Julie Gumm - Author

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Dumping Debt

09.03.2010 by juliegumm@yahoo.com //

So on to baby step #2 and the real reason that most people are looking for help.

DEBT.

We think it’s normal. It’s part of life. Everyone has a car payment. Everyone has student loans. Everyone has a Visa bill.

Well, we were tired of being normal.

Dave Ramsey has a saying “Normal is broke. Be weird!”

I can’t remember EXACTLY where we were on our credit card debt when we first began this journey but our debt looked something like this:

  • credit cards – $2,000
  • student loans – $5,500
  • Mazda 626 balance – $3,000
  • Ford Explorer balance – $10,000
  • TOTAL – $20,500 (not counting our mortgage)

We took a hard look at the biggest debt first. We owed $10,000 on our Explorer and it was worth about $10,500-11,000. We quickly made the decision to sell it before we got upside down. The plan at the time was to scrape together a few thousand dollars, even if we had to finance part of it through the bank, and get a VERY used car. We put in an ad and had the explorer sold within a few weeks.

Right about this time, my Grandmother died. She had a 1991 Buick Century with about 60,000 miles on it. Pristine condition. A true “grandma car”. We asked my mom and my uncle if they would sell it to us. Since no one else was interested in it, they gave it to us. A true blessing.

New debt total = $10,500

There are lots of theories about how best to prioritize what debt you pay off – highest interest rate, etc. But Dave Ramsey’s Debt Snowball has you list the debts in order from smallest to largest. So our list had three things – visa, car and student loans. In that order. For a lot of people this list is much longer – small department store cards, gas cards, etc. Whatever your debts are, list them out smallest balance to largest.

Then, make minimum payments on everything except for the smallest debt. Throw everything you can at the debt. Squeak every extra penny you can out of your budget.

When you have that first debt paid off you take the amount you had been paying toward that and add it to the minimum payment on the next debt – in essence growing your debt snowball.

So for example, the minimum payments we had were:

  • Credit Cards: $200 (I’m guessing at this one.)
  • Car Payment: $336
  • Student Loans: $115

So we paid the minimum payment on the car and student loans and through as much as we could at the credit cards. Now remember that for the few months prior to this we had been funneling all the “extra” money into the small emergency fund. So we took that money and added to it the amount we had been spending on the Explorer payment.  Without too much work we were able to throw about $700 at the card, getting it paid off in just 3 months.

Next was the car. Well in the 3 months it took to pay off the credit card we had also paid down that debt some – around $800 – so we had $2,200 balance. We took the $700 we had been paying on the credit cards, added it to the car payment of $336 and paid about $1,000 a month to pay that off – took us 2.5 months.

Now we had $1,000 a month that we could add to our student loan payments of $115. Again, we’d made 5 payments while paying off the other debt so we hovered right about $5,000. Paid off in 6 months.

That’s a rough timeline for illustration purposes. I’m sure there were some missteps along the way. When we had a car repair come up, we paid for it out of the emergency fund and then refilled the emergency fund the next month (lowering our debt payment that month).

We’ve counseled tons of people through FPU and financial matters and I can totally vouch for the effectiveness of the debt snowball method. By giving yourself “quick” wins (knocking off the smaller debt) you will be energized and motivated to keep attacking the debt as you see the list get smaller and smaller.

If you want to see how long it will take you to pay off your debt, you can use this form to list it out.

Paying off our debt completely changed our lives and allowed me to do something I never thought I would do.

I’ll tell you what next week.

THE REST OF THE STORY

  • Part 1:  The Early Years: In Love and In Debt
  • Part 2: Joining Financial Baggage
  • Part 3: Driving Our Debt Around
  • Part 4: The Baby Years: Baby Steps, Baby Boy
  • Part 5: The “B” Word: B-U-D-G-E-T
  • Part 6: The Envelope System – It Makes Your Budget Work
  • Part 7: The ever-important emergency fund

Categories // Featured Articles, Financial Freedom

Ethiopia Necklace Giveaway

09.01.2010 by juliegumm@yahoo.com //

I have a friend who has entered a photo contest sponsored by Sigma and is hoping to win some great camera gear from them. Josh is passionate about using his skills as a photographer and videographer to help non-profit ministries like World Orphans and so I would love to see him win this contest. So much so that I’m offering a cool giveaway if you will help me spread the word.

He’s entered in 3 different categories and you can vote for each photo.

It’s a 2 step process.

1) Go here and click the button under one of the photos.

2) You have to enter your e-mail address and then click VOTE

3) Check your email for a confirmation message and click the link. You ONLY have to do this on the 1st photo.

4) Now you can vote for the other two photos.

You won’t get spammed, they are just validating you’re a real person.

THE GIVEAWAY

To encourage some voting I will be giving away one of the beautiful necklaces that Mark brought home from Ethiopia (read more about the ministry they came from).

You will get one entry for each of the following things that you do.

1) Vote for all 3 photos

2) Post a link to this blog post (here’s the URL: http://juliegumm.com/?p=2099) on Facebook so your friends will vote.

3) Tweet about the contest and link this post

4) Blog about Josh’s entries and encourage people to VOTE.

Leave me a comment for each of the above actions you take.

IMPORTANT: You need to make a comment on this blog post for EACH thing that you do. I will use a random number generator to pick the winning comment so if you do all 4 you need to make 4 separate comments to increase your chances of winning. Just a quick “voted”, “facebooked”, “tweeted”, “blogged” will do.

I’m going to run the contest for a week and draw names at the end of the day on Thursday, September 8th.

The winner will receive this gorgeous silver and coffee bean necklace…

Categories // Featured Articles, Orphans & Social Justice Tags // Beza Entoto, coffee bean jewerly, Ethiopian jewelry, giveaway

His turn…

08.31.2010 by juliegumm@yahoo.com //

I didn’t really intended to take a blog-cation during my mom-cation but it kind of turned out that way didn’t it.

I even skipped a Financial Freedom Friday. Sorry – I was having too much fun.

Poor Mark was not having quite so much fun. All four kids ended up at sleepovers on Friday night (that part was okay).

I got this text message from my husband at 12:20 p.m. on Saturday…

“Can u come home now?”

Followed by

“They were all 4 up past midnight. Luke puked all over back seat of van – like 2 gallons worth of barf. Guess you’ll be getting a new van when u get home.”

At 2:12 p.m.

“Beza just puked.”

I told him that I was still winning until he had all 4 kids puking at the same time (which happened to me while he was in Africa during last summer).

“Ya. I don’t want to win that game.”

I was just about to say that he did a fantastic job of cleaning the van because I couldn’t smell anything. But then I realized I haven’t actually been in it yet since I got home 🙂

Categories // Family Matters, Featured Articles

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About Me

Writer. Wife. Mother. Traveler. Coffee-addict. Book-lover. Television-Junkie. I love stories. Hearing them, watching them, telling them, living them.

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