Your ability to prevent a meltdown can make or break your financial plans. Suffering a financial meltdown can not only be a major setback against your budget, but it can potentially drive you further into debt.
What is a Meltdown?
A meltdown is one of those unexpected minor disasters that life hands you at the most inopportune moments.
Though there is NEVER a good time for your car to break down; or for your roof to leak; or for that old tree in your backyard to crash down on your fence, it hurts even more when it ruins your budget you’ve worked so hard to conform to. Obviously no one plans for things like these to happen but when they do if you have a bit of a safety net in place you can protect yourself from a great deal of different potential meltdowns.
That safety net comes in the form of a savings plan. Save in your budget for meltdowns. These minor disasters won’t phase you as much if your sitting on $500 or $600 in savings to cover such meltdowns.
Not having a safety net for these little disasters can leave you with no other choice but to go to the bank for a loan, or even worse, scratch the plastic. The other alternative is to do without; most of the time that is out of the question, you can’t just not fix the roof; you can’t just not drive your car because you have to get to work and back. Have a safety net. Its as important to winning the game as your budget is.
Of course too many meltdowns will deplete your safety net so you then have to replenish your savings after a meltdown occurs.
The best way to fund your safety net is the same way you fund your regular savings, your vacation savings, or your car savings. Open a separate savings account and fund it in your budget. You will want to focus more on your safety net at first until you save the appropriate amount to bail yourself out of any meltdowns that occur. Once your comfortable with that fund, stop funding it and focus on your debts listed in your budget plan.
I constantly hear people at work complain that they had to pay for this and fix that and now their credit card is maxed and they can’t put anything else on it until its paid down. This is just plain stupidity. If they bothered to save that money in the first place they wouldn’t have to, “scratch the plastic”, they could be earning interest on their savings instead of paying interest on their credit cards.
How much quicker can you payoff your debts? How much more money will you have for the things you want and need? How much are the credit cards actually getting after you pay all the interest and other fees? Your supposed to be doing all this to get out of debt not further into debt.
Measure up the Pros and Cons. I fail to see a down side. If you find one I’d love to hear it!
The fourth installment of this series will be Keeping Ahead of the Game.
A wise man once said “Common sense isn’t very common” - especially true in a cracked world.




