The Denver Post

Writer warns your money secrets are killing you

Neal Gabler speaks from experience about financial stress.

- By Liz Weston

Writer Neal Gabler broke the don’t-talk-about-money taboo this spring with an Atlantic article, “The Secret Shame of Middle-Class Americans.” Now he wants everyone to start talking.

“The idea of not being successful financiall­y in America is such a stigma,” says Gabler, who revealed in the article that he was among the millions of adults who didn’t have savings to cover a $400 emergency. “That’s the reason people don’t talk about it, because they take their failure personally.”

Yet financial stress is epidemic. Nearly three-quarters of U.S. adults admitted feeling stressed about money, and 22 percent reported extreme stress in a 2015 study commission­ed by the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n, “Stress in America: Paying With Our Health .”

A third of the respondent­s said lack of money prevented them from living a healthy lifestyle, and 12 percent skipped going to the doctor when they needed health care because of financial concerns.

Other studies have shown financial stress can be lethal.

• Money worries have been linked to higher mortality rates among cancer patients and those with heart disease.

• A study for the Australian government found prolonged financial stress was a strong predictor of subsequent obesity. One study published in the American Journal of Public Health found that obese adults were 20 percent more likely to die during the 14-year study period than normalweig­ht adults.

• Adding insult to injury, financial stress also seems to make people look older, according to a study published in Research on Aging.

Despite its pervasiven­ess, most people don’t disclose the financial pressures they face. In a study commission­ed by Umpqua Bank, 77 percent of respondent­s said they didn’t talk about their money stress, often because they were embarrasse­d or ashamed or thought no one would understand.

“Yet, of that 23 percent of folks who did talk about it, 70 percent of them felt better after doing so,” says Eve Callahan, Umpqua’s executive vice president of corporate communicat­ions. “They felt less stressed out, they felt like they had more, a better ability to make financial decisions and live their lives in a way that would be healthy for them.”

Gabler, for one, is glad he opened up. “I’m an extremely private person. I never write about myself,” Gabler says. “I broke my own taboo because I thought there are other people out there who are in a similar predicamen­t and it would help them to know that they are not alone.”

Gabler wrote that despite outward appearance­s of success, he had juggled creditors, had his bank account levied and been down to his last $5 while waiting for a paycheck to arrive. He has plenty of company: The Federal Reserve said in May that 46 percent of U.S. adults either couldn’t cover a $400 emergency expense or would have to borrow or sell something to do so.

That’s terrifying, since 60 percent of families experience some kind of financial shock in a given year that can make it hard to make ends meet, according to research from the Pew Charitable Trusts. Liz Weston’s column is distribute­d by The Associated Press.

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