Almost
everything we’re taught about money is focused on spending it and
saving it. Parents, teachers and even personal finance books discuss
saving money as keeping it, increasing it and controlling it. Saving
money involves figuring out ways to get more of it, to build a bigger
cushion. We’re taught that’s the ultimate goal.
In
contrast, spending money is described as budgeting or cutting back.
We’re even told that we should create habits that make spending painful,
like cutting up credit cards and carrying only cash. We shouldn’t feel
good about spending money.
For as long as I can remember, that’s how I’ve defined these two concepts: saving good, spending bad.
Then,
there was a subtle change in my thinking. What if we start treating
money like a tool? Tools are meant to be used. They’re not meant to sit
on a shelf and collect dust. Instead of thinking in terms of saving and
spending money, I started to think of using it.
For
instance, let’s say we’ve decided that it’s time to go on a family
trip. We’ve saved the money, and the trip fits our plans perfectly. When
the time comes to use that money, there’s no need to feel guilty or
bad. Instead, we’re using a tool that helps us get something that we
really value, time with our family.
This
shift in thinking is definitely subtle, but it changes our feelings
about saving and spending. We no longer need to think in terms of good
and bad, positive or negative. We’re focused on the outcome of our
actions.
Money
is meant to be used, to be in motion. It circulates from us to other
people then back to us again. Even when we save money, we’re simply
storing it for use later. When we use money today, we’re not spending it
or blowing it. We’re using the best tool available to get the job done.
My
experience suggests this small shift changes both how we feel and talk
about spending. With that change comes a different perspective about
what it means to spend money. Of course, the shift doesn’t give us
permission to blow the budget or ignore our plans. But it neatly detours
around the negative emotions we’ve been taught to feel about spending
money.
We
don’t feel bad when we use a hammer to pound in a nail. We don’t need
to feel bad when we use money to pursue our plans and goals.
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