How We Paid Off $26,500 In Under 3 Months

It’s been a pretty amazing last 9 days and an awesome awesome start to February which for most is the worst time of year because of the “January Blue’s”.  It’s the time when all the bills from Christmas come in and people just have no idea where to start on how to pay off all these bills.  This year for us we took coaching and mentorship and because of that there are no blue’s in the Guthrie household this January!

So in the last week and a half since I mentioned that we paid off $22,000 (actually $26,500 when I include both the MasterCard and Visa) people all over have been asking us how we did it? How did you pay off that kind of debt in such a short time?  I tell them it was the help of some amazing coaches by listening to what they had to say, reading some suggested books, streamlining our life and lastly making smarter decisions.  Before all of that however it started with association and getting around like minded people who want similar things in life.  As I’ve said before you are a product of books you read and the people you associate with.  I took that to heart and with that paid off $26,500 in under three months.  Am I different then you? Nope.  I have two arms, two legs and put my pants on the same way you do.  Now I know your wanting to know “well that’s nice Shaun, but how exactly did you do it”, well I’ll tell you.

  • First and foremost if you want to get out of debt you need to talk to someone who has, and not just someone who said “Oh yeah I paid off some debt”. Well what does that mean? Did you pay off a few hundred dollars?  A few thousand?  Go find someone who will actually tell you how much debt they had so it’s tangible to you, so you can say to yourself if they can pay of $x amount then I can too.  So we did just that and sat down with an amazing woman, Christine Shewchuk who shared her insight and coached us in making some suggestions on smarter decisions with our money.  Now notice how I said “suggestions”, with World Wide Dreambuilders one of our cardinal rules is “Don’t mess with any one’s money” and Christine made sure she was giving us suggestions.  Ultimately it’s our decision on what we do with it and we were sick and tired of doing the same thing going round and round not making any headway.
  • Second we were recommended to read “The Richest Man in Babylon”.  I won’t go into much detail about the highlights of it that we took out of it was if you want to get out of debt, streamline your life to live off 70% of your income.  The other 30% should go to debt/savings.  So we split it up into 20% towards debt and 10% to savings.  With this we setup a budget and have actually stuck to it.  It’s amazing when you really want to acomplish something and you make changes necessary to achieve that.
  • Lastly we took a good hard look at what investments we had and compared them to all our debt to see just how much we were “making” in our investments.  Turns the majority of are actually LOSING money in our investments compared to our debt.  Think about it, do your investments return you 19.5% each month?  Do they even make you 19.5% in one year?  Some might but most won’t.  And when you compare $22,000 on our Visa at 19.5% interest to some of our investments we were loosing money and not even getting ahead.  So with some advise we took some of our investments out and put them towards the debt.  It just made sense.  To be honest I would have NEVER thought to do that because we are all taught that we need to put that money away to invest and not touch it until we retire.  If we didn’t do this we’d still be swimming trying to pay off our credit card with little payments sometimes just over minimum and not really affecting the principal.  A vicious cycle that would have taken a LONG time to end.

As you can see it wasn’t anything hard.  We first got around some amazing people that helped us break the mental block of just ignoring debt and paying the minimum or just being careless with debt and not taking it serious.  We then did the three steps above and really committed our-self to these things.  What did we get in return?  $26,000 less debt that’s what!  We are not done either, so don’t get me wrong we are not debt free, however we will be close to it by the end of this year (aside from the mortgage) and that day will be a HUGE celebration for sure!

Part of our goal is to impact people and I think this is a good way to start.  We’ve impacted more people then we realize so we’ve been told as our message has been forwarded out by the likes of Brad Duncan, Leslie Wolgamont and others.  With that we’ve partially achieved our goal and we will continue to be leaders and teach other people the things we’ve done to be successful.  We are in the business of duplication and we only want the best for people.

So can you do what we did?

Start being real about your debt, take ownership and do something about it!

Reap What You Sow

reap_what_you_sow You know the old saying “Reap what you sow”?  Pretty much it means you get what you give.  Well think of this for a moment.

