Budgeting Is Very Important
12:40 AM
No one can achieve financial freedom without first committing to make and to stick to a personal budget. A budget is an important financial tool, leading you down the correct path like a map. You may be someone who needs to write out your budget at regular intervals all of your life. Or you may only need to actually budget formally for a little while, until you develop a sense of where your money is going and what it is going for. Drawing up your budget is fundamental to the road to financial freedom and the most simple helpful tool to that end. Neglecting to establish a budget sets you up for nearly certain financial problems.
Often people dread it when anyone suggests they draw up a budget, even fleeing the expert adviser who makes the suggestion. People are reluctant to take on the work involved. It isn?t really all that unpleasant or difficult. The emotional resistance to the idea stems from the perception that the budget is going to trap them and force them to make lifestyle changes. Often when they do begin to budget, though, they find the reverse is actually the case. It?s the people who don?t sit down to plan a budget who find themselves in a heap of debt, debt which demands large payments every month and leaves them less free to decide how to spend.
The budget is only a plan, a way to use your money with intention instead of improvised spending without a purpose. The point is that if you plan your expenditures, you won?t find yourself spending money you don?t really have coming in. Your personal budget may feel as though it?s cramping your style at first, but after a few months of following it, it will wean you off of your credit cards, and then you?ll know what it?s like to feel truly free.
You cannot expect, however, to get it perfectly right from the get-go. It?s going to take you 3-5 months to have your budget up and running correctly. At first, you will probably forget about some small expenses and make a few mistakes. Three to five months later, the bugs should be all worked out, and your budget will reflect exactly what you are really spending.
Budgeting skills are not something that will come easily and quickly to everyone. It will probably be several months before you begin to feel comfortable with it, and for it to be as efficient as you would prefer it to be. You may have expenses for which you did place in your budget the first time around, and you will need to append your budget to account for these expenses as you think of them, so that you may get an as much of an actual view of your financial habits as is possible.
If you truly crave financial freedom, you must possess enough discipline to stick to your budget without fail once you have set it up. If you stumble at times, do not feel like you have failed completely. Instead, keep going with your budget as best you can once you realize that you have made these budgeting mistakes.
Success rarely happens without at least a little effort and planning. Now is the time to make your own success story and my suggestion to you is that you do yourself a favor and grab a note pad and a pen and start working on your own personal budget.
Often people dread it when anyone suggests they draw up a budget, even fleeing the expert adviser who makes the suggestion. People are reluctant to take on the work involved. It isn?t really all that unpleasant or difficult. The emotional resistance to the idea stems from the perception that the budget is going to trap them and force them to make lifestyle changes. Often when they do begin to budget, though, they find the reverse is actually the case. It?s the people who don?t sit down to plan a budget who find themselves in a heap of debt, debt which demands large payments every month and leaves them less free to decide how to spend.
The budget is only a plan, a way to use your money with intention instead of improvised spending without a purpose. The point is that if you plan your expenditures, you won?t find yourself spending money you don?t really have coming in. Your personal budget may feel as though it?s cramping your style at first, but after a few months of following it, it will wean you off of your credit cards, and then you?ll know what it?s like to feel truly free.
You cannot expect, however, to get it perfectly right from the get-go. It?s going to take you 3-5 months to have your budget up and running correctly. At first, you will probably forget about some small expenses and make a few mistakes. Three to five months later, the bugs should be all worked out, and your budget will reflect exactly what you are really spending.
Budgeting skills are not something that will come easily and quickly to everyone. It will probably be several months before you begin to feel comfortable with it, and for it to be as efficient as you would prefer it to be. You may have expenses for which you did place in your budget the first time around, and you will need to append your budget to account for these expenses as you think of them, so that you may get an as much of an actual view of your financial habits as is possible.
If you truly crave financial freedom, you must possess enough discipline to stick to your budget without fail once you have set it up. If you stumble at times, do not feel like you have failed completely. Instead, keep going with your budget as best you can once you realize that you have made these budgeting mistakes.
Success rarely happens without at least a little effort and planning. Now is the time to make your own success story and my suggestion to you is that you do yourself a favor and grab a note pad and a pen and start working on your own personal budget.
About the Author:
Susan Reynolds is a content coordinator a leading South African Debt Consolidation Portal. For more information visit: http://www.debtconsolidation123.co.za/
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.