Remove Credit Card Remove Learning Remove Magazine Remove Retirement
article thumbnail

A Single Mother Struggling to Budget Weighs the Balance Between Just Surviving and Really Living

Success

So, I had to learn to stick to my budget , which wasn’t easy, especially for someone who’d had to repeat a year of high school math. I quickly learned that with small children, every moment you are away from them costs money. These days, my biggest “little” indulgence is the way I use my credit card reward points.

Budget 264
article thumbnail

How My Experience as a Black Entrepreneur Shaped My Views on Building Financial Freedom

Success

What if he wrote down my name from my credit card and used it to find out who I was? Instead, in an effort to avoid conflict altogether, they are far more likely to quit, which could have a negative impact on their earning potential, retirement account contributions, health care coverage and other financial employee benefits.

Medical 279
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Tori Dunlap, Founder of Her First 100K is on a Mission to Close the Gender Pay Gap

Success

I was on the receiving end of sexist, negative comments from male supervisors, and I learned that the majority of women earn 82 cents for every dollar earned by their male counterparts. Leverage credit to your advantage. People are often shocked to learn I don’t have a debit card.

article thumbnail

Tips to Go Almost Paperless - Productive & Organized

Stephanie LH Calahan

4 -- Contact Your Credit Card Companies and Utility Companies for Paperless Statements Almost all credit card companies and many utilities have the ability to sign up for paperless billing now.  Learn whatis enhancing or impeding your productivity today!   Most banks now offer this service for free.

article thumbnail

16 Timeless Truths of Financial Freedom

Success

When Jim came into my office at age 52 to see about retiring early, I was surprised. I fully expected to inform Jim and Sue they couldn’t retire early only to discover they were multimillionaires. This is the biggest lesson I learned from Jim and Sue: it’s not what you make but what you keep that determines whether you’ll build wealth.

article thumbnail

Handbook for Life: 52 Tips for Happiness and Productivity

Stephanie LH Calahan

Try to learn and understand more about their background, and why they react the way they do. Once you’ve developed this invaluable skill, learn the other half of compassion — acting on your understanding, and helping others, alleviating their suffering, acting with kindness. It makes everything else on this list possible.   15. 

Goals 100