Why Smart Women Still Feel Behind with Money (And How to Stop Comparing)
Why Smart Women Still Feel Behind with Money (And How to Stop Comparing)
Intentional Money Moves Live | March 3, 2026
Have you ever scrolled through LinkedIn or Instagram and thought, how are they so far ahead of me? If you're a smart, accomplished woman who has done everything right but still quietly wonders why you feel behind with money, this episode is for you.
In this week's show, Leah Hadley breaks down why this feeling is so common among high-achieving women, what is actually driving it (hint: it's not your numbers), and four concrete strategies you can start using right now to stop comparing and start building with intention.
What You'll Learn in This Episode
Why "feeling behind" is not a character flaw That nagging sense that you should be further along is a completely predictable response to the environment we live in. We are constantly consuming the financial highlight reels of other people's lives, then comparing our full behind-the-scenes picture to their curated best moments. That's not a fair comparison, and your brain doesn't know the difference.
The three real reasons smart women feel behind with money
You were taught that wanting money is selfish. Many women, especially those who identify as helpers and caregivers, were raised with an unconscious belief that wanting wealth is in conflict with being a good person. That story quietly shows up as undercharging, not negotiating, avoiding your accounts, and feeling guilty about wanting more.
You are measuring against the wrong benchmarks. Who told you what "enough" looks like? Most of us are chasing numbers that were never designed for our lives. When you measure yourself against a benchmark that doesn't belong to you, you will almost always feel behind, because you're running someone else's race on someone else's track.
You think you should already know this stuff. Accomplished women often feel behind because they expect themselves to be more financially confident. But personal finance is a set of learned skills, not an intuitive gift. Most of us, especially women, were never formally taught. That's not a failure. It's a gap in the system.
What comparison actually costs you Feeling behind doesn't just feel bad. It leads to reactive financial decisions, lifestyle spending you can't afford, avoiding your accounts, and not asking for help when you need it most. Comparison keeps you in a chronic state of scarcity, even when your actual numbers don't reflect that. Getting out of the comparison trap is not just an emotional exercise. It's a real financial strategy.
Four strategies to stop comparing and start building
Define your "enough." Get specific about what a life that feels fulfilling actually costs. Not a vague idea of comfort, but a real number tied to your real values. Once you have your number, you have a finish line that's actually yours.
Build your personal financial baseline. Look at the facts, not the feelings. Know your net worth, your cash flow, your insurance, your retirement savings, and your estate plan. Women often feel further behind than they actually are. Getting clear gives you either a confidence boost or a clear action plan. Both are better than the comparison cloud.
Audit your financial inputs. For one week, notice everywhere you are consuming someone else's financial narrative. Ask yourself: does this inspire me, or does it make me feel worse? Content that consistently triggers shame is not serving you, no matter how popular the source.
Find your people. Real community, where people are honest about what they don't know and where they're struggling, is one of the most powerful antidotes to comparison. You can't white-knuckle your way out of the comparison spiral with willpower alone. You need a different environment.
Q&A Highlights
How do I stop feeling guilty about wanting to build real wealth? Connect wealth to impact. When you get clear about what financial security means for your family, the people you support, and the causes you care about, it stops being about ego and starts being about alignment. Intentional Money includes a full chapter on giving with intention that speaks directly to this.
I'm in my fifties. Am I too late? No. Not even close. The experiences, the focus, and the wisdom you have now are advantages, not liabilities. What matters most is getting clear, addressing the stories that may be holding you back, and taking intentional action with the right support.
What's the first real step to stop comparing and start building? Get clear on what you actually want your life to look like, and what that life really costs. Your target should be yours, not borrowed from someone else. That clarity changes everything.
Resources Mentioned:
The Empowered Sisterhood [https://www.watchherthrive.co/empowered-sisterhood] -- a membership community for accomplished women building wealth with clarity, community, and accountability.
Intentional Money: The Modern Woman's Guide to Building Wealth, Purpose & Peace -- Leah's new book, coming very soon. Get on the email list to be among the first to know when it's available.
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit intentionalmoney.substack.com [https://intentionalmoney.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]