haha
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
finally got around to using Microsoft Money. I believe it has helped me with one of my most difficult areas-staying within reasonable spending limits.
I found that it is not exactly obvious what is leisure when you are retired. I classify an activity as leisure if it isn't directly related to survival. If I enjoyed painting my house, that would still not be a leisure expense. If I took a still life painting course, even if I hated it, I would classify it as leisure.
The only thing I wasn't sure of was my pool membership.
I love swimming even more than eating. Still, I think if I weren't convinced of it's health benefits, I might let it go if I were really tight on money. So I did not count it as leisure, I counted it as health.
So with that out of the way, here are my average monthly expenses in leisure and it's separate categories.
Books.......................$47.25
Drum Equipment......$86.88
Entertainment..........$103.25
Lessons....................$70
Videos(rent)..............$1.13
Sporting Goods.........$20
CDs, Players, etc.......$54.13
Total..........................$382.63
Books will be less going forward becaue I have gotten a lot more serious about using the library. A lot of the books are drum books, transcriptions etc. If I buy an investment book, I count it as investment expense, not leisure. CD spending should lessen, again thanks to the library and the miracles of modern electronics.
Also, I bought an MP3 player this year.
Lessons are drum lessons, and a few Cuban salsa lessons.
Entertainment is my spending in bars, dances, clubs, plus an occasional movie. I don't go out to eat, or take people out to eat. If I fix food for a group, I still call it a food expense, feeling that it will probably eventually come back as food. If I were to buy an espresso it would go in the leisure category. But I do this rarely.
If I serve someone a drink at home, it isn't counted as leisure. if I buy someone a drink in a club it is. The wine I buy for home is not leisure.
I would be interested in hearing about how others define what is leisure spending, as well as how much and in what fashion different people spend in this category . BTW, all the above are for one person, although some of it may be for the pleasure of another. It is still MY leisure spending.
If I took a trip for any purpose other than a wedding, funeral, or to make money, it would be leisure. However, I haven't gone anywhere this year.
Mikey
I found that it is not exactly obvious what is leisure when you are retired. I classify an activity as leisure if it isn't directly related to survival. If I enjoyed painting my house, that would still not be a leisure expense. If I took a still life painting course, even if I hated it, I would classify it as leisure.
The only thing I wasn't sure of was my pool membership.
I love swimming even more than eating. Still, I think if I weren't convinced of it's health benefits, I might let it go if I were really tight on money. So I did not count it as leisure, I counted it as health.
So with that out of the way, here are my average monthly expenses in leisure and it's separate categories.
Books.......................$47.25
Drum Equipment......$86.88
Entertainment..........$103.25
Lessons....................$70
Videos(rent)..............$1.13
Sporting Goods.........$20
CDs, Players, etc.......$54.13
Total..........................$382.63
Books will be less going forward becaue I have gotten a lot more serious about using the library. A lot of the books are drum books, transcriptions etc. If I buy an investment book, I count it as investment expense, not leisure. CD spending should lessen, again thanks to the library and the miracles of modern electronics.
Lessons are drum lessons, and a few Cuban salsa lessons.
Entertainment is my spending in bars, dances, clubs, plus an occasional movie. I don't go out to eat, or take people out to eat. If I fix food for a group, I still call it a food expense, feeling that it will probably eventually come back as food. If I were to buy an espresso it would go in the leisure category. But I do this rarely.
If I serve someone a drink at home, it isn't counted as leisure. if I buy someone a drink in a club it is. The wine I buy for home is not leisure.
I would be interested in hearing about how others define what is leisure spending, as well as how much and in what fashion different people spend in this category . BTW, all the above are for one person, although some of it may be for the pleasure of another. It is still MY leisure spending.
If I took a trip for any purpose other than a wedding, funeral, or to make money, it would be leisure. However, I haven't gone anywhere this year.
Mikey