How A Peanut Butter Sandwich Saves Me 2.5 Workdays Every Year

in money •  7 years ago  (edited)

Peanut butter Sandwich.jpg

It’s important to understand the power of small amounts over time.

Just today I had a chance to teach one of the young guys at work a lesson on this.

He came into my office to ask about something and he noticed that I had some bread out. I had been just about to make my morning peanut butter sandwich. He commented on the bread saying “Are you going to just eat plain bread?”

I said no, and pulled out a jar of peanut butter from my desk cupboard and began to spread it on one slice. He asked if I do this often, I said I did.

Watching, he said “I just make my breakfast at home and bring it in, it only takes 5 minutes.”

Only 5 minutes.

I sensed an opportunity to pass on some wisdom.

I said, "Sure, 5 minutes ONE time isn’t much. But consider that I normally go to work 5 days per week and there are 4 weeks per month. Twelve months in a year."

5 minutes X 5 days = 25 minutes

25 minutes X 4 weeks = 100 minutes

100 minutes per month X 12 months = 1200 minutes

1200 minutes is 20 hours.

Certainly 20 hours of time per year spent making breakfast is better spent during work time than personal time (if your work is ok with this, as mine is).

In one year I claw back 2 ½ days worth of time from just 5 minutes per workday.

Maybe that still doesn't impress you. How about realizing that if I did this simple action for 20 years it equates to 50 DAYS worth of work time spent on breakfast preparation.

Amazing, isn't it? All from just 5 minutes per workday.

And people wonder why I hesitate to show up 15 minutes early to work every day. It's because I can do simple math like this.

$10 Bill.jpg

MONEY

It's important to realize that the effect of small amounts is even more important in your finances due to the ability of money to compound when invested.

To maximize my savings by decreasing my spending I have adopted the frugality mindset.

By finding deals and saving where I can in my normal daily, weekly, or monthly transactions I am harnessing the power of small amounts. These small amounts are accumulated and eventually become large amounts.

Most people only think about the big things and when it comes to the smaller expenses, like $10 on lunch everyday, they think it doesn't matter.

Little do they know that it only takes $10 per day invested at 8% for 40 years to equal a million dollars due to the compounding nature of investments!

I realize that a one time cost of $10 doesn't change your future, but when that cost is continuous it is important to understand the long-term results.

Something as simple as saving $10/week on groceries will save you $520 per year. You can easily save that much by using coupons (paper or store app), buying deals, or using the store brand items instead of the more expensive name brand.

If you invested that $520 at 8% for 40 years you will have saved up $145,486.14!

Now imagine if you can find multiple areas to save just $10/week? If you can find 10 places in your life to save $10 every week, then you will have almost $1.5 MILLION dollars from this simple act (using the above math)!

PiggyBank.png

SECURITY

These simple savings can quickly add up. In a recent survey, it was found that 36% of Americans would have to go into debt to pay for a $1,000 unexpected expense.

Another survey found that 44% couldn't cover an unexpected bill of just $400 without using debt.

Whichever survey is closer to the truth doesn't really matter. What matters is that somewhere near 1/3rd to 2/5ths of Americans have basically zero financial-security.

I don't know about you, but unexpected expenses seem to pop up every once in a while. I also don't like to live on the edge of the financial blade. It doesn't make for a nice, carefree sleep at night.

Yet those people do nothing about it. They do nothing to break the cycle. They can't control their impulses.

And that's what saving all these small things really come down to – being in charge of your own mind.

I mean I am not talking about a lot of 'sacrifice'. I am sure that nearly all of those people can save $10 per day if they chose to actually do the small effort of stopping and thinking about how they spend their money.

That daily $10 being spent on things that don't matter to make their lives seem less shitty IS NOT WORKING.

Walking woods path.jpg

What Works


Do you want to know how to start on the journey towards a better financial future?

Have an intense desire for something that requires you to save and invest money instead of spend it.

When you have that desire, you can more easily shed the things that don't matter.

I'm not saying you can't spend money. We all have things that do bring us real, if temporary, joy. I like to buy a PC game on Steam every now and then. You might want to go out every other weekend. Someone else might have a list of countries that they want to visit.

You can do what you want when you aren't spending money on things that don't matter. You just can't do EVERYTHING.

