Tuesday, May 19, 2020
How I Am Paying Off $128,000 in Student Loan Debt - Classy Career Girl
How I Am Paying Off $128,000 in Student Loan Debt When you owe more money than youâve ever written a check for, it can seem overwhelming and beyond your control to get a handle on repayment. However, as with most things in life, student loan debt is considerably less intimidating when broken down into bite-size chunks. To make my point, I decided to come up with a little pop quiz for you. POP QUIZ: $128,000 is A. Supermodel Gisele Bundchens daily income in 2014. B. The combined student loan debt of this authors household. C. Sorry, got distracted thinking about what I can do with $128k a day. Last year Gisele made in one day what my husband and I owe in student loans for one undergraduate and two graduate degrees. If I lived on a diet of sunflower seeds and divided my waking hours between Pilates and CrossFit for the next year, my chances of commanding Giseleâs daily rate would still be laughable. Probably as likely as throwing a rock and hitting the moon. Depressing. I know. Contrary to Navientâs prediction, we refuse to be shackled to this resource-suck for the next 22 years. Donât get me wrong, the amount is substantial and will take time to pay off. But it seems considerably more manageable now that we understand the loans that make up the total (a process we completed using this handy spreadsheet). Once everything was outlined, we devised a repayment plan that includes tackling the loans under $3k (7 in total) to keep us motivated towards the ultimate goal. Of the seven, weâre zeroing in on the one with the highest interest rate and working backwards. For each one paid off, the minimum payment (plus extra) will be re-rerouted to the one with the next highest interest rate. Weâll follow the same principle as Dave Ramseyâs snowball method because that makes sense for us. [RELATED: 15 Ways I Paid off 80k of Debt] You must, of course, do what works best for you and your family, but outlined below are several tips to help you take hold of your student debt. How I Am Paying Off $128,000 in Student Loan Debt 1. Accept it. You owe the money. Stressing about it will only cause you sleepless nights. No sense being saddled with debt and dark circles under your eyes. 2. Know your debt. Who do you owe? How much exactly? What are the terms? All that information can likely be found by logging into your debt providerâs website. All you need is a little patience to copy and paste. 3. Start a budget. It doesnât have to be complicated. It can be as simple as a couple of columns on a spreadsheet to keep track of what youâre bringing in and how youâre spending it. See spreadsheet below for a basic sample. 4. Find the âextraâ. Now that you understand what youâre bringing in, how youâre spending it, and directing where it should go, keep your eyes open for the leftover dollars in your budget. Better yet, be proactive and cut back on a couple of line items to generate the âextraâ. Nothing too drastic. Make it manageable. As an example, youâll notice in tab 2, column G2 of the spreadsheet that we sent $63 extra dollars to our loans this month. This was cobbled together by taking excess money from last month ($34) and shaving a few dollars off several flexible items on our budget this month: $15 from the food allotment, $4 from the Christmas club account, and $10 from the weekly lunch. The amount isnât important, the shift in mindset is. Make it a habit to critically analyze your spending for areas to cut back and be disciplined about using the savings to pay more than the minimum on your loans. 5. Appreciate the dollar. Every dollar, quarter, dime, nickel, and penny over your minimum snips away at the number of years, months, weeks, days, and hours youâre held hostage by debt. 6. Celebrate to stay encouraged. Laugh if you must, but Iâm not above high-fiving myself for a job well done. Donât wait until youâve paid off huge chunks to celebrate. Take pride in every smart decision made to bring you closer to your debt-free goal. 7. Donât beat yourself up. Some months youâre going to hate having to be so responsible. Youâll cry, âWhy canât I spend that $100 on nose bleed tickets to see Beyoncé?â Trust me, I understand. It sucks. Acknowledge that it sucks, but stay on course. And if you do fall off course, do as the late Aaliyah said, âDust yourself off and try again.â Share your thoughts. How are you handling your student loan debt? Do you feel in control of them, or are they controlling you?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.