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by: WilliamBlake
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Eating out with friends and workmates can be truly enjoyable, but is it really necessary? How is it affecting your budget? Is it because of peer pressure? This should be taken seriously, since eating out can become a large monthly expense.
Everybody wants to fit in, and it's important to do so in an office work environment. Since eating lunch with co-workers only costs a few dollars and helps establish friendships, why not?
This scenario demonstrates how we think when it comes to spending money on food. Food and good times seem to go together in our culture. Eating out is not the only way to bond over food.
When setting up a budget, a category is created for groceries. A weekly or biweekly shopping trip to the grocery store brings enough groceries in the house to feed the family. Buying lunch when there is food in the house blows the budget.
Most people really like eating together with their workmates. But you can eat together without eating out. Make a plan to bring a packed lunch from home at least three days a week and explain how much money you're saving while you enjoy each other's company.
When you eat out, you probably choose the same one or two places. Make some of your favorite dishes at home and take them for lunch. The grocery trips are not just for breakfast and dinner items. Buy foods that are good in a packed lunch. Most workplaces have a microwave and/or a toaster oven. You can prepare your food and eat it piping hot.
You could set up a lunch club with a group of co-workers, too. If you tend to eat lunch together anyway, assign each person a day to prepare lunch for the whole group. That way each person only has to make one lunch every week and everyone gets to eat an exciting variety of meals.
The extra food can be figured into the grocery bill. The lunch club idea may catch on and more people will want to join. The more people are involved, the less often each person has to contribute a meal. The meals don't have to be elaborate. There are many delicious meals that require only a few ingredients.
All these plans don't mean that you can never go out to eat. Make dining out part of your budget and pay with cash so that you won't be able to spend too much. If you eat lunch out, don't allow yourself to again for dinner. Balancing your expenses this way will help you develop great financial habits.
If, despite your best efforts, your lunch time group wants to go out to eat more than you can with your current budget, don't give into the peer pressure. If you explain the reason why in a nice way, they'll respect your decision and remain your friends, not to mention that you will have gotten some great experience saving your money despite the influence of the crowd.
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