We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Bad with Money? Get Better with Tori Dunlap
Episode Date: July 29, 2025432. Bad with Money? Get Better with Tori Dunlap Glennon, Abby, and Amanda are doing something they've never done—talk about money. It's one of the most vulnerable topics, especially for women, w...here silence and shame still dominate. Joining them is Tori Dunlap—New York Times bestselling author and feminist finance expert—to help break the stigma, spark the conversation, and guide us toward financial freedom. -How shame—not numbers—is often the biggest barrier to financial well-being-Why women are conditioned to shrink around money and how to reclaim power-Using money as a tool for safety, agency, and freedom-Practical steps to begin healing your relationship with money, starting today Tori Dunlap is the Author of the instant New York Times bestselling book “Financial Feminist”; host of the #1 Business Podcast, Financial Feminist; and co-creator of Treasury, an investing education platform that has over $82M invested. After saving $100,000 at age 25, Tori quit her corporate job in marketing and founded Her First $100K to fight financial inequality by giving women actionable resources to better their money. She has helped over five million women negotiate salary, pay off debt, build savings, and invest. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Tori Dunlap is the author of the Instant New York Times bestselling book, Financial Feminist,
host of the number one business podcast,
Financial Feminist and co-creator of Treasury,
an investing education platform
that has over $82 million invested.
She has helped over 5 million women negotiate salary,
pay off debt, build savings and invest.
And really, as you'll hear in this episode,
sort of change their entire stories
that they have around money.
Because I am so terrified to talk about money,
this is the first conversation
I think I've ever had publicly about money.
So, sweatily, let us jump in.
Tori!
I'm so excited to meet you. Hi, everybody.
Tori, what a treat.
When we got to the part in your book with the Glennon and Together Rising shout out,
we were like, what? It was so exciting.
We were texting each other like, ah, that's so exciting.
I can't cry this early.
This is my goal, is to get through this interview without crying.
Oh.
Yeah, I'm so excited to be here. Thank you for having me.
We're really grateful.
I'm really grateful for you. Big fan. I follow you.
I listened to all your advice. You're wonderful.
That's very sweet.
Abby, do you know that you and I have met?
I'm about to tell the most embarrassing story
that's ever happened to me.
Okay. So Abby, you and I have met.
It was 2019. I was in my early twenties.
I was with my mentor in Seattle
and we were about to hear Liz Gilbert speak.
And this has been, yeah, I've seen her a couple times.
I met her in college very briefly and told her,
you're who I hope to be when I grow up.
And she goes, no, you're who I hope to be when I grow up.
Which is the sweetest.
And there's this woman sitting next to us.
And this person in the audience comes up to this woman
and goes, oh my gosh, I'm so sorry,
but can I have a photo?
And this person gracefully says, of course.
And my mentor, who's so sweet, she's like my second mom,
and she's so curious and so kind,
but had no idea who this woman was,
and goes, hi, I'm sorry, like, who are you?
And she goes, oh, I'm Abby.
And my mentor goes, what do you do for work?
And Abby goes, oh, I used to play soccer. And this woman in front of us whips around mentor goes, what do you do for work? And Abby goes, ah, I used to play soccer.
And this woman in front of us whips around and goes,
she used to play soccer?
This is Abby fucking wombo.
And just goes on and on like World Cup, Olympian.
And both of us who don't know a lot about sports
are like, oh my God.
And I pull out my phone and I do the quick,
very subtle, but not so subtle Google.
And I'm like, Abby, oh, oh, oh.
And then someone comes and gets Abby and is like,
Abby, Liz would love you to sit in the front row.
And I think Glenn and you were maybe there.
And both of us are just like, shit.
Okay, that's all right.
So Abby, you and I have met.
And I had the most embarrassing moment of my life
where at the time I had no idea who you were.
And now, of course, I'm absolutely obsessed.
And so I just, yeah, it was so embarrassing.
It was the moment of like, well, okay.
That was pretty cool.
And I didn't appreciate it for what it was in the moment.
Well, that's a beautiful vortex.
Liz, Abby, Tori, all in the same place.
Come on.
Well, and how humble is Abby?
Oh, I play soccer.
I used to play soccer.
Like, oh man.
It's hard to be in those situations
because first of all, we were all there for Liz.
And I do remember this interaction, actually.
Oh no.
Yeah.
And these are like the kind of weird moments because I'm there as a fan.
Like, honestly, Liz Gilbert's one of my favorite authors.
She's one of our best friends.
So, you know, it's one of those things that, and it's always actually quite fun to be like,
oh, I'm Abby and somebody else be like, wait a second, you don't, it's like a fun little
game that I like to play with people.
Because you know they're gonna Google it later
and go, oh shit.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Look it up later.
I love it.
Yeah.
Well, speaking of not knowing things,
this is a great segue or seg you, as Glennon likes to say.
We're very excited for this conversation, Tori.
And I loved your book.
And one of the things that I love about your work, and I think is so different and important,
is that you just dive straight into the story under the story, the one that is unconscious
in us, but makes us avoid thinking about or talking about or even facing our money issues.
And so what I thought was so helpful is,
and what we wanna focus on with this,
is that all of the practical advice in the world
doesn't work until you have unearthed
and like emotionally unpacked
what your emotional barrier is to money.
And so that's what we want to kind of focus on today
because it just is precursor to all of that.
If we want to change our financial situations,
we have to unpack what is happening
in our relationship to money.
So I want to give two scenarios,
real life things, dynamics
that might be happening in our lives.
And can you, they're unrelated to money, but I feel like maybe these are things that happen
in people's lives.
And can you help us understand why our money relationship is like these things and help
us unpack that kind of emotional money stuff?
That sounds great.
