Using rational inquiry to examine and dismantle false beliefs about money, scarcity, and personal worth that perpetuate financial anxiety.
Zera Yacob's foundational philosophy insisted that reason, not tradition or fear, should guide human judgment. Applied to financial anxiety, this means using rational analysis to question scarcity narratives we've inherited—examining whether our beliefs about money shortage are factual or psychological. Yacob believed humans possess innate rational capacity to understand truth; financial anxiety often stems from unexamined assumptions about worthiness and resource limitation. By rationally investigating your relationship with money, you expose false premises: that you are undeserving, that resources are truly scarce, or that economic struggle defines your value. This philosophical practice transforms financial anxiety from an emotional prison into a solvable problem requiring clear thinking and honest self-assessment.
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