Chattanooga Times Free Press

The high price of money shame

- BY LIZ WESTON

The U.S. suicide rate has risen dramatical­ly in recent years, and certified money coach Tammy Lally of Washington, D.C., is convinced money shame is a contributi­ng factor.

Lally’s brother died by suicide in 2007 after receiving a foreclosur­e notice. Shortly afterward, Lally’s mortgage business collapsed in the Great Recession. She said she went from driving a Mercedes and living in an oceanfront house to filing for bankruptcy.

“It blew me away, the level of pain and sadness that I was experienci­ng,” Lally said. “I didn’t tell anybody. I was pretending like nothing was going on.”

She eventually realized she was experienci­ng shame — a deep sense that she was fundamenta­lly flawed and unworthy because of her financial problems. When she switched careers to become a financial advisor, she began to notice how pervasive those feelings were. Some clients were ashamed of their debts, or their wealth. Others lived beyond their means or “played the big shot,” picking up the tab at restaurant­s or constantly rescuing others.

“I’m seeing every one of my clients having shame around their money,” she said. “We live in a culture where our money is our worth.”

THE ORIGINS OF MONEY SHAME

We aren’t born knowing how to manage money, and everyone makes mistakes with their finances, says Lindsay Bryan-Podvin, a financial therapist in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Plus, there are many factors beyond our control, such as the economy, industry trends and unemployme­nt rates.

Too often, though, people feel there’s something deeply wrong with them if they struggle with their finances. They may feel they’re stupid, immoral, lazy or “bad with money,” or ruminate on what they should have done differentl­y.

“When we make mistakes with money or things happen to us, we tend to internaliz­e it and make it really personal,” said Bryan-Podvin, author of “The Financial Anxiety Solution. ” “If you’re beating yourself up, that’s a good sign that there is money shame.”

Money shame can lead us to overspend to “keep up with the Joneses,” avoid our finances or criticize others who are struggling, says certified financial planner Edward Coambs, a marriage and family therapist in Charlotte, North Carolina.

“Shame induces us to be judgmental,” Coambs said. “Because when we see other people struggling with something, it creates discomfort for us.”

Many therapists and researcher­s say that shame differs from guilt: We feel guilt when we’ve done something bad, but feel shame when we believe we are bad or deeply flawed. People may believe they’re so defective that they are unworthy of ever being loved or connected to others, Coambs said. In extreme cases, that could lead to thoughts of suicide.

“Shame really is about loss of relationsh­ip,” Coambs said. “It’s communicat­ing to you that I’m not worthy or valuable of being in relationsh­ip either with myself or with another person.”

SHAME AND SUICIDE

Suicides rarely have a single cause, and researcher­s can only speculate about why the suicide rate rises and falls. Studies show that suicides tend to rise with the unemployme­nt rate , and a 2020 study for the American Journal of Epidemiolo­gy found that financial strain is a significan­t risk factor for suicide attempts.

But in the past couple of decades, suicide rates have increased in good economic times and bad. The suicide rate rose 35% from 1999 through 2018, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, before dropping in 2019 from 14.2 suicides per 100,000 people to 13.9. Statistics for 2020 are not yet available.

Lindsay speculates income stagnation and increased economic insecurity could be contributi­ng factors. Coambs noted that the suicide rate for men in the U.S. is more than three times higher than that for women, which could be in part due to internal pressure to be “providers and performers.”

“Men struggle more with their mental health [after financial setbacks], because they tend to associate their self-worth to their income or their net worth,” Coambs said.

WHAT YOU CAN DO ABOUT MONEY SHAME

All that is scary stuff. But suicide is preventabl­e (the National Suicide Prevention Hotline is 800-2738255), and money shame can be tamed, financial therapists say. The first step is acknowledg­ing what you’re feeling.

“The first and most pragmatic piece is being able to name it,” Coambs said. “Having language to describe experience­s does help to start to alleviate the distress.”

So can getting support. Being able to discuss money shame with a trusted person can help you feel less alone, Lindsay said.

“Many people think they’re the only person in the world or the only person in their community who has experience­d money shame,” Lindsay said.

Being compassion­ate with yourself and looking for lessons from the experience may also help. Ask yourself what you can learn, or what you can do differentl­y next time.

Lally turned her experience into a TED Talk that’s been viewed more than 2 million times, “Let’s Get Honest About Our Money Problems,” and a book, “Money Detox.”

“I didn’t have a name for it until it happened to me,” Lally said. “And my mission is to get people to talk about it.”

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