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7 Mindset Shifts to Master Your Money Psychology

In this episode of the Personal Finance Podcast,  we are going to talk about the  seven mindset shifts to master your money psychology.

In this episode of the Personal Finance Podcast,  we are going to talk about the  seven mindset shifts to master your money psychology.

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On this episode of the Personal Finance Podcast, seven Mindset Shifts to Master Your Money Psychology.

What's up everybody? Welcome to the Personal Finance Podcast. I'm your host Andrew, founder of Master money.co. And today on the Personal Finance podcast, we're gonna dive into. Seven mindset shifts to master your money. If you guys have any questions, make sure you join the Master Money Newsletter by going to master money.co/newsletter and follow us on Spotify, apple Podcast, YouTube, or whatever podcast player you love listening to this podcast on.

And if you want to hop out the show, consider leaving a five star rating and review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast player. Now, most people don't struggle with money because they're bad at math. Most people struggle because they don't know how to feel and think about money. Now, I say this all the time on this podcast, but money truly is 90% up here.

It's 90% in your head. And it's 10% what you actually know. Your emotions matter more than anything else. And regulating those emotions and making sure you have the right money, psychology is the most important thing. So today what we're gonna be doing is I'm gonna dive into seven mindset shifts to help you master your money and help you master that financial psychology.

And it's going to be very, very important for most people to go through this process and understand how they can build some. Financial confidence with their money psychology. Now, one of the biggest things and the guidelines that I have, if you wanna master your money psychology, is to make sure that you're continuously learning.

If you continuously learn about money, the more you understand about money, the more you're going to be able to regulate those emotions. So what I realized very early on, for example, is that when the market would go down, I would feel some sort of emotion. And I would feel an emotion when the market would shift or when the market would go up.

I would also feel emotion. I'd feel excitement. I'd be so happy that the market is moving up. I'd see my bank account going up. I'd see my balance going up, and I got really excited. Then the market would go down and I'd be like, oh my goodness, I am losing money every single month. What the heck is going on here?

And so with a financial education, I started to learn more and more about the market, how the market moves, gain more experience, investing in the market. And all of a sudden now when the market moves, I feel literally nothing. In fact, when it goes down, I get a little excited 'cause I get to put a little more money in and stocks are on sale.

Now this comes with experience, but this also comes with furthering my financial education. Those two things will help you master your money psychology. And for some of us you may feel like, well, I know a lot about money, I know a lot about finance, and I really don't need to continue learning 'cause I feel like I know everything I want to know, and I'm gonna go as far as I want to with this.

But typically what you need to be doing is continuing that education because it helps motivate you, it helps keep you level, and it helps keep you grounded. And so all of these things are really important to make sure that you are mastering your money psychology. So I wanted to talk about that up at the top of the show.

Now let's get in to the seven key mindset shifts that you need to have to master your money psychology. Alright, number one is to understand your money. I. Story. So your money habits are going to always start with your money story. What beliefs did you grow up with around money? So I have talked to so many different friends and they have these certain beliefs around money and typically those beliefs around money, sometimes they're unusual.

I. And sometimes they're pretty normal. But if they do have some sort of unusual belief around money, I'll ask, well, where did you learn that from? And it's always from their upbringing, it's always from their parents and how they grew up with money. Maybe you know, someone who is really frugal around money.

If you turn the lights on, they want the lights turned off every single time they walk out of a room. Or maybe you know, someone out there who does not wanna waste a single cent. Well, the odds are they either likely grew up with someone who also shared those same values, or they're rebelling against someone who did the exact opposite.

And so sometimes this can come outta scarcity mindsets, but this can also come out of mindsets from people who maybe their family lost it all. There's a lot of different beliefs out there and how people grew up with money is gonna have a huge impact on how you think about money. Now, sometimes this is wrong, where I've heard people say for example, oh no, you can't invest your money.

You need to keep it all in cash. Well, that typically, for most people is the wrong answer, and that's because maybe your parents lost all their money or their parents lost all their money in the Great Depression or whatever else it could be. And so what you need to make sure that is happening here is that you understand and have the ability to identify what areas of my up.

