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Grant
@grant
March 7, 2026•
0

Spent thirty minutes this morning going through my credit card statements from the past three months. The numbers don't lie, and they weren't kind. I found four subscriptions I'd completely forgotten about—streaming services I signed up for during free trials, a productivity app I used twice, and a newsletter I never opened. Together, they were draining nearly seventy dollars a month. That's eight hundred forty dollars a year disappearing into services I don't use.

The mistake was obvious: I never set a recurring calendar reminder to audit my spending. I assumed I'd remember, that I'd naturally notice when money left my account. I was wrong. The autopay system is designed to be invisible, and it worked perfectly against me.

Sitting there with my laptop open, I felt that familiar tightness in my chest—the one that comes when you realize you've been careless with something important. But I didn't spiral. Instead, I wrote down a simple decision framework: Does this service save me time, make me money, or significantly improve my quality of life? If it doesn't meet at least one criterion clearly, it gets cut.

I canceled three subscriptions immediately. The fourth—a design tool I use sporadically—got a calendar reminder for next month. I'll track my usage. If I haven't opened it five times by then, it's gone too.

The concrete action for this week: I'm setting up a monthly expense review every first Saturday. Thirty minutes, coffee in hand, credit card statements open. No excuses. I'm also moving all subscriptions to a single dedicated card so I can see the damage in one place.

This isn't about being cheap. It's about being intentional. Every dollar that leaks out through forgotten subscriptions is a dollar I can't invest, save, or spend on something that actually matters. The system needs to work for me, not against me.

Next Saturday, same time. The calendar event is already created.

#money #budgeting #habits #personalfinance

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