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So now that I finally have a credit card with a healthy CL again after all these years, how do I resist the temptation to use it? (I didn't want an $8K limit, I was expecting $500 or $1K.) I'm a technology enthusiast (and professional) and am naturally tempted to buy a tricked out Macintosh, or a VR headset.
But what I really need to be doing is saving for emergencies and retirement. How do you fiscally responsible people out there convince yourselves not to buy shiny toys with your $50K+ credit limits?
You set a budget and stick to it.
@Anonymous wrote:You set a budget and stick to it.
This!
Plus if you think you can't control yourself and will be racking up debt in you credit card maybe you shouldn't have one.
@8bitmachinegun wrote:So now that I finally have a credit card with a healthy CL again after all these years, how do I resist the temptation to use it? (I didn't want an $8K limit, I was expecting $500 or $1K.) I'm a technology enthusiast (and professional) and am naturally tempted to buy a tricked out Macintosh, or a VR headset.
But what I really need to be doing is saving for emergencies and retirement. How do you fiscally responsible people out there convince yourselves not to buy shiny toys with your $50K+ credit limits?
Years ago—and this is kind of funny because now I’m more financially responsibe than she is—a friend told me that prior to buying anything, ask yourself a question. Do you need it or do you want it? I swear this works for me 90% of the time! And keeping and adhering to my budget completes the 360-degree circle.
True story. I was in Marshall’s HomeGoods at least 1.5 hours having a good time picking out things for my home. My cart was brimming over with things: towels and bathmats, a down comfortable, a runner for the hallway, pillows for my sectional, and all kind of accessories. As I was standing in the long line, I kept looking at the things in my cart that I had so lovingly picked out and then asked myself the question. I couldn't get out of line because the space was to narrow and there were many customers behind me. So when the cashier said “next”, I walked up to her and lied. I said, “Oh Man” all exasperated. “I forgot something.”
I left the store without buying one thing and drove home feeling pretty proud of myself.
It takes a lot of willpower, but you can do it!
Write this 100 times: I will not revolve a balance on my credit card.
Resolve to pay the statement balance by the due date. Of course, that requires a bit of discipline as you need to have the money in your payment account by the time you need to fork it over.
I think the way to ease into this is to treat your card like cash and pay frequently. Bring your card balances to zero once a week or so.
If you're going to charge a big ticket item, the cash needs to be within arm's reach, i.e. it can be added to your payment account in time to deal with the charge soon after it posts.
I'm not sure what cards you have and what rewards they carry if any, but big ticket items you feel fall under the WANT catagory vs the NEED catagory, just use your card for every day stuff for a year. If by then you still want that item, use your cash back. I sincerely doubt that if you wait a year to buy something that you will have buyers remorse.
@8bitmachinegun wrote:
@lupoli And that’s why I didn’t get a CC for ten years. I would’ve preferred a lower CL to reduce the possibility of getting into trouble, but that’s water under the bridge. But honestly I do think I’ve grown in the past decade, so I’m not as worried as I would’ve been 7 or 8 years ago.
I have multiple issues with budgeting. For one, I was raised to believe ‘money is the root of all evil.’ I know now it’s just a tool, but I still find managing it to be distasteful. Don’t get me wrong; I like the stuff it can buy me, but I hate dealing with money itself. Item two is my chronic disorganization (I was an ADHD child.) I’m very good about paying major bills (car, house), but little ones escape my notice all the time (water, trash, lab fees.) Finally, I hate math. I’m smart enough to do it, but I find it exceptionally tedious and boring.
In a past life, I had a sufficiently good income to expenses ratio to set everything to autopay and forget about it. I’m not quite there yet, but getting closer.
@CreditInspired That’s a good way of looking at things. But surely you allow yourself a treat every now and then. How do you know when the time is right, and how much you can spend on it?
Another "solution" for this issue is you calling them and requesting a lower cl that will better work for you.