Hidden Brain - Money 2.0: Rewrite Your Money Story
Episode Date: May 2, 2022Money worries are one of the biggest sources of anxiety in the lives of Americans. This week, we kick off our new "Money 2.0" series with psychologist Brad Klontz. He says that while external economic... forces often shape our financial well-being, our unconscious beliefs about money also contribute to how well we manage our money. If you like this show, please check out our new podcast, My Unsung Hero! And if you'd like to support our work, you can do so at support.hiddenbrain.org.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanthan.
Around the world, when you ask people what keeps them awake at night,
they'll invariably tell you, money problems.
Our challenges with money are varied, but we generally tend to have a fixed way of thinking about them.
Most of us point to external factors as the root cause of our money problems.
We've had an eight-day losing streak in the Dow that in percentage terms puts it on par close
to that percentage loss those two days in 1929.
This could be the most serious recession in decades.
Every American is feeling the bite of inflation.
Groceries cost more, gas costs more, everything seems to cost more.
It's certainly true that a recession or an unexpected medical expense can send our finances
into a tailspin.
But it's also the case that psychological factors within us can play a powerful role in determining
our financial successes
and failures. All I know is I have these beliefs around money that are banging around
in my subconscious and in our studies we have found that these beliefs, most of us aren't even
really aware of them, they have a profound impact on our financial outcomes.
on our financial outcomes.
Today we begin a new series called Money 2.0. Over the next few weeks, we'll explore how money shapes our behavior in profound and subtle ways.
We'll consider how money influenced the rise of civilizations
and why we're drawn to focus on people who are richer than us.
We'll also look at the common psychological traps that lead to money difficulties and
how we can chart a path to solid financial footing.
Our money and our minds, this week on Hidden Brain. Many of us struggle with money. We have a hard time saving it. We spend more than we earn
and we blow through budgets. Others of us have the opposite problem, focusing so much on
saving for the long term that we never commit to spending on things that will give us pleasure in the shorter.
One thing we don't do?
Few of us stop to think about how we think about money.
We don't notice the psychological patterns in our behavior.
That's why each money challenge can look like a brand new problem.
Psychologist Brad Clans studies how people think about money.
It turns out that once you understand the underlying patterns that shape your money-related
behaviors, it can transform the way you think about your finances.
Brad Clans, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thank you so much for having me.
Brad, I want to start by looking at a moment in your own life.
You were just out of grad school and you had a massive amount of debt.
I think you were staring at a $100,000 student loan.
Can you start by telling me what it felt like
to owe so much money?
I knew that the only way for me to get through school
was to take on loans.
And I was very fortunate in undergrad
that I had some sports scholarships and academic scholarships.
But grad school was very expensive.
And I knew that was the only way for me to get
where I wanted to go, so I took on that debt
and staring at that, looking at that interest rate,
it was terrifying for me,
and it was something that I was very anxious to tackle
and try to get rid of as fast as I could.
Now, you had a friend of the time
who was making a lot of money.
What kind of amounts are we talking about here?
Well, I saw him make over the course of a year
about $100,000 by day trading.
And what was his secret when you watched him?
What was he doing?
What was so attractive about it to me
is that he had no idea what he was doing.
I would sit there and... Yeah, and I knew he had no idea what he was doing.
I would sit there and, yeah, and I knew I had no idea either.
So I sat there and I'd watch him buy a stock,
and one that comes to mind is like EMC, and I'm like,
what's EMC? And he's like, I have no idea, click,
and he buys a bunch. And this strategy had been extremely effective
for him over the course of this year.
So your friend is raking in the cash, even though he doesn't know what he's doing.
He's buying and selling stocks and companies he's never heard of.
Meanwhile, you're working three jobs.
I understand you had lawn furniture inside your home.
You're sleeping on the floor.
Obviously, I can imagine the next thought that goes through your head, Brad.
Well, absolutely.
And it really was, for me, the focus I was very honed in
on getting rid of this debt,
because I knew this was a big monkey on my back.
And the interest rate was like eight and a half percent
at that time.
And so I thought, I saw this was a viable way for me
to just clean the slate and my goal was to get to a net
worth of zero.
That was my goal.
Mm-hmm.
How did you go about doing it?
I mean, where did you generate the capital to begin day trading?
Yeah, I didn't have much money, but what I did have was a truck.
And the truck was worth probably about $7,000 at the time.
So I decided to sell it and take the money and start trading with it.
It just made logical sense from that point of view.
It's like, of course I should do this.
And I was living in Hawaii at the time
and I didn't have a lot of material needs
and I bought a couple of $500 cars.
And I would, the reason I bought two is
because the first one broke down in the first month
and I bought another one.
And I would alternate fixing one and driving the other.
And I thought this was totally fine.
I can totally do this for a year
so I can become wealthy or at least make that 100K
to pay off my student loans.
