Frugal Seasons





When I was hemming my new white jeans, I flubbed the job.  I not only sewed it wrong twice, but I also cut it wrong before I'd caught my mistake the second time around.  Sigh.  When I told John that I hoped the pants didn't shrink, he commented, "If they do, then you'll buy new."   I felt protests rise upon my lips.  "But these are new!"  "But I just bought these!"  "But...." I stopped each one before it was ever uttered.  The truth is that if I'd really made a huge mistake in hemming these pants, then I'd move them to my drawer to wear around the house and I'd buy another pair.  We're not going belly up over another $30.

This morning, I was thinking of that conversation and realized that I've lived through many frugal seasons.  I have always been frugal, but the degree of frugality is directly linked to the needs of my life at the time.


When I first married at age 19, I was laid off from my job in our first year of marriage.  We had a house payment, two car payments, insurances, and life necessities.    I quickly learned what to do to save as much money as I possibly could, especially since my first husband felt that food for basic nutrition was unnecessary.   This was my introduction to eating on a budget that I have ended up using for the whole of my life but this season of frugality was all about have to and needs must.   We went without.  We picked up glass soda bottles from roadside and turned them in for deposits just so we could buy a fast food breakfast out once a month.  

I learned many frugal lessons in the years of that financially and emotionally unstable marriage.   When I entered the work force, I didn't understand why we still struggled though it was a little easier than it had been.   I didn't know of the financial infidelity my husband was committing until he was called for duty to the Gulf War.  Suddenly not only was I parenting on my own and struggling to make ends meet (he never sent any of his pay home during that short season) but I was getting phone calls from multiple agencies to whom he owed money.  I learned that you can have quite a good income but if you owe more than you make you won't be free of the need to be frugal.

 These years of my life set me up to manage very well indeed when I was a single parent with no child support and later when  John and I combined households and I went through a spell of unemployment.  After a year of not finding any sort of work, I was able to get a temporary position that turned into a full time job.   We didn't have funds enough to save much but we attempted to save anyway.  Most everything we made was spent on basic necessities.  Thankfully our rent was very low and I knew how to stretch a meal!  If a child needed shoes or clothing, we saved a little each pay period until we could go buy the needed things.  

Eventually we were able to buy a home to put here on this land.  Those were tight years for us but our lives changed very gradually.  We set up our household here.  We were a smaller family as the two older children  moved out.   A job that paid well for a short season enabled us to pay off a few of the moving debts but I can't tell you life was noticeably better.  All those years of frugal living that had gone before, stood us in good stead.

Eventually John and I each had jobs that paid equally as well.  We were still plodding along but things had eased financially for us a little.  However, with our second child graduating  and planning to move on into her own life, I found myself in a position where I had no child care for Katie.  We were uneasy with Sam being at home alone, too, though he was 13.   

I was a latch key child from age 7 and I remembered too well the sick anxiety of caring for younger siblings and the fears and insecurities of being expected to carry adult responsibilities at such a young age.  We looked at many options and ran figures for each scenario.  In the end, as well paid as I was at the time, it came down to cold hard facts.  If we employed any of the options I was going to be working for $0 a month by the time we'd paid the added expenses that each option presented.  I was shocked when we realized that if I left my job, we'd really only lose $100 a month.  I changed our car insurance, saved that sum per month immediately and John and I agreed I'd leave my job and become a stay at home mom.

A new and different season of frugality began.    This one we went into willingly.  It wasn't a 'have to' season of frugality.  It was a "We choose to...." season.  And while it all looked the same on the outside, we both felt we had real purpose in this particular season and a common goal in doing all we could to make our budget work. 

The day came when John said to me, "I want to be debt free...these four things are what are holding us in debt."  I shivered as I'd looked at his list because frankly we'd just been through some mighty lean years of living and we had just come into a season that had eased our situation slightly.  The total of what we owed was daunting, too.  I represented a lot less than most peoples debt but for us, with only one working, it was several years worth of salary required to pay that off.  But I was intrigued as much as I was scared.   I wanted to be debt free, too.  How and where could we tighten our budget any further?  Truth told, I was getting a bit weary of living frugally.  

