Financial Feminist - 52. Recognizing Financial Red Flags in Relationships
Episode Date: October 27, 2022Money is complicated –– and it’s made even more complicated by relationship dynamics. As a nod to spooky season, in today’s episode, Tori guides you through some common “financial red flags�...�� in both romantic, friend, and family relationships and how to navigate conversations with said friends and family around finances when your boundaries aren’t being respected. Learn more about our guests, read episode transcripts, get resources from the show, and more on our show notes page: https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-show-notes/financial-red-flags Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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hello financial feminists hello everybody so excited to see you back yet again thank you as
always for your support of the show the the support of this movement. You liking, subscribing,
rating the show always helps new people find the show. It helps us boost our ratings, which helps us continue to deliver great information for you and to give you great guests. And that's very
exciting. So we appreciate your support of the show as always. And we always love it when you
leave a voicemail. If you haven't left a voicemail, if you have a question, if you have a favorite episode, if you have a favorite money win,
please let us know. Also, we've never done this before and I'm doing this live on the recording
here. I did not pitch this to Kristen beforehand, but I have been reading all of the reviews and
some of them are just really fucking lovely. And so I actually want to go and like read a few today. And if you left this review, thank you. Kisses. And I just, yeah,
I want to be able to highlight you and highlight your amazing wins and your stories. So Kat Green
2018 says, I'm 28 and I thought I was pretty knowledgeable with money and had good guidance.
With that being said, I learned so much more and in a healthy way. You know, not the typical scare tactic old white
grandpa warning ways. I wish I had this before I bought my house, but I'm happy I found it when I
did. Thank you guys so much for everything you do. Thank you, Kat Green. That's so kind.
Their username is 10kemergencydone, which makes me think that they maybe just created their account to give a review, which props, 10 out of 10.
It says, my big sister who teaches me about money.
I've been listening to the show since the first episode.
Wow, oldie but a goodie.
It is truly so important for all women to understand money.
I'm so thankful I can listen to your words and learn how to be the most independent woman I can be by having my finances in check. And I just pre-ordered your book, all caps, with some smiley
faces. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Let's do one more. I'm trying to find a win. There it is.
Very inspiring. Oh my gosh. I'm not going to read their username because it's literally,
it looks like a bunch of gibberish. Okay. Just saved my first $20,000 in part because of you.
Never thought this number was possible. Last year I had $0 in savings. So in a year, this person saved $20,000.
That's fantastic. And they said, working towards my first 100K right now. Yay. We love it. We love
reading reviews, especially the good ones. And if you're going to relieve a bad review, just don't
listen to the show. If you don't like the show, don't listen, right? If you take a bite of something
and you don't like it, don't eat it. So good vibes only
here. You know, good vibes only. Team. So today we are doing what we're considering to be a
Halloween themed episode. A little spooky episode. And we are talking all about financial red flags.
This is a question we get constantly. Like, what should I look out for
in my relationships, both romantic and like a roommate or a friend situation? What should I
look at when I am trying to determine like a company or a bank to work with, right? Like,
red flags are all over. We're talking specifically today about emotional red flags in partnerships
and friendships. Everyone, anyone can have a financial red flag, even people who don't
mean to. Sometimes financial red flags are not manipulative. They're not necessarily intentional,
right? Sometimes it's just people having emotional hangups about money. We have so many episodes in the Bat Catalog about
how to overcome your psychological bullshit around money, your financial trauma. I'm going to keep
plugging it, guys, because literally I put everything I fucking know in this book. But
the entire first chapter of Financial Feminist, the book, is all about the psychology or the
emotions around money. So please pre-order if you haven't already. But it's important to recognize
financial red flags so you can confront them in other people so you can work towards a better, more healthy
relationship, but also in yourself. If you're currently in a red flag kind of relationship,
and especially if you're feeling unsafe, I'm going to come right off the top here.
We have an incredible episode with Jan Langbein who talks more about domestic and financial abuse.
We're going to talk about some red flags here that do relate to abuse, but if this is like something that's pretty serious
in your life, please take a listen to that episode. You can also call the National Domestic
Abuse Hotline available 24-7 at 800-799-7233. So we want to kick off the episode with that.
