- Just thinking about the $1,000 that I spent this month that I won't be seeing again. All right, so this is my budget for the month, so at the top here we've got how much money I'm spending a month and then all of the bills and essentials and things we need to pay for. - So in my personal budget, I'm going to put my earnings, and I'm going to put my expenses, and then also I'm going to keep track of any savings I'm making so that I can work up towards something that I wanna get later on, which is a big cinema camera. - And I've found this app called Pocketbook, which is a really really good app. So it's completely free. What it is, it's essentially like that budget sheet that I wrote up, but it links with your bank account. So whenever you make a transaction, it automatically categorizes that payment into for example, if it was a bill, if it was groceries, if it was a health product, or whatever, and that's just a really good way of just keeping track of things without really having to do anything. - Just as a visualizer, it's really helpful to have. And now I can see where all my money's going and that'll help me save in the long term. - So I think the hardest thing about planning out my finances for the week was realizing that I actually spend a lot more money than I thought I did. And that I didn't have a conscious relationship with my finance and money. So that's something that I'm really excited to try, to think a bit more consciously when I'm spending and tapping. - I've never really budgeted before, I didn't find the motivation, I didn't think that I needed to. But, thinking now, after all of this, you just realize that was silly, because one, it's so easy, and two, this is a skill that you're going to have for the rest of your life, you're gonna need to know how to budget, whether you're rich or you're poor. Budget the way that works for you and make your budget work for you.