by Lumpy » Sat 11 Oct 2008, 11:58:41
Here is my plan (I am speaking for myself, not my husband ... for those of you that know who he is. He agrees with most of it, but if he decides to post in support that's up to him.)
TODAY and TOMORROW
1. Add to our one year store of food, with more staples ... rice, beans, etc.
2. Spend time in town and/or online stocking up on basics -- toilet paper (one of my first threads here was about toilet paper!), extra rubber boots, wheat grinder, replacement wheel barrow, more socks, hose repair parts, more tarps, back up grow lights for the green house, motor oil to do our own oil changes, a year's worth of dog food for our big watch dog & our working shepherd, etc, etc, etc
3. Put all of our purchases on credit cards -- and we are talking several thousand dollars, here.
4. Anything we haven't thought of today or tomorrow but that falls under the same heading as above (non-luxury - but good to have (toilet paper), and some of it MANDATORY to have (food)), I want to continue to buy on plastic for as long it is possible to do that. And as SOON as possible. This is like a mission in my mind. Total stock up ... sweatshirts from the army/navy store, etc.
Since I am self-employed, I have to pay the IRS (which I do in a foot-dragging sort of way.)
Other than that, I have to make sure
1. We can pay for our necessary medications
2. The mortgage gets paid so we can keep our 7 acre farm. (Fortunately -- with property values going down, & the fact that we didn't put a lot into our down payment three years ago, so that we could use the money to work on the farm instead -- we don't have much equity. That means the farm is nothing for anyone to go after in terms of it being a big LIQUID asset.)
The only fuel we need is for me to get to my rural offices, and at present that is paid for by the state as a part of my contract. Whatever we MIGHT need from town, I can pick up while I am in one of those little towns.
If worse comes to worse funding wise, and I can't practice psychiatry any more, I can still practice some kind of medicine -- and still make enough for us to pay the IRS & the mortgage & buy our meds, I believe. If we have to go bankrupt on the plastic at that point, so be it. I don't want that, but I'll do it if I have to.
In the meantime - bank-wise - we have been keeping a little stash of cash on hand. But my paychecks are auto deposited to the bank, and our bills are auto paid from there.
I can't decide whether or not to stop this practice (auto deposit of paychecks to a major bank - one of those that if IT goes bust, we can kiss our behinds good-bye.) If things are bad enough that IT goes away, and I tried to cash a "real" pay check, where would I cash it? So I think the best idea is to continue as is ... but take a little more out of the bank for cash on hand as is possible in the coming weeks.
So you see, what I am HOPING/PLANNING FOR is that I will be able to make good on paying for all the hard goods we are buying on plastic right now. But what I am PREPARING FOR is a scenario of having to cut to the barest bones in terms of expenditures in the future.
Lumpy
"A government big enough to give you everything you want, is strong enough to take everything you have." Thomas Jefferson