Are We In a Loop? How Thoughts, Feelings, and Money Habits Feed Each Other
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Episode Overview
Ever wonder why you keep doing the money things you swore you'd stop doing? In this episode, we dig into the CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) framework to show you exactly how your thoughts, feelings, and behaviors form a self-reinforcing cycle — and, more importantly, how to build a better one. Packed with real-life examples, four practical tools, and zero judgment.
Key Concepts Covered
The CBT Triangle
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (developed by Aaron Beck) identifies three interconnected elements — thoughts, feelings, and behaviors — that form a continuous feedback loop. Each influences the others. The goal isn't to break the cycle but to build a healthier one.
Three Entry Points
• Thought Trigger: Automatic negative thoughts (ANTs) that fire before conscious awareness
• Feeling Trigger: Emotional states (stress, boredom, loneliness) that drive spending as regulation
• Behavior Trigger: Impulsive actions that generate guilt/shame thoughts and avoidance behaviors afterward
Four Cognitive Distortions in Money Life
• All-or-Nothing Thinking: "The budget is ruined — might as well keep spending."
• Mind Reading: Predicting what others will think about your finances and letting that prediction drive decisions
• Fortune Telling: Treating fear-based predictions as facts ("there's no point in investing")
• Emotional Reasoning: "I feel broke, therefore I am bad with money"
The Four Tools
• The Thought Record: Five questions to challenge and reframe automatic money beliefs
• Behavioral Activation: Scheduling avoided financial tasks before you feel ready — action changes feelings
• The Pause-and-Name Protocol: Naming the emotion to activate the prefrontal cortex and create response choice
• Values-Based Spending Anchors: Connecting discretionary spending to your top three core values
This Week's Action Items
• 1. Identify your entry point — thought, feeling, or behavior?
• 2. Run a Thought Record on one money belief this week (5 questions, 5 minutes)
• 3. Schedule a 15-minute money date — your favorite drink, a comfortable spot, and just look at the numbers
Reflection Questions
Use these for journaling, a money date, or discussion with a financial coach or partner:
• What is the "story" I tell myself most often about my relationship with money?
• When did I first learn to think that way? Where might it have come from?
• What would I tell a close friend who shared that belief with me?
• What is one small behavior I could try this week that would create a slightly better thought afterward?
• What are my top three financial values — the things money is actually for in my life?
Recommended Reading & Resources
• Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy by David D. Burns, MD — the definitive accessible guide to CBT and cognitive distortions
• Mind Over Money by Brad Klontz & Ted Klontz — CBT principles applied directly to financial behavior
• Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman — foundational behavioral economics, beautifully accessible
• The Psychology of Money by Morgan Housel — behavioral finance storytelling at its best
• Financial Therapy Association (financialtherapy.org) — find a certified financial therapist near you
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