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How to Stay Motivated

Fun fact, more than 80 percent of people who start budgeting end up quitting after the first month.
That figure really resonates with me. I struggled mightily when I first started trying to budget. I was trying to flip my money script and start being responsible with money because I knew I needed to be more financially responsible to provide for the family I wanted. My then girlfriend, now wife, was onboard with it. She was much better with money from a fundamental standpoint: she didn’t believe in debt and knew she had to live on less than she earned, but that was about it.
So we embarked on this journey together, eventually realizing that we were much more likely to succeed that way. That accountability piece was crucial.
But we still struggled along the way, particularly with motivation and with staying the course when things got rough.
When we started this together, we were still dating and enjoyed going out and doing things. Eating out, going out to bars, and then the special occasions. Hot air balloon rides for Valentine’s Day, Tour de Theme Parks in LA for birthdays, endurance races all over the country, international travel. We were actually pretty darn good at spending money.
The problem was when we did that, more often than not it busted our budget. Our planning for the month would just fly out the window. It was incredibly frustrating, and at times I wondered if it was even worth it. We were making progress towards being debt free, and I sometimes questioned whether or not we even needed to budget if we were still able to make progress.
What I didn’t see, and what Tamar HELPED me see, was that we were sabotaging ourselves. Yes, we were making progress, but by spending frivolously and not planning for these trips and everything we were doing, we were pushing out farther and farther how long it was going to take us to reach our goals.
When we sat down and looked at the numbers and looked at when we were going to pay off our last debts; when I saw that date get farther and farther away, it was like being hit with a sledge hammer.
Having that visualization, seeing the actual impact of what our spending was doing to our goals was a huge WOW moment.
We still slipped from time to time, but it was much easier to get back on track after that. We started planning in advance for these bigger trips we wanted to take. We made it a point to pay ourselves first by using all of Tamar’s paychecks to pay debt while we lived on my salary. We had to reign in the eating out a bit, we had to wait a little bit longer between the big trips and events, but once we got serious about it, we knocked that debt out in 26 months. Nearly $100,000 debt in just over two years.
So if you feel like quitting after that first month, focus on why you started in the first place. Keeping that in perspective could be just what you need to stay motivated.
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