When was the last time scrolling through Instagram made you feel better?
If you鈥檙e like me, the puppy photos on your feed momentarily boost your mood, but the parade of carefully selected and artfully edited experiences leaves you feeling depleted. How can these people afford to travel to New Zealand? When will it be your turn to road trip along the Pacific Coast Highway, drinking wine on sunlit rooftops along the way?
You know by now that social media leaves out the fender benders, arguments and weather mishaps essential to any vacation. You can add financial faux pas to that list.
A full 48 per cent of U.S. households have credit card debt, according to a recent NerdWallet analysis. The average household with debt carries $6,929 in balances from month to month, which means paying about $1,141 in interest per year.
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You can鈥檛 really know how much money your friends have. But it鈥檚 safe to say that at least some of them may not be able to afford the trips that make you feel inferior without going into credit card debt. Here鈥檚 how to keep Instagram from bullying you into overspending.
FIND THE SOURCE OF YOUR FOMO
If a friend鈥檚 vacation photo really got under your skin, explore why. The destination or trip itself may not be the source of that FOMO, or fear of missing out. Has it been a while since you鈥檝e taken time off work, and you鈥檙e resentful of how relaxed this person seems? Are you jealous of how close they appear to their partner or friends?
There could be ways to ease your anxiety for free, without vacationing at all. Consider scheduling a mental health day and going to a local museum on a day with free or reduced-price admission to get your mind off work. Round up friends interested in starting a book club or hiking group that meets monthly so you can feel part of a community.
VACATION FOR CHEAP
If travelling is what you crave, plan a debt-free vacation by estimating how much you鈥檒l spend on transportation, lodging, meals and activities and saving that amount in advance. Some online savings accounts let you create sub-accounts for specific purposes, so setting aside money each month for travel means you save passively over time.
But if you haven鈥檛 been saving and need a getaway stat, stay flexible on dates and locations and use price-tracking apps to find hotel and flight deals. Consider staying local and taking a short road trip to an attraction in your area you鈥檝e never been to. Split an Airbnb nearby with a group of friends and spend a weekend doing activities that don鈥檛 involve screens, like playing cards, exploring nature and making art.
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Credit cards aren鈥檛 always the enemy; with a good credit score and a commitment to paying off your balance each month, you can get a rewards card that lets you earn points or cash back that will subsidize future trips. Be realistic about your ability to spend responsibly and avoid carrying a balance, though. The interest you could end up paying, and the anxiety that comes with ballooning credit card debt, can quickly erode any post-vacation glow.
CUT BACK ON SCROLLING
There鈥檚 another, potentially nuclear-sounding option to prevent social media-influenced spending: Don鈥檛 look at Instagram at all.
You don鈥檛 have to go cold turkey. You can continue to post your own photos or communicate with friends via direct message, but rein in mindlessly perusing other people鈥檚 feeds. Start by setting a goal to wait until noon to open the app, or choosing two specific times of day to check it. Like any behaviour you鈥檙e trying to change, it will be hard at first, but you鈥檒l likely be surprised by how little you miss the app. Fill the time you get back with activities you enjoy.
The ideal outcome? Making plans and choosing travel experiences based on what makes you happy, not on a highly filtered version of someone else鈥檚 life.
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This column was provided to The Associated Press by the personal finance website NerdWallet. Brianna McGurran is a writer at NerdWallet. Email: bmcgurran@nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @briannamcscribe.
Brianna McGurran, The Associated Press
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