Skip to main content

3 Financial Self-Care Habits You Can Start Today

 If you're someone who struggles with financial anxiety and stress, practicing a financial self-care routine could help. Just like other areas of your life, the more consistent you are about financial self-care, the better. This is why I am emphasizing the idea of building habits. The reality is that anxiety and stress are life's constants. We ourselves don't have the luxury of removing those factors from our environment, but what we do have are tools to help manage and reduce them.

Before I get into it, I want to note that there's a pretty extensive list of financial-self care options available, but what I've realized is that when we are struggling, we often overcommit ourselves to perfectionism instead of trying to be a little less imperfect. I'm the first to admit that it's really tough not to go all-in when reading advice that sounds life-changing. Often, we find ourselves trying out anything and everything to feel in control, and  it is for this reason that I won't offer you the extensive list today. Instead, I hope to help you focus on taking things slow for once so that you don't set yourself up for failure (and ultimately right back in). You can view these three foundational habits as a starting point for a long-term financial self-care routine that you will work to enhance over the course of your life. With this in mind, let's dive in.

Habit #1: Review & Categorize Your Transactions Daily
Building awareness of what and how much you've spent can be a game-changer. This habit not only takes the dreaded guessing game out of your end-of-month leftover income and total spending, but it can help you course-correct throughout the month to ensure you hit budgeting goals, cut back in areas you may find yourself regretting, or even upping your spend in areas that bring you joy. A few added bonuses of this habit include saving time at the end of the month if you're someone that typically sits down for 4-5 hours get yourself organized, in addition to helping you catch fraudulent transactions faster!

Pro tips for building this habit:
  • Make it east: If you don't already use an app, download an app today to have all your transactions organized and easily viewable in one place.
  • Make it obvious: Set a calendar reminder on your phone to check your app each day at the same time. I'd recommend early morning before your day gets busy.
  • Make it attractive: Check your spending after a ritual or habit you enjoy doing. For example, after you sit down to drink your coffee, open up your app to review your transactions.
  • Make it satisfying: After reviewing your transactions, do something rewarding. For example, after categorizing and reviewing, consider checking it off your to-do list for the day to feel progress. 
Habit #2: Check Your Savings Account(s) Daily
Checking your savings accounts is a great way to flood your brain with positivity about your financial situation. Having savings is a rewarding feeling, and even more rewarding, is seeing yoiur savings progress over time. Getting in this habit will also be a good reminder to actively save for each of your financial goals. 

Pro tips for building this habit:
  • Make it easy: Connect your savings accounts to your app and use the goal-setting feature that allows you to customize your savings goals and connect your savings account to easily track your progress.
  • Make it obvious: Consider setting your phone's background to a photo of something you're saving for so that everytime you check your phone, you'll be reminded of saving. An app also allows you to add photos of your goals in the web version and in the app. 
  • Make it attractive: In addition to checking your savings right after reviewing your transactions in the app, consider starting a savings group with your friends and family. No need to talk about how much you've saved, but you can talk about your goals and turn to the group for motivation when you're tempted to spend what you would normally save. 
  • Make it satisfying: Make sure to give yourself credit for doing this habit by also crossing it off as a separate to-do list item. Try to also make it a rule to never miss checking your savings twice in a row. Skipping a day here and there because life gets in the way is totally normal, just make sure to commit yourself to doing it the next day. 

Habit #3: Reward Yourself 1X Per Week
I saved the best for last. Rewarding yourself is a critical step that most skip wen trying to become more disciplined. Self-control can be a draining experience, especially at first. Make sure to set aside "free time" each week to do something for yourself. It doesn't have to be big, and it doesn't have to require a lot of money. Think of it as a way of telling yourself good job for working hard and trying to improve.

Pro tips for building this habit*:
  • Make it easy: Consider making your reward something that takes less than 2 minutes to start doing. Perhaps it's turning on a Netflix show, making an easy dessert, grabbing a coffee at the Starbucks you just walked by, or even dancing in your living room to your favorite song. 
  • Make it obvious: As I write this, it sounds weird, but for some of us, setting aside time for ourselves isn't something we're good at, so commit yourself to a consistent day and time that's for you to do what you want.
*Making it attractive and satisfying isn't necessary here because the reward in and of itself will reinforce the habit. 

With that, you know have 3 habits to start building a financial self-care routine. Give this a shot, and let me know how it goes in the comments below. 



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Best Way To Budget? Try Pen And Paper -- How Bullet Journaling Can Fix Your Spending

Bullet journaling is a new and trendy way to track your spending. Using pen and paper can make you more active in your budgeting and can be fun too. Here's how to start keeping a bullet journal. You can hear it in the swell of retro-inspired music. You can see it in the resurgence of vinyl records and vintage cameras. You can feel the hum of simple circuitry in the air. Analog is back. Analog products fill a very real, very legitimate desire to untether from the digital world we've been enslaved by. In a society where the speed of information is ramping up at an exponential rate, the world of analog is a reminder to slow down and connect to your surroundings. The analog approach can be implemented in a variety of ways -- even budgeting. The bullet journal community has embraces this pen and paper approach to money-management, developing simple and time-saving methods to track and organize your finances offline. What is bullet journal budgeting? The goal of bulle...

How to Recognize the Signs of a Gambling Problem

 Whether it's buying a weekly lottery ticket or taking an annual trip to Vegas to blow off some steam, gambling is a fun and harmless diversion for many people. For others it can become a problem that creates a variety of issues, including extreme financial hardship and deep debt. Let's take a look at some of the tell-tale signs of a gambling problem.  When Gambling Goes Beyond Entertainment Win or lose, gambling should be nothing more than a fun activity. When it stops being fun and becomes something that dominates your thoughts or conversations, that's a sign it's becoming a problem.  Gambling with Money Meant for Other Things It's one thing to have a few dollars set aside every week for lottery ticket or putting a line item in your entertainment budget for a trip to the casino every few months. It's something else entirely if you're gambling with money intended for other things like rent, food, and paying bills. Gambling with money originally planned to c...

How to Avoid Debt Consolidation Scams

  If you're in significant debt, the prospect of becoming rent-free can be alluring. So alluring, in fact, that you might find yourself caught in any number of scams along the way.  One common way to pay off debt is through consolidation. This involves combining all your debt and taking out a loan that goes toward paying it off each month. Debt Consolidation can help simplify and streamline the debt payoff process, and it might even save you a little bit of money, too.  Still, the debt consolidation industry is rife with scams. Companies might say they offer debt consolidation when, in reality, they're for-profit debt settlement companies looking to take advantage of people.  Warning signs of a debt consolidation scam  When you're searching for a way to consolidate and pay off your debt, you might come across companies online that promote debt consolidation.  But some of these companies aren't offering to help you with debt consolidation. Instead, they're d...