So scenario one, you are venting about your relationship. Your friends keep telling you,
you need to have that one conversation with that person
or you need to break up with that person.
You know they're right, of course they're right.
They've always been right.
But you can't do it.
You can't have the conversation.
You can't break up with them.
So you keep doing the same thing over and over
and the cycle continues forever and ever, amen.
Scenario two, I know that I feel better when I exercise,
when I move my body, I know it in every aspect of my life.
I don't do it, Tori.
I don't do it.
There's something happening that one cannot understand,
but I don't do it.
And instead I just shame myself for infinity
for not doing the thing that I know I should do
to make myself feel better.
How are these things like money, Tori?
In a lot of ways.
This is the thing that I want everyone
to understand about my work.
It's very easy to see what I do.
Okay, finance expert, personal finance and go,
okay, that's a niche thing.
It's not at all.
All of us have to interact with money.
And the problem is very few of us want to do that.
So the first example you gave
is what we call the ostrich effect,
which is barrier our head in the sand,
acting like our problems don't exist
and expecting our money to just magically get better
because we're so terrified to look at it.
And the second one is I know I would feel better if I looked at my money. money to just magically get better because we're so terrified to look at it.
And the second one is I know I would feel better if I looked at my money.
I know I would feel better if I took some strides to get there.
But again, it feels so uncomfortable.
And what we're really talking about and what I know you all talk about on your show a lot
is this feeling of shame.
And it's so wrapped up in how we view money,
how we view our relationship with money,
whether we think we're good with money or not.
We believe somehow that we were either born
with the good with money gene
or born with the bad with money gene, right?
We think that we should just naturally know
how to save money or how to pay off debt.
And we don't understand it's just a skill
like learning a new language or learning an instrument,
but we see it as a moral failing, especially as women.
And so then if we're starting there
of I already feel shame for not knowing enough,
I feel stupid, I'm not good with math,
so I'm not good with money,
all of these things prevent us
from being able to have an honest conversation
with ourselves about our spending or looking at our debts.
And then the shame cycle just continues.
We then spend more money to try to make it okay.
And then we feel shame about that spending.
So it is not easy, but I also have to,
and we'll talk about this, I'm sure,
but I have to convince everybody listening
that it's not about whether
you have an economics degree or not, it's not about being good with math. It's actually
about emotions. And most women are very, very good at understanding their emotional triggers,
about how they feel, about what they want. And we're actually extremely good with money
once we start to understand the basics of it.
Yes. Okay. Your whole look into the emotions of money.
Can we just work through some of that?
I don't know if you wanna start with kind of like
our money imprint or work up to it,
but the ideas about money that we have,
especially as women like that,
even the wanting of money is selfish and ick.
If rich men are powerful, rich women are conniving.
Can you give us some of those emotions and how they play out?
Yeah. I'll give you an example that I found in the research.
I'm going to use the gender binary here because it's easier just to explain here.
When we grow up as children, stereotypically,
what kind of toys are boys given?
They're given legos, trucks, things to build, right?
They are told that their value to society is in their own ingenuity,
is in their own critical thinking, their own ability to be resilient.
Right. OK, the legos get knocked down. We build them again.
What are girls given? Dolls.
Kitchens.
Easy bake ovens, a bridal veil.
We give a literal child another child to take care of.
Wow.
Like that's insane.
We say to a four-year-old girl, here's your dolly
and you're gonna be mama to a dolly.
And so we tell her that her value to society
is in how giving she is,
how selfless she is to someone else,
how if you give of yourself, society, people will like you more. So as we grow up and we're
internalizing these narratives, what then starts to happen when women say,
you know what, I am deserving of more money, or I do want to play bigger and I do believe that I want to be rich.
I want to have more money. Society realizes she's not playing her role. She's not playing her role
of being so selfless to the point where she's giving everything and putting herself last.
So society then weaponizes that altruism and goes, you should just be grateful. Right?
Your boss tells you, you should just be grateful that you have a job at all when you go to ask for
a raise. The Instagram comments tell you, you should just, why aren't you humble? Like you should just
sit down because the patriarchy realizes you're no longer controllable. The patriarchy's worst
nightmare is an uncontrollable woman who has money. And I fucking love being the patriarchy realizes you're no longer controllable. The patriarchy's worst nightmare is an uncontrollable woman who has money.
Amen.
And I fucking love being the patriarchy's worst nightmare.
Yes.
That's the feeling I want for every single woman on this planet.
But even as a child, we're getting these narratives, which is money is only there
so that you can take care of your kids or so you can pay your people properly at your company.
It's not for you. And like, I love being a woman. And I love that I have altruism baked into my bones.
But the expectation for men is not the same. So we have that narrative that starts when we're very,
very young. We've all heard that it's impolite to talk about money. We are more likely statistically
to talk about any other uncomfortable topic. Sex, death, politics,
religion. We will talk about anything before we'll talk about money. And that is another
patriarchal narrative meant to keep us playing small because if we don't talk about money,
I have no idea that Chad, who got hired two years after me and has the same degree I do,
is making $20,000 more. And I have no idea that my best friend is also in debt
and is also financially struggling,
but I feel so much shame for it.
So there's that narrative going on too.
And then, Amita, you were saying,
which I think is the worst one,
men are allowed to pursue wealth.
That is something that is not only conditioned,
but it is worshiped.
And yet the pursuit of wealth for women
is greedy, gauche, bad.
It's probably not hers anyway.
Right, right, right.
It's daddy's money, it's your husband's money,
you didn't earn that money.
And it's because, again, when you start to believe,
maybe I am worthy of money, maybe I am worthy of money.
Maybe I am worthy of all of these things
and I don't have to put myself last, the patriarchy panics.
