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Summer Book Club Review: Your Money or Your Life

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I’m a little late with my review, as Your Money or Your Life was supposed to be our July book for our summer book club and I just finished it. Better late than never, right?

In June I reviewed Dave Ramsey’s Complete Guide to Money. Feel free to check that out, too!

Now, onto this review.

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For some reason, I had a really hard time getting into this book. There’s an introduction and a prologue and I swear it took me 3 weeks to get through those few pages. But once I finally got into the first chapter, the book drew me in a bit more and I devoured it pretty quickly.

I definitely didn’t agree with everything the authors said. They start laying their argument by discussing how miserable many people are in their jobs:  the long commute, battling traffic, doing mindless work, and always looking forward to 5:00pm or punch-out time. They call it “making a dying” (instead of making a living). I have to say, this perspective really didn’t resonate with me at all. I think partly because I really love my job, partly because its still so fresh and new (and I’m just so grateful to have it), and partly because I don’t have the typical 9-5 job. There’s a little more flexibility and I find it to be challenging but enjoyable at the same time. So the way they framed the book really didn’t appeal to me. I felt like it was written for someone else.

That being said, I still really enjoyed the content. Some of the figures the authors present are really compelling – on average we have $8,000 of consumer debt for every man, woman, and child in the United States. Savings rates in 2007 were less than 1 %, compared to a 10.9% rate of savings in 1981.

The book was a little dated (and, therefore, so are the figures presented), but the core message is clear:  We spend our whole lives working and have nothing to show for it. No savings and lots of debt. So from that perspective, we’re certainly a slave to our jobs.

I also really enjoyed the various thought provoking exercises. Again – I didn’t feel that everything necessarily applied to (or helped) me, personally. Though I think much of that is because I’m already committed to my debt-reduction journey. If I read this book 3 years ago when I was still just contemplating tackling my debt (before I’d taken real and active measures to actually pay down debt) I think it would have been much more beneficial. Even so, there were several activities that still appealed to me.

Step 2 in the program is to “track your life energy.” The authors give two simple instructions to complete this step: “a) Establish the actual costs in time and money required to maintain your job, and compute your real hourly wage, and b) Keep track of every cent that comes into or goes out of your life.” The purpose of this activity is to step back and really assess our true income, after taking all job-related time and expenses into consideration (e.g., work clothing, commute time, lunches at the office, evening e-mails, etc.)

The authors pose the question: “If you didn’t need [your] money-earning job, what time expenditures and monetary expenses would disappear from your life?”

I also like how the authors continually push back against the traditional job scenario (the 40 hour work week for 40 years). They teach readers to think in terms of overall life values, satisfaction, and fulfillment and to examine how behaviors might change if work were not a requirement of survival. They challenge our culture’s very idea of “fulfillment” and explain the thin line between “enough” and “excess.” They teach the pleasures of frugality – of spending less, but enjoying more.

Overall, nothing was really rocket science in this book. They provide strategies to decrease spending and live a happier, more fulfilling life with less. But I liked how they tied together many psychological and even spiritual (to some extent) elements to make a case for the importance of changing our outlook on life:  to place more value on our time and less value on “stuff.”

I think this book would be particularly beneficial for those just starting (or thinking of starting) their debt-reduction journey, or for those who are struggling with budgeting.

If you’ve read this book, what did you think? Have you read any other good financial books or articles lately? (feel free to link in comments)


6 Comments

  • Reply JayP |

    I read this a while back and also no light bulbs went off for me. But, like you I was already committed to a frugal lifestyle. Even if you like your job – achieving financial independence gives you flexibility and a lot of reassurance. That’s what I’m striving for!

    I do wish that I had done the exercise about life hours of work when we purchased our home. Now it occurs to me that I’m giving up hundreds or thousands of my life hours here just for a more expensive home(probably would not have made that trade-off).

    • Reply Jen from Boston |

      JayP, what you said about working to buy a more expensive home made me think about a conversation I overheard at work last week. In this case, it wasn’t working more to own a more expensive home, but living further away from work in order to afford a bigger home and yard. Many people who work in Boston live further out so they can afford a nice single family house with a big yard, but it means a longer commute, and I began wondering about that kind of trade off. Commuting can be a drag, especially if it’s an hour or more one way.

  • Reply Sue |

    I am still on the waiting list at the library….I think I am #8 now – guess everyone reading this site goes to our library 🙂

    • Reply Ashley |

      That’s too funny! It’s not a recent book or anything, so I wonder what the deal is!?

  • Reply Jen from Boston |

    I tried reading this several years ago. I did like thinking about the true wage you get from your job – your income minus work-related expenses. Where I stopped, though, was the bean counting exercise of tracking your work & commute hours and all of your expenses. I’m just not good at doing that sort of thing.

So, what do you think ?