“I am the happiest man alive. I have that in me that can convert
poverty to riches, adversity to prosperity, and I am more invulnerable
than Achilles; Fortune hath not one place to hit me.”
― Thomas Browne.
When
I volunteered answering the phone for 211, if there was someone that I
couldn't provide referrals to or, they exhausted their service options
in their particular community, I would brainstorm with them trying to
find ways they could save money. If they could save money from one area
of their budget and expenses, they could then divert funds to other
more important areas of their budget. Many people are not willing to
give anything up, however. Some people, for instance, would rather
spend $70 or $150 per week on cigarettes rather than pay their heating
bill. That's another problem altogether. Here are some tips to save
money:
In the winter, turn your thermostat down. If you are
home during the day, 60 - 65 degrees can be very comfortable, especially
if you wear two or three layers and there are no children, elderly or
sick people in your house. If you absolutely need or want to be warmer,
so be it. But, turn the thermostat down when you are gone for the day
or when you sleep at night. I turn my thermostat down to 55 when I go
to bed because I like sleeping in a cool room. I have several layers of
blankets on top of me and I often wake up sweating and I find myself
peeling off a layer or two. I know someone who keeps his heat set at
75 degrees day and night, whether he is home or not. He is always
complaining about his heating bill. At night, it is often too warm for
him to sleep so he has a fan pointed at his bed to keep him cool. Who
does he blame for his high utility bills? The utility company and the
economy. Instead of heating wisely, he puts in for overtime at work.
Make
sure your windows are not ciphering heat to the outside. If you can't
afford to replace your windows, get some window plastic from any
hardware store and seal them yourself. If there are rooms you don't use
during the day or even rarely, such as a spare bedroom, turn off the
heat or close the vents and doors to those rooms. I keep my bedroom
door closed during the day and open it at night when I go to bed. There
is no need to heat a room if you are not using it. There are grants to
assist homeowners to winterize their homes if they qualify. Call 211
to find out about them or if they exist in your community.
Based
upon your income and expenses, you may qualify for HEAP. This is a
government subsidized program to assist people in paying their heating
bill in the winter. The amount they may offer you varies from county
and/or state. Qualification depends on a multiple of factors. I'm sure
a brief internet search for HEAP and your state will provide all the
details you need.
Buying clothing, shoes, accessories, some
electronics and other merchandise from Ebay and China can save you a lot
of money. Many of those vendors don't charge for shipping or tax and,
their prices tend to be lower than what you will find in your local US
store to begin with. Many venders from China sell on Ebay or
Aliexpress. Just make sure the vender you buy from has a good rating
and has a strong history of sales and satisfied customers. My brand
name laptop is priced at $800 in my local electronics superstore, I
acquired it for $300 online. You can find many brand name products
online for less money but keep in mind if it is too good to be true, it
just might be. Be a wise consumer and do your research.
Don't
eat out. It is less expensive and healthier for you to buy and cook
your own food. Also, shop at some of the discount markets and buy store
brands. There is a discount market near me which has great produce.
Their milk is priced at $2.37 a gallon while at the brand store it is
$3.99 a gallon. This little market is actually an overstock store for a
major supermarket so you are getting the same quality at less the
price.
Would you be willing to pay $16 for a two liter bottle of
soda? Of course not. But when you pay $2 for a glass of soda or a
bottle or water at a restaurant, that is what you are paying. Don't buy
drinks at restaurants. If you shop around for sales, you can get brand
name soda for as little as eighty eight cents for two liters. Ninety
nine cents most of the time. Would you pay $50 for a salad? Of course
not, but, you can buy six heads of Romaine lettuce for under $2.50 and
make about 15 or 20 salads out of it. Don't eat out or at fast food
joints, either. It is not cost effective.
The same principle
goes for coffee. For under ten bucks you can buy a can of coffee and
make your own before you leave for work. A few pounds can yield about
250 cups. That will cost you over $500 at your local drive through
coffee house. Would you pay $500 for a can of coffee grounds?
Cancel
your garbage pick up. If you bag your trash on a daily basis, crush
the cans and shred the paper, well packed trash takes up very little
space and you can deposit small portions of it in garbage cans found
everywhere such as gas stations, markets, work, school, etcetera.
Burning is not allowed in most jurisdictions but safely lighting up your
daily paper waste each day is not like igniting a raging fire once a
week. I have a smoker and use my paper waste to start my fires. I
also go for walks and collect small chunks of wood for smoking, saving
on the cost for propane.
Another key factor here is to minimize
the trash you bring into the house. Cancel junk mail and catalogs you
don't use. Don't bring paper waste into the house in the first place.
Another option is to talk to your neighbor. If they pay for trash pick
up, maybe you can make a deal to share the service and split the bill?
Free internet is everywhere. If you need to be connected 24
hours per day, can you wirelessly connect with a neighbor and split the
bill?
What about "cutting the cable" and eliminate cable TV?
Do you need all those channels? Do you find yourself watching the major
networks which are actually free to begin with? Why would you pay for
something that is free? If you have a newer TV (since 2008), you don't
need a converter box and can probably pick up the major stations with
just an antenna and then you can eliminate your cable bill. Many of
your favorite shows are available for free online the next day anyway
and you can watch them at your leisure.
