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The Basics
Ready or not, I'm buying a house
"A Renters Story"
I did the math and
decided, like many people, to ignore the numbers and do what my gut
tells me. But I've also found a way to buy my first house without
walking off a financial cliff.
I have no business buying a house. I'm single.
I rent. I don't have a kid or a car or a dog. In short, I have no
earthly reason to buy my own home, except … I want to.
I've wanted a house since I was 5 years old.
It's a long story, but for some reason I got it into my little head that
my parents were going to buy a house in Williamstown, Mass., near my
grandmother. They weren't, but they thought it was pretty funny that I
was so clear about it. I didn't think it was funny. I was devastated.
And since my parents never did manage to buy a house, ever, at all,
anywhere, you could say that I never quite recovered.
So I'm buying a house.
Joining the real-estate bubble
I know. You think I'm just buying a house
because the entire country -- now cowering in fear at what the stock
market will do next -- is taking shelter in the seemingly safe bosom of
real estate. July new home sales topped a million for the first time
ever; a 15.4 % increase over last year. From June to July, new and
existing home sales combined jumped over 11%. In one month.
But my impulse to buy isn't part of the whole
real estate craze. This desire to own my own home isn’t about fear or
profit; it's far more ... primal. Elemental. Cosmic, even. People talk
about how single women in their mid-30s can hear their biological clocks
ticking. I think what I'm hearing is my real estate clock, ticking off
the roughly 270,816 hours since I saw that house in Williamstown, and
asking me what the heck I'm waiting for.
Besides, I finally have the money. At least I
thought I did, until I figured out what buying a home would do to my
budget.
Dancing with your demons
Whenever you're faced with making a big
commitment in either love or money, all your worst fears and biggest
neuroses rise up and overpower your common sense. So when faced with the
prospect of making a huge financial commitment like owning a house, I
resorted to old familiar habits like ... total denial! (Hey, it's worked
in the past.)
I conveniently "forgot" that owning a house,
especially an older house in upstate New York where the climate can be
quite unforgiving, means not just paying for the house, but paying for
all the repairs. Forever.
I conveniently "forgot" that buying a house
would require also buying a CAR. Which would require car insurance.
Moreover, most people would give up their
rental apartment to go live in the house, which is the principal
motivation to buy in the first place, right? But not me. Oh, no. Nothing
so practical. I'm going to keep both places.
Don’t hate me because I’m stupid
Look. My editor made me do the math, as he so
often does. If I were to take the money that I would invest in the house
over 10 years (minus repairs, plus appreciation, etc.), and compare that
yield to what the same amount invested in the stock market would get me
-- the stock market would be a better investment.
But a house is also a form of enforced
savings. Would I, on my own, be motivated (or frugal) enough to set
aside the equivalent of my $750 mortgage payment and invest it in mutual
funds every single month? No way. But I'd have a helluva wardrobe.
So as crazy as this sounds, it actually makes
more sense for ME to buy a house than pretend to save my money -- since
I would probably just spend it all. (Editor's note: Astute readers will
detect a world-class rationalization in the preceding sentence.) Sad,
but true. Know thyself, Socrates wrote. And I'm trying.
And now for some budget magic
This may sound a little kooky. But if you're
thinking of buying a house, let my example inspire you.
To my surprise, buying a house takes more
determination than money. I'd almost advise that you start to look, even
if you don't feel quite ready or financially prepared. It's like having
a kid. I don't think you ever feel financially prepared, so sometimes
you just have to rock on.
The house I fell in love with is $95,000, and
I'm putting down a measly $5,000. I didn't even HAVE that $5K when I
went house hunting the first time, but I was close. (I hope my
real-estate agent isn’t reading this.) Anyway, houses take a long time
to buy, and I've been saving like a madwoman ever since then. It's
incredible how many sacrifices you can make when the thing you want most
is within reach.
But all that bravado has its downside in my
tendency toward denial, as I mentioned. So to convince myself that I
could afford to both buy the house and keep renting, I had to do what so
many corporate executives have done in recent years: invent a whole new
system of accounting!
I've recently gotten an additional free-lance
contract, which promised a steady new revenue stream -- thousands of
extra dollars per year. I'm rich! With the resulting growth in EBIDTA, I
can reclassify prior-period earnings and justify expansion of the
physical plant!
Then I took my monthly income and subtracted
all my expenses:
- rent for my apartment
- mortgage on the house
- taxes
- utilities
- phones
- credit card payments
- living expenses
and decided I could live on the remaining $1,400 a month, no problem.
Unfortunately, that's what everybody does when they are creating a
budget that will never work.
Back to reality
The reason budgets created by subtraction
never work is that they aren't based on reality. People tend to count
only their regular expenditures and forget about those big ugly expenses
that crop up infrequently but with catastrophic regularity.
After resisting it for weeks, I finally sat
down with to work the numbers according to the method outlined in a
column on "the
60% solution," which is designed to take care of present expenses
AND provide cash for the unexpected. I recalculated my budget to see if
I could fit all of my regular living expenses and all my taxes into 60%
of my gross income, and then divide the remaining 40% up equally for
fun, retirement savings, irregular expenses and for major, long-term
expenses (like buying a car and repairing the roof).
And I couldn't make the numbers work.
That meant either:
- give up the house,
- buy the house but live on the edge of financial insanity (in which
case my editor would fire me, because then why am I here?),
- ask Martha Stewart if I can borrow some money,
- or bring in more cash.
I need the house
A certain amount of insanity comes into play
when you’re buying a house. I mentioned that my parents never bought
one. And that it has been 31 years since I first knew that I had to own
one myself or die. That conviction has only grown as I've watched my
parents pay ungodly amounts of rent -- with nothing to show for it.
I know that there are a dozen other more
sensible ways to buy my first house. I could bide my time, save my money
and eventually find another one. I could buy a house that I would live
in, instead of trying to own and rent at the same time. I think,
honestly, I’m afraid that if I wait any longer, another 30 years will
pass and I still won’t have a house.
So as hard as this decision is, financially,
I'm willing to take on a few additional writing assignments beyond what
I'll be earning with my new gig. These should bring in an extra $10,000
a year, which is basically what the house is going to cost me in
mortgage payments, taxes, insurance, etc.
I was a little depressed upon facing up to
this necessity. I thought my little raise would take care of the new
expenses, and it would, but with nothing left in the bank: no savings,
no emergency money, no cushion. Of course, this is how I was raised, so
it seems totally doable!
And maybe it is, but it's also a recipe for
ceaseless anxiety -- and it's a chance I don't want to take. So, yes,
taking on the equivalent of some part-time work seems reasonable. And
while it will be hard to give up my shoe-shopping fetish, I’m sure I can
channel those impulses into more productive ends.
Home Depot, here I come!
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