Bringing, maybe are causing me financial harm. And so I want you to think through how did your parents or caregivers treat money? What did they do around money? Did they spend a lot of money? Did they overspend all the time? Did they hoard it all and there was super frugal? How does that impact the way you think about money?

Now, here's some common things and common money scripts that you know, maybe parents have said to you, we can't afford that. Or you've had parents say Money is evil. Or they'll say something like, money makes everybody greedy. All of these are just scripts that people are stating, but they are not always true, and so you have to make sure that you identify those.

Now, are you replaying any patterns in your life from your upbringing? These are really important questions to ask yourself because you need to make sure that you understand and identify some of those, what emotions are to idea your money habits. Here's a great example for me. Okay, so. In my upbringing every single year at Christmas time, and this sounds really privileged and it is, but every single year at Christmas time, my parents would get me, uh, gifts and they had a sentimental budget.

So when we would get gifts every single year, they would spend $100 on our Christmas gifts. So I would see friends around me and I grew up in, I. A middle class household, but I would see friends around me and their parents would be buying all these different things, and mine would stick to that a hundred dollars budget always was that a hundred dollars budget.

If you wanted one big thing, you'd get one giant big thing and maybe a couple of things in your stocking, or if you wanted a bunch of small things, they'd get you all the small things. But it all fell in that a hundred dollar budget always. Okay. Now, I never loved that because I saw people around me getting more and my friends and kids around me that were getting more than I was when it came to Christmas time.

So one thing that happened to me is when I had my first child, which was my son, my oldest son, when I had my first child, I, every single Christmas, he'd be like two years old, and I would fill up under the tree with as many gifts and toys as I possibly could. And this is stemming from me early on at Christmas time, wanting more gifts.

And I would just buy him more toys and I'd just buy him more stuff. And then my second child would come and the tree would fill up even more. My wife's like, this is getting ridiculous. Like you are. You are compensating for something here. And I would think back and I was like, oh my goodness. This is all stemming from me.

Because of me growing up wanting more under the tree. Now this sounds extremely privileged, I understand that. But at the same time, this is an example of what could be something that happened to you. So maybe for example, your parents were super, super frugal and they would complain about money all the time.

They would talk about money all the time, and they would just say to you, we can't afford that. We can't afford this, we can't afford that. And then you grow up and you're like, well, I wanna be able to afford everything. I don't ever wanna say no to my kids because my parents said no to me. All the time. So you may grow up with a money belief that is the opposite of how you grew up, but that's okay.

You need to make sure you identify that and figure out what part of that is healthy and what part of that is not healthy for your money psychology going forward. If you are someone whose parents were really frugal and then you grew up wanting to do the opposite for your children, you need to make sure it's still within your means.

And so this is gonna be a situation that you can't always rely just on some of those psychological triggers. Also just think through your past experiences and your behavior and don't let it control your future if you feel like you're going in a negative direction and you can rewrite the story. This is what I think most people need to understand, and this is what we want to work with you on, is you can rewrite the story of what some of these beliefs are.

So if you're someone out there and you know that some of these money beliefs are in your life, you have some of these things where your money story is impacting the way that you spend money. Maybe you feel like money is not abundant and you can't go earn more. Maybe you feel like, you know, just trying to earn more money is almost impossible because forever your family has been in poverty for years and years and years.

I wanna tell you right now, you can rewrite your family's money story. Part of the reason why we started this podcast was I believe anybody in this world can build wealth. And if you are coming from generation after generation of people who did not know how to handle money or who could not earn more, or who did not have the opportunity to earn more, maybe they weren't privileged at all.

Privilege is very real, and maybe they weren't privileged. Well, you can rewrite that story. You can make the change, and I want to encourage you as much as I possibly can to know that you. Can rewrite your story. And so I want you to understand that as we go through this episode. Now, number two is I want you to shift from scarcity to abundance.