Ultimately you would be
better off if you didn't have television at all. Calculate how many
hours you spend per day or week watching TV. Now imagine what you could
accomplish with that time if it were spent pursuing a hobby,
exercising, with your children, with friends, sitting on the stoop with
neighbors, reading or cleaning the house. Buddha once said that in
order to find enlightenment, one must chop wood and carry water. After
enlightenment, chop wood and carry water. You won't find much
enlightenment watching TV.
When closing accounts to your cable
or trash pick-up, make sure you have your very first bill. There are
many companies who when you open an account, will charge you in advance
for the first month. Say for instance that I open a cable account on
January 1. They will charge me for the first month and around the
middle or end of the month I will get a bill for February. At the end
of February I will get a bill for March. After several years of
service, one may forget that they are paying in advance of receiving the
service. Unless your bill states the pay period, as most do, you may
forget about your advancement and the company may trick you into paying
for the current month when you close the account. Let's say halfway
through the month of April you decide to cancel your account and forgot
that your March payment WAS for April but the company may say that since
fifteen days have elapsed into the month, you owe them for the fifteen
days of service. Knowing the day you opened the account and that you
paid in advance might save you from overpaying and giving the company
additional money. The company can get around this by changing your due
date at some point, "for administrative purposes." This tactic can
complicate your argument should you challenge them on it. That is why
you should at least keep the first bill and any bills relating to
changes in your account due dates and pay periods.
If times are
really tough, there are a couple of free cell phones offered by the
government. Assurance Wireless is one. You don't get many minutes,
about 300 per month but, the phone is completely free. If you qualify
for HEAP and several other government offerings, you would qualify for
this. It is perfect to help get you through the tough times or
eliminate an unnecessary bill. If you have internet access, Google
offers a free "voice over internet phone (VOIP). All you need is a
Gmail account and then sign up for the free phone. You'll get your own
number and it is completely free. It is not the same as a cell phone
but you will save a lot of money each month, money you could spend on
heat or food. It is best to not allow yourself to lapse into a downward
spiral of debt in the first place. I was raised - If you don't have
the cash, you can't have it.
If you are truly poor, you have
probably been in contact with the Department of Social Services and
already know what you qualify for regarding health care but keep in mind
that many hospitals offer charity care programs. Call your local
hospital and ask if they provide that service. Hospitals are businesses
and they are discovering that it is less expensive for them to prevent
illness than it is for an uninsured person to come in when the illness
becomes chronic or worse and the uninsured person can't pay the hospital
for expensive treatments and service.
Finally, call 211 and
ask them for assistance in finding organizations who may help you with
paying your specific bills. 211 ONLY makes referrals and many of the
organizations they refer you to may be tapped out already, but, it
doesn't hurt to ask.
Something else to keep in mind when calling
211, be patient as some of the call specialists may have to ask you
personal questions which you may be embarrassed to answer or don't think
are relevant, but, they are. For instance, say you need assistance
paying for your dog's vet bill. You may be ashamed, insulted or think
it irrelevant to be asked if you or anyone in your household has HIV but
there are organizations who will pay your vet bill but only if you are
afflicted with that particular disease. The same thing is true for
military veterans, or if one is living in your household. Other
stipulations may include income, age, gender, sexual orientation or
race. You may not think that is relevant but to the organization
offering the free service, they do. Some organizations will only assist
you with your utility bills if you have children or elderly people in
your household. Others, only if you don't. Be patient, answer the
questions and let the database do the work of filtering out the services
you may qualify for. You don't want 211 to refer you to a company only
to find out that they won't help you because you didn't answer the
questions up front.
Ultimately, if you can't pay your bills and
getting more work is not an option, you have to cut back someplace -
unlike schools and town governments which don't cut back - they just
raise your taxes. If you don't go to town or school board meetings and
speak up about their wasteful spending and budget management, don't
blame them if your taxes go up. Not to act is to act.
Speaking
of which, if you are having financial difficulty, write your elected
officials. Of course they won't do anything for you but, they need to
know the difficulty their constituents may be having. If you have a
Catholic education and don't know how to contact your elected officials,
go to this website: whoismyrepresentative.com - then type in your zip
code to find out who you may or may not have voted for. Then contact
them and let them know how they are doing and how you are doing. If
your elected official doesn't know you are having a problem, then there
is no problem, right? We don't truly live in a democracy if the silent
majorly remains silent. Then the people who do speak up get to make the
rules you then live by.
If I had my druthers, I'd make it
so that nobody earned more than $30,000 per year, we all had a stay at
home parent and for the working parent, more time was spent with family
than at work. Our lives are backward. Instead of spending the best
part of our day with our employers and our most exhausted time with
those whom we love, we should reverse that. We could all learn from
having less. Buddhist philosophy suggests that it is not happiness that
makes us grateful, it is gratefulness which makes us happy. It is hard
to be grateful when you have everything and in order to obtain
everything, you have to give up everything.
Musician Malcolm Kogut has been tickling the ivories since he was 14 and won the NPM DMMD Musician of the Year award in 99. He has CDs along with many published books. Malcolm played in the pit for many Broadway touring shows. When away from the keyboard, he loves exploring the nooks, crannies and arresting beauty of the Adirondack Mountains, battling gravity on the ski slopes and roller coasters.
Showing posts with label poor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poor. Show all posts
Sunday, August 24, 2014
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