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Article Title:
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21 Plus Tips To Help You Recover From A Personal Financial Crisis

Article Description:
====================

In this article, we show you exactly how we were able to overcome
a recent financial crisis in our family's personal finances. We
detail 21 primary tips that can help you reduce your overall cost
of living, but we also include other tips that can help you to
recover your finances enough to survive the crisis. 


Additional Article Information:
===============================

2200 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2009-07-07 15:00:00

Written By:     Fred Vanhoosen
Copyright:      2009
Contact Email:  mailto:[email protected]



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21 Plus Tips To Help You Recover From A Personal Financial Crisis
Copyright (c) 2009 Fred Vanhoosen
Fast Cash 4 All Net
http://www.fastcash4all.net/



The best place to start on surviving this recession is to look
around your home, see what you need, see what you want, and
decide between those items.

It is very easy to say I need a new entertainment center, and at
that moment jump in the car and go buy it. But, if you are taking
the current economic conditions seriously and worrying about what
tomorrow might hold in store for us, then waiting may make more
sense than impulse buying.

Often, the entertainment center can wait for better times and
more secure economic conditions.

It takes real courage to say that you will save the money
instead, maybe even putting that money into a saving account that
could earn a trickle of interest until you need it far worse than
you need it now.

As we look towards the unknown economic environment of tomorrow,
it is important to consider that tomorrow could potentially be
worse than today. If that were to happen, you will need some
savings to fall back on, when that rainy day comes knocking.

That is why starting and sticking to a responsible budget may
help you weather the coming economic environment. Please don't
get me wrong... I am not saying that worse days are coming... I
am generally an optimist, so taking the negative view of tomorrow
is not in my DNA. But we never truly know what tomorrow might
hold in store for us.

I have seen the good, the bad and the ugly in my personal
finances - even during good times. For years, I ran through life,
living the good life, buying what I wanted when I wanted it,
because I had tens of thousand dollars in my savings account.
Then the bad days came rather unexpectedly, and my savings were
drained to almost nothing in the matter of only a few months...

Even as I write this today, the good times are returning for me,
but my savings have not been recovered to the level they were at
just three years ago.

Having recently - in the last few years - seen the drama that can
come to one who does not have enough money coming in to cover all
of the bills in a timely manner, I am reminded to return to my
more conservative roots. And in doing so, I can show you how you
can join me in the road to a fat savings account and future good
times.

I have been up and I have been down during my life. I was glad to
put the bill collectors behind me. And for nearly a decade, I
rode the wave of prosperity, never hearing from a single creditor
about a late payment. And then when my finances began to bottom,
the bill collectors started to call.

I came close to a car repossession and house foreclosue - within
two weeks of total financial disaster. And then with my back to
the wall, I was finally able to turn the corner and start
rebuilding my good name. I don't hear from any bill collectors
anymore. Thank goodness.

Stop The Financial Bleeding

The first step to correcting a potential financial disaster is to
figure out what you can afford to keep and what you can bear to
get rid of. When the bottom fell out for us, we put our second
vehicle up for sale. Once we were rid of that gas-guzzling,
always breaking-down, newer SUV - I despise Hyundai today for
that reason - then we were able to stop the financial bleeding.
But we still needed a second vehicle.

So we shopped for a used vehicle that would meet our needs and
found one 200 miles away for just $5,000. The van was in good
shape, but it had a cosmetic issue that reduced the overall price
of the vehicle, by more than $5,000 according to the prices of
comparable vehicles with comparable mileage. We could deal with
that unsightly dent, so long as the vehicle served its function.
We paid our mechanic to travel with us to check out the vehicle,
and then we offered the dealer $800 less than the asking price,
so that we could pay all cash. The dealer agreed and we took home
our new, used Dodge Grand Caravan.

Now, we no longer bleed money to keep two vehicles in the
driveway.

We eliminated one car payment, and we managed to get a second
vehicle that we could reliably count on to carry us where we need
to go.

Set Up A Budget And Stick To It

There are some things in life that cannot be escaped... As the
old joke goes, two of those items are death and taxes.

But honestly, there is also a home, water, electricity,
telephones, transportation and food.

Figure out how much money you need to have available to pay for
each of these items, and then watch the remainder of your money
carefully.

Designate how much money you have available for your home,
utilities, groceries, transportation, and entertainment in each
calendar month. And then make a sincere effort not to exceed the
money you have alloted for each item.

Occasionally, you will run into unexpected expenses - like owning
a Hyundai. The vehicle was just outside its warranty, and we were
forced to spend a whopping $6,000 in
back-to-back-to-back-to-back-to-back repairs to keep that silly
thing on the road. We blew through $6,000 of our savings in just
three months time... And for most of that time, we were
restricted to having only our small economy car to serve the
needs of our family of five.

Despite what the Hyundai commercials suggest, you could not pay
me enough money to ever own another Hyundai!

There I go on another Hyundai rant...

Be sure to set up a portion of your monthly income to put into
savings. We would have been up a creek without a paddle if we did
not have the savings we needed to keep fixing that piece of crap
Hyundai and to buy its replacement for cash money.

Reduce Your Monthly Expenses

This is actually much easier than you would think. Besides not
buying a Hyundai, reducing your monthly expenses can be pretty
easy and straight-forward.

 * Turn out lights when they are not in use.

 * Cut those 20-minute showers down to 10-minutes.

 * Don't leave the water running when you wash dishes or brush
your teeth.

