No One is a Financial Island

blog-image-financial-islandSome people just have all the luck and skill and become rich all by themselves.  Feels that way sometimes, right?  Well, there’s nothing further from the truth.

No one becomes wealthy in a vacuum, by themselves, or on a deserted island.  Click to Tweet this!

Think about that image for a second.

An island.  By yourself.  Think Tom Hanks in Cast Away.

Just as no one has become wealthy completely on their own, none of us can become financially secure on our own.   Whether formal advisory boards, like many wealthy people have, or more personal relationships with friends and family from whom we seek advice, we all need help from other people in our financial  struggles and successes.

The Good News  

You probably already have someone in your life who can or already does serve in this capacity.  They are the person who holds you accountable for your financial decisions.  They are the ones who call you out when you miss a utility payment because you just had to have the newest iPhone.

They are called an accountability partner.

The Bad News

You are going to experience some painful reality-slaps.  You must listen to what your accountability partner is telling you, and be honest with yourself about what they reveal.  If your accountability partner never makes you uncomfortable, never ruffles a few feathers, then they aren’t doing the job.

Married Couples

Guess who your accountability partner is.   It’s your spouse.  (I didn’t say they had to be perfect or financial whizzes).

One of the leading causes for divorce in the U.S. is disagreement over finances.  One of the other leading causes is lack of communication.

Guess what – regular (say monthly) financial discussions could not only save your marriage, but is likely to improve it overall.  Regular financial discussions are communication.  If lack of communication leads to divorce, then any increase in communication is likely to prevent it.

Never having been married, I don’t have much practical advice to offer on how to communicate better with your spouse, other than this:

If you want to have more communication, you need to make time for more communication.  Together. (Click to Tweet this!)

If you are having trouble communicating with your spouse in general, seek some help.  This could be simply spending time talking with a more experienced married couple or more formally meeting with a marriage counselor.

Singles

So, what do you do if you are single, meaning no spouse and not living with a significant other?  (For purposes of this discussion, your significant other would take the place of spouse in the married couples section above).

Who do you pick as an accountability partner?  Scratch that – how do you know who to pick?

Great questions.

How do I know who to pick?

The person you pick needs to have certain qualities.  Some essential qualities are listed here to help you get started, but feel free to add your own.

  • They are trustworthy
  • They have unquestionable integrity
  • They are comfortable saying “No”
  • They will never stop challenging you to try
  • They will encourage you even when you fail or experience set backs

Who do I pick?

Now that you know the qualities of the person you are looking for, it is time to make a list of all the people in your circle of friends and family.  It can be helpful if you use index cards, writing one name on each card (disclosure: this idea is borrowed from Jon Acuff’s latest book, “Do Over“).

Follow the steps below to process these names, and keep in mind that this is not a good vs. bad exercise, you are merely narrowing down the people whom you would trust the most with your finances (you do the same thing when you pick who you want to go with on vacation):

  • Write one name per card
  • Just write the name and move on to the next card
  • Take the pile and one by one place each into one of two piles, potential accountability partners and not
  • Be honest with yourself, and trust your first instinct
  • Take the potential pile and use the qualities list from the first exercise to check off the matching qualities (using a numbered list with check marks is fine)
  • Refine your pile by keeping only those with the highest number of matching qualities.
  • Which one would you most want to be your accountability partner?
  • Call them and ask them if they would consider this role in your life

 

Wrap Up

Plans fail for lack of counsel, but with many advisers they succeed. (Proverbs 15:22)
(Tweet this!)

Guess what?  None of us are limited to only one accountability partner.  Married couples can and should reach out to other couples and other good counsel to round out their “advisory board.”  Singles should look to friends, family, and even others in their stack of potential names and ask for advice.

The proverb quoted above states with many advisers we succeed, but left to our own devices our plans will certainly fail.

In order to succeed in our personal finances, we need the help of others.

SingleLife: The Importance of Relationship

SingleLife Logo

The Set Up

A couple weeks ago a good friend told me that she wanted to hear what I had to say, not just links to other people’s writing and or thoughts. She was right, I have not been sharing as much as I ought, or as often as I might like. So I am trying to fix this.

What does that have to do with relationships?

Everything. If I don’t foster and maintain relationships with other people, single or not, I am not heading in a healthy direction. Me guided solely by me is a frightening thought, and I have been there, done that, and never want to again.

Because we have a solid foundation of friendship as the basis of our relationship, my friend is comfortable enough to call my bluff. And I am comfortable enough to swallow my pride and listen to what she has to say. Not just because she is right, but because our relationship matters to me. It makes me better, and, I trust, makes her better as well.

Friendship and Relationship

I don’t have any ground-breaking elucidation to share about the difference between friendship and relationship except to say that the terms do convey different things. Often relationship implies something more intimate while friendship implies something more platonic, and intimate does not necessarily mean romantic.

