Debt
Why does it take So Long for Me to Pay off My Debt?
Debt is a part of our everyday lives. Are world goes on because of debt. Since the beginning of time, we have made a system, to have things that we couldn’t afford, and set up a debt payment to pay it back. Weather is was a horse or a house, we find a way to get it and pay for it on time.
If I were to buy a home, the bank would give me a loan to purchase that property, and issue me a mortgage. This word mortgage comes from two root words, “mort”, comes from the Latin word meaning dead or death, and “gage”, means a pledge to forfeit something of value if the debt is not paid. So this mortgage is literally a death pledge. If I don’t pay my mortgage, they will take my home, or something of value. If I pay my mortgage the pledge is dead also. Either way, through the payment or nonpayment of the mortgage, the pledge is a dead pledge.
Now homes are not as valuable as they once were. Back in times past you might be able to barter something else of value, like one of your children, or an animal, but today we are much more sophisticated.
The beginnings of a mortgage system have been found, as early as 1190. English common law included a law that would protect a creditor by giving him an interest in his debtor’s property. According to this law, the mortgage was a conditional sale. Although the creditor held title to the property, the debtor could, in the event the debt wasn’t paid, sell the property to recover his money.
Doesn’t sound like things have changed too much today!
We live under a free enterprise system called capitalism. Capitalism is an economic system in which wealth and the means of producing wealth are privately owned and controlled, rather than state owned and controlled. The one downfall of capitalism that can bring the whole structure down is greed. We are seeing plenty of that right now in our economy, and many think that we are heading to a socialistic society, where the government controls and runs everything.
If I have a 30 year mortgage, for 200,000 dollars, at a 6% interest rate, your payments will be 1199.10 a month. Now, let’s examine how this exactly works.
Mortgages today are designed specifically to benefit the bank. They are set up so that all the interest that you pay the bank will be made in the front end of the loan. The loan is top heavy with interest, and that interest belongs to the bank, not you. This is no accident. The bank makes sure that they will make their interest off the loan, before you make any payments to the principle. And there is a lot of interest for the bank to take. There is a name for this interest. It’s called compound interest.
Your mortgage is a closed end loan. It is interest which is working for the bank and not you. When you closed on your home, you were given an amortization schedule. This schedule is a schedule of every one of your payments to the bank, from your first one to the last one. If it is a 30 year mortgage, it will be for 360 months, a fifteen year mortgage will be 180 months. It will show you the amount of your payment that goes to interest, and the amount that goes to principle for every month that you have this mortgage. This schedule cannot be altered or deviated from. You must make every payment, as scheduled, on the date it is scheduled for. Usually there will be a late charge added to those payments that are late.
But what if I came up short one month and could not pay the full payment. Could I ask the bank to let me pay just 1100 dollars this month? Well, I could ask them that, but they would say no. The full amount is due every month and they will take nothing less.
Just as your mortgage is an example of a closed end loan, your credit card is an example of an open end loan. If you were to go out and charge up 500.00 dollars on your credit card, but when that credit card bill was due, you paid the full 500 dollars, how much interest would you pay on that credit card? If you said, none, you are absolutely right. You would pay zero, because the interest that you pay on a credit card is simple interest. It is figured on the average daily balance that you carry on that card. No balance, no interest. You can make as many payments that you want on your card. You can move money in and out of the balance; there usually are no limits as to how many times you can do this.
Interest is a part of our everyday lives. It’s everywhere, and it is what makes our economic system move. Interest can work for you or it can work against you. Albert Einstein said, “Compound interest is the eighth wonder of the world. Those that understand it, earn it, and those that don’t, pay it.” The banks certainly understand it and have been using it since they first existed. They get you and me into a death pledge, (mortgage), that many of us are unable to get out from under. Today, one in every ten homes is vacant because someone was unable to fulfill their pledge to the bank and lost their home.
Compound interest is the concept of adding accumulated interest back to the principal, so that interest is earned on interest from that moment on. The act of declaring interest to be principal is called compounding (i.e., interest is compounded). A loan, for example, may have its interest compounded every month: in this case, a loan with $100 principal and 1% interest per month would have a balance of $101 at the end of the first month.
Another example of compounding interest is this; what would you rather have, one million dollars or a penny doubled every day for the next thirty one days? Take your time…. Grab your calculators…. Give up?
After thirty one days you would have, ten million, seven hundred thirty seven thousand, and four hundred eighteen dollars, and twenty four cents.

