December Splurges vs January Realities
Sleigh the season, not your savings
Therรจse Havenga, Head of Business Transformation at Momentum Savings, contemplates money decisions over the festive season.
Thereโs something about December in South Africa. The air smells like sunscreen and braai smoke, the shops hum with Mariah Carey, and suddenly, weโre all a little more generous โ with our time, our wallets and our waistlines. Itโs a season of joy, and rightly so. After a long year, we want to celebrate, spoil the kids, book the trip, buy the gift. We want to make memories that feel like a reward.
But hereโs the thing: January doesnโt care how festive December felt. School fees arrive. Debit orders kick back into gear. Credit card statements land with a thud. And many of us, despite our best intentions, dip into savings or delay retirement contributions just to stay afloat.
So how do we do December differently? Not with guilt or grim warnings, but with a little more intention. Because not all spending is bad. In fact, some of it is deeply meaningful: A road trip that reconnects your family. A gift that makes someone feel seen. A shared meal that becomes tradition. These are the things we remember โ not the extra gadget or the rushed mall spree.
Before you tap your card, ask: Will this matter in a month? In a year? If yes, go for it. If not, maybe pause.
You donโt need a financial overhaul to make December count. Just a few shifts can make a world of difference:
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If you get a bonus, skim off the top: Set aside 10% before you even look at it. You wonโt miss it, but your future self will thank you.
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Create a โmemory budgetโ: Plan for experiences, not just things. A picnic, a photo book, a day trip โ these often cost less and mean more.
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When it comes to giving, do it with heart, not pressure.
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Set a festive ceiling: Decide upfront what youโre willing to spend on gifts, outings and extras. Itโs easier to be generous when you know your limits.
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Start a tradition: Something that costs less but has a high impact. A handwritten note, a shared playlist, a sunset walk. These rituals often outlast the receipts.
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Make time: Isnโt giving someone some of your time the most expensive, authentic gift you can give? Especially to the young and the old.
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Track your joy, not just your spend: Jot down what made you smile this season. Youโll notice itโs rarely the most expensive thing.
Legacy doesnโt always arrive with fanfare. Sometimes itโs just a quiet decision made in a noisy month โ a small act of restraint, a moment of clarity, a choice to honour both the present and what comes after. December doesnโt have to be either joy or wisdom. It can be both. And you can celebrate without sabotaging January.
So go ahead โ braai, beach, bonus. Say yes to what matters. But let your spending reflect the kind of story you want to tell โ one that still makes sense when the sunburn fades, the inbox fills up and the debit orders start knocking again. Because the best stories are the ones where joy and foresight walk hand in hand.