Did you have any success when you began day trading?
Did you have moments where you suddenly felt,
oh my gosh, this easy money is rolling in?
I did.
It was incredible.
I had three months of just bliss watching these stocks that I was buying move up in value.
And I think by the time I cobbled together savings and all that, I think I had about 10,000
in.
And I remember vividly just seeing it go up, you know, 500, a thousand a month.
And I knew that if I could get better at this, I would have no problem reaching my goal
within a year.
So you must have felt that you made the right call to sell your truck, you know, quit your
jobs, become a day trader.
How did the story turn out?
Well, unfortunately for me, but I think fortunately in retrospect, given that this experience launched
my entire interest in financial psychology was about three months into it, the tech bubble
burst.
So I had invested at just about the peak of the tech bubble and I started to then watch
my accounts go down and stocks go down
and I went to my friend and I'm like,
what do I do and he's like, I have no idea.
He's never experienced this.
And I'd say over the course of three to six months,
I mean, I was down about 70, 80%,
and when it was all set and done,
I'm gonna say about 90% of it was gone.
You know, the question I asked myself was,
why would a reasonably intelligent person do something
so stupid with his money?
Fortunately, being trained as a clinical psychologist,
I had gotten here in a very logical way,
as I knew that it could
make sense if I analyzed it and learned from it.
Brad, you fell for what was essentially a get rich quick scheme.
And of course, it's not just you.
This happens all the time.
I remember some time ago, people began buying stock in a company called GameStop.
This was a company that was failing,
but some traders on Reddit wanted to drive up
the value of the stock.
So they invested tens of thousands of dollars
and the stock skyrocketed.
It went from, I think, four dollars a share
to $325 a share or some astronomical number like that.
Here's a clip from CNN's Christine Romans.
The fundamentals of the company have been rough here.
They're not making any money.
They've been closing stores.
Someone's going to be hurting when this thing turns.
But for now, it's not turning.
Eventually, of course, Brad did turn.
Some people made massive profits, but many others lost a lot of money.
So clearly, your story is not the first time we've heard a story about a Get Rich Quick
Scheme, and it's almost certainly not going to be the last.
Yeah, there's nothing worse than the idea of hard work and drudgery and waiting years
and discipline to become wealthy.
And so anything that looks like it could be a shortcut, of course, it's like instantly
attractive to most of us.
So Getrich Quicks schemes are not the only money problems that people confront.
The average American has a credit card balance of $5,525.
And collectively, Americans owe about three quarters of a trillion dollars in credit card debt.
That's a heart-stopping number, Brad.
It's an unbelievable number.
And I remember the statistics showed that when we are in really good economic shape,
that's when we tend to have the higher credit card debt and the lower savings rates.
It's really fascinating.
When we're really excited about things, we go into more of a spending frenzy,
not really thinking about the future.
This optimism that everything's going to be fine.
And so we see that. I mean, that's the biggest problem in America, I believe, is not saving thinking about the future, this optimism that everything's going to be fine. And so we see that.
I mean, that's the biggest problem America, I believe, is not saving enough for the future
and spending more than we make.
So the challenge of overspending seems like a simple enough problem to fix.
I want to play you a clip from Saturday Night Live that essentially was a parody of the
problem.
Did you know millions of Americans live with debt they cannot control?
That's why I developed this unique new program for managing your debt.
It's called don't buy stuff you cannot afford.
So we'll talk later in the conversation about why people engage in overspending, but I want
to flag that if you don't understand the underlying thought patterns that lead to some of these
behaviors, it can seem like the same irrational things keep happening over and over and over again.
That's right.
And it is one of the reasons that money is the number one source of stress in the lives
of Americans.
Studies have shown three out of four Americans over the last 10, 15 years.
It's one of the top stressors in their lives.
And you can argue that we're in one of the richest wealthiest countries in the world.
Hmm. So we've seen how lots of people are drawn to get rich quick schemes and to overspending,
but it turns out some people have the opposite problem. One of your earliest memories involves
your dad giving you a crisp $20 bill to spend at a county fair. What did you do with this
windfall, Brad? Well, it did feel like a windfall. I did not have much money growing up. My parents divorced
when I was about two and they were both public school teachers. So we did not have much.
And when he would give me that Chris $20 bill, I felt an intense need to hoard it and to
save it. And so I would go through the entire day, not buying any cotton candy and looking
around at things I wanted, but feeling so good, I had that $20 bill in my pocket. Not really
enjoying the money that was given to me. I was anxious about not having enough.
So I have to say some listeners might say, look, this doesn't really seem like a problem.
