Tag: #personalfinance

  • Why you always feel behind financially even though you work hard

    Why you always feel behind financially even though you work hard

    You work hard, pay your bills, maybe even earn more than you did a few years ago. Yet your account is always thin, your savings never feel safe, and you live with a low-grade fear that one surprise bill could knock everything over.

    Part of this is simple math: prices for rent, food, transport and small fees have climbed faster than many salaries. But there’s a psychological layer too. As costs rise, your brain quietly upgrades what counts as “normal”. Takeaway coffees, delivered food, subscriptions and convenience buys stop feeling like choices and start feeling like basics you’re entitled to after a long day.

    That mix of real inflation and shifting normal makes you feel stuck. You rarely see clear progress. So you avoid opening your banking app, tell yourself you’ll “sort money out later”, and drift from month to month with the same background stress.

    A tiny rule

    Once a week, do a 10-minute money check-in: open your accounts, list upcoming bills, and move a small fixed amount to savings or debt. No big plans, just one calm look and one small transfer.

    Your financial life doesn’t change in one dramatic decision,
    but in the weeks you finally look at the numbers instead of bracing for them.

    ID: G5h2zLW

  • Why you feel poorer than your friends even when you earn the same

    You earn a decent salary, pay your bills, even save a bit. Then you see friends posting trips, renovations, new gadgets. Suddenly your life feels small and you feel “behind”, even though nothing changed in your bank account.

    Money doesn’t just live in numbers. It lives in comparisons. Psychologists talk about relative deprivation: you don’t measure how well you’re doing in absolute terms, but against the people you quietly treat as your reference group. If your circle keeps upgrading, your “normal” shifts upward and your enough keeps moving out of reach.

    Social media turns this into a 24/7 highlight reel. You see everyone’s peak moments and almost none of their debt, arguments, or anxiety. Your brain still reacts as if it’s a fair comparison and quietly rewrites your story from “okay” to “losing”.

    A tiny rule

    When envy spikes, don’t ask “Why don’t I have that?” Ask:
    “Do I even want that life, with the trade-offs that come with it?”

    Then name one thing you already have that they might quietly envy: stability, time, health, real friends.

    Your money stress often comes less from what’s in your account, and more from who you’ve chosen to stand next to in your head.

    ID: V6p4tQX

  • One brutal money lesson from The Psychology of Money

    In The Psychology of Money, Morgan Housel makes one uncomfortable point: doing well with money is less about what you know and more about how you behave. Most people treat money like a math test. Housel treats it like a stress test of your emotions.

    Two people can have the same salary and knowledge, but very different outcomes. One panics in crashes, chases hot tips, upgrades their lifestyle with every raise. The other stays boring: saves automatically, ignores noise, lives below their ego. The difference isn’t IQ. It’s temperament.

    We overrate information and underrate behaviour. You don’t need the perfect portfolio. You need a setup you can stick with when you’re scared, angry, jealous, or tired.

    A tiny rule from the book:

    Build a money system you’d still follow on your worst day, not your best. Smaller risks, higher buffers, and automatic habits beat clever strategies you abandon in the first storm.

    Your net worth is a delayed mirror
    of how you behave when money feels emotional.