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The Carr Report: Saving Challenge 2025

In 2021, I received an inbox message from a friend. She informed me about a “Saving Challenge” she was inspired to do.  In 2022, on New Year’s Day, she inboxed me again saying Happy New Year. She included a photo of a pile of cash that was at least three-feet high. She said she had saved a total of $4,610 from her saving challenge.

After seeing her success with this challenge, I thought it would be a good idea for me to challenge all my readers and followers to a saving challenge. I will participate in this challenge. It has become an annual thing for us. Waking up on New Year’s Day to count a wad of cash is fun! I look forward to it.

Many of my Facebook followers participated. There were three stories involving people who attempted the challenge but didn’t complete it.  One used the savings to pay for her son’s high school graduation party. Another used the savings to fly her daughter from Atlanta to Pittsburgh to be home for the holidays. The last person used the savings to purchase her grandchildren Christmas gifts. Although they didn’t complete the challenge to the end, the money they were able to save was used for a good cause.

There were a few people who completed the challenge. One person used the savings to pay for a vacation. Another person used the savings for a home improvement project. As for me, I saved $100 per pay which added up to $2,400. I gave my wife $300 to spend on whatever she wanted. I took $300 and bought some personal items. I used $500 to take my wife out on a date. The date included dinner and a trip to the casino. We didn’t win but we had fun. I still have $1,300 left. I haven’t decided what I wanted to do with it as of yet. I simply like the idea of having extra money that is not earmarked for anything.

Saving money is the cornerstone of sound money management. Saving money is how you create financial stability, financial security and financial independence.  Sadly, Americans grossly undersave money.  We live in a culture and an economy that thrives on spending money. From the moment we open our eyes in the morning until the time we close our eyes to go to sleep, we’re inundated with marketing messages via TV, radio, print media, social media, and podcast with one goal in mind—to extract money out of our pockets into theirs. 

Money is the greatest magician. It can disappear before our eyes without us ever knowing.  We have to make saving money a priority because saving money is how we flex our money muscles.

Having gone through the saving challenge twice, I decided to simplify the challenge. I wanted to make it easy to understand and practical for all to do.

The main takeaway from this challenge is for all of us to develop the habit of consistently saving money. As we develop our saving habits, we grow our saving muscles allowing us to save more and more. Doing this allows us to eventually grow our savings and investment accounts.

This saving challenge is in addition to money you may be saving or investing at this time including your retirement savings.

Saving Challenge Explained:

Married couples—Your choice: You can merge forces and take on one challenge together—or you can both do a separate challenge then combine your savings at the end.

(Damon Carr, Money Coach can be reached at 412-216-1013 or visit his website at www.damonmoneycoach.com)

 

 

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