Many adults have trouble saving money. You were already saving money as a kid, why do you feel your
frugality or your hyper frugality is a problem? And perhaps you might explain that in the context of
a conversation you had some time ago with your wife about a new couch. Yeah, so I think one of the
problems with that mindset is you can look at it as a scarcity mindset. There's this belief and
it's really deeply
held almost on a cellular level that there's not enough money. And quite often if you're
growing up in lower income, it's true. There really isn't enough money. But when you're
able to climb that socioeconomic ladder, that thought and that emotion doesn't just disappear.
And so then what you're left with is potentially an experience of scarcity and poverty, even
though you have money and resources.
And for me, what I saw happening in my life is that I felt like it was never enough.
And so what I would do is I would get more and more jobs and work more and more hours.
It's sort of comical when I think about it, but my wife wanted a couch and I'm about
40 years old and I had never bought a couch in my life.
It's like, we don't need to buy a couch. These lawn chairs are fine.
So in that moment, I realized I'm going to have to sit with my anxiety.
And I got to tell you she was right because they are way more comfortable than a lawn chair.
We've looked at different problems that people have when it comes to money.
Get rich quick schemes, spending more than we can afford, and miserliness.
When we come back, the common threads that Brad has discovered
that connect these different issues.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Save, avoid debt, spend less than you earn.
The basic rules of money are pretty simple,
but in our day-to-day lives, many of us struggle to put these rules into practice.
As a young college graduate, Brad Clons chose a risky financial path. It ended up draining his bank account.
Where the dust settled, Brad asked himself a simple question, why do smart people
make bad money decisions? He took it upon himself to answer that question. As a
psychologist, he has spent decades studying the way we think about money.
He found there are powerful influences that shape us, and the first has to do with our family
history with money. Brad, I understand you are an avid martial arts fan as a kid. For
your 11th birthday, your mom got you a special present. What was it? Yeah, I was so incredibly excited. I got three months of
cruddy lessons and then I got my white belt and it was the thing that I loved
more than anything. And my gift was for three months of cruddy lessons and then
when that time was up, my mom said, I'm sorry, sweetie, we don't have any more
money. And it was it was actually a devastating experience for me, realizing, well, there goes the end
of my martial arts training.
Tell me a little bit about your mom.
I understand that she was extremely frugal.
Where did her anxiety about money come from?
She went to school, or grew up in Detroit and went to high school.
And she went to a high school where there was half the school was poor and the other half had money.
So she was one of the poor ones and she felt extremely self-conscious about this, anxious
about it.
And as she's talking about it, I'm saying, oh, okay, so I get why I'm anxious.
This is starting to make sense.
And then I asked her, what was it like for Grandma and Grandpa growing up around money?
And this blew me away. So first of all, I knew we didn't have money.
And so, at this point, my grandparents, they're living in a trailer park community, so I
know we didn't have much money, but I know everyone's really hard working in smart.
So, this was one of the mysteries I had in my mind.
And I found out that my grandfather went to the bank as a young man right during the
Great Depression, and all the money was gone.
And then my mom said that your grandfather never put a dollar in the bank again the rest of his life.
Now, he lived into his 90s.
He kept all of his money in a lock box, either in the attic or under his bed.
So you call experiences like this a financial flashpoint,
an experience that leaves this long-lasting
imprint on our minds. The Great Depression was clearly a financial flashpoint for a lot of people,
but you argue that these financial flashpoints in some ways stay with us not just for the rest of
our lives, but sometimes for the rest of our children's lives and our grandchildren's lives as well.
They absolutely do, and that's what I found to be true in my own experience.
I realized that my grandfather's trauma,
I mean, what does that experience tell you?
What do you walk away with
in terms of understanding money in the world?
And it's like, well, very clearly,
you can't trust banks with your money.
Then my mother's reticence to invest anything.
She wouldn't invest in anything.
She bought CDs in the bank,
but she would not put money in the stock market. All of a sudden, that makes sense to me.
And so then, this is the real light ball moment for me, is I did what I call a dysfunctional
pendulum swing. You see this quite often in extreme behaviors. For example, if you grew up with
an alcoholic parent, some people either become alcoholics themselves or they never touch this stuff.
I went from, don't trust any financial institutions, be super conservative with your money to
investing in the riskiest possible asset class.
I realized if I hadn't been aware and thinking about it, I would have then swung back to that
money belief my grandfather had, which is you can't trust financial institutions.
What we've seen in our culture
is that's the typical response.
And the crazy sort of creepy part
is you don't even have to know the story.
All you know is you have this emotional response to money.
And that's what blew me away, was realizing,
searching through my family history,
all the sudden it made total sense
why I did what I did.
I mean, it's almost like, fuck, no risk know the past is not dead, it's not even past,
that's the same idea here. And it really helped me feel less ashamed. Of course I felt ashamed
and embarrassed here, I had made this financial mistake. When I put it in the context of these
financial flashpoints that went back for generations in my family system, it actually freed me up a bit
to give myself a break and bit to, you know,
give myself a break and be like, okay, great, I made this mistake, I get why I did it,
now what can I do about it?