If you plant corn, you’ll get corn

If you plan weeds, you’ll get weeds

The same thing could be said about time and money:

If you invest time you’ll get time

If you invest money you’ll get money (sometimes)

 

What does this all mean?

Well it ties into the time we are putting into our business up front.  Yeah we might be busy, and yes we knew that getting into this business but like the saying goes you reap what you sow.  So we are investing time into our business to make it grow and in the long run we will gain time back which is ultimately what we want.  I can make all the money in the world at my job, however I still need to show up for my job.  That is the example I was trying to make at the end.  I invest my time in a job and I get money, however the more time I invest in my job the more money I make, yet I still don’t gain any time.

Something to think about!

Is This Worth It?

Well I’ve got a picture that proves it.  Is it a million dollars? Nope, not yet! :) However this is October’s monthly bonus which in the last few months it has just grown bigger and bigger.  For all those naysayers out there that say this costs a lot of money and you’ve gotta pay for tools and all this stuff.  I’ll let you know that 1/2 this cheque pays for our monthly operating costs.  So are we making money? The short answer is YES!  Now keep this in mind, this doesn’t include our retail bonus cheques we get as well.

So as you can see by this picture YES Amway does pay out! woot woot!  I’ll tell you this is the lowest we will ever have for a bonus cheque.  What could you do with a few extra hundred dollars a month?

Ask your self, is it worth it?  What “vehicle” are you using to obtain your dreams?  Can you honestly say you will obtain those goals in your current situation?

 

 

Time To Get Serious With Debt

We sat down with your Platinum upline Christine to discuss tackling debt.  She has an amazing story where she has pretty much gone from rags to riches.  She just retired from her job over a month ago where she now has more residual income coming in then she ever made working for “The Man”.  Anyway we had some discussions with her around debt and wanted her to help us reconfirm what we had learnt from the Richest Man in Babylon book as well as her personal experiences.

One of the biggest teachings from this book was pay yourself first.  Pay yourself 10% of your income and put it into savings or into a float of some sort to help you out for those one off emergencies or unexpected purchases.  This is something I was taught from my parents long long ago and I’ve always done it.  So that’s nothing new, but something you SHOULD be doing.  The second thing that I’ve never done was how to pay off debt.  The way to successfully do this is to use 20% of your paycheque and put that towards debt.  So in effect you are living off of 70% of your paycheque.  This might make your budget tight however take a good hard look at your situation because I bet you are not gaining anything on your debt situation.  We are implementing this starting tomorrow when I get paid.  10% right into savings as always and 20% onto debt.  You’ll be amazed as you plot out your debt how fast you’ll be able to pay it off if you commit to 20%.  Is it going to be hard? yeah it probably will and I’ll update you on the progress and let you know how it goes.  Another way to help from overspending is to take out cash and pay for everything with it.  If you use debit or credit cards you easily lose track of how much you are spending and 9/10 you will not make it.  So pay with things with cash.

Lastly, reward yourself when you pay off a portion of debt.  Say you close off a credit card.  Go celebrate that.  I’m not talking about a 4 week holiday to Europe.  But maybe a nice dinner with a good bottle of wine.  Or it can be as simple as rewarding yourself with a new outfit or new shoes.  We need rewards which help keep us interested and give us something to strive for.  Without it we won’t feel accomplishment.

Anyway I hope that might inspire you or help you and like I said I’ll make sure I update you on the progress.

The Richest Man in Babylon

the-richest-man-in-babylon-audiobook

1920`s Book That`s Prevalent Today

I stepped out of reading “The Personality Tree” for a few days to read “The Richest Man in Babylon”.  Now this is an older book that’s had millions of books sold and came from the 1920′s.  It’s a book about basic fianancial fundamentals that has transended decades.  Why?  Because it’s basic principals we should all do.  I`ve got a few chapters left but I`m thankful my coaches and mentors have asked me to read this.  While I do a few of the basic principals, there are a few that I`ve not been doing and plan on changing right away to help streamline my finances so that I can become even more successful in the future regardless of what I do.

Just so you can see this isn`t a weird ”cultish” book here is a link to Chapters Indigo for the book.  I highly suggest you read it!