Dave Ramsey is awesome, especially if you had to file bankruptcy because of your own habits and not because of things out of your control. The fact that he has an official bankruptcy course shows that he knows it's going to happen. He just advises against it. Which, I'm sure most of us would have liked to have not had to do it. I plan to use a lot of his wisdom to prevent myself to falling into the same problem ever again.
I used his bk course and read one of his books. Both really helped me.
From my (bad) memory, here's the short list of goals for financial freedom:
1) Save $1000 in a starter emergency fund now, even while you have debt. This is important because accidents do happen, and you should not have to rely on credit to pay for them when they do.
2) Aggressively pay off all of your debt. This is where the part time jobs come in. Pay off your smallest bills first to eliminate them, working your way up to the big bills.
3) Save up 3 to 6 months worth of living expenses. This is to ensure that you will never be forced into having to use credit, even if you lose your job.
4) Invest %15 of all household incomes into safe investments (he suggests some kinds, but I don't remember what they are, sorry lol)
5) Save up college funding for children if you have them
6) Pay off your home early
7) Build wealth, and give wealth. Invest.
In his courses, he goes over these things a lot, and shows you how to do things.
He says that before you pay any bills, you need to pay yourself. If you dont put money into your savings account before its just "the leftovers", you'll never save any.
He makes a lot of sense, even if he is "radical." His goal is to help people become financially free.
Credit really is a lifestyle lie. If you follow his plan, you can build wealth without any magic tricks, and you can afford nicer things after your life and your spending is under control.
I used his bk course and read one of his books. Both really helped me.
From my (bad) memory, here's the short list of goals for financial freedom:
1) Save $1000 in a starter emergency fund now, even while you have debt. This is important because accidents do happen, and you should not have to rely on credit to pay for them when they do.
2) Aggressively pay off all of your debt. This is where the part time jobs come in. Pay off your smallest bills first to eliminate them, working your way up to the big bills.
3) Save up 3 to 6 months worth of living expenses. This is to ensure that you will never be forced into having to use credit, even if you lose your job.
4) Invest %15 of all household incomes into safe investments (he suggests some kinds, but I don't remember what they are, sorry lol)
5) Save up college funding for children if you have them
6) Pay off your home early
7) Build wealth, and give wealth. Invest.
In his courses, he goes over these things a lot, and shows you how to do things.
He says that before you pay any bills, you need to pay yourself. If you dont put money into your savings account before its just "the leftovers", you'll never save any.
He makes a lot of sense, even if he is "radical." His goal is to help people become financially free.
Credit really is a lifestyle lie. If you follow his plan, you can build wealth without any magic tricks, and you can afford nicer things after your life and your spending is under control.
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