GREAT adviseAnonymous wrote:You need to control your spending. I'll bet you can cut back on lots of things and still maintain a decent lifestyle. We live quite well on half your HHI, but we have no debt.
Can you take out a HELOC and pay off the credit card debt? That's the first place to start. The interest rate on credit card debt is outrageous, but the interest on a HELOC is a fraction of that. You might also be able to pay off part of your student loans with a HELOC if it's at a much lower rate.
That will cut your payments at least, and you would not be taking on any more debt.
Trade in your newish cars and get used minivans (they are spacious and cheap). Plenty of space to haul around three kids. Use the cash you raise to pay off more debt. Do not spend it or put it into savings.
Take cheap vacations or none at all. Don't throw away cash on big trips to Europe or renting a nice beach house when you can stay in a moderately priced hotel in a pleasant place for a week for the same price. Take day trips if you need to get out of town.
Look at your monthly expenses: What do you pay for heat? Do you really need to keep your thermostat at 72 degrees all winter? We keep ours at 65 degrees. Yes, it feels cold in the fall, but we wear sweaters and get used to it. As an added bonus, we get fewer colds when the temperature is lower in the house.
What are you paying for TV each month? Can you cut back on some of the premium channels? Can you live without cable? We don't have a TV, but we watch TV shows on our computers.
What are you paying for cell phones? There is lots of competition, so you can surely get a lower priced plan.
How much do you spend each week on lattes? Just cut that out right now. Bring your coffee from home in a thermos.
Go out to eat once or twice a month, period. And go to family-type places. You're over date night at fancy restaurants if you've got three kids.
How much do you spend on convenience foods? Takeout? Cook more, and you'll save money.
Have your housekeeper come every other week instead of every week.
Mow your own grass.
Shop at TJMaxx. They carry last-year's Nordstrom merchandise at a fraction of the price. I keep my clothes for more than a year, so it makes no difference to me.
That should get you started. as a pp said, it's not rocket science. You have to take a cold hard look at your "necessities" and cut back ruthlessly. Consider "needs" and not "wants". Get rid of the "wants."
Best of luck to you OP.
Anonymous wrote:
I do have a child who is musically gifted. He is not in Kindergarten as other posters have alluded to, but is in older grade in elementary school. It is not some bragging right for us wannabees to flaunt. He has been flagged as gifted by his school, and is playing his chosen instrument at a pre-professional level at a very young age, with just a couple years of training. Elementary school band/orchestra doesn't cut it at this point. Sorry to disappoint you naysayers. We are doing our best to support him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My bet is that OP went out and bought all 3 kids brand new boots, snow pants, jackets, mittens, hats, new sleds, new shovels just their size and blew $250 because it's snowing and the kids wanted to go outside for 15 minutes
Impossible to buy all of the above for 3 kids for $250.
Agreed, and for the record, my two have been outside for hours and hours. I have the dryer running non stop.not od wet into dry and repeat.
I'm certainly not going to hate on patents who want to warmly clothe their children.
You can warmly clothe your child for much less. I got snow pants for $5 and boots for $3 at a consignment sale. I think that was pp's point.
Get those bargains at a consignment sale/thrift store requires:
1) Being there when the store's open (they often close @ 5)
2) Happening to see something in your kids' sizes -- you won't go 3-for-3, but maybe 1-for-3 and 2-for-3. So then there's 2-3 trips to different stores
3) Beating out Everyone Else for the stuff in your desired sizes and that isn't horribly inappropriate for whatever reason (e.g. something from 1985).
Maybe doable for a SAHM with a preschooler or whose kids are all in school. But a woman working 40+ hours a week is supposed to do her consignment/thrift shopping when, exactly? I hardly think most dual-income families want to spend their weekends combing over thrift stores.
This is something where the time spent looking for bargains can really add up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The $8k after one of the pregnancies could have been therapy for PPD pre-ACA, when mental health wasn't covered like physical health. At $100/session it can add up. Could have also been marital counseling, which is really spends.
That is speculating. It's also possible that OP had major surgery and was under a plan when she had to pay 15% or 20% of the costs after a certain amount. I recently had a very simple surgical procedure that lasted 45 minutes, but cost me close to $4k because Blue Cross Blue Shield Standard required that I pay 15%. Bills to surgeon. Bills to hospital. Bills to anesthesiologist. Bills to pathologist, etc., etc. I can definitely see how it's possible to have $8k in medical bills as a fed. if something isn't covered entirely.
I don't. Most plans cap out of pocket costs and exclude infertility (if it's covered). Our plan is 3k.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My bet is that OP went out and bought all 3 kids brand new boots, snow pants, jackets, mittens, hats, new sleds, new shovels just their size and blew $250 because it's snowing and the kids wanted to go outside for 15 minutes
Impossible to buy all of the above for 3 kids for $250.
Agreed, and for the record, my two have been outside for hours and hours. I have the dryer running non stop.not od wet into dry and repeat.
I'm certainly not going to hate on patents who want to warmly clothe their children.
You can warmly clothe your child for much less. I got snow pants for $5 and boots for $3 at a consignment sale. I think that was pp's point.
Get those bargains at a consignment sale/thrift store requires:
1) Being there when the store's open (they often close @ 5)
2) Happening to see something in your kids' sizes -- you won't go 3-for-3, but maybe 1-for-3 and 2-for-3. So then there's 2-3 trips to different stores
3) Beating out Everyone Else for the stuff in your desired sizes and that isn't horribly inappropriate for whatever reason (e.g. something from 1985).
Maybe doable for a SAHM with a preschooler or whose kids are all in school. But a woman working 40+ hours a week is supposed to do her consignment/thrift shopping when, exactly? I hardly think most dual-income families want to spend their weekends combing over thrift stores.
This is something where the time spent looking for bargains can really add up.