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  HOME > SAVER RESOURCES > SAVERS TESTIMONIES

 
 

 

ColoradoSaves Savers' Testimonies

 

Eunice Diaz 

Mable Banks 

 

 

Developing a Savings "Game Plan"

Eunice Diaz, a teacher in Colorado Springs, has been noticing a pattern.  Despite the fact that she and her husband were "making good money," they were spending their entire earnings and "were still struggling at the end of the month."

So, when Diaz saw an America Saves article about "paying yourself first," she decided to make some changes.

Diaz went online and, through the America Saves website, found Colorado Saves.  After enrolling as a Saver, Diaz got started saving by purchasing a certificate of deposit that carried a penality for early withdrawals.  As someone who would empty her savings to pay for non-emergencies, it was exactly the sort of product she needed.

Diaz also entered a ColoradoSaves contest and won the services of a financial planner for one year, for free.  "I think I put in the best plea for help." Diaz joked.

Wroking with a financial planner from Money Management International, the non-profit organization that leads ColoradoSaves, the couple started off by assessing their finances. The couple saw they "didn't have a game plan," said Diza. "If we kept spending the way we had been, we would be poor, we would never have savings."

The Diaz were over $30,000 in debt, the majority of which stemmed from the purchase of a vacation time-share that they now admit was a "big mistake."  They began a classic debt reduction strategy, putting all their financial efforts into paying down the highest-interest debt while making minimum payments on lower-interest debts.

Diaz was also given the task of creating a monthly budge.  After tracking their spending to see where the money was goning, they realized that,  "The reason we were struggling was our lifestyle.  We like to go out with friends, go to the movies, play pool.  We would spend all the money we wanted," she said.

Now, she and her husband are learning how to have fun and spend less, by renting movies and cutting back on dinners out.  "I'm not going to lie, it's difficult to stick to it," she said.  "I don't want to sacrifice my whole life and be the only one at home while everyone else is out.  So we compromise."

The couple has also made major strides toward their top long-term goal, to retire comfortably, by opening and setting up automatic payments into Roth IRAs and 401(k)s.

Diaz's advice for other savers is to think about savings "not in terms of how much you make, but how much you keep", adding that "sometimes that means putting off what you could have today, to make sure you have something later on."

 

 

Excerpts from a speech given by Mable Banks on the benefits of being a member of ColoradoSaves, during an Educational Forum.

Start Early and Stick to it.  It has always been a dream for me to be financially free. When ColoradoSaves gave me the opportunity to work with a financial planner, it was a dream come true. I want to thank Susan O"Grady, my financial planner, for helping me get my financial affairs in order. I have become more disciplined with my spending. I only buy what I need and what I can afford. The actual creation of the budget is easy, but staying within it is a challenge. It is very important to develop the saving habit early, even as early as a high school or college student, and to carry the habit throughout our lives.  When you travel the path of saving early, you accumulate more wealth, and open possibilities that otherwise would never be available.

I pledge

- To spend less than I earn;
- To avoid long-term, high-interest debt;
- To invest in a home, college education, or another appreciating assets; and
- To prepare for retirement.