You have to chose what is or is not important.

Then what is important you find a frugal way to accomplish it. For me, it is to wait until the game I want is on sale.

Someone that wants to visit many different countries might learn how to travel hack. You can get everything cheaper if you think about it.

So don't just save that $10 to save $10. You save that $10 to, first, get you off that financial edge with a decent emergency savings account. Then you use that money to work towards your goal.

Your life will become A LOT less stressful once you have a laid out a path towards the future you desire.

Conclusion

So how does all this money talk translate back into time? Well, I did some thinking years ago and figured that if I could save MORE than $10 per day I could speed up that time until I had enough.

Once I had enough invested and passive income coming to me every month I no longer have to go work.

Say instead of saving just 5 minutes per workday by making that peanut butter sandwich I saved 8 hours every weekday from not being at work because I achieved financial independence after 20 years on the job.

  • 8hrs X 5 days per week = 40hrs

  • 40hrs X 52 weeks = 2,080hrs

  • 2,080hrs X 20 years = 41,600hrs

  • 41,600hrs is 1,733.33 days

That's a lot more than the 50 days I would get back from making a sandwich.

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  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Life is not just only about work at office or earning/saving money. A person who spend more time at the office is not a hardworking person, Instead is a fool who does not know how to manage work within the stipulated time. He/She is inefficient and incompetent in his work. You did not study hard and struggle in life to become a machine. Working smart should be the strategy and give the remaining time to the family and your own body by preparing healthy food or doing workout...After all health is the true wealth, so eat healthy.. stay healthy!

@hms818 Thank you for this thoughtful comment. I have to admit when I was a Broker in the Financial Industry I spent way to much time at a desk staring at clients accounts and stock trades.

Thanks @stokjockey for the appreciation ... Why are we running after money when we know happiness and health is more important...

This is why I am focused on breaking free from this work cycle as soon as I can now. :)

Time is money and how we value that time will determine how efficient we function. Very good post Resteemed!

Cheers

Dante

Thanks for the resteem, Dante!

Very wise indeed. :)

:D

This makes a lot of sense... 20 hours is a lot of time that can be used to influence a purpose you have in life.. be it at work, training for an upcoming tournament for the sports people, innovating something that could bring you some income. We end up putting to waste 50 days in 20 years when we don't make the small things count in life.
How many people save upto $520 a year, how many have a million dollars in their accounts after 40 years of active working in their professions. This is where the math is. $10 at the moment is too small for one whose bagging a good amount at the end of the month, but then these same people have accumulate loans that could be covered by the same amount when it multiplies.
Thanks for reminding the world that people are actually not poor @getonthetrain.. It's just their mindset that is. People need to make a choice of parting ways with spending money.
Indeed the easiest way to do this is have an intense desire for something that requires to save and invest money. Having a list of priorities that actually require spending will lessen this outrageous spending on things that don't matter in our lives.

You can adjust the numbers to fit a normal amount of money in your country, but the main point is that all the little things add up. Time and money both. Be a good steward of your resources and don't squander them just because it is a little amount.

The slight edge, ever read that book, taught me something.
A penny saved is a penny gained. With money i realized the rich are those who understood the power of compound interest, it's amzing how we sometimes forget about it.

It's important to realize that the effect of small amounts is even more important in your finances due to the ability of money to compound when invested

Absolutely, just as you said, the money we spend on usual things that aint so useful too compounds up, we realize after a year that we wasted a little too much dollars in things that don't really matter.
Just like a business, we tend to undermine it's beginnings, it's until we build it up after a long time that we look back and be glad we persisted with discipline.

So the peanut butter sandwich saved you alot, it seemed insignificant until it happened over and over for some time.
This is a nice one, loved it.

Thanks, so many people disregard the small stuff but that is exactly where they are getting hurt the most!

I think some did not understand the concept of their message, what I understood, maybe this is wrong, it's not just about saving, but that little can mean a lot, and a lot can be very little, about how with just one grain of sand you can end up changing it everything, and above all, that with just a few small changes in your life you can make it better.

You can save a lot of money by reducing some relatively insignificant expenses, you can save a lot of time if you manage it well, but you can also use it in reverse and spend little time doing things you want to do, such as learning French or doing some exercise, and long, you will also see good results.

