S
o it's been 3 weeks now on my austerity budget of £60 a week for food and treats. Have scrimped and saved to the tune of £190 this week (and that doesn't include what would have been spent on clothes - about £25 this week). Still have my overdraft to clear but at this rate I will be saving around £800 per month which is pretty much £10k per year. Potentially could be mortgage free in 5 years, or could buy a motorhome in 3 years or could have £50k in savings in 5 years to rent the house out and do some travelling, maybe get hitched on a beach abroad with long honeymoon...the sacrifices made below don't even seem like sacrifices anymore - a sense of achievement - working to a goal is seemingly so far as enjoyable as frittering away all your wages with a few material possessions to show for it - and mainly just a thoughtless string of not well thought through purchases under your belt...
- Avoiding eBay/shop retail therapy or any form of online shops despite fancying some £9.99 total bargain destroy boots never worn (retail at over a hundred) and despite really needing some decent headphones for my iPod classic - plan is to borrow my sons skull candy headphones for the gym instead. I also avoided a nice knitwear opportunity in Peacocks - but reminded myself that I actually do have lovely knitwear not dissimilar from previous years hardly worn. Impulse buying avoidance has saved dividends - this week. Savings made on clothes purchases this week amounts to £10 - that was a very close call - the boots.
- Funnily enough I thought I would somehow have to treat myself to something with a price tag - however no extras apart from 1 glamour magazine which came with free gift anyway - nail polish worth £1 - purchase price £2. So little tiny free pampering treats like that are good. Treats that don't cost can be as simple as
- treating yourself to a ten minute break with your feet up and a nice cup of tea.
- a nice walk with your iPod.
- finding new things to wear from your newly sorted out wardrobe- putting things together in a different way. These all have the effect of feeling treated.
- losing a few pounds - then you can look better in the clothes you have and some you can't get into become wearable again.
- going into shops where you could buy anything and having a browse around - you get a nice feeling looking round a charity shop and don't get tempted into spending lots. DO NOT GO INTO SHOPS SUCH AS TOAST IN LLANDEILO.
- Savings on treats on coffees and magazines has amounted to £10 per week.
- Exercise classes were my achilles heel, however free zumba classes now apply as I'm designing my instructor a website in exchange for 1 years free lessons starting now. Also have free protein shakes from her as she is a herbalife nutritionist - which make my breakfasts free too. That's a saving of £25 per week.
- Doing extra work apart from day job - a few websites for extra money for xmas and for Canaries next year means will technically still stick to budget. The Edu-Pets site will pay for my holiday money and the Zumba site cash payment for xmas presents for my son - who is only getting £100 worth of presents this year. These extra sites amount to additional savings of around £100 a week but sometimes this will be much more.
- Have noticed budget also ties in with dieting - the less treats you buy the easier it is to diet. Have lost more weight and am now a small 8 instead of an 8-10.
- Bulk buying and offers - Purchased civil servant gym points - 12 for 20 quid so can afford gym at just over £1 per session instead of a whopping £3.50 an hour. That's a saving of £5 per week.
- Luxury forfeits...Wearing headband instead of getting my roots done at lara jonnsons for £300. Will buy a few more pretty headbands to match outfits. This means that I only straighten hair with tongs for half the week so I don't ruin my hair...it has very curly roots. By avoiding a bill of £300 this month that's a saving of £75 per week I normally would have spent.
- Wardrobe overhaul - Reorganised all my clothes - packed some away for a boot sale so only my nicest ones are displayed - makes me realise I have SO many clothes it's unreal. If I see something now and then to add to this collection I will do - say up to £50 per month, but so far I have not been tempted. Now wardrobe is organised to colour and style and drawers of clothes all garment co-ordinated...makes me question when tempted - do I really need this item? and the answer is so far no. Think am saving about £25 a week on clothes shopping.
- Finding the best place to food shop - Tesco in Carmarthen has much better deals. Cheaper than Co-op and Sainsburys. However, doing 2 smaller shops is also good in any store. You buy the precise meals and no wastage. Think am saving about £40 per week on food.
Have not cut back on
- 1 meal of salmon with fresh greens per week
- healthy food - all cooked from scratch and still getting fruit and veg and managing a roast on a Sunday.
- child 1's dinner money - won't have sarnies - have tried to persuade
- fuel - although if I leave earlier for work can conserve up to one third by driving slow. This is potentially a saving of £500 per year.
Plans for further savings
- grow veggies - potatoes, onions, garlic etc. Need to make initial investment in greenhouse first.
- advertise business in local free ads - budget websites.