Having to deal with managing money in today’s culture is a difficult task. Trying to figure and follow a budget is something that I know in my head is vital to living a life of financial peace. In practice, however, it is so difficult to follow through on. Life just seems to get in the way.
My wife and I were snagged by the thinking that getting student loans for college is essentially a mandatory situation. Both of us went to a private Christian school (expensive) and both of us paid for most of it with student loans. I want desperately to pay off these loans. The biggest problem with that is the fact that she is a public school teacher and I work for a church.
Now we feel so strapped to these loans (along with some relatively minor, but still annoyingly pesky credit card bills). Dave Ramsey, a nationally syndicated financial radio guy always talks about being in debt in Biblical terms of the borrower being slave to the lender. This sort of enslavement is very subtle and wears you down gradually, but wears you down nonetheless.
My church is starting a new Financial Peace University course — written by Dave Ramsey, the Christian financial guy I mentioned before — and Heidi and I are thinking of going. We took the course a number of years ago, but the fire to get out of debt that we had after taking it the first time has fizzled.
I very much want to take better control of my financial situation. I fear for the many people in America today who are living a borrowed life — a life owned by their bank and leased to them at 24% interest. This system of spending money we don’t have is not one to benefit the consumer in the long run, it is designed to benefit the banks, and the banks are winning.
I want out of this hamster wheel. I want to live a debt-free financial life that keeps me free from being enslaved to anyone else. I want to call Dave’s show and scream, “I’m debt freeeeeeee!” What a day of true freedom that will be. Accomplishing this will be a tremendous feat because the biggest battle will be against my most formidable enemy: me.
I look forward to the day that I can blog about how I was able to get out of debt. I’m ready for a change.
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