Las Vegas Review-Journal

Financial stress all too common: Five ways of tackling it

- By Kimberly Palmer

Financial stress is so common that certified financial planner Katie Lindquist says almost every client she has tells her they are feeling it.

“They don’t know what they should be doing with their money, and they feel like they should know. They feel shame around their money habits, which is a huge driving force of stress,” Lindquist says.

To alleviate that tension, Lindquist helps them get organized and take inventory of their financial accounts and goals. “People who have financial plans are a lot less stressed because they know where they are and where they want to go,” says Lindquist, who is based in Madison, Wisconsin.

To combat overwhelmi­ng feelings of money stress, financial experts suggest taking these steps:

Normalize the feeling

Knowing how common financial stress is can help people realize there isn’t something wrong with them when they feel it, says Bari Tessler, author of “The Art of Money” and a financial therapist in Boulder, Colorado.

“Increased financial anxiety has everything to do with interest rates, inflation, job challenges, life curveballs and world events,” Tessler says. Those stressors impact almost everybody. It can lead people to freeze and ignore their finances or to check them too obsessivel­y, she says, neither of which is helpful.

Check in with your body

Sometimes, your body can alert you to financial stress first. Sonya Lutter, director of financial health and wellness in the School of Financial Planning at Texas Tech University, says when people experience financial stress, their fingers often get cold because they are experienci­ng a fight-or-flight response that affects blood flow.

“You can easily train yourself to notice when you are physiologi­cally stressed,” Lutter says. Then, you can avoid making big financial decisions until you are in a calmer state. Otherwise, she says, fight-or-flight “leaves us to make very myopic decisions. You just want to get through right now and definitely don’t care about 10 years from now, which is horrible for financial decision-making.”

Learn your triggers

Sometimes, negative experience­s around money from childhood can lead to a high-stress response whenever the topic comes up as an adult, says Jannese Torres, author of the forthcomin­g book “Financiall­y Lit!” and host of the podcast “Yo Quiero Dinero.”

The idea of negotiatin­g for a salary or bartering at the car dealership could send you into an emotional tailspin, Torres says. She says exploring those early life experience­s can help people learn to navigate financial conversati­ons rather than avoid them.

Look for ways to reset

Tessler suggests slowing your mind down before a big decision, which could be done through activities like hiking, meditation, taking a shower or listening to music. Sometimes, getting a snack, going outside or lowering your shoulders can go a long way toward resetting, she says.

Take first step to regain control

Because stress can cause us to freeze in the face of financial decisions, Stacy Dervin, founder of Tailored Financial Planning in Eugene, Oregon, suggests tackling one thing at a time. “Trying to solve everything at once can be really overwhelmi­ng. Just focus on the next right thing to help build your confidence,” she says.

Lindquist says creating a spreadshee­t to list all of your accounts, logging in to a workplace retirement savings plan, tracking spending or making a net worth statement to look at assets and liabilitie­s are all great ways to regain a feeling of control over your finances.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States