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How
To Relieve Holiday Anxiety!
By Sallie Bentt
I must admit that as much as I love and look forward to the holiday
season, I simultaneously feel a great sense of anxiety when the
festive season approaches. I look forward to quality time and sharing
with family and friends, but money is stressful enough every other
month of the year and it's intensified during the holidays. Christmas
parties and dinners, gifts and great times lend well to holiday
excitement and sadly, great expense.
With
an uncertain economy and an ever-changing job market, it feels even
more stressful than ever. I want so badly to be wholly excited,
yet I find myself dreading the obsessive calculations from the frenzied
activity in my checkbook, more activity than my checkbook sees all
year.
Fortunately
for those of us who do experience a nagging anxiety tugging at our
heart and purse strings, there are ways to relieve these feelings
to make the holidays feel almost as joyous as you remember before
you had the burden of paying for them.
Start
this holiday season by getting organized: Maintain a week by
week calendar of all upcoming events for you and your family through
the holiday season. This will help you visualize where you need
to be and what you need for each upcoming week. Organization will
guide you through the holidays by keeping you focused and will allow
you to maximize your money, time and resources. Further, this will
help you avoid the last minute panics!
Don't
be afraid of your stress: You're not alone. Talk about it. If
you're concerned about gift giving and don't want to make a dent
in your savings or rely on plastic to foot the bill for Santa, discuss
your feelings with your spouse, your children or significant other.
Express your concern and create a strategy to survive the expense
of the holiday season. If discussing the issue with children, help
them understand that in the real world some years are financially
better than others are. This year has been tough on all Americans
and if you can spend frugally during this season, maybe you can
do something special later in the year when times, money and employment
are more certain.
Gift
giving doesn't cost a fortune: The most valuable gifts sometimes
come in the smallest packages. People often do without the little
things because they don't want to spend money on themselves. This
is where you come in. Get creative!
Shop
early. Shop sales: If you wait until the last minute to do your
holiday shopping, you risk missing current sales and overspending
on unnecessary purchases, often the result of feeling guilty about
procrastinating. Take advantage of sales everywhere to get the most
for your dollar and don't forget stores that regularly carry discounted
merchandise. One of my favorites is Tuesday Morning. This store
typically carries a little of everything and the prices are significantly
lower than prices in major department stores.
Inventory your kitchen: To survive the cooking and baking
that goes hand in hand with the holidays, make a list of what you
have and what you need. Buy only what you need. Use a list when
grocery shopping to avoid overspending. Use coupons and remember
that if you find something you'll eventually need on sale now, buy
it and freeze it for later.
Paper
or plastic?: I once wholeheartedly believed "charging it" allowed
me to preserve my cash for a later date. Remember, if you charge
it, you're only delaying when and how much extra you'll pay for
purchases. Create an overall spending plan and determine in advance
what you can afford to spend. You'll feel much better when the holiday
season is over that you're not still paying for it!
Sallie
Bentt is author of the ebook "Debt Deception! A Guide to Preventing
Credit Card Debt" and host of Credit-Tips.com. She frequently writes
about the need to teach financial education to prevent debt. Visit
her at http://www.DontDoDebt.com
or http://www.Credit-Tips.com
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