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Debt

Were you recently laid off from work? If so, you may be in financial distress. Even those who collect unemployment benefits barely find themselves scraping by. If you are one of those individuals, you need to make significant cutbacks. What might those cutbacks entail?

Sell your house. If you live in a home with an expensive mortgage that you cannot afford and if you do not anticipate finding a job in the next two or three months, get out now. Try to sell your home before your credit is severely impacted. Luckily, the housing market is starting to slowly improve in many areas of the country. Layoffs are increasing in frequency, but many Americans still have their jobs and can get a loan. List your home for sale based on its last appraised value or fair market value. Don’t sell yourself short, but middle class family homes, in the $75,000 to $150,000 range are easier to sell.

If you have been trying to sell your home and cannot, do you have extra room? If so, rent out a room. Do backgrounds check and check references. This can help offset the cost of a mortgage you cannot afford. In addition, right now many Americans have steady income, but poor credit. These Americans cannot get a home loan, even though they could likely afford one. For that reason, consider renting your home. This is ideal if your house is too big, but do not feel comfortable living with a stranger. Use the incoming rent to pay the mortgage. Use your spouse’s income or your unemployment check to pay rent on a much smaller and cheaper apartment.

Find a new apartment. If you are renter, as opposed to a homeowner, is your rent too expensive? Can you no longer afford it or will you barley be scraping by? If so, look for a new place to live. If you have children, you may want to keep them in their same schools. This is good, but live where you can afford. A city may have an average rent of $1,000. However, fifteen minutes away a smaller town may have an average rent of $500 a month. Due to the poor economy, many landlords are releasing tenants from their contracts with appropriate notice, such as 30 or 60 days.

Sell your car and buy a cheaper one. Your best avenue is to sell the car outright yourself. List it for sale in newspaper classified sections, Craigslist.org, and other places online. Consider the value of your car. Set a fair selling price, but make sure you have enough to payoff the rest of your automobile loan and buy a cheaper, used car. Driving around a used “old clunker,” may not be what you had in mind, but you can find quality used cars for $1,000 to $5,000. Right now, you need something that runs and gets you from point a to point b. As for just selling you car, this isn’t recommended. Even if there is public transportation in your area, remember the poor job market. When find a new job, it may be two or three town away.

Look at the cost of your landline and cell phone. Do you have both? Many see success with replacing their landline phones with cell phones. If you can’t, practice talking on your cell phone less and lower the minutes. If you can get out of your cell phone contract without large fees, do it. Get a prepaid phone and use it for emergencies only.

Lower the cost of your internet. Many times, internet access is considered an extra. Yes, it technically is. However, it is now a job search tool for you. If actively looking for a new job, you need internet access. Don’t cancel yours. Instead, look for cheaper lower speed packages or opt for dial up access instead.

Lower the cost of your television. If you have internet access, consider doing away with your television altogether. You can get your local news and weather online. If you want television, get the local channels only. You don’t need one hundred or more channels, many of which you never watch. Luckily, most shows are now streamed online for free. In addition, the season DVD will soon be released on Netflix. Speaking of Netflix, if you do away with television, consider a subscription. For less than $20 a month, you can get unlimited movies with three movies at a time!

The above mentioned lifestyle changes may sound significant and impossible to make, but remember your financial situation. You were laid off from work. It may be one month before you find a new job, but it may be one year or more. Don’t fall victim to debt, take charge now.

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Tighwad Group, Come Join!

I’ve recently been granted to take over the Tightwad group, a long time Yahoo tightwad living group.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/tightwad

The group’s owner had disappeared long ago, leaving the group to spammers posting yucky stuff. I have deleted a lot of messages and hopefully got rid of all the nasty ones.

We are wanting to jump start the group again, bring it back to life, to what it was intended for… tightwad tips, frugal living, budgeting, freebies, and coupons. So I am asking my readers here to join up and share their freebies, tightwad tips, frugal recipes, coupons, etc. Basically any and everything that pertains to tightwad living.

The group posts are moderated to keep the icky spam out.

So come on and join and spread the word to your friends!

Tightwad
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/tightwad

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One of the best ways to save money the fastest is to clip up all of those expensive credit cards.

Credit cards are perhaps one of the most expensive forms of money. A very good rule of thumb is, unless you pay off your credit card bills each month, don’t use the cards for anything you can either eat or wear.

Another good rule of thumb is to consolidate your debt. If you have several credit cards, each at different rates of interest, why not fold them into a home equity loan and then write off the interest payments? This is a good way to begin an emergency savings fund.

Here are some good suggestions for budget trimming that can work for just about everyone:

When mortgage rates are especially low—consider refinancing your mortgage and, while you’re at it, your car loans, too.

When you live in an area that has good public transportation, see if you can get by on one car instead of two.

Make your current car last. With good maintenance, you will be able to replace it every six to eight years instead of every three years.

Do a periodical energy check on the house. Replace all essentials such as cracked storm windows and renew the weather stripping.

Cancel subscriptions to magazines or newspapers that you’re not reading.

Eat out less often and learn to be creative using leftovers. If you stop for a morning cup of coffee at the local Deli, make coffee at home.

For the kids weekly allowance cut it back. Explain to them that every member of the family needs to contribute to the emergency fund for it to work.

