Why We Don't Talk About Money Worries
Financial stress carries a unique kind of shame. Unlike other forms of anxiety, money worries often come packaged with a story we tell ourselves: that if we were smarter, more disciplined, or more together, we wouldn't be in this situation.
This story is rarely true and it keeps people suffering in silence long after they should have reached out for support. The reality is that financial pressure is a leading cause of anxiety and depression, affecting people across all income levels and backgrounds.
Keeping financial stress hidden doesn't make it smaller. It makes it grow.
How Financial Stress Affects Your Mental Health
Money worries don't stay in your bank account. They follow you to bed, into your relationships, and into the parts of life that should feel enjoyable. Here are some of the most common ways financial stress shows up in your mental and physical wellbeing:
- Sleep disruption: a racing mind at 3am going over numbers and scenarios
- Irritability and low mood: snapping at loved ones when the real issue is fear
- Difficulty concentrating: financial anxiety takes up significant mental bandwidth
- Physical symptoms: headaches, stomach tension, fatigue
- Avoidance: not opening letters, ignoring bank statements, putting off calls
- Relationship strain: money is one of the leading causes of conflict in partnerships
These are not signs of weakness. They are signs that you are carrying something very heavy.
The Shame Spiral And How to Break It
Financial anxiety often works in cycles. The more we worry, the more avoidant we become. The more avoidant we become, the worse things can get and the worse things get, the more shame we feel about not having dealt with it sooner.
Breaking this cycle doesn't require having the money situation resolved. It begins with changing the relationship you have with the anxiety itself.
Some gentle first steps that can help:
- Name it out loud, saying "I'm feeling financially anxious" to a trusted person reduces its power
- Set one small financial boundary for yourself, open one letter, make one call
- Separate the facts from the fears, write down what is actually happening vs. what you imagine might happen
- Talk to someone, a friend, a debt advisor, or a counsellor
How Counselling Helps, Even When the Money Situation Hasn't Changed
One of the most important things to understand about counselling for financial anxiety is this: you don't need to fix the money situation before you can feel better mentally.
A counsellor won't review your finances or give you budgeting advice. What they will do is help you understand the emotional patterns underneath the anxiety, the beliefs about self-worth tied to money, the fear of judgment, the patterns of avoidance, so that you can begin to relate to the situation differently.
Many people find that once the emotional weight lifts even slightly, they are better able to take practical steps they couldn't face before. Counselling doesn't solve debt but it can dissolve the paralysis that makes it feel impossible to act.
You Don't Need to Be in Crisis to Reach Out
There is no threshold of suffering you need to reach before asking for support. If financial stress is affecting your sleep, your relationships, your mood, or your sense of self, that is enough. That is a valid reason to talk to someone.
You are not failing. You are human, living in genuinely difficult times, and you deserve support.
If this resonates with you, I offer a free initial consultation where we can talk through what you're experiencing in a safe, non-judgmental space. You don't have to have the words for it yet we can find them together.
Go to my contact page now where you can find a number of different ways to get in touch for a chat with no pressure and no commitment.