Let's talk about some of these red flags and
how they can manifest. Number one, first financial red flag is this person is controlling aspects
of your relationship or if you're on a date, they're controlling it right from the get-go.
So what does this look like in actuality? Maybe they're always in control of where you go,
when you go there, what you order at a restaurant, basically trying to have some semblance.
It's not just the control aspect, right? It's like deciding for you what is happening in your life.
So I've seen this manifest and we've gotten so many,
unfortunately, so many community stories about red flags, about abuse. So we've seen this manifest
in terms of, you know, I had to be home at a certain time or this person would be upset,
right? And even if I had a good explanation, the person would still be upset. Like I had a
curfew, right? Even as an adult, it manifests as literally like a person controlling what you eat,
controlling how much you eat. And this can again look as severe as like literally monitoring your
food, monitoring your spending, or as simple as like comments about how much you eat.
I was unfortunately in a relationship, my first ever relationship, where my partner would make
comments about my weight. Like I literally was at Thanksgiving dinner with my family and he made a
comment about me like grabbing another roll at the table. So this can be as severe as literally
them tracking every single thing you do, your movements, right? Or even these like more subtle aspects of control. Number two,
they are not equal partners when it comes to money. And we're not just talking, again,
like romantic partnership. So something we've talked on the podcast a lot about already,
and that we'll continue to talk about, is this idea of like equality in a partnership.
we'll continue to talk about is this idea of like equality in a partnership. Equality, at least in especially like a romantic relationship or even in a roommate scenario, it doesn't necessarily
mean you're splitting things 50-50, right? Like if I were to move in with a partner, I will probably
be making more money than them. So I don't think it makes sense for us to split the rent 50-50.
them. So I don't think it makes sense for us to split the rent 50-50. I think it makes more sense to split our rent by our relation to our income, right? So I might pay 70% of the rent versus their
30% because that makes more sense for how much money we're bringing in, right? So when we say
equal, we don't literally just mean like 50% split down the middle all the time. So how does this
manifest? Okay, a couple examples.
One, they get a little cagey when it comes time to pay. They forgot their wallet at home.
Even if you're asking to like split the bill or cover it. And it's not just like once or twice,
this is happening a lot. They also may act offended when you ask to split the bill or go
Dutch. Or again, they may be forgetting
their wallet, asking you to pay for more dates than you do, right? They're asking you to pay for
more dates than they're reciprocating. If it's a roommate situation or someone you're living with,
maybe it's they're refusing to cover certain bills, right? They're not interested in splitting. They always, again, forget. Oh my God, it's rent day. I totally forgot, right? It's not just every once in a
while. It's happening repeatedly. Again, this can be more malicious. This can be more intentional,
or this can just be someone being truly forgetful and unorganized when it comes to money or avoiding managing money because
it makes them nervous. Okay. The third and probably one of the ones that I just, I need all of you to
listen to me, please, dear God, is accounts all in this person's name. Now, again, a lot of times
this kind of just happens. This is not somebody saying, I'm going to put all the accounts in my name. It's more just either the partner either not advocating for themselves or not knowing they should.
credit and about how what often happens is in a heteronormative relationship, a man will take out a credit card or a parent even will take out a credit card and you are a cosigner. You are like
attached to their credit card. So you are not building your own credit. You are building your
partner's credit or you're building your parents' credit. What happens, of course, is that when you
try to buy a car, when you try to open a credit card in your own name,
all of those like good behaviors, all of the paying on time, paying in full,
you have not built your own credit score. So this accounts all in somebody's name,
again, can either be malicious or can just be the person added you and it's still in their name.
Or when, you know, there was a deed to the house and it's not two people on that deed.
So if you haven't done so already, if you're in any sort of partnership, a romantic partnership,
a business partnership, please make sure that everybody's name who's supposed to be on the things, on the accounts, on the deeds, on the contracts is actually there.
We want this red flag to be as avoidable as possible, right?
In the more malicious sense, the accounts all in one place thing is a very, very serious
transgression. It is 100% about control. It is 100% about the ability for typically a romantic partner to keep you in a place you don't want to be.
We talk all the time about how money gives you options and money gives you choices.
