It seems like the last few days have been filled with nothing but terrible financial and economic news.  And honestly, I don’t understand all of it.  I’ve read the articles, but I just don’t have a real grasp of the details of how this happened and why, and I don’t even really think that the enormity of the problem has hit me.

See, I’m really sort of a small-time finances kind of gal…I’m in my groove when I’m figuring out whether a $.55/2 coupon on a item that’s on sale 3 for $5 is a better deal than the off brand, but when it comes to larger financial matters, I’m not really all that great.(fortunately my husband does better with large stuff than with small stuff, so we’ve managed to not make disastrous large decisions most of the time!).

At any rate, the financial problems in the news the last few days definitely fall into the big-time finances category and not into the small-time category, but I’ve been thinking about how now is as good a time as ever to focus on the small stuff.  We can’t control what’s happening in the stock market or housing market, we can’t control how banks loan money, and we can’t control what the government decides to do about it, but we can do a lot to control things on a smaller scale.  We can…

…and a million other things that I haven’t gotten to post about yet!  Obviously, these things won’t make up for a $10,000 loss in your mutual funds, but since you can’t do anything about that, you might as well focus on something that you CAN do.   And if our worst nightmares come true and we end up in another Great Depression, these sorts of skills and habits will be more necessary and beneficial than ever.



8 Responses to “It’s kind of a financially depressing time…”  

  1. Thanks for the encouragement! I was just telling my husband yesterday that we are still one of the lucky ones, in that we’ve been tightening our belts (pretty much since the day we got married!), and yet we can still find little ways to cut back even more. That gives me a certain amount of practical comfort that keeps me from running around in circles panicking, which is always an option, too. ;0)

  2. I’ve always lived with my belt tightened. Not from need, but from inbred frugality from ancestors who subsisted on what they could grow from the good earth. Having never lived depending on “plastic” or bank loans…if we want to buy something we save for it…we aren’t suffering from this apparent collapse of the economy. If any lesson is to be learned from this, it is to live within one’s means.

  3. 3 Kristen

    Oddly enough, even though the economy has gotten worse over the last year or two, we’re doing better financially now than we were a few years ago.

    AG, I agree with your last sentence…it seems like if companies, banks, and people had all lived within their means, a lot of the current difficulties could have been avoided.

  4. Having an emergency fund and some cash reserves are always good ideas in any economic environment. I like your list and think this economic news is a good opportunity to teach our children about savings. I also think home baking and home meals taste better than fast food any day. It’s also easier to eat at home when we have a 4 and 2 year-old. I never enjoy my meal at a restaurant and have to deal with spilled cups and outbursts. Much easier to deal with the kids at home, and it cheap :)

  5. 5 Kristen

    LOL @ Scott! I agree…although 4 and 2 are better than a baby. I really hate eating out with, say, a 9-month old! Our youngest is 2.5, and when we ate out on vacation last month, I noticed a significant improvement over the last couple of years.

  6. Well said Kristen!

  7. 7 Carolynp

    I’ve done a fair amount of research into the economic situation, and from what I’ve read, the real problem is that a large amount of people have foreclosed on their homes. I think Palin nailed it when she said people allowed themselves to be talked into buying a 250k home when they could only afford a 100k home. The safeguards in place to avoid this happening were removed for political reasons that are just sad. I love your blog! Anniesgranny has all the gardeners reading it now, rofl. I totally agree the thing we can all take from this is: live within your means.

  8. Yep. Exactly. Things will get tight, but not impossible. Good ideas btw. :)


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