Anything is possible with the right planning.

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Mindset, stress, and emotions

HOW THEY INFLUENCE YOUR FINANCIAL PLANNING

Money may be a tool, but how we use that tool is often driven by emotions, beliefs, and life experiences far more than logic and spreadsheets. Why do some people save meticulously while others can’t seem to keep a dollar, pound, or rand in their pocket? Why do some avoid financial planning altogether while others obsess over every transaction?

It all comes down to how we relate to money on a psychological and emotional level.

Let’s start with money mindset. This is the collection of beliefs and attitudes we hold about money, usually shaped in childhood. If you grew up hearing phrases like “money doesn’t grow on trees” or “we can’t afford that,” those messages may have conditioned you to see money as something scarce, difficult to earn, or easily lost.

Conversely, if wealth was celebrated as the ultimate measure of success, you might have internalised the belief that more is always better, which can drive a constant chase for accumulation.

But our mindsets alone don’t determine our behaviours. Financial stress and anxiety play a significant role, often overriding logic and driving us toward decisions rooted in fear, avoidance, or impulsivity. If you feel anxious about your financial future, you might over-save to the point of not allowing yourself to enjoy the wealth you’ve built.

Or, on the flip side, you might avoid looking at your financial situation altogether, hoping it will somehow resolve itself if left alone. Financial anxiety is powerful because it taps into one of our most primal fears: survival. And when our survival feels threatened, rational thinking goes out the window.

Then there’s emotional spending—the act of using money to soothe or avoid emotional discomfort. Maybe it’s shopping to cope with stress, buying lavish gifts to earn approval, or splurging on experiences to distract from deeper emotional pain. Emotional spending is particularly tricky because it often provides temporary relief, making it feel like a solution when, in reality, it’s just a Band-Aid.

What’s fascinating is how these three aspects can interplay. For instance, a scarcity mindset may drive financial anxiety, which then leads to emotional spending as a coping mechanism. Alternatively, someone driven by the need to accumulate wealth as a measure of success may feel constant financial stress, pushing them to overwork or take excessive risks.

Recognising how your mindset, stress, and emotions are influencing your financial decisions is the first step toward change. It’s not about trying to eliminate emotions from your financial planning—it’s about understanding them and allowing them to inform your decisions in a healthy way.

What does this mean for financial planning? It means acknowledging that real financial freedom isn’t just about the numbers; it’s about understanding and addressing the emotions and beliefs behind those numbers. The most successful financial plans are those that take into account not just your resources, but your relationship with those resources.

After all, financial wellness isn’t just about accumulation; it’s about alignment. Aligning your money mindset with your values, recognising the emotional triggers that drive impulsive decisions, and finding healthy ways to address financial stress and anxiety.

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