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Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Tiny house? hmm...



My husband and I have currently been looking into tiny houses while we build our future home debt free so it will take a while.  They are houses, very small houses anywhere from 100-200 ish sqft, built on a trailer. Has anyone every heard of these? Above are the pictures of Jenna and Sean tiny house. You can learn more about their transition. They have a great documentary on Netflix called Tiny, check out some info on that. Then there is a show on FYI network called Tiny House Nation. This  topic continues to fuel a great transition. Both cites are very informative on what having a Tiny house is really about. 







I think the idea of throwing everything away and starting fresh sounds amazing. Declutter, live comfortably, and enjoy the real purpose of life. I feel that as Americans we have taken such a heavy responsibility to care about what society thinks of us and our house. We work long hard hours just to pay for a house in the end we can't really even afford. Here are some statistics on a tiny house. 
 think this would be fun to live in while we take a couple maybe five years who knows to save up money to pay for our house as we go. So we have been talking about it. But we do not want to pay 15,000 for something we will only live in for a few years. We are going to try to get as much as we can by thrifting, dumpster diving, free finds, and repurposing. Thats if we do it which we are hoping to. 

I know everyone hears how small it is and cringes. Let me tell you a little bit about our timeline of square footage. 
First apartment-an unfinished basement 500 soft
Moved in to our first home 960 soft
Rented a room from family-150 sqft
Second house-over 3,000 sqft
New and current above a garage apartment-580 sqft



So we have jumped around a lot in four years to say the least. Maybe we should start calling ourselves Gypsies I think that word would fit appropriately. But we are also flexible. Thanks to Anthony, my husband, he has taught me to not hoard and instead get rid of it. Its true why do we really need all of this stuff? We waste it on things we will throw away in two years. The money thats buying these wasteful things we worked our butts off for. So this also goes along with the New budget. Helping cut out waste in our lives and help allow us a better future.  By get rid of I do not mean throw away either. I mean donate and give to those in need or just starting off. 

Just a tidbit of information of something new to learn about. What do you think of moving to something so small? What are your thoughts on this house?

Sources:
http://tiny-themovie.com/store/
http://thetinylife.com/tiny-house-infographic/
http://vagabode.blogspot.com
http://thetinyhousefilm.com/blog/meet-the-people-of-the-tiny-house-film

Monday, September 1, 2014

A Year of Scrimping.

We started a new budget this week. Oh the new budget..sigh. We decided to take over half of both our incomes and put it towards building a house for ourselves to be DEBT-FREE. Talk about hard...
We plan on doing this for a year and hope we can stick with it.

Our inspiration to make this drastic sacrifice was a couple things.


  • We NEVER knew where all the money was going. We were spending like crazy.
  • We needed to get on a budget (thanks to Dave Ramsey) 
  • We want to live debt free and enjoy life, who doesn't! 
  • We want to have a debt free environment for our kids raising them to do the same, and not make the same mistakes we did.
  • I grew up in as a kid with my parents in debt. I would be in elementary school worrying about if my parents could pay the bills. I do not want that to be my life as an adult or for my kids. 
  • We do not want to be in debt! We have struggled enough in the past 10 months
  • We bought a house way out of what we could afford $1632 a month, a truck that was more then one of our weekly incomes $568, $4,000 in credit card debt, and very high utilities over $700 a month. We were up to our eye balls in debt.  Our income was pretty much the same as our outgo. It was a terrible time. We were blessed to get out. I can't tell you how lucky we were. 
  • I have SO MANY REASONS I could right pages! But you get the idea.


This is how we plan on being able to save so much.

  • Cut down on your cable bill.
    • See if your neighbors will split the Internet service with you. That's what we did. We pay a part of their bill and cut our expenses for it in half. 
  • Sell your pants off, not literally, have yard sales, take up crafting,  lemonade stand anyone, do whatever it takes. Do anything to help bring in some extra income to put towards savings. 
  • We are no longer eating out or spending any money for that matter. What ever was left over in our budget is for emergencies, doctor visits, vitamins, toiletries or anything we might want to treat ourselves to. But that envelope only has $118 in it for the MONTH = nothing!
  • ALWAYS use your envelopes and STICK TO THE BUDGET! (Thanks to Dave Ramsey for this amazing knowledge).
  • If you leave your envelope at home sorry, turn around you can't use the card its only for bills. Those are done. 
  • Write down all of your budgets for each envelope and keep track of what you spend for food, gas, and the extra money. Also keep an envelope for savings and track how much you have so far it helps remind you of the reason your doing this. 
  • One of the most important- Meal Planning
    • I started us on a meal plan. Everything is strategically plan out and not wasted. I know what we are having every night for dinner breakfast and lunches. This allows no waste or overbuying of food (which we do to often). I have only $100 a week to feed the two of us. I have an envelope for each week. That's all I can pay for the groceries with. I have no overage. I make sure to keep a running list of prices while in the store. 
      • Tips for saving on food especially organic
  • Cook from scratch it really makes a difference. 
  • Break your expenses down weekly it helps show what you have each week. Monthly is hard because you don't have that money at the beginning of each month. Plus you are more likely to spend more and not have any left over by the fourth or fifth week. 
  • Be conscious of how often you leave your home in your vehicle. Make sure to consider if ti's really necessary to leave you don't want to waste gas which equals wasted money.
  • Breath.. You will make it through its not for long :)
  • We have no current debt (we paid it all off) hooray! Now to save for the house.. eek!
    • But this doesn't make this challenge impossible just a little longer. No Biggy!
      • Please look into Dave Ramsey's Financial Peace University!- Its the gateway to being DEBT FREE. He is great and very informative.
  • We moved in to a cheap apartment. Which = cheaper utilities. 
    • DON'T feel discouraged if you don't have the above already done, you CAN still do this and save money and become debt free. 

Things to do and ideas to make this hard time better. 



  • Make staying at home fun. Game nights, movie nights, do potluck party dinners with friends.
  • Want a date night but don't have the money? No worries! Swap babysitting with another family. You and the hubs can go on a nice homemade picnic or a walk down to the beach, or even a night at home without the kids for awhile.
  • Make time for the little things like cooking and have quality time it helps make things more fun with not that much money. 
  • Take walks, bike rides, and get playing outside. 
  • Look towards the future! One year or even a couple months is nothing to scarifies compared to many many years of debt.

    Here is our budget I made this one night at 1 am. 
    Here is before in the old house and now after.







    So what are you thoughts? Are you going to take the challenge.  What other ideas do you have that are frugal friendly? I would love to hear from you.

    XO Tori



      I am not affiliated with Dave Ramsey at all. I am just a major fan. He has changed my life and I can't help but try and spread the word to help others like he has helped me.