Rebecca Brown Interviews Kimberly A. Griffiths

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Abstract: Read about the book review of How to Become Debt Free, One Paycheck at a Time.

Rebecca Brown, editor of www.rebeccasreads.com  interviews Kimberly A. Griffiths, author of One Paycheck at a Time.

Rebecca As most of us earn our keep from one paycheck to the next, I found your book really helpful in looking at the bigger picture of my economic life. How did you come to write your book?
   
Kimberly At one point I had over 18 credit cards all that were at their maximum limit. This shock came after filing for a divorce to an addictive gambler. To my horror, I discovered I was facing $50,000 of cash advances that were used to feed his gambling addiction. The judge felt it was only fair to split the debt and I wound up $25,000 in debt at the age of 22. Shame on me for putting myself into a victim role, but fortunately I learned from it and have moved on. This experience has changed how I view money, manage money, and how I conduct myself in relationships around the topic of money.
   
Rebecca What is the biggest mistake we working stiffs do (or not)
with our money?
   
Kimberly We have been trained by creditors to pay them monthly on their time schedule. When I discovered many of my creditors where compounding interest daily, I learned very quickly to pay them once a week.
   
Rebecca In what ways is handling our money budget like going on a food diet? Why doesn't it work?
   
Kimberly We all have great intentions when we go on a budget and/or diet. We feel that we should already know how to manage our budget and weight. The reality is, when you can implement long-term strategies that work for you is when you will be successful.
   
Rebecca Can a person really live in modern America without credit cards?
   
Kimberly Until you are in control of your credit cards instead of the other way around, I think it is a necessity to live without credit cards. Being a slave to the banks is not a fiscally smart move. It took nearly 10 years for me to become debt free. Now that I'm completely out of debt, I use one credit card which earns frequent flier miles. I use it for every possible purchase and pay it in full at the end of each billing cycle. The major difference is, I don't have to have a credit card. I lived so many years without a credit card that it felt very foreign to me when I started using a credit card again. I only use it to earn additional perks - a big difference from where I once was. It's interesting how banks behave when you are no longer a slave to them. I hope that money management skills will someday be taught in high schools and colleges.
   
Rebecca What is it about living from paycheck to paycheck that makes us downright miserable?
   
Kimberly Living paycheck to paycheck tends to make us very fearful. We know that we may be weeks away from financial devastation if an illness or a lay off were to occur. The most frustrating part for me was that I couldn't see any light at the end of the tunnel. I was doing everything I could to pay off my debt, but it seemed endless. Like most hard working Americans, I would wonder where all my money went that I worked so hard to earn. My friends were driving beautiful cars, living in nice homes, and here I was barely getting to the next paycheck. The situation of debt tends to make you feel "less than" what you really are.
   
Rebecca What are your Pay Period Bill Logs?
   
Kimberly The whole book revolves around the timing of when YOU get paid not when the creditor tells you to pay them. When you start paying your bills on your pay period schedule instead of when you are told to pay your bills, getting out of debt becomes much more manageable. I wish someone had taught me how to get out of debt, but the sad truth is, nobody knew how to help me. After ten years of trying different tactics, I figured out a system that seemed to work for me. I don't want anyone to ever have to eat watermelon and tomato soup for a week because of being broke. I've been there, and it was a miserable experience.


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