I work as a finance analyst, and I was raised by two accountants (that is my mother and my grandmother, my dad didn’t do that much raising – and when finances are concerned that was probably for the best), so this book wasn’t for me. In fact, while reading it I thought to myself “this is so duh, surely everyone knows it”. But then I thought back to so many people I knew who actually don’t know it. People who were raised by financially irresponsible parents, people who think credit cards give you free money, people who think some expenditure ‘counts’ and some ‘doesn’t’. And people who simply get so stressed out by money they refuse to look at their bank account and just hope for the best every month.
I arrived in this country with £350 to my name in October 2008, right in the beginning of the financial crisis. For the first few months I was on minimum wage and emergency tax rate and still I made sure I was saving some money every month. Now after 16 years of lifestyle creep I have no idea how I did it, but I remember doing things like buy yellow sticker bag of carrots and making heaps of carrot soup for dinner with it. I remember I also still had a full gym membership with a swimming pool access because it was important to me, and money is there for spending, and if it truly enriches your life then spend it.
We read it together with my husband, who was quite obviously not raised by two accountants so that we can get serious about our finances. I’m not sure how much it really helped him, but this combined with my nagging is getting us to the point where we can be serious and realistic about our finances and not involve any magic thinking in the budgeting process.
On my side, it pushed me to be slightly less risk averse and start investing money. And I really appreciate it was fairly realistic for your average Gen Z or Millenial and not some Rich Dad, Poor Dad bullshit or some other book by some internet guru on how to become a millionaire. I think this misconception so many have about being very close to becoming multimillionaires (somehow?) is making them be very unrealistic with their money now. No need to save £200 a month if you're going to be a proper millionaire soon, right?
I realise I could probably write this book myself with a slight modification for ADHD folks, called the gamification of savings. See, contrary to the advice given in this book, I don’t set aside my savings after the payday and delegate the rest money towards bills, groceries and fun money. No, I keep in mind what an ambitious figure I want to save that month, and I make a game of it. I need to keep a mental track of my spend and see if I can arrive at that saved money number by the end of the month. So when I’m presented with a decision – should I buy this takeaway coffee or not, both options give me a dopamine boost sort of. I can get the coffee, but I might then lose my savings game. Or I skip the coffee but win the game. Anyway, I’m probably crazy but this has worked for me so far.