However, we came into agreement and we began looking for ways to save further.  I found items to sell on eBay.  I started cleaning my mother's house twice a month.  We counted all sorts of savings.   If we chose to skip buying a soda, we put that change aside in a jar and when we came home to eat instead of grabbing fast food, we put the savings aside.  If I found an item cheaper at one store than another, we bought the cheaper item and saved the pennies we netted.   If John worked an extra shift we saved that money. Within the first year we'd completely paid off a small loan.   I learned in this season of frugality that truly small amounts of money that seemed too small to fret over, once saved and combined, could make a greater than imagined impact if you were serious about getting out of debt.  Some months that extra was $25...Others it might be $250.  The key was to keep doing all we could and to save, save, save.  We paid off a small loan that we'd been paying on for years and rolled that amount over to the next debt, along with any additional sums we could manage each month.

We tackled the credit card debt next.  That added amount was a start but not quite enough.   We changed how we used credit cards, too.  If we used any of our cards, we wrote down the amount as a debit from our account right away.  We pretended we'd paid cash and that money no longer existed.   And then that debt was paid off and we started trying to pay the car loan off.    The day we paid off the car, my eBay sales dropped to $0.  I couldn't make a sale for anything.  We had no clue how we'd keep the momentum going to pay off our home. 

I've shared before that during this season of time my Grandmother, Uncle (my father's brother) and finally my father died.  My family didn't leave much behind.  My uncle had no personal property and my father, too, was without personal property and had only a small bank account.  My father told me when Grandmother died that he intended to hold on to his share of my grandmother's home and when he died it would be left to my brother and myself.  As it happened my uncle died and then my father, so my brother and I inherited my Grandmother's property.   

Grandmother's home was old,  needed work and was in a very  rural area much like our own with low real estate values.   I wouldn't have taken bets my brother and I would realize much  but eventually the legalities were all sorted out and the house was sold.  The amount the house sold for was not high.  John and I were determined however that we'd pay as much as we could of our house debt with whatever I received.   We had $250 left after we'd paid tithe on the money and wrote the check to pay off our home.  We'd lived here for ten years and not one penny of all the payments we'd made ever applied towards the principal of our loan.  It had taken five years of saving and earning extra where we could and going without all sorts of things, big and small but we'd paid off all our debts.

Did that end our frugal years?  No.  You see, at that point,  we knew we needed to look towards retirement years.   We knew we'd need to replace furnishings and do some major maintenance work on our home.  We'd need to eventually replace our cars.   We knew all too well that life happens and you can be flush with cash one day and broke as broke the same day if life took a turn.

We entered a new frugal season, one geared towards our retirement years.   We took our former house payment and turned it into savings each month.  When we needed to replace our cars or we had to do work on the house (AC, new roof, new flooring, etc.) we paid cash.  Cash.  We'd borrow the money from ourselves and we'd pay it back just as if it were a loan with interest.  If, as in the year when I was hospitalized with pulmonary embolisms and we found ourselves with medical bills coming in faster than we could pay them, we did take out a real loan we paid it off in double time.  We kept using the same means: an extra shift here, a week without grocery shopping, a gift of money...it all went to paying off that loan.  And we saved, saved, saved every month.  We never stopped saving just because we had a loan payment. We tightened our belts still more.

This past year we entered still another frugal season, one called "Retirement".   When John retired, we knew we had a limited retirement income at best and we were counting on that 'entitlement' social security we'd been paying for all our working years to close the gap.   The day we signed paperwork to cash out our retirement account, the stock market crashed.  Suddenly we found ourselves with a social security check and nothing more.  I'm not saying we lost everything.  We did not.  Thanks to a very savvy investment counselor who coached us we delayed withdrawal and recouped very well.   We also learned  through his counsel that if we waited a few years more we'd save thousands in taxes.    Hearing that made the choice to choose another season of frugality easy.  It meant we'd live on about half what John had made monthly while working but we didn't fret.  We knew we could manage just fine.  Savings might be decreased for a short season but we'd get through and so we did.  

This year, I qualify for social security.   We won't be changing a whole lot about our lives.  I want  to slip away from home a little more often but our travel won't be costly.  I'm discovering as we grow older our needs are decreasing.  Things last longer when there are two adults and the children are grown.  Confidence has grown, too.  Frugal seasons will always come and go.   I am so grateful for the experiences these years brought us so that we could live peacefully and sure of our ability to manage just fine.   

11 comments:

Rozy Lass said...

Wow! Impressive story. I have a holy envy of couples who work together to reach financial goals. I can't get my husband on board no matter what. We are approaching his second retirement (first was after 25 years in the USMC) and we are still mired in debt. God bless you for sharing your story.

Lana said...

We got married very young and stupid but by the grace of God we survived all those stupid years. We had baby number one 18 months into our marriage and I was always a stay at home Mom. We were blessed so much to have a small church family of other young families that did everything together and were all equally poor so it was really just normal. We were able to buy our first house 3 years in through an FHA loan with nothing down. Our downfall came when my husband got his first big job working in Orlando with a bunch of Yuppies. I wish we had known that the company would go bankrupt within tow years ad that all that glamour was just hollow promises. We soldiered on and came back to our senses and God showed us how He could take care of us through that time of unemployment. Fellow church members kept coming to our door and handing us bags of groceries until we had them lining the walls because we had nowhere to put them. Four more children and a big move away from home and We were always blessed and had no lack. People asked us what we were thinking when we had so many kids and how were we going to pay for college? We did not know but we knew that we were meant to have those kids and I was to say home and homeschool them. Turned out that four out of five of them got full tuition scholarships to college and the other one had a great engineering internship that got him through. So once again God provided. After all the kids were grown and the house paid off a few extra dollars here and some there I really began to throw a lot of money at retirement. I thought I had the retirement savings licked. I did not know that my husband would become disabled at age 57. We also had no idea that the company that he worked for had so much in place to care for us. For a year he had full paychecks deposited twice a month. At that point we were on full disability plus disability insurance through his old company that gave us 50% of hos former pay. But, we no longer had money going into the 401K and expenses went way down so that we have more discretionary money than we did when he worked. The stock market has gone crazy and we have made so much money that I doubt anything I would have saved would have given us so much. Once again, God. We continue to be faithful to give as we have for 40 years and He opens the windows of heaven and pours out blessings and we cannot account where the money comes from. In the last 8 month we have put $26K into the house and our savings is the same as it was when we started. Hubby has disability until full retirement age and then goes on SS. I am still 13 months from SS but will hold off taking it until we have to have it in order to increase the payout. Looking back I have no idea how we paid for everything but we did and I have no idea how we managed so save so much for retirement but we did and I can only say that He provided in every circumstance just when we needed it. No, our kids did not have designer clothes or the latest gadgets nor did we buy them cars but I think that was best for them. More of a testimony that anything ese but I can see it no other way. Yes, I have always been careful with every penny but it does not account for the blessings and prosperity that has been ours for nearly 43 years.

Chef Owings said...

A couple people asked Hubby why I put out such a large garden at our age and being retired. His answer was frugal organic food, no recalls and no battles at stores.

We still have some debt from 2008 when he went to 3 days a week, his work truck and our mortgage. All plan to be paid in full in 5 yrs (hoping for 3)
Blessed Be

Ellen said...

That was a great story to read! Thank you for sharing. We are in our late 50's but we have to financially support our 2 grandchildren and provide a home for them along with our divorced daughter. My daughter can only work part time because our youngest grandchild's special needs. We have one loan and our mortgage, no other debt. My husband is a cancer survivor and can no longer work but gets SSDI. Our loan is from money needed for his medical Bill's and taxes. It is set to be paid in full next May. I work full time and we have very little in savings. I do surveys also, sell things when I can, live very frugally. I am hoping we can start saving money next year. This is a long term situation with our grandchildren for the past 14 years really since our oldest grandchild was born, providing for her. My daughters divorce was horrible when it was finally done, by then our grandson was born too. BUT your story of saving, paying off debt gives me more hope that one day we will be in a better position.

Anne said...

I related to so much of your financial story, but I got a real lump in my throat when you talked of being a latch key kid. My parents left me alone at a shamefully young age. Not just for a few after school hours but all day in the summers.

There was never a parent at home when we came home from school and I longed for such, a smiling mother instead of an unhappy, exhausted one who came in at 5:30 and then had to do dinner. She was not glad to see any of us and barely spoke.

I, too, was willing to live on less money when I remarried so I could be home for my children when they walked in.

terricheney said...

Lana, Thank you for sharing your testimony with us. It's awesome to read of all that God can and will do!

Rozy Lass, I pray that your husband will get on board with you. Being debt free has been a wonderful blessing in my life since my childhood and early adult years were spent with a world of financial insecurity!

Juls, I know that the two of you work hard to keep things paid ahead and will soon meet your goal.

Unknown, We've had our share of financially carrying a grown child. Thankfully they are now on their feet and managing capably. I know that if we had to care for others we could but it would necessitate being even more frugal.

Dear Anne, It took me many years to understand how being a latch key child affected me personally. For all my difficulties with my mom, I can say she worked hard both at work and at home. She gardened and canned and preserved, sewed our clothing, etc. She was always busy and not available. I wanted to be more for my children than someone who constantly said "I don't have time for you right now" even if it was truth.

ladybug said...

Thank you for sharing your journey. It is always inspiring to hear the frugal stories of others. I am approaching retirement as a divorced woman. For 40+ years we planned and saved towards being able to retire and travel. Now I am planning to retire and rest! Thankfully we had saved and paid off debt and I don't have to worry so much about the future as long as I am frugal. I enjoy reading your blog!!

terricheney said...

Ladybug, thank you for taking time to comment. Here's to your restful retirement!

Liz from New York said...

I was that little girl too... the one left to care for my younger brother, no one to cook dinner, and I so envied the kids that had the nicely packed lunches at school. It was no ones fault, just really bad circumstances. I survived. But I wanted to be the mom that my kids could count on. Dinners that weren’t from a can, a welcoming, clean presentable home, etc. I’m not sorry for myself, but I’m glad to know I’m not the only one. I think once you learn to become frugal, it’s ingrained in the psyche. I’d still look for the best prices on things, even if I did have money to burn, lol. Thankful that I just learned that unemployment benefits will be extended for me, so there’s a load off my mind. Just saving it because who knows what’s eventually going to happen. I’m glad you are going to get away more. It’s good for the soul.

Karen in WI said...

Terri, I never understood why social security was referred to as an “entitlement” either as we pay for it all our working years. I understand the first generation that received it did not pay in, but they had been through enough with the Great Depression and no social safety net at all except for charity if you could find it.

I have been very inspired by all of your frugal writings the past few years! Our whole marriage we have paid cash for cars and only had a mortgage. We were in a position to finish paying that off recently, but my husband is in finance and says that we get more out of our money by keeping it in investments. He has promised that we will pay off the house on my 53rd birthday as he realizes I want the comfort of knowing our home is paid off, which is priceless!

With our four boys, we told them that they were expected to work and save for their education. We pay half of in state tuition at one of the local colleges so they can stay home. If they wanted to go away for their education, they had to get scholarships. We are lucky here in Wisconsin as even though we live in a rural area, there are two 4-year state colleges and one 2-year state college all within 30-45 minutes of our home. No student loan debt here and the boys have been taught that this will give them a nice head start after they graduate, plus they have all learned to be good savers and have invested their money at an early age. The boys tease us that we have an old van that they have all driven, even though it was hard to “look cool” while driving a minivan! That vehicle has been so reliable and we rarely have to pay to have it fixed. I tell them that every month we drive it is money in the bank.

The Lord has put it on my heart lately to give more as so many around the world are suffering for basic necessities and basic safety, much less basic healthcare. My heart goes out to the children who migrate out of desperation and for their families. The world already had more refugees than right after WWII BEFORE COVID hit and it is only worse now. Compassion International has been trying to keep families alive with 2 week emergency food packages, rental assistance, and keeping their basic health clinics open. They are overwhelmed with need. Our family has all we need and more so I feel that I need to use what the Lord gave us to help more. Retirement savings and giving is our focus now.

terricheney said...

Liz, I'm glad that the unemployment benefits will keep up for a bit longer.
I was expected to get dinner and have it ready for my mom when she got home from work. But yes, it's a sad way to grow up and the summers alone with two brothers were often difficult though I admit it beat the daycares where children were routinely physically abused or out and out neglected. Shivers! So much better to be home alone!!
John and I agree that if we ever won a lottery (obviously one that requires no purchase of tickets since we don't buy them, lol) we'd likely live about as we do now. No bigger house, no fancy cars, though I am lobbying for a beach condo, lol so we can travel there more frequently and possibly rent out through a management group in between our stays. lol

Karen, I think that would make an excellent birthday gift. It's nice that your husband is able though to recognize the big picture here and put money where you'll earn the most. We aren't and we were finally lucky enough to begin to deal with the counselor the county had managing their retirement accounts and now he's handling our personal finances.

Simple, Lovely Christmas