A Look At Life - CONTROL
- Replies 17
Note from the Editor:
This article was kindly written for the SDC by member Pete M.
It's so easy today to be flat broke and yet have no difficulty buying anything we want on credit.
‘No deposit and easy terms’, ‘buy now, pay later’, say the enticing advertisements. It's only when you calculate the actual cost of the item after the repayments have been made that you realise how substantially the interest you have paid has added to the cost of the item.
You can even purchase your major items ’interest-free’ for a set period of time, which can be years in the future. Not only are you probably paying an inflated price for the object, but you will be hit with an enormous interest bill and fees should you fail to finalise the payment within the prescribed time.
It seems, these days, you would be considered odd if you were to save up to buy something when you could use your plastic card or take out an instant loan at an inflated interest rate.
Maybe it has been made too easy for us today to really understand how to successfully survive through financial hardship. The ease of getting whatever we want, when we want it, is doing little to develop the value of our own self-control and placing many into serious debt.
The difference between what we see as our real ‘needs’ as against what are our ‘wants’ has become deliberately hazy.
We should be aware we can gain strength of character by NOT getting. We can be enriched by NOT having, and we can gain maturity through our ability to say the occasional NO to ourselves.
I’m Pete, and that’s life.
Is the art of budgeting a thing of the past? Have you ever used 'buy now, pay later' programs? We'd love to hear from you in the comments below.
We were only able to share this content because of the financial support of SDC Rewards members. If you'd like to see more of this (and a lot fewer ads!), please consider supporting us and signing up for SDC Rewards today—it starts at just 14 cents per day.
This article was kindly written for the SDC by member Pete M.
It's so easy today to be flat broke and yet have no difficulty buying anything we want on credit.
‘No deposit and easy terms’, ‘buy now, pay later’, say the enticing advertisements. It's only when you calculate the actual cost of the item after the repayments have been made that you realise how substantially the interest you have paid has added to the cost of the item.
You can even purchase your major items ’interest-free’ for a set period of time, which can be years in the future. Not only are you probably paying an inflated price for the object, but you will be hit with an enormous interest bill and fees should you fail to finalise the payment within the prescribed time.
It seems, these days, you would be considered odd if you were to save up to buy something when you could use your plastic card or take out an instant loan at an inflated interest rate.
Maybe it has been made too easy for us today to really understand how to successfully survive through financial hardship. The ease of getting whatever we want, when we want it, is doing little to develop the value of our own self-control and placing many into serious debt.
The difference between what we see as our real ‘needs’ as against what are our ‘wants’ has become deliberately hazy.
We should be aware we can gain strength of character by NOT getting. We can be enriched by NOT having, and we can gain maturity through our ability to say the occasional NO to ourselves.
I’m Pete, and that’s life.
***
Note from the Editor:
Is the art of budgeting a thing of the past? Have you ever used 'buy now, pay later' programs? We'd love to hear from you in the comments below.
We were only able to share this content because of the financial support of SDC Rewards members. If you'd like to see more of this (and a lot fewer ads!), please consider supporting us and signing up for SDC Rewards today—it starts at just 14 cents per day.
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