So there are a lot of people out there, and when I start to talk to people about money, I can realize pretty quickly if they have a scarcity mindset around money or if they have an abundant mindset around money. Now, every single wealthy person that I know has an extremely abundant mindset when it comes to money.

They think that I can always go out and earn more money. I can start another business. I can start to negotiate my salary at my career and be able to earn more there. I can increase my skill level, so I can earn more at my day job and outside of my career. Hey, they're always thinking of business ideas.

For example, for me, I cannot stop thinking of business ideas and I need to share. I have a bunch of episodes coming for you guys, by the way, of more business ideas to start. 'cause I know you guys love those episodes, but I cannot stop thinking about different ways to earn more money. And how money is abundant, but for a lot of people out there, if you grew up in a family who always talked about how tight money was and talked about scarcity, this is going to ingrain in your brain that money is a scarcity thing.

You always need to be playing defense instead of offense. You're trying to just fend off the bill collectors. You're just trying to fend off making sure that you can even get by the next month. This is the opposite of what I want you to think about money, but you need to make sure that you understand how it works first.

So a scarcity mindset is a person that thinks there's never enough, and maybe you grew up forever and you've never been in a situation where there is enough. That's okay. We're gonna make that mindset shift because an abundance mindset says I can always create. More now, scarcity mindsets. I know really wealthy people who have a scarcity mindset and they hoard their money.

They're scared about money all the time, and they're always playing defense. Now I get it. For a lot of us, one of my biggest fears in the world is losing it all. That is one of my biggest fears in the world. That is my big money. Fear is losing it all in, starting from. Ground zero. So a lot of us are going to have somewhat of a scarcity mindset, but still you can have a scarcity mindset, but still be abundant when it comes to your actions.

And so I want you to try to stop playing defense and I want you to start playing offense. So an abundance mindset will invest their dollars. They will go out there and start a business. They will go out there and try to work on their skills so they can level up in their career, and they know that there is always more money out there to be made.

I want that to be you, and I want you to think. In that way, if you're the type of person who always comes up with business ideas and you are the type of person who doesn't take action on them, we all know this person. A business idea comes up. Maybe it's like Netflix for example. They're like, and your friend comes up and said, man, I thought of Netflix before Netflix came out.

Or somebody comes out with a brand new. Restaurant and they said, man, I thought of this restaurant before this restaurant came out. Well, you need to take action on some of these things in order to make it come true. We all know the person who always does that. Now, abundance doesn't mean carelessly spending.

It means confidently living and it's the shift starts with your thoughts before it shows up in your bank account. If you can make this shift early on, it'll be a big, big difference in your life. Now number three is to recognize your emotional triggers. Now, most people will make money decisions emotionally and not logically, and so I want you to recognize some of those emotional triggers when it comes to spending money.

So number one is do you emotionally spend money when you are stressed? Bored or insecure. So I know for a fact that when I am bored and I am sitting at home more often or I'm looking on my phone or I'm just kind of doing nothing, I will start to go, uh, well, what's going on online? Maybe I can look at that brand new golf club.

Or maybe I can look for that brand new pickleball paddle. Or maybe I can go online and, Ooh, I haven't bought a. New polo in a while. And so I'll go and start to just shop around online 'cause I'm bored. What else am I gonna do? And most of you listening do the same exact thing. When you are bored, you start to shop.

Now, stress shopping is another thing. A lot of people, when they experience stress, they want to relieve that stress in some way, shape or form. Some people will do a workout, some people will go shopping. Have you ever heard of retail therapy? That is literally where that word came from. When you are stressed out or you are dealing with a lot of things, retail therapy can help people decompress, but look for those emotional triggers because if you are in a situation where you're living paycheck to paycheck, or you don't have a lot of extra money there, see if any of those emotions are causing you.

To spend. That's the first thing I want you to think through. Okay? Is emotional spending. Know about emotional spending and know when it causes you to trigger spending money. Do you go on a shopping spree every single time you get stressed? Well, that's gonna be a problem. We need to make sure that we get that under control so that we can get our finances right moving forward.

