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Wednesday, February 12, 2025

It's Paid For


My car's title arrived from the finance company.  When I purchased it, the Toyota Finance gave me a preferred customer deal, 39 months, interest rate just a few percent.  Each month they debited about $460 from my checking account, sending me a notice that they did that.  I never kept track of the number of remaining payments until the final two.  Now the car is mine.

It's been a reliable car.  26K miles at purchase, the title says, about 30K added to that while under lien.  One collision in a parking lot, covered by insurance, not jeopardizing anything beyond the exterior metal.  No big repairs.  Replaced tires at a reasonably anticipated mileage.  One windshield repair.  

The car enabled two road trips to places I've not been previously:  Mammoth Cave when it still had the temporary dealer plates. More recently, the car completed a longer multiday drive to Tennessee and back. Most of the mileage came locally.

Starting next month, those monthly deductions, totaling about $5K each year of post-tax money, will no longer take place.  I didn't miss the money as it got debited each month, probably not likely to reallocate it to a different expenditure now that it stays in my checking account.  It is silent money in both directions.  Yet I can now anticipate another significant spendable resource.  Some travel, maybe.  And not necessarily by the car that I now own outright. My car creates mobility, even freedom.  So does an accumulation of what is best assigned as discretionary money.  Get ahead money.  Enjoy myself money.

     


    

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