Budgets: The WORST…?

I hate budgeting. And I’m bad at it. But I do it anyway.

I hate budgeting. And I’m bad at it. How about that for truth from a personal finance writer? I blame my parents. They have never budgeted in 42 years of marriage, and if I told you how much they are worth today, well, I’d have to kill you. JK, but it did work out for them in the end.1

I never budgeted through college or for the first nine years of my marriage. I really never needed too. During those years I lived very simply, and my parents/company paid for my health insurance. My income was always more than my spending so why bother? Plus I was always concerned that if I had a bucket of money set aside, and I went under budget, I might feel entitled to spend that money just for the fun of it. Spending money for the fun of it is no fun at all in my world. My philosophy on budgeting is that it is much simpler to adjust my lifestyle to consistently spend below my income than to put the energy needed into budgeting.

But then we did it. We went and had babies. Two of them so far and hopefully more one day. Having babies affected our budget in two ways. One, babies are expensive. Sure we cloth diaper, breastfeed, and dress them in hand-me-downs. But my husband and I are self-employed. So for us, each child is an extra $150 in health insurance premiums each month. Each. Month. Just for the premiums. Plus we are saving for their college, and our next car will have to be a bigger one.

The other thing that happened when we had babies is it started to feel like we were really living. Now, please don’t think that I’m saying that you have to have children to live life to the fullest. But for me, I spent my teenage years and my 20s feeling like I was preparing for “real life.” At 29 when we welcomed our first son, a switch flipped in my head. Suddenly I felt like I was in the throes of life, and I started feeling like if I didn’t really enjoy life now I would never get another opportunity.2

And with that feeling, comes spending. My husband and I want to spend time with family and friends. We want to pursue the careers that make every minute feel valuable, not just the careers that make us the most income. We want to experience the world through travel and exploration. All of that costs money. And those careers that would make us more money than our passion careers? Friends, the opportunity costs of those decisions hit our wallets a lot harder than our travel and dinners out with friends.

So I bit the bullet and decided to start budgeting. It was partly out of a fear that our spending would grow to take up our full, reduced income. But I also wanted to see if it would really help us squeeze even a little more out of our income, as promised by countless personal finance professionals. Finally, I wanted to have a clear idea of where our money was going each month in case we ever needed to make drastic cuts.

I came up with a five step monthly budgeting process:

  1. Cut and paste all transactions from our credit card and banking statements into an Excel spreadsheet. (I ignore cash because it is such a small part of our spending.)
  2. Assign each transaction to a predetermined category–gas, groceries, transportation, saving, giving, utilities, etc. Here I should note that many of you might have this process automated with some sort of fancy-schmacy Quickenbooks or something. By all means you do you, I’m just a by-hand, Excel kind of girl. Plus it takes, like, 10 minutes, tops.
  3. Sum each line item and plug it into my spreadsheet that shows how much we budgeted to spend in each category. I get a monthly and year-to-date variance.3
  4. Bellyache to myself about some unforeseen expense that destroyed my otherwise underbudgety month. And it is ALWAYS something. Gas prices go up or income taxes were more than I thought they would be or someone had to go to the emergency room.
  5. Assume a very serious expression and bellyache more to my husband about how we never come under budget and LIFE SUCKS AND WE WILL DIE POOR. This discussion is usually part of our scheduled family finances check in. Some months we actually do go under budget, but in three years of budgeting we have yet to finish the year under budget.

So I guess I really have two problems with budgeting. Even though I try to leave room in the budget for unforeseen circumstances, there is always something I failed to foresee. And if the car breaks down or a kid gets sick, it’s not like I’m going to say, “But wait I’m already over budget, no emergency room visit for you!” Instead I end up beating myself up at the end of the month for overspending, when really there are just lots of expenses that come up during this baby-having, self-employed time in our lives.

