Little bit of a vent post...
My family seems to have a problem with credit card usage. We can easily afford monthly expenses, and sometimes we use the credit card for convenience and situations like ordering stuff off the internet. It sometimes gets up to the $800 range, but we are pretty quick to pay it off.
Last night I blew up. A local jewelry store is going out of business, and for some reason, my wife ran up over $2k there. I got a watch I liked, but did not need or necessarily want. My son got a watch for his birthday. My daughter got a pre-sweet-16 gift and my wife got something she wanted. The rationale: "We can't turn down deals like this, I always want jewelry and this was a great opportunity to save a lot."
And since my wife does all the clothes shopping for the kids, she puts about 90% of those purchases on the card. The excuse is normally along the lines of, "They needed clothes." A quick review of the statement also showed around $400 worth of groceries were put on the card, as well as beauty supplies and various mall stores.
When we get saddled with paying $1000/mo to service the CC balance, of course things are going to be tighter. It gets worse when new purchases fight against our efforts. Last time we ran up debt like this, we literally froze our cards in ice in the freezer to avoid usage.
The good news: we save a lot toward our 401Ks, IRAs, Roth IRAs, and EF. I tried to share the vision of no big CC payments with my wife, but she always answers with the good news about how much we save, and doesn't see the negative. Unfortunately, any money left over after expenses and saving appears as free money, and is quickly employed to spend on non-critical things.
What kind of strategies can we use to avoid situations like this again?
Thanks for listening.
My family seems to have a problem with credit card usage. We can easily afford monthly expenses, and sometimes we use the credit card for convenience and situations like ordering stuff off the internet. It sometimes gets up to the $800 range, but we are pretty quick to pay it off.
Last night I blew up. A local jewelry store is going out of business, and for some reason, my wife ran up over $2k there. I got a watch I liked, but did not need or necessarily want. My son got a watch for his birthday. My daughter got a pre-sweet-16 gift and my wife got something she wanted. The rationale: "We can't turn down deals like this, I always want jewelry and this was a great opportunity to save a lot."
And since my wife does all the clothes shopping for the kids, she puts about 90% of those purchases on the card. The excuse is normally along the lines of, "They needed clothes." A quick review of the statement also showed around $400 worth of groceries were put on the card, as well as beauty supplies and various mall stores.
When we get saddled with paying $1000/mo to service the CC balance, of course things are going to be tighter. It gets worse when new purchases fight against our efforts. Last time we ran up debt like this, we literally froze our cards in ice in the freezer to avoid usage.
The good news: we save a lot toward our 401Ks, IRAs, Roth IRAs, and EF. I tried to share the vision of no big CC payments with my wife, but she always answers with the good news about how much we save, and doesn't see the negative. Unfortunately, any money left over after expenses and saving appears as free money, and is quickly employed to spend on non-critical things.
What kind of strategies can we use to avoid situations like this again?
Thanks for listening.
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