Life Kit - The Emotions Behind Money
Episode Date: March 29, 2021Money isn't just about numbers. It's about emotions, too. Tiffany 'The Budgetnista' Aliche's new book unpacks the relationships we all have with finances so you can make the most of your cash.Learn mo...re about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is NPR's Life Kit. I'm Andi Tegel, one of the producers of this show,
and today we're going to talk about money. More specifically, we're going to talk feelings about
money. Hopes and fears, guilt and shame, and the significant role they play in your financial life.
Feeling uncomfortable yet? Good, then we're in the same boat.
I've never been great with money,
a trade I often blamed on being too busy or perpetually poor math skills,
or a weakness for convenience and good sample sales.
But, of course, my dilemma is more complex
than just a bad relationship with algebra.
Money is more mindset than coins,
than dollars and coins.
That's Tiffany Aliche.
Much better known as the budgetnista.
I like to say I'm America's favorite financial educator.
If not, at least your favorite financial educator.
In addition to being one of LifeKit's favorite financial educators,
Aliche is the author of the new book, Get Good With Money.
It's a super practical guide to getting your financial house in order
to achieve what she calls financial wholeness in 10 steps.
Budgeting, savings, debt, credit, learning to earn, investing, insurance, net worth, getting your financial team in place, and estate planning.
The first five are super, super, super foundational.
And then the next five build upon those first five.
Her book dives deep into each one of these topics.
But Aliche says this process begins with understanding your own financial identity
and the many feelings and environmental forces that shape it.
For Aliche, conversations about money have been front and center her whole life.
Like kids had sweet 16s.
But at 16, we walked to the bank down the street
to open up our first joint bank account with my parents. And so I just grew up not having kind of
like hangups about money because it was normal conversation. I was like, you guys don't have
money talk Thursday nights? Not all of us might've been so lucky, but we can all, says Aliche,
get good with money. We just have to get good with our feelings first. In this episode of Life Kit,
tips for accessing your emotions around money and learning to strengthen your financial voice.
You talk about how you used to live in this state of financial fear.
And you say that financial wholeness is the cure to that
financial fear or to financial trauma. And I love that idea, financial wholeness. How do you define
it? How do you define that term? Let's start there. I define financial wholeness when all
aspects of your financial life, and there's 10 that we lean into truly. So when all of these 10
aspects of your financial life are working congruently
for what I like to call your greatest good, your biggest benefit, and your richest life.
Greatest good, biggest benefit, richest life. It's really smart.
Yes. I would say financial freedom is for the few, but financial wholeness is for everyone.
It doesn't matter how much you make. It doesn't matter what you do for a living. It doesn't matter how old you are. Financial wholeness can be achieved by everyone. And so
it's just a holistic view of what to do with my money and how to maximize and make the most of it.
So financial wholeness is really about making sure you have a strong foundation for wherever
you're at. Wherever you're at. It's not about being a millionaire. It's about
just making sure wherever you're at, you have an appropriate foundation. You have the appropriate
pillars in place. Exactly. Because from there, then you can build. What's so great about financial
homeless is that it is like the prerequisite to the rest of your financial life. If you get that
solid foundation, like I grew up with a solid foundation.
So as a result, even though like I lost my first condo to foreclosure and I lost my job and I had
the scam happen, I'm here and stronger than ever before because of that financial foundation. And
now I pass that gift on to y'all through Get Good With Money. I want to talk a little bit about the emotions behind money. I loved what you
had to say about money messaging and being aware of the influences in our life that might affect
our habits and in our financial voice. I know in my own life, for example, I immediately thought
about how my dad was always super, super frugal. He'd ask for discounts wherever we went. That's a really valuable skill.
But as a kid, I just remember feeling so embarrassed. I just remember turning beet red.