My other problem is that I wait until the end of the month to track my spending. I realize the whole purpose of the budget is to remind me to slow my spending when it gets to a certain level. I saw on a PBS documentary that JP Morgan recorded his daily purchases in a little notebook even though he was crazy rich. I tried it and it was more trouble than it was worth. I mean, am I really going to stop buying groceries in the middle of month because our health insurance premium went up? Those unanticipated expenses are the whole point of a savings account. We faithfully contribute to our saving accounts each month, and being over budget hasn’t yet put us into debt.

Has budgeting helped us spend less? I don’t know. Budgeting has made me want to spend less because I knew a big ol’ overage would be staring at me at the end of the month. But we live pretty cheaply already. And, like I said, if the washer needs a repair, I’m not going to put it off just to hit some number I came up with last year. I wonder if the people who are really successful at budgeting and keep it up long term are the same folks who don’t really need to do it? You know what I mean?

So maybe one day I will admit defeat and give up on the whole experiment of budgeting and go back to simply focusing on how much our spending is (hopefully!) under our income. For now I will keep plodding along, happy that I have clear insight into what we are actually spending each month, living for the day that we will come under budget.

Help a girl out in the comments section. Are you a successful budgeter and have great advice for the budget challenged (me)? Should I just give it up and trust my frugal instincts to keep it reigned in? And what is it about having kids that makes appliances and cars regularly go on the fritz?

Photo by: peasap


  1. I mean in retirement. My parents are alive and well. 
  2. Deep stuff for someone running on four hours sleep and Pepsi. 
  3. I know, I know, Nerd Alert. 
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Amanda Gibson

Amanda Gibson used to teach folks about money at the Fed. Now she spends her days reading history books, raising kids, and thinking of ways to rule the world.

Notice: Comments that are not conducive to an interesting and thoughtful conversation may be removed at the editor’s discretion.

  1. I did the excel thing for years, but once you throw in retirement, savings goals, trending and all sorts of other things, 10 minutes becomes hours. I got a lot of value from http://www.getrichslowly.org as a blog with content from multiple viewpoints, similar to your writing style above. It turned me onto http://www.mint.com, not a fancy expensive quicken books, but an intuitive free personal finance website that brings it all back to 10 minutes. Once budgeting was dialed in I incorporated http://www.PersonalCapital.com , another free, investment focused online budgeting tool. These both have apps that let you check your budget on the fly and remind you of upcoming bills. If you ever want to go any deeper, even if you stick with excel, http://www.bankrate.com has tons of articles and calculators.

  2. YNAB (youneedabudget.com) is super flexible and basically works on the assumption that things will change mid-pay period and works to make flexibility the goal, in addition to saving for a rainy day. Been using a trial and love it. Was using google doc excel before, and hated Mint.

  3. The trick is to save for things like car repairs and emergency room visits before you need them. You have to figure your budget over a year. So you know something is going to be say, $240 in June, put $20 aside each month for it and then you’ll have the money in June to pay for it out of your savings buckets rather than your bank account. Same with car repairs, medical expenses, vacations, school supplies, summer camps, Christmas…figure out how much you are going to need, divide by number of pay periods or months or whatever and then you’ll have enough when it comes time to pay. And if you have some left over, you can repurpose it or keep it for the next year.

    The first few months are not easy, but the first time you have to pay for a large car repair or other expected, but unexpected, expense, you won’t have to decimate your bank account, you’ll have the money right there and you can just pay.

  4. Kelly on said:

    I agree that #5 in your budgeting process is essential.

    I also agree with MJN. When I track my bills for each pay period (which I write down on paper, because I am old-timey), I treat deposits to my savings accounts as bills, and I have four savings accounts I pay to for different things throughout the year (emergencies, car repairs, kid expenses, travel, etc.), with one that I can dip into if I need the extra cash before the next payday. Budgeting probably helps me not spend money throughout the month, but saving money on the day I get paid definitely helps me build my savings, and has kept me credit card debt free.

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