by Hope
I’m working on a new budget with the thought of being cash only. It’s really a new mindset. And a bit scary. You can see my 2025 budget here.)
Thanks to Financial Peace University, a quieter living situation, and a life season that looks nothing like it did ten, even 2 years ago, my budget is requiring a complete overhaul and a lot of thought!
This isn’t a “bigger goals, tighter rules” budget.
This is a protect my nervous system budget.

What “Budgeting for Peace” Actually Means for Me
Peace isn’t vague. It’s specific. It’s practical. And it’s exactly how I am living right now.
Here’s what peace looks like in my 2026 budget.
1. Fewer Categories, Fewer Decisions
If I have to negotiate with myself every time I spend money, the budget is broken.
So peace looks like:
- simplified categories
- predictable spending
- fewer “maybe” line items
I’m tired. I don’t want to argue with my budget or the BAD community. I want it to support me and make financial decision making easier/cleaner.
2. Margin for My Actual Life (Not an Imaginary One)
My living situation is quieter. Slower. More home-based. More caretaking. More hermit, less hustle.
So my budget includes:
- convenience where it preserves energy, that means, yes, I am paying for Walmart+ so I can get ALL my groceries delivered
- room for the unexpected
I’m not budgeting like I’m running marathons when I’m clearly walking the trail right now.
3. Clear Boundaries Around Emotional Spending
Quiet seasons can be sneaky. And I’m certainly not immune to those “I just need to go buy something” moments.
So my budget now assumes:
- emotions will show up
- loneliness may try to swipe my card
- stress might whisper “just buy it”
Peace looks like pausing, naming the feeling, and choosing something that doesn’t show up on a statement.
This is SO HUGE for me. (Today it meant getting off DoorDash and heating up some of last night’s casserole.)
4. A Real Plan for Irregular Income & Expenses
Peace looks like:
- sinking funds
- boring consistency
- and not acting shocked when life does what life always does
This alone lowers my stress more than any inspirational quote ever could.
5. Money That Supports My Values, Not My Ego
My budget reflects what matters now:
- stability
- faith
- stewardship
- rest
- and the freedom to say no
I don’t need my money to tell a story to others. I need it to make my life quieter. I realize that the BAD community doesn’t agree with my recent decision to tithe again. But it is important to me.
What This Budget Is Not
It’s not extreme.
It’s not flashy.
It’s not optimized for admiration.
It’s optimized for sleep.
The 2026 Goal (Spoiler: It’s Not a Number)
The goal isn’t a perfect spreadsheet or a dramatic payoff date. (Ok, maybe it is still a payoff date!)
The goal is:
- fewer financial surprises
- fewer internal arguments
- fewer stress responses tied to money
I am finally learning that money is a tool, not a test.
And this stage of life?
I’m choosing peace on purpose.
Not because I’ve arrived-but because I’ve learned.
And that might be the most valuable return yet.

Hope is a resourceful, solutions-driven online business manager with over two decades of experience helping clients streamline operations, manage projects, and grow their businesses through digital marketing and technology.
But life has a way of rewriting your plans.
A year ago, Hope made the decision to move in with her aging parents full time – a season she wouldn’t trade, even as it came with its own financial and emotional weight. Earlier this year, she lost her mother, and is now walking the tender, disorienting path of grief while learning what “forward” looks like from here.
Hope came to the Blogging Away Debt community in 2015 as a single mom raising five foster and adoptive children. She’s written through job changes, financial setbacks, and the bittersweet transition to an empty nest. Her kids are finding their footing in the world now – and so is she.
Rooted in faith and fueled by the same perseverance she’s brought to every hard season, Hope is ready to face her finances with fresh eyes and an honest pen. She believes that clarity, courage, and community can change the trajectory of anyone’s story including her own.
She lives in Austin, TX with her dad, loves adventures with her dog Addie, and is figuring out, one step at a time, what this next chapter is meant to be.


