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Maine Jump$tart Coalition for Personal Financial Literacy

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Home | Contributors | Allison Bishop | Financial Mindfulness

03.11.20 Allison Bishop, Blog

Financial Mindfulness

By Allison Bishop, a personal finance coach in Portland, Maine with over 18 years of experience as a CPA. Reposted with permission from Allison’s blog.

Talk about mindfulness is everywhere now. Exercise, food, even parenting – we can be mindful in nearly every aspect of our lives. We can also be mindful of our money. If you’re not making active decisions around your finances, you’re likely not using your money to enrich your life. Our finances are an integral part of our overall well-being, and if they are not under control, the rest of our lives won’t be balanced. If you’re kept awake at night worrying about whether your money is going to last until your next paycheck, your health, productivity at work, and personal relationships can be affected.

The good news is that you have control over where your money goes, and if you choose to actively exercise that control, you can use your money as a tool to help make your life fuller. Money is not inherently good or evil, but the way you treat it will affect everything else in your life.

The greatest power your money provides you is the power to buy freedom: freedom to travel, freedom from debt, freedom to go back to school, even freedom from cleaning your house, if that’s what you choose to spend it on.

It’s easy to ignore your money. So many people pay the bills that come in and at the end of the month their bank account seems to be a little bit lighter than they’d expect. Their money seems to passively dissipate into the air. If they don’t have creditors knocking on their door they probably don’t give much thought to their money at all.

Be mindful of how you’re spending your money. Pay attention to where it’s going. Make sure that every transaction is one that is purposeful and enhances your life.

The thing people find most difficult to do around gaining control of their finances is to figure out where their money has been going. Unless you’ve been keeping records, you may have to track your spending for a few months. It’s necessary that you know where your money goes every month. You can’t possibly make conscious, informed decisions around how to change your spending if you don’t know what your spending habits have looked like in the past.

A nice side effect of paying attention to every transaction is that you might find that you make different decisions than when you were mindlessly pulling out your credit card and not even looking at the amount when you signed the slip. If you know that you’ll have to go home and write down that you spent $300 on a pair of boots, even if that accountability is just to yourself, you might think twice about that purchase. As you’re making any financial decision, take a moment to ensure that you can see how it will improve your life, and not just add to the pile of stuff that you have at home, as well as to your credit card bill.

Once you have real knowledge about where your money is going, you can look at that in relation to where you’d like it to go. Look at how much you’re spending in each category and think about how it compares with what you’d like to be spending. Decide whether you feel good when you look at the amount you’re spending on going out, your cell phone, travel. Don’t forget gifts and charity. Think about whether you want to be spending more or less in each area.

Now identify your goals. Take an hour and consider where you want to be in five or ten years. Maybe you want to buy a house or are thinking about having kids. Perhaps you want to pay off some debt that has been hanging over your head or you’ve been fantasizing about quitting your job and opening a bakery. You need money for each of those things. Once you have your goals in mind, look at where your money is actually going so that you can identify the habits you need to change to start using your money to reach those goals.

It might help to make your goals more solid. Estimate how much you’ll need in the bank to reach your goal in five or eight or ten years. Calculate how much you will need to save every month to make that happen. Then go ahead and take the first steps. Open a savings account and arrange for an automatic transfer to happen monthly. Record the transfer in your checkbook as if it’s another bill you’re paying every month. Even if your monthly savings amount right now won’t be enough to reach your goal within that timeframe, start with what you can and add to it as you come across extra money. Increase the amount as your income increases. Having a specific goal in mind may make it easier to be disciplined about saving. If you have a particular goal in mind for your savings, you’ll be much more motivated to make the necessary sacrifices.

If you pay attention to where your money is going, and make active decisions around how you spend it, you will be using your money as a tool to make your life better. That’s what it’s there for.

As originally published in Essential Living Maine, July/August 2016

The views, information, or opinions expressed in this blog are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent or reflect those of The Maine Jump$tart Coalition for Personal Financial Literacy.

Tags: Financial Lessons

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