Showing posts with label 2012 summary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2012 summary. Show all posts

Sunday, 30 December 2012

Living on £4,000 for a Year

Time to Balance the Budget!

 
Once again, I am going to attempt to stick with my frugal living challenge to live on (or should that be off?) £4,000 for the entire year.

On Wednesday 28th November, the car failed its MOT and proved to be an uneconomical repair. On Monday 3rd December, the car got scrapped. We have decided to attempt to do without a car in 2013, but we won't be without wheels.

We live in a rural location, we are not on a bus route and there are no local taxis. The main road is just over a mile from the house, so we can walk there and flag down the occasional bus - I think there are two per day. I've asked friends about lift-sharing and have registered with Royal Mail so I can  pre-pay and print postage labels, then all I need to do is pop the mail into the box or hand it to the postman.

With what was saved on the final month's petrol, scrap money and refund of road tax from the car, it paid for two secondhand bikes. December 2012 was the first time I had cycled in 30 years! My 2013 challenge includes seeing how easy it is to manage without a car, despite living in a rural location, and keep the overall annual household budget below £4,000.00 while having frugal FUN!
 
Having a prepayment electricity meter normally means going and topping up the key at the post office or relevant PayPoint. That's not easy on a miserble, windy, wet day when the post office is a 7 mile round trip, so I bought a Scottish Power 'pod', which cost me £13.99. I can now top up the meter online. After considered paying the £60 to have meter replaced, I decided against it. Why should we need to pay extra when the power companies will soon be installing Smart Meters into every house in the country? We'll ALL be charged for those, both gas (for those who have it) and electricity, once the Government plan is rolled out fully over the next few years.

My new challenge budget has been finalised! It reflects groceries, electricity, heating, telephone, Internet and TV for the household, but gift buying, clothes, mobile phone, postage, travel etc is my own only... housesharing means no joint-accounts, no joint family affairs and, if I want to blow the balance on a horse, the house or a foreign holiday, I'm free to do so. But I promise not to buy a horse!

The Finalised Challenge Budget for 2013

Groceries, Toiletries, Cleaning - £1,000
Electricity - £800
Coal - £200
Logs - £200
Other - £12 (firelighters, matches etc)
Mobile - £5
Telephone & Internet - £360
TV - £145.50
Footwear & Clothing - £50
Gifts - £100
Transport Costs - £75
Postage & Deliveries - £35
Home Insurance - £100
Household Pets - £60
Everything else - £857.50

TOTAL = £4,000.00

In a change of plan, I will not be deducting council tax or buildings insurance from my budget, so I've shared some of the extra money among the gifts, fuel and groceries categories, while leaving the remainder under the category of 'everything else'. Without a car to worry about, I'm feeling positively LOADED for 2013!
 
Frugal living has never looked so good! I've managed to fit in a few miles of cycling to get used to the bike, a set of mud flaps, lights and a back rack have been fitted, so I can stay drier going through puddles, be seen and carry the basic essentials home when visiting the shop. Recent eBay purchases included fleecy leggings (99p per pair) and hi-vizibility vests (99p), so I think we're all set to roll into the new year.
 
The freezer is full, the cupboards are full, there's enough coal to take us through to the next visit by the coal man and I've already started collecting kindling sticks to replenish our dwindling supply. January is always a fairly expensive month for me, so the budget takes more than its fair share of hitsduring the coming month. With luck, winter will be kind to us and there's plenty of work to be done about the place in between keeping up to date with my 'eBidding', making McGonks and writing about life in Frugaldom.
 
Finally, a couple of the bantams have started to lay eggs again and I haven't even used the eggs from the freezer, yet. Pancakes, omlettes, quiche and homemade pasta can now be reintroduced to the frugal menu and who knows, we may even have some lemon curd back on the go soon.
 
All comments and questions are welcome - frugal living is about making affordable living fun while steering clear of debts. If you're looking for a money challenge, feel free to join us online anytime in the Frugaldom Forums and I will do my best to keep the blog ticking over in more diary-like fashion for the benefits of my wonderful subscribers. You'll also find a version of this challenge on the Moneysavingexpert forums, where many people prefer to go, just search for the 2013 Frugal Living Challenge and you'll find us. :)
 
Thank you for showing an interest in frugaldom and all it entails. I hope everyone can have some frugal fun in 2013.

