You survived the holidays. You’ve tossed or stored the decorations and reordered your space (and your life) to January normal.
The last reminders of celebration are the credit card bills that rolled in on schedule. If your New Year’s resolution was to be more financially responsible, this arrival might have seemed more like a January 1 hangover—and the world seems bleak.
If this sounds familiar in any way, you are not alone. If this seems normal, then the time has come to question the sanity of this annual routine that drop-kicks you into money misery. Whatever lofty goals you set on January 1 have been supplanted by the urgency to deal with bills that are neither comfortable nor in alignment with your plans for financial success.
Your choice now is to feel miserable and remorseful about those poor decisions OR (waaaaay better) to channel that energy into a positive plan to create a new and better reality. If you haven’t clicked off by now, you probably are interested in finding a constructive solution to a more satisfying financial life.
But where to start?
The answer is simple: a change is necessary—from your mindset to your actions. Say it out loud: “I have to make a change!” There, you didn’t die from saying it and chances are you will be able to navigate change without costing you a limb or an essential organ. So let’s start these seven steps to back away from financial failure:
Imagine yourself, a year from now when the January bills roll in. They are manageable and within reason. You feel good about yourself, your progress and the decisions you’ve made to put you into this more favorable position.
Just think, it seems like only yesterday when you were hyperventilating and now you are feeling the peace and happiness of a life in control. Go for it—your happiness is worth it!