The Mercury News

Time to clamp down on spending and prioritize household expenses after the holiday season

- Marni Jameson At home Syndicated columnist Marni Jameson’s At Home column is published here weekly. Contact her at marnijames­on. com. To see all of Jameson’s columns, go to mercurynew­s. com/author/marnijames­on/. Jameson is the author of four home and li

As my Scottish mother used to say when the holidays were over: “Back tae auld claes and porridge.” Translated, that’s “Back to old clothes and porridge,” or the fun is over and it’s time to tighten our belts.

Indeed, in households across America, two words are currently echoing throughout the freshly undecked halls: “Stop spending.”

Adding to your sobriety come the credit card bills. Once again, you vow to clamp down on excess spending and never again buy anything, to use my husband DC’s word of choice, “frivolous.”

This year, DC has found a new approach to curb household spending. It’s the BFUBRE method. Here’s how it works. You look around your house for a Big Fat Unknown But Required Expense. At your house, the BFUBRE (pronounced bafuber) might be a new baby, brakes, a roof repair. At our house, the BFUBRE was The Beam.

A few months ago, when DC and I were looking into a minor update of our back covered patio, we noticed that the beam running across the ceiling had a few cracks. Three contractor­s looked at it and all said the same thing: “We won’t know what’s going on, or what it will cost to fix, until we get in there.”

Dollar signs rolled up in DC’s eyes. Who knew how much it would cost to fix?

As a BFUBRE, The Beam worked like this:

“Honey, I’d like to get plantation shutters for the master bedroom.”

“Not until we know about The Beam.”

“I found this great fabric that would be perfect for kitchen chair cushions.”

“After we know about

The Beam.”

And so on.

So you see, a BFUBRE is to spending what a boot is to a parked car. It puts a clamp on things.

If you’ve been on a spender bender and need to recover, here are some tips you can use to get your household budget back on track:

MAKE A BUDGET >> January is a good time to create a household budget or to review and revise the one you have. DC keeps an exacting household budget. While his fiscal conservati­sm can be a little frustratin­g, it’s one of the reasons I married him. I appreciate the benefits and security of having a financial check and balance, even if that means sitting on hard kitchen chairs for another year.

PRIORITIZE YOUR SPENDING >> List your fixed expenses: house or rent payment, utilities, transporta­tion, food, retirement and savings. Then thoughtful­ly add discretion­ary spending, weighing each category for non-essentials you can trim (the daily latte, dog grooming.) In other words, separate needs from wants.

PAY CREDIT CARDS AND BUILD SAVINGS >> If you have credit card debt, make eliminatin­g it a New Year’s priority along with building an emergency cash fund, so you don’t have to use credit cards. Then resolve to never carry a credit card balance at all.

STRUCTURAL INTEGRITY>> Around the house, fix what is leaking, broken, or dangerous ahead of cosmetic improvemen­ts. If a situation is unsafe, or, if left unattended will lead to greater damage, like a leak or mold, fix it first and fast.

BORROW FROM YOURSELF, AND PAY YOURSELF BACK >> If you take money from savings to put in new cabinets, pay your savings back before getting that next “want.”

FIND YOUR BFUBRE >> Look for that looming Big Fat Unknown But Required Expense in your life, and let the thought of that keep your credit card in your pocket next time something “frivolous” calls to you.

PRACTICE GRATITUDE >> Focus on what you have, not what you want. I count among my blessings a wonderful home, husband, family, job and health. The shutters and cushions will wait. Wishing you a happy and prosperous New Year.

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