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    Five Steps To Success In Beating Debt

    Sunday, August 8th, 2010

    Beating debt is as much to do with what’s going on in your head as it is to do with what’s going on in your wallet. If you have a debt problem you can solve it if you admit this. Here are five steps you can take to begin beating your debt:

    1.Take control
    There comes a point where you have to admit that your debt is defeating you. You can’t keep up with repayments; the interest charges are mounting up and, maybe even worse, you’re using one loan to pay off another.

    You have to take control of your finances: if you don’t your creditors will. If you are in denial about this you need to face the truth. If you can face the truth and take control, you’re on the first step to beating debt.

    2.Live within your means
    Take a look at your credit card and charge-card statements. What did you spend that money on?

    Go round your house and take a good hard look at the goods that you bought with those credit cards. Are they worth it? Did you want them that much? What difference have they truly made to your life?

    What do you feel like when you look that stuff and say to yourself, ‘I haven’t paid for that (xxx) yet’?

    3.Reduce your stress
    Debt can become a nightmare and stress can send you into a spiral of despair. It doesn’t have to be like that. There’s a way out but it’s not an easy way out. You have to take control of yourself and your spending, and resolve to get your life back. When (and only when) you’ve got that mental resolve, then consider consolidating your debt.

    4.Eliminate your debt
    Consolidating your debt is a one-chance option of repaying your debt. The debt doesn’t disappear, but all the various loans and debts get lumped together into one bigger loan to be paid off over a longer period and at a lower interest rate. This frees up some of your income and will instantly reduce your stress.

    And, crucially, you shouldn’t continue to rack up credit card debts. You will only eliminate your debt if you live within your means.

    Try an experiment. Leave your credit cards at home for a week and live on cash. Pay for everything with money – yes, everything. This will help you get a handle on your need to budget. When you see the money slipping through your fingers it will bring home the reality that your supply of money is limited.

    At the end of the week, ask yourself how you feel. If it was difficult but you succeeded in prioritizing your spending, congratulations – you’re in control! If it was hard, or impossible, then try again. You need to be tough with yourself to be in control of your money.

    5.Getting your life back
    Happiness is not being able to buy useless luxuries: it’s about being free. Cut up all but one of your credit cards, and pay back that credit card every month, without fail. You’ll enjoy the things that money can buy only if you spend money that you have – not money that you borrow. Resist the temptation to indulge yourself with money that you don’t own.

    Money has the power to enslave you as well as making you free. When your debt is out of control, you’re enslaved. You can become free only if you take control.

    5 Ways To Try And Reduce Your Debts And Outgoings

    Sunday, February 28th, 2010

    5 Ways To Try And Reduce Your Debts And Outgoings

    Anyone that has a high level of debt or a number of creditors to pay off each month will know how stressful and difficult financial management can be. However, for those crippling themselves with monthly outgoing as a result of high debt levels there are some steps that could help to reduce the amount that you have to pay out each month, as well as reducing overall interest paid on your debts.

    1.See where you can make cutback’s on your outgoing’s. Look at cutting back on little luxuries such as eating out at lunch each day rather than taking sandwiches to work with you. Also cut out any unnecessary expenditure, such as subscriptions and memberships that may no longer be of much use to you. It is surprising how much you can claw back through a number of small savings each month, and this can then be applied towards your smaller debts such as credit and store cards in order to clear them more quickly.

    2. Make sure that you are aware of exactly what is coming in and going out of your account each month. Trying to manage your finances and prioritize on paying off debt is impossible if you don’t keep a proper track of your income and outgoing’s. List down every little payment that goes out of your account so you know exactly how much you can afford to spend or put towards clearing your debts a little faster.

    3.Consider consolidating your debts. By consolidating smaller debts with one larger loan you can reduce the number of repayments you have to make each month, cut back on the number of creditors to whom you have to pay interest, and dramatically reduce the amount that you pay out each month. For homeowners, a secured loan could be the ideal solution, as this can be spread over a longer period and this helps to keep monthly repayments down. You should be aware though, that by taking finance over a longer period, this would mean you pay back interest for longer. However, if the interest rate is lass than what you currently pay, and lower monthly payments means that you have more disposable income to spend, it would serve to prevent it from being necessary that you need to take on extra borrowing as you will have spare money each month to either build up savings and be able to afford things which you made want to purchase, with out borrowing additional money.

    4.Try and clear your overdraft. If you have an overdraft with your bank, and you find yourself reaching the limit every month, one small transaction is all it will take to push you over the limit and of course this means hefty bank charges being added to your account. By ensuring that you keep your overdraft at a sensible level rather than teetering at the brink of exceeding the limit you can avoid these hefty charges.

    5.If you do intend to take out another loan this should be by way of consolidation rather than an addition to your existing finance, as consolidating all your existing credit may help to ease the financial strain and reduce outgoing’s, whereas another added loan will increase both. It may sound obvious but try avoid taking out a loan as an easy solution, as this will only suffice for the short term and you may soon find yourself struggling to keep up with all of your previous debts plus a new loan.