A more recent financial flashpoint might be the great recession of 2008, the housing market
which had been booming for years suddenly crashed. Millions of people lost their homes, sparking a global
economic downturn that lasted for a very long time. That downturn had a profound effect on young people.
Many of them found themselves struggling to afford the things their parents owned at the same age,
and Brad says even those who could afford to spend were reluctant to take financial risks.
even those who could afford to spend were reluctant to take financial risks.
Well, some early surveys have shown that millennials,
and it makes sense, are more reticent to owning homes,
to investing in the stock market.
I mean, as a kid, if you watch your parents
have to delay retirement or lose their home,
it is going to make you anxious around the thought
of buying a home or investing.
make you anxious around the thought of buying a home or investing. It's not just lay people who are affected by these financial flashpoints.
Experts seem to be affected as well.
I understand you once ran a study on how the Great Recession of 2008 changed the advice
that financial planners were offering.
What did you find?
Yes, so I was consulting with financial planners at the time.
And in my training as a psychologist,
I'd been trained at the National Center for Post-traumatic Stress in Hawaii.
And so I was aware of Post-traumatic stress.
And I'm talking to these advisors and I'm like,
these people are traumatized.
So imagine like it's not just your money,
but it's your parents' money and your family's money
and your best friend's money that you're managing.
And watching a huge drop.
When we did a study, we saw that 90% of the people we surveyed had medium to severe levels
of post-traumatic stress.
They had trouble concentrating.
They were anxious.
They were worried about the future.
When you experience a trauma like that, your brain tries to sort it out so that it never
happens again.
The other thing we saw, they were questioning their entire approach to investing, how they're
helping people.
Interestingly, there was a dramatic shift going on at the same time where financial advisors
were moving from more of a strategic buy and hold strategy to more tactical asset management.
It had a profound impact on how the investing profession was actually operating.
So we've seen how these experiences, financial flashpoints, our experiences with money growing up,
even the way our parents and grandparents thought about money. All these things influenced the way
we think about money. In our minds, they form what you call money scripts. What do you mean by that
term, Brad? So money scripts is the term that we use
to describe beliefs about money
that we quite often inherit from our grandparents
and our great grandparents and the culture
and the people around us and events that are happening.
And I use the word scripts because
they're almost like a script written in a play,
you know, that was passed down to me.
And I don't even know who the author was.
I don't know what they were thinking. All I know is I have these beliefs around money
that are banging around in my subconscious. And in our studies, we have found that these
beliefs, most of us aren't even really aware of them. They have a profound impact on our
financial outcomes, like our income, our net worth, our financial behaviors, our credit card debt.
And so I think it's really important to be aware of your money scripts.
So your money script came from growing up in a household where having enough money was
a struggle, but there are other scripts that also come from growing up poor or watching
your parents fight about money or being around other people who are in dire straits.
And let's look at some of those other scripts.
One is something that you call money avoidance.
Can you describe for me what this is?
So money avoidance is a pattern of beliefs that make you have some anxiety or negative associations
with money.
And specifically, their beliefs like rich people are greedy, money corrupts, or there's
virtue in living with less money.
And this is actually not an uncommon belief pattern
in lower income communities and environments
because quite often the thing about money scripts,
they all are valid in a certain context.
So without a doubt, you can find people who are rich,
who are total jerks, and do terrible things in the world.
And that's the tricky thing about money scripts
is there's always an element of truth.
But this belief set, when we study it, it damages the world. And that's the tricky thing about money scripts is there's always an element of truth. But this belief set, when we study it, it damages the holder. Like people who
have these beliefs and believe them very strongly are much more likely to have lower income,
lower net worth, and engage in self-destructive financial behaviors because they have a negative
association with money. It's a lot easier to adopt a belief that having money is bad
and rich people are evil, you can
do that a lot faster than you can go become rich, which can take decades or generations.
And so if you want to feel better instantly, the bailout is to vilify the people who have
something that you wish you had.
The opposite of money avoidance is another money script.
This one is called money worship.
This money script also affects people who grew up without much money.
What are the hallmarks of money worship, Brett?
Yeah, money worship, I would say, could potentially be the average American.
It's beliefs that more money and more stuff is going to make me happier and it's going
to solve all of my problems.
Now, the crazy part is in our studies, there is a very strong correlation between people who hate money
and also wish they were rich.
Now, just to illustrate the confusion
that so many of us have around money,
they're very, very much in conflict,
but that's a common pattern we see.
And if you believe that more money,
more stuff's going to make you happier.
First of all, there's an element of truth in that.
If you're growing up hungry and poor
and you can't afford karate lessons and you love them,
having more money will help.
And if you're able to use some money
to better your life and give you better experiences,
I think it's a beautiful thing.
