A personal blog of financial resources for preparing yourself and family for the challenges of life.
Monday, October 5, 2009
Snowbird Customer Appreciation Days
If you bring in a can of food (one per person) you can ride the Snowbird Tram for free on Saturday, October 31 and Saturday, November 7 from 11am - 5pm (weather permitting). We have gone in years past and there is a wait in line to ride the tram (probably at least 20-45 minutes). They are packed pretty full, but you get a great view from the top. I took 6 boys last year and they all thought it was worth it.
Question and Answer Competition!
We are going to feature a Question and Answer section in future newsletters that addresses the topics that most concern you. Therefore, we need you all to submit your financial questions to us by comment, email, phone or even a note. If your question is chosen to be featured in an upcoming newsletter, you will receive a small prize. Start thinking and submitting – the next newsletter will be coming out in January 2010!
Teaching Children – The Value of Money
Teaching children about money should be high on our list of priorities. The One for the Money pamphlet produced by the church has 12 points to guide us in properly managing family finances. Three of those points address the need to involve and teach the family members about finances. Family Home Evening is a great place to teach and discuss these important topics, but even more influential is your example and day to day discussions with your children.
Your interactions about finances with your children will depend on their age, abilities and comprehension. For example, with a two year old, the ‘discussion’ might include “Money goes in the piggy bank, not your mouth.” They can really enjoy the fun of putting coins in a money bank and it is teaching them to save from a very young age. A discussion with a teenager would be drastically different. For example, talk with them about whether they paid their tithing and ask what it is they are saving their money for, both short-term and long-term goals – clothing, a date, a car, college, mission, etc.
Kids also love spending money. Allow them the opportunity to give money to the cashier when purchasing something small, particularly when it will be something for them. Older children can count out the money and be responsible for that. Not only is it fun for them, they are learning that we don’t get something for nothing.
It is important that children learn the value of money. It will give them a foundation for making wise decisions on how to spend (or save) their money. Young children often don’t understand what items are worth, so telling them that a dollar will buy a candy bar, or rent a movie will help them put it into perspective. Another way to teach the value of money is to explain how long a parent needs to work to earn the money to buy a certain item. Encourage play around money – for example, set up a play store or a pretend garage sale.
Involve your children in your grocery shopping, gift shopping, etc. They will learn very quickly about the value of money. When a child asks for something, it could be the perfect opportunity to talk about how much things cost. Don’t hesitate to let them know if it costs too much, or it isn’t worth the price. Also, encourage them to save for something they really want. Children will learn more from being told no and waiting for their wants than being indulged at the moment.
Your interactions about finances with your children will depend on their age, abilities and comprehension. For example, with a two year old, the ‘discussion’ might include “Money goes in the piggy bank, not your mouth.” They can really enjoy the fun of putting coins in a money bank and it is teaching them to save from a very young age. A discussion with a teenager would be drastically different. For example, talk with them about whether they paid their tithing and ask what it is they are saving their money for, both short-term and long-term goals – clothing, a date, a car, college, mission, etc.
Kids also love spending money. Allow them the opportunity to give money to the cashier when purchasing something small, particularly when it will be something for them. Older children can count out the money and be responsible for that. Not only is it fun for them, they are learning that we don’t get something for nothing.
It is important that children learn the value of money. It will give them a foundation for making wise decisions on how to spend (or save) their money. Young children often don’t understand what items are worth, so telling them that a dollar will buy a candy bar, or rent a movie will help them put it into perspective. Another way to teach the value of money is to explain how long a parent needs to work to earn the money to buy a certain item. Encourage play around money – for example, set up a play store or a pretend garage sale.
Involve your children in your grocery shopping, gift shopping, etc. They will learn very quickly about the value of money. When a child asks for something, it could be the perfect opportunity to talk about how much things cost. Don’t hesitate to let them know if it costs too much, or it isn’t worth the price. Also, encourage them to save for something they really want. Children will learn more from being told no and waiting for their wants than being indulged at the moment.
Christmas Already?
It may only be September, but December comes quickly, and so does Christmas! It seems crazy, but it is never too early to start planning and saving for Christmas. Now is a good time to start discussing your Christmas budget. Decide now, before the Christmas wish list starts, what you will spend per person for Christmas. And stick to it! Don’t get tricked into increasing your budget because a certain person wants something that exceeds your budget. They can keep dreaming . . . or better, yet . . . teach them to start saving for their dream.
In your Christmas budget planning, decide whether you can afford your Christmas budget. If the money isn’t there and won’t be by Christmas time, get a little more creative with your gifts and spend less. It doesn’t benefit anyone by going into debt for Christmas.
Just to look at some numbers . . .
If you were to spend $500 for Christmas and put it all on your credit card at 13% interest, it would take you 42 months to pay it off with a minimum payment of $15 a month! Or, say you wanted to pay it off in just one year, your monthly payment would be $44.18. You don’t want to be paying for last year’s Christmas when it is time to start thinking about this year’s Christmas. Wouldn’t you be better off to have a light Christmas this year and start saving that $45 a month for next year?
A few other helpful Christmas tips:
Keep your eyes open for sales, clearance items and great deals all throughout the year. If you know the people you are buying for, you can sometimes get great deals long before you think about Christmas. Be cautious though, no matter how good a deal it is, if they aren’t going to like it [or it is a fad that will go out of style], it isn’t worth it. Always keep your receipts and don’t forget what you bought and where you hid it.
