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Stay the Course – Pay Off Debt First

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The message I heard from your comments on my post about changing direction to focus on savings was – Not a good idea.

Sounds like staying the course to focus on paying off consumer debt should continue to be priority one. While balancing in some savings. What I’m doing now.

Then pivoting to saving over the student loan debt. Then returning to student loans.

Am I reading the room correctly in this?

Big Rock Priorities

  1. Pay off the remaining $8,600 in credit card debt
  2. Pay off the $2,600 personal loan
  3. Save a solid 6 months of daily living = $36,000
  4. Pay off student loans

Sit Still

I know that selling my house is not a good financial move. I know that.

And as commentors pointed out, it is definitely a decision driven my emotions. Versus smart and logical reasoning.

So for now, I’m going to sit on that decision for a bit longer. It’s still rolling around in my head. But the extended trip and staying with my daughter for a week during her surgery, definitely gave me a different perspective. And really, it’s not something I have to decide now or put a timeline on.

dogs - opie and addie

Even they wonder what I’ll do next.

Having some stability and figuring out why that’s so hard for me is probably a better priority now. I had a good, heart centered talk about just this with my daughter this weekend. Hearing her perspective was eye-opening.

Now I will go forth and devise plans to pay off debt. A plan that is achievable. And not a game. One that can be tracked and measured. That doesn’t rely on me earning extra money from side gigs or selling anything.  A real, honest to goodness plan.

 

 


5 Comments

  • Reply Walnut |

    This is a pretty good read of the room, though I would still pay the minimum payment on your student loans in case you’re incurring penalties.

    One other thing I think I suggested a year or so back is to take a hard look at how you can reduce your monthly expenses. You want to strike a balance between austerity and exorbitant that feels comfortable, allows some travel (or other highly valued treat), savings, retirement and health insurance.

  • Reply Klm |

    Please share the amount you currently have saved, including your investments, as this influences answers. However, I would not try to save $36K before paying off student loans. How long have you been dragging those along with you? It will be so freeing to have no debt. I’d aim for a middle ground savings and attack the debt like it insulted my child.

    • Reply Hope |

      I love that “like it insulted my child” that is a very motivating statement. I’ll have to keep that in mind.

  • Reply anon |

    I’m not sure why you mentioned $8600 in credit card debt, as your last update had $5000 in credit card debt. Whatever the credit card debt is, yes, pay it off first, and then go in the order you specified with the rest of your steps- you are reading the room correctly for those steps. And I suggest staying put in the house. Why is your house payment $1000/month now instead of $600/month? That’s a huge difference. Perhaps you also need to refinance to a lower interest rate if you’re really paying that much? https://www.bankrate.com/mortgages/mortgage-calculator/

    • Reply Hope |

      The additional CC debt was the cost of Princess oral surgery. I paid off a credit card and then used it immediately for the cost of the surgery.

So, what do you think ?