Stressed about money? Scared to check your balance? These tips are for you

Cha Pornea for NPR / Left: Courtesy of Institute for Work, Right: Courtesy of Sara Hart Weir

As a robust season of jolly holiday spending comes to a close, a lot of us are starting the new year with a debt hangover or a big case of bill-paying blues. Recent data reports show nearly half of American consumers went into debt while shopping this season, and spent close to a thousand dollars on average on themselves and their loved ones.

While no one finds the idea of paying a big monthly credit bill fun, some people find dealing with personal finances to be more difficult than others.

Money avoidance, as Judson Brewer puts it, is the practice of ignoring our financial situations, often to our own detriment. Regardless of how much money you have in your bank account, it’s easy to understand why so many of us do everything we can to circumvent dollars and sense.

“There can be all sorts of signs, including procrastination, turning away, not opening our bank account apps — all of those are good signs of money avoidance,” says Brewer, who is a psychiatrist, neuroscientist, and the author of Unwinding Anxiety: Train Your Brain to Heal Your Mind.

Whether you’re worried about keeping the lights on or feeling the pressure of student debt, financial woes are a heavy mental burden, and it’s only natural to try to turn away from them.

But “the avoidance doesn’t magically make our bank account have more money in it,” says Brewer. “It doesn’t magically get the bills paid. It doesn’t magically help us work toward having more financial security.”

In other words: more money avoidance, more problems.

So if you wince at the thought of opening your credit card app or feel stressed at the mere mention of the subject, here are six tips to curb money avoidance and train your brain to face those money woes head-on.

Anyone can fall victim to money avoidance.

While the idea of money avoidance might suggest a certain amount of privilege — it’s true, you have to have money in order to avoid it — every socioeconomic class can be subject to avoidant money behaviors, because everyone has faced financial problems they’d rather sweep under the rug at one time or another.

“We can turn away from them, or we can learn to turn toward them and work with them regardless of where we are on the privileged spectrum,” says Brewer.

Recent studies have found, and many have felt firsthand, a rise in financial insecurity during the pandemic. Brewer says such high-stress situations can further lead to problematic money interactions. “So it’s really important that we are able to kind of notice our financial habits,” in order to ensure our brains stay online and deal with money situations “in a way that is most productive.”

Money avoidance stems from “survival instincts.”