I love your money saving tips. I think they are practical and realistic, based on the actual way people live.
Yeah, it's like dieting - it has to be something you can do for the long term, not just a short term fix that you over-do and then relapse on. With TV you end up watching some things out of habit, just because there is nothing better on
Stop.
Have a look at some of the fantastic documentaries that are available (just watching Oliver Stone's "The Untold History of the United States" and it's amazing) or older shows that you can binge watch.
Stop credit diarrhea and borrowing money
This is the key to me. Zero has a negative gravity. The further your bank balance is away from it in either direction, the harder it is to get to it and cross over.
Save money, then get paid for having money. Don't give in to the addictive "shopping" satisfaction that is transient especially if you do it on credit - calc the real cost of the items you buy based on what you end up paying PLUS the opportunity cost of what that money could have earned you (and bought you later after it had grown).
Look at the old phone gathering dust in the draw (better yet, sell it) ... remember how much you paid for it? However shiny and amazing the new one is, it will end up like that.
Sounds as though your cable phone service was already a reasonable amount.
$18 is quite a lot when you consider that they basically just give you VOIP anyway. They hide the expense by pretending to give you a discount for having multiple services but really you pay for it.
I never tried Magic Jack. Ooma seems to work OK, esp if you put it between your internal router and your modem so it can prioritize traffic (and QoS is finicky and funny to setup - you need to set the right bandwidth amount for it). I did try the WiFi adapter with it but it wasn't as good quality / latency wise (too many internal devices competing). I could have lived with it but it made sense to just move things and forced me to tidy up some wires.
My internet is dodgy, so programs load slow, but I'm used to it now...and saving $70 a month.
Netflix now lets you download things to watch rather than having to stream them. If you have a lower speed or quality internet service it might makes it a viable option and more watchable.
... so that is another savings of $25 per month
For me, it it's the monthly amount spread over 5 years. You forget about it and it adds up. Bundles are priced to make you think you're getting a bad deal if you pay $50 for 10 channels you watch vs $75 for 11 channels you will watch + 39 more that you won't (and the bundle choices deliberately complicated to make you punt and go for the ready-made option).
That $25 may not sound much ... but per month, over 5 years, it's $1,500 even before you earn any interest for it.
So reverse it - imagine someone will pay you $1,500 to not watch a couple of channels. Hells yeah I'll switch over!