But if you're putting money on a pedestal,
there's no amount of purchases of things
that are going to make you happy
in any sort of sustainable way.
Another script that you talk about is something called Money Status. People who follow the script place a lot of value on money. So unlike money avoiders, they are willing to say that money is
important, but you say they confuse their net worth with their self-worth. What do you mean by that?
So in some ways, we have shown that the keeping up with the
Jones's effect is actually real and it actually happens. And this is where people would, if you ask
them how much they made, they would probably tell you they make more than they actually do. They
don't want to buy something unless it's new. They really want to show the world that they have status,
that they have value, that they have importance.
And unfortunately, of course, this can lead to overspending, and there's another huge
problem with it.
Our culture lies to us about how rich people actually spend their money.
And the money status scripts, you see it all over the place, like Instagram, TikTok, all
the social media platforms sell this idea that rich people have outward
displays of wealth.
And certainly, there are people who are wealthy who spend money quite lavishly, and there's
nothing wrong with that if you can afford it.
That is just not how most wealthy people spend their money.
First of all, most millionaires in the US are self-made in the sense that they didn't
inherit all the money.
So how do you become wealthy and how do you grow your net worth?
Well, it's actually by saving and by investing and not by buying the latest flashy thing
to try to impress your friends.
You know, I'm thinking about that book that came out some years ago, The Millionaire Next
Door, and it was all about how the people who are next door living very ordinary lives, you know,
driving, you know, 12-year-old cars and, you know, not even very expensive cars.
These are the people who are truly wealthy.
Many of the wealthiest people, in fact, are living fairly modest lives.
Can you talk about that idea, Brad, that in some ways there's a disconnect between what
we see in the media, the representations of who we think are rich and who is actually rich in our society.
Yes, one of the most profound things about the millionaire next door is it took our vision
of who rich people are and how they live their life and it just turned it on its head.
And if there's such profound wisdom in that, because if you live the life that you think
most wealthy people are living, you're
going to get a paycheck and then you're going to start buying watches, expensive cars,
feeling like this is what you need to do to join that group.
That is actually the opposite of what most millionaires do in the United States.
So all the scripts that we've talked about so far seem like, you know, they're pretty
bad.
They produce problems in people's lives. Are they scripts that actually point to good
money habits?
You know, thankfully there are, right?
And scripts we can aspire to.
And so what we call those in our studies, we call them money vigilance.
And this is the group of people in our culture that have the most money.
They fight with
their spouse the least, they have more income,
and their beliefs like it's important to save for a rainy day.
I'd be a nervous wreck if I didn't have money
save for an emergency.
So there's that real emphasis on saving
and investing is important.
There's a future orientation
and a little bit of anxiety associated with it.
And so interestingly, if you ask them how much they made,
they're actually likely to tell you they make less
than they actually do,
which is fascinating in terms of social media
because the people who are least likely to brag
about what they have are the people who tend to have the most.
And in some ways, you seem like a moneyilant person yourself, but I also hear you say that
perhaps this can spill over into a form of hyper anxiety, where money vigilance can become
hypervigilance, and then you become unable to spend money even when you can afford it.
Yeah, actually, my first book I wrote about Ebenezer Scrooge.
Ebenezer Scrooge is the perfect example of a hyper-vigilant ultra-wealthy
individual. And the problem was, he had a scarcity mindset. Now what is so fascinating about
that mindset is if you grow up in poverty and not having enough, it can make you an incredibly
hard worker. Some of the richest people I know were immigrants who had nothing. And their
work ethic was so incredible, but they were so anxious about not having enough.
They can have a difficult time enjoying life.
And so that's really we need to be able to do both.
We need to be able to save for the future
and enjoy the moment.
I'm also reflecting that money scripts in some ways
teach us to be vigilant to the kinds of things
that produced trauma in our past or in our family's past.
But unfortunately, money traumas are not like the trauma of encountering a predator,
where you just want to stay clear of the predator.
If you lost all your money in the Great Depression, but now you're choosing to stick your money under your mattress or in the attic,
you're solving a trauma that was in the past, even as you're exposing yourself to the risk of an even bigger trauma in the future. So in some ways, it makes sort of, it sort of, it makes intuitive sense why we would have
these scripts, but in actual practice, they could be deeply destructive.
That's right.
And in my experience, the ones that are the most difficult to change and shift are the
ones that have intense emotion attached to them.
So the example of my grandfather, it wasn't just this thought, oh, you shouldn't trust
banks because beliefs can change very easily. When the federal government came in
and guaranteed banks, well, I guess what? Now you can trust them, but that emotion was
so intense. And so when we have really emotional experiences or they go back in our family
for generations around money, that's when it can become really difficult to change our
relationship with money. This is where we find ourselves knowing that we shouldn't be doing things, but finding ourselves continuing to do it.
