Work Addiction Isn’t About The Money
Are you a workaholic? And if you answer “yes,” are you bragging or complaining? Workaholism is incentivized in our society. Work Addiction isn’t about the money.
Are you a workaholic? And if you answer “yes,” are you bragging or complaining? Workaholism is incentivized in our society. Work Addiction isn’t about the money.
An insight that is fundamental to financial therapy, which I learned over 20 years ago and often quote, is, “We can only go as far with our clients as we’ve gone with ourselves.” It comes from my friend and colleague Gayle Colman.
We tend to live in the same financial comfort zone as our friends, which is framed by similar money scripts. Your financial reality may not be reality.
One of the questions that I get a lot as a financial planner and a financial therapist is, “Will Social Security be there for me?”
Divorce is a much more than just the termination of a marriage. It’s a major financial event that can have repercussions in a person’s life for many years.
Here are the second part of Bari Tessler’s list of 21 things your Financial Therapist wants you to know part two. Actually I reduced it to 20.
Here are the first ten things your Financial Therapist wants you to know from part one.
What gives your life meaning? Physicians address physical/emotional wellbeing. We address emotional / financial wellbeing. True wellbeing requires all three.
What gives your life meaning? Physicians address physical/emotional wellbeing. We address emotional / financial wellbeing. True wellbeing requires all three.
Money skills requires knowing how to earn enough, spend wisely, save for future needs, protect your assets, maintain good credit, & build an emergency fund.