My complete guide to open enrollment season: what I check and why
I want to be honest about the mental health component of personal finance that most posts skip entirely.
For most of my 20s, financial anxiety was a constant background noise in my life. Not crisis-level stress — just the low-grade worry that comes from not knowing if you're okay, not having a plan, and feeling like you're behind.
Building financial systems didn't eliminate anxiety about other things. But it genuinely, measurably reduced the financial component. Knowing exactly what I own, what I owe, what I'm saving, and whether I'm on track removed a persistent cognitive load.
The anxiety doesn't require a dramatic financial situation to be real. I've heard it from people with modest debt and from people with significant savings who hadn't organized their picture clearly.
The organizational clarity of a budget, a net worth spreadsheet, and a clear savings plan is not just financial value — it's a reduction in a specific kind of ongoing mental burden. That's worth taking seriously as a reason to get organized, separate from the dollar outcomes.
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