And unfortunately, of course, when you don't have your own money, when somebody is controlling your money, when someone is controlling what happens to it, you can't get out of that situation because you don't have the financial means to do
so. Again, if this is a more serious, more malicious thing, you will know. You can trust
your gut. Your gut is telling you. That's one piece of advice that's just for this entire episode.
If you're wondering if it's malicious or not, you already know. I promise you, you do.
And either you've been gaslit into thinking you don't or you're gaslighting yourself.
You're going, no, but he wouldn't do that.
He's a really nice guy, right?
Or, oh, it's just a misunderstanding.
It's not.
If you know it's not, it's not.
It's not.
So the accounts all in one name is not a great thing, regardless of the intent.
It is one of the worst things if it is intentionally malicious.
And if you've been following me on TikTok or Instagram for any amount of time, you've probably heard me discuss that one of the few personal finance rules that's hard and
fast for me is that no couple in a romantic relationship should 100% combine finances.
No couple in a romantic relationship should have accounts in just one person's name, at least shared accounts, right? Joint accounts. You need some of your own money and anything that
you are in together, right? A joint account, again, a house, whatever that looks like should
be in both of your names. All right. Number four. I don't think there's any way that this isn't
one that's egregious or malicious, but giving you an allowance or a stipend, especially if it's your own goddamn money. This is one of the telltale signs of both financial
and domestic abuse is telling you that you can only spend this amount of money and that this
is the only money you have, right, for a certain thing. And it's not like, hey, we're each getting
$50 to like go do something fun, right? Like my dad has his own money so he can go take golf lessons and my mom has her own money so she can go buy like scrapbooking supplies.
This isn't it, right? This is one person divvying up a certain amount of money for another person
and then again creating really strict barriers around what that looks like. This is, again, another one that is incredibly malicious.
And if this is your reality, this is financial abuse. This is financial abuse. Number five is
limiting where you spend your money or time. Very similar to giving you an allowance, right?
Either monitoring your spending on your accounts or, again, giving you some type of allowance.
Number six is telling you what jobs you can or cannot have. We see this in a lot of abusive
situations where one partner tells the other person they're not allowed to work or that they're
only allowed to work certain jobs or certain industries or certain hours because they, quote,
have to take care of the home or kids or just because they feel their
partner should not be allowed to work. This is a very patriarchal idea, right? Assuming, again,
you're in a heteronormative relationship where the male identifying person is the abuser,
right? You need to stay at home barring you and restricting you from A, spending money outside
the home or B, being able to have your own money. This is another sign, again, of control is preventing you from
making money. Because if you're not making money, of course, you don't have money to spend. Again,
we mentioned earlier, this is all about control. This is all about making sure, again, in maliciously
abusive situations, this is all about making sure that you don't have access to money, that you're
not making your own money, that you can't escape. to money, that you're not making your own money,
that you can't escape. All right, number seven. Very similar, but some sort of resentment towards
you making more money. Almost like guilting you into trying to not work. This can look like snide
comments or them freezing you out when you come home from work. Or again, literally making you
or asking you to quit your job.
Number eight is one that could be malicious or could be just somebody against, like mismanagement
of money. But number eight is constantly asking to borrow money. All right, number nine is a
refusal to talk about money. Some of this might be money trauma, right? Some of this might be
the narrative of talking about money is gauche, talking about money is trauma, right? Some of this might be the narrative of talking about
money is gauche, talking about money is bad, right? And probably it's more commonly that,
right? Is like money makes people uncomfortable. This is what we're trying to change here at
Financial Feminist. But this refusal to talk about money is often just based on money trauma
around those narratives that, again, talking about money isn't polite, or just a lot of shame,
a lot of shame about their financial situation, a lot of shame about money.
But if you get closer to a partner and you're starting to deepen your relationship and you're
starting to make choices together, you have to be able to talk about money. You have to be able to
have conversations about money, right? In the same way that if you're talking with friends and you're
starting,
like Christine and I take our trip every year, we travel every single year, we've had to become very comfortable talking about money with each other because we have to plan out the budget for
the trip. And if we're not able to talk about what we can each spend or what we're willing to spend
money on, then A, the trip's not going to be very successful, and B, there's going to be a lot
of unresolved tension there. You can kind of tell whether this uncomfortability around talking about
money is truly just they're uncomfortable and they've never done it before, or they have
preconceived notions about what it should look like, or it is very specifically like a choice
that, again, feels manipulative. All right, number 10 is they're kind of sneaky
about spending habits. They refuse to tell you how much debt they have or they're just hiding
it from you altogether, especially when you get to the point of combining finances.