The second thing I want you to think about when it comes to emotional triggers is avoidance behavior. So, so many people I know do this, and most people I talk to or coach through their money do this, okay? Avoidance behavior is not checking your bank accounts or your budget because it's in a bad situation.

So when things get bad, you don't wanna feel worse, and so you try to avoid it as much as you possibly can. Now, you guys who have been here for a long time have heard me tell the story about when I went to the gas pump. The gas pump was the turning point. In my life where I actually got my money together.

So I had my first job. I was not making much money outta college, and I had my first job. And over the course of the first six months, I was just trying to get by. I was living paycheck to paycheck and I went to this gas pump, went to go fill up my gas tank with gas, and I did not have enough money to fill my entire tank with gas.

And it was, at this point in time, I was at a crossroads. I could either, you know, just avoid this and try to move on with my day and hope for my paycheck on Friday to get me by once again, or I could do something about it. And if I avoided this, I would've never turned my financial life around. I would've never had my first a hundred K in two years and my first million nine years later.

And that is because I decided I was not going to avoid this any longer. And so a lot of you out there, you're like, man, I just will never be able to get it together. I can't get a budget together, or I can't start investing, or I can't get an emergency fund going, or I can't invest in my Roth I a, or my 401k.

I'm just not even gonna think about it. But avoidance behavior means that you will never build wealth, and I want you to remember that and we go through this. So do not avoid your problems. You need to face them head on, develop a plan, which is what we teach you here, to develop a plan, and then we're gonna move on to the next step.

Overspending for approval or status. Now, I'm gonna say this right directly to you, if you're watching on YouTube. Let me lean in for this one really quick. Stop spending money, buying things you don't really care about to impress people that you could care less about. Stop buying things. To impress people you don't care about.

It does not make sense. This is a huge thing that a lot of people will do, is they will go out and overspend on a vehicle because they want people to think they have more money than they do, or they will buy the bigger house that really stretches their budget because they want people to think they have more money than they do.

I want you to think this to yourself. If nobody else was watching, would I actually make this purchase? Or would I make a separate decision? That is going to be a huge difference maker for most people, is asking themselves that question every single time they do this. Luxury brands fall deep into this category.

There is almost zero reason to buy a luxury brand unless you really feel the quality is that much better. But typically, the mid-tier quality and the luxury brand are made very similarly. And the luxury brand just has a label on it. That label is for others' approval. And if you do not think that that is true, just look deep, deep down.

If that label was not on, if Gucci was not on the shirt or on the purse or on the shoes, would you actually, I. Buy that item. And we just found out, actually, as of recent, if you've seen all of these Chinese factories coming out saying they're making all the handbags, they're making all the shoes, and then it goes to Italy, and they put the final stamp on there.

So this entire time, the fakes have been also the real. And so for a lot of people. If you are overspending for approval or status, you need to know that you are doing that. This is really important and sometimes you just gotta call people out. I'm calling you all out right now. You need to understand that for approval or for status.

If you are spending dollars, it is not worth it. Mercedes is for approval or status. BMW is for approval or status unless you're really into cars or vehicles. Typically those are for approval or status. Okay? So I just want you to understand as you think through this, track your emotional state before you swipe a card.

So if you swipe a card, I want you to do something and say to yourself, do you immediately regret it an hour later? If you do, then let's just keep thinking about this. Let's keep making sure that we are conscious about this and not do that again. Because if you swipe your card during an emotional state, you are going to most likely do something that you regret.

Making sure that you are just aware. Awareness is step one. Judgment is not helpful here whatsoever. So you need to be aware. You need to stop judging yourself, and you need to just be understanding of what is going on here and start to fix it. And emotional regulation leads to financial regulation. So if you can regulate your emotions, you can regulate your finances, and I want every single person to understand that as we move.

Forward. So what's your go-to emotional trigger when it comes to spending? Think about this for a second. Do you spend dollars based on some sort of emotional trigger? Is it stress? Is it anxiety? Is it to feel better about yourself when things are just going wrong? Is it to impress other people? Is it when you feel guilty?

