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Your money needs a system. Yours might be broken.

Money always flows — the question is whether it’s flowing with you or against you.

The Find Your Flow Assessment reveals how your income, expenses, debt, and decisions interact as a system — and where misalignment is quietly costing you time, energy, and, well, money.

In 5 minutes, you'll see:

  • your current money flow clearly

  • get language for what's felt off

  • find a grounded starting point for better decisions.

So if you’re a founder and operator who knows something isn't working right, the Find Your Flow Assessment is the smartest way to spend five minutes today.

For educational purposes only.

Every time the economy sneezes, the internet catches a full-blown financial flu. I say this fully aware that parents are going through it right now. Tis the season for a new virus brought home each week.

Markets dip? Breaking news alert.
Interest rates move a quarter point? Push notification.
Some guy on TV uses the word “uncertainty” six times in one sentence? Cue the panic.

And suddenly, perfectly rational people, who just last month had a solid financial plan, are asking things like:

  • “Should I pause investing?”

  • “Should I move everything to cash?”

  • “Should I do something… anything?”

Let me save you a lot of stress (and potentially a lot of money):

👉 This is exactly when you should stay the course.

Your Financial Plan Wasn’t Designed for Perfect Conditions

If your financial plan only works when markets are calm, inflation is low, and the vibes are immaculate… It’s not a plan. It’s a wish.

Real life includes recessions, bear markets, layoffs, elections, and headlines designed to spike cortisol levels.

A good financial plan assumes all of this will happen multiple times over your life, and still works anyway.

The Market Doesn’t Care About Your Feelings (Or the News Cycle)

The market has a long, well-documented history of going up over a long period of time, panicking in the short term, and recovering right after people give up.

Reacting emotionally (aka selling when things feel scary or stopping contributions when headlines get loud) is one of the most reliable ways to underperform.

Ironically, the worst time emotionally to invest is often the best time mathematically.

Doing Nothing Is Often the Most Responsible Move

Staying the course doesn’t mean ignoring reality. It means:

  • You keep investing consistently

  • You don’t blow up your asset allocation

  • You don’t make major changes based on fear

  • You trust the plan you made when you were calm

This is boring. Unsexy. Extremely effective. And yes, it feels wildly counterintuitive when everyone else seems to be “doing something.”

The News Needs Your Attention. Your Money Does Not.

Financial media makes money by keeping you anxious and clicking. Your portfolio grows with time, consistency, discipline, and not micromanaging it every bad week in the market.

If you feel the urge to change your plan, ask yourself: Has my life changed or did I just read a scary headline?

Those are very different things.

The Real Flex Is Sticking With the Plan

Staying the course isn’t passive. It’s a choice. A calm, confident, and long-term choice. Trust that you don’t need to outsmart the market. You don’t need to time it perfectly. You don’t need to react to every. single. piece. of. news (noise).

You just need to keep going. So if you’re feeling anxious right now? Totally normal.
But before you make any big money moves, take a breath, and remember the plan works best when you let it do its job.

Stay the course. Your future self is rooting for you.

Once again, I am late. Once again, I am blaming my children who hate to see me rested, y’all. 🤣

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