Remember, too, that you will be teaching your kids to be frugal and to develop good spending habits.

Saving money on your own brings many rewards, and like most other things, it becomes easier over time. In the end, your entire family will have peace of mind that comes from knowing you have financial resources set up and ready for when times are the toughest. The sacrifices you make now will be realized when you need the most comfort as a family.

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Totally Debt Free Lifestyle….

“Learn How You Can End the Fear and Worry Created by Bad Credit and Debt Collectors…Get Out of Debt Quickly and Easily, Right Now!”

Steps to avoiding credit card debt, the most common and serious case of debt accumulation.

How to check and choose the best credit interest rate…What to ask and clarify before choosing your credit card with the lowest rates.

Summarizing your debts is very important – I’ll show you real life examples of how I summarize my debts correctly and create a formula to pay them all off.

Learn the secret to repaying debts quickly and still save on interest charges…And once that debt is paid off, you can use the secret to pay off the rest of your debt.

Whether your a student, a stay-at-home mother, or working a nine-to-five job, I’ll break down step by step how to become debt-free.

And Much Much More!

Get all of the details by clicking here.

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Descriptive words such as “tightwad” and “frugal” may have had a negative connotation at one time, but given the state of our current economy – these two words have taken on new meaning for most individuals.

A book that has been highly touted as “brilliant” by its readers, The Complete Tightwad Gazette by Amy Dacyczyn has become a must read for those who find it necessary to cut back on expenses in order to get through this economic recession.

Currently priced at only $22.95, the product description for The Tightwad Gazette states that:

“In a newsletter published from May 1990 to December 1996 as well as in three enormously successful books, Amy Dacyczyn established herself as the expert of economy. Now The Complete Tightwad Gazette brings together all of her best ideas and thriftiest thinking into one volume, along with new articles never published before in book format. Dacyczyn describes this collection as “the book I wish I’d had when I began my adult life.” Packed with humor, creativity, and insight, The Complete Tightwad Gazette includes hundreds of tips and topics, such as:

* How to transform old blue jeans into potholders and quilts
* Ten painless ways to save $100 this year
* Ways to dry up dry-cleaning costs
* Inexpensive gifts
* Slashing your electric bill
* Frugal fix-its
* Saving on groceries
* Avoiding credit card debt
* Using items you were about to throw away (milk jugs, plastic meat trays, and more!)
* Recipes galore, from penny-pinching pizza to toaster pastries, and much more”

This comprehensive book not only teaches you how to save money, but offers tightwad tips, frugal living tips, and many tightwad suggestions on how to develop a new mindset when it comes to fiscal responsibility. In addition, Ms. Daczycyn utilizes her own brand of humor to impart important information regarding your finances.

It is very comprehensive and anyone can utilize it on a daily basis for ideas on how to live a more tightwad life. Some have called it their second Bible! The advice given is up-to-date, relative to today’s environment, and is for anyone who wants to cut back on expenses and develop a budget that is reasonable, efficient, and yes – frugal.

To order your copy of The Tightwad Gazette, go to:

The Complete Tightwad Gazette: Promoting Thrift As a Viable Alternative Lifestyle

The Complete Tightwad Gazette: Promoting Thrift As a Viable Alternative Lifestyle

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Descriptive words such as “tightwad” and “frugal” may have had a negative connotation at one time, but given the state of our current economy – these two words have taken on new meaning for most individuals.

A book that has been highly touted as “brilliant” by its readers, The Complete Tightwad Gazette by Amy Dacyczyn has become a must read for those who find it necessary to cut back on expenses in order to get through this economic recession.

Currently priced at only $22.95, the product description for The Tightwad Gazette states that:

“In a newsletter published from May 1990 to December 1996 as well as in three enormously successful books, Amy Dacyczyn established herself as the expert of economy. Now The Complete Tightwad Gazette brings together all of her best ideas and thriftiest thinking into one volume, along with new articles never published before in book format. Dacyczyn describes this collection as “the book I wish I’d had when I began my adult life.” Packed with humor, creativity, and insight, The Complete Tightwad Gazette includes hundreds of tips and topics, such as:

* How to transform old blue jeans into potholders and quilts
* Ten painless ways to save $100 this year
* Ways to dry up dry-cleaning costs
* Inexpensive gifts
* Slashing your electric bill
* Frugal fix-its
* Saving on groceries
* Avoiding credit card debt
* Using items you were about to throw away (milk jugs, plastic meat trays, and more!)
* Recipes galore, from penny-pinching pizza to toaster pastries, and much more”

This comprehensive book not only teaches you how to save money, but offers tightwad tips, frugal living tips, and many tightwad suggestions on how to develop a new mindset when it comes to fiscal responsibility. In addition, Ms. Daczycyn utilizes her own brand of humor to impart important information regarding your finances.

It is very comprehensive and anyone can utilize it on a daily basis for ideas on how to live a more tightwad life. Some have called it their second Bible! The advice given is up-to-date, relative to today’s environment, and is for anyone who wants to cut back on expenses and develop a budget that is reasonable, efficient, and yes – frugal.

To order your copy of The Tightwad Gazette, go to:

The Complete Tightwad Gazette: Promoting Thrift As a Viable Alternative Lifestyle

The Complete Tightwad Gazette: Promoting Thrift As a Viable Alternative Lifestyle

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