Is it when you just feel like everything in the world is against you? What are some of those emotional triggers? Identify those. Write 'em down to your phone and just have some sort of thing just reminding yourself before you make a purchase. Say, I spend money because of these emotional triggers. Do I still wanna make this purchase?

Just write 'em down, put 'em on a list as a note in your notes app on your phone, and before you spend money, just pull that up. And just say, are these some of the triggers that is causing me to wanna spend money? And then think through that process. Alright, number four is to upgrade your money identity. So your words have a major impact on how you think and how you think is what you're going to end up doing.

And I want you to understand this very deeply here. Your words. Matter and how you think matters. Proverbs 23, 7 says, for as he thinks in his heart, so is he. And this is something I think most people don't realize, that your thoughts need to be controlled and they need to be regulated. If you say, I'm bad with money, this could become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

So one of the things that I think most people don't understand. Is the power of motivating yourself. Okay? And when it comes to motivating yourself, I'm not gonna do some rah rah hoo-ha thing here. I'm gonna give you an example. So when I was in college, I ran the New York Marathon. Now your boy ran the New York marathon without training.

The longest I had ever run before. That was six. Miles. Now, I could not do that today, but when I was college, I was a SPR young individual. I probably weighed 205 pounds now. I weighed 230 pounds. I'm six foot four. I weigh 230 pounds now. Been lifting a lot more weights. Your boy's been getting into the gym a little bit.

And so this is something where probably now I could not do it with the extra 25 pounds, but I ran the New York Marathon the longest I had ever run. I did not train at all, and the longest I had run was six miles. So I get to the storyline of the race. Okay. And I start running the race and I'm feeling pretty good.

I get to mile five, feeling great, get to mile six. And if you've ever seen the New York Marathon, there's people the entire way on each side. They help kind of motivate you to continue on, get to mile seven, mile eight. I'm still feeling good and I'm amazed that I'm still feeling good and I'm running, keeping the same exact pace.

I'm moving forward and I get to mile 13 and at mile 13. Boom. I hit a wall and it hit me pretty hard, but I continued on running and so now the next 13 miles are a huge psychology game for me. And I had to continually tell myself, I am gonna finish this race. I am going to finish this race. I am a marathon runner.

I am going to finish this race. You will not stop while you're running on this race. You will not stop running. So most people pass mile 13, they'll stop, they'll start walking. And I knew if I stopped and started to walk. My legs would be completely jelly and I would not start again. So I continuously just kept running and running and running, and I kept the same exact pace as when I started.

And then finally when I finished that race, it was the best feeling in the world to finish that race. I did it in my mind mentally. Guess what happened after I literally could not walk for three days because I did not train for the race. I felt sick after and all these different things, but mentally, I got my body to finish that race.

I want you to do the same thing when it comes to your money. This is the long game when it comes to money. You are gonna get hit left and right with different things that are going to try to derail your path to financial independence. Something's gonna happen where you're gonna get a big unexpected bill.

Maybe you get sued, maybe something else comes up and it derails your entire emergency fund. You lose your job. But you say to yourself, I am good with money. And I'm going to continue on this financial race. If you continue to tell yourself, I'm bad with money, I'm never gonna be able to get through this, how am I gonna get through this?

That is one of the worst things that you can do for your money. Psychology shift. Two, I'm a wealth builder. I'm learning and I'm capable. I'm a wealth builder. I'm learning, and I'm capable. And you are going to get through this. Now. Identity shapes your behavior more than your motivation ever will. And that's what most people fail to, uh, realize, is that your motivation is.

Fleeting. That's why we have you automate your money because your motivation is going to disappear, but you can still run this race and win with money by just having the right mindset. Now, wealthy people see themselves as capable even when they mess up. So have you ever met a really wealthy person and they're kind of cocky and they're someone who you're like, man, that person is super cocky.

Well, this is probably most likely people who have taken this concept too far where they believe in their selves, but then they also believe in themselves so much that they think they're better than everybody else. But part of the reason why they got there was because of their mindset. Now, I'm not saying to be cocky whatsoever.