Now back to our 200,000 dollar mortgage. It will take you twenty one years before you make it to the half way point of your mortgage. Twenty one years of your hard earned money going to the bank. After twenty one years of payments, you will still owe the bank 100,000 dollars. Do you think the bank understands how compound interest works? They do and you pay them interest, lots of it. As a matter of fact, after thirty years of monthly payments to the bank of 1199.10, your death pledge, oh, I mean your mortgage; will have cost you 231,677 dollars. That’s why it will take you thirty years to pay that mortgage off. Your 200,000 dollar mortgage will have cost you 431,677 dollars by the time it is all over. You will have bought one home, but you paid the bank for two. That just doesn’t sound right to me.
Our economy is changing. The more we understand how debt and interest work, the better we will be able to secure our financial situation, and learn to live debt free. Yes this is a fact that thousands of Americans are learning and living debt free, through United First Financial. How about you? Continue to follow this blog and we will discuss ways to achieve this goal. The good debt that you should have, and getting rid of the bad debt and the interest that goes along with it. Instead of paying interest, let’s start using interest to our advantage and our benefit.
Financial institutions want to keep you and me in debt. They don’t want us to learn how money really works. They don’t want you to know how compound interest works, because the longer they can keep all of us in the dark about money, the more of yours they get to keep.
As you can see, interest is a very much needed element in our economy today. We pay it, and we earn it but it is what keeps our economy working. As consumers, or entrepreneurs, we all need to learn every aspect of what interest is, and how it works. It can be the defining line on whether we succeed or fail.
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Dealing With Emotional Factors Leading To Debt
Why Does It Take So Long For Me To Pay Off My Debt…And
How Can I Speed It Up?
There are many reasons why your debt seems to be ongoing for a lifetime. Many of the
following reasons may be familiar to you, things you have said to yourself, your
spouse or others. Perhaps you will see something here that will trigger a new thought
pattern in the approach to becoming debt free.
What’s Your Plan?
Most people, although well intentioned, have absolutely no plan for becoming debt free. They
may occasionally pay an extra $10, $20 or more on a particular debt thinking what a large
difference that will make. That is a good move but it’s the perfect example of the
proverbial drop in the bucket.
A good plan includes many components. Some, and I repeat myself, some of the components
are:
· Determine the amount of discretionary income you have to work with each month.
· Know every detail about each debt you have. Some of these details are the rate you
are paying on each debt, whether the debt is revolving or installment in type, balance
on each debt, length of time or payments remaining on each debt and whether the debt
has a fixed rate or is an adjustable rate. This will be discussed in later chapters.
· Determine a strategy. Which debt is first, 2nd and so on until you are debt free. This is
computed using Factorial Math. This requires a computer program or a plan that
includes Factorial Math within that program. This will be discussed in later chapters.
· Get educated on strategy. Debt payoff strategies are not “one size fits all.”
· Find out where your mortgage fits into your plan since interest is calculated in a
different manner than your other debt.
· Think “long term.” You didn’t get into debt over night and you certainly won’t be able
to get out overnight.
· Increasing income and reducing outgoing fits will help you but certainly is not
enough to bring the results you are searching for. It is a component of a good plan,
not the total answer.
It’s enough to make you want to drop your pencil, put away your calculator and go
outside in the sunshine and feel the fresh cool breeze on your face isn’t it.
Unfortunately, that’s what most people do. They give up before they ever get started. Therein
lies the problem with why most people don’t have a plan today.
It’s just the way it’s supposed to be.
Our first experience with debt comes to most of us between the ages of 16 and 18 years of
age. It’s called “our first car.” Although we may have a job after school and during the summer
there just isn’t enough income to pay cash for the car and insurance coverage. After all, if I
were to pay cash I might have to save for a year or more to get enough money to pay for both
the car plus a year’s insurance. After all, there are clothes to be bought. There’s money
needed for fun and trips and all around good times to maintain ones social status. What if the
car breaks down? I’ll need money for repairs.
Enter Mom and Dad or the Grandparents who either co-sign or front the money for the
car. Often times, Mom or Day will take on the loan assuming that we will honor our word and
make regular payments each month. What quite often happens next is a scenario many of
you may already have experienced so I won’t go into that here. Even if you haven’t
experienced it yet you still know what comes next.
So here we are age 16 to 18 with our first debt. We make the first 3 payments on time then
something comes up and we need the money and skip the 4th payment. Our payments start
getting sporadic and so it goes until we either get the car paid off or Mom and Dad just
give up and pay it off.
Now we’re 21 or older and we have our first credit card. We manage to maintain that card
somehow and we get a 2nd card. As we get older we acquire more cards. We marry, increase
the joint incomes and get more cards and more cars and more stuff for the happy
home (plus babies) and one by one the debt mounts.