And it's not about money really.
It's not about a stack of government issued paper.
Like, I don't want that.
That doesn't give me anything.
I want the options that money can buy me.
I want the ability to be able to leave unsafe relationships or situations
and have money be not the reason I can't leave, but the reason I can. I want it to be able to
give me the ability to donate to causes I believe in and to start a business and to go to therapy
and to travel and to be well rested. So that is my whole idea of this work,
is it's not niche, it's not just Excel spreadsheets.
It is literally the tool to complete
and total freedom for women.
Bam.
It's interesting that with women,
it's so outside of the story
of what makes you worthy to pursue money, like what makes you worthy
is to not pursue money
and only pursue whatever goodness is.
And men, it makes me sad for men too, actually,
and I don't usually say that.
But because if their only worthiness is pursuing money.
So there's a double-edged sword of it.
It's like, what if you're a dude
that that's not your gift or whatever,
then it's equally horrific for everybody. Yeah. I mean, I found this crazy,
this crazy stat that in heteronormative relationships, when the woman in the
relationship makes more than their male partner, they will lie and say they make less. Yes. And
when the man makes less, he will actually lie and say he make less. And when the man makes less,
he will actually lie and say he makes more.
Like, patriarchy hurts men just as much as it hurts women.
And I think this is why we have a society
that worships the pursuit of wealth for men
and stockpiling and hoarding
and demands constant selflessness
at the expense of yourself for women.
And I'm fucking sick and tired of it.
Mm-hmm.
Wow. Yes.
This starts, like you said, so early.
You know, you mentioned the toys and stuff.
I was blown away to learn that our beliefs about money are imprinted.
Like, we adopt them and keep them, unless we change them, from the
time that we're seven years old.
In the second grade.
So most of us, unless we have thought really critically about the stories that we are holding
about money, are holding the same beliefs we had in the second grade.
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more. How do we know what our story is?
It's a great question.
Glennon, thank you.
Okay, here we go.
We're going to do an exercise if you guys are willing.
Yay.
I love this.
What is your first money memory?
What is the first time you remember thinking about money?
Okay.
One time I forgot my lunch in elementary school.
I think I was in like second grade.
And I went to the grocery store with my mom after school.
And I saw this like plastic covered sandwich at the deli,
which we never would have bought a freaking plastic.
That's like for the Rockefellers and shit, right?
We would not have...
The grocery store, my parents were both teachers.
The grocery store, we knew exactly what we were getting.
We had to stay under a certain number.
And I said, I'm...
Mom, can I just please have that sandwich?
Because I was so hungry.
And she said, okay, you can have that sandwich.
And I was like, what?
This is the height of luxury.
Yeah. He height of luxury.
Yeah.
Height of luxury.
It felt so loving.
It felt so, and that, I don't know what,
but that is my first memory of,
oh my God, my mom's gonna buy me that $4 sandwich.
So how do you think that influences
the way you look at money now?
Or maybe the way you looked at money
before you unpacked some stuff?
Well, I'm gonna say it makes me wonder
about, you know, all of my food issues.
LAUGHS
So that, I think money and food and people
are tied together for me.
I think maybe, like, money can be love.
I have a lot of scarcity about money.
A lot of scarcity, and, like, I'm scared of it being out of control
I'm scared of wasting it. I'm scared of I have a lot of fear around money
Haven't talked about money. I think you know, I've been talking out loud to people for 15 years 20 years
This is my first money talk ever
so I don't know what it says, but that's
My imprint So I don't know what it says, but that's my imprint.
Anybody else want to go? I'm curious.
I'm playing therapist.
Yeah. So I have like two distinct memories
and they're kind of related.
My father was self-employed.
He had his own business.
And so at the end of every night,
he would take the money out of the till and wad it up
and bring it home in his pocket.
And there was a sense, ironically, like when I was a kid, when my dad would go to dinner or something,
he would pull out this huge wad of cash, but it was just the business's money, right?
Yeah.
And so I always had this like thought like, oh, when I get older, I want to carry around a huge wad of cash,
which is weird to think about when you're a little kid.
And then I remember going to a friend's house
and their dad, we wanted to walk to the candy store,
but none of us had any money.
And their dad pulled out a huge wad of cash.
And I remember correlating this joyful walk to the candy store because he gave us
like five bucks each. And at that time five bucks was like, you know, I felt like I had a million
dollars in my hand. And so I just remember being like, that is what I want. I'm going to for sure
I'm going to for sure have a wad of cash to be able to give to kids
because it was like this most joyful thing.
And we went and we got all the like the little raspberries
and the Swedish fish.
And so a lot of my connection,
and ironically, once I got into a family and had children,
my desire to spend money on joy things ramped down a little bit
because I had a responsibility for a family. So I had to be more mindful of that. And I'm
kind of in the process of working through that right now to get back to just, Hey, let's
figure out like what we can spend on joy stuff. What are the experiences I want to be able
to have or give to our children? So that's like my first memory about money.
Well, it sounds like that wad of cash meant safety.
Yeah. And power. Right.
Being the man. Right.
And the flex of being able to pull out of wad of bills and be like, five dollars?
Sure. Yeah. Totally.
Yeah. And my dad never had any insecurities around money.
And then, you then, interestingly enough,
things happen throughout the whole of a person's life.
But I just remembered that there was an energy
that he and that friend's dad who pulled out that money,
the energy and vibe.
Masculinity, is that the energy and vibe?
What I was like that,
I know that that is something that I want.
I wanna be able to have that energy of safety, of power, of freedom in a way.
Yep.
Amanda.
I have too also.
I remember sitting in a car.
We had this like white tiny hatchback car that my dad drove that he had to start with a screwdriver.
