5 Ways You May Be Sabotaging Your Financial Independence

July 02, 2018

Take a moment to think about what you would do if you were financially independent. Would you travel, volunteer, spend more time with family or friends and “treat” them or yourself more often? Is financial independence something you want to achieve and life keeps getting in the way?

This month, take a stand and start choosing the financial lifestyle you want. When the people who founded the United States of America declared the nation’s independence, their biggest interest was in achieving each individual’s freedom to determine his or her own financial destiny. Here are some things you may be doing wrong, and the keys to setting yourself up for financial independence:

  1. NOT writing down your financial goals or action plan. It’s easy to procrastinate your way to financial mediocrity or even financial ruin, but studies show that people who just write down their goals and action plans are significantly more likely to achieve them. You’ll be thanking yourself later. Create a S.M.A.R.T. (Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant, and Timely) goal plan using the S.M.A.R.T. Goals worksheet, and use online calculators to figure out the savings or payment rates you’ll need.
  2. NOT using a spending plan to guide your financial decisions. Look at your transactions over the first six months of the year, and compare them to the plans you made. Can you see where you need to reign some things in, and where you’ve done a good job sticking to your plan? Keep up the good habits, and change the ones that aren’t working now.
  3. NOT paying off debts quickly and wisely. Include a plan to pay off credit cards every month, automate the payment of low interest debt, and eliminate high interest debt.
  4. NOT keeping an emergency fund. Lacking a cushion of funds to pay for the occasional car repair or veterinary bill can repeatedly sabotage the best of financial plans. Use a separate savings account or a Roth IRA, whatever works best for you, to stash some cash that you will not touch unless it’s for an emergency.
  5. Making poor investment choices. Don’t leave your financial dreams to chance! Invest for the long run and not like a day trader (unless you ARE a day trader). Take advantage of the tax benefits offered by retirement accounts to set up a diversified, long range portfolio. Then put money into those accounts consistently and generously to accelerate your achievement.

It’s never too early, or too late, to start matching your financial decisions up to your goal of financial independence. You might even enlist your friends to help you stick to the plan and avoid poor choices that will sabotage your success. Keep with it and soon you will be enjoying your financial freedom.