Saturday, 29 December 2012

Reminiscing in Frugaldom - Part II

Rolling back the frugal years... to the FT.com

 
As suggested in Part I, the real 'troubles' at NYK towers didn't really begin until after Y2K had arrived. 1999 was similar to 2012, in as much as there were doomsday soothsayers whining and groaning about the end of the world being nigh. Apparently, they thought all computer technology would halt on the last stroke of midnight, as we went through Hogmanay 1999 and into the 21st Century. Satellites would crash from the sky, communications and utilities systems would crash and all sorts of apocalyptic nasties would occur.
 
My 11 year-old son had met with a nasty playground accident late in 1999 that led to him needing home care for several months. This had meant handing over the NYK reins to a third party, providing them with transport, laptop and access to all the relevant information.
 
Someone was recommended to me, I did what research I could, I checked out their credentials, I took them on freelance, then discovered the truth! The first I knew was when said individual met with some sort of accident in which the provided laptop was wrecked, losing all the files. This was followed shortly afterwards by a series of even more extraordinary events, ranging from the emergence of bogus advertising clients to written threats and the implementation of a funded campaign to put us out of business. (Campbell, if you are reading this, thank you! You opened my eyes to the truth once and for all - trust nobody!) But lest anyone gets confused, the newspaper company responsible for the put-us-out-of-business campaign was NOT the Financial Times, but I'm getting to that.
 
We pulled the entire publishing project after distributing several thousand free copies over Christmas 1999, then switched everything online, kicking up a gear on the money challenges, Cyberdosh in particular. It really made my day when I read the following quote in the FT.com that same month:
"... readers interested in value-enhancing ideas should log on at ideas@cyberdosh.com..."  this written by none other than the chairman of W. H. Smith, himself! I was inundated with enquiries and offers!
 
Y2K saw the dawning of a new era. I travelled south with a friend and met with some business people who, in true Dragons' Den style, assured me that Cyberdosh was worthy of major investment - I was stunned by the names of the proposed investors! Figures were mentioned, directorships discussed and certain conditions laid down that would need to be met. For the uninitiated, these business angels may look good on TV when they invest small fortunes in new businesses, but we see only the edited highlights. We never hear of the legalities or formalities that can tear families apart, wreck marriages and create merry hell in so many ways that it's best I don't even begin to explain here.
 
2001 - Did I make the right decision?
 
2003 - Relocated - Divorce finalised
 
2007 - Debts almost cleared and most of my 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2011 challenges are still online for anyone to read.
 
2011 - Threw every penny I had into a joint-savings pot to buy a fixy-up that I named 'Thrift Cottage'. This became my 10th address in ten years, having moved around Britain from Lanarkshire to Aberdeenshire to Suffolk to Wigtownshire. You can do the arithmetic for yourself.
 
At the top of the Merrick for my 48th birthday

So, here I am, a debt free divorcee, fast approaching 50, still housesharing, but now as part-owner of a 200-year-old, partially-renovated, terraced cottage on a quiet street that has nothing more than a post box and a 'no coins accepted' phone box. The household of three dropped to two earlier this year, I have a tiny (self-employed) income and a massive chip on my shoulder that's made up of many smaller chips. A few weeks ago, the car got scrapped and it isn't being replaced.
 
2013 brings a whole new set of challenges, none less than attempting to manage without a car when there's no bus service and the nearest shop is over 3 miles from here. To replace the car, we have secondhand bikes. Work is slow, income is falling, prices of most things are rising, rural living doesn't lend itself to finding bargains, home repairs need doing, the house needs heating and we still need to live.
 
I will try my best to document the progress as honestly as possible throughout the coming year and if anyone wants to share the challenge of frugal living and/or working, please join me in the daily forums at frugaldom.myfreeforum.org
 
As you'll have guessed, come hell or high water, I fought to keep NYK Media - and won! But in so doing, lost home, husband and the small fortune I'd have made if only I'd been able to meet those blasted terms and conditions.
 
29th December 2012 - I'm still asking myself the same question! Did I make the right decision?
 
Who knows! Only time will tell.
 
For the coming year, I have set my household challenge budget, once again, at £4,000 for the full year - breakdown of costs listed in the forums - but this time, I'm including council tax. This accounts for almost 25% of the entire budget. Energy costs account for even more and groceries for almost as much, so it's an extremely tight budget. We all need a challenge in life and proving that money isn't the be all and end all of everything is mine. I hate the stuff, but we can't live without it!
 
Coupled with the frugal living challenge, I have my frugal working challenge, knowing as the Frugaleur Challenge. This entails earning extra income from home by way of a brand new business idea. For 2013, my new business revolves around McGonks - handmade Scottish gonks. But their tale will be told elsewhere.
 