If there was no key, it wouldn't start. So he would put in a screwdriver to start it
every morning. And we had in the in between, I remember sitting in the passenger seat,
watching him start the car with a screwdriver and in the console, like between the two, he had a rotary phone
because this was just around the time
where people were starting to get like those bags,
cell phone things.
And he thought it was so obnoxious
that people were doing this.
That it was like a show of like wealth and privilege
that like people had these bags with these phones in them,
that he put a rotary phone there and when we would pull up with our screwdriver car
at a red light, he would like pick up the rotary phone to mock them that they had the phone.
So this idea of like only losers need to like show that they have money.
There's like value in being able to make do
with what you have and like,
it kind of like a mocking suspicion
of people who have money.
And then the other memory I have,
Glenn, I wonder if you remember this.
I don't know, I was probably like in third or fourth grade, but you wanted to borrow
my one of my sweaters to wear to school. And I remember, and my mom gave this to me last year.
So I know that I didn't just make this up. I have it in my office. I wrote up a contract
for her borrowing of the sweater. I kid you not, I should go get it from my office. I wrote up a contract for her barring of the sweater. I kid you not, I should go get it from my office. It had collateral. Yep. Interest. It had interest.
Mm-hmm. It had collateral. Her collateral was her upcoming that weekend babysitting gig. So,
she was putting on the line that collateral if she didn't return my sweater in a particular time.
And then it was like quote-un unquote notarized with a dinosaur stamp.
Yeah, this is real.
A dinosaur stamp was at the end.
And Glennon had to sign it and I had to sign it.
And I just remember feeling like, okay, I can be in control of a situation.
We can make this work for us.
And there's an upside. Hey, if she loses my sweater,
I'm gonna get her nine bucks from babysitting.
And in your own defense,
it was a pink forensic sweater with a roll top net.
I mean, come on.
See, I didn't remember anything about the sweater,
but that makes sense, yeah.
Well, and it was official with a dinosaur stamp, so.
Yeah, you can't go back in a dinosaur stamp.
Absolutely not.
Yeah, so I mean, thank you all for sharing.
And I think anybody at home can do this.
You can start to understand
maybe some of the beliefs you have,
or maybe some of the misconceptions you have about money.
For me, I grew up with really financially educated parents
because they both didn't have a lot, especially my dad.
And so they were like,
okay, we're gonna teach her about money.
And it was one of the best gifts I got.
And so when I was probably five,
I wanted to go see Annie the musical.
I majored in theater.
That should prove to you that you don't have to be good
with math to be good with money.
And I really wanted to go see it.
And I had an Altoids tin.
And my parents told me, you're gonna save up your money.
She can buy a ticket.
Now, tickets were like $22 or whatever.
And I was not gonna save $22.
It was the act of, hey, if you want something,
you have to save for it.
So I got all my quarters and my pennies
that I found on the ground in a tin,
and then the day had come, and I was so excited.
I remember being in the back seat.
Still, I remember this.
And we were driving, and I remember about halfway
to the theater that I had forgotten my tin. And I was like, oh remember this. And we were driving, and I remember about halfway to the theater that I had forgotten my tin.
And I was like, oh no.
And I start bawling in the backseat.
And my mom's like, what's wrong?
And I was like, I forgot my money,
so I'm not gonna be able to go.
And my mom was like, you're fine, we're covering you.
That was the plan the whole time.
But it was, okay, if you want something,
you have to save for it.
And I internalized that. And I went through all of my life going, okay, we're going to budget
for things we want and we're not going to spend frivolously. But then the interesting
thing with growing up in a very financially educated household is that anything that wasn't
a nine to five job with a 401k with a stable paycheck felt like a risk. So even in a very positive, financially educated household, when I was on the precipice of
quitting my job to run my business, I had already saved my first 100k.
I was on Good Morning America.
The business was making money.
And yet I had my very well-meaning parents in my ear going, yeah, but what about your
health insurance?
What about your 401k?
What about your health insurance? What about your 401k? What about your stable paycheck? And so that, like even in positive situations,
the money story can start to creep in
in a potentially negative way.
And if I would have done what my parents wanted
and stayed in my job,
I'd be living a very, very different life right now.
And I joke with them all the time, like,
hey, aren't you glad I didn't take your advice?
But that's the interesting thing is that even like
the positive memories or the positive narratives
around money can sometimes be, okay, well,
we're gonna save everything we can,
but then you end up not spending any sort of money.
And Abby, it kind of sounds like that's what's happening
where it's like, okay, I'm gonna keep the money
because we have to protect our children.
We have to protect the life we've built.
But then in doing so, you might forfeit
all of the incredibly fun experiences.
And we see this a lot with people
who have had some sort of trauma in their childhood
is they either spend money in willy nilly very crazy
or the opposite of that, which is they hoard all of it
and they don't allow themselves to have any sort of leeway
because they're so afraid
that the other shoe is gonna drop.
Right, right, right, right.
If we all have the wrong stories,
is there a right story?
What are we replacing all of these?
Because I certainly have,
I mean, Amanda, when you're saying that,
I'm like, oh my gosh,
the amount of times that Abby and I have talked about
like unearthing my idea that rich people are bad.
Like, that is what I,
and I accidentally taught my kids that
before I made a lot of money.
So now I'm trying to undo that story for everybody.
And it's hard.
Tori, when Abby came into the family,
she had a fancy car, okay?
So our child used to say, you can't pick me up in that.
Abby had to sell the car because our kid was so humiliated
that our family would have a rich car.
So she had to sell her car because-
I sold it, I sold it.
The child wouldn't get in it.
And so I had to real quick, like undo all the stories.
So my question is, what's the best money story that we should be shooting towards?
