The 9 Steps to Financial Freedom (4 page)

BOOK: The 9 Steps to Financial Freedom
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Most of us leave a cluttered paper trail marking where our money went behind us, but Suzanne was unlike any other client I’d ever had. She had no debt. She rented a furnished house: no mortgage. She leased her car. She had no savings, no investments. Divorced, with one son, she had come to see me about putting aside money for his education. I saw a woman alone with no money for emergencies, or tomorrow. I could have said to her, “Now, Suzanne, see here, you are forty-three years old and you really must start investing for the future.” But clearly she knew that, and clearly knowing it made no difference at all to her, at least on the level that inspires us to take action. Suzanne was still living as if she might have to move the next day—no commitments, no ties, no furniture, no complications to undo if she suddenly had to pull up stakes. She had turned her childhood message around and had come to believe instead that to keep away from pain, you keep away from money.

ANDY’S STORY

If you’ve lost it all, how can you think you have the power to keep money safe, let alone make it grow?

When I was about eight, my mother gave me ten dollars to go to the bakery to buy bread. My grandparents and cousins were all coming to lunch, and this was a big deal. It was the first time that I got to go all the way by myself—down the block, to the right, then across the street all by myself, and down one more
block to the corner. I’d been that way a million times, but never all by myself. And ten dollars! It was an enormous amount of money. Mom told me how much the bread would probably cost and told me to keep the change in my pocket. There was all this trust in me, all this responsibility. And what did I do? Lost it, the ten-dollar bill. When I got to the bakery: no money in my pocket. I had no idea what could have happened to it, no idea. I was late getting home; I looked everywhere. My grandparents and cousins were already there when I got back; everyone was in the kitchen; there was the noise of everybody talking. “Where’s the bread, Andy?” my mom said, and I had to say I lost the money. The room grew so quiet. Nobody said anything; they were all just looking at me. I didn’t get punished or anything. I think everyone knew how bad I felt, and there wasn’t anything anyone could do. We had our lunch with the bread basket on the table but without the bread.

When he and his wife, Leslie, came to see me, Andy said, “I was so overwhelmed by that loss, I think I never wanted to be in control of my money after that.” Leslie had never heard his story before, and even Andy had forgotten about it until we did this exercise together. But after Andy told the story, everything started to make more sense for both of them. They had come to me to talk about investing for the future, but the two of them could never agree on the kinds of investments they should make. Most of these disagreements ended up with one or the other of them storming out of the room, to the point where they decided they needed professional help. Leslie wanted to invest aggressively; in their early forties they were young enough, she felt, to take some risks. Andy, on the other hand, was adamant about putting the money into a bank account, where, he said, “it’ll be safe.” He never understood why investing scared him to death until he made this connection to his past.

CATHERINE’S STORY

I remember when my twin sister and I were seven, and we both asked for bikes for our birthday. I could already ride one, and I wanted to tie a balloon to the back wheel and make it sound like a motorcycle as I sped through the neighborhood. That’s what all my friends had done with their bikes. But my parents made a huge deal of it, said that bikes were too expensive, maybe we could just share a bike. Well, I didn’t like that idea so much. I wanted my own bike and told them so. They told me—in a very loud voice, I might add—that I was being so selfish, that all I cared about was what I wanted, and that I didn’t deserve a bike at all. I didn’t know bikes were expensive; everyone else had a bike, and I just wanted a bike. Who knew? The morning of our birthday, there in the driveway were two bikes, one with pink streamers and one with white. I was so excited, I could not stand it. I immediately put a blue balloon on the back tire, and off I went. As I rounded the first corner to go around the block, before I knew it I was flat on the ground with my bike on top of me. I tried to get up, but my arm would not move. I can remember lying there, screaming for my mom to come help me. For the next six weeks I had this big cast on my arm. And all I could think was: This is what happens when you get something you’re not supposed to have. After my arm healed, I never really rode my bike again.

When I met her, Catherine was still living her life as if she did not deserve to have anything she wanted. More than anything else, she wanted to buy a house in the town where she was a teacher in a fine private school; she wanted to start a garden. She even had a particular house in mind, she had the money saved for the down payment, but she couldn’t bring herself to make an offer. It was as if she felt afraid to take up any space in the
world. She didn’t know why she felt so paralyzed, until together we went back to her first money memory. For Catherine, the bike episode popped up right away, although she hadn’t thought about it in years. She began to see that the seven-year-old she had been had every right in the world to ask for a bike, and that the pain of her broken arm wasn’t punishment for her desire.

