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Live on 40%, Save 60%?
By MP Dunleavey Monday December 14, 2009
Could you live on 40% of your income—and save the other 60%? It sounds impossible (or tortuous), yet Mary-Jo Dionne says she's learned to make it happen—and happily—with a system she calls the 1-2-3 saving strategy.
"Every time I get paid, I instantly pop 10% into my shopping/mad money account; 20% into a business expenses account; and 30% into a taxes account. I've learned to live on the remaining 40% only--this is what I use to cover mortgage, retirement, bills and real-life stuff," Dionne wrote to us.
Really?! Live on less than 50% of your income? Even in the disciplined corridors of DailyWorth's headquarters, we struggle to save 20%.
I contacted Dionne, a freelance advertising copywriter and amateur pet lobbyist in Vancouver, to learn how she became a mega saver.
Dying to hear how she does it? Us too!
Dionne says her savings skills were honed from a very young age, watching her single mom make careful and creative money choices. She remembers showing her an article about a couple who had saved a million dollars through small acts of frugality (like reusing sandwich bags). After that, Dionne says their kitchen was festooned with drying plastic baggies. " I used to look at them and think, 'Wow, we're going to be rich.' "
She was nine years old.
Since then, Dionne has relied on tiny acts of economy to build her savings muscle. "I haven't made any huge sacrifices," she says, "but I've made hundreds of smaller choices you might not even notice."
Like any woman, she likes her little luxuries—facials, highlights, going out—but she's is strict about using her "mad money" stash to pay for extras. And she minimizes what she pays for everything else. "I'm very micro," she says.
• She'll feed her Starbucks habit, but get a Tall instead of a Venti.
• Rather than live in Vancouver, an expensive city, she lives a few miles outside it.
• When her boyfriend picks pricey grocery items or fancy imports, she shaves bucks off their bill by choosing lower cost items and store brands.
It doesn't sound like much—because it's not, Dionne says, and that's the point. Saving isn't painful or sacrificial, because it's all small moves. And it adds up. The girl goes to Hawaii—and clearly shops around, OK?
Because every paycheck is subject to the 1-2-3 saving rule, Dionne gets a thrill (you might say a fix) by watching her money pots fill. "I regularly get down to $27 in my checking account each month," she says, "but then I look at all my little accounts, and I can hear the angels sing."
(I reused my bags too!)
I especially love the thought of making small reductions like a Tall instead of a Venti. As a girl, I'm used to doing this kind of "budgeting" already with calories! LOL Now, to apply it to my *real* budget!
I am also, however, baffled as to the particulars of this program. We regularly wash out baggies, take lunches, buy generic brands, and heck, I make my own laundry detergent, use coupons, drive an old car without a car payment, use every idea possible to cut costs, and still we are scraping paycheck to paycheck.
Is there more info other than the select few in this article? Would love more...thanks!
also, am i allowed to set up different savings accounts at the bank for these things? or would i do better to use the old envelope system and stash them under my bed?
Re the many accounts: Is this the most effective way? Wouldn't you miss out on some interest you'd get if all your money was pooled in one savings account? I waffle back and forth about this. Any opinions? Answers?
You might lose some interest, depends on how much you have in savings.
I prefer to keep the bulk of my money in one place (in addition to some being kept in a saving account linked to my checking account and separate ira account of course), and track any actual that I am saving up for in quicken.
I also don't get where a lot of that is saving? I put money in to a temp saving account for taxes, but its not money I get to keep, so it isn't money I am saving...
@Oceana, the trick is to see what you can give up (even for a short time) as a way to save money, or find a way to make more money. Then put that money aside as a rainy day fund. Treat yourself with some of it so you don't feel deprived though!
DH uses automatic payments for everything, as do I. I think that really helps.
The first thing I did was to pare down my living expenses to what is REALLY necessary. I do not use a credit card, except for my business expenses. I pay low rent (364.00/mo). No cable tv, no movie rentals (check them out at the public library for free), very rarely eat out (great for my health!), keep the almost 10 year old car-no payments and its reliable, one phone (no land line), no new clothes (I have a closet full!!)and only buy something if it's needed, like the furnace filter or oil change for the car. I plan my meals around weekly grocery sales and eat simply. Also better for my health! I don't NEED most things that I thought was a "have-to" in the past.
As a game, I label an envelope at the beginning of the month for all my receipts and then see how little I can put into it. At the end of the month my envelope is still flat (most of the time) and my bank account has enough to pay for the above mentioned expenses plus a little bit for savings.
If you don't know where the money is going to come from to start a savings pot, look around your home. I bet you could find a dozen items to sell off, for a start, and lighten your load! Within the last two months I sold several items on Craig's List and gained 400.00 to start my cash emergency fund. I don't miss what I have sold.
I think before I buy. It doesn't have to be an automatic impluse to buy buy buy. Think-1.How else can I get that item. 2. Do I REALLY need it? 3. What am I giving up to have it? My answer to the last question is FREEDOM! (Specially good to realize if you are putting your items on credit cards!)
Sorry for the long post.
MP, I'd love some assistance and will definitely give it a go. Thanks for the offer!
If I can do this, well...you can write about me if you'd like and help others in similar situations find hope again. Any hope sent my way is welcome.
To your Starbucks point, buy one of their reusable mugs. Some of their locations will fill it up for only $0.55 instead of the $1.50 for what a tall cup of coffee will cost. And you are wasting less as you save!!! Being Green in multiple ways !! =)
My salary arrives on a monthly basis but my discretionary is topped up automatically every couple of weeks, so I never have to wait long for that cute item I saw or feel guilty about it because bills are already taken care of.
Of course any extra income on the side or finding ingenious ways to save even more (like biking to work has saved me $1,000 a year on public transport alone!) gets rewarded with a slice of the savings topping up the discretionary account.
I like to think of it as feel good budgeting. All the boring work is automated, I spend my time thinking about the fun money and focusing on the areas I enjoy spending the most.




