Making frugality fun
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Dinner with My Family is taking a one week break this week.
Most of the time, when people mention frugality, the first thing that comes to mind is doing without little pleasures. They think of giving up something that they deeply enjoy, like their morning coffee or their weekly lunch out with coworkers.
I鈥檒l be completely honest: this was my first impression of frugality, too. When I was starting to feel some financial bumps because of my overspending in late 2005 and early 2006, I looked at some basic frugality tips in magazines like Money and, frankly, I came away with a negative taste in my mouth.
The reason was that my attention was always drawn to the things I didn鈥檛 want to get rid of. My focus was on the things that I felt would impact my happiness. I would look through a list of a hundred frugality tips, pick out the two that I felt would have a big negative impact on my happiness, and choose to believe that frugality was terrible and not fun and would make my life a boring misery.
Guess what? If you start with that approach, frugality is going to be pretty awful for you.
Simply put, it鈥檚 those little key pleasures that should be the last thing you cut. They鈥檙e the ones that carry psychological and emotional weight for you. They鈥檙e the ones that tell you that life is good on a day to day basis. They鈥檙e the ones you care about.
If you鈥檙e first getting started on frugality, start by focusing on things that have little or no direct impact on the things you enjoy about life. Focus on projects like . Give some generic products a try when you鈥檙e shopping. Fill up your car tires to the maximum recommended pressure. In fact, I have to get started, and I wrote .
Here鈥檚 the key part, though. Keep track of every dime you saved because of your frugal moves. Write them down in a notebook. Then, once a week, move that much out of your checking account into your savings account.
This way, the money you save with frugality isn鈥檛 going to just go toward other unnecessary expenses. Instead, the money in your savings account can go strictly for things like extra payments on your debt, building an emergency fund so you don鈥檛 have to rely on credit in a pinch, and so on.
What I began to find, though, was that frugality was actually quite fun.
At first, I started to view the amount I was saving as a 鈥渉igh score鈥 that I needed to beat. I would keep a careful eye on the amount I was saving and constantly strive to save more. I鈥檇 view my frugality for the previous month as a record I鈥檇 want to beat for the next month.
This motivated me to start to choose to give up or alter some of the perks I previously enjoyed. I wanted to see how much of an impact not going to the coffee shop might have or not eating out for lunch might have or not stopping at the bookstore every little bit might have. On the whole, choosing frugality was more fun than the alternative at that time, mostly from a 鈥渒eeping score鈥 standpoint.
Eventually, though, I began to appreciate many of the frugal things I was doing for their own sake. The first thing I remember is I began to really enjoy going to the park with my son instead of trying to find the perfect educational toy for him or something along those lines. We鈥檇 just go to the park, run around in the grass, go down the slide, and make up adventures along the way.
Some of it, of course, is just establishing new life patterns and getting used to them, but there鈥檚 also a lot of merit in simply trying new things that we previously ruled out for some reason and discovering that those things are surprisingly good.
It turns out that those small economies of pleasure work a bit differently than I originally thought.