Write a little ditty on how you feel about money. Get clear on all your
craziness around it because trust me, if you don’t have any money, you
definitely have some crazy. Write something along the lines of:
So the truth is I don’t really trust money. I want lots of it so I can do
whatever I want and make big changes in the world, but I don’t believe it will
come to me. Or that if it does, it won’t stick around. It never has. I resent
needing it. I think people who make it are evil and have bad priorities. I ignore
it because I hate dealing with it. I wouldn’t know what to do with it if I made it
anyway. If it’s easier, pretend money is a person and write it as if you’re
writing a letter to someone. Just get it on the page so you can look at it.
Then break it down, sentence by sentence and expose your drama around
money for the award-winning performance that it is. For example, using the
paragraph above:
I don’t believe money will come to me. Has it ever? I guess so. Can you
imagine a specific time and a specific amount that came to you that was really
helpful and enjoyable?
Yes. I was a graphic designer for five years. I got to
work on a lot of really cool projects with great people making good money.
Any other times? Have you had other jobs or monetary gifts or dividends?
Yes.
Can you list off five to ten significant times that money came to you?
Okay. So
if it came to you all these many times, is it possible that it could come to you
again?
Yeah. Can you change your belief from, “Money doesn’t come to me”
to, “Money does come to me?”
Fine. Yes I can.
Now that you see the truth, focus on money coming to you, imagine
receiving all the money you need, visualize how you’ll spend it and
feel it in
your bones. Change your story from “Money doesn’t come to me,” to “Money
comes to me all the time.” Make this an affirmation that you walk around
saying
in your mind and out loud,
that you write down, read over and over, and
tape
to your bathroom mirror, etc. Drill it into your brain and your bones.
Another example:
I resent needing it. How come?
Because I never have enough to do what I
want. Is this true? Have you never had enough money to do what you want?
Well, there have been some times where I’ve had the money. So is it true that
you never have enough money to do what you want?
No. And when you have
the money you need to do what you want, do you resent needing it?
Not really.
How does it feel when you have it and you spend it on something you’re really
excited about buying for you or someone else?
Pretty cool actually. So is it
true you resent needing it?
No.
Once you’ve caught yourself in your big fat lie, focus on spending money
lavishly on yourself or the people you love or a cause you’re passionate about
or whatever and
feel it in your bones. Imagine receiving it and feel yourself
filling up with gratitude for it coming to you. Be grateful to money for the
awesome tool it is and for allowing you to feel so good. Replace your story
that “I resent needing money” with “I’m grateful to money for helping me live
such an awesome life.”
Start healing your relationship with money. Sit your broke ass down and
write a letter to money and then break it down, sentence by sentence like I just
did above (really DO this please), and create some new money affirmations.
Repeat your new affirmations and feel them in your bones. Walk around
thinking about how much you love, love, love money. (Did reading that just
make you throw up in your mouth a little bit?)
You are going against some seriously deeply-ingrained beliefs here; money
is incredibly loaded for most people, so if you want to get over your issues and
start making money,
spend time on this. You are rewriting a story that was
written in blood, by you and generations before you, that you’ve been buying
into in your whole life, so it’s going to take some effort to rewrite it and start
living it.
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