They will spend a bunch of money on a credit card either under like other names, right? Or they just won't be willing to talk about it. A lot of, I think,
people have like shopping addictions or shopping habits where, you know, you might go spend a bunch
of money and then hide the bags from the store. Yeah, we see this a lot, especially with like
people buying like pornography on the internet, right? There's different names for companies that show up on
credit cards. And I believe sometimes you can pay to specifically have a different line item on a
credit card statement. So again, this can be pretty egregious. This can also be someone's just
not sure how to talk to you about how much they spend
or they feel shame because their previous partner or their families or their friends have shamed
them for their spending. With all of these, again, there's like a level, right? There's a certain
level of severity with these. But if someone is secretive about their spending, again, it's
probably linked to shame. It's probably linked to them feeling
ashamed of how much money they do spend. Number 11 might surprise you, but number 11 is overdoing
it when it comes to taking out credit cards, like taking on an $800 car payment and just being like,
it's fine, I'll pay it off later. This kind of temporary satisfaction of buying something
without thinking through the long-term impacts of that decision, right? Oh, let's go to Cabo and
we'll go to this place every other weekend and not realizing that like all of that is going on
a credit card and they're going to have to deal with it later, right? Again, this is probably
linked to a lack of understanding about how to manage money, about how to be smart around money.
It might literally be as simple as they don't understand how a credit card works. We know that the number one reason
women actually go into debt is they don't understand how the loan process works. And of
course, that's not because we're stupid. It's because no one ever taught us this. So it might
just be literally that this person is going into debt or spending money because they don't either
A, know any better, or B, know any different.
Number 12, we talked about borrowing money before. Maybe they're not asking you to lend to them
money, but they're constantly borrowing money from everybody else, right? They're constantly
borrowing money from friends and family. And when we say borrowing money, again, it's not something that happens
every once in a while or something that is like an emergency, but it's borrowing money and then
sometimes using that money for either something different than why they asked for the money,
right? Oh, I need money because I have, you know, like an emergency medical bill, but then spending it on a vacation
or doing it because, again, they're not managing their money very well.
And so they're constantly getting themselves into these situations where they need more
money because they've mismanaged their finances.
Number 13 most commonly happens with friends.
This is, again, a more minor of these red flags, but something that should really be discussed is if you're going out with friends and they never take your budget into
consideration. They never make plans in a way that either A, asks you, like, what do you want to do?
What are you comfortable with? Or B, they're forcing you to split the bill instead of you
just paying for your portion.
I don't know if I've told this story on the podcast. When I went to my senior prom in high
school, it was my money that we were paying for dinner. Like my parents didn't give me money.
When I went out to our pre-prom dinner, that was my money I had earned. And so I could only afford
at this really nice restaurant we went to the like $20 appetizer that I purchased
as my meal. I think it was even, it might've been less than that. I was on a budget.
And unknowingly, I, you know, I had lovely friends. They didn't do this intentionally.
What happened was my friend who had planned the dinner was like, hey, I have gift certificates
to this restaurant. So we're just going to go all in
and split the dinner eight ways. For me, as a 17-year-old who I think ordered basically
fancy grilled cheese because that was the only thing on the menu I was comfortable spending money
on, it was really shitty to realize that I was also going to pay for the steak dinner that my
friend next to me had ordered and the lobster dinner that my friend next to me had ordered and the lobster
dinner that my friend across from me had ordered. And at the time, I didn't speak up. And you can
tell that it still haunts me. Now, did this friend have any malicious intent? No, of course not.
However, if this sort of behavior was either continued, right, if this happened a lot,
or if I didn't feel like I had the power or the kind of relationship where I could say something,
If I didn't feel like I had the power or the kind of relationship where I could say something,
that's a red flag.
