Once upon a time, two friends went on a little holiday.
They decided to go to the same hotel down in sunny Florida to have a tanning-lotion filled long weekend.
Warm ocean water, Cuban food, and a nightlife so vibrant it makes a Monet painting look drab.
We'll call these guys Frugal Fred and Spender Sam.
Frugal Fred spent a few hours researching restaurants, clubs, and activities.
He made a list of all the things he wanted to do, priced 'em all out, and put aside money every week until he had a vacation budget planned.
Spender Sam?
He had a good job and made decent money, so he didn't think about setting aside any cash.
In his mind, if he's on vacation it doesn't matter.
Budgets are restrictive and won't let him let loose and PARTY...
I'm sure you see where this is going.
Frugal Fred abstained from wasting money on hotel lobby drinks and waited to get a mojito from a little local place he found.
Spender Sam blew about $40 bucks within an hour on watered down rum.
Fred spent his days bopping around town, trying food trucks and going into free museums.
Sam kept getting fleeced on the hotel beach for towels.
Come nighttime, Fred already knew where to go for live music with a reasonable cover...
But Sam waited in line and paid $100 to get into an overpriced nightclub where it was too loud to enjoy.
By the time the vacation ended, Fred had a beach-city glow and no stress.
Meanwhile, Sam was out over $1k and had nothing but sunburn and regret.
(At least they split the hotel.)
Fred had a great time, went back to work refreshed, and did EVERYTHING he wanted to do.
But Sam was more stressed than ever, having to play catch-up and eat ramen to make next month's rent.
Because here’s something most people get backwards about budgeting.
They treat it like a restriction.
A list of things they can’t have.
A punishment for spending too much last month.
And then they wonder why it never sticks.
A budget isn’t a cage. It’s a plan.
It’s you deciding in advance what your money is going to do, instead of looking back at the end of the month wondering where it all went.
That shift in framing changes everything.
And it's why Fred enjoyed his vacation, while Sam was left anxious about Monday.
A real budget does three things:
It shows you what you’re working with.
Not what you wish you had.
What you actually have, every month, after the fixed expenses come out.
It tells you where your money is going.
Not in a vague “I spend too much on food” way.
In a specific, here’s-the-number way that makes it impossible to keep avoiding.
And it gives you permission to spend.
This is the part nobody talks about.
When you’ve budgeted for something (a dinner out, a weekend trip, a new pair of shoes) you can spend that money without guilt.
Because it was already part of the plan.
The guilt and the anxiety come from spending without a plan.
The budget is what gets rid of both.
Where to start
If you don’t have a budget right now, start simple.
Three columns: income, fixed expenses, everything else.
See what’s left.
Move some of it to savings before it becomes “everything else.”
That’s it.
That’s version one.
And if you want something that actually tracks it for you, shows you patterns, and makes the whole thing less of a headache: that’s what Dollarwise is for.
And right now, you can get a full year of the app, my 4-course financial education bundle, and the budget-friendly cookbook for just $249.
That's over 67% off!
[Get the Summer Budget Reset here]
Don't be like Sam.
Plan your fucking vacation Pookie.
Taquitos,
Caleb "Budget Daddy" Hammer
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