Yes, save time/money on things that don't matter or that you can cut back without missing and then use that time/money in areas that matter a lot to you.

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Smart!

This is really well written buddy and while the advice is simple, it's also very powerful.

I admit to there being plenty of improvements I could have made to be more frugal in the past, but these days I'm better at it - Steemfest 3 won't be cheap and by looking after my funds I should hopefully be on my way to the event this year.

Good stuff!

Hey, if SBD's hold up until tickets go on sale it won't take very many of them this year! You will only need to save up a few each day to have enough.

Small things, when you try to accumulate small things, the effect is big. I often do this while I was working in the government. It helps me not get late because the travel time to work is almost one hour. Thanks to the worsening traffic condition in our city. Furthermore, I also save time because I put my make up on at the office's comfort room. Do not worry, I usually come to work thirty minutes earlier, meaning I had more time to think things thoroughly on how I am going to face all the work load.

For now, as a fulltime blogger on steemit, the usual time I allocate on facebook is now spent on helping beginners on steemit or rather making more art commissions.

Time = Money

Oh yeah, the amount of time that traffic eats up can be enormous! I could tell you the monetary cost, but it might be mind-blowing.

In principal, I agree with most of these thoughts. I tend to be quite frugal myself.

But, I aim for larger lifestyle changes that let me keep smaller luxuries because they save me so much. For example, I hunted for a career that I could always do from home so that way I could save on commute time, work wardrobe, food, and overall stress.

I spend on wellness (yoga, healthy food, vitamins) in the hopes that I won't have to spend money on expensive medicines in the future.

I cook nearly all of my meals as opposed to eating out. That way my husband and I can take small trips every once in awhile.

I live in an inexpensive area and drive an old car. That lets me buy things like musical instruments (I have two, violin and mandolin), cultural outings, and other leisure activities.

I care less about the small calculations, and more about what adds up to bigger picture happiness and fulfillment.

Yes, you get it and you see the power of the small things over time.

In health you mention you do yoga to lessen your ill health - that is you doing good actions over time to add up to a very healthy body. There are people that do the opposite, small junk food or inaction for long periods of time add up in the negative.

So this principle works both ways.

Very smart way to save. Einstein said, “Compound interest is the most powerful force in the universe.”

Smart man there

If you can find 10 places in your life to save $10 every week, then you will have almost $1.5 MILLION dollars from this simple act (using the above math)!

It's a shame really! most people don't realize this simple thing.
Like i think i told you before my father doesn't like to save and invest very much, some years ago he run into some debt problems because our accountant was stealing for us, i think seeing my father not being able to pay his debt, buy the stuff he wanted and being constantly more and more depressed made me a better investor and better at managing my own money.
Damn my father had no control over is urges, he once left home to go to the supermarket and came home with a new car... saving 10 bucks a day xD? The guy bought a car just like that, at least now with everything that happened he is controlling himself better and better, there are still some stuff that he buys for no reason, his words are always the same "it's just 10 bucks", i always tell him, save that money, invest, in 1 year you will get much more! At least now i got your post that has some math to show him xD
I'm trying to save 80% of my allowance and making steemit my side job while i am in college, those 80% go to buy cryptos atm, and i have about 1k in the bank, a rainy day fund, something that i finnaly made my father understand and he is doing it too.
What i want to do is the same thing you are doing passive income to early retirement, BTW what do you think about dividend paying cryptos? Like VEN, XLM and NEO, they are pretty good to buy in and hodl, i can keep them for my retirement

I like anything that pays you to own it - Steem has its own dividend you know? Right now all your powered up steem is earning you 1.45% annually!

But aren't they collecting 0% APR? no APR means no dividends unless you are talking about something else... i'm powering up everything i can xD

Right now, 1.45% of the reward pool is shared proportionally based on powered up steem.

You can see this in effect. Before you go to bed tonight, write down the exact amount of powered up steem you have. When you wake up, check again and you will see it has increased.

Didn't know that, i will do it and ill post the values here tomorrow.

Wow! I save at least thirty hours a year by skipping breakfast and only eating two meals a day. I've never really thought about it like that, but now you've got my wheels turning. It starts to make living in town seem worth the extra money for living expenses, since you save so much time by not driving 15 minutes to get to the grocery store or the bank.

