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by: Roy Thomsitt
Christmas is coming, the banks are getting fat,
Let's put more money, in the banker's bowler hat.
If you haven't got a credit line, a credit card will do,
If you really don't have either, then God Bless you!
That's not exactly the nursery rhyme I read to my baby daughter sometimes, but it did come to
mind a short while ago. I had just finished working on both my Christmas websites, and about to
make the switch to work on Eliminate Credit Card Debt. It's early September, and I'm on a tropical
island, but for much of the past month I have had to "think Christmas" because of those two
websites.
The nursery rhyme, of course, is quite the opposite; the hat belongs to the old man with no money.
And he had no recourse to credit cards in Old England.
Christmas and the holiday season are, of course, boom times for retailers, for restaurants, for
travel agents and hoteliers. As the days pass between September and January, consumer spending escalates.
As consumer spending rises conspicuously, people not already sucked into the whirlwind and with no cash to
spare, will be wondering what on earth they and their family are missing out on. December will arrive, and
no gifts bought, no special nights out arranged, no parties planned at home, or no skiing trip organized.
Everyone else is going to enjoy themselves, but not you, your spouse and children.
You cannot bear the thought of either missing out or appearing to be broke, so out comes the credit card
or the credit line checkbook. A big sigh of relief! We can enjoy ourselves. What you didn't know was that
most of those already making it known they were spending a fortune on Christmas, were also doing so on credit.
That banker's bowler hat is really going to overflow this year; lucky he has big vaults to transfer it to every
night. Or is it every millisecond?
New Year will come and just about everyone's feeling broke, wondering how on earth to pay off those Christmas
debts, which have piled on top of other debts; making New Year resolutions to stop smoking and drinking and
spending so much money.
Why follow the suicidal crowd when you can plan early, and save cash to spend on all your Christmas gifts and
anything else you plan for the holiday season? If you spend $1000 every Christmas, then budget to save $80 a month?
Can't afford to? Then you can't afford to spend $1000 every Christmas. Budget for what you can and spend that.
That sounds simple, and it is common sense, but when it comes to credit, debt and the Christmas whirlwind,
common sense can be in short supply. Grab your share early and you will be one of the minority who come through
Christmas as cool as a debt free cucumber.
Why spend the holiday season in Cloud Cuckoo Land, with its unpleasant post mortem of debt ridden misery,
when you can have a great and relaxing time with your family, all paid for out of real money?
Your money.
Why not ignore the banker and his bowler this year and next, and from then onwards? Bowlers are old hat anyway.
Far better to have your own personal family t-shirt, emblazened "We're having a credit free Christmas" on the front.
You never know, you may start a trend. Concerned about the blank back on your t-shirt? Then how about "Stuff
the Bank Manager, Not The Turkey"?
This Christmas debt article was written by Roy Thomsitt, owner author of the Eliminate Credit Card Debt Now website.
Roy is also the owner and author of Gifts For Xmas website.
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