Where Financial Planning Meets Couples Therapy

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The last thing most financial planners, myself included, set out to be is a therapist for couples. Our training focuses on strategies for building wealth, retirement planning, and asset allocation, not handling the landmines that can cause conflict in a couple’s financial life. Facilitating partners’ disagreements around money is nothing most advisors are trained in.

Yet couples make up a significant chunk of a financial planner’s clientele; most advisors work with couples every day. Over my 40 years in financial planning, I have witnessed more marital money arguments than I care to count. For years, whenever spouses started arguing over finances in my office, my body remained in the room but my mind was usually hiding under my desk.

It occurred to me a few years ago that I could use some new tools in my kit, so I signed up for a training program for therapists and practitioners certified in Internal Family Systems. While I still wouldn’t call myself a couples counselor by any stretch, the training gave me invaluable insights into how to facilitate difficult money conversations with couples.

As any financial life planner knows, couples’ money decisions and difficulties are not just about dollars and cents. They are about values, history, shared and conflicting money scripts, and emotional baggage, all wrapped up in a not-so-neat little package. When two people’s internal financial systems merge in a marriage or committed relationship, so do their money stories, insecurities, and personal definitions of financial “success.”