MONEY MESSAGES

Messages about money are passed down from generation to generation, worn and chipped like the family dishes. Your own memories about money will tell you a lot, if you take that step back and see what those memories taught you about who you were—and whether those memories are still telling you who you are today.

For me, the first message I remember came when I was eight or nine. In the hot Chicago summers, all of us in the neighborhood would go to the Thunderbird Motel to go swimming. It was heaven, jumping into the cold water of that crowded pool, everyone screaming. It cost a dollar to get in. One Saturday, as usual, I said to my mom, “Can I have a dollar to go swimming?” And she said, “Suze, I’m sorry, we don’t have it.” I said, “But Mom, I need a dollar to go swimming with everyone else,” and she said, “Sweetheart, this is very hard for me to say, and we don’t want anyone else to know, but I just don’t have a dollar to give you.”

I could tell that saying this to me made my mom want to cry. I also knew I was not to tell anyone. I felt as if the wind had been knocked out of me. What was I going to tell my friends? I don’t remember what I told them, but I do remember this: I suddenly felt I was different from my friends, that I had less than they did, and therefore they wouldn’t like me anymore.

I’m not proud of what happened next. Every night when my dad came home from work, he would place his pants over a chair in the dining room right outside their bedroom. He kept his money in the pocket of his pants. At night, after my mom and dad went to sleep, I would sneak into the dining room and take some bills out of his pants pockets. I took this money not to spend on myself or to save, but to buy gifts for my friends. I really thought that if I could show them that I did have money, they would continue to like me.

Interesting, isn’t it, that the happy memories of the dozens of times I did go swimming at the Thunderbird Motel pale against the agonizing memory of the one time I couldn’t?

Without my knowing it, this memory played itself out well into my adult life. For years, even though I was becoming more and more successful, I felt “less than.” Until I could connect the dots—that who I am today is not the same little girl with no money to go swimming at the Thunderbird Motel—this memory defined how I felt about myself.

A few years ago I asked my mom if she remembered that Saturday, and she did; she still remembers the look on my face when she said she didn’t have a dollar to give me. Ever since then her biggest fear in life when it comes to me is that I don’t have enough money to get what I want and that I am suffering. It doesn’t matter how successful I become, she still calls me and asks, “Suze, are you okay? Now, if you need anything, you’d ask, wouldn’t you?” It’s as if she is still trying to make up for that Saturday.

Now it’s your turn to look back.

YOUR EXERCISE

As it was for Suzanne, Andy, Catherine, and me, this is a connect-the-dots exercise, revisiting the past and tracing the memories to
where and how they affect your life today, and they do affect your life today.

In childhood we live full force, and when you delve into childhood memories, they are vivid, alive with all the five senses—you can see, touch, taste, smell, and hear them. The smell of cotton candy from the local amusement park, the feel of the wind against your face when you leaned out the car window, the mud squishing through your toes as you ran barefoot in and out of mud puddles, the cold on your face when temperatures dropped below zero, the way your house smelled when your mother was cooking your favorite meal. I am asking you to look back into your childhood and remember everything you can about money, the wonderful things it did and the ways in which it might have scared you.

Remember back to when you were three, twelve, or seventeen, and see what comes up for you. When one money memory feels true, important, and keeps coming back, that’s the one we want. Here are some questions to help you remember:

What were the best presents you recall receiving when you were a child?

Did your friends have things you didn’t?

Did your mother have to work when others didn’t, or not have to work when others did?

Did you get money every time you went to see your grandparents?

Were you ashamed to bring your friends home to your house?

What were the special treats of your childhood? Did you have to be good in order to earn them?

Did you feel like your friends had nicer clothes than you did? Did your friends’ parents have more expensive cars than yours did?

Did you feel ashamed of having far more than your friends did?

Did you hear your parents fight about money?

Did you receive only money as gifts, instead of the personal touch of a handpicked present?

Did your mother close the windows when she bought something because your father would yell and she didn’t want the neighbors to hear? (Mine did.)

Was shopping for school clothes a ritual you looked forward to every year?

Did you steal—from piggy banks, your parents’ wallets, the dime store?

Do you remember the very first wallet you ever had? Was it given to you empty, or with a penny in it, or a dollar?

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