
TIPS4STRESS
Stress and Money
Money issues can be stressful for many people from all walks of life. But even the worst of financial tangles can be resolved without the need to suffer undue stress.
Who hasn't stressed over money? Some will reply: 'those with a
lot of it'. That's an easy conclusion to draw when you are wondering
how to make the mortgage payment. But the fact is that many people
with large amounts often worry about it more.
They may not stress over paying the house payment, but they often
have investments that go south, money managers that prove
untrustworthy and other problems. If they have enough of it, they
can have security, publicity and sometimes legal problems. Sure,
we'd all like to have those problems rather than our own - until we
get them.
The bottom line is that money issues are often stressful for just
about everyone. But this is not inevitable. Many people, perhaps
more in the past than the present, led very happy lives with almost
next to nothing in the bank. And even most of the very poor today in
the U.S. live infinitely better than kings of 300 years ago.
One needn't go so far as to say 'everything is relative', but a
sense of perspective is helpful.
Stress over money issues is no more inevitable than is stress over
any other fact. Being concerned and being stressed are not the same
thing. Stress results when a person believes there is no way out of
a dilemma they simply 'must' solve. But neither side of that dilemma
is cast in stone.
Certainly, life often presents alternatives that are unpleasant. One
need not accept passive stoicism as the only option, though. The
will to struggle can be helpful in a number of ways.
Both mental and physical struggle help work off the natural hormones
that are released in stressful times. The effort put forth also
helps psychologically, since passivity is an essential component of
depression (a common result of chronic stress). And, of course,
during the attempt to overcome a hurdle one often gains the
knowledge needed to actually overcome it. The pride that results
provides one more bulwark against future episodes of stress.
Those general comments apply to stress over money as much or more
than any other issue. Millions get into situations of excessive debt
every year. Credit cards and other temptations of 'easy money' are
ubiquitous in today's society. But millions get out of debt, too.
Family arguments over money are one of the most common causes of
stress. When two people disagree over how to spend limited funds,
conflict is inevitable. But, that conflict need not lead to stress.
Realism, long-term planning, a willingness to compromise and respect
for another's point of view can go a long way toward minimizing
stress.
Sometimes it helps simply to put aside a certain percentage of the
income for 'anything in the world you want to happen today'.
Indulging the occasional whim, and realizing it rarely leads to huge
loss, can help relieve the pressure.
Once you have enough money to ensure basic survival, which all but a
small percentage do, the rest is optional. No need to stress over
that.