Our experiences are upbringing and our financial background,
all play a role in how we think and behave when it comes to money.
Because these scripts are so deeply ingrained, our problems with money can seem impossible to solve.
When we come back, how to change that?
You're listening to Hidden Brain,
I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Brad Clans is a psychologist at Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska.
He is the author of the book Mind Over Money.
He studies the thoughts, attitudes, and beliefs that people have about money.
Brad calls these, are money scripts.
These scripts are rooted in our past experiences with money,
but they determine the way we deal with money in the present and in the future.
The solution to many of the problems we face with money lies in first understanding the way these scripts influence us.
Once we do that, there are ways to get around these scripts or even get these scripts to work for us.
Brad, I want to talk about a study you conducted where you and your colleagues went into a
workplace and tried an intervention to get people to save more for retirement.
You started by helping people understand their money scripts.
How did you go about doing this?
A big part of that was helping people identify
their early experiences around money.
And I gave them a little questionnaire
on money scripts on the categories we just discussed.
And then ask them to think about,
what did your mom teach you about money?
What did your father teach you about money?
What was your earliest experiences around money?
You're most joyful, you're most painful. These types of reflections are going to help you identify these underlying
beliefs you have around money. And then, of course, you can then challenge and change
them. As I said, every money belief, every money script, has an element of truth. And
I think it's really important to validate where you learned that or where your ancestors learned that.
And the most healthy mind around money is one that's flexible.
So we want to be able to take in new information.
So for example, my grandfather, you can trust banks, at least up to $100,000 in his time.
And you need to have flexibility in thinking.
So that is really the goal.
I understand that contribution rates increased by about 40%, which is just an astronomical increase in the amount of money that people were saving.
That's absolutely right. So that was 401k contributions.
And people were had been in these meetings previously, the mandatory 401k meeting.
Right. But I think really connecting with who they are, where they come from, and what they really want on the other
side of this deferral, this salary deferral, really, really important.
So we talked about four money scripts that produce problems.
Money avoidance, money worship, money status, and hypervigilance about money.
With money avoidance, people avoid dealing with money altogether because they have negative
associations with it.
Money worshipers, in some ways, have the opposite problem. They overestimate how much money will
buy them happiness or make them feel good about themselves. People who follow a money status script
tend to focus on how having money and possessions can increase that status in the eyes of other
people. So they're using money and possessions almost as a signaling device. And both people who
have a money worship script
and a money status script can end up
doing a lot of overspending.
And then finally, there are people who are hyper-vigilant
about money.
They allow their anxieties about money,
their scarcity mindset, to turn them into misers.
Let's look at some of the ways we can disarm these scripts.
Let's start with money avoidance.
In one study where you looked at people's savings behavior,
you asked people to come into a lab
and you split them into two groups.
The control group was given a financial literacy presentation.
They learned some basic money management lessons
on things like compound interest and saving for retirement,
different kinds of banking accounts.
In the experimental group, rather than give people
the financial education presentation,
you asked them to bring an interesting object
into the lab with them.
What kind of objects do you ask people to bring, and why did you ask them to do this?
We asked people to bring in something they had saved, a sentimental object.
Maybe it was something they got from a grandparents, people brought in pieces of jewelry, some people
brought in stuffed animals, some people brought in pictures of vacations they took as kids, and what
we were trying to do was get people connected to their core values. What really
matters to them? And what was this intervention designed to do? How does that help
change their behavior when it comes to money? From my perspective, I was theorizing that
if we could get people in touch
with what really matters to them in a visceral way,
that's why I wanted it to be very experiential,
not just think about it, but bring in the item.
I had people close their eyes
and think about how this item came into their life,
how it felt, what it meant to them
to really get at these core values.
And then what I did is I had them identify their values.
Like, so what does this represent to you?
It represents family, safety, adventure, comfort.
And then I use that as a bridge to have them identify their top three financial goals.
And they look like a kindergarten classroom.
We had paper, we had scissors,
we had people drawing pictures, cutting out pictures,
really getting a very clear vision
of why they want to save for the future.
So I can imagine that if someone is a money avoider,
they have negative associations with money,
they don't want to deal with it at all,
they want to push thoughts of money out of their heads,
connecting money to their personal values
might help them in some ways rewrite
or rethink that script.
That's right.
So we expose them to the idea and try to encourage them
to explore the idea that not all money is bad.
Because the belief that rich people are greedy
and money corrupts is accurate in only one context.
It's much more accurate to say,
some rich people do bad things in the world.
I can become wealthy and do good things in the world.
And so it's really important to tackle that and examine it
and to make it frankly more accurate.
We were looking for more accurate thoughts.
So when you connected people in some ways
to things that were important in their past,
perhaps made them more, I guess, emotionally available to things that had happened, the
values that they cared about.
