Jennifer Calder


Montpelier, Vermont 05602 United States

About

Are you experiencing chronic financial stress but cannot figure out why because on paper, things look like they "should" work out just fine? Financial therapy is really not about the numbers. Rather, it's about how to think, feel, communicate, and behave differently with money to improve overall well-being through evidence-based practices and interventions. If you find yourself in repetitive self-sabotaging behaviors with money, it's possible that your unconscious beliefs may be contributing to that pattern.

We have between 50-200 unconscious money beliefs that inform what we do with money. The majority of our beliefs are formed by the age of seven. Financial therapy identifies underlying beliefs about money, and where they influence your current relationship with money. Your numbers tell a story and can show you where those of are showing-up in your decisions.

Money can be hard to talk about especially when we've been told it's a taboo subject. I look at money as a foreign language - one that we're expected to speak fluently without being taught how. Financial therapy neutralizes money's power. It helps people feel more in control of it rather than it controlling them while at the same time reducing stress.

Features

Qualifications: University of Vermont
Academic Suffixes: LICSW, FBS
Expertise: Other

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