I'm going to give you a non-answer answer, which is, like,
I don't want anybody out there to be like, my money story is bad
and then feel shame about that, too.
That is one of those that is actually completely uncontrollable.
And that is a good chunk of personal finance really,
is that we've been made to believe that, you know,
our money is 100% in our control.
Our financial futures are 100% in our control.
They're not.
It's about 20% personal choices and 80% systemic oppression.
Racism, ableism, sexism, homophobia,
a trillion dollar student debt crisis,
stagnating minimum wages,
a lack of paid family leave federally in the country.
So I first have to acknowledge for folks
that if you don't have a good money story,
or if you grew up with these narratives
that I talk about in my book of,
I'm not gonna talk about money because that's impolite,
rich people are shit, so I don't wanna be rich,
I'm gonna actively push away wealth,
that's not your fault, that is social conditioning.
So when we talk about if there is a right money story,
I do think that so much of course of money is emotional,
but that when we look at money,
it feels like it's either moral or immoral.
Again, that stack of government issued paper has some morality to it.
Mm-hmm.
And it doesn't.
It doesn't.
What we do with it is where the morality comes in.
We know plenty of rich people who are terrible human beings, who exploit people and who pursue getting wealthy just to get more and more and more
and more.
And we also know plenty of rich people who are doing incredible things with the money
and incredible things with their platform and with their power.
Nothing bad happens when women have more money. Nothing bad happens when women have more money.
Nothing bad happens when women have more money.
And so I don't want that stack of government issued paper that doesn't get me anything.
Again, I want the options and the choices that money affords me.
Women are more generous when we have money. Women are more powerful when we have money.
We are able to control our own destinies to create opportunities in our communities.
It is so incredible to see the messages I get from women that say,
I left my 10-year marriage that he was abusing me every day and I couldn't leave because I
didn't have money. And now I can. and I took my daughter with me and I left.
That's a real story from our community.
Or, I have my first thousand dollars,
and it doesn't feel like a lot,
but wow, I feel so much more powerful and confident
in every aspect of my life now.
Because it's about giving ourselves options and choices.
So, the right money story, and I'm putting that in quotes,
is the one where you feel like you have ownership over your money rather than money owning you.
When we think about proven proven diets don't work because you're not listening to your body and all you're doing is restricting and so it's going to come back around.
Talk to us about the messages that women get about budgeting being deprivation and why that is a huge pile
of horseshit.
This is my favorite thing to talk about.
Okay, two things.
One, women are told that the reason they're not rich is because they spend money.
You have a shopping addiction, it's the manicures, It's the lattes. It's the Taylor Swift tickets, right? That's the reason you're not rich because you spend frivolously. Notice
how frivolous spending is never about NFL season tickets. It's never about golf clubs.
It's never about video games. It's never about power tools. It is never about the stereotypically
masculine things. It's about the stereotypical feminine things, right?
The reason you're not rich,
or the reason you can't buy a house,
or the reason you don't have a million dollars
is because you spend frivolously.
So already there's a double standard
for men's spending versus women's spending.
And my second point is that the advice for men,
the financial advice for men,
is actually really, really good advice.
Even if I went and Googled, right? Financial advice for men, the financial advice for men, is actually really, really good advice.
Even if I went and Googled, right, financial advice for men 2025, this advice is going to be
expand, make more money, negotiate your salary, bring in a bonus at work, invest your money in
the stock market so it can grow, start a business, invest in real estate. That is the advice for men,
make more money, expand, become the biggest, baddest, invest in real estate. That is the advice for men. Make more money, expand,
become the biggest, baddest, fullest version of yourself.
What is the advice for women?
Get smaller.
Shrink.
Shrink, yes.
Control yourself. Shrink.
Exactly.
The reason you're not rich
is because you overspend on lattes.
So if we were to actually take that advice,
one, it's not good advice. You cannot budget your way,
frugality your way out of your financial situation. So if I did cut every single thing that brought
me joy, that's a limited amount of money when your earning potential is in theory limitless.
So that's one just bad advice, but two, it also makes you hate your fucking life.
Yes.
And it deprives you of joy and the things
that a lot of women like have as hobbies
or ways to connect with other women.
And like, I'm not a conspiracy theorist,
but that's not an accident.
No.
Like it's not an accident that women are told,
stop spending money, right?
Control yourself, shrink, hate your life
and that's how you're gonna get rich.
The math doesn't work and it also fucking sucks.
It also ruins the cyclical effect that starts
when you start to get money and enjoy money,
you want more money.
When the only thing, when this model of deprivation eliminates the only upside of money, you want more money. When the only thing, when this model of deprivation eliminates
the only upside of money, you stop trying to pursue money because you're not getting
an upside of it.
There's no happiness. You're like, why am I doing this? This doesn't feel good. And
you said diet. And that's what I bring up in my book is 99% of diets don't work because
the more you tell me I can't have fried chicken, the more I want fried chicken. And like that's not willpower, that's literal psychology,
which is if you take it away, I want it more. And also that's not sustainable. That's not
consistent. There's a reason why every diet is called a crash diet, right? It's not a
lifestyle, it's a diet. And it's the same thing with spending. And I actually see a
lot of people do this. They'll go on no spending months or no
spending years. I think, you know, of course, learning how to mindfully spend is really
important. I have a whole chapter about it. But you can't tell yourself to not spend money
because you're more likely to sabotage yourself later. You're more likely to go on a spending
binge. Right. And it's also just not fun. Like I am not the personal finance expert who's going to tell you you can't spend money.
That's not any fun.
You can have both.
You can take care of your finances.
You can save money and you can invest and you can pay off your debt and you can also
have nice things.
