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MP Dunleavey

Women in Red

Are you stuck in a money trap?

When you make the same financial mistakes over and over, chances are that the same seemingly nonnegotiable principles have been tripping you up for years.

By MP Dunleavey
MSN Money

Most money problems are pretty dull. What's gripping are the financial car wrecks: watching someone drive themselves into a pit, repeatedly, despite their best intentions.

It's the people who worry they have no retirement savings but must drive a new luxury car. Or who know things need to change but are unable to take control.

What's going on there? I've often wondered, and then a recent conversation with my cigar-chomping editor sparked an answer: If you're a repeat money offender, chances are you're stuck in a mental money trap that has misguided your financial actions for a long time.

A money trap isn't like a bum mortgage deal or bad credit card agreement. It's when you're stuck in the wrong mental gear and acting from a set of principles that are so nonnegotiable that you find yourself driving into the same quagmire time and again.

3 case studies

Let's look back at some of the harder cases that have come through Women in Red headquarters, including three women whom I was never able to help, nor were able to help themselves:

Anna was a new mom and breadwinner who believed the power of her own frugality and common sense could make up for her husband's total disinterest in financial reality.

A hardworking Washington, D.C., lobbyist, Anna earned a modest income and managed to buy a house, but her husband kept making terrible financial mistakes. "My husband thinks 'plan' is a four-letter word," she said.

Anna struggled for years, but her husband's lack of financial cooperation left her falling further and further behind. She just couldn't let go of the idea that she could do the thinking (and planning) for both of them. I call this money trap the "Casablanca" syndrome.

Marian was a divorced mother of two, one of whom had a learning disability. Despite her limited salary (she was starting a business), she was taking out tens of thousands in home equity to pay for a special school for her child.

Although many parents go to the ends of the earth to help their children, Marian went further than most people would go, borrowing against her home (which was her only asset and had been fully paid for) and justifying the enormous debt in the name of her child's future.

It was a tough call. As a mom myself, I deeply understood her need to help her child. But not at the expense of her own stability as a single parent. Marian was caught in the money trap I've dubbed "all you need is love," with her decisions driven by the self-sabotaging belief that money doesn't matter and that you can afford to ignore financial reality in the name of a greater cause.

Brice was a striving freelance writer trying to fix many financial failures -- chronic debt, no savings, scant retirement funds -- and kept stumbling.

Brice and Mia (aka yours truly) manifested many of the same symptoms: procrastination, inertia, helplessness and cluelessness around all things financial.

In the end, we were poster kids for two types of money traps. I call hers "someone else will save me," the belief that you'll be rescued by someone or something. And for a long time I thought I was in that trap, too, until I learned what was really holding me back.

Roadblocks to success

Most of us blame our financial misdeeds on a familiar lineup of external factors:

  • Anxiety or fear.

  • Not having enough money.

  • Lacking sufficient time.

  • An uncooperative spouse.

  • Laziness.

  • Did I mention fear?

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In fact, those are just symptoms of whatever money trap you're in, and each manifests in different ways, according to your psychological makeup.

Here are seven money traps I've identified -- and my own revelation that finally helped me to break free. See if you recognize yourself in one of these:

1. 'Someone else will save me'

Secret belief: You don't have to manage your money because someone or something is going to gallop to the rescue. Any minute now.

Telltale emotions: anxiety, helplessness. You wish to be comforted.

Red flags: You keep dropping the ball. You procrastinate. Your head is in the sand, and you won't dig it out. You have piles of unopened bills.

2. 'It's not my job'

Secret belief: Money is beneath you. You loathe dealing with it, even though you may be quite well off.

Telltale emotions: aversion, indifference. You feel a need to focus on higher causes.

Red flags: You rely on your mate, a parent or an in-law to make financial decisions for you. You're conservative, which gives you a false sense of security. In reality, you have no control over your own finances.

Continued: 'Money doesn't matter'

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1 - 10 of 29
Wednesday, June 03, 2009 6:19:30 AM
So uh - where are you going here? Try doing some real work! How about posing possible solutions for your case studies??
Wednesday, June 03, 2009 10:22:09 AM
Well, this is a ridiculous article.  I'm not sure how labeling myself into some made-up category helps.  But, I will concede that my solution is beyond the scope of the article, altho not sure what you'd call my better half who is only slowed when the plastic melts in the credit card machine (and, btw, is also a certified financial planner).  Money is a theoretical construct only.  For me it's a choice between financial stability and my marriage.  You really can't "fix" another person.  I guess I'm the Cassablanca problem.
Wednesday, June 03, 2009 10:51:27 AM

Umm, hello? Previous poster! At the end of her (informative) article she said that the next upcoming articles will "explore the other six money blocks and show you how to turn them into building blocks in your own life." Which means-look out for her other articles and they will give you possible solutions.

 

Next time, please read the entire thing before criticizing someone's work.

Wednesday, June 03, 2009 10:59:34 AM

Nope, not gonna read the whole thing before I comment.

This writer's work should never see the light of day on msn.com

It is a blog. She has no background on anything financial. It's worthless, at best.

This is simply someone with a degree that got lucky. Anyone could write this article. You can't just sit around and make up theories and bang out a bunch of fluff.

 

It's a mediocre singer with no life experiences and no research.

 

Two freelance writers sitting around, hoping they don't have to get a real job.

 

Wednesday, June 03, 2009 11:16:44 AM
How hard is it to sit down and see where you are overspending. Cut up the credit card and force yourself to only spend money you have. Get Quicken or Mint.com and start tracking your money. It's like exercise and anything else. You don't get better at it until you start to do it.
Wednesday, June 03, 2009 11:35:34 AM

I disagree with the previous postings stating that the article was pointless.  It is really important to define the problems in our finances before addressing them.  We cannot really fix our finances unless we understand ourselves so that we do not continue making the same mistakes.  Quick fixes will not help in the long run but truly learning about ourselves and understanding why we make disastrous financial decisions is a good beginning. I  think this article is great because it talks about some factors (such as fear) that really influence how we handle our finances and look forward to the articles that will follow.  

Wednesday, June 03, 2009 1:42:56 PM
Hey Casablanca! A kiss for luck! Although, financial stability and marital success I believe are somewhat of a oxymoron as they are in many cases one-in-the-same. When financial stability becomes unstable - the arguments start and voila! In comes "the-high-cost-of-leaving".
Although, I'm supposing these days, it's a financial luxury to be able to divorce. A bit of humor here!

Wednesday, June 03, 2009 1:48:36 PM
Ok, so you needed this article to analyze your spending mis-habits? You go right ahead and wait for those "enlightening" future articles and don't by any means exercise any probative brain power until then.


Wednesday, June 03, 2009 1:53:01 PM
I see no harm in this article.  The first step in fixing a problem is identifying it.  I was feeling pretty superior until I hit #4.  Ouch.  I am a control freak about money, but it's actually saved us financially.  My hubby and I have a weird role reversal thing going.  He would buy a new car every three years if I said ok, and I hate shopping.  It's just frustrating how there never seems to be any extra money at the end of the month, even after our raises.  How do you get ahead without working every waking minute?
Wednesday, June 03, 2009 1:54:14 PM
#9 - in response to cgapsp. Don't know why when you click reply, it doesn't state exactly what comment you are replying to.
Who set up this site? I guess function, efficiency and............ genuine talent for the position are not requisites for getting and keeping jobs anymore.

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