BAD
DEBTS ARE LIKE HIGH HEELS, WE LOOK FABULOUS WEARING THEM BUT OUR LEGS FEEL
EXTREMELY PAINFUL.
Debt can be compared to your shoes. You
have great heels that look fabulous, but hurt like hell.
You have your flat shoes that appear
boring, but are comfortable and you can still enjoy the use of your back in old
age.
Bad debts e.g car loans, furniture loans,
holiday loans, wedding loans are like the high heels. We look fabulous in our
cars, our furniture is the envy of all our friends but the monthly repayments
we make are extremely painful.
At one point in our lives we can all say we
have lived beyond our means and we were able to recognize that fact. However
some may be living beyond their means but they have no idea.
It is easy to find yourself in this kind of
situation given the YOLO (You Only Live Once) mentality of today’s society and
the need to fit into a particular class, created by lifestyle trends on social
media.
Most people live a lie. They drive big cars
on loans that take them years to clear. They live in lavish apartments that
they can barely afford to pay rent for. Others merely survive by relying on
their family wealth and inheritance.
While it may seem like they are doing better
than you, you might be shocked to find out that they are spending sleepless
nights hiding from creditors. You might be shocked to learn that they are stuck
in a vicious cycle of poverty with no light at the end of the tunnel. The best
kind of growth is the one that comes gradually.
As much as it is good to fuel your growth
through credit-finance, always make sure you have a healthy debt to equity
ratio. This will help you enjoy life more, be more stable, achieve a better
credit rating and above all achieve long-term financial success.
The reason we all work so hard is to ensure
we can afford a good lifestyle and that we can live in a good neighborhood. The
unfortunate thing however is that what we earn may not always afford these
little pleasures but we insist on getting them anyway.
You may earn a salary that can afford you a
good house is say Ruiru but you cannot imagine having to tell your peers you
live there because it may not be considered a posh enough neighborhood.
You therefore make the decision to live in
Westlands or Kilimani or any other neighborhood that maybe considered leafy or
posh. This in turn translates to you having to spend half or more of your
income on rent.
Financial experts often say you should not
spend more than 28% of your income on rent. So if your take home salary is
Ksh.30,000 per month, your rent should not be more than Ksh.8,400 per month.
Rent is undoubtedly the biggest monthly
expense for most young adults and families which is why there is a real need to
keep it as low as possible. Such a recurrent expenditure should be limited to
give room for other developmental expenses like investments.
If you are going through life with zero
savings, you are living dangerously financially speaking. No matter how little
your income is, you should be able to save a little of that money for a rainy
day or for retirement.
If by the end of the month you have spent
all your money and saving a little of it was the last thing on your mind then
it is a clear sign you are living beyond your means and if not then you are
well on your way there.
Financial advisers generally agree that one
should save at least 10 to 15 percent of their income at least for retirement
if nothing else.
So if your take home salary is Ksh.50,000,
you should be setting aside at least Ksh.5,000 per month. If that is too high
for whatever reason and you find you are having trouble setting aside even 5%
of your monthly income, then there is a problem.
Continually setting a little money aside
cushions you from life eventualities such as loss of a job or a sudden illness.
Living with no savings can be compared to swimming in the big ocean without a
life vest, you may survive for a while on your swimming skills but a big tide
could end it all at any one time.
If by the end of the month you have already
started taking things from your ‘mama mboga’ on credit and you keep calling
your friends or colleagues for a soft loan to cater for your transport then you
are definitely living beyond your means.
Funding basic lifestyle costs using credit
is one sure way to confirm you are living beyond your means.
No matter your salary, proper planning
should ensure that the ‘little’ you get should get you through the month.
To ensure the money you take home lasts you
the entire month, adjustments have to be made. That means no weekend binges on
nyama choma and alcohol, no weekly take out because you feel too tired to cook,
and no random trips with your boys/girls to Nakuru, Naivasha, Mombasa or any
other ‘sin’ cities.
Having a budget helps you prioritize your
money on what is really important.
Are you one of those people who always
wonder where their money went?
If you can never account for your money
then you are living beyond your means because you have no budget in place.
Without a budget, it is difficult to
control spending and as such you will never be able to save or use your money
sparingly.
One should always live below their means.
Not within but below.
This means even if you can afford to live
in a house worth Ksh.30,000 a month, if you do not absolutely have to, you can
get a house for half that price and invest the rest.
Have you ever found yourself at a point
when you felt like everyone else was doing better than you?
Back in college or University you used to
be the most confident guy around. Always attending all lectures and getting top
grades.
By third-year, you had managed to get
yourself a part-time job which meant you were above most of your classmates
(financially-speaking).
And on top of that, you managed to get a
full-time job just a few days before sitting for your final exams. You did not
“tarmac” and unlike your former classmates, you did not have to knock on
endless doors hoping for a miracle.
But your wave of success was short-lived,
or so it seems, because just a few years down the line, the once broke guys
started cruising around town with big 4×4 SUVs.
The ladies who you used to ignore suddenly
became social media sensations – attracting numerous followers with each photo
they posted on Instagram.
Suddenly, everyone seems to be doing better
than you. This is despite the fact that you are working extremely hard in your
middle-income job and trying your level best to save as much as possible.
Does this story sound familiar?
Well, if you think “YES that’s me” you
probably would like to find out what changed. And as it turns out, you could be
more of a victim of perceptions than reality.
Chances are that, even though you are more
successful than them, they own better phones than you. By capturing more
visually stimulating photos and captioning them with nice words, they may
appear like they are more successful than you but in reality they are just
another lot of overhyped individuals.
You know, social media has the power to
make small things look big and less important things look important. Don’t let
the sheer numbers of the comments posted beneath their heavily filtered photos
scare you.
They are doing that for self-validation and
you have no business trying to out-perform them in that. Look at the world’s
most successful people like Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg. You rarely see them
bragging about their money or luxury items in public.
Finally
The road to financial success is one full
of pot holes, hills, barriers and road blocks. Only very few manage to make it
to the other side of the bridge of prosperity
Most people remain poor, not because they
don’t have the knowledge. Not because they don’t read business books and other
business-related articles. But because they don’t LEARN BY DOING.
You were born poor, but if you die poor you
have yourself to blame.
DEBTS ARE LOADS
ReplyDelete