And that equation doesn't have to be, I never enjoy my money ever again.
Yeah, it's just interesting as a wider thing that,
whether we're talking about sex or leadership or work
or money, that the bucket of advice to men
is always do these things.
And the bucket of advice to women
is always don't do these things.
It's just always a list of don'ts,
which is absolutely goes against human nature.
Like men do invest, do lead, do speak big,
do women don't buy the latte, don't be too loud,
don't have sex, it's just so fascinating.
It's really about like, don't enjoy your life.
Don't have any sort of joy.
And we've had a couple of folks on my show who have talked about like the good girl trap, right? That's what this is.
And I know you all talk about this a lot.
Like, it's the same thing with money.
And it's control.
It is control.
And when you start to have your own money, you get to control your own life.
Like I was saying before, I am uncontrollable.
If I'm not happy on a date, I can throw down my credit card
and I never have to see that person again.
If I don't like my job, I can quit
because I have the money to quit.
Like I never have to be in a situation
that doesn't respect me anymore.
Money allows me to fully be the person I wanna be,
and it allows me to show up for myself,
to show up for my community,
and it allows me to exercise my self-worth,
because I never have to stay in a situation
that doesn't respect me.
Can I give an analogy that happened to me all the time,
like playing soccer?
Yeah.
So there's like so many different components
of like when you're playing the game that matter
and that you have to train.
But one of the things that I realized
that throughout my career that was like
inhibiting me from being the best Abby I could be
was fitness.
And so I was like, okay, what I'm gonna do
for the rest of my career is all I'm gonna do
is I'm just gonna like work so hard on fitness
because then when I was in the game,
I wasn't having any thought or stress or worry
about can I make that run?
There was no question.
So like the correlation between this and money for me is like when we are
experiencing our lives, if we are stressing or wondering or in confusion about this thing that
kind of really does offer us this like entryway into a calm, contented, loving, beautiful life,
it can sabotage the whole thing if If you're just fucking stressing like,
oh, can I have this thing?
And it's a seed that's been implanted in you by the system.
But you're saying it's so fascinating
because you're saying your energy, you were like,
I don't have to think about whether I have the energy
I need to get my job done on this field.
That's right.
And then money is like, I don't have to think about
whether I have the energetic resources I need to get my job done on this field. That's right. And then money is like, I don't have to think about whether I have the energetic resources I need
to get my work done on this earth.
Like it's the same.
But Tori, how do you deal with, I'm with you.
You are ahead of where the world is.
So my question is, when you stop believing this thing
about women and you start to say, it's okay, I want the power,
I want the money, I'm gonna do what I need to do.
The world still doesn't feel good about that.
Like, the world hates you, and they don't even know why.
They're just like, there's something about her.
Like, we don't like her.
I remember starting to feel so bad about myself
when I started to become financially successful
because I would watch myself on stages or in interviews and the second anyone started
to mention my success, I would immediately bring up my philanthropy every time. And it
was unconscious until I saw it and I was like, oh my God, I'm doing the thing where I know
that the world will not accept a woman who does well unless she's
also doing good.
And so immediately as soon as anyone mentioned it, I would say, Oh God, I got to like earn
my right to exist by bringing out my various do-goods.
You have to justify it.
Right.
So like, how do we deal with a world that will despise the fact that we are beyond that
idea?
I want to give the metaphor to that most listeners have probably experienced, which is you buy
something nice for yourself and people go, oh, that looks really nice.
And you go, I got it on sale.
Right?
My sister does that all the time.
That's the version I think that most people experience.
It's the same thing for me.
It's like, oh, my business made this much,
but I gave this amount to charity,
or I paid my people this,
or I'm charging this rate because I have a team, right?
There's always a justification.
I don't know if I have an answer for you.
That's honest.
No one likes a cheetah, Glennon.
No one likes a woman who is uncontrollable
and who is embodying the fullest version of herself.
But I will say that every time I do it,
every time I show up as the biggest,
baddest, fullest version of myself,
there are always people in my Instagram comments,
sometimes in my life who are like, what are you doing?
Like, again, be humble, play small.
But also there's all of these women who go,
finally, like, finally, I can own what I want.
Finally, I can like who I am and like my choices
without any sort of justification.
And it's a constant battle.
It's a constant fight.
It is.
I will never fully know, of course,
how much sexism impacts my work on a day-to-day basis.
I will never know that.
But I know that I get passed over for opportunities
because I am not as palatable as someone else.
I know that men who say the exact same things I do
get the opportunity over me
because it's easier to hear all of this
out of a man's mouth.
Like, I know all of this.
I don't know.
I don't know the answer.
I think you just have to do it anyway.
I think that we need to create a force,
a mass of women who start to get really comfortable without being liked.
This idea that we need to be likable and accepted by the world is just bullshit, right?
Because here's the thing, you might walk into a room full of men and if your bank accounts are
the same, they probably won't like you, but guess what they probably will do?
They might actually respect you. There's a respect that I have felt because likening it to soccer. When I walk into a room, I get male privilege, not just because of the way
that I look and the way that I present, but because I actually do something better than
them at their game. Or I did.
And so that is something that I was always able to know
that I was getting peer to peer respect from men
in the athletic space.
And I think it probably will be the same.
That's why rich lesbians confuse the shit out of them.
Rich lesbians is like, their brains explode.
They're like, where'd you get it?
But that's reinforcing the same binary.
When are we going to stop worrying about whether men respect us?
Who gives a fuck?
That's the same, that's the not being liked and not worrying like,
we're going to win so that they respect us.