And finally, let's talk about our last one, which may not seem like a red flag, but 100% is.
There's such a thing as saving too much money.
No, that might shock you that a financial expert is telling you that there might be
a place where you're saving too much money, right?
Or investing too much money or paying off your debt too quickly. But this is often a financial trauma
response as someone who hoards money. Either because they didn't grow up with a ton of money
or they have a scarcity mindset or they're just constantly scared that shit's going to hit the
fan. And of course, you can't see this, but Kristen, our podcast producer, is like jamming in the corner because this is her, I think, in a lot of ways.
But this is a red flag. This is a red flag, is that if you are ever doing something financially
and it is motivated by a fear, that's probably a red flag. Saving an emergency fund in a way is like, oh, I don't
want this to kick me in the ass later. But like a deep-seated fear of like, oh my god, everybody
hates me and I'm going to lose my job and the world's going to burn and it's going to be terrible.
Right? Like that's a emotionally motivated financial decision in probably a negative way.
I tell this story in the book in Financial Feminist, but one of my
first money clients was saving 90 to 95% of her income. That's insane. And that told me actually
a lot. No one should be saving that much money. Like truly, truly, truly, unless you're making
like, I don't know, millions and millions of dollars, right? Like it was crazy how much money
she was saving. And the reason she was working with me
as a financial coach is she was worried she wasn't saving enough. And when we dug to the root of it,
I realized that she had some financial trauma because again, her parents didn't grow up with
a lot. And so she was trying to save every single penny she could because she had the scarcity
mindset. So if someone is, as Dave Ramsey so
lovingly puts it, paying off their debt with gazelle-like intensity and foregoing their
relationships and foregoing their mental health and foregoing everything good in life in order
to pay off debt, that's a red flag. If someone is saving so much of their income that they're
depriving themselves, that shows you that they're probably trying to compensate for something emotionally. So yes, actually being like, quote unquote, too financially responsible,
100% a red flag and probably tied to your financial trauma. This is by no means an
all-encompassing list. There are other ways that financial red flags show up. There are other ways
that abuse and trauma show up in our
relationships, in our relationship with money. I can't tell you enough. Please trust your gut.
Your gut knows better than your brain, better than anything else, if something doesn't feel
right. And if these are more minor red flags that you think you can work through,
minor red flags that you think you can work through, open conversations, sending people this podcast episode, reading books, consuming YouTube videos or TikToks, becoming more comfortable
just hearing other people talk about money will most likely make you more comfortable
having these conversations and trying to broach either conversations or lasting change around money
with the people in your life. If you recognize some of these behaviors in yourself, it does not
mean you're a bad person. And it does not mean that you're going to never be able to get over
them. Recognizing and acknowledging is the first step. We all have moments from our past and our
upbringings that
shade how we manage our money, that influence how we manage our money. So again, first steps might
be having an honest conversation with a friend or a partner, or maybe with a therapist, probably
with a therapist. Podcasts, of course, like ours at Financial Feminist are a great place to start.
We have two great episodes that I think will be really helpful for you. Actually, three. Overcome Your Psychological Bullshit Around Money is the
number three. This is the third episode we ever released. Number five, the episode called Where
Do I Start? And number 11, Around Financial Self-Care. These are all great episodes to
either go back to if you've heard them already or to start with. So we actually got an email
about this feeling of when you are the financial red flag. And Kristen, would you mind reading it
for us? Absolutely. Okay. This email says, hi there. I feel so much shame in writing this.
However, I deeply trust your financial wisdom and guidance. So I'm writing anyways. I read
your blog post recently
about financial red flags in a relationship. It was helpful, but it was written mainly from the
perspective that your partner is the red flag. I'm writing because it's me. I'm the red flag in
my relationship. What advice do you have for those of us in the opposite boat, being the ones with
the dirty financial secret and wanting to change and open up to our partners. I'm going to give you some context.
She gave some context.
Okay, some context.
We are in a long-distance partnership, about four years now.
As for my red flag, well, I was freelancing the last few years and really struggling to make ends meet.
Truly only being able to afford my rent and some bills.
Leaning on my credit card to support groceries,
doctor's appointments, therapy,
and everything else life brings.
I racked up 10K in debt.
