My friends north of us love to tease us about Florida winters. And honestly, fair enough. But we do get winter — it just comes in waves.
Every February we get a warm snap and think the cold is done. This year it hit 89 degrees. We were in shorts, windows open, convinced spring had arrived early. Then right before Easter the cold snapped back in, and this morning it was 39 degrees.
That's exactly what happens when you start getting your finances untangled.
Things are going smoothly. You paid off a credit card. You hit a new savings threshold. You finally feel like you're getting ahead. And then Murphy's Law kicks in — "If something can go wrong, it will."
This happens to everyone, because it happens to be life.
The answer isn't to avoid Murphy. You can't. The answer is to build a bigger buffer.
When you're living paycheck to paycheck, even a $20 school field trip can be a struggle. But when you build cushion, a $200 tire doesn't derail you. A $500 mistake doesn't change your month.
Here's a real example.
We needed a garage refrigerator — not our primary one, just something to keep drinks cold and run the spare freezer. I found one from a new subdivision for $500. The story made sense. They were upgrading to a bigger one. It looked brand new, beautiful.
From the moment I plugged it in, something was off. Over the next four or five weeks it just kept getting worse.
I called a repair guy. He pulled the back off and said, "Someone's already worked on this. The compressor's been replaced. There's nothing I can do." I was out $500.
Could I have gone back? Sure. Could I have blasted him on Facebook? Probably. But $500 didn't change my life at that point. Back in 2014 it would have.
That's the cushion we're building toward.
Not rich. Not perfect. Just stable enough that when Murphy shows up — and he will — it's an inconvenience, not a crisis.
What's your Murphy number? Drop it in the comments.