Before David was King of Israel, he was a soldier and servant of King Saul. Saul had a son, Jonathan, who we are told loved David as himself:

After David had finished talking with Saul, Jonathan became one in spirit with David, and he loved him as himself. From that day Saul kept David with him and did not let him return home to his family. And Jonathan made a covenant with David because he loved him as himself. Jonathan took off the robe he was wearing and gave it to David, along with his tunic, and even his sword, his bow and his belt. 1 Samuel 18:1-4

When David hears of Jonathan’s death, he writes a lament, saying:

I grieve for you, Jonathan my brother;
you were very dear to me.
Your love for me was wonderful,
more wonderful than that of women. (2 Samuel 1:26)

Love is part of relationship, and should be differentiated from our modern romanticized concept of love (a very limited concept, at that).

David’s lament tells us two things:
1. Love is bigger than romance, sex and marriage
2. A relationship grounded in Love is more fulfilling than any other, romantic or not

David and Jonathan did not love each other romantically – that theory is simply juvenile when you take context into account and understand the character of each man. The beautiful part of this story is that it portrays the power of healthy intimacy in friendship and relationship, and eschews the concept that intimacy is not macho. Both David and Jonathan were fierce warriors, undaunted by fear, confident in their faith in God.

Maybe their relationship was a model for the relationship God wants to have with us.

SingleLife: One Worth Living

singleLife-OneWorthLiving-20Many people struggle with the idea of being single – running constantly into a barrage of inane commentary and advice such as:

        • it’s just a phase you’re going through
        • you just haven’t found the right one yet
        • God has someone for you, just be patient
        • you must not be trying hard enough
        • you’re just too picky

All of the above is crap – for the most part.  The state of being single is not purgatory, it’s not simply a way-station of suffering you must endure as an incomplete person before finally finding that someone who will make you whole (think Jerry McGuire’s defining moment when he says, “You complete me”).

You are a Whole Person

You are a whole person just as you are.  Yes, God said it was not good for Adam (man) to be alone, and created Eve and established marriage as two joining together and becoming one.  Two become one.  1+1=1.  Not 1/2 + 1/2 = 1.  It was two single whole individuals joining together to become a new combined whole.

If we continue with the math analogy, two wholes must give up something in order to become a new whole.  As we all know in math, 1+1=2, so in order for 1+1 to equal 1, something must be subtracted from each.  I’ll simply state this as what we all accept as putting the other’s needs before our own, such as:

  • finances are no longer separate but combined
  • decisions on how to spend your time are no longer autonomous
  • you may have to do things you don’t like, simply because your spouse needs you to do them

So, in mathematical terms, married people are theoretically less whole than single people.

One Worth Living

There is so much we can do and achieve as single people that we cannot do within a marriage relationship.  I just watched the Ashton Kutcher film Jobs (about Steve Jobs, founder of Apple Computers) the other night, and was struck by the harshness with which Jobs rejects his girlfriend when she tells him she is pregnant early on in the growth of Apple Computers (he basically throws her out of the house).  While not condoning his actions or the choice he made, I believe he understood fundamentally that Apple Computers would never be what he envisioned it could be if he had to attend to the matters of being married.

In 1 Corinthians 7:32-35, the apostle Paul describes the difference between the focus of the unmarried versus married.  Take a look (I have take the liberty to divide the passage into bullets for easier dissemination):

  • I want you to be free from anxieties.
  • The unmarried man is anxious about the things of the Lord, how to please the Lord.
  • But the married man is anxious about worldly things, how to please his wife, and his interests are divided.
  • And the unmarried or betrothed woman is anxious about the things of the Lord, how to be holy in body and spirit.
  • But the married woman is anxious about worldly things, how to please her husband.
  • I say this for your own benefit, not to lay any restraint upon you, but to promote good order and to secure your undivided devotion to the Lord.

 

Paul is not against marriage, but is concerned about things that create worldly anxiety in us and wants us to be free of them.    A married man must concern himself with how to please his wife, and thus his interests are forever divided between what pleases his wife and what pleases God, himself, his company, etc.  The same goes for the married woman.

The key here, is that Paul wishes us to remain single as he is (1 Corinthians 7:7) in order that we can secure our undivided devotion to the Lord.  Thus, choosing to live the SingleLife is a high calling, not a punishment!

The SingleLife is One Worth Living simply because it allows us the best opportunity to secure our undivided devotion to God.  So focus less on why you are single and more on devoting your life to God.  I guarantee it will be worth it.

High Cost of Being Single – Mint.com Infographics

Mint.com published the following two infographics earlier this year on the high cost of being a single man or single woman:

The High Cost of Being A Single Lady

The High Cost of Being a Single Man