And then after each experiment, you checked back in with people and looked at how much
they were saving.
Did you find that it made a difference in terms of increasing their savings rate?
For that particular study where we had people bring in the sentimental object, we saw a 73% increase in savings as a percentage of gross income.
In comparison to the 22% increase for the financial education group,
but I think it really came down to getting people that are really excited.
And then another hack, once you have a really clear vision of what it is you're wanting,
that's when you want to automate towards those savings goals.
And that's the instruction that I encouraged everyone to do. Get real excited,
share this with somebody you love, and then immediately automate to capitalize on that status
quo bias we have. So we've lifted some techniques to combat money avoidance. Let's look at the next
money script, money worship. So these are people who believe that money or possessions can buy them happiness. I'd like to play your clip from the
TV show Parks and Rec. In this scene the characters Tom and Donna are
describing a special day that they have planned which involves spending a lot of
money on pampering themselves. Once a year Donna and I spend a day treating ourselves.
What do we treat ourselves to? Clothes. Treat yourself. Fragrance. Treat yourself. Massage it. Treat yourself. Mimosas. Treat yourself. Fine leather goods.
Treat yourself. It's the best day of the year. The best day of the year. Can you
explain what you found about how you can disrupt the script by changing
patterns of behavior? So part of it comes down to educating people around happiness in general.
So happiness is a state, right?
It's not a trait.
It's not like you're either happy or you're not happy.
It's like you're going to be happy 10 times today and you're going to be sad 10 times today.
And so realizing that stuff is not the cure to happiness.
And I love the example of thinking to your birthday as a kid and you got this shiny new toy.
I mean, this thing you always wanted, you know, that red rider BB gun.
Have you been happy ever since then?
I mean, did that thing create happiness in your life? Of course not.
It's fleeting. The emotion is fleeting. And so I really identifying that money in and of itself and items in and of itself are not the key to happiness.
So the third problem we looked at was the script of money status.
You found that people who follow the script prioritize outward displays of wealth and
they often end up with a lot of debt.
How can people learn to combat this script, Brad?
One study that we did, we saw people from an ultra-networth group and we compared them
to a middle-class group.
The ultra-wealthy had about a net worth of about $10 million and we compared them to a group
people who had a net worth of about $500,000.
What was so interesting about this study is that ultra-networth group, they had about 18
times more money, but they only spent twice as much as that middle class group
on their watch, their house, their car, and their last vacation.
And so for me, a huge part of it is educating people on if you really do want to have
quote status and have wealth, this is how you need to operate and this is how you need
to get there.
It's actually the opposite of what you're seeing people do on social media.
Those people are quite often trying to do a brand deal or they're selling
you a course or a get rich quick scheme. That is not how most people become wealthy. And
it makes logical sense. They become wealthy by growing their net worth, not getting rid
of their net worth.
We talked earlier about how money scripts can produce interpersonal conflict, conflict
within marriages, within families, within households.
I'm wondering how you have tried to resolve this yourself in your own relationship, perhaps
with your wife or with other people in your family, but also more generally, how people
can resolve problems with their money scripts that are not just rooted in themselves, but
are rooted in relationships
and interpersonal behavior.
Well quite simply, I have spent 20 years convention my wife that she's wrong about everything
around money and that her parents were wrong and her grandparents were wrong.
This is what most couples do actually.
They're unconsciously battling it out.
If you're not careful, the conflict is going to push you further
and further apart. And before you know it, you're going to be saying some ridiculous things.
Like, we only should live in lawn chairs, you know, not couches, you know, because you're
so worried about your partner spending. So when couples go to counseling and therapy
on average, the ones who go to a therapist have been fighting about an issue for seven
years. So when I work with couples in conflict,
what I have them do is table that, whatever this issue is.
Like, we'll get to the, by the way,
that's the easy part is fixing that.
But what we should really do is have a conversation
that you all should have had on date seven.
Okay, now we could debate which date number it is,
but you know, about the date where you're saying,
hey, do you want wanna have kids someday?
Where do you wanna live?
We don't talk about money.
We don't talk about what are your financial goals?
How do you handle money?
How do you wanna handle money?
And so I encourage couples to just rewind
to date number seven, sit down and have a conversation.
And some of those questions are,
what was it like for you growing up around money?
What did your mom teach you? What did your mom teach you?
What did your dad teach you?
What is your most painful money experience?
Your most joyful money experience?
What are your financial goals?
What are your financial fears?
I love this one too.
How did you feel about your socioeconomic class growing up?
And then I also asked them to say, you know, what are my
most proud of in my relationship with money? And what do I appreciate about you, my partner,
around money? And what I have found is that this has two benefits. People get insight about their
own relationship with money. And then I get insight about my partner's relationship with money. And
so, for example, I might have seen some irrational spending
that made no sense to me.
