Hustle Humor: Snoop Dogg & A Butternut Reduction
Ever wonder how famous rappers get together to eat? Wonder no more! Check this out:
WARNING: Video contains a video girl, PG-13 content.
Ever wonder how famous rappers get together to eat? Wonder no more! Check this out:
WARNING: Video contains a video girl, PG-13 content.
They say Reading is Fundamental. Well, I don’t know who “they” are, but “they” are right. Da Hustler — in spite of all that you see on this site — does not know everything about saving money and getting deals, and as a result, I have to continuously read and research to stay on top of my game. One way that gain knowledge on the inexpensive side is to scour the internet, find relevant and interesting articles, see how it could fit into my life or the lives of others, then tell everyone that I know. In doing this, I often come across references to books, and instead of going to Amazon or eBay to see how cheap I can get them for, last year I dusted off my library card and went there instead.

This approach to furthering your education is often overlooked unless you are in public school or college. It seems that once you become a member of the “real world,” you are taught to buy items at retail so your local shopkeeper can take expensive vacations on your dime (then give you the honor of viewing the photos, how thoughtful). This extends to groceries, cars, dining out, and even reading. Take a look at how advertising has bamboozled all of us over the years:
These are just a few examples of what can be accomplished when you do not accept what society deems as “standard” and you challenge the status quo. When i found out about the wonders of the library and how it has evolved from when I was a kid, I was simply amazed. Libraries are starting to become your central location for anything media, and the best part is that you don’t have to pay for it! Check out some of the other benefits of using your library card:
There are many others, but some are specific to your local system, so check with them to be sure of all that’s available to you. in addition, don’t limit yourself to just one library system! These entities often work with each other, and there may be ways to get access to another system without having to pay a non-resident fee. The combined services of the library network can lower the total cost of living, while still providing you with the same quality of life that you have now (or better!). So yeah, you still may have to be quiet (and please place your cell phones on silent), but in the end, silently saving money this way is a hustle that many of us will want to shout about!

When it comes to precision, nothing is more important than when the doctor has the scalpel in his hand, ready to operate on his patient. Surgery is the time when no mistakes can me made, for there are precious lives at stake if the slightest slip occurs. This is why doctors go to school seemingly forever — so they can perfect their craft and actually know what they are doing when they get into that operating room.

This ain’t biology class, however.
The mindset, craft and skill that surgeons use on an almost daily basis is the same thing that you and I must have when doing the hustle (no, not the dance). Being “surgical” is so profound that it found its way into the lines recited by Denzel Washington in Training Day. Lately I have really been thinking about this in my daily grind, and it has helped immensely because I plan out things way in advance instead of waiting for the last possible moment, a.k.a. procrastination:
The money needed to be spent for the upcoming week.
The routes I take to get to the places I want to go.
The posts I do for this website.
The goals I have for the current year.
In doing this, it has truly maximized the amount of money I’ve saved, and also the amount I’m able to earn. For instance, holding yourself to a budget will allow you to almost predict with precision how much money you will have for bills, household expenses, fun, etc., instead of being surprised that the ATM will not give you any money when you stick your card in. You no longer live paycheck to paycheck because you know what you can and can’t afford, and you find that this “new lifestyle” offers you the ability to afford many of the things you want, and conversely, you find that you won’t want many of the things you previously did!
Huh?!

Yes, you will find that once you have the capacity to buy something or do something, it’s not as appealing as it once was, especially if it is a frivolous decision or purchase. It’s kinda like going to the grocery store when you’re not hungry: you tend to stick to your list more (your established goals) versus making impulse purchases (being frivolous, undisciplined). These lessons are not new, they have been all around us for quite some time now, but the only way they truly sink in is when you finally get tired of living life the way you have been, or when you tell your mind that it is time to do something different.
But that’s not enough.
Once you make this decision, you have to continuously tell yourself that this “new lifestyle” is really what you want, because you will have the tendency to fall back on what you know, what is familiar, what you have been doing for so long. This is a fancy way of saying you have to develop new habits that will lead you to the place that you want to go. Da Hustler did this over the past few months with the electricity bill. Tired of seeing the high energy usage and consequently, the higher bills, I decided to do something about it. Beginning in January, I decided to switch off the things I wasn’t using at the fuse box. All the rooms or items that weren’t in use, I decided to stop paying for the convenience of having them ready at all times. I also started checking my electricity meter everyday, one to be sure that the power company wasn’t getting over on me, and two to monitor my own usage. One would think that if the power company isn’t getting over, why monitor the usage? Well, once you know the average amount of energy you use in a day, you have a better chance of lowering your usage through conservation.
In addition to monitoring everything, I also looked at my past usage over the past six years and noticed the trends: more energy used during the winter (heating) and summer (cooling) months. Now because of where I live, this trend will not likely cease just because I have changed my habits, because humans want to be warmer when it is cooler and vice versa. I will still use more during these times than in the spring and fall, but I will use considerably less than I have ever used. And as the saying goes, less is more.
This is just one example of how you can be surgical, but I’ve noticed that once you start, you will want to do more, deciding that it’s not cool to give away money, but rather cool to make your money work for you. Cut your bills by any percentage, and place that money in a high-yield interest-bearing account such as ING (in fact, send me an e-mail, and I’ll send you a link to get you an extra $25 in your account when you deposit $250!).
Be surgical. Keep your money. Don’t allow decisions to be made for you. Make a better life for yourself. And to borrow yet again from Training Day: “The [ish] is chess, not checkers!”
