Money Matters
Dear Community,
Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.
If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.
Thank you.
Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.
Trying to find a system that works.
My H and I are completely different when it comes to money. I'm a saver. I can hold onto a dollar for a year if I have to. I'm cheap when it comes to groceries. And I hardly ever buy anything for myself. I had to become this way more so because my husband spends money ALL THE TIME. He starts projects that he never finishes, throwing away hundreds in the process. He trades for things on Craigslist that end up costing him money out of his pocket. Etc, etc. It wouldn't be such a bad thing if A: we had money to throw around and B: he would actually TELL me before he went out to spend it. I've been trying to find a budget system that works for us, but it's so hard to keep him on track, and then I lose my motivation in the process. At one point we seemed to be fine, but recently a snowball of events has left us really wiped out for the past few months.
What kind of systems have worked for you guys? How have you blended your differences in finances?
Re: Trying to find a system that works.
I say talk to him about it. Set out specific goals and work towards them together. Set aside designated fun money. We get $50 each a month to spend on whatever the heck we want no questions asked but when it is gone it is gone and we have to wait until the 1st to get the next $50. Good Luck!
Love: March 2010 Marriage: July 2013 Debt Free: October 2014 TTC: May 2015
We are a little bit like you and your H. Honestly, what really helped us was just getting H to get on the same page as me. He went a little house crazy after our wedding , and I made him see that if we want a house, we need to do X, Y, and Z to get financially ready. Having a limited amount of discretionary "fun" money for each of us also helped. And I can't lie, there may have been some nagging involved :P
People keep saying "get on the same page"- But its one thing to say "lets work on paying off our debt" and entirely other thing to actually DO it. You NEED a plan. A concrete month by month budget with exactly how much you can put toward your short term goal that month, then the next. And agreeing together to never use credit cards and just make sure you don't spend more then you bring in. We follow Dave Ramsey's plan - which was great for us because it gave us a mutual plan to follow and a mutual goal to work toward. And he's got a lot of great tips about how to work together on money. The "budget meeting" works well for us. I make the budget because i'm the math nerd but DH gets a vote. Its not finalized until DH approves it. We do this every month. DH still goes over about 20-30 a month on his spending but through his second job he also brings in an extra 700 so i can't be too mad. Its not about cutting expenses as much as it is - giving yourself a limit. Talk to him about your future goals and how you will attain them. Tell them you don't want to control him, you just want to work with him so you can attain all your dreams.
I will always be the frugal saver and DH will always be a spender but what i've realized is - thats okay. Its okay to be different. We need each other and now that we're actually working together on the same plan we use each others strengths. I'm there to help him tame his spending habit and make sure he doesn't and he's there to make sure i actually have a life! DH and I both got 150 dollars for Christmas. His was gone in a week and he's still talking about all the other things he needs. Mine is still around - Actually I wanted to put it toward our debt but DH wouldn't let me... Finally a few weeks ago i spent some of it but i could put the rest to my car payment and never miss it. I might use it to pick up some new clothes cus I know DH will tell me to spend it and he's right - it was a gift. My point is when you start working together - you begin to realize how much you need each other and those annoying differences begin to fill in your imperfections. He's strong where i'm weak and vice versa.
We are opposites when it comes to what page we're on. H is a spender, I'm a saver then spender. So I like to save up like crazy, then spend one lump sum on something big. He would rather spend $100-200 here and there.
What helped us get on the same "game plan" was Dave Ramseys Total Money Makeover. Now we sit down and do the budget together each month. We also have set out goals for what we want after getting debt free, and what the gameplan in for that.
This has helped us both understand why we're putting the money in places, and what it's doing. I get the satisfaction of my save and spend by putting aside money each week into a separate account. Then at the end of the month I write out a big check that goes toward the debt. H gets satisfaction by seeing our car maintenance budget and making it work to do modifications to his toy car and upgrades to ours (he's a car guy).
So it's all about working together to an end goal. We know that our end goal is to be able to move forward with fertility treatment and not worry about the financial portion of it. We both had to change our ways of thinking in order to move toward that.
TTC since 1/13 DX:PCOS 5/13 (long, anovulatory cycles)

Clomid 50mg 9/13 = BFP! EDD 6/7/14 M/C 5w6d Found 11/4/13
1/14 PCOS / Gluten Free Diet to hopefully regulate my system.
Chemical Pregnancy 03/14
Surprise BFP 6/14, Beta #1: 126 Beta #2: 340 Stick baby, stick! EDD 2/17/15
Riley Elaine born 2/16/15
TTC 2.0 6/15
Chemical Pregnancy 9/15
Chemical Pregnancy 6/16
BFP 9/16 EDD 6/3/17
Beta #1: 145 Beta #2: 376 Beta #3: 2,225 Beta #4: 4,548
www.5yearstonever.blogspot.com