Get creative in your giving. Homemade gifts are generally cheaper to give and have a lot more meaning. Gifts of service are sometimes the most valued gifts. It truly is the thought (and time) that counts, not the money.
Make a list of who you really want to give to. It may be nice to give gifts to all your family, friends and neighbors but, is it necessary and can you afford it? Maybe a simple handmade note or card would be enough to tell them that you are thinking of them and care about them. If you were to ask them, they would probably say they would rather you be in a healthier financial situation than to receive a gift from you.
In your Christmas budget planning, decide whether you can afford your Christmas budget. If the money isn’t there and won’t be by Christmas time, get a little more creative with your gifts and spend less. It doesn’t benefit anyone by going into debt for Christmas.
Just to look at some numbers . . .
If you were to spend $500 for Christmas and put it all on your credit card at 13% interest, it would take you 42 months to pay it off with a minimum payment of $15 a month! Or, say you wanted to pay it off in just one year, your monthly payment would be $44.18. You don’t want to be paying for last year’s Christmas when it is time to start thinking about this year’s Christmas. Wouldn’t you be better off to have a light Christmas this year and start saving that $45 a month for next year?
A few other helpful Christmas tips:
Keep your eyes open for sales, clearance items and great deals all throughout the year. If you know the people you are buying for, you can sometimes get great deals long before you think about Christmas. Be cautious though, no matter how good a deal it is, if they aren’t going to like it [or it is a fad that will go out of style], it isn’t worth it. Always keep your receipts and don’t forget what you bought and where you hid it.
Get creative in your giving. Homemade gifts are generally cheaper to give and have a lot more meaning. Gifts of service are sometimes the most valued gifts. It truly is the thought (and time) that counts, not the money.
Make a list of who you really want to give to. It may be nice to give gifts to all your family, friends and neighbors but, is it necessary and can you afford it? Maybe a simple handmade note or card would be enough to tell them that you are thinking of them and care about them. If you were to ask them, they would probably say they would rather you be in a healthier financial situation than to receive a gift from you.
Emergency Fund
Experts recommend having three to sixth months of expenses saved in an accessible account for those inevitable emergencies that arise in life. Those ‘rainy days’ come in the form of unemployment, medical emergencies, car accidents and loss of vehicles, the demise of an appliance, etc. Sometimes it doesn’t just rain, it pours! How is your ‘rainy day’ fund doing? If saving three to sixth months of expenses seems beyond your current abilities – start somewhere. Make it your goal to have $1000 put away for an emergency – and remember it is only for true emergencies – not Christmas, birthdays, clothes, or whatever your current need or want is.
When that emergency happens, and you do have to use some of your ‘rainy day’ fund, it will be a blessing. You won’t have to use credit to fund your emergency and you will have more peace in your lives knowing that you can weather the storm. Think of it as your financial food storage and don’t forget to replenish it after use. Come up with a plan of how to save and build your fund (budgets are great tools for this) and DO IT.
A family in the ward recently experienced the blessings of having an emergency fund and being prepared for the future:
Several years ago we started a dedicated savings (emergency fund) by adding some tax money here, a bonus there, and $10/ month. When we paid off a bill, we increased the amount we saved each month.
Our family van died on a Friday. We had no money for payments on a used one. Since we had our emergency fund and had saved a little of our tax return for a shed, we knew we had a certain amount of money we could spend for a used van. It wasn’t much, so we took it to the Lord. We told the Lord we needed a safe vehicle and didn’t want to go into debt. We told the Lord the amount of money we had and asked him to guide us to find something reliable. We fasted on Sunday and by Monday we had a van. Between the van, inspection and licensing, it was the amount we told the Lord we had available. Because of our emergency fund, prayers and miracles, we were back on the road in 5 days.
When that emergency happens, and you do have to use some of your ‘rainy day’ fund, it will be a blessing. You won’t have to use credit to fund your emergency and you will have more peace in your lives knowing that you can weather the storm. Think of it as your financial food storage and don’t forget to replenish it after use. Come up with a plan of how to save and build your fund (budgets are great tools for this) and DO IT.
A family in the ward recently experienced the blessings of having an emergency fund and being prepared for the future:
Several years ago we started a dedicated savings (emergency fund) by adding some tax money here, a bonus there, and $10/ month. When we paid off a bill, we increased the amount we saved each month.
Our family van died on a Friday. We had no money for payments on a used one. Since we had our emergency fund and had saved a little of our tax return for a shed, we knew we had a certain amount of money we could spend for a used van. It wasn’t much, so we took it to the Lord. We told the Lord we needed a safe vehicle and didn’t want to go into debt. We told the Lord the amount of money we had and asked him to guide us to find something reliable. We fasted on Sunday and by Monday we had a van. Between the van, inspection and licensing, it was the amount we told the Lord we had available. Because of our emergency fund, prayers and miracles, we were back on the road in 5 days.
Friday, October 2, 2009
Free at Tracy Aviary
Tracy Aviary is free this UEA weekend. I know it's kind of late notice, but there is still tomorrow (between Conference sessions of course).
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