Emergencies, Are you prepared?
A young man got into a car accident resulting in many bedridden months in the hospital and $100,000 of debt in hospital bills. Pathfinderís ìMastering Your Moneyî series originated from this true story. The young man decided to pay off his debt in small amounts each month instead of filing for bankruptcy. When he was released from the hospital, he got a job, generated a modest income and stuck to his plan of paying his doctors $5 each week. He calculated with each payment how long it would take him to get out of debt. The result: he learned how to manage every penny he made.
Your overall financial wellbeing has less to do with your income than the strategies you put in place and honor. We are stewards of our money. In my opinion, we have an obligation to honor our money by treating it as best we can. It doesnít matter how much youíre making, if you have a leak somewhere, the money will run out. Prepare for lifeís emergencies. One of Robert Kiosakiís quotes from last weekend that I took away and believe to be true: ìThe way you do anything is the way you do everything.î Do you cut corners? Do you plan ahead? Are you disciplined? Hard working?
Speaking of discipline and preparing for emergenciesÖone of Pathfinderís principles isóWhen you track your money, you can control it. Do you avoid balancing your checkbook? Do you blame employees and others because you donít make enough. Blame the kids, your boss, your investment partners? Donít think youíll ever have an emergency? Statistics say you will, and youíll need an emergency fund. Keep at least six months of living expenses liquid, so you have half a year to gain control over your emergency situation.