenience costs extra. The funny thing is-once you know how to make them from scratch you’ll be scratching your head over why you even bothered with a mix in the first place. So go ahead and pull out your trusty cookbook and dust that thing off. Spend that hard earned money on some honest to goodness real maple syrup instead! Your tasted buds and your wallet will thank you. (Don’t forget to save the leftovers! They freeze just fine and toast up nicely in the morning.)

Yep. Really. A Budget.

“Whether you think that you can, or that you can’t, you are usually right.”-Henry Ford

My first one looked a lot like this one. It was tough at first. It felt like….WORK. And it was. But I haven’t had to work real hard at in the eight years since we started living on one. Now it’s about refinement. It’s graduated to a lovely Excel spreadsheet. You’ve got to start somewhere. A notepad and a pencil will do just fine.

It starts like this. JUST like this. Start small and make baby steps.

Two things we live better without

My husband and I knew a transition was coming. After 8 years, he was getting out of the Army. We knew there might be a period of unemployment. We began planning at least 2 years in advance. We weren’t debt free yet. But we were well on our way. When the day came and he still hadn’t found a new job we tightened an already tight belt on our finances. We squinted our critical eye even harder at our budget to find anywhere at all we could further cut our household expenses. We found it in two items: Our cell phones and the cable bill. Now granted, we were already using what most people consider VERY basic levels of cable and cell phones. But we jumped from basic cable to a set of retro-old school rabbit ears on top of our old CRT television. And we made the jump to pre-paid cell phones. At first it was hard and it felt a little like we’d jumped off the edge of the world of technology. But over time, we realized that we really don’t feel the need to go back to having over a hundred channels to surf, often not finding anything we really want to watch anyway. And we now watch our minutes and spend on our cell phones only what we can afford and only use what we need. These two cuts helped us find slightly over $100 a month in our budget which translates to $1200 a year. When you look at it that way-it’s awfully hard to consider going back. So how about you? Do you have a budget? Can you find something you can live without? Take a look you might be surprised! I’d love to hear what you find.

These are basic-but even the upgraded models can be cost effective!