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Money or mental health?

October 20, 2011 by Jana 20 Comments

How much money would you sacrifice to save your mental health? This week, I determined that figure.

Would you like me to explain?

Here’s the long-winded explanation: I have a part-time job teaching criminal justice for an online school (I’m not going to say which one but suffice it to say, it’s probably the one you’re thinking of). It’s not too difficult of a job. I get to work it when it’s convenient, I get to work from home or anywhere else (so no extra babysitting required) that has internet access, I have a good deal of freedom with my syllabus, and, as long as I’m adhering to deadlines and certain requirements, I get left alone. I do have a once a year performance review but that’s fine. As far as part-time jobs go, it’s one of the easiest, noninvasive ones I could ask for (except for the whole grading papers thing. That’s time-consuming and very invasive) and I feel fortunate that I was able to get the job when I did.

I’ve had the job for just over 3 years. At this point, my classes don’t take up a huge part of my time and I don’t spend a whole lot of time on my classes. Since I’ve been teaching them for so long, it’s not only just part of my regular routine but teaching them has become second nature. However, the classes run year-round in 9 week blocks so I’m always teaching something. Always. I have not had a stretch of more than 4 weeks where I have not been teaching at least one class. Every vacation I’ve had in the last 3 years has been a working vacation.

For a while, I didn’t mind. It was crucial that I earned the money so we could eliminate our debt. Not having debt was more important to me than having a “real” vacation. I was willing to sacrifice relaxing at that time so that I wouldn’t have the stress of debt later on (for the record, my husband did and still does work a second job as well so it was not totally on me to bring in extra income). As a result, I never turned down a class. If a scheduler came to me last minute and needed a replacement, I said yes. Every solicitation that was sent to my inbox was accepted. If they wanted me to teach two concurrent sections, I happily agreed. And so it went for 3 years.

I still keep accepting classes. Even though most of our debt is paid off at this point, I still keep teaching because the money is good and it’s fairly easy to earn. The money that was once going towards debt is now going towards some of the fun things. It’s nice to be able to keep them money in my account rather than giving it over to someone else. Except there’s one problem. I am burned out.

I am exhausted from constantly working two jobs. I have been working 7 days a week for pretty much the past 3 years. I miss having time off and actually being able to enjoy my weekends. The quality of the student enrolled in the school continues to backslide and I find myself having to teach basic grammar and literacy rather than the subject matter I’ve been charged with teaching. I find myself stressing about the job at odd hours of the night. A job that I once enjoyed and did not only for money but because I like teaching was now becoming the bane of my existence. I’ve stopped caring about whether or not the students learn. I’m doing everyone a disservice by continuing to teach right now.

So, this week, I did something I’ve never done before. I emailed my scheduler and told her that I could not teach the class I was scheduled to start next month. Then, the very next day, I was sent another solicitation for a class starting in December. I turned that one down, too.  I decided that focusing on my blog, my business in the making and my daughter were more important than the money I was going to earn from those classes. I chose to have my weekends free from class work and grading papers for students that don’t really care about my feedback anyway. I decided that when I’m with my daughter in Disney World in January, I want to be able to give her my complete attention and not bury myself in my laptop. I picked my mental health over money.

I get paid just under $1500 per class. I turned down two classes, meaning this week I gave up almost $3000. And I don’t care.

I don’t mean to sound cavalier when so many are struggling. I’ve been there. I know what it’s like to not have any money and to have to do whatever possible to earn a dollar. And I will start teaching again in a few months. But for now, I need a break. Because for the first time in a long time, I’m picking myself over money. I’ll do without whatever that money was going to buy. No vacation, concert, purse or frivolous item is worth what will happen if I don’t take a break.

My mental health is worth $3,000.

Filed Under: Money, random, work

Reader response: Why didn’t I learn?

October 10, 2011 by Jana 8 Comments

A few weeks ago, I guest posted on Debt Free by 30 skills I have in my 30s that I didn’t have in my 20s. In of the comments, a reader asked why I never learned those skills. I thought it was a great question that deserved its own post as a response.

The short answer is that I was lazy. Talking and thinking about money were boring to me so I didn’t do it. Finances were one of those things that I knew I needed to learn but at 20, 21, 22, didn’t seem necessary. I just figured my money would take care of itself. I knew I needed to pay my bills but that meant once a month, sitting down with my roommate and writing checks to our cable provider, our landlord and to my credit card. That was it.  I didn’t think about budgeting, retirement, savings or anything even remotely related to that stuff. Why? Because that stuff is what old people worry about.