2013 is my WTF year - WORSE THAN FRUGAL!

Reminiscing in Frugaldom - Part I

Computer Science Geek / Foter / CC BY-NC-ND

Having been 'working' online since the early 90's, it's time to backtrack and make allowances for those who haven't. I do tend to forget how many years have passed and that we've moved on another generation.

I've seen so many names come and go that I think that's what sometimes disillusions me about life online, the Internet and all that stuff.

Running frugal or money-related challenges means doing it continually - it's like it can never end for me. Those who take part usually move on to the next chapter of their lives as soon as they're on their way to resolving whatever problems brought them here in the first place.

New sites begin, new forums open, new challenges repeat old, new blogs... for those of us who came here so long ago without the cash or wherewithal to make a career of it, debt-free obscurity is about as much as we can ever hope to achieve. As long as it's within our own means and we can live with the consequences of our own actions, possibly that's all that matters.

1994 So, a look back over the years, courtesy of the Internet Archive, which has been around for a long time, just not quite as long as I'd have liked. It's been there since the mid 90s, but I didn't pay it much attention back then - I was too busy getting used to using a mouse and enjoying the hype of the soon-to-be-released Windows 95!

Back then, things cost an absolute arm and a leg. Our first 'proper' computer and printer were bought on credit at a cost of well over £1,000 - it had 16mb of whatever and the modem was a 9,600bps! Prior to that, it was an ancient Amstrad that took cassette tapes and an age to load a single game! Technology has moved so far forward since that point that it's scary!


The Compuserve guys back in 1996
Connecting to the Internet was a bit hit or miss in the early days. By 1996, we had Compuserve with a standard phone line, billing was by the minute. It was the epitome of luxury that few could afford, so my first thought was to help make it affordable! Initially, this meant not going online very often. The introduction of '0845' local rate for America Online was an absolute God send back then and, by 1998, they had introduced multiple accounts and a fixed monthly fee! The cost of using the Internet was then controlled by your telephone company billing at local rates per minute.

I'd done a basic City & Guilds course in IT, learning word processing, spreadsheets and databases. Being 'computer literate' seemed like the right thing to do. Indeed, it seemed like the only way to go, especially for those of us who were working from home.

In 1996, Motley Fool arrived on the scene. It was one of the first money-related sites I remember being a part of, even attempting to set my frst online money challenge. (At that point, it was mainly US based, but it reached British shores by 1999.) The site developed into one more apt for stocks and shares investors - which is probably how I ended up doing that for one of the later challenges.

But the Internet was still a luxury few 'normal' folks could afford. I couldn't, so I needed a plan to make it affordable.

In 1998, I opened an Internet cafe - Charlotte's WWWeb - complete with shop front, art and crafts group, writers' group and office facilities for all the frugalers to pool their resources and share the costs of promoting their goods and services, spreading the costs of accessing the world wide web. Learning how to develop a basic website was a real eye-opener and bears no resemblance to how things get done nowadays, that's for sure.

That same year, eBay took to the virtual stage in USA and our own eBid came into being here in the UK. The Internet service providers saw fit to offer fixed fee accounts and the wonderful world of online selling had arrived! It was around that time that the Government saw fit to provide Internet access through the libraries - our local library was practically opposite, so it virtually ended the Internet cafe idea!

1999 - We needed to advertise our multifunctional frugal business centre, we needed a way to help promote the crafters and writers, we needed to cut overheads and survive! We began publishing 'Now You Know'.

Back then we used message boards, chat rooms and e-zines plus the basic, essential websites. We published the newspaper both online and in print! Web logs (now known as blogs) hadn't yet fully fledged their technological nest, but word was spreading.

With no funding of any description, there was no way of promoting anything, so hooking up with Lanarkshire Television, a private enterprise nearby, seemed like a good idea - mutual promotion whilst taking on the mass media establishment. We set up Scottish Web TV (.co.uk) - nobody was interested, so we shut it down again. (In 2007, plans were set in motion for a relaunch, but it never happened.)

By 2000 we had three online newspapers running - 'Now You Know', 'Paranoid Times' and the 'Lanarkshire News'. That's when we launched the Scottish Web Directory. I placed all the money challenges under the heading 'Cyberdosh' (cyber/online, dosh/cash) and began trying to fund it, going further afield and seeking suitable premises.
  • 28th May 2000 - Copy of a rather apt archived page of notes showing that clootie dumping has featured regularly in my writings! I'd never realised that before now! Our forum, back then, was exciting! The discussions were fed directly to the local TV station, live on air - anyone remember the sliced sausage discussion?
(In 2009/10, an online newspaper began to emerge. The owners have the audacity to advertise themselves as "Scotland’s first truly online newspaper." I'm sure you can understand my contempt at this blatant lie.)