And so now as an adult, I just have zero haggling ability, just none at all. And probably I'm worse
off for it. So how do we break those habits? So one of the things I illustrate in the book is
that one, bravo to you, Andy, for acknowledging that you see that habit. So that's first. You
can't break something that you don't acknowledge and see. So teaching folks to see, one, what is
the habit that I'm seeing in myself, you know? Then two, exploring where it came from. And so
like bravo to you again of recognizing like, ah, this is from dad, you know.
And then three, practicing in a safe environment.
So what I would tell you, Andy, is that like, okay, don't worry about like the financial
haggling for now.
You know, likely if you are not haggling financially, you might be someone that's uncomfortable with
like sharing with the
waiter, oh, actually, can I get extra cheese on my macaroni and cheese?
Right?
A thousand percent.
Right?
So that's me too.
And so I would say, okay, it's a baby step.
You can never send a sandwich back.
Yes.
So it's like sending something back and not even sending something back, maybe just asking
for something additional.
Like, oh, can I also get dot, dot, dot?
Because what you're wanting to do is you want to practice advocating for yourself,
you know, because it's hard to jump into the financial advocation, you know, for yourself,
if you're not able to advocate in small little ways. So starting with a safe, simple practice,
and then leading your way up from there. And breaking these habits you talk about is in service of doing something you mentioned
in the book, which is finding your financial voice.
What is your financial voice and how does someone go about finding their own?
So your financial voice is everyone has this internal voice as they're doing something.
So if you're wanting to find your financial voice, I just want you today to every time you make a financial choice, I want you to do kind of like a heart check and ask yourself, what am I thinking?
What am I feeling?
I want you to practice pausing.
Like, let's get Uber Eats.
Pause for a moment and ask yourself, how am I thinking?
How am I feeling about this?
Am I thinking you're feeling nothing, which is fine?
Or am I feeling a little anxious or a little guilty because this is another Amazon purchase?
Whatever that is, I want you to stop, pause, check, and kind of mentally record for yourself.
And then I want you to kind of get a pulse of do you largely think about your financial choices positively or negatively. So this might actually, like, if you really find
that you're having a hard time mentally with money, this, you might, a little notebook might
really help because literally you might, you know, like you might have a happy face on one side of
the notebook and a sad face and literally just a check mark. Like, oh, that was a positive thought,
check. That was a negative thought, check. Because we're trying to get a gauge of like,
how are you with your finances and what is your money message to yourself? And what is your voice? Is it a positive voice? Is it a neutral voice? Or is it a negative
voice? And it's already there. You just want to tune in to listen to it. But you also want to
actively work toward changing and transforming it to something more positive.
That's great advice. Now, we've asked about this before, but I want to talk a little bit about
mindful spending. Can you break down the different priorities people should be thinking about for us?
Absolutely.
It's do I need it?
Do I love it?
Do I like it?
Do I want it?
And so needs are, we already know, food, shelter, clothing, water, you must have to maintain
your health and safety.
Second are your loves.
Loves give you joy, will continue to
give you joy six months to a year from now. Likes give you temporary joy. So in under six months,
you won't remember, right? So it's like, oh, okay, you know, this thing is cool. So likes give you
that temporary joy and wants, there's really no joy at all. So what I want people to do is to lean into, like, the first half of the equation, your needs and your loves.
So your leads take care of your health and safety, and loves give you lasting joy.
And less money toward likes and wants.
Not no money, but the more money you spend on likes and wants, the less money you have for needs and loves.
Great.
I want to change gears a little bit.
We had a listener question come in and as
soon as it came in, I thought of you and you kind of address this in your book. I'm just going to,
I'm going to read it for you. How do you budget your spending for the month when you're starting
at $0 available? On the first of every month, I balance my checkbook by putting in my pay and
entering all of my usual monthly bills. But by the time I subtract my monthly bills, I literally have $0 left for the month. I even have to transfer money
from my savings into my checking account just to cover bills, which leaves me with negative money.
I don't ever buy coffee or eat out. How do you manage your income when you simply
don't cover your expenses? And I know this is something that a lot of people are dealing with,
with the pandemic, with having all of these surprise emergency, you know, spending.
