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The Carr Report: How to avoid debt while Christmas shopping this year

Happy black family Christmas window shopping

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It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas. Retailers are open extended hours seeking to claim the money in your wallet. Every charitable organization known to man is soliciting you for money. Friends and family are dropping hints about certain gifts that they would enjoy this year. People in the office are asking you to chip in on a gift for the boss. Your church is passing around an extra offering plate for a present for the pastor. 

You believe in your heart that “it’s better to give than to receive” but in the back of your mind you’re thinking, “give me a break.” “No can do,” says mortgage, car note, student loan, credit cards, lights, gas, cable, house phone, cell phone, internet, insurance, and Uncle Sam.  “We understand that you’re in a giving mood but don’t forget you have bills to pay!”

As a financial advisor I sit as the proverbial fly on the wall and listen to the conversations you’ve been having with yourself and your significant other. I heard you cry out in a moment of stress – “the paycheck doesn’t stretch far enough to feed, shelter, and clothe the family, provide basic utility and transportation for the family while at the same time give to charitable causes and save for future needs, wants, and goals.” I know that you’re doing the best you can to make ends meet. You’ll like to avoid using credit cards. You don’t want to rob Peter and Paul to play Santa. You’ll like to set up a Christmas fund to save a small portion each month starting in January every year so that when Christmas is here you have the money to shop for gifts.  The reality is you’re having a tough enough time trying to meet the financial demands of today. You don’t have the space in your mind or the funds in your wallet to worry about Christmas in January. Here we go again. Christmas has snuck up on us!

Christmas is upon us. You frantically wonder how you’re going to come up with the money to do your Christmas shopping.  You’ve thought long and hard. You’ve concluded that you’ll get the money you need for Christmas one of two ways: 1. You’ll skip various bills this month and pay them when you get your tax refund.  2. You’ll reluctantly use a credit card with the intention to pay it off within the next 6 months.  Caught up in the emotion of the holidays, it may not have dawned on you that this is exactly what you did last year, the year before and the year before.  That plan isn’t working.    

Below are some ideas that will help you enjoy Christmas and avoid debt this holiday season:

(Damon Carr, Money Coach can be reached @ 412-216-1013 or visit his website @ www.damonmoneycoach.com)

 

 

 

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