In the early days of the pandemic, Nora Herting
decided to try financial therapy.
“I didn’t even
know what it was, exactly,” she said. “I heard about it and thought, ‘That
sounds like something I need right now.’” A
small-business owner whose revenue
had been decimated by lockdowns, she faced agonizing choices between her own
financial security and that of her company, including her 14 employees.
اضافة اعلان
“At the time, my
personal finances and my business finances were inextricably tied together,”
said Herting, who lives in New York. “I needed help — not in a business sense,
but more in a personal sense. Like, what decisions align with my values? Are
these decisions I can live with?”
She made her way
to Amanda Clayman, a financial therapist with a private practice in Los
Angeles. Clayman did not offer financial advice; instead, she directed Herting
to make a timeline of her relationship with money. Over several sessions, they
discussed Herting’s family history, her career and how she communicated about
money with her boyfriend. Then they developed a plan.
First, Herting set
aside a chunk of savings for emergencies and her retirement. Next, she
determined how much she would spend to self-fund her company, which creates
visuals for meetings.
Amanda Clayman, a financial therapist, at her home in Los Angeles on Aug. 3, 2022. (Photo: NYTimes)
“I felt good
about the amount of money that I was willing to potentially lose on my business,
because we had talked it through,” Herting said. Her company eventually
rebounded, and is now fully operating with all of its employees.
For years
financial therapy has occupied a little-known, vaguely defined niche. One of
its earliest practitioners, Clayman became a licensed clinical social worker in
2006 with the goal of integrating financial and emotional wellness.
“I saw a clear
need for it, but there was no institutional path or system for addressing that
need,” she said. “The teachers in my master’s program had no idea what to do
with me. I kept asking, ‘Why doesn’t this exist?’”
Clayman
eventually learned that she wasn’t alone. Brad Klontz, a certified financial
planner and psychologist, has been researching the overlap between his two disciplines
since the early 2000s. But there was no official recognition of the field until
the 2008 financial crisis, when a handful of financial and mental health
professionals banded together to form the Financial Therapy Association, which
aimed to spread awareness of the connections between psychology and personal
finance.
Their timing was
ripe. “The financial crisis helped the mental health profession understand that
money is an area of deep concern to our clients,” Klontz said. The problem was,
many therapists were not prepared to talk about it. “Most people in the mental
health community are trained to ask our clients about their marital stress,
whether they can sleep at night,” he said. “We’re not trained to say, ‘So, how
about your money?’”
Financial advisers
were experiencing the opposite problem. “During the Great Recession, all these
financial planners had clients melting down and emotionally distraught during
sessions,” said Megan McCoy, who leads the financial therapy graduate program
at Kansas State University. “Financial professionals love numbers and clean
answers and solutions, and they didn’t know how to deal with these messy
emotions. They needed more tools.”
Today, those
tools exist. In 2019, the Financial Therapy Association introduced an accreditation
program for both financial and mental health professionals to become certified
in financial therapy. The coursework, which takes three to six months to
complete remotely, covers financial topics as well as therapeutic techniques.
To earn the designation, students must pass an exam and promise to adhere to a
code of ethics, which includes a fiduciary standard and a ban on selling or
earning commission from financial products. The Financial Therapy Association
also formed a disciplinary committee that enforces its rules.
If the 2008
crisis lit a flame under financial therapy, the pandemic doused it with fuel.
“When
COVID hit, there was a lot of uncertainty and anxiety around finances,”
McCoy said. “The pandemic also decreased some of the taboo around discussing
mental health. The combined result is that financial therapy has flourished.”
The number of
students in her graduate program has quadrupled, even as higher education
enrollment has shrunk.
The University of Georgia and Creighton University have
recently incorporated financial therapy into their financial planning and
family therapy curriculums as well.
Traci Williams,
a board-certified psychologist in Atlanta, became an accredited financial
therapist this year. She did so after seeing how financial disparities affected
hospital patients amid the pandemic.
“There was a
stark difference between the haves and the have-nots, and how they were able to
cope,” she said. “Once I started to see that, I couldn’t look away.”
Demand also played a role. “There is only one other
financial therapist in Atlanta, and she has a three-month wait list,” Williams
added.
Not all
certified financial therapists are licensed mental health workers. Some,
including the Financial Therapy Association’s president, Preston Cherry, are
certified financial planners or coaches.
“I don’t do
financial therapy as an isolated practice,” Cherry said. “I invoke financial
therapy tenets within my financial planning. If there’s a situation that is out
of my scope — say, a marital issue that is blocking their financial goals or
communication — then I can help uncover that and refer my client to a
specialized person, like a couples counselor.”
Like traditional
therapy and financial planning, financial therapy can vary widely in cost.
Practitioners charge from $100 to $800 per session, depending on their fee
structure and services.
Financial
advisers certified in financial therapy should be clear about the boundaries of
their mental health training, McCoy said; the same goes for mental health
workers and their financial knowledge.
“The financial therapy program trains people to
recognize when an issue is outside of their expertise, and how to make a
referral to someone else when necessary,” she said. Many financial planners
deal with clients when they are facing major life events, such as marriage,
divorce, career changes, retirement, or a death in the family, and it’s normal
for them to suggest a lawyer or an accountant. Why not a therapist?
Larger
institutions are also adopting more touchy-feely angles with clients.
“Financial
planners have always known that clients have trouble implementing goals even
when they have been clearly outlined and demonstrated,” said Sonya Lutter, a
founding member of the Financial Therapy Association who leads research and
education at Herbers, a consultancy for financial advisory firms. “The part
that’s been missing is the personal, behavioral element — a computer can’t just
spit that out. A lot of big firms now recognize this, and are starting to
integrate behavioral training into their work.”
Even the CFP
Board, which oversees the accreditation process for certified financial
planners, has embraced the “soft skills” of money management. In January, the
board added a section to its education program called “The Psychology of
Financial Planning,” which covers “principles of counseling” and “client and
planner attitudes, values and biases,” among other topics.
“Now anybody who
wants to be a certified financial planner has to show competency in the
psychology of financial planning, which is more or less financial therapy,”
Lutter said.
With Americans
feeling high financial anxiety, perhaps it’s inevitable that therapy and money
should mix.
“Most of us no
longer have stable careers for 30 years and then retire,” Clayman said. “We
juggle multiple different jobs and income sources. We need to manage and plan
for our future. And if we have a partner, we need tools for merging those two
complex systems together. I would argue that’s a process that’s bigger than any
spreadsheet can contain.”
Read more Health
Jordan News