You need to be humble throughout this entire process, but you also need to feel confident, and you need to act confident. This is one of the most important things that you can do now, every smart money move is a vote for the person that you're becoming. Your behavior dictates a vote towards who you want to be, and I want you to remember this over and over again.

Every single action I take is a vote for future me. That's how you need to think about this. So you need to shift your identity. When I was at that gas pump and I was filling up my gas tank and I did not have enough money, I shifted my identity to someone who I am good with money and I'm gonna figure this out.

And I did. And that was the thing that I think most of you need to understand as well, is you can figure this out. Number five is I want you to practice financial discipline and not deprivation. Now, Jocko Willink, who is a great author, he was a Navy Seal, he's got a great podcast too. He has this saying, and he has an, an entire book titled this called Discipline is Freedom.

And I think that is one of the most powerful statements that you can have because it creates peace, it creates margin, discipline equals systems. Not stress. So discipline is going out there and automating your money so you have a system in place to just take care of everything. Automating your savings, your investing, your bills, all of those are really, really important.

And the key to this is you're saying no now. So you can say yes to everything later. Your future self is gonna be so incredibly happy that you did this. One of the biggest pushbacks I get when I talk about investing or when I talk about making more money. Or when I talk about building wealth is the long game.

And I'll get people, for example, we'll put a video out on TikTok and everybody will say, oh, it's gonna take you 20 years. You're just gonna be an old person with a lot of money. Would you rather be an old person with no money? Because that's what's gonna happen if you follow the path that you are taking.

And so what I want people to understand is building wealth is a long game. You have to have the discipline to stay in the game. You have to have the discipline to go out and pursue wealth for the long run. Most people don't have it. This is why retirees, most retirees are on a shoestring budget. 'cause someone told them to invest their money every single month and they said, oh, that's way too far out.

Now they're living a retired life. That is no fun. They have no way to travel. They have no way to do anything. They're living off social security and maybe a couple hundred thousand dollars or less, and that's all they can do. They're stuck in their house. They cannot pursue their hobbies. They cannot pursue their interests because they did not take action.

And just taking small actions every month and still living your life today is the best combination that you can absolutely have. So rewarding yourself with intention and not impulse is a huge key here. And discipline is the muscle behind abundance. Every single person that you know who is building a business, or they're building tremendous amount of wealth, they have discipline, but they do not have to exercise that discipline every day.

If you automate your money, it's not about restriction, it's about alignment with your goals. It's about aligning your intentions with your goals. That's what discipline is when it comes to your money. Alright, number six is to kill comparison. Comparison will derail your financial clarity. If you compare your life to other people, every single person in your entire life is on a different financial path than you.

And truthfully, you have no idea what their real financial situation is. If you have a friend who you see go to Barbados, and then you see them go to Mexico, and then you see them go overseas to London, and then they go to Italy, and then they go to. France and then they go travel all over the place and it seems like they have no job and it seems like they really are just doing well financially.

Well, guess what? You have no idea what underlying is happening with their finances and if you try to match them or if you try to compare yourself to them, or if you try to say, man, I am way behind from this person. That is the thief. Of your joy. Comparison is the thief of joy. You need not to be doing that because instead what you should be doing is focusing on the things that you can control, which is your variables.

Meaning that you can work on your personal development, you can work on yourself when it comes to developing more skills so that you can earn more money. You can work on doing the best at your day job so that you can negotiate your salary, so that you can earn more at your day job. You can work on building up that side business.

You can work on becoming. The best possible person that you can be. But what you can't do is compare your start to someone else's finish line. If you're looking at some of these entrepreneurs out there, or people out there who are way ahead of you, but they've also been doing this for 25, 30 years, that is the most ridiculous thing that you could ever compare yourself to.

They started 25 years ago. There is no way, shape, or form that you should even be close to the same level as them. Now, let's come down to the people who are the same age as you. If you're comparing yourself to people who have different privilege, they have different starting points. They have different things that have happened in their life, there is no comparison.

