I Don't Believe in Luck. Dave Ramsey Quotes



I am finally caught up to real-time after all my previous posts were about the past (August 1st, 2008 up till now). To update the numbers: 19 months into our debt destroyer plan. $38,500 paid off so far! $61,800 left to go (only the house). Our combined income is under 90k & we will pay off about 20k of debt each year. I guess my debt plan has been more of a combination of John Cummuta and Dave Ramsey. I have not been building a fully funded emergency fund (6 months of expenses) because I would rather be paying off debt than pause the payments for about 8 months. I figure if a financial crisis happened where I needed six months of expenses, I would just have to go back to the credit card but I would have paid off a whole lot of debt in the mean time. If no crisis happens then I am way ahead of the game and building a 6 month ffef after we are totally debt free will only take about 4 months. I am willing to take the risk that no major crisis will take place before 12/01/12 and we will be free. Wish me luck.

Where is My Universal Remote Control?



Part Six: As the months went by, so did the debt. I was able to cash in on some of my companies stock options to pay off one car payment and half of the other. I then focused on the second car payment by attacking it with the debt snowball. I, unlike Dave Ramsey's plan, did not pay my smallest debts first. Instead, I paid the bigger interest rates first because I knew I was in this for the long haul. Once both vehicles were completely paid off it was time to retire the credit card balances. Actually there was only one cc balance because I transferred the three into just one at a zero percent interest rate. It took 7 months to kill the credit cards and finally be DEBT FREE except for the house. That felt so great to escape from the bondage and know that I would never go there again! The only thing left then was the mortgage. $77,500 (13 more years) remaining on the mortgage (no heloc or 2nd mortgage, yea). My debt snowball had grown to $1100 EXTRA that I was paying on the principle every month. Before that, I was only paying off $300 of principle each month but now it is $1400 & growing! Add in some tax refund money each year and the House WILL be paid off on 12/01/2012. This will be about 2 years sooner than my original calculation (I thought we would be totally debt free in about 6 years). That will be $100,000 paid off in about 4 years! Then what? A cruise to celebrate our freedom sounds good! The funny part of this whole process is that I keep wanting to fast forward the months so I can pay the next payment. Ever watch the movie Click? Don't forget to appreciate your family and live a little or you will get in a zombie-like state of mind (kill debt--kill debt...) as the time goes by. Treat your debt like that dog in the movie (Click) treated the stuffed duck--if you know what I mean.

What Part of "Write It Down" Don't You Understand? Who Needs a Mesothelioma Lawyer?



Part Five: So in addition to my fancy dancy excel budget, I also designed a "tracker" spreadsheet. That was where we were to enter ALL of our purchases each day for the month. Seems simple right? Well, lets say that it turned out to be quite challenging, at least for one of us. Since I really don't buy anything other than gas and beer, I managed to keep up on it rather well. DW on the other hand not so well. She does all the grocery shopping and day to day things so I understood she might miss a few things, but it was often a few hundred dollars off each month for the first few months. Oh well, who's perfect? Anyway, after about three months of tracking every expense (ok, almost every expense) we had a real good idea of where everything went and it helped make an even more accurate budget each month. Three months is about all we could take of this tracker anyway, it has been retired ever since.   After that three month point, the envelope system also went bye bye. At least the credit cards were still in exile, safely collecting dust. Honey, I see a McDonald's cup in the garbage but it isn't written on the Tracker, what part of write it down don't you....

If Time was Really Money, This Budget Would Be Rich! College Loan Consolidation Not Needed



Part four: So I gathered up the old checkbook registers, a calendar, and a legal pad and started to make our budget. Six hours later I thought I had it nailed. Three days later I thought for sure I had it right. Ten days later I finally had a workable budget. Amen. After much tweaking, re-calculating, cussing, and drinking, I had what I needed-a real plan. More like a path with a map. My $100,000 debt would be paid off in about 6 years! Liberating! The all cash plan looked like it could really work, now only to "sell" it to the dear wife. I presented her with the envelope system. Eight envelopes each with a name. She then called me some names. This might take a while....

Once Upon a Time I Knew Excel. IRS Help Me Now



Part Three: Budget, budget, budget, my wife was about to hear the b-word. There are three things in life I KNOW. 1: Life is short. 2: What goes up must come down. 3: My wife was not going to like this. To my wife, debt is normal. She says it is no big deal to owe money, everybody else does. On the other hand, I kind of freak out knowing I owe money because it is just adding years to how long I will need to keep working. I want to retire early. REAL EARLY! The best way to accumulate money is to shut off the outflow pipe. I wanted our money to really be our money, not GMAC's, Kohl's, Target's, Chase's, CitiBank's, etc. Step one was stopping all credit card usage. DW didn't like this one bit. All I could tell her was "trust me". The credit cards were gathered and sent to exile. Now it was time to figure out how, when, and where our money would go to start paying the creditors. $100K owed including the house. Yes, thankfully our consumer debt wasn't huge-about $20,000-and our house loan had shrunk to about $80,000 after 10 years of paying on it. I still was very uncomfortable owing on 2 vehicles, 3 credit cards, & the house as I was approaching my 40th b-day. I had never paid extra on the house up until now even though I knew it was a good idea. The money just seemed to disappear each month so never anything extra to send. That was about to stop. After searching for excel budget sheets online for a few days & not really having anything that looked workable, I knew I would have to design my own. Once upon a time I kinda knew excel, time to re-figure it out.

How do you eat an Elephant?


Part Two: It was now time to figure out the HOW part. How do I pay off over $100,000 of debt? I set out to find the answer by calling my best friend-GOOGLE. I googled and googled all day and mainly came across the same sites and blogs. One name kept coming up in all these sites. This guy named Dave Ramsey. Who was he? If he was so popular, why had I never heard of him? It seemed like he was the king of all the debt busters and he had a real detailed plan on how to become debt free. I had to find out more....I became a Ramsey junkie. All Dave, all the time. I listened to his podcasts, read his books, googled & googled evertyhing I could about him and the people following his plan. I now had a clue! Now the real fun began...time to get a really big fork!

ENOUGH!!!! Who is This Dave Ramsey Guy and Can He Help?



August 1st, 2008. That is a date I will always remember. That was the day I said ENOUGH!!!! I was sick and tired of being sick and tired. My wife had been handling all the bill payments and checking/savings accounts so I was kind of just a bystander to the whole situation. I was aware of all the debt but pretty much numb to it all as we had enough money coming in, but just as much (or more) going out.
My wife was paying the bills but doing it by some sort of juggling act that she couldn't explain, it just happened. After I dove into our finances, analyzed the debt, looked into the checking account (after way to long), and calculated just how long it would be until we actually would own our stuff (cars, house, paid off CC), I had ENOUGH! Something HAD to be done. This wasn't working. I was now on a mission and will not stop until I win. I didn't know how I would do it, I just knew it had to be done. Time to find that Dave Ramsey guy....

In the beginning.......



Today's the day! My blog is officially underway and I am looking forward to sharing some quality information with anyone who finds this blog. About me: I am in my early 40's, a husband and father of two (girl & boy). This site will mainly be about my debt free pursuit and sharing my knowledge and beliefs. Will I ever be one of the top finance blogs? No, but my goal is not to see Dollars Not Debt as one of the top 100 personal finance blogs, I just want to keep my gazelle intensity to become Arnold Schwarzendollar. Much more to come.....