Good credit is a valuable tool. It has saved my butt several times. My ex-wife would run up credit debt for un-neccesary things, like elaborate Christmas gifts and birthday gifts to people who we barely knew. Also way too many dresses and shoes. She has continued this pattern and is now on her third husband.
Rather than making payments on an expensive fairly new car, buy a 5-10 year old vehicle with good fuel mileage and a good reliability record. Concentrate on paying it off. Keep it till it absolutely dies. (I currently have a 1991 Toyota 4-cyl, wife has a 2000 Nissan, both paid for and show no sign of dying) No car payment, good gas mileage, insurance is low. A 2-job family should have 3 cars, so that when one car has an issue, there is no panic, and you don't spend a lot because you NEED it fixed quickly.
Move close to a good job, or get a job close to a good home. I am currently 5 miles from my job, a perfect range for an e-bike (weather permitting). I did well on a California house, and instead of a minimal down payment, I made a very large down-payment on a small house in Utah. Home prices have retracted, but since my house payment was cheaper than rent, my wife and I were able to survive comfortably on unemployment for a few months while we looked for work.
Many people who had a large house payment didn't have that option, and now have lost any down payment and equity they may have had when they were forced to "walk away" from their house.
Not having a car payment (or any debt) and living close to my work has given such peace and freedom. I've found work in Kansas, and homes are affordable, my goal is to find a house I can pay cash for (bank repo?) and though I'm certain it would not be impressive or luxurious, it will enable me to survive an uncertain future.