No, when are we going to be like, where is my source of
self respect? Where is my internal, I can walk into any room because I don't give a
flying fuck whether the men or women or whoever, because I've got my back, because I know I
can take myself out of this room or into any room I want, because I have figured out a
way to bypass all of those shitty consolation plies on the way
to taking care of myself and having my own self-respect
because I don't have to ostrich.
I don't have to hide from anything in my life.
I know my finances, I know my worth,
and I know how to take care of myself.
That's good.
I like that better.
Well, and again, money allows you the ability to do that.
I'm in a room of men.
This happened the other day.
Oh my God.
I was at an entrepreneurship dinner and I was one of two women and it was like, you
know, 40, 50 men.
And this man starts asking me what I do, which is my favorite question because I'm like,
oh, you're going to hate this.
Here we go.
I teach women to be good with money.
And he's like, oh, and then basically asked me for the next 25 minutes
if that's really needed.
I walked, I was just like, I'm not doing this with you.
I like thought we were gonna have a nice conversation.
It was very clear we weren't.
And I was just like, I'm just gonna leave.
Like, I don't have to be in that room.
I don't have to earn his respect.
I don't fucking care.
And I think that money allows you the ability to do that.
It allows you the ability to exercise your self-worth.
You get to walk at any time, you get to leave at any time
and go to a situation that does respect you.
But Abby, you did prompt something for me, which is,
we can't do the tearing down other women in 2025.
Like, we're done with that
because that sometimes is the worst.
If we want to create a system and a collective
that does allow women to unabashedly pursue money
and allow them to be the fullest best version of themselves,
men are going to say, shit, fine.
We cannot have women do it too.
Because some of my worst comments are not from men,
they're from women.
Because the women haven't done their own work to see that I'm a mirror for them.
So when I show up in a bikini and I like myself,
when I talk about my accomplishments,
when I talk about how much money I've made,
it feels like an attack unless you've done the work.
It's not an opportunity, it feels like an attack.
And I just need women to support each other.
I need that because we are...
Glennon, you asked, how do we solve this?
I think that's it.
That is what we have to solve,
which is seeing other women as inspirations
and as motivation, not as a threat, not as an attack.
Hmm.
What do people do first?
If they're listening to this,
because we could talk for six more hours, and I'm so annoyed that we're not gonna be able to already. What do people do first if they're listening to this?
Because we could talk for six more hours and I'm so annoyed that we're not going to be
able to already.
But like, what would your advice be for them today if they listen to this and they're like,
I'm going to make one step towards more money, more power, more agency, more knowledge, whatever
it is.
What do they do?
I'll give you three quick ones. One is to unostridge yourself.
So get yourself a down comforter cocoon
and like look at your money.
It's gonna be painful.
It's probably gonna be a little scary.
But you know the horror movies
where you can't see the monster
and you never see the monster?
That's scarier than a horror movie
where you know what the monster looks like.
And that's what happens when you don't know
what's going on with your money.
It's like driving a car
and you have no idea how much gas is in it.
You don't have a gas gauge anymore.
And that's what happens when you're driving through life
and you don't know what's going on with your money.
So make it something you can look forward to,
take out from your favorite restaurant,
like have an actual date with your money.
Sit down, look at your money, look at the lay of the land. And so we can then start
to understand what the plan is from there. So that's the first thing. Second thing is
that you need to understand, again, you don't have to stop spending money, but I do need
you to stop spending money on shit you don't care about. We don't want your hard earned
money to go to things that you actually don't really like, when it could be going to things
that absolutely light you on fire.
And so we have a practice in my book
to assign your three value categories.
These are the three areas in your life
where you get the most joy.
So for me, mine are travel, food out,
I love going to good restaurants,
and nesting, but really plants.
You can kind of see it behind me,
but I have about 50 plants in my house,
and I love them and they're my babies.
And that's where I spend my money.
So identifying these are the areas in my life
where I want the majority of my spending to go.
And then you can start to understand,
oh, am I spending my money on things I don't really like?
Or is my spending aligned with my values?
And then you don't have that guilt of spending money
because you're like,
I know that I'm gonna get a lot of joy out of this.
I know that these are things that I absolutely love.
And the last thing that anybody can do is automate your savings.
So set up an automatic transfer from your checking account to your savings account.
Maybe that's $200, maybe that's $20 a month.
But we want to get in the habit of starting to save and also doing what we call
in the industry, paying yourself first.
So setting aside that money that as soon as your paycheck hits, the money's already gone to your savings. You don't have to think
about it. It's saving on autopilot. And you can set that up at any bank and just start
with a little bit of money and increase it from there.
Can I offer two things from your book that I thought were so helpful in the framing and
they're about the things that you talked about. You talk about really like a mindfulness practice
of your
money, paying attention to what is happening in your body when you're spending money. So
this idea of like money as self, we think it's self care. Like I just, I want that manicure
because it makes me feel good. And maybe it does. Maybe that is your value and you will
find out by paying attention to yourself. But often it's like what you're calling self-soothing.
Like I just had a fight with my partner.
I just got a snarky comment from my boss.
I feel like shit.
And so I went to click on that thing that it wasn't really,
it was more of a soothing than a caring for yourself.
Yeah, it's bubble baths or face masks, right?
And we think that's self-care.
Self-care is hard shit.
Self-care is going to therapy and eating a salad
when you don't want to eat a goddamn salad
and going to the gym because you know
it's going to make you feel better.
And it's also looking at your money.
And we have a whole chapter about that.
And I appreciate you bringing it up
because I think that is one of the lies we've been believing
because self-care has been commodified.
It's been, you know, put under capitalism where it's, oh, we just need this face mask
or this massager or this like, tech neck device that we bought on TikTok and it'll solve our
problems and that's self-care.
No, that's self-soothing.
Self-care is the hardship that actually makes your life better, but feels pretty uncomfortable
in the moment.