I forgot that one day I was going to be one of those “old people”. It didn’t occur to me that one day, I was going to finish school and all of the insulation that goes along with being a student would be stripped away. I didn’t think that one day I would live in a place where utilities would not be included in the cost of living. I failed to realize that being fiscally responsible in my early 20s would leave me more options as I moved into my 30s. I didn’t consider the fact that there’d be a day where I’d have to rely on my income to meet my obligations. I just assumed that I would graduate, get a job, and everything else would take care of itself (including any debt I incurred. I suppose I believed a genie would pay it off for me).

Part of the reason was my parents. I know it’s cliché to blame my parents for my financial ignorance in my early 20s but sadly, it’s true. My mother has absolutely no idea how to handle money. I remember every Sunday night my dad sitting at his desk balancing my mother’s checkbook. I remember him yelling at her that she added when she should have subtracted. I remember him getting frustrated that my mother consistently forgot to input checks that she wrote. And I remember that not once, did he ever call me over to his desk so that he could teach me what he was doing. My dad is kind of an intimidating man, especially when he’s angry, and I never wanted to ask for fear of getting yelled at myself (I got yelled at plenty for other things. I opted to stay away from this).

I was also never taught about the importance of long term savings. After my bat mitzvah, my dad had me sit down and sign the back of about 100 checks that I received but he never took the opportunity to explain where they were going or why.  Being just shy of 13, I didn’t even think to ask. I just trusted that my dad knew what he was doing and that he was putting the money away for me for when I was older.  I should’ve asked and I should’ve taken the time to learn because as it turned out, the money got used for other stuff. I’m still not sure what or why and I’m sure not going to ask.

Now that I’ve properly blamed my parents for not seizing teachable moments, let’s reflect inward as to why I didn’t learn. We’ve sufficiently covered the fact that I failed to ask questions, I’m lazy and I thought that money was something only old people thought about. But wait! There’s more. Lots more.  For instance, I always thought that money was just something I couldn’t understand. When I was in high school, we were required to take economics. We learned about the stock market, investing, credit cards—all of it. And it bored the crap out of me, mainly because it sounded like I was learning some obscure foreign language. I don’t know about you but when I get bored and information is too complicated, I shut down. I decide that I’ll never understand it and I quit trying to learn. Such was the case with money.

Let’s pause and discuss cooking for a moment. I did not learn to cook for a few reasons. One, I was incapable of cooking without starting a fire (I’m better now. I only start one fire per year instead of per week). Two, my firesetting prowess made my parents forbid me from using anything in the kitchen that was not the microwave. Three, that’s what restaurants and take-out were for! I did cook some things—pasta and chicken. I was really good at making sandwiches and soups (from a can but whatever) and I never starved. My expenses at this point in my life were so low that going out to eat was no big deal.  Cooking was not a priority because I had money (or so I thought).

And now we return to money.  As I mentioned in my post, I didn’t practice self-control either. That was a skill I had to grow into gradually. This was actually something my parents did do right. While they were really good about buying me everything that I needed and most of what I wanted, there were times where they adamantly refused and they made me save my allowance and babysitting money in order to purchase something extravagant like a brand new camera or a Coach wallet. However, once I became an “adult”, all of that patience went out the door. I bought what I wanted, when I wanted because I didn’t have the forethought to realize that I was going to have to pay that money back. It wasn’t until I was 29 and my daughter was born and her needs had to come first did I really learn what self-control was all about. If it came down to a new outfit or diapers, the diapers were going to win every. Single. Time.

I’m not trying to justify or explain or defend why I was like this. It’s a shame really. Because now? I’m literally paying for being that way.

Come back next week when a special guest poster will explain why these are all poor excuses.

Filed Under: beginnings, Money, money tips, savings

The questions you never want to ask

October 7, 2011 by Jana 10 Comments

This is the first post is an ongoing series about how to handle financial matters in a relationship that is close to, or has gone over, the edge.

Recently, I have been having lengthy conversations with a friend of mine about her marriage. She is unhappy, her husband treats her like dirt, she has to deal with her stepdaughter’s mom (with whom she has a very contentious relationship), and they are mired in financial difficulties. In addition to the stepdaughter, they have 2 boys and she cannot afford to support them on her own. While she still loves her husband and wants him to change, he refuses to take any action to work on himself or his marriage. In the meantime, my friend is getting more and more depressed and angrier and angrier. Needless to say, this is not a healthy situation for anyone involved. On more than one occasion she’s mentioned separation and/or divorce.