2001 Disaster everywhere! I was finally presented with a massive opportunity to develop my project commercially, but there were conditions... sadly, those conditions simply could not be met. It was the beginning of the end, as far as marriage, home and business* were concerned.

Sometime later, around 2002, Martin Lewis set up his 'Moneysavingexpert' site and the associated forums. My version of moneysaving was not made welcome there at all during the early days, so I left - I was struck off his site, if I remember correctly! I retreated, only to return in 2007 and relaunch the challenge to run it parallel with one I had running on eBid!

The Martin Lewis ideal appeared to be to screw every company around to get the best bang for your buck - as long as you weren't having to do without, that's all that mattered. Hmm...

For those of us who simply don't want to screw the financial system, or who have no justifiable reason to do so, money-saving is about getting back to basics and living within our own means. I'm never going to sell my websites in a deal reported to be worth up to £87 million, I'm only here to promote frugal living and working! As part of the economy, we are deemed pretty much worthless, from how I see it. Now I know that Mr Lewis was said to have promised £10 million of it to charity and £1 million in support of Citizens Advice, and I applaud that - if it ever came to fruition - but so what? Martin Lewis has probably never tried to live on £4,000 for a year! (I'm assuming everyone knows that Moneysupermarket.com bought out Moneysavingexpert.com)

Frugaldom is about NOT spending money, it's about getting back to basics, accepting the fact that consumerism can wreck lives and that it just isn't for everyone; it is alright to turn your back on society's pressures to comply and spend, spend, spend, it is alright to be thrifty or frugal!

I have existed on whatever income there has been, I have struggled to overcome debts accrued, I have seen close friends suffer to the extent they literally went over the edge and into the abyss and I have witnessed those I have helped in the past go right back down the spending path of destruction, no lesson learned. I will keep on frugaling, I will keep on cutting costs wherever and however I can and I will fight to remain debt free. But this frugal living and working lark isn't easy, so we need to make it FUN!

That's roughly my story to the point at which things went completely off the rails. That's also the point from which I have been trying to recover, fighting my way back to 'normality', shunning consumerism and trying to live a better life - a life without debt. I do use credit cards, paid in full every month, so I do technically have debt from one month to the next, but how else can we safeguard ourselves as online shoppers when a Debit card offers no such protection? I do hate that fact, but I also appreciate the fee-free, 1% cashback accruing from my use of the credit card.

Nobody really gives a stuff about anyone other than themselves until they face a personal crisis. People come, people go, major events, catastrophes and tragedies occur, money comes and money goes, debts come and go, life carries on regardless. It's acceptance that matters most:
  • Can we live happily on our chosen route through life?
  • Can we live within our own means?
  • Can we shake off the self-inflicted shackles of our past?
  • Can we see a better future?
  • Are we prepared for circumstances that are completely beyond our control?
I'll apologise now for this rather gloomy overview that has barely come close to the present, but my journey has been a long one. It is this fact that I want to emphasise to all the newcomers who are still at the start of their frugal journeys. Don't let debt bog you down, don't fall for the hype - follow what you know is the right path to financial freedom and prove that it's possible to live a normal life without succumbing to unneccessary spending. IN the long run, the less you spend, the more you can afford - so what will you do once the debts are all gone and your time and money are your own to do with as you please?

Any given day sees the realisation by someone, somewhere that they must take control of their own situation and make important changes. It's accepting that these changes need to be made that shows we are on the right track. No matter how difficult certain situations might get, it's our acceptance that we need to face them and resolve our own problems that matters most. Yes, there is help out there if we care to look for it, but confessing to needing it and then accepting it, let alone seeking it out, is something that we can't all deal with; for many, it can lead to feelings of guilt, shame and failure.

Stripping things to the bone, the frugal lifestyle makes us all survivors! To hell with what others might think! We may never get what we want but perhaps we only think that we want it in the first place!

My first priority is in ensuring that I never again owe anyone any money, (business or domestic) which means spending as little as possible. If this seems mean-spirited or self-centred to you then go and read another blog, because this one isn't for you.

Part II will follow shortly, in preparation for a brand new start to 2013. I hope I haven't bored you all to tears and I also hope you'll see through the next post, then join us in 2013 for a no holds barred, nitty-gritty reality check on spending, while making the very most of life itself.

Frugaldom.