Though the language can be a bit woo-woo-there’s talk of “sacred pathways” and the sacral chakra-the program is comfortingly therapeutic, and refreshingly, not a quick fix it involves 30 minutes a day of largely mental and emotional work over the course of a few months. After seeing how often clients were financially stymied not by circumstances or earning potential, but by feelings based in unpleasant experiences with money, she began focusing on getting people to face these “unwelcome feelings.” Talking readers through a reframing of money as a “tool,” not a “master,” Peterson provides steps to challenge one’s assumptions about money (“How you feel about money is often a reflection of how you feel about yourself,” she notes), to overcome a scarcity mentality, and to develop a “prosperity contract” with oneself. Money is an emotional subject-and all too often, that emotion is fear, writes certified financial planner Peterson in her thoughtful debut.
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