surviving on $12,000 a year

Student and writer Donna Freedman details how she’s going to live on a meager $12,084 in 2007.

In a nutshell, it doesn’t sound terribly fun (unless you’re the romantic sort). Her article does, however, offer several frugal money tips that could come in handy if ever you need to financially bootstrap it for a while. Granted, the $12,000 living income is wholly unrealistic for some cities (she’s only paying $525/month in rent), but the idea remains worthwhile: whether you’ve set up some aggressive savings goals or you’re just completely strapped for cash, Freedman’s tips offer a number of ways you can cut back on your living expenses if you’re motivated.

Via Lifehacker

It’s an interesting read. Freedman is basically living off of a little more than $1000 a month. Ouch. Granted my sister and her new husband are living off that right now, but they also have a free apartment and utilities where they’re living. Lucky.

I already know my big-ticket annual costs, too: rent of $6,300 and $1,200 for car insurance. Subtract these from my income and I’m left with $382 a month for food, utilities, clothes, medical deductibles and co-pays, gasoline, renter’s and life insurance and any help I give my daughter, who lives on even less than I do.

Freedman brown bags her lunch every day. Drinks only water and combines coupons and rebates for free items like toothpaste and toiletries.

But in order to thrive, you have to hustle, too, always looking for ways to save a dime or to make one. I exchange spent ink cartridges for reams of printer paper at Office Max. Whenever I see a candy dish, I put a piece in my coat pocket; if my energy flags midday, those toffees and peppermints keep me from buying snacks. After I won a basket of specialty coffees at a college event, I immediately sold it on Craigslist.org; I sold a “free after rebate” phone that way, too.

It may not be super fun but if you can do it, think of the long-term benefits. We talked Tuesday night about how James says there’s an actual army at war inside of us when it comes to envy and material possessions.

Where do you think all these appalling wars and quarrels come from? Do you think they just happen? Think again. They come about because you want your own way, and fight for it deep inside yourselves. You lust for what you don’t have and are willing to kill to get it. You want what isn’t yours and will risk violence to get your hands on it. – James 4:1-2

It’s funny how if you live without for so long you don’t realize you’re without. Many people I know that grew up in the depression have said numerous times, “We didn’t know we were poor.” It’s the same with material possessions and me. I don’t realize I have not if I don’t see what others have. My 19″ TV is perfectly OK until I go to a friends house and see their 52″ plasma. Then the war begins. “How much more can I put on that credit card? How long would it take for me to pay that off?” I don’t need it. I’m perfectly content with my 19″ TV, that’s actually sitting in storage right now. But when I see what others have I start wanting it and “needing it.”
Read Freedman’s story and see what you think you can live without.

Add a Bible search to Firefox

I was looking up a Bible passage for my last post and found this great list of plug-ins for Firefox.
As you may know, Firefox has a pull down menu for searching right from the tool bar. A number of search engines have already been installed.
But now you can also add searches from Biblegateway.com. You can do a generic search with your default Bible translation, or you can choose from nine other versions including the NIV, The Message, King Jimmy, New King Jimmy and others.
Super easy and very handy.
install your preferred Bible search

Firefox shortcuts

Get Firefox
Ureeka! I’ve found three new shortcuts for Firefox. Yeah. I know. You probably already new about them… but I didn’t. So now the angels are singing from above like they did when you discovered them.

CTRL+T opens a new tab in Firefox. (Cmd+T on Macs)
CTRL+Shift+T opens the last closed tab!
And CTRL+L moves your cursor to the address bar.

Amazing!
Ok you can stop singing now. No seriously. You can stop.

Via: Lifehacker


SHAMELESS PLUG: Need affordable web hosting for your church, non-profit or your blog? E-mail me for more information.

Build your family tree online

You can now track your family tree and watch it grow online as your family adds to their tree/network.
Geni has several impressive features, like collaborative family tree building and editing. If you add a new branch to your tree and include an email address, that person can visit your tree and build branches directly related to them. Geni is flash-based, so all of the tree-building is done dynamically with a really nice drag-drop-and-zoom interface for moving around your branches.
Check out the software here: http://www.geni.com/tree/start
Via Lifehacker

Let Google find your cellphone

Next time you’ve lost your cellphone, let Google maps help you find it.
If you search for a business using Google maps, the site will offer to place the call for you. Type in your number and it will place a call to your cellphone or land line and then connect you to the business after you pick up.
If you lose your cell phone, just use the service and then simply ignore the call from Google.
It’s a lot less embarrassing than admitting you’ve lost your cell phone and need someone to call it for you. From Google:

There are two things that I really like about this. The business’s phone number is automatically stored in your caller ID so you can easily call back in the future. And by checking the box to remember your phone number, you can make future calls from Google Maps with just two mouse clicks (and picking up your phone, of course).

Via Lifehacker