How to Change Your Holiday Money Story
LifestyleSpendingWellness
Twinkling lights are appearing. Familiar songs waft through stores. Sugarplums and family gatherings and gifts are just around the corner …
Meanwhile: who turned up the volume on my Money Story?
Money affects all of us, every single day. On the emotional level, the practical level, the interpersonal level, the spiritual level … all of it! And during the holidays, our “money stories” can get a little louder: more prominent, more joyful, and often — let’s admit it! — more challenging.
First: What’s a “Money Story”?
In my work as a Financial Therapist, I often refer to “money stories.” Simply put, your money story is the entirety of your relationship with money. It’s unique to you, and includes the whole shebang: the historical facts of your financial life, your beliefs and behaviors around money, inherited patterns from your family, and all the sensations and emotions that get stirred up in this terrain.
Your Holiday Money Story is a Small Slice of this Larger Money Story.
It revolves around the finances of the holiday season, which is typically full of relatives, gifts, and family traditions. All that good stuff! And all that painful stuff, too.
Often, the money stories that arise for us during the holidays are identical to the issues that we carry around with us the entire year. But for many people, the holidays bring them to the surface in a particularly poignant, pointed way.
This holiday season, what if you chose to give yourself — and your holiday money story — a big dose of gentle, loving awareness? Take a moment, take a breath, and ask yourself …
Are Any of These Part of YOUR Holiday Money Story?
- Stressing out over how much money you must or “should” spend on gifts.
- Feeling shame that you don’t have enough money to give many meaningful, great gifts.
- “Going unconscious” around your spending by not monitoring your account balances when you’re shopping.
- Refusing to create a budget for holiday gifts — or not staying mindful of your spending as you create and check off your gift list.
- Going along with your family’s patterns of activities, spending, or money stories — even though they might not work for you anymore.
- Feeling afraid, anxious, ashamed, or angry about broaching money conversations with friends and family members.
Any of that sound familiar? You are SO not alone. While the details are always unique, I’ve seen these patterns in hundreds of people over the last 12 years, as I’ve helped them with their money relationship. (I’ve seen these patterns in myself, too!)
Un-Wrap Your Hidden Gift
The holidays can feel like a wild financial ride. Thoughts, emotions, and patterns around money can be more intense and challenging now than at any other time of the year.
But here’s the silver lining: because your money issues are so raw, so right on the surface, the holidays can be the perfect time to bring some healing awareness to your money relationship. Plus, if you shift your holiday money story, you’re setting the groundwork for a healthier, happier relationship to money for the coming year … and beyond.
Ready for a New Holiday Money Story?
Got a holiday money story you’d love to shift? Ready to feel some more control and ease this holiday season?
Here’s how to start: bring awareness to the pattern. (It may sound simple, but don’t let that fool you — this is square one!)
Here’s why this is so important: our spending habits are often driven by unconscious emotional and behavioral patterns. Bringing these out of the shadows and into the light is the first, fundamental step in gaining some clarity and control.
My Favorite Tool: The Body Check-In
The simple process of pausing, noticing, and allowing your present-moment experience is what I call a “body check-in.” It’s an elegant, powerful tool you can use in any moment to bring more awareness to your money story.
You could even give it a go right now, as you’re reading this. Pause for a moment. Notice the experience you’re having as you read. Get curious. What’s happening within you right now? What body sensations, emotions, thoughts, or memories are arising?
Maybe you’re feeling excitement and anticipation. Maybe there’s a tightening in your chest: stress, anxiety, or even dread. Perhaps there’s guilt sadness or anger. Maybe your emotions are quiet, but you see a vivid slideshow of past holiday gatherings in your mind’s eye. Memories of the magic and anticipation on the night before Christmas. That year when you had no money for gifts, so you made them by hand. Confusion about why people in religious traditions other than your own spend so much money on gifts during the holidays, when that wasn’t a big part of your childhood.
These emotions, thoughts, and memories are great clues that can begin to shed light on your own unique holiday money story. Just be with them for a moment — without needing to change them.
This awareness and understanding begins to open up space for new choices. And the more intimate you become with your money story, the more access you have to the clarity, energy, and motivation needed to shift it.
Body check-ins are a wonderful, simple way to begin transforming your relationship with money, so it becomes more conscious, mature, supportive, satisfying, and–yes!–even fun. And remember: you can do them anywhere, any time. As you make a holiday gift list. In the checkout line. Around the dinner table. When things are feeling joyful and wonderful — and especially when things are feeling challenging!
Integrating Inner and Outer Money Worlds
Now you have a powerful tool — The Body Check-In — to navigate the inner aspects of your holiday money story. (High five!) This isn’t the whole story, though. The inner world is where things begin — but it’s not where they end.
When it comes to money, our inner worlds (emotions, thoughts, beliefs — often unconscious) drive our external reality: buying, spending, earning, saving. And during the holidays, this often means gifts: physical, digital, handmade, expensive, thoughtful — the whole spectrum.
So How Do You Navigate This Outer Realm with More Clarity and Confidence?
Keeping in touch with your numbers is hugely important here. Just like bringing awareness to your inner emotions and thoughts is the first step in shifting your inner money relationship, being mindful of your numbers (actually looking at them) is the first step in shifting your outer money relationship.
Your bookkeeping software is a highly personal choice, and there are great tools out there for you. It could be Quicken, Quickbooks, Mint, iBank, YNAB or the new breed of mobile banking apps like Moven.
Moven, in particular, is an amazing tool to help you bring more mindfulness to your spending, since the goal of mindfulness around your money is baked right into the software itself.
Moven shows you exactly where you’re at, in real-time, in specific spending categories: groceries, clothes, gifts, etc. So when you’re out and about, buying those holiday gifts (or anything else), Moven keeps you exquisitely aware of where you’re at in each of those categories. Right when you most want to (and need to!) be aware of your spending behavior.
Using smart financial software tools like this helps integrate the outer world of spending money with the inner world where our emotions and thoughts — and fresh goals — around money happen.
By combining tools like the Body Check-In and financial software like Moven, you’re giving yourself phenomenal power to create real change in your holiday money story — and your entire relationship to money, all year long.
Bari Tessler Linden, M.A. is a Financial Therapist, Mentor Coach, Mama-preneur, and the Founder of The Art of Money, a year-long money school. Bari holds a Masters in Somatic Psychology from Naropa University and was steeped in the body-centered therapy field for over a decade. She is currently leading a global conscious money movement, The Art of Money, which weaves together personal, couple and entrepreneurial money teachings into one complete tapestry. To learn more about The Art of Money 2014, which is now open for registration, and to enjoy more of Bari’s money articles visit: http://baritessler.com
1 Comment
Our inner dialogue/script absolutely designates our reality- financial and otherwise. I think you’ve mapped out some excellent strategies for bringing mindfulness to the spending process to create a better financial future.