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Unfollow Your Friends

Why Unfollowing my Friends Helped my Finances

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For the last 15 months we’ve been paying off our $84,000 of consumer and student loan debt. We’re $60K down and have $24K to go. It’s been a combination of hard, easy, fun, annoying, and exhausting. There are times I wish we hadn’t taken out the loans, but I know we wouldn’t have the jobs and friends we love without them. So even in the arduous task of paying them back, I’m grateful.

Why Unfollowing my Friends Helped my Finances

 

In paying off our student loans in such a short amount of time I’ve learned a lot about myself, and our culture, that I may have never seen without this journey. I’m more aware of what I enjoy, now that I don’t mindlessly consume, and I’ve discovered a whole new skillset that’s giving me life! I’m also more aware of people’s poor spending habits, especially in my friends.

First, you should know I friggin love my friends, I don’t have siblings so I consider them my family. I’ve kept my best friends through college, marriages, moving hours away, and (so far) a pregnancy! (Not mine.) We’ve had our disagreements in the past but for the most part, they’ve been a joy to have in my life.

They’re also adventurous and like nice things. We used to share trips to theme parks, road trips, dinners at new restaurants, and fancy lattes at hip coffee shops. It was all lots of fun, but it all cost money, and our priorities have changed.

But just because we’ve changed doesn’t mean our friends did. And what used to be tags on Facebook and Instagram turned into a bad case of FOMO and me, balling my eyes out over a picture of doughnuts. (There may have been more to that story, but you get the picture.)

 

 

See, another thing we have in common is that they too have student loan debt, car loans, and credit cards. And it makes it even worse knowing I make more money than some of them. So here I am doing dishes, by hand, on a Friday night while they’re taking trips, seeing movies, and racking up bar tabs.

So I unfollowed them on Facebook and Instagram. I don’t have a Snapchat or I’d unfollow them there too. I didn’t defriend them, we’re still friends online and in real life. And it’s a good thing I don’t think they read my blog because I didn’t tell them I did this. I didn’t hash it out with anybody or try to get them to change, I just hit unfollow.

In the future, when seeing their insta-worthy lifestyles doesn’t make me want to gouge my eyes out, I’ll follow them again, but for now, ignorance is bliss.

I don’t see where they’re spending their money and it doesn’t make me jealous. Scrolling my Instagram feed doesn’t feel like a constant reminder I’m not living my best life now. (By choice.)

So if your friends are jet-setters, foodies, fashionistas or over-sharers I give you permission to unfollow them. You can still be great friends without subjecting yourself to GOMO (Guilt of Missing Out) and I bet your relationships will even improve as a result.

Unknowingly, our friends have turned into mini commercials for businesses and products with every post and check-in. Do you think it’s coincidence that social media marketing budgets have doubled in the last 2 years?  Companies spend billions of dollars on advertising via social media. For the most part, we’ve learned to tune out ads as a necessary annoyance to enjoy a free service.

When it comes to our friends, whom we love and we want to be more like, we care about the products they’re using and what they’re wearing. It’s not unreasonable to unsubscribe from emails to stores you like so you’re not tempted to spend money there.

So if your friend does a lot of stuff you wish you could do but don’t have the money for, why can’t you unsubscribe from them?

 

It’s better for you to hit unfollow then be constantly tempted by their “advertisements.”

Companies are intentionally spending more on “word of mouth” marketing, meaning they’re offering freebies for check-ins or pay regular people with moderate followings to take pictures and talk about their stuff. It’s a great strategy (I’ll post whatever you want for a freebie) but if it’s causing you to stumble in your finances, that’s no good.

Be cautious out there friends, it is possible to separate business from pleasure. If you have a goal, do what you need to do to get it done, even if that means cutting some virtual chords to ease the pain. It’ll all be worth it in the end when you’ve got money in the bank and maybe even get unfollowed yourself.

Unfollowing my Friends Helped my Finances

This Post Has 19 Comments

  1. I can totally see how this would be useful! I don’t spend much time on my private accounts (where my friends are!), but after having two babies in the past year, it would probably be very easy to want to do activities with them, that would now cost wayyy more. I think we could all be happier by focusing on what’s in front of us, in our own lives. Great post:)

    1. Amen Leighann! Thank you! It’s super corny but the best things in life really are free, and right in front of us. 🙂

  2. I can relate to this so, so, so much – we’re trying really, really, hard to save for our wedding while also paying off our car and it is ROUGH. We are on such a budget and every little thing I see online makes me envious! Lol, I feel like a crazy person sometimes!

    -Clarissa @ The View From Here

    1. Que the “crying over a picture of doughnuts” reference. I felt crazy too but you are so not crazy. Push through it Clarissa, it’ll be worth it in the end. And congrats on your upcoming wedding!!

  3. I’m all for this. I love it! In the social medial world, if it makes you feel bad/insecure/jealous – get rid of it and unfollow. Life is too short and we need to take control of what is being spoon fed to us. Friends are more important in person anyway.

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