What do we do? What do people do in this situation?
If most of your money, like this listener, is going to your financial obligations, like maybe all of your money or actually more money than you actually have.
And that means you have a don't make enough issue.
I think if nothing else, this pandemic and quarantine has taught us that we all have to learn how to earn in multiple ways.
Because some people's whole industry knocked out.
The restaurant industry, movie industry.
So learning to earn.
But in the meantime, and this is what I had to learn.
It was a hard thing and it might be hard for you listener to hear.
Is that I had to drop down to what I call my health and safety budget.
That is what things on my list must I pay for to maintain my health
and to maintain my safety. Everybody else had to wait. So I'm giving you permission to say,
you know what? I need to prioritize myself before I prioritize my bills. Because if I'm not here,
if I'm not healthy, if I'm not safe, who's going to pay them anyway? Nobody.
Moving on a little bit to savings.
You say we should save like a squirrel.
Yes.
And I really like that.
How do we get squirrely?
Just, you know, big picture.
How can we all get a little more squirrely?
This is what squirrels do.
Work the hardest, they save the most.
And when wintertime comes, squirrels, like, they hole up in their little tree and they eat off of when they work the hardest and they save the most.
And so that's what we can be.
Human beings are the opposite.
When we get our raises, we get our bonuses, it's like drinks on me, drinks on me.
That we tend to spend the most and be like, well, things are good.
I don't need to work hard.
And then when financial winter comes, we're like, ah, that's when we try to put the more work in. But there's no work to be found. So that's how you
get squirrely then. If you're experiencing financial abundance, lean into it. Work a
little bit harder if you're capable, but definitely save a little more because some of your financial
acorns are actually meant for your financial winter as well. I love that.
You tell this great story in the book, and it's about saying no to brunch with your girlfriends for a very specific reason.
Can you share that story with us?
Yes.
So friends of mine would go to brunch every Sunday.
It was maybe like, say, $30 to $50 every time.
And one day I realized I wanted to go on vacation, but I didn't have any money.
And then when I was realizing it, she called and was like, hey girl, you want to go to brunch?
And I thought to myself, that's where my money is going. Like, do I remember? What did we even
eat last week? And I realized brunch is not a love for me because I don't even remember what
we had last week. She loved brunch. That was her love. I was spending my money on her loves. Now,
it's not her fault because she was doing what she's supposed to do, spend her money on her love, but she was convincing me to do as well. So I stopped going to brunch and
I almost made it like how you do like a drinking game. Every time somebody says, Andy, you take a
drink. But I said, every time someone says brunch, I put that money in my savings account. That was
my drinking game. And so every time they invite me to brunch, I would transfer 30 to 50 bucks
to a savings account. And then when I had
enough, I used it to go to my first solo trip. And so now I learned that I'm not saying no to brunch.
I'm saying yes to Morocco. I'm not saying no to brunch. I'm saying yes to India. And these are
real countries I've been to. I'm saying yes to Monaco. I'm saying yes to Italy. And so I always
encourage people to do the same. I want you to use your money to live an
actual richer, more joyful life. I want you to make sure you're not using your money towards
someone else's idea of loves. To me, that's not the best use of your money. What especially spoke
to me was that you said you learned how to say no in a different way. It wasn't just,
no, sorry, I'm busy. You didn't make excuses. You changed your language. Can you give
us some template language for how we might be able to change our language when those uncomfortable
situations come around? How can we say no to brunch too? So whatever it is that you're saving
towards, I don't believe saving just for savings sake. You could save toward emergencies or save
toward goals. Because saving towards savings sake, it means that you're probably not enjoying as much
life as you ought to, right? So if your emergency savings is fully funded, you got your six months, your year, your three months, whatever you think is necessary, great.
You can say, I would love to, it sounds really awesome to go to dot, dot, dot, or to go to the mall or whatever.
But honestly, I'm saving toward sharing that amazing dope thing.
Because your friends and your family, they love you.