Years pass – we decide “Hey, we don’t need all these payments, all this debt” but we
rationalize that we are, after all, doing what everyone else is doing so that’s just the way it has
to be. “We’ll pay everything off when we get the raise or the better job.”
When 5 to 10 more years have passed we then resign ourselves to the fact that being is debt
is simply the way everyone lives their lives and we will be in debt forever after all, how could
we possible get all this debt paid off. It’s just the way it’s supposed to be.
Let me say that there are ways to accomplish complete debt freedom without sacrificing your
lifestyle.
Availability of Credit
Until recently, the availability of credit was a contributing factor to why we rack up so much
debt. For most of our lives we’ve come to expect one or more envelopes in the daily mail
offering us additional credit cards or some type of additional credit. You passed on some and
accepted others. Over the months and years the credit cards in your wallet or purse grew to a
surprisingly high amount along with your available credit.
Some obtained new credit to help manage and pay for existing credit going down a road with
the brick wall at the end. At this writing, credit is difficult to obtain. We are forced to utilize and
live on the credit we have. Some people with equity lines have had their lines frozen. We now
need to manage more payments with the same or less amount of income, not a pretty
sight.
The thought of becoming debt free sometimes becomes hard to imagine when one is juggling
so many payments. I would like to tell you that you should remain hopeful, do your
research, and watch for more information from us regarding the methods and
possibilities for becoming debt free. If you are motivated and persistent you can live a
debt free lifestyle.
Should you be offered new credit, do not accept it. The thought of new credit may seem to be
helpful at first but just remember; new credit was a contributing factor in bringing you to where
you are today.
I trust my bank.
Oops! “When we really needed that new car our bank or credit union gave us our very own
great low interest loan. They really did us a favor!” If that’s not what you said, I would guess
that it is what you thought at one time or another. You may or may not have actually needed
that new car. I say that simply for your consideration. You may have needed it; then again,
you may have simply wanted it.
In any case, the bank or credit union thought it was a good idea so let’s do it, right. I’ve been
there. Perhaps we all have. Its so easy. Lending institutions have slowly convinced us
that debt is normal and just a part of being a good American.
We are bombarded with ads for more debt through TV, newspapers, the Internet and by mail.
There’s so much media coming at us constantly we begin to believe that it’s “normal” to be in
debt for most, if not all our lives.
It’s our responsibility to look beyond the advertising at the big debt picture and begin
perhaps even with baby steps to filter this out. This is one of the first steps to acquiring a
mindset that it really is possible to be debt free.
Principal and Interest
Compound Interest, simple interest, amortization, fully amortized, and many other financial
terms will not be discussed in detail here. There will be some discussion of these in other
chapters but just a reminder, our purpose is to leave you with the hope and the
knowledge that it is possible to live debt free.
In a perfect world, what if you could cancel all the interest off of all your debts? Every
dollar you paid would reduce principal. How long would it then take you to pay everyone off?
It sounds great doesn’t it? We all know that it isn’t a perfect world but, what if you could
cancel forever a large portion of your interest charges on your debt. How great would that be?
Hold that thought as you read the rest of this book.
We Need Help!
Think back from your elementary school days through college. How many of the students
were really good at math in any given math class. Not many right. Formulating a plan for
becoming debt free is a struggle for the best of us, even those who have always
thought they had the gift of mathematics.
Without a computer and the proper software it is impossible or nearly impossible for the
average person to devise a plan, work that plan on a monthly basis is such a way as to stay
on target for becoming debt free. Going back to school won’t get it done. Buying a book won’t
get it done. Neither will listening to the financial media gurus. While all this good information,
very little of it ties together for you, so you remain stuck, head in hands with a figurative
question mark above your head.
Do we have the answer? Well, yes we do. In fact, there are several ways which we will
share with you. We will also share the ultimate strategy that we have found to work in the
fastest way possible. First, we will break down debt and all that it entails. Then, we will give
you a better understanding of debt, what it is, how we arrive at a life of servitude because of
debt, but most of all, we wish to give you hope and instill the knowledge that you don’t need to
spend the rest of your life suffering under that debt servitude. Don’t worry. We will offer you
the solution. We wouldn’t want you to be left in the dark. Just hang in there and keep
reading. You’re already making progress by thinking about your problem in a new light.
OK, I got all that. So what do I do next?
At this point we want you to simply understand that you don’t have to remain in debt for
the rest of your life. There are ways to become debt free with grace and ease without
disturbing your lifestyle to any great extent.
In order to adopt this way of thinking you will need to accept what I like to call a Paradigm
Shift. Think about it. We are asking you to go from thinking, “debt to the grave is normal,” to “I
can live most of the rest of my life debt free.” Wouldn’t you call that a Paradigm Shift?
