budget bleeding You’re Not Broke — You’re Leaking Money Everywhere | Episode 607 It’s Not the Big Bills—It’s Death by a Thousand Cuts Most people think they’re broke because of the big stuff. Mortgage is too high. Car payment is too high. Groceries are too high. And yeah… some of that is true. But that’s not usually what’s actually killing you. It’s the little things. The constant small leaks that add up over time. That’s where your money is going. That’s why your budget doesn’t balance. It’s death by a thousand cuts. And the reason most people don’t see it is because they’re not actually tracking anything. You Don’t Have a Budget—You Have a Guess If you’re not tracking your money, you don’t have a budget. You have a guess. The times I’ve sat down and run my finances with an iron fist—tracking everything, planning everything—our finances were flawless. The problem is… that takes effort. A lot of it. Which is why systems matter. Automation matters. Because if you rely on willpower alone, you’re going to fall off eventually. Automate What You Can (Before You Screw It Up) The best solution for most people is to build systems that run your finances for you. Separate accounts. Automatic payments. Scheduled transfers. Set it up so the money goes where it needs to go before you even touch it. Because if it hits your account and just sits there… you’re going to spend it. That’s just reality. There are apps that can help with this too. Things like Rocket Money that pull in all your accounts and show you exactly where your money is going. That’s the easy way. The better way is combining that with actually writing things down and paying attention. You Don’t Need to Cut Everything—Just See It First Here’s where people mess up. They think budgeting means cutting everything fun out of their life. It doesn’t. The first step is just awareness. Write everything down. Every bill. Every subscription. Every stupid little charge. Then look at it. You’ll find things that don’t make sense. Maybe you’re spending money on subscriptions you haven’t used in months. Maybe you’ve got a gym membership you haven’t touched since January. Maybe you’re dropping money daily on something that doesn’t actually matter that much. Or maybe it does matter—and that’s fine. The point isn’t to eliminate everything. The point is to decide what’s actually worth it. Give Yourself Permission to Spend This is where most budgets fail. They’re too strict. If you don’t leave room for fun, you’re going to break the system. In our house, we have money set aside for spending. My wife even jokes and calls it her “allowance.” It’s not that—but it gives her the freedom to spend without blowing up the whole budget. Before that? She went hog wild. That’s what happens when there are no guardrails. Now it’s controlled. It’s intentional. And it works. Same with eating out. It’s in the budget. Not unlimited. Not crazy. But enough that we’re not miserable. Because if your budget makes your life suck, you’re not going to stick to it. It’s a Partnership—Not Control If you’re married, this part matters a lot. There’s always one person who wants to dial everything in… and one person who feels like they’re being controlled. That’s normal. The solution isn’t to force it. The solution is to involve them. Let them have input. Let them fight for what they want in the budget. Because if they don’t feel ownership, they’re going to ignore it. And then the whole thing falls apart. Check It, Adjust It, Repeat You can’t make a budget once and forget it. Things change. Bills change. Income changes. Life changes. You should be looking at your budget at least once a month. Could you automate it enough to check it once a year? Maybe. But you’re probably going to run into problems if you do that. Stay on top of it. Adjust when needed. Because once you actually see where your money is going, you’ll realize something important. You were never broke. You were just leaking money everywhere. This has been James from SurvivalPunk.com. DIY to Survive. Amazon Item OF The Day
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