And so that's really the language, identifying the thing that you're saving toward your goal
or emergency savings or otherwise, and then reiterating that language to the person that's
asking you to spend. Because I promise you that positive language feels good to you and to them.
You're not actually saying no to them because what they hear is, oh wow, Tiffany,
Andy's saying yes to herself. She's saying yes to this awesome goal, not no to them. Because what they hear is, oh, wow, Tiffany, Andy's saying yes to herself.
She's saying yes to this awesome goal, not no to me. So Tiffany, you came from a household where
you were talking about money all the time. But what about people where that wasn't the case?
How can we get comfortable talking about money? What can we say? What can we do? How can we start
having those conversations?
You're right. I think the average person did not have these conversations at home. So how do you naturally do that? So you have to find a safe environment to do so. It might just be a
group of your girlfriends where you've said, I would love for you to be my accountability partner,
and I'm just going to talk about money with you. So finding a safe environment to do so.
And if you don't know anybody in your own physical real life, that there are digital folks that you can lean into and virtual people that you can lean into.
I speak freely in front of my friends about money on purpose because I'm always trying to create a safe environment.
I'm not going to judge.
For me, I don't know what's right or wrong for you. The educator in me is just merely here to present you with as much knowledge as possible
so you could choose the right choice for yourself.
So make sure that when you're looking for these safe spaces, that that's the energy
you get.
So I'm hearing seek out a safe space.
It doesn't necessarily have to be your family or your household.
And also, you know, de-stigmatize it.
Like, don't be scared to talk about it,
normalize it. It's okay to talk about dollar amounts. It's okay to talk about salaries.
Familiarize yourself first. You can dip your toe in first.
Yes, dip that little pinky toe in.
Tiffany Aliche de Bucinista, thank you so much for joining us. This has been wonderful.
This has been awesome, Andy. It's always a good time with you. Thank you for having me back. Okay, let's recap what we've learned.
Money is so much more than dollars and cents. Our relationship with money is emotional,
and those feelings are tied to lots of things. Your upbringing, your environment, plus, you know,
all the money messaging in the world and the media. Learn to hone your financial voice by first being aware of the money influences in your own life.
Then, take time to examine your financial decision making.
Do you feel mostly good or mostly guilty about your choices?
Track your feelings if you're not totally sure where you're at.
If you want to change a habit, start small and practice in a safe environment. Maybe enlist
a friend to be your accountability partner. Next, be more mindful of your spending by
differentiating between your purchases. Do I need it? Do I love it? Do I like it? Do I want it?
Remember, a no to a like can and should be reframed as a yes to a love. Your friends and family will understand,
and they might just be inspired to do the same.
Finally, you can work towards financial wholeness
by just talking about it more.
Seek out safe spaces with your people or online
and ask the questions you want to ask.
Air out your grievances.
The more money conversations are out there,
the less they're stigmatized,
the more empowered we all are. It's just good sense.
Thanks again to Tiffany Aliche for joining us. Her new book is titled Get Good With Money.
Special thanks to listener Carly Miller from South Dakota for her budgeting question.
For more NPR Life Kit,
check out our other episodes. If you want more Tiffany, we have an episode with her about how to curb unnecessary spending and another on how to boost your credit. We also have tons of other
episodes on parenting, personal finance, health, and lots more. You can find those at npr.org
slash life kit. And if you love Life Kit and want more, subscribe to our newsletter at npr.org slash LifeKit newsletter. Also, we want to hear your tips. Leave us a voicemail at 202-216-9823
or email us at lifekit at npr.org. This episode was produced by Claire Marie Schneider.
Megan Cain is our managing producer. Claire Lombardo and Beck Harlan
are our digital editors.
Beth Donovan is our senior editor.
I'm Andi Tegel.
Thanks for listening.
On NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour podcast,
we talk about TV, movies, and more, like the new Marvel Disney Plus series, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, and a definitive ranking of the best Muppets.
All of that in around 20 minutes every weekday.
Listen now to the Pop Culture Happy Hour podcast from NPR.