I mean, do you remember when, sister, when we used to call,
or I think I used to, or maybe dad did,
used to call how I would go to Target
or into these, like, home stores,
and I would buy all this shit,
but I couldn't really afford it,
so I would bring it all home.
And then the next day, I would return it all.
And we called it my bulimic shopping,
because it was an exact replica of I'm self-soothing
by binging and purging.
And so I was acting out this thing that was not actually healing in any way. It's just
so interesting how it can be just exactly correlated to the food and the money thing.
I also think there's like the soothing and the self care. It's like, Abby, do you remember
when you were first starting to get together
with Glenn and we were talking about money and you were like, but I work so hard for
this money and I just love that feeling of when I get something I want and it gives me
this zing. And so why would I work so hard for the money and never get the zing? And
so do you remember when we sat down and we looked and we set up bank accounts and I was like,
you will have the zing.
This zing is going to be unlike anything you ever had.
Like you take this money and you put it in the account and then you check it every day.
And it's going to be a zing that out zings all of the purchasing things.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, that completely changed my life because I was-
Mine too, mine too.
Because I was like, I only got the zing
when I got the money in the checking account
and then I spent it on something.
So I'd save up and I'd spend it on something.
And then sister was like, yeah,
but I've got a different zinger, it's a better zinger
and it's gonna go deeper.
And so now I get that zing when I look at my savings account
and I see how hard we're working and I see a future,
a safety in the future that we might want one day.
That was life changing, Sissy.
So it's not giving up the zing.
No.
It's replacing it with something that is an actual
taking care of yourself zing. Yeah, the it with something that is an actual taking care of yourself
zing.
Yeah, the dopamine works the same way, right? So we get a hit of dopamine whether we spend
money or whether we save money. It actually it's the same brain chemical. It fires the
same way. However, usually when you save money, the guilt isn't there and the shame isn't
there.
Oh, interesting.
Whether if you're spending money to try to make yourself feel better, the guilt and the
shame is right around the corner.
That's right.
And again, we're not shaming you for spending money,
but we do not want to spend money on things
that we actually don't care about
and that we don't give a shit about.
And I want you to have something
to show for your hard work, right?
I want you to have something to show
for all of the time you're spending
working really,
really hard at your job or really, really hard in your business.
And that is my biggest fear is that when women do start making good money, I want you to
have something to show for it.
I want you to not only be able to spend money on the things that you love, but also take
really good care of yourself.
Set yourself up well financially so that you can start investing, so you can start creating
generational wealth for you
and for future generations.
Like there's something so powerful about that too.
Mm.
After the ESPYs, about just like,
that's what we're talking about here.
Yeah.
Like, I went into a completely different retirement
than all of these men,
and I didn't know how I was going to afford my rent.
Like, that's what we're talking about.
It's like, you didn't have the opportunities that you should have had because of money. And so like I just think about
that all the time. Yeah. Of like if you want to look at one particular example of like how money
can completely change somebody's life, you were at the top of your game and you were not getting
compensated in the same way. Totally. Like. And I've been in all the rooms like throughout the end
of my career. I was in all the biggest rooms.
I met with all the most popular and wealthiest CEOs
in the world and talked with all of the most successful people
that you know.
And I just remember feeling like,
oh, I'm not the same as them.
I had this feeling of like less than,
because I knew that my bank account just was not even
not even what anybody would even imagine my bank account to be.
It was the difference of that.
And so actually at the time and Glennon knows this I was like fuck this I'm going to make
the most money that I possibly can now.
And I've been able to make more money now in my retirement than I did
times like 20 than I did as a women's soccer player. And people are like blown away when
they hear that reality.
And nothing bad happened when you got more money.
No.
And nothing bad happened when you got more money.
No.
And nothing bad happens when women have more money. Nothing bad happens. They're more generous.
They take care of themselves. They take care of their communities. They give to causes they believe. Like it's just
nothing bad happens.
But it's so interesting that you just keep saying that because that is how it feels.
It feels like something bad's going to happen. Like when you're taught that, you actually
feel like I'm flying too close to the sun. I'm wanting things I shouldn't want.
There is an in your body feeling of something bad's going to happen.
So I'm just, I think it's so cool that you keep saying that.
It sounds like a simple thing, but I think it's in a spell or an anti-spell of some sort.
It's really cool.
I appreciate it.
Thank you for having me.
And I would be remiss. Thank you both.
I have Untamed and Wolfpack on my desk.
And Glennon, I have a really difficult relationship
with my mom.
And Untamed, one, I don't think I'd do the work I do now
if I hadn't read Untamed.
And the second thing is like,
I wanted to please my mother so badly
that I gave so much of myself away.
And the moment I started doing the things
that I wanted to do, it was really hard on our family,
but I felt so free.
I felt so free.
And so I just really appreciate the work you all do.
I listen to this show every week
and it's such a joy and an honor to be here.
So thank you.
And I couldn't do it at the beginning
because I was gonna be a wreck.
So thank you.
Sorry.
Thank you.
Awesome.
Keep doing the shit.
Keep doing your work and we'll be watching you
all the way.
As Sonia Renee Taylor tells us,
what we have shame around, we avoid.
And we are avoiding thinking about our money because of shame.
So everyone go check out Tori's, her first 100K, the book, Financial Feminism, the investing
tool that is Wild Treasury.
Let us get rid of our shame.
No shame.
We are going to look at our stuff without shame
and we are going to take care of ourself
and there are ways to do it.
So Tori is your girl, check it out.
Thank you for talking with us, Tori,
and thank you for your work.
Thank you, Tori.
Thank you for your work.
Thank you for having me.
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We Can Do Hard Things is created and hosted
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