Angela Coffman, of Kansas City,
Missouri, one of the four subjects on the recent TLC special Extreme Cheapskates, was a stay-at-home mom of six, and in debt to the tune of $89,000.
Through extraordinary dedication,
effort and big-time penny-pinching, she managed to pull her family up by its
bootstraps and erase all that debt … in just six months!
What were you doing to acquire so much
debt?
My husband and I were living the
American dream. We had several
credit cards, but we mostly used one that gave us cash back on our purchases. We would put everything on it—food, clothing, all of our necessities—and then try to pay it back at the end of the month. We borrowed $20,000 to buy a car, we had put $75,000 down on a house that we were using as a rental property and borrowed $1,000 to buy a leather couch. Then my husband Darren, who’s an accountant, lost his job, and we couldn’t pay off the credit card any more.
credit cards, but we mostly used one that gave us cash back on our purchases. We would put everything on it—food, clothing, all of our necessities—and then try to pay it back at the end of the month. We borrowed $20,000 to buy a car, we had put $75,000 down on a house that we were using as a rental property and borrowed $1,000 to buy a leather couch. Then my husband Darren, who’s an accountant, lost his job, and we couldn’t pay off the credit card any more.
How did you become motivated to do
something about it?
I knew there was a better way to
handle our money. My parents paid off our home when I was in the fourth grade,
and they never borrowed money again. They really had taught me better. One day,
I heard finance expert Dave Ramsey on the radio announcing a contest to win a
trip to the Bahamas. You had to be one of the top ten families in the nation
who paid off the most debt or saved the most money in a six-month period. About
that time Darren got a new job, and I figured, even if we lose the contest but
we give it our all, we’ll end up winners. We won—and got to go on the trip.
What did you do during those six
months to save money?
We went all out. We spent nothing that
we did not have to in order to survive. We ate food that we picked from our
yard, we turned off our heat and burned wood in the fireplace instead, we used
cloth diapers, cloth napkins, cloth toilet paper—anything that you would
usually use paper for. We hand-made gifts, I made clothes for the kids out of
leftovers from garage sales that neighbors would give me. So my sons wore denim
skirts … but they looked like shorts after I sewed them.
2 comments:
Awesome story! Thanks for sharing! Blessings from Bama!
Very inspiring story! Thanks so much for sharing it
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