And if you make yourself feel bad because you're comparing yourself to someone else. That is the wrong way to look at this. You have no idea what their financial life is. And for the majority of Americans, if you look at the stats, most of them are in financial derailed situations. They just don't show it.

What they're showing you is a facade of what is actually happening behind the checking account. And so you need to understand that as time goes on, social media shows highlight reels and not real life. And so a lot of people will see social media. They think everything is absolutely amazing, but it is not real life.

They may be driving a nice car, but living paycheck to paycheck. In fact, most people who have a Mercedes or A BMW are living paycheck to paycheck, and most people who, by designer. Our living paycheck to paycheck. I want you to notice this. Go look at the statistics and see what is actually happening there.

So you wanna stay focused on your own journey. Your journey is what is matters. What is your financial goals? Let's map those out and let's go get 'em. Let's go attack 'em and get after 'em. Have that abundance mindset to chase after them. Have the discipline to chase after them. But don't compare yourself to somebody else.

Who cares? Who cares what somebody else is doing? And the last one is I want you to build confidence through action. Okay, so this is number seven, is confidence comes from taking action even when you're scared, so you don't need to know everything to get started. Okay? If you are scared to get started investing, take our Investing for Beginners Free masterclass.

If you go to Master Money dot coast slash investing for beginners, that's where you can start there. If you don't know how to start saving for an emergency fund, listen to a couple podcast episodes and try it. Out. If you don't know how to automate your bills, that's okay. Open the account, invest the $50, automate the bills.

Just get started. You don't have to know everything to get started. When I started out in my real estate investing career, it took me three years to get started. Why? Because I thought I needed to know everything. I needed to know every single thing on how to tackle every single problem, and this caused me a three year delay when I could have been buying houses for like a hundred thousand dollars.

And so the market went way, way up, and I lost out on tons of deals because I thought I needed to know more, and I thought I needed to know more, and I thought I needed to know more before I get started. No, you need to start an analysis. Paralysis will destroy your financial decisions. You need to know enough around what you're doing, but you need to also take.

Action. Now, small wins compound and so does belief in yourself. You need to make sure that you have financial confidence. You are starting to believe in yourself. Where does financial confidence come from? It comes from your financial education and mastering this psychology. So the more that you know, the more that you learn, the more that you understand, you will start to feel confident around money.

But you know what else helps with financial confidence, experience. I cannot stress this enough. The more you experience, the more you try things, and you could take small little experiments, but the more you do it, the more you realize, oh, this isn't that bad. I can invest 50 more dollars, or I can invest a hundred dollars a month, or Now I'm gonna invest 200 a month.

Now I'm gonna invest 500 a month. And it starts to grow over time because you are confident in what is going to happen. And the only way to become confident with experience is to take that initial action every action. Is another vote for the identity you wanna step into. And I want you to continue to remember that.

And the real way to become confident is by doing and not waiting. So the more you wait, the less confident you're gonna become because you haven't tried it yet. And so if you haven't tried it yet, you will never be able to get over that finish line and that hump. So if there are things out there. That are scaring you about money.

Maybe it's taking that first investment. Maybe it is starting a budget. It doesn't matter what it is. Start today. I'm telling you, you can do this. And so give yourself the confidence to get started because you need to start today. Proverbs 21, 5 says, the plans of the diligence lead surely to abundance.

And so that is what I want you to remember as we go through this. Again, here's the things we talked about. I want you to understand your money story. I want you to shift to an abundance mindset. I want you to recognize your emotional triggers around money. I want you to upgrade your identity. You can do this.

I want you to practice discipline. I want you to kill comparison. Do not compare yourselves to others, and I want you to build confidence through action. Listen, thank you guys so much for listening to this episode. I hope it brought value to you. If you got value of this episode, please share it with a coworker, family member or friend, and also.

If you enjoyed the show, consider leaving that five star rating review. It really does mean the world to us. Now, take one of these mindset shifts today. Go out and take action on that. Thank you guys so much for listening, and we will see you on the next episode.

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