So, start imagining your life debt free. What would you be able to do with the income you
are receiving right now if it wasn’t all going out the door to pay off your debts? How
would it feel to have the peace of mind that comes from owning your own home free and
clear? It’s OK to start thinking this way because we are going to show you how to realize
those dreams in less time than you probably think.
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What You Should Know About Interest
What You Should Know About Interest
Interest is compensation to the lender for forgoing other useful investments that could have been made with the loaned asset. These forgone investments are known as the opportunity cost. Instead of the lender using the assets directly, they are advanced to the borrower. The borrower then enjoys the benefit of using the assets ahead of the effort required to obtain them, while the lender enjoys the benefit of the fee paid by the borrower for the privilege. The amount lent, or the value of the assets lent, is called the principal. This principal value is held by the borrower on credit. Interest is therefore the price of credit, not the price of money as it is commonly believed to be. The percentage of the principal that is paid as a fee (the interest), over a certain period of time, is called the interest rate.
Interest is a part of our everyday lives. You can have it working for you or against you. Let me give you an example of what I am talking about.
Your mortgage is a closed end loan. It is interest which is working for the bank and not you. When you closed on your home, you were given an amortization schedule. This schedule is a schedule of every one of your payments to the bank, from your first one to the last one. If it is a 30 year mortgage, it will be for 360 months, a fifteen year mortgage will be 180 months. It will show you the amount of your payment that goes to interest, and the amount that goes to principle for every month that you have this mortgage. This schedule cannot be altered or deviated from. You must make every payment, as scheduled, on the date it is scheduled for. Usually there will be a late charge added to those payments that are late.
A mortgage for 200,000 dollars, at 6 % interest rate, for the next 360 months of our lives, requires a monthly payment of 1190.10 every month, but if I have some extra cash lying around, I could give that to the bank and ask them to put this extra money towards the principle balance of my mortgage. That would reduce my principle, thus adjusting the interest that I would have to pay. But what if I came up short one month and could not pay the full payment. Could I ask the bank to let me pay just 1100 dollars this month? Well, I could ask them that, but they would say no. The full amount is due every month and they will take nothing less.
Just as your mortgage is an example of a closed end loan, your credit card is an example of an open end loan. If you were to go out and charge up 500.00 dollars on your credit card, but when that credit card bill was due, you paid the full 500 dollars, how much interest would you pay on that credit card? If you said, none, you are absolutely right. You would pay zero, because the interest that you pay on a credit card is simple interest. It is figured on the average daily balance that you carry on that card. No balance, no interest. You can make as many payments that you want on your card. You can move money in and out of the balance; there usually are no limits as to how many times you can do this.
Ever hear of compounding interest? Compound interest is the concept of adding accumulated interest back to the principal, so that interest is earned on interest from that moment on. The act of declaring interest to be principal is called compounding (i.e., interest is compounded). A loan, for example, may have its interest compounded every month: in this case, a loan with $100 principal and 1% interest per month would have a balance of $101 at the end of the first month.
Another example of compounding interest is this; what would you rather have, one million dollars or a penny doubled every day for the next thirty one days? Take your time…. Grab your calculators…. Give up?
After thirty one days you would have, ten million, seven hundred thirty seven thousand, and four hundred eighteen dollars, and twenty four cents.
Compound Interest
As you can see, interest is a very much needed element in our economy today. We pay it, and we earn it but it is what keeps our economy working. As consumers, or entrepreneurs, we all need to learn every aspect of what interest is, and how it works. It can be the defining line on whether we succeed or fail.
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Emotions and Money
Are you an emotional person? How about your emotions and money?
We usually tie emotions to the women in our lives, and sometimes that is true. Women go through physical changes every month and those changes can bring on emotions that are sometimes hard to live with, let alone try to understand them. But men…..we can be emotional too.
Guys, do you like sports?
I love sports. Especially hockey, and right now the NHL playoffs are being played, and my beloved Detroit Red Wings have advanced to the Stanley Cup Finals and will play the Pittsburgh Penguins, a repeat of last years finals. They took four of five games from the Chicago Blackhawks, in a very tough series. Two of the original six teams that started the NHL, played for the right to advance to the Stanley Cup Finals. Great hits and some great hockey.
Whoooo…. See! I am getting all emotional just thinking about it. Emotions are on both sides of the fence. We just can’t say women are emotional creatures, because, men,… we are too.
Now. What about emotions and money? Do we get emotional when it comes to our money? We sure do. Let me tell you what I mean.
