Living Below Your Means: The Only Way to Build Freedom
For years, I thought “living below your means” was just a polite way of saying do without. Turns out, I couldn’t have been more wrong. What I eventually learned after charging my way into stress and sleepless nights is that living below your means isn’t about looking poor or feeling deprived. It’s about buying yourself options, confidence, and a whole lot of peace.
Real freedom isn’t being able to buy whatever you want today. It’s knowing tomorrow won’t ambush you. Living below your means puts you back in the driver’s seat. You decide where your money goes instead of wondering where it went.
And if that sounds harder than it should, you’re not imagining things. Recent research shows that more than one in four Americans now spend more than they earn, a sharp increase from just a few years ago. Even people with steady incomes are feeling squeezed, anxious, and stretched thin as everyday costs keep climbing. One national study found that nearly two-thirds of adults say thinking about their finances makes them stressful and for many, sleep suffers right along with it.
That pressure creates fertile ground for a very convincing lie: that credit is freedom.
The Moment Credit Stops Feeling Like Freedom
Being thought of as cheap was, to me, the ultimate insult. I equated frugality with digging through dumpsters in search of food and who-knows-what-else. Eeeooow!
Cheap people, in my mind, skipped out without leaving a tip. They were slovenly in appearance, lacking dignity and self-respect. Cheap people were just plain tacky.
So I charged my way through life, determined to prove to the world, and more honestly, to myself, that I was not cheap. Credit cards made it easy. I could have a $200 outfit and pay only $10 a month. I could fix up the house, treat the kids, drive nice cars, and look like I had it all together. And for a while, it worked.
You already know what happened next. By the time I came to my senses, that so-called freedom had turned into a trap. I wasn’t free at all. I had sold myself into bondage one dollar at a time.
What Frugality Really Means (And What It Doesn’t)
If the word frugality makes you a little squeamish, I understand. Truly. I’ve been there.
Frugality doesn’t mean you have to become someone you aren’t. It doesn’t mean embarrassment, deprivation, or scraping by. Frugality means doing whatever it takes to spend less than you earn. That’s it.
It’s about restraint, discipline, finding the best value, and not being wasteful. It’s about making choices and understanding that when you say yes to one thing, you may need to say no to something else. Most of all, it’s about deciding what really matters and letting go of the need to impress people who aren’t paying your bills.
Living Below Your Means Without Feeling Deprived
Living frugally doesn’t mean you stop spending money. It means you spend it on purpose. You still enjoy life. You just do it with intention.
That might look like fewer impulse buys and more experiences you actually remember. It might mean cooking more at home so travel, time off, or flexibility fits into the budget. The goal isn’t to squeeze all the joy out of life. The goal is to stop bleeding money on things that don’t add much joy in the first place.
When spending lines up with your values, frugality stops feeling like a sacrifice and starts feeling like common sense.
How This One Habit Protects Your Future Self
Why live below your means? Because the future is coming whether you’re ready or not.
You’ll need money to cover what’s ahead. You’ll want choices about when and whether you retire. You probably don’t want to work until you’re 90.
And retirement isn’t the only reason. Maybe you’ve got kids heading to college. Maybe you’re paying off credit card debt and want more breathing room each month. Maybe you’re craving flexibility, security, or the ability to handle surprises without panic. Living below your means quietly supports all of that.
A Practical Reset You Can Do This Week
If “living below your means” sounds abstract or overwhelming, don’t start by cutting everything. Start by interrupting autopilot.
Here’s a simple reset that works whether you love spreadsheets or avoid them altogether:
- Pick one recent month and look at where your money actually went. Not to judge… just to notice.
- Circle the expenses that didn’t improve your life at all. The forgettable ones. The “why did I buy that?” ones.
- Choose just one of those to pause for the next 30 days. Not forever. Just long enough to feel the difference.
That’s it.
Living below your means doesn’t start with deprivation. It starts with awareness. One small, intentional change is often enough to restore a sense of control—and that control is where freedom really begins.
Question: What’s one expense you cut that actually made your life better, not worse? Share in the comments below.















I get paid 2 time a month. So, I have 2 Small recipe (blank).
I right down my Tithe and them my Bills, Grocery’s, Milk, Gas for my Jeep, Rent Dr’s app ( if I need it) And Water. ( Get get water to drink) .
And I always have some money in the bank.
I also have a Saving bank where say If I we move, I would use that money to move.
I
Want what you have.
Buy what you need.
Thrifting is good for our Mother
Earth.
Reuse and Repurpose instead of buying new.
We have been heating our home
With wood for the last few years and it has saved us a ton. Hard work? Yes it is but we don’t mind. We are both in our mid 60’s and retired. We have never cut down a tree to burn – we take what farmers ask us to – trees that have fallen in their fields. We clear out pastures to save cows from tripping on the downed trees and breaking a leg. Hard work but we love it. If we rest, we rust.
Great advice to follow!!
Thank you!
One course in high school that needs to be mandatory for graduation is that ofconsumer science and money management. If your school district or home schooling group is not teaching this, they should. The parents should be ultimately responsible for seeing that their kids ‘gets this’ before turning them out into this fiscally irresponsible world.
I quit falling for the ‘rewards’ a while back. It was too hard to keep up with, I ended paying money to use the rewards and sometimes it didn’t apply when I tried to use it. If it’s not a percentage off something I already want/need or included w/ something I already use, I don’t bother.
That designer top slashed to $20 isn’t cheap if you charge it and can’t pay it off at the end of the month. Seems obvious. But people get all tangled up in thinking about “cash-back dollars,” airline points, easy-pay on TLC, etc. Soon they are in quicksand and are paying way more than bottom dollar for just about everything they own — car, clothes, furniture, appliances and doodads galore. Pitiful. I don’t know how some people sleep at night.
Thank you Mary! You really struck a nerve with me on this article. My husband and I have learned the hard way how to live below our means. Two years ago we were eating out 3 or 4 nights per week, taking long weekend trips, buying things we wanted instead of what we needed. All that stopped when my husband lost his job and we had to live on 1 income. Thanks to you, we had an emergency fund with which we paid bills but after a few months that was gone. We shopped with coupons, at discount grocery stores, farmers markets and learned to stock up and freeze weekly grocery specials. I made laundry detergent and we made vanilla from your recipe from Christmas gifts. We bought a Roku and an antenna and cut out the $150 monthly cable bill. We cut out smart phones and our cell phone bill dropped to less than $50 monthly. We are still chipping away at a few credit card bills but we have paid off a few so we’re slowly getting out of debt.
The past 2 years have been an eye opener for us and as our finances improve, I don’t see us returning to our wasteful spending from the past. Eating out will be for special occasions and we won’t go back to cable. We will continue making Christmas gifts because our homemade Christmas was the best one we’ve ever celebrated. Our grown children, family and friends loved their gifts.
Thank you so very much for all the awesome advice you’ve shared with us over the years!