Now I see that my partner grew up not having much.
And for them, whatever that purchase was,
was almost this desperate sort of need to say,
it's okay, I can actually have some things
because I grew up with nothing.
And if I can look at it through that lens,
I have much more compassion and it's much more easier for us to negotiate a solution around whatever this thing it was
we were fighting about.
You know, as you're talking, Brad, I'm realizing that one reason I think many people don't
do this, and perhaps don't think to do this is, is that many of these conversations involve
the emotion of shame. And especially when it comes to money, people have grown up, especially if you're grown up poor, or especially if you're grown musician, you're a musician, you're a musician, you're a musician, you're a musician,
you're a musician, you're a musician, you're a musician,
you're a musician, you're a musician, you're a musician,
you're a musician, you're a musician, you're a musician,
you're a musician, you're a musician, you're a musician,
you're a musician, you're a musician, you're a musician,
you're a musician, you're a musician, you're a musician,
you're a musician, you're a musician, you're a musician, you're a musician, you're a musician, you're a musician, things make our scripts invisible not just to other people, but invisible to ourselves.
That's right. Shame is an emotional glue trap and it keeps us stuck in our financial behaviors.
And so, deshaming is so important. And part of what I'm talking about, I can take any baby
born and I could probably stick them in your family, stick them in your culture, give them the
experiences you had, and they'd be thinking and behaving exactly
the way you are around money.
So, shame does us no good at all,
and when we're shaming each other in relationships,
it's terrible.
I think it's really great to start with,
we're all screwed up when it comes to money,
so let's all move forward.
How does it speak to people who might be currently
in very difficult financial straight.
So let's say someone's working minimum wage job. They're not able to make ends meet.
And they hear this conversation and they say, well, it's all very well for you to talk
about money scripts and what I should be doing psychologically. But I just, I'm not getting
paid enough. I just don't make enough. Are money scripts or the conversations about money
scripts and the psychology of money?
Is this a conversation primarily for people who are well off?
Or do you think people who are poor have something to gain from this conversation as well?
I'll be honest, I'm not that worried about trying to help people who are well off.
That's not really why I do the research I do.
I believe money scripts are most important for people who are struggling financially,
for people who are poor and low income and working class.
I think they're the ones who can benefit the most
from understanding their money scripts.
And it's not just understanding,
oh, I have these beliefs.
There's another very key element,
and that is challenging them and changing them,
and realizing that these beliefs predict income.
They predict not worth.
They have a profound impact on your relationship with money for the rest of your life.
And so understanding though that a part of why you are where you are is just a stroke of
fate.
You can't help where you were born.
You can't help what family system you were born in, but understanding that you have the
ability and the power
to examine those beliefs, to modify and change them
so you can better your life.
The studies we have done have found
that people who have more money are more likely
to have an internal locus control,
believing that the mistakes in their life are because of them.
The successes are because of what they're doing
and they have the power to change their life.
And so that's a message that I think is great
for everybody, especially people who are struggling financially.
I'm wondering if you can tell me about a time
when your own study and research into money scripts
helped you revise or even recognize
that you were operating under a money script
and perhaps give you the latitude to change what it is that you were doing.
So for me, part of understanding my money scripts was a conversation that I had with my father
and my wife was sitting there at the time.
And I said that I had worked 70 hours the past week, but I felt lazy compared to him.
And my father said, I worked 100 hours and I feel lazy compared to him. And my father said, I worked a hundred hours
and I feel lazy compared to my dad,
so which is my grandpa.
And I was like, what?
I said, dad, why?
He goes, well, I don't know if you know this.
And by the way, I didn't know this,
but my grandfather's father was a lazy good for nothing.
And my grandfather had lived his entire life
trying to please his mother
by being a hard worker and supporting her. And my dad is here working a hundred hours
a week trying to, you know, live up to his father's standards. And I'm feeling guilty working
70 hours a week. I got to tell you when I saw that pattern, I laughed. I thought it was
crazy. I can't believe I'm living out this script that goes back for
generations and has nothing to do with my life. All I know is that I'm not
taking care of myself. I'm not spending as much time as I want to with my wife.
I know I don't want to be an absent father like my father and my grandfather
profound understanding for me, but I'm gonna tell you this. It was so hardwired
that I had to write a script
for myself and read it at the end of the workday that said this.
I have worked enough today.
My family and my health is more important to me than this job.
I'm getting up and I'm going home.
I literally had to read that to myself for at least a year to try to change that money
belief.
Brad Klantz is a psychologist at Creighton University. He is a co-founder of the Financial Psychology Institute,
and he's the author of Mind Over Money,
overcoming the money disorders that threaten our financial health.
Brad, thank you so much for joining me today on Hidden Right.
It was my pleasure, thank you so much for joining me today on Hidden Brain. It was my pleasure, thank you so much.
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