I recently challenged myself to spend only $20 per day while in Mexico. I have been able to achieve that goal every day except for the days I was at the hotel for my conference. The whole area was more expensive, from food to taxis, and I spent a lot more than I'd budgeted for those four days. But apart from that, I've spent a lot less than my travel companions just by skipping breakfast (which I do at home anyway), and not drinking alcohol. I guess this qualifies as travel hacking, in a way? When I get home, I should have some excess vacation money left over to put into crypto.

Commute time is a silent killer of both time and money - best to lessen it as much as possible.

Hey, whenever Steemfest wasn't feeding me I made meals back in my place instead of eating out. So saving while traveling is a sort of travel hack I guess.

This warms my heart! Fantastic perspective on the value of time. I'm also lucky that my job doesn't mind me making and eating my breakfast at work. I never make or eat breakfast at home except on the weekends, and I never come in early. Why would anyone do that? I'm only going to be there for the time they pay me and being able to make a quick breakfast at my desk enables me a few more minutes of sleep each morning, which is worth more to me than eating at home.

Ahh, I have expected that you would understand the value of small things.

Where I work, they do expect the workers to come in at least 15 minutes before shift start. I don't do that, but some come in even earlier as to appear better than others.

Yeah, this reminds me of the conversation I had with a friend where we talked about changes we do not bother to take at supermarkets. I wonder how much profit these supermarket make just because people do not bother to ask for change. It must add up pretty quickly.

When I was young I had a friend that never wanted coins. He would just not take them. I always told him how much it could all add up to. He still didn't care.

pretty much explains my posting strategy.
I average ten or fifteen posts a day
each one makes two to twenty steem/sbd
(depending on the price of steem)
when I get ten or twenty SBD
I buy CryptoMonies.
some of them have increaded in value ten thousand percent.
in the last year.
a little bit here...a little bit there.
adds up
(I eat peanut butter sandwiches too..I don't cook)

Hey, all those little posts have sure added up Everitt!

What amount do you reckon is enough for you to have financial independence? For the two of us in my household I'd say something like 1 million euro would do me well. But I suppose 600-700 thousand euro would be enough. Of course invested, not kept on my bank account.

I would say using the 4% rule, those numbers would be the same for me in dollars.

This is the kind of food post I appreciate, stuff all that foody-wood recipe nonsense!

Crunchy or Smooth?

I'm a smooth guy all the way.

Thank you @getonthetrain for a good no nonsense post. Very clever the way you exhibited how frugality with small increments over time can turn into big things..putting back real large sums of money in your pockets !!

I don't know about you, but unexpected expenses seem to pop up every once in a while. I also don't like to live on the edge of the financial blade. It doesn't make for a nice, carefree sleep at night.

Yep, my wife came home today from work. She saw a bubble in her tire. So we called Costco. For Michelins it's gonna cost $195 per tire . W'ell take it in Thursday as they had to order it. Well, over $800

Yikes, I better get to doing some major posting here on Steemit 😜

Oh, that sucks. How many miles of use did you get out of them?

Well, we got the car in July 2016 so just over 1.5 years. I think that's about right

Ended we normally forget the small details. I do treasure my time and think since I joined steemit, I had to add on an extra mile on my hours to make at least 2 hours or plus on steemit.

The only art remaining is to make use of the small finances . My weakness is that if I get more, I may engage less in those other small activities which made my living.

I hope that I'll pay attention to the small voices and be pro-active .

Thanks again @getonthetrain

Even small Steemit posts will add up over time. Plus each new follower adds visibility. You just keep going and who knows how big you can be!

That's a lot of math. But definitely worth giving a thought.
I always land-up to meetings just 3 minutes before it starts, of course when I am not presenting. That saves me a lot of time. Instead I have seen people gather half hour earlier, chit chatting over coffee or disturbing the work area near the meeting room.
I never thought so deep but always thought I would sit at my desk in peace rather than wondering around near the meeting room doing nothing productive.

Hey, that's a lot of time they are wasting as you can see

If you consider all the resources one consumes just to go to work on a daily basis it can be depressing.

Oh man, the cost is enormous! Best to live as close as you can stand.

Good post. It has good content. Thanks for sharing

woow this is my favorite, i really love this.