Because of my traumatic past and the struggle with PTSD,
I kept this debt a big secret from everyone in my life.
From my partner to my sisters and my parents,
I had a lot of fear around being honest with my loved ones,
scared of being judged, shamed, and having their opinions of me change. Anyways, I have finally broken out of that awful dark place. I recently broke down to my mom and my sister about debt. I got a new job where I'm
being paid very well. I put most of the little savings I did have towards my debt, and my mom
helped me with a portion too. I am repaying her back slowly over the next months. I'm finally
seeing the light at the end of the tunnel. I have about 2K back slowly over the next months. I'm finally seeing the light at
the end of the tunnel. I have about 2K left to handle, but something I haven't tackled is sharing
all of this with my partner. I am terrified he will judge me and ultimately that he will leave me
because I've kept this secret for so long. Makes me sad. We recently did talk about finances.
He broke the ice and shared how he was concerned that we talk so little about finances in our relationship.
He said he didn't want to pressure me and was waiting for me to bring it up,
but was curious why this wasn't something I ever wanted to talk about with him.
I downplayed it and ultimately avoided the conversation at the moment.
It's been a few weeks since then, and I want to have this conversation, but I don't know where to start.
I don't know how to find the courage.
I'm scared.
I feel so ashamed of my situation. Sure, a great new job, but years of keeping a secret and hiding
this part of my life, I think hiding will hurt him more than learning about the amount of debt I was
in itself. Do you have any advice on how to open up about this? I don't even know where to begin
the conversation and it's just so much to talk through. I want to add that my partner is really supportive. I'm just terrified of opening up and him leaving me. If you can hear my therapist saying
if he leaves you because of this, he wasn't the one. Okay. First of all, this is my audition to
have a Dave Ramsey-like show with none of the bullshit. So welcome to the financial feminist
call-in line. Okay. First of all,
wow, your vulnerability in your email. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Second of all,
you have already made such progress. One, financial progress of paying off $8,000 of debt,
which is incredible. But two, it sounds like you're starting to at least get a little more
comfortable being uncomfortable. And you're at to at least get a little more comfortable being
uncomfortable and you're at the point where you've acknowledged, okay, this is an issue
and I need to talk to people about it.
Three, I already know your partner is supportive because of how he is speaking to you in what
you described, right?
Of like, hey, I noticed we don't talk about money a lot and I didn't want to pressure
you and I was waiting for you to bring it up. Right. You can already tell he's supportive.
So I'm going to tell you a story. One of my first coaching clients, who is now a very good friend
of mine, and I will not name her, but I'm sure she is. She loves when I tell this story because
it's just it's so relatable, but also it's so powerful. When we started working together,
so relatable, but also it's so powerful. When we started working together, she was in $80,000 of credit card debt and her husband knew nothing about it. She had hid $80,000 of debt from him.
And she was, first of all, terrified of the debt, but second of all, deeply, deeply ashamed and felt so scared to tell her husband because of course she was afraid of the judgment
and then she was also afraid that he would be angry that she kept it from him. So I'm going
to give you the same advice I gave her. Admit to him that you're scared. If you're starting a
conversation with him, which should be a, hey, not to alarm you,
but I need to talk to you about something tonight, when would be a good chance to do that,
right? This is not a conversation you have when he's like leaving the door for work or leaving
the house for work, right? This is a like, hey, I want to talk to you about something. Everything
in our relationship is fine. I love you, but I just want to talk to you about something, right?
You say, I'm really scared to tell you this. This is really, really difficult
for me. I'm really scared you're going to hear it and you're going to leave me. You can tell him how
you feel. You can tell him that you're scared. And it sounds like what this beautifully supportive
person will do is sit there very present and listen. And he might have
a reaction, but ultimately that reaction is going to be, okay, let's do it together.
Which is what my friend's partner's reaction was. At first it was like, oh God, oh shit,
that is a lot of money. And then when he slept on it and he woke up the next day,
he turned to her and said, okay, how are we going to, how are we going to make this happen?
And was very much
in it as a team effort. So you're going to say, you know what? I'm really scared.
I'm really scared you're going to leave. I'm scared to even admit this to you.
