
Money rarely arrives loudly in therapy offices, those quiet spaces with angled chairs, soft lamps, and a box of tissues within reach. It enters sideways. A customer casually brings up a credit card. Another makes a joke about being “bad with money,” grinning too hastily. When the invoice is brought up, a third pauses and looks down at the carpet.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Field | Financial Therapy / Psychotherapy |
| Notable Voice | Bari Tessler |
| Focus | Emotional & somatic responses to money |
| Common Symptoms | Avoidance, self-blame, anxiety, dissociation |
| Therapeutic Lens | Trauma-informed, attachment-based care |
| Key Concept | Separating self-worth from net worth |
| Reference | https://baritessler.com |
One of the least recognized but most prevalent emotions in therapy may be money shame. Bari Tessler, a pioneer in financial therapy, has long maintained that financial literacy is not the same as money shame. The topic is nervous systems. Before a banking app even loads, the body tightens. As this theme emerges across practices, it appears that issues that appear to be related to budgeting are frequently older—sometimes even childhood-old.
Money shame often takes the form of avoidance during sessions. Customers “forget” to mention mounting debt, put off tax appointments, or postpone opening statements. When asked about savings, one executive who was well-groomed and spoke intelligently about conflicts at work fell silent. The clenching of his jaw was barely noticeable. He shifted the conversation. Spreadsheets weren’t the focus of that pivot. It was like having protection.
In psychology, shame is not the same as guilt. “I did something wrong,” says guilt. “I am wrong,” shame murmurs. The difference counts. People tend to collapse into global self-judgment when money is involved. “I’m not smart.” “I should have progressed further.” “This was figured out by everyone else.” These statements have a surprisingly strong impact.
The reason why money has such a strong moral connotation is still unknown, but culture probably has something to do with it. Financial status becomes identity in societies that associate poverty with failure and wealth with virtue. Even therapy rooms, which are supposed to be neutral spaces, are susceptible to that environment.
Another dimension is trauma. Sometimes, clients who experienced scarcity as children respond to bills as though they were impending dangers. Before reasoning takes over, the body reacts first—heavy limbs, shallow breathing, a racing heart. Others who have had financial control in relationships might “fawn,” letting partners make financial decisions in order to prevent arguments. At first glance, it appears to be passivity. It might be survival beneath.
Somatic clues can reveal a lot. Therapists report that when talking about debt, their clients start to nod off. disassociation. a reaction of freezing. Others clutch the chair’s arms as they recount a recent rash purchase with a mix of shame and defiance. It’s difficult to ignore how money equally triggers the fight, flight, freeze, and fawn responses.
Then there is the actual fee. An excessive amount of anxiety may be triggered at the time of payment. Some customers keep apologizing for rescheduling, as though the money transaction validates their load. Some people put off paying, not necessarily because they are rude, but rather because giving money raises concerns about one’s value—”Am I worth this investment?” The dance is delicate.
Therapists are not exempt either. Money-related countertransference is frequent but seldom discussed. A therapist may become excessively protective of a client who is struggling or unusually irritated with their spending habits. That response can occasionally be a sign that shame is pervading the space. The tone can be changed by gently naming it, such as “I wonder if this feels embarrassing to talk about.”
Avoidance frequently conceals deeper scripts that were learned early. One woman remembered that whenever she requested school supplies, her father would mutter that “money doesn’t grow on trees.” Even after receiving a steady salary for decades, she continued to feel unworthy of minor pleasures. She had not updated her nervous system.
Debt is especially significant. Instead of seeing it as a structural problem—student loans, medical bills, and housing costs rising more quickly than wages—many clients internalize it as a moral failing. By providing a broader perspective, therapy can reframe systemic pressure as a situation rather than a flaw in a person. This rephrasing softens needless cruelty toward oneself, but it does not eliminate responsibility.
“Tough love” is rarely used to heal financial shame. Harsh advice actually tends to make the spiral worse. Trauma-informed methods prioritize safety by normalizing the discussion, distinguishing human value from net worth, and encouraging awareness of physiological responses. When a client understands that their racing heart is a conditioned reaction rather than evidence of incapacity, something changes.
It seems easy to be compassionate. It isn’t. Admitting vulnerability—the fear of being judged or exposed—is necessary to sit with money shame. However, the relief can be evident when clients dare to say the unthinkable: “I haven’t looked at my bank account in months.” Shoulders fall. The breath gets deeper. The secrecy of the shame is diminished.
As you watch this develop over time, you notice a subtle change. Without attacking themselves, clients start to check their balances. They establish limits in collaborations. They bill more for their services. Not because they are experts in compound interest, though they occasionally are, but rather because their financial history is less intertwined with who they are.
Emotion is always present in money. It touches on belonging, power, and safety. That charge cannot be removed by therapy. However, it can establish an environment where discussing money is no longer taboo and where people’s alarm is accepted rather than stigmatized.
Maybe that’s the deeper work: realizing that behind the phrase “I’m bad with money,” there’s usually a person who discovered that their value was negotiable at some point. And that belief can finally be challenged—slowly, carefully—until it relaxes in the silence of the therapy room.