Last week our discussions turned to the idea of having a financial escape plan. In other words, we talked about how she should be starting to set herself up financially in case their marriage keeps getting worse and she can’t take it anymore. I am not an advocate of making rash decisions especially when money and children are involved so I encouraged her to ask herself the following questions:

  1. What is my net income each month? How would it change once I change my marital status?
  2. What is the cost of my insurance for just me and my sons?
  3. What will my expenses be? Who will pay for child care?
  4. How much rent/mortgage can I afford? How much do I need to save before I can move out of the house? How soon can we sell the house? Will he let me buy him out?
  5. Is there anything I can do to increase my monthly income? Where would I need to cut?
  6. How should we split our joint savings? How much is in my individual account?
  7. Should I get a credit card with just my name on it?
I suggested that after she had answers to those questions that she take the the following steps:
  1. Establish an amount of money to save
  2. Set a target date for having that money saved.
  3. Research apartment rates and house prices in her school district.
  4. Gather information on how much a divorce would cost (court fees, lawyer, paperwork, parenting classes, etc).
  5. Write out a budget on her full-time income only.
  6. Figure out what skills she has that would allow her to earn extra money.

I ended the conversation by letting her know that no matter what she decides, she needs to do what’s best for her and her boys whether that’s ending her marriage or keeping after her husband to attend counseling to improve their marriage. She seemed a bit dazed with all that she needs to think about but she seemed focused at the same time. I was proud of her for even having the conversation; she is uncomfortable thinking logically and critically about money.

For the record, I despised having this conversation with my friend because this is an awful plan to put together and no one should ever need to think about it. Believe me, I never thought that I did. You see, 7 weeks ago, I found out that my husband cheated on me. It was a huge, crushing blow to every aspect of my life. And quite frankly? I feel like shit. Whoever said time heals all wounds obviously never had the person she trusted more than anyone in the world sleep with someone else and then lie about it. Hard as I try, I will never understand what possessed him to choose to do this. He took every insecurity that I have and exploited it for some girl whose name he claims he can’t even remember. Infidelity is quite possibly the most horrible thing one partner can do to another and as a result of this, I am left feeling duped, worthless, unattractive and stupid. I am left feeling as though nothing I have to offer is of any value. These are not good qualities to have when you’re trying to decide how to proceed with your finances and your marriage. So I did the best I could do. I took a deep breath and took a step back.

Setting aside my feelings in the aftermath, I know there was nothing I could have done to prevent what he did. But what happens afterwards is totally in my control.  After I found out, and the blind rage subsided long enough for me to form a rational thought, one of the first things I did was figure out what I needed to do financially (I also employed strategies outlined in the Guide to Financially Surviving Infidelity). Once I realized that I was not financially stuck, it was easier to make some other decisions.  Knowing that I was not forced to stay with someone for financial reasons was liberating. Money shouldn’t control the decision to remain married or not but having a handle on the reality of my finances afforded me more choices.

I understand that no one enters into marriage with the intent to leave that marriage. Unfortunately, things happen. I’m all for working on your marriage and not immediately jumping into divorce. But if things are irreparable, having a plan doesn’t hurt.

Note: I appreciate any and all comments. However, if you are going to comment on this post, please make sure that you are respectful and not attacking, even if you disagree with me or another commenter. I will remove any comments of that nature. 

Filed Under: budget, Money, Relationships Tagged With: relationships

Small changes make big differences

October 6, 2011 by Jana 5 Comments

I was driving recently when Alter Bridge’s “Ghost of Days Gone By” came on the radio. I adore this song. The more I hear it, the more I like it. It’s such a great song that I forget it’s really by Creed minus Scott Stapp. In other words, Creed sucks but when the singer is replaced and the band is given a new name, it magically makes all the difference and it becomes something awesome. Which got me thinking.

Finances kind of work the same way. You can plod along, doing what you normally do, and no matter what it’s just not working. Your budget fails every month. Your debt repayment plan gets derailed. You’re constantly behind on bills. You’re slashing expenses but other expenses keep rising. You start to fall into a self-loathing, self-pitying stream of self-beratement until you collapse on the floor in a messy drunk heap (or was that just me?). Then, one day,  you make a small change and instantly everything clicks.

I’ve actually experienced this type of change twice. The first was finally getting on a budget. Finally getting all my expenses written down and figuring out where my money was going each month made managing my money a whole lot easier. I was no longer frustrated by questions like “how am I going to afford this” and “good Lord, is this bill really due again” and “where the f*ck is all my damn money?” I had an idea of where my money was going, how I was going to afford everything and even attempt to plan for things in advance. One thing that I did during this time was withdraw $500 every payday (my bank’s daily withdrawal limit) and fit all my two-weeks expenses (minus bills) in that pot of money. Unfortunately, after weekend #1, there was only enough money for gas and the next week’s groceries left and I would have to use my debit card to fill in the gaps. It was frustrating for two reasons 1) I hate balancing my checkbook which I would have to do each time I used the debit card and 2) I couldn’t understand why I was running out of money. After all, my expenses were budgeting and planned. Right?

