My Recipe for a Continuing Road to Financial Stability

Larry Biocarles
4 min readNov 26, 2021

An author’s personal approach to securing financial freedom.

I met my wife Hilda when I was in my early twenties. She was happy-go-lucky, even some would consider her to be spoiled. Because I saw her that way, I had this inkling that we would have a hard time agreeing on finances if in case we end up being together as a couple.

However, marrying her was a different story. Even at a young age (we were both 27 at the time) we were very mature when it comes to understanding the value of our hard-earned money. With her prodding and support, we were able to secure a house in the south, near our places of work. At 33, we were already fully paid with our house and is now working on the mortgage of our second.

Our Ingredients

All of what we’ve accomplished so far were result of plans and lessons learned that have stuck to us during this ongoing journey. Here are some of the many ways that enabled us to jump through the hurdles of our finances in our 30s and will certainly serve as our guide for the road ahead:

Save on high gain.

Early on, I tried to convince my wife to start saving money thru savings cooperative for military personnel and their dependents because unlike commercial banks, dividends plus interest rates can reach around 8% on average per annum. Now, our initial investment has more than doubled.

Picture of the logo of a savings and loan association where the author first invested in.

No credit card rule.

I’m not saying having one is bad, but it worked for us because we did not have the temptation to spend when we had none. Or you can look at it in a different way, like use it only when you really need it and not for your wants. And if you really need one, make sure you pay up on time.

Be free from bondage.

Nowadays owning your own house and having a car is very essential and but it would mean getting loans if you don’t have the funds to pay in full. For our case, we tried to pay up our house and car mortgages as soon as possible by using savings mostly from yearly bonuses. We’ve paid these debts in the middle of their respectively terms instead of enduring the whole duration of the plan. Doing so was always a relief!

That feeling of being free from financial obligations. Shackles off!

Secure your savings.

We knew we needed to be prepared for the unexpected, so we availed of health and disability insurance which would allow us to have a buffer to protect our savings in cases of emergencies. And for good measure, we picked an investment-linked type of insurance that would also provide us with a secondary source retirement fund in the future.

Educate yourself.

There are several avenues that are available for us to grow our savings or generate funds. During the first few years of my career in the semiconductor industry, I failed to recognize the importance of employee stock options that was part of my benefit. That was one of my regrets because instead of understanding it, I stayed hesitant about the unknown.

The same can be said about our investment-linked insurance because our decision was quite late, and it limited our opportunity to gain more on our portfolio. Looking back, I now believe that doing nothing was worse than failing.

Spend!!! Your Extras…

Our friends know us to be a couple that loves to travel, and it hasn’t changed a bit. We also frequently go on quick getaways and food trips whenever there are gaps on our busy schedules since we are both working in a fast-paced and demanding manufacturing setting. We sustain our travel-seeking urge by saving as much as we can so that there would be enough funds on top our planned savings which we call the extras, which are the main source for all our wants.

Picture of the author and his wife enjoying their “extras”.

What it Takes

More than the recipe, if there is one thing that was very instrumental on our road to financial security, I’d say it is discipline. We had plans and we stuck with it. We never stopped saving up to now. If there were doubts, we tried our best to understand the risks and gains beforehand. Doing so gives us the confidence to decide on any venture.

My wife and I believe that it is never too late to start saving both for the sunny and rainy days of our lives. Our ingredients may not work for everyone because fiscal approaches can be affected by several aspects of living and the routes to economic stability can also be fluid. But there is no denying, Now is always the best time to be financially literate.

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