Face Your Money Mindset With 3 Simple Journaling Tools

A real photo of a money mindset exercise. The Venn Diagram has the seperate circles in the primary colors. These circles represent you money mindset, your family's money ideas, and your cultures money ideas. Each intersection of the circle has the related secondary color. This is my personal exercise journal page.

What exactly is a money mindset? Simply put, itā€™s the way you think about money. Anything cash related counts: how you earn money, how you save money, how you spend money.

Long-term journalers wonā€™t be surprised to hear that this mindset often comes from our culture and childhood. Every family views money differently. In fact, you might be floored to hear what your best friend thinks about money.

That said, thereā€™s probably things you really respect about your own money mindset. This post isnā€™t to tell you one way is best. Itā€™s about empowering you to be intentional about the ways you use money.

Sometimes, You Really Arenā€™t the Problem

The thing that a lot of financial planning or budgeting advice skips over is that the system isnā€™t fair. No amount of 20/30/50 or snowballing is going to change the fact that inflation is crazy and many people donā€™t make a living wage.

Before digging in to your money mindset, you need to give yourself a little grace. Are you really in a place to play around with the ways you spend money? If you donā€™t always have enough to eat or find out your rent is rising $800 overnight ā€“ your money mindset likely isnā€™t the issue.

People are inherent problem solvers. If poverty really was as simple as ā€œtrying harderā€, youā€™d have done that by now. At the very least, youā€™d know why youā€™re in this situation.

This post is for people who donā€™t understand why. Why is it so hard for you to spend money, even when it is safe and important to do so? Why do you splurge on retail therapy? These tools help put you better understand whatā€™s going on. You might find an easy fix or you might find something to bring up with a therapist. Either way, a win is a win.

Two Sides of the Same Coin (Pun Intended)

An old Greek-style coin on a soft green background.

There are two types of people in this world. Over spenders. Penny pinchers. But honestly? They have a lot in common.

Both groups use money to control their emotions. Over spenders buy things to feel excitement and relief. Penny pinchers hold back from spending to feel secure. But money on its own canā€™t guarantee these things.

Marie Kondo taught us that some purchases just donā€™t spark joy. Scrooge taught us that sometimes you need to just buy the Christmas goose. Whatever your money mindset extreme, itā€™s all just two sides of the same coin.

Your journalā€™s goal is point out how you use money to manage your emotions. From there, youā€™ll notice you have more options when it comes to your money mindset.

3 Journaling Tools for Your Money Mindset

The Money Mindset Venn Diagram

People learn their money mindsets from three main places: their parents, their culture, and their own personal values. This exercise letā€™s you piece apartĀ  where each though comes from. Pro hack: you can use this for any topic, not just money.

Make a Venn Diagram with three circles. Label the circles ā€˜my familyā€, ā€œmy cultureā€, and ā€œmeā€. Go through each of your thoughts and habits around money. Ask yourself where you learned this idea. Donā€™t just focus on the things you donā€™t like. You should honor the things you love about your money habits.

An example of the money mindset Venn Diagram exercise. A blue circle represents how you family sees money. There is also a pink circle to represent you culture's money mindset and a green circle for your own. At the intersections, you see how family and culture influence each other and so on.

And Then Whatā€¦

So, you want to win the lotteryā€¦and then what? Money should never be the end goal. At the end of the day, money is just a tool for getting what we truly want.

Crazy enough, money is so hyped up that sometimes itā€™s hard to remember what your wants actually are. When that happens, try this.

Start by writing down a recent money goal youā€™ve had. Something like ā€œI want a job that earns X amount of moneyā€ or ā€œI want to pay off all of my debtā€. These goals are great. Nothing wrong with wanting a little extra cash. The key, though, is knowing why that money matters.

After you list your goal, ask yourself ā€œand then what?ā€ For example, youā€™ve paid off the debtā€¦and then what? How will paying off your debt change your life? Once you know that, keep asking ā€œthen whatā€ until you feel youā€™ve reached a core need.

Hereā€™s what that prompt could look like:

ā€œI want to earn 6 figures a yearā€

ā€œAnd then whatā€

ā€œThen I could save more money every monthā€

ā€œAnd then whatā€

ā€œWell, then I could finally afford a vacationā€

ā€œAnd then what?ā€

ā€œThen I could get to explore! I miss trying new thingsā€

Ding. Ding. Ding.

Joyful Spending Tracker

Youā€™ve probably heard of a no-spend day habit tracker. Itā€™s where you mark down every day you donā€™t spend any money apart from essentials like rent, groceries, or utilities. No-spend trackers can be a really useful tool! However, they arenā€™t so helpful when it comes to identifying your money mindset.

One great alternative is a joyful spending tracker. Instead of tracking the days you donā€™t spend money, rate how the dayā€™s spending made you feel. Think of it as a cross between a spending tracker and a mood tracker. Once the week is over, go over everything you bought that week again. How do you feel a few days after spending the money?

This tool is great for uncovering patterns. You might find that you get a lot of joy from buying little trinkets off TikTok shop in the moment but canā€™t even remember whatā€™s coming in the mail 4 days later. Maybe you find that your most meaningful spending happens when you go out to dinner with friends.

Joyful spending trackers remind you that money is only good if you can use it in ways that matter. Itā€™s up to you to discover what that might be.