USA TODAY US Edition

Study your parents for financial lessons

- Pete the Planner Peter Dunn USA TODAY

The look on the man’s face was one I’ll never forget. Five seconds prior, his wife unleashed a verbal blast heard around the world.

Fine, it was just my office.

“As long as we don’t end up like his parents, I’ll be happy,” she levied with a steeled focus.

Then, silence. A preparativ­e inhale was next, as the man collected his thoughts on the cusp of an angry retort. But it never came. She was right. His parents were a financial disaster.

John, we’re going to call him John, had a front-row seat to a poorly executed financial life, yet until he was forced to step back and examine its lessons, he had no idea he was tangential­ly involved with such a financial atrocity.

“My dad was the sales director for a regional electrical component company, and my mom was a high school guidance counselor. My sister and I never wanted for anything, but once I got to college, I began to see serious cracks,” John said. “I’m embarrasse­d to say, but I went from idyllic childhood to buried in student loan debt. And when I began to ask questions, I realized my parents were drowning.”

As reductive as this idea is when we were kids we assumed our parents knew what they were doing with money, simply because they had more money than we did.

Some of our parents were poor, and presented that way. Some were wealthy, and they presented that way. And of course there were those parents who were wealthy and acted as though they had few resources, and there were the poor parents who decided they would outwardly appear well-heeled. I’m not judging, just observing.

What was your family’s reality? Was it one of the four I just mentioned? And if your parents were able to run an okeydoke on you, how long did it take for you to learn the truth? My fear for anyone is a misreprese­nted financial truth could have unduly influenced your small, watching eyes. Now you’re forced to redefine your views of money, scarcity, and abundance.

The best way to retroactiv­ely evaluate your family’s relationsh­ip with money is to determine whether or not there was an evolution. In the event they were still alive as you grew into adulthood, did their relationsh­ip with money change? Most people learn from their mistakes. But not all people.

As an adult now, it’s OK for you to deeply study your parents’ financial mistakes.

Start with retirement. Did they or can they retire successful­ly? They had some ingredient­s, they had a recipe, but did it taste good? If it did, you need to know why. If it didn’t, you definitely need to know why. The strange part about this is if they did successful­ly retire, absent a pension, it’s likely because they made good decisions when you were a small child.

If you’re able to, ask the people who raised you what they would have done differentl­y when they were your age. You can ask this of an older close friend as well. If their advice is still pertinent today, act.

Examine your family’s relationsh­ip with investment­s and savings, debt, and material possession­s. At an arm’s distance, do their decisions make sense? Think about what you would do differentl­y and how those different decisions might have changed the course of your personal history, good and bad.

What kind of housing decisions did your family make? How about transporta­tion decisions? They may have made sense to a younger you, but now you should take a moment to observe the additional color that time has provided. However, to be fair, Americans spend money much differentl­y than we did some 35 years ago.

From the latest available data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, you and I spend 9% more of our annual total household expenditur­es on housing than Americans did in 1984. We also spend 72% more on health care, 11% more on entertainm­ent, and 79% more on education.

Our day-to-day challenges are different than our parents, but our obligation to create stability remains the same.

Peter Dunn is an author, speaker and radio host. The views and opinions expressed in this column are the author’s and do not necessaril­y reflect those of USA TODAY.

As an adult now, it’s OK for you to deeply study your parents’ financial mistakes.

 ?? PEOPLEIMAG­ES/GETTY IMAGES ?? Were your parents savers or spenders? Asking how they managed their money can show you how to improve your own habits.
PEOPLEIMAG­ES/GETTY IMAGES Were your parents savers or spenders? Asking how they managed their money can show you how to improve your own habits.
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