Forgiveness and Money
June 15, 2009 by Jean Keener, CFP, CRPC, CFDS · 1 Comment
I invited Kristin Robertson, president of Brio Leadership, to do a guest post on the Keener Financial Planning blog this morning about forgiveness.
As we seek to manage our money in smarter ways, many times our experiences with money in our past play a key role in the decisions we’re making today. We inherit attitudes about spending and saving from our parents and early childhood experiences. Sometimes we’ve personally made mistakes with money. Or we’ve seen people that we’re close to make mistakes, oftentimes in ways that significantly affected us.
These experiences all affect our ability to be fully effective for ourselves and our loved ones in our financial lives. Sometimes, until we’ve processed these experiences, it can be difficult to understand why we continue to overspend, or why we can’t enjoy spending the money we’ve saved for a vacation, or why we feel deprived even when we have plenty. As we process our attitudes toward money, we may discover that forgiving ourselves or someone else for past mistakes is important to letting go and moving forward to happier and more productive ways of managing money.
I hope you enjoy Kristin’s article. And don’t miss the links to her site and more information on her new book.
Forgiveness: 5 Reasons It’s Good for You
June 15, 2009 by Jean Keener, CFP, CRPC, CFDS · 1 Comment
By Guest Blogger Kristin Robertson, President, Brio Leadership
Remember how a nice warm bowl of chicken soup helps you feel better when you have the flu? Well forgiveness and have the same effect when what ails you is a grievance from the past.
Did you know that you really forgive others to help yourself — not to help the other person? Surprised? In my definition of forgiveness, the goal is to neutralize the emotional charge that you carry toward a person who has harmed you. Forgiveness is like letting yourself out of jail – you release the hateful, vengeful thoughts that imprison you and make you feel bad every time you remember the hurtful incident.
So if forgiveness is like chicken soup, what are the results of enjoying a steaming, savory bowl of the stuff? Here are five personal benefits to forgiving:
1. You are healthier.
You