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Credit: Courtesy Lakisha Simmons I was reading every day, all weekend, in nights after work, all through my lunch break, she says of learning about FIRE tips. It felt good to know that I was taking control of my finances and was doing something that was going to help me, in the long run, be financially secure, which is something I didn t really ever have.
The FIRE philosophy inspired Simmons to cancel her cable bill, opting for streaming services Netflix and Amazon Prime instead. That saved her $100 a month. She also began shopping at discount grocery stores like Aldi and switched from a name-brand wireless carrier to one that offered a cheaper price (in her case, Mint Mobile). Unexpectedly, Simmons also learned to cut her sons hair to save on barber costs.
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Before getting married and becoming a parent, Kiersten Saunders says the best way to describe her early relationship with money was misplaced abundance. I felt like there was a ton of money in the world, and I just needed grab my piece of it, she says. So I focused a lot on earning.
The problem was that she was spending at a rate that was twice as much as what she was earning. Saunders spent her 20s thinking that making money was easier than managing it, so she racked up consumer debt and was living paycheck to paycheck. When she met her husband, Julian, in 2012, shortly before she turned 30, she was dealing with maxed out credit cards. Julian was the complete opposite when it came to money. He was already very fiscally responsible, says Saunders.
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Before getting married and becoming a parent, Kiersten Saunders says the best way to describe her early relationship with money was misplaced abundance. I felt like there was a ton of money in the world, and I just needed grab my piece of it, she says. So I focused a lot on earning.
The problem was that she was spending at a rate that was twice as much as what she was earning. Saunders spent her 20s thinking that making money was easier than managing it, so she racked up consumer debt and was living paycheck to paycheck. When she met her husband, Julian, in 2012, shortly before she turned 30, she was dealing with maxed out credit cards. Julian was the complete opposite when it came to money. He was already very fiscally responsible, says Saunders.
South-africa
United-states
South-african
Americans
Kiersten-saunders
Mckinsey-company
Using-early-retirement
Racial-wealth
Financial-independent
Retire-early
Black-americans
Where-you-can-save
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