But I went into a lot of credit card debt and I don't have the best relationship with money.
And I'm trying. And I not only want this relationship with money to change to better my own life,
but to better our relationship. And if you're able and willing, here's how you can support me
in that. Maybe it's conversations with money. Maybe it's money dates, right? We've talked about
that on the podcast before and in the book. Maybe it's, hey, just encouraging me and telling me I'm
doing a good job, right? But first, admit that you're
scared. Second, be really honest with him. And third, tell him, here's how you can support me,
right? Or maybe you have a longer conversation and you figure out how you can support each other
through that. I just also need you to know you're so not alone in this. So many people have this of just they feel so deeply insecure about money.
And I hope it brings you some solace that this thing that feels very siloed of like,
I'm terrible with money. Everybody else is great at it. I'm like fucking up. Everybody's doing it.
Everybody, even me, I have financial trauma. Like everybody has some
sort of financial trauma. And it sounds like you're in therapy. I always recommend therapy.
Talk to your therapist about it. Right. And it sounds like you're already starting to do that.
I am not a medical or psychological professional. Right. I'm a financial expert. But I know that,
you know, being able to talk to somebody who will help you work through it and counsel you through it from a brain standpoint or from an emotion standpoint will also be very helpful.
You're not alone.
You're taking exactly the right steps and you're fucking brave and you should be really proud of yourself.
Also, just like gold star because you did get out of it.
You know what I mean?
Like, that's amazing.
Right, right.
You're actively working your way out of it. You know what I mean? Like, that's amazing. Right. Right. You're actively working your way out of it.
Yeah.
I love that.
It was such a great email to get.
I love how vulnerable she was.
And if you are the person who's listening to this podcast episode and you're like, fuck, I'm the person.
I'm the red flag.
I am the fucking blazing on fire red flag.
You're here.
You're listening to this podcast. You're
doing first steps. And I always talk about how to change anything in your life, you have to get
uncomfortable. You have to get uncomfortable in order to be comfortable, right? You have to get
comfortable being uncomfortable in order to be comfortable, right? So you just being here and absorbing some information and maybe taking
that information and starting to apply changes to your life, starting to bring up money in
conversations, like that's why we do what we do. And again, if you are in a red flag relationship,
if you're in an abusive relationship, and especially if you're feeling unsafe,
we have that incredible episode with Jan Langbein that talks a little bit more about domestic and financial abuse.
And again, that hotline is available to you, 800-799-7233. So team, if you've listened to
this episode and you've taken something away from it, please share it. It's so important,
especially around red flags. I can't tell you the amount of people, but especially
women who get into relationships, whether that's, again, partnerships, romantic partnerships,
or friendships, or living situations, and they ignore all the red flags, or they don't realize
that the red flags are actually red, right? So please share this episode on social media,
share it with your friends and if you are
either in a red flag scenario or you are the red flag we have all of the resources you need linked
down below thank you as always for being here thank you for your support of the show i hope
you have a happy halloween i will be watching the uh multiple community episodes around halloween
because in my opinion they're the best episodes they're so good because in my opinion, they're the best episodes.
They're so good. And yeah, the one where they're doing ABBA, it's the episode where they all turn
into zombies. Great episode. Season two, I believe. All right. Thank you as always for
being here, Financial Feminist, and I'll talk to you soon. Thank you for listening to Financial
Feminist, a Her First 100K podcast. Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap, produced by Kristen Fields, marketing and
administration by Karina Patel, Olivia Koning, Sharice Wade, Alina Hilzer, Paulina Isaac,
Sophia Cohen, Valerie Oresko, Jack Koning, and Ana Alexandra.
Research by Ariel Johnson.
Audio engineering by Austin Fields.
Promotional graphics by Mary Stratton. Photography by Sarah Wolf. And theme music by Jonahielle Johnson. Audio engineering by Austin Fields. Promotional graphics by Mary Stratton.
Photography by Sarah Wolf.
And theme music by Jonah Cohen Sound.
A huge thanks to the entire Her First 100K team and community for supporting the show.
For more information about Financial Feminist, Her First 100K, our guests, episode show notes,
and our upcoming book, also titled Financial Feminist, visit herfirst100k.com.