What do you do men, when your wife comes home and tells you how much money she saved today, and all you see are bags of clothes and shoes that she wants you to help her bring in from the car. She starts to tell you about all the sales, and how much she saved on those shoes, and the matching purse for this outfit was also on sale. You scratch your head and start to do a slow burn. Are there emotions starting to flow? Yes they are.
But wait a minute guys. What did you say to her about that new fishing rod that you just bought last week? Or what about that new driver that you have to have to help you improve your game so you can finally beat the snot out of Jim, who is always just a couple of lucky shots above you. Did she get mad at you for spending the money? Did you defend your actions, as to why you needed and had to have these items? Were the emotions flowing? I bet they were.
We definitely have emotions attached to our money, and they are different by gender and person. I will think nothing of spending a lot of money on something that I think is important and my wife will do the same on what she believes is important.
It’s all a mind set. How I think and feel about money is totally different than how my wife feels, or my daughter, son or anyone else. But how I feel and think about money is going to definitely be the driving force behind how I use it.
I want you to sit down with a pad of paper and jot down what you would do if you had a ten million dollars. How would you use your new found fortune? What would you do first? We’ve all done this before, when you hear of someone who has just won the lottery. We get together with friends or co workers, and discuss what we would all do if we had all that money. You have fifty different people, you get fifty different answers. Write yours out and really give it some thought. Dig down deep into your soul for the answers. Then ask yourself…..Why?
Getting out of debt is getting the right mindset and thinking process about money. Once you know what your emotions are concerning money, then we need the right mindset, and plan to get back on the right track. The way we think affects the way we act. Why do you think so many people who have won big cash prizes in the lottery end up broke. How could they go though all that money? What were they thinking?
I will have more to say on this next week. Do your assignment and I think you will be surprised at how close the answers to your debt are.
Sorry for the delay in getting this blog update, but I have been moving the last couple of weeks, and I hate moving. I can’t find anything, but it is finally coming around. Just had to get the right mind set, I guess.
Let me know what you think of money. What is important and how would you spend a ten million dollars? Write it out and tell me what you come up with.
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Debt! What About It?
DEBT! DEBT! DEBT! DEBT! DEBT! DEBT! DEBT! DEBT! DEBT! DEBT! DEBT!
Getting tired of that word yet?
It’s just Debt! What about it?
That is a word that we are hearing a lot of today. The federal debt, state debt, bank debt, seems like everybody is in debt.
There are some people out there who aren’t in debt. They are out there, but they are far and few between. There are actually some people who don’t have a mortgage or a mortgage payment. They are probably your parents, grand parents, or aunt or uncle. Those are the people who learned, long ago, that they would bought a house, raise their kids, and live in it for the rest of their lives.
Not so today. The average person lives in their home for about five to seven years, and either moves to another home or refinances their current mortgage and gets locked into paying the bank a lot more interest for another, long thirty years.
DEBT! Did you know the the last two years the national average of money that people are putting into their savings account is……ZERO! That’s right… I said zero. People are living paycheck to paycheck. Nothing is going into our savings account. As a matter of fact, many people don’t even have a savings account.
But you know what is scary? People think this is OK. They think this is the norm. This is what we do. Buy things with money you don’t have so you can impress people that you don’t even like.
Do you know that there will be more people filing for bankruptcy this year then there will be people graduating from college? Now that is sad. That is real sad, but that is the state of our financial mode of thinking.
Everybody attaches emotion to their money. You want to get someones’ feathers ruffled, just start talking to them about money. Especially their money. The saying is, “don’t talk to people about politics and religion.” Well, you can toss money in there now also.
Now, I don’t mean to draw any barriers, but there is a definite line and perimeters to the way people think about money, and how they use it. Social class, religion, location, ethnicity, race, and gender. All these groups have a different emotional side to money and if we look at these emotions, I think that they will guide us to the answers of why and how we get into debt.
That is what this blog is about. I want to invite you on this journey with me to find the answers to the questions about our debt and how we can find the road to financial freedom… Can we?… Can we really learn to live debt free? Can we really get out of this mess and back on the road to prosperity? I want to find the answers to these questions and more, and I will need your help.
I too have struggled with debt most of my life. Living beyond my means. Wanting everything and wanting it now. Not worrying about the future or who would pay the price. Maybe, I am describing some of you.
Come with me on this journey. I need your input. I need your experiences and the way you coped with your debt. The ways that worked for you and the ones that didn’t.
I am co authoring a book, with six others, my business associates, and I would very much like to hear from you. Leave your comments, ask your questions, and give your advice.
I look forward to hearing from you all, and I can’t wait to travel this road with you.
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