Excavating family and cultural money stories buried in your psyche to understand why you earn, spend, and save the way you do.
Zera Yacob examined his own thinking processes, tracing assumptions back to their sources. Emotional Money Archaeology applies this self-examination to financial psychology: Where did your money beliefs originate? What family stories shape your spending? Which cultural narratives drive your financial anxiety? Schools teach money mechanics while ignoring the emotional infrastructure—the inherited trauma, the scarcity mindset, the shame, the magical thinking about abundance. This concept asks you to dig: Did your parents fight about money? What did you learn about worthiness from how you were provided for? Does your cultural background carry specific financial narratives—immigration, reparations, displacement, abundance or deprivation? By archaeologically examining your money emotions, you separate inherited patterns from chosen values. You recognize which financial behaviors serve you versus which replay ancestral wounds. Understanding that your resistance to saving might echo parental poverty, or your overspending might resist deprivation's grip, liberates choice. Financial education becomes therapeutic: conscious reparenting of your relationship with money, aligning it with dignity and reason rather than unconscious reaction.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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