Making your Money Work for You

I snapped a screenshot of a back and forth with THE Dave. I don’t know if it was accurate, but it sparked the same frustration in the poster as it would me. In summary, the caller says that if they put $2,000 worth of expenses on a credit card and pay it off before interest hits, getting 2% cash back, that’s an extra $40 per month. Do you see where this is going yet? Dave says no credit card. The $40 per month isn’t worth the credit card, and that’s not how you get rich.

I guess the first question is: Is everyone’s intent to be rich? Or is the average person’s desire to live comfortably and enjoy their life without worrying about their spending and making ends meet?

Every year I summarize the extra income we made in the year. I admit that we’re far above average in the management we do to get that, but the concept is there – we made more than $0 in extra income, and it’s nice to have money coming in that took barely any work.

I also take the time to admit that some people can’t manage their credit card spending and need the immediate acknowledgement in their account balance that money is leaving. However, even if you made credit card mistakes at 18, have you learned that lesson 10, 20, 30 years later? Do you think you’re in a different phase of life with more control and brain capacity to manage that spending?

$40 per month is $480 per year. If you took that extra income and put it in a separate bank account, what could you do for yourself for about $500? Does that sound enticing to put towards a trip, or to use that month allowance to go to a restaurant?

The flippant response that having no debt and not using a credit card, even if it’s paid off monthly, is doing a disservice to actually teaching people money management. Make your money work for you through rewards and interest, with very little effort, and you have that extra money to do things, even if that thing is just to pay a utility bill more easily.

My next post will detail the extra income we made in 2025 and how we manage our money to work for us.