What if you were in a relationship with someone on
whom you depended for safety and security, but who caused you a lot of
worry? Someone who came and went un-predictably. Someone you couldn’t
live with, but couldn’t live without? How long would you want to stay
in that relationship without having a clear, direct talk about the
ground rules? Would you continue to put up with all that uncertainty, or
would you want to resolve things so you no longer got upset and anxious?
Like it or not, you have a relation-ship with
money. It’s an intimate liaison that bears witness to hopes and
dreams, insecurities and disappointments. We each have a unique bond
with it, based on our past experiences. We bring these experiences with
us whenever we deal with any aspect of our finances or money management.
A new year is always a good time to assess where
we are with relationships. Where have we been conscious, loving, and
nurturing? Where have we been unconscious, impulsive, inconsiderate or
self-absorbed? Where is there incomplete business that needs to be
cleared up in order for us to experience more ease and empowerment with
that friend or loved one? Have we missed any signals that all is not
well?
What if you used these same questions to assess
how you are doing with money? Powerful relationships are based on
clarity, integrity, trust and the desire to be present. What if you
dedicated yourself to demonstrating those qualities in your relationship
with money?
Alice is a woman I’d been coaching to develop
goals that had real meaning and resonance for her. Her primary reason
for not achieving goals was that she didn’t have enough money. Rather
than approaching this as a financial problem, we started looking at her
situation as a relationship issue. When she "woke up" to how
she was misusing money, everything started to turn around.
Alice "I finally saw that I was treating
money carelessly. At the same time, I’d wake up at night in a panic
that I wouldn’t have it around much longer. Considering it from the
viewpoint of a relationship put things into perspective for me. For
example, I looked at where I’d been frivolous and disrespectful with
money. I tracked every penny I spent for thirty days, just to see where
I was using money consciously or unconsciously. I saw that I was
spending $7.00 a day on cappuccino and croissants before I went to work
and that $7.00 a day times 220 work days was more than $1500 in
after-tax income!
"I’d been moaning about not having enough
money to go on a vacation, and hadn’t taken a trip in five years. I
thought money had been deserting me, but I was wrong. I’d been
deserting money. I’d been eating away my vacations at $7.00 a pop.
Well, I decided to buy treats on Mondays and Thursdays only, and put the
other $7.00 a day into a vacation savings account. It’s one year later
now, and I’m on my way to Club Med for my first vacation in six years.
Me and money? We’re very happy together now."
Alice is only one example of how people have
turned around their relationship with money. The first step is to look
at where you’ve not been awake to the possibility of having a vibrant,
alive, and even fun relationship with this powerful form of energy. You
are asleep when you have unfinished business with money—large or small
things that we know you should do, but that you haven’t yet completed.
Try these quick tips to getting your relationship
with money back on track
• Give your money the respect it’s due by
knowing how much of it you have. Balance your checkbook!
• Look at where you have neglected money. Even
if you feel anxious about doing this, remember when you wake up and
clear away unworkable money situations, you are much happier with your
money. So look at your credit card balances and see if it’s time to
put those cards away and give your money the rest it deserves.
• Find a good financial planner who, like a good
relationship counselor, helps you look at how you want to experience
money and then supports you in clearing away any blocks to having the
relationship with it that you truly want.
• Look at a goal you want money to help you
attain. This will be something you and your money can do together. For
example, do you have a dream of buying your own home? Taking voice or
scuba lessons? Going on a writer’s retreat? Hiking the Sierras? We
often become unconscious about money when we’re not using it for
something that has real meaning for us.
• Finally, become grateful about money.
Gratitude is a potent antidote to fear. Keep track of three things about
money for which you’re grateful each day, and write them in a notebook
you keep by your bed. List these three "gratitude’s" for
thirty nights. Then go back and read what you wrote. What are you
discovering about the possibilities for a powerful partnership between
you and money?
You were meant to have what you want in life with
clarity, focus, ease, and grace. Money is meant to support you on this
journey. It’s not something that is here to bring you grief or fear.
It’s here to be your friend. Are you up to having a powerful
relationship with money? If you start with these suggestions, you’ll
be well on your way.
Maria Nemeth, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist
and coach. Her Sounds True six-tape series, The Energy of Money, and
Mastering Life’s Energies seminars have helped thousands. www.marianemeth.com