Sara NoelSara Noel
Owner of Frugal Village, LLC & Me Time Media.

My column Frugal Living is available daily & syndicated by United Media's Newspaper Enterprise Association.

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Know when to step away from the table

Nov 10th, 2007 by Sara Noel | 4

photo by cortomaltese
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“Financial freedom has everything to do with your belief system.” — Ron Blue

A common misconception is that frugality is voluntary poverty, deprivation or selfishness. Frugal folks aren’t cheap misers with the world’s largest ball of saved rubber bands in their garage or 1,000 rinsed plastic baggies. Frugality is knowing when you have enough. It’s accepting that you can live with less, and that there is incredible freedom when you aren’t focused on material desires.

FRUGALITY IS LIKE HEALTHY LIVING
Some people view a healthy, balanced diet as deprivation and sacrifice, when it’s normal and healthy not to gorge or starve yourself. If you’re pigging out on a regular basis or not eating, your health will suffer. With frugality, not giving in to excessive consumerism is normal. If you continue to overspend, your finances will suffer.

With dieting, if your focus is always on the food instead of the overall healthy lifestyle change, you are setting yourself up for failure or unhealthy extremes. With frugality, if your focus is constantly on money and not a lifestyle and priority shift, then you’re more apt to overindulge and create a form of financial obesity, or worse: You are so obsessed with money that you end up with financial anorexia.

We all know the stereotypical cheapskate extremist that gives frugality a bad name. Think gradual, consistent lifestyle change. Learn to substitute and acknowledge your alternatives.

ENOUGH IS ENOUGH
Recognizing when you have enough and being aware of the life value of goods (read: how much life/time an item costs you) is a light-bulb moment — and not everyone experiences it. This is why you see some people with plenty of money with an even larger dose of misery. The money-go-round is a well-oiled piece of machinery. People hop on and chase after this and that and work harder to attain stuff, but the ride lasts a lifetime — and what happens to their quality of life? Frugality offers an exit ramp.

MORE TO LIFE
My path encouraged me to focus less on myself and more on helping others. For some, frugality is a way to reduce debt, save to achieve goals or simply slow down. It’s not a new trend. It’s choosing a different set of values or replacing what isn’t working for what does. It’s knowledge most everyone already has. You don’t spend money that you don’t have, and there’s more to life than money. A quality life involves our time, relationships with others and living a life that is true to our priorities. It’s about shedding your embarrassment over living a life of moderation.

Maybe you’ve been looking for a change for a while but didn’t know what was wrong. Maybe you’re tired of a materialistic, wasteful, complicated and dissatisfied life. Perhaps you’ll find that you’ve set your dreams aside and want to rekindle your spirit.

THE JOURNEY
Frugality touches upon areas outside of money, such as simple joys and personal development, and often is a great source of happiness. The process makes you realize the truth in being responsible for your actions and that everything has a consequence. You’re accountable, so excuses are stripped away, victim mentality diminishes and forgiveness takes hold. In time, you look back and realize that frugality isn’t simply about pinching pennies. It’s a value system that can lead you to prioritizing and re-evaluating what truly matters, giving you more time to focus on what you want versus obligatory tasks.

Frugality starts with knowing what is most important to you and that life involves trade-offs, but you’ll discover many viable alternatives and options to replace your old mind-set.

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4 Comments on “Know when to step away from the table”


  1. Vernon Lun said:

    Sara, loved the post.

    You’re right of course. Being frugal is like dieting… it is a lifestyle, a mindset and a journey, it is not a means to an end.

    Vern


  2. J.C. Carvill said:

    As I always say to everyone..

    So many times to save money is equal and sometimes even has more meaning and degree of control than simply to make money.

    Frugal living has many degrees and level, but my key philosophy for this is to know the limit of our own most optimum satisfaction and healthy state.

    I see many one generation rich people has this philosophy in their life.

    Wealth and health optimization.. Optimize your life, Minimize your spending and maximize your revenue, income & profits.

    J.C. Carvill
    Email: support@cosmosing.com
    URL: http://www.cosmosing.com/jeanclaudecarvill/index.php


  3. Alexandra said:

    Great post! I’ve linked.


  4. julieb said:

    Great post, so true. I am finding I am able to give more to others through my frugality. I would never have thought that possible.

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