Effective strategies to manage your money worries

Financial anxiety can have a serious impact on your mental and physical health. These six strategies can help you to reduce it substantially.

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It shows up in all sorts of ways; blurry vision when looking at your banking, confusion around what "should" be a simple financial decision, panic attacks, headaches, muscle tension, relationship challenges, avoiding meetings with your adviser, flaking on social meet-ups, fear you'll never have enough and that feeling in the pit of your stomach that keeps you up at night.

Financial anxiety is no joke for your emotional and physical health.

Having worked in the financial well-being space for nearly two decades, I’ve found these to be six of the most effective ways to reduce financial anxiety.

Deprivation is not a strategy

How likely are you to stick to a diet of 500 to 900 calories per day? There’s zero chance that it's sustainable.

We were all taught to believe that financial deprivation is the way to fix all our money problems.

But, like a yo-yo diet, it never lasts. It's too restrictive and doesn't target the part of your brain that craves and thrives off rewards.

Rewards give you the motivation to keep your financial momentum high.

The key is to keep the rewards on budget and linked to some aspect of your financial well-being.

For example, you could incorporate a small "treat" into your weekly budget — that costs say $5 to $10 — that makes you feel great and that you give yourself when you've had a financially mindful week, or when you've been great about updating your budget.

Small rewards can be more effective than big expensive ones (which often cause more financial stress in the long run).

As you gain financial confidence, you can start to link these small rewards to bigger milestones, like paying off your credit card, increasing your RRSP contributions or showing up prepared for your financial-planning appointment.

Do something good for your finances each day

Simple daily acts of financial self-care go a long way toward improving your money mindset, reducing anxiety and building confidence. They also bring a healthy sense of awareness to your financial situation, which you'll need to improve your finances.

I recommend these small self-care activities: move a small amount of money into your savings account every day, like $5, saying out loud a daily affirmation like, "I'm in control of my finances" or, "Today I'm going to be mindful with my money." Express gratitude for your money when making a purchase or looking at your banking, tracking your spending or taking a pause before purchasing anything to calculate the cost per use.

Just as going for a 20-minute walk each day can keep your body healthy, daily financial care keeps your money situation healthy.

Look at your money, don't hide from it

Money mindfulness is a daily practice of being aware of your money’s ins and outs (which is the foundation of budgeting, a skill you'll need in order to feel better).

Be intentional about how you want to prioritize your hard-earned dollars. In action, money mindfulness is knowing (and saying), "That works for my budget" or, "I'm making this (fill in the blank) a priority" or "A coffee meet-up works better for me versus dinner out."

A craze on TikTok is loud budgeting. Finfluencers on social media are revealing specifically how much they earn and what they’re spending their money on and why; and they're racking up millions of views each week. You don't have to mimic this exactly, but there are many benefits to open communication about money, without fear or shame.

The “facts not fiction” exercise

Similar to a reframing exercise you might do in therapy, take a pesky thought you have about your finances and use facts to either affirm or debunk it. If it happens that the thought is indeed true after using real evidence to support it, make a plan to overcome it.

More times than not, it will turn out to be false and will be an opportunity to reframe your thinking. Here's an example: thinking you're bad with math and therefore bad with money.

Facts for this thought being true might be that you have a hard time adding numbers together in your head at the grocery store.

Evidence against this thought is that almost no one is great at mental arithmetic.

Financially mindful people use their phones and AI to do the math, make their shopping lists, stick to their budget and so on. They don't run numbers in their head.

Reframe this thought: "I have the right tools to help me assess how much something will cost and compare it to my budget."

Reframing is also extremely helpful in relationships when trying to work through money issues that have a long history; use facts, not fiction, to make a plan to move forward.

A little bit of progress is all you need

We've all done this: set goals that are too big and then we fail and feel bad about ourselves. Smaller goals we can "win" at are going to be way more helpful.

I recommend micro-goals, such as measuring the monthly progress on your net worth. Tally up the value of your assets (don't include your car because it depreciates) and then tally up your liabilities (yes, car loans are included on this list). Subtract total liabilities from total assets and that's your net worth. Growing your net worth is how financial security and wealth are created. If it's growing each month, you're doing something right. If your net worth is going down (and it's not related to market conditions) it usually means one of two things; either your budget or your habits aren't working. Investigate and make the necessary changes.

All progress on your net worth, even if it's small, is good.

Make a plan to improve your financial literacy

This could be by reading books, listening to podcasts and so on. From my first-hand experience, money learning gets so much better and becomes more fun when you aren't doing it alone. Find a money community of like-minded people to join or hire an advisor or therapist and start talking. Having people who can join you on your journey is key to reducing financial stress and anxiety.

This article was written by Lesley-Anne Scorgie contributing columnist from The Toronto Star and was legally licensed through the DiveMarketplace by Industry Dive. Please direct all licensing questions to legal@industrydive.com.

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