 * Reuse bath towels between showers. This will reduce your need
to use your washer and dryer, and as my ex-girlfriend used to
say, you are supposed to be clean when you get out of the shower
anyway.

 * Put more clothes into a load of laundry. Once again, by doing
so, you are reducing your need to use the washer and dryer as
often.

 * Clean the lint filters in your clothes dryer between each use,
and clear the lint from its exhaust vent once a month. If your
clothes dryer is clogged with lint, then it has to work harder to
dry your clothes.

 * When you replace your clothes dryer, buy the more expensive
unit that has a Sensor Drying option on it. This enables you to
set your clothes to dry for only as long as is required to get
your clothes dry. Why set your dryer to run for 60 minutes, when
it may only take 45 minutes to dry your clothes? If you don't
have this option on your current clothes dryer, be willing to run
your dryer for 30 minutes and then check to see if the clothes
are dry before setting it to run additional minutes.

 * If your water heater is easy to get to, you can turn off the
water heater when you are not using it, and turn it back on
thirty minutes before you will need it next.

 * Fill the dishwasher completely between each use. In other
words, wash more dishes for the same money.

 * Don't cook in the oven during summer months. Try not to
overwork your air conditioner. A money-saving step that accompany
this tip is to wash out your air conditioning unit or central air
unit regularly with a water hose. The more dust and bugs that
gather in your air conditioning units, the less fresh air your
unit gets, and the more power it has to burn to keep your home at
a comfortable temperature. Along the same lines, change the
filters in your air conditioning system on a regular basis.

 * Buy a big deep freeze to keep those items that you can buy in
bulk at a nice discount. Just the other day, my wife purchased
$108 worth of hamburger for a mere $54 on sale. As a result, we
have enough hamburger to last us for a couple months. This would
not be possible if we did not have a deep freeze in our home.

 * Swap out your curtains during season changes. We keep
see-through curtains on the windows during the winter months (or
when we rely on heating to keep the house comfortable) to enable
more natural light and heat to enter our home, and therefore
reduce our heating bills. During the air conditioner season, we
keep dark curtains on our windows to block extra light and heat
from entering our home. (I know what you are thinking... Brighter
colors reflect light and dark absorbs light, but the amount of
natural light actually reaching inside our home is the real
consideration. Our house is generally ten degrees cooler with
dark curtains on the windows during the summer months, instead of
the see-through bright curtains.)

 * Encourage the kids to play outside, instead of in their rooms.

 * Don't overwater the lawn. While water is cheap, it is not
that cheap.

 * Put solar lights outside to light your yard. We recently
purchased two-dozen solar lights to light the sidewalks and
driveway outside our home. We ended up getting more light outside
at night, and eliminated the need for that big electric-powered
spotlight on our front porch. We were able to get the two-dozen
solar LED lights for outside for under $50.

 * Replace all of your standard light bulbs with the new energy
saving spiral light bulbs. Yeah, they are more expensive to
purchase up-front, but they provide the same level of light,
while using much less electricity. AND the florescent bulbs are
said to last for years without replacement. (We can attest to
this claim to a point... We have had all florescent lights in our
house for the last two years, and we have yet to need to replace
a bulb.)

 * Ceiling fans help circulate the air in our home during summer
and winter - circulating cool air and heat as needed,
respectively. Did you know that you can get cheap ceiling fans at
Wal-Mart for $20 a piece?

 * If you can afford double-pane windows for your home, you will
find that they will pay for themselves in very short order by
significantly reducing heat loss in the winter and heat gain in
the summer.

 * Make sure your doors and windows have a good seal to reduce
heat loss/gain year around.

 * Eat leftovers. Buy in bulk when you can, and cook in bulk when
you can - especially during the summer. If you have to cook in
the oven, cook a big meal that you can eat from for several days.

 * Magic Jack - They are advertising a new telephone line that
you can use in connection with your high-speed internet access,
called Magic Jack. For $40, you can get the equipment and one
year's worth of service. I eliminated an $80 per month AT&T
bill, when I chose to go with the Magic Jack program. And for the
most part, I am completely satisfied with the service.

In Conclusion

When we started to feel a serious financial pinch, we took
actions that eventually led to us being able to stabilize and
recover our personal finances.

 * First, we stopped the money bleeding.

 * Next, we set a budget and started sticking firmly to our
defined budgetary guidelines.

 * Third, we started reducing our overall costs of living,
utilizing 20 of the 21 money-saving tips shown in the previous
section. The only thing we did not do was to replace the
double-pane windows that have been broken by our kids over the
years. All told, we were able to reduce our monthly expenses by
as much as 25%, putting us on more solid ground to be able to
recover from our financial woes.

 * Fourth, we started putting our extra money into a saving
account. Now instead of struggling from monthly cutoff notice to
monthly cutoff notice, we have paid our bills down to current -
with six-week's of living expenses in the bank. We are still
working to get back to the one-year's worth of living expenses
in the bank as we had three years ago, and we will get there in
time.

But the good news is that we are no longer worrying about whether
we will be able to keep our house and cars. We are set up to
recover from our financial woes, and with discipline, you also
will be able to do as we have done. 




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Fred Vanhoosen writes money issues. While he recommends that one
should be careful about using cash advance loans in times of dire
need, he also knows that sometimes we need fast access to fast 
money to cover an unexpected expense. When that happens, Fred 
recommends http://www.fastcash4all.net/ for your payday loan needs.





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