Wednesday, 12 November 2014

How Not To Be a Cheapskate In Your Journey To Financial Freedom

In my journey to financial freedom for the past one year since I started this blog, many other people have joined in to start their own journey too. Some are younger than me, some are the same age as me while some are older than me. What is common is that we're all on the same path to financial freedom.

I have posted more than 230 articles on this blog on a wide range of topics from personal finance to investments to success stories and even life lessons. In this journey, often we'll ask ourselves how to balance between saving money and spending money. Swinging to either extremities may not be healthy for our lives in the long run. Imagine because young people want to save money and they have to abandon their social lives of hanging out with friends at shopping centres? Or worse still when you go dating, you get labelled as a cheapskate. I'm sure we do not want this kind of life.

Living a cheapskate life is never good. However, thinking that frugality is synonymous with cheapskate is also wrong. They are 2 completely different lifestyle. When we're older and free from the dating world or the need to belong to a certain younger generation of society, then being cheap works perfectly fine for you. But the problem is for young people. Being young means having the desire to be part of a society, to feel belong to a group of people and having some social status. I've been young and am still young by society standards. Telling young people to be separated from society and become some unusual weirdo is never good.


Credit: https://www.flickr.com/photos/51764518@N02/9759057675/


Nowadays, you mostly don't see a group of young students hanging out at hawker centres or coffee shops. Where are most of them? They are either in nicely decorated Cafes, fast food joints like MacDonald or at the cinema watching movies. This is the lifestyle and if you're a young person right now, you probably have to or is doing that to be part of your group. Also, you mostly see young students with trendy and nice clothes during the weekends. Now the question is, will they still be able to save money with this kind of lifestyle?

I was chatting with a friend on this cheapskate issue which revolves around the furniture that we buy. There was an issue that a certain brand of furniture was thought to be valued for money just because it is cheap. However, the problem is most people who buy that brand of furniture realises that it is not durable and falls apart easily. What attracted consumers to buy is the design and what appears to be good quality material but underneath it hides the cheapskate materials that easily dents. But however, buying cheapskate stuffs does not save you money at all. The plan is to make you buy again and again. This is consumerism which I've discussed on in a previous article here.

Buying good quality stuffs saves cost in the long run. It saves the environment too by minimising wastage. A cheapskate person buys stuffs which is cheap and thought to be value for money. A frugal person buys stuffs which is of good quality and yet spends less to own it. This is the distinct difference between cheapskate and frugality.

So How Not to be a Cheapskate and still be able to achieve financial freedom? Here are some ways:

1) Know that being Frugal is not equal to being Cheap. Frugal doesn't mean you own all the crappy stuffs.

Being labelled as a cheapskate is never a good thing. Thinking that frugality is equal to cheapskate will destroy your life. Frugality is a trait while cheapskate is a social disorder. If you save money by taking advantage of others such as not paying for bills, waiting for someone to treat you for a meal, then its cheapskate.

Here's a funny video to illustrate what it means to be cheapskate:

*Warning: Don't do what the video shows if not you'll become a cheapskate


The video is funny. I had a few good laughs on some of their ideas. A frugal person does not take advantage of others. Only a cheapskate does. Frugality is not about owning all the cheap and crappy stuffs. For example, a frugal person can own a branded $100+ pair of shoe and know that it can last for many years vs buying a cheap $20 shoe which can only last for 1 year.  


2) Live like a Spartan when nobody's around

We need to socialise to make friends and build network. These are the times we hang out at Cafes and have meals at restaurants. When you're out dating, it's appropriate to pick up the bill and give a treat to your girlfriend. Even when you're out with friends, paying for the drinks goes a long way for the friendship that you have. It doesn't hurt to pay that little money which strengthens relationships. 

However, when you're alone and nobody's around, you can start living your simple life again. Buying simple groceries and cooking at home is great. Relaxing with an interesting book instead of an iPad seems like a good idea. Nobody will see you as a cheapskate when you're alone. 


3) Get more for less

Believe it or not, it is impossible not to spend any money. You got to spend money for that formal shirt, pants or skirts for your first job interview to look presentable. You got to spend on socialising to build up your network especially during the early days of your life. For young people, you got to date to get a girlfriend. That cost money too. Some of us might want to go on an overseas trip at least once a year to take a break from work. Yes, that is important too to let you recharge from working the whole year.

Since we have to spend money, we might as well spend it smartly. There are discounts all over the city. With the internet, it is even easier to compare products and get the latest discounts. I can buy that same piece of shirt that usually cost $80 for $30. I can get the same plane ticket that usually cost $500 for $200. I can watch the same movie at the same cinema for $9 instead of $12. All these discounts happen all the time. We can get the same product but at a lesser price.

Let me give you a specific example. For plane tickets, it gets easier to travel with budget airlines such as Jet Star, Scoot and Air Asia. But do you know these budget airlines still offer discounts even though their tickets are already cheap? Discounts happen almost every week with special discounts once a month or every few months. Sign up for their newsletter and if you just wait for a few more days before you book your tickets, you might get that $200 plane ticket instead of the $500 ticket.

Let your financial journey not be a cheapskate but a meaningful one.

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Related Posts:
1. Going from working middle class to rich with a simple tweak
2. How do you spend your money?

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