Something Great for 98
With a little will power, you can get a free trip by this time
next year.
by Paul Gerald
he last New Years resolution I made was to give up New Years
resolutions. I think that was back in the early 90s. But in the
mid-80s I learned a little trick that Ive used every year since.
I learned it from Deadheads, and with it I have gone on all sorts
of free journeys Dead Tours back then, other long and purely
pleasurable trips now. These trips seem to be free, since I do
absolutely no work to earn them.
The trick is this: Throughout the year, generate and save all
the spare change you possibly can, and throw it into a box in
your closet; on top of that, check your wallet at the end of each
day for any dollar bills that you think you can live without,
then throw them into the box, too. It becomes an obsession after
a while, and this year that obsession bagged me $926.
The money you save this way is entirely beyond your personal economy,
since the pay you get from working is already (we hope) paying
your bills. So you have a spare-change fund to do whatever you
want with: do all your Christmas shopping, buy a stereo component,
or pay off some credit-card bill. I once had a fund going for
15 months and wound up with $1,300. I got a six-week trip to Alaska
with that one.
I am going to spend this years $926 on a several-week bus tour
of the East Coast, visiting friends and family all the way. A
30-day Greyhound pass is $410, so Im hitting the road with transportation
and accommodations paid for and $526 in my pocket. My paychecks
will handle the bills while Im gone. I hope.
Think about it: What would you be doing with 926 free dollars
right now?
It all starts with the coins. It is amazingly easy to set aside
a dollar worth of spare change every day and never miss it. At
that point youre looking at $365 after a year. Ten bucks a week
is $520. You can have serious fun in sunny lands for $520. But
its not just about saving change; you have to make as much of
it as you can. Pump the gas to five cents past the dollar and
tell the guy you dont have the nickel. Put dollar bills into
every vending machine you use and keep the coins. Throw a bill
into the tip jar at the coffee shop and keep the 65 cents you
got in change. Sure, youll turn a lot of $7 lunches into $9 or
$10 lunches, but the staff will remember you fondly, and besides,
if it gets you a week in Florida ...
As an example, the picture running with this column is of two
weeks worth of savings. Theres about $25 there.
There are only three rules to this trick:
First and foremost, never take money out of the box. If you need
change for the laun-dromat, get it there. Once you become obsessed,
youll find yourself buying a $10 roll of quarters and throwing
$6.50 of them into the box when your clothes are clean. Its a
fine feeling at the end of the day to reach into the bottom of
your pack or purse and pull out seven bucks worth of coins. They
make a nice sound hitting the box, and seven dollars times 365
days equals one serious vacation in my world.
Second: If you do take money out of the box (and trust me, you
will) always round up to the nearest dollar figure and throw it
back into the box. If you take the $1.50 out for laundry, throw
$2 back in. I find myself pulling as much as $10 or $12 out of
the box and replacing it with a 20. But then, Im totally obsessed.
This is, by the way, the most important rule, because the whole
point of this thing is to save money.
Third: Absolutely any amount of money which seems superfluous
or unnecessary, money that you have planned the rest of your life
without, goes into the box. Win $50 at the casinos? Throw it in
the box. Somebody pay you back $10 you had forgotten about? Throw
it in the box. I recently got a whopping 15-cents-an-hour raise
at the YMCA, retroactive two months, so my paycheck had $17 on
it that I wasnt expecting. I got that $17 as cash-back from the
deposit, and I threw it in the box.
One thing about this box: I know the sensible thing is to start
a savings account and put your money in there. But money that
goes into my bank accounts has a habit of disappearing, and its
a lot easier to throw money into a box every day than to make
an $11 deposit every week. Besides, I think its old-fashioned
and fun to have a big box of money in your closet. Anybody know
where a guy can get some mason jars?
I hope this adds something your life, even if its only a week
of wandering around somewhere.
Happy 98, everybody. Ill see you out on the road. n
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