Turns out, not so much. I never bothered to do an itemized calculation of what I was spending each month on things like toiletries, household expenses, clothes, pet expenses…all of those little expenses that would just seem to crop up unexpectedly even though I knew that I needed to pay for them. The other mistake? Was letting my bank’s limit dictate how much money I had in my budget. I realized that I needed more (sometimes, way more) than $500 every two weeks especially when gas was teetering on $4/gallon. Once I realized this, I was astonished with my own stupidity that I hadn’t thought about this before. That was when I called our first family budget meeting (this meeting involved only my husband and I as our daughter is 4 1/2 and the dogs lost their ability to have input after they ate my underwear). I printed out Dave Ramsey’s budget forms and together we went line by line, discussing and deciding how much we do spend, should be spending and should be saving. We arrived a total amount for each category that we need to budget monthly. And instead of taking out the $500 and making it work, I write a check and one of us cashes the check, giving us exact amount of money that we need for those 2 weeks. If there’s money left over, it rolls over into the next pay period/month (like rollover minutes but with money instead. Brilliant, right?).

The second small change has made the most significant impact on my budgeting. I now only have to balance my checkbook once a week, or sometimes only on payday, and now there’s always have enough cash for expenses each pay period rather than a cash/debit combination. It has been such a relief to start making my bank work within my constraints rather than the other way around. It was such a small change that I can’t believe I didn’t think to make it sooner.

Kind of like Creed didn’t think to replace Scott Stapp sooner. That guy is a douche.

What small changes have you made that have had a significant impact?

Filed Under: budget, Money, Money Motivation, money tips

Dependent Care: How we do it

September 29, 2011 by Jana 10 Comments

When my daughter was born, one of the first things my husband and I did was enroll in the Dependent Care benefit option at work. For those of you not familiar, Dependent Care works similar to a Health Savings Account or a Flexible Spending Account. You contribute money, pre-tax, and then draw on that money to offset child care expenses. There is a $5000 limit for one child and a $6000 limit (total, not per child) for two or more children. However, unlike an FSA or HSA, you cannot draw on money you have not contributed; you may only draw on money that is in your account. This can make things a little tricky at first especially if you’re not paying attention.

When we first started paying for daycare, we had no idea how to use our DCA effectively. It took about 8 months of confusion, moving money around and manipulating the checking account until we devised a system that has worked splendidly for the last 3 years. It works so well, in fact, that at the end of the year we wind up paying only 1 week out of pocket!

Before I explain what we do, let me break down what it costs and how we pay (and why). We currently pay $165 per week for our daughter, which should be $660/month, right? Wrong. Why? The owner is an idiot and does some sort of complicated formula where she calculates that daily rate and the actual number of days in a month and then makes that the monthly rate (OK, fine, it’s logical but the owner is still an idiot. I stand by my statement). Rather than paying the monthly rate, we pay weekly; rather we pay bi-monthly. Each payday, I write out a check for the upcoming two weeks for $330. Why don’t I pay by debit or credit? Because she tacks on a 3.5% fee for that privilege. So I’ll write checks instead. Fine with me–it makes her have to do some work.

Now for the dirty details. Let’s do a list:

  • Of that $330, $165 comes out of our pockets and $165 of our DCA contribution is used
  • Our DCA contribution every two weeks is $192.30 ($5000 max benefit/26 paychecks)
  • We are left with a balance every two weeks of $27.30.
  • Every 3 months, we have 1 week saved
  • By December, we have 3 weeks balance remaining in our DCA account

This extra 3 weeks leftover means that we only have to pay 1 week in December, or if we do have to pay, it’s a nominal amount. Having that extra money available in December is great because we get absolutely slammed financially that month: Christmas, Hanukkah and our daughter’s birthday (yes, I know we should be planning and budgeting for this in advance. We’re working on it).

Our system, while seemingly cumbersome, actually is quite beneficial. Besides not having to pay in December, it also helps offset the out of pocket cost each month, spreads the money out over the year instead of concentrating it in one part, and, yes, we still get to deduct the difference in total amount paid and the $5000 on our taxes. The only pitfall in this plan is the fact that on payday, I have to remember to fax a completed form with information like my daughter’s age, the name/address/EIN of the provider and signed by the assistant director or owner and my husband to the company. As I am a forgetful Jones, I have a hard time remembering this. But I combat the problem by leaving a little note on my computer that says “Dependent Care”.

While I wish I didn’t have to pay for daycare at all and I dream of the day she starts kindergarten and childcare expenses go away, maximizing our Dependent Care benefit has paid off.

Do you use a Dependent Care Account? If so, how do you structure your payments to maximize the benefit? 

 

Filed Under: budget, Family matters, Money, money tips

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Jana

I'm Jana ...

A book reading, nail polish wearing, binge watching, music loving, dog owning, reluctant cheer mom.
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