A few years back Tracy Cheyne realised she had to do something about her finances if she ever wanted to reach her goals.
The Brisbane woman had accrued a debt of $50,000 through a car loan, loan for her sister’s student fees and a credit card and was paying an unsustainable amount of interest.
“I sat down, put it all down and realised all my money pretty much was just going to maintaining this debt and just repayments and I was never going to be able to save for my first house, I was never going to achieve other important goals,” Tracy said.
Three years later she was debt-free and happy.
In a video blog, the 33-year-old explains how she got rid of her debt by making just 12 small changes that added up in a big way.
1. Stopped buying clothes… and other things she didn’t need.
Tracy knew as well as anyone the “pressure to maintain a public image” and look good. It’s also very hard to fight the urge to buy clothes and accessories you don’t need when there are sales everywhere.
However, with a little bit of willpower, seating herself a New Year’s resolution not to buy clothes, and following the mantra: “I do not need this. I need to get rid of these loans so I can have that financial freedom I was looking for,” Tracy was able to kick the clothes habit.
Soon she was applying ‘need vs want’ to other areas of her life and had cut her spending dramatically.
2. Made her own lunches, but went out once a week.
Networking and being social was an important part of her job as an accountant, so Tracy reasoned that she couldn't quit going out to lunch with coworkers and clients entirely. Instead she made her own lunches for four working days and joined in once a week.