Original Orient Adventures

Jack of all, master of none, better than master of one

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From Survival Mode to Steady Ground

After I left the night job, I thought things would finally settle down.

No more energy drinks. No more dragging through the day like a zombie.

But the truth was, my mind was still stuck in overdrive.

Even though I’d gone back to working just my day job, I hadn’t adjusted my mindset or spending habits. I was still living like I had two incomes. I was buying out of impulse — small things here, big things there — and telling myself, “It’s okay, I work hard, I deserve it.”

Except… I couldn’t afford it anymore.

Not with only one paycheck.

Mental Fog & Money Blind Spots

What I didn’t realize right away was how much burnout affects your thinking.

I wasn’t sleeping right. I couldn’t focus. I wasn’t budgeting. I wasn’t planning.

I was trying to escape stress with spending — and it just made things worse.

It wasn’t like I was blowing money on huge luxury items. It was the little things:

Fast food, because I was too tired to cook. Random online purchases. Skipping bills for a week or two, thinking I’d “catch up” later.

Next thing I knew, my bills exploded.

Late fees. Overdrafts. Missed payments.

I was watching my progress slip away, and it felt like I was losing control — again.

Hitting Reset

The real turning point wasn’t one big dramatic moment.

It was a quiet realization: I couldn’t keep living like this.

I sat down and started doing what I hadn’t done in a long time — looking at the numbers.

I made a list of every bill I had. I pulled my credit report and checked my scores. I tracked what I was spending — not just rent and utilities, but the $7 here and $12 there that was eating me alive.

It wasn’t pretty. But it was honest.

And from there, I started building my bounce-back plan.

Rebuilding Basics: What Actually Worked for Me

I didn’t do anything flashy. I didn’t take a financial course or hire a coach.

I went back to my personal motto: K.I.S.S. — Keep It Simple, Stupid.

I was tired of overcomplicating things. I just needed to take small steps that I could stick to:

1. Make a Realistic Budget

I stopped trying to follow some perfect spreadsheet or “Instagram budget hack.”

I made a list of what I actually spend and started trimming what I didn’t need — even if it was just $25 here and there.

2. Stack Wins, Not Stress

Instead of trying to pay off every debt at once, I picked one — the smallest one — and focused on that.

When I paid it off, it gave me momentum to tackle the next one.

3. Use Cash & Auto-Pay

For things I kept forgetting (like subscriptions or utilities), I set them to autopay.

For everything else, I started using cash again — yes, actual bills in my hand — to stay disciplined.

4. Talk to My Wife About Everything

This was a big one.

We stopped hiding the stress from each other and started doing money check-ins.

No judgment. Just, “Where are we at, and how can we fix it together?”

Lessons Learned (the Hard Way)

You can’t outrun burnout with hustle. You’ll crash eventually — and the recovery takes longer than you think. Having two jobs isn’t always worth it. Especially if it costs your peace, health, and family time. You don’t need more money. You need a better plan. The mindset matters more than the paycheck.

Where I Am Now

I’m not all the way back yet.

But I’m standing on solid ground again.

My credit’s rebuilding.

My bills are getting paid — not all at once, but on time.

And for the first time in a long time, I feel like I can breathe.

I’m learning that life comes in waves — and climbing out doesn’t have to be fast, just forward.

Coming soon: Part 4 — Money Talks & Lifestyle Traps

How I’m learning to resist lifestyle creep and build a sustainable life I actually enjoy.


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3 responses to “Part 3: Climbing Out”

  1. mattlr Avatar

    There’s some good stuff in here! This is so true: —>>> “What I didn’t realize right away was how much burnout affects your thinking.” Cheers, and keep on. Matt

    Like

    1. Originalorient Avatar

      thank you and yes it can have some big affects

      Like

    2. Originalorient Avatar

      thank you and yes it can have some big affects

      Like

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