Money disorders: Financial dependency means losing self-worthNot being in control of your own finances hurts in the long runBy Michelle Crouch
This is part three in a five-part series about
severe money disorders (click through the interactive below to see additional stories). Although most people's financial
issues aren't serious enough to warrant classification, we all battle some
unhealthy money behaviors, and these articles can help you spot and address
your own weaknesses. Coming next week: financial rejection, when acquiring
money creates feelings of guilt and unworthiness.
There's nothing wrong with looking to
your spouse to be the provider if you stay home with your kids, or with moving
back in with your parents after you graduate while you save for your own place.
But it is possible to be too financially
dependent, experts say, and dependence that continues indefinitely can be a
sign of a serious money disorder.
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Do you lie to your spouse about your spending? Feel guilty about how
much money you make? Constantly blow your budget? CreditCards.com talked to a new breed of expert
-- the financial therapist -- about the top five money disorders affecting people today. You can find the stories below or you can navigate to the articles through the illustrations above.
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Called financial dependence, it's a
financial disorder that affects a wide range of people, from trust fund babies to
stay-at-home moms, generational welfare recipients to adult children who live
off of their parents.
"Even though these are very different
people at different income levels, what financial dependents have in common is that
everything is given to them, and someone else is managing the money, so they end
up with no self-esteem or sense of self-worth," says Yvonne Kaye, a Willow Grove, Pa., therapist and
author of "Credit, Cash and Co-Dependency: The Money Connection." "A lot of
them get into trouble with alcohol or drugs, or end up in relationships that
are abusive."
Signs of financial dependency
Here are some signs that you may have
a financial depency problem:
- You feel
resentment or anger because the money you receive seems to come with strings
attached, but you're too scared of being cut off to say anything.
- You have
never supported yourself on your own.
- You lack
even the most basic financial know-how, such as how to balance a checkbook or
read a bank statement.
- You're in a
physically or verbally abusive relationship, or you're simply unhappy with your
living situation, but you worry you won't be able to support yourself if you
leave.
- You lack
self-confidence and ambition and have little sense of purpose in your life.
- You have no
idea what your family income level, net worth or cash flow is.
When the financial dependent is a grown child, it can stifle their creativity, motivation and drive to succeed, experts
say. "When children know they don't have to do anything to earn money, that's
very destructive to their sense of self," says Kathleen Gurney, a psychologist in
Sarasota, Fla., who specializes in money issues. "They never learn how to take
care of themselves, they feel helpless, and that often leads to low-grade
depression."
Outdated gender roles fuel dependency
The majority of financial dependents,
though, are still women whose husbands make the money and manage the family
finances, experts say. Some were brought up to believe that money is a man's
territory, that money equals love, or that someone else will always take care
of them financially. Even women who work can be financially dependent if they
don't know where the money is kept or what the cash flow looks like.
Because money is so essential in our society, if you don't
earn it or manage it, it's easy to feel inadequate and like you have no control
in your life.
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-- Mary Gresham
Psychologist specializing in money issues |
The dependency damages a woman's
self-esteem and can be destructive to the relationship. "Over time, the earner
starts to act more like a parent, and the dependent begins to feel and act more
childlike," says Mary Gresham, a psychologist who specializes in money issues
in Atlanta. "Because money is so essential in our society, if you don't
earn it or manage it, it's easy to feel inadequate and like you have no control
in your life."
Women who are financially dependent in
abusive relationships often feel it's impossible to leave. One study found that
46 percent of domestic violence victims return to live with their abusers due
to a lack of money.
Dependency can lead to a crisis
Even if there's no abuse, most women
will be on their own at some point in their adult lives -- and that can create
a crisis for a financial dependent, says Brad Klontz, a financial psychologist
and author of "Mind Over Money: Overcoming The Money Disorders that Threaten
Our Financial Health." About half of all
marriages end in divorce, and even in long-lasting marriages, women outlive
their husbands by an average of five years.
Amy Sprague Champeau of Racine, Wis.,
had no college education or skills when she and her husband divorced 23 years
ago, and she ended up homeless and living in her car. "I had been completely
dependent on him," Champeau says. "I didn't even have enough money to get
good legal counsel in the divorce. Because of that, I lost everything. I
was destitute for a long time."
Champeau
said it took her 17 years to rebuild her life, eventually getting her degree and
becoming a financial therapist herself. She now offers other women the advice
she wished someone had shared with her back then. "I suggest they figure out
how much it would cost them to live if they needed to support themselves.
I even have them check into the cost of renting an apartment, figuring
out what their expenses would be. Sometimes when women do that, they
realize they need to have some kind of employment in the event something
unforeseen happens."
Develop
an action plan
Therapists such as Champeau also help dependents work through the deeper fears that keep them
from striking out on their own. They often recommend the following small steps:
1. If you don't earn
the money, manage it. There are
two kinds of financial power in a relationship, therapists say: earning power
and management power. "If you're not earning, become the manager so the power
in the relationship is equalized," Gresham says. "You should be the main person
taking that paycheck and deciding how it's distributed every month."
2. Put aside money in your own name. Open an account you can tap for unexpected
expenses, whether it's an emergency repair or a splurge on a new outfit. That
will keep you from constantly having to go back to your source and asking
permission.
3. Educate yourself. Enroll in a
budget or investment class at your local community college. Go with your spouse
to the financial planner. Open those bank statements. And ask lots of
questions.
4. Get a job or
volunteer. Even if you're short on time because you're
home with the kids, find something you can do a few hours a week. Do it even if
you don't need the money. "A lot of trust fund babies use the excuse, 'I don't want to take work away from
someone else,'" says Kaye. "I tell them, 'If you don't need the money, give it away.
Or volunteer your time.' The goal is to help build your self-worth and give
your life some meaning."
See related: Is it time to consider financial therapy?, Financial enabling is help that actually hurts, When being frugal becomes an obsession, Poll: Two out of five parents giving adult children bailouts, Fed rule limits credit for stay-at-home spouses, Parents shouldn't pay for child's late card payments, Adult son racks up $20,000 on mom's cards, Jobless adult children rack of big debt on mom's cards
Published: April 8, 2011
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