Finding freedom from money


MINNEAPOLIS

Courtney Zinter doesn’t have a big house with rooms full of stuff, a fancy car or a manicure habit. But she still has it all. Just not how the Joneses next door would define it.

With a well-paying job, Zinter had no problem paying the mortgage on her 1,600-square-foot townhouse in Chaska, outside Minneapolis.

But at 29, she sold it and moved to a $590-a-month studio apartment that overlooks a freeway on the outskirts of downtown Minneapolis.

She could have certainly afforded a rental that had at least a bedroom and separate living space in a hipper part of town. But she didn’t because she’s realized something that it takes many people decades, if not a lifetime, to figure out: Money and stuff don’t equal happiness.

Growing up in Silver Bay, Minn., with a dad who worked as a financial associate for Thrivent Financial for Lutherans, Zinter, now 30, was schooled early on about the value of a dollar. And when she graduated from college in 2002, she followed in Dad’s footsteps, starting as a financial representative for the company.

With a job in place, she checked off the next thing on the “you’re an adult now” to-do list: homeownership.

“I thought the thing to do was buy a house as soon as I could. You grow up thinking that’s what you do,” she said.

The townhouse she found was spacious, complete with a wet bar and patio. But over the years, her two-hour bus commute to downtown Minneapolis gave her plenty of time to think “What am I giving up for this place?”

Then a trip to El Salvador in November 2008 for a Habitat for Humanity project made her realize just how many things she owned and how little most of it meant to her.

“I decided I had to make some changes in my life,” she said. So she sold her townhouse last fall for a bit less than she owed, found a home for her piano and gave away a lot of her things.

Courtney set a goal to find an apartment for $500 per month — $1,000 less than her old mortgage payment. (The new place isn’t quite that low, but she no longer needs a bus pass.) And that’s on top of her already impressive savings habits. She has more than $130,000 in retirement accounts, despite starting to invest during a decade when the stock market hasn’t been kind to aggressive young investors like herself. Her emergency savings is fully funded as well.

Her next journey? George Washington University law school, which she chose in part because it gave her $100,000, so she won’t have to choose her first gig as a lawyer based on whether she can afford her loan payments.

I like Courtney’s story so much because it reminds us that in these uncertain times, we can be mindful stewards of our money, using this limited resource to spend on what matters most and to make a difference.

Many of us only realize after we buy the big house and the closets of clothing and toys that we have too much stuff and too many financial obligations. Unwinding ourselves from the financial burdens of a big house payment or car lease can be difficult, especially in this economy.

Kara McGuire is a columnist for the Star Tribune in Minneapolis. Readers may send her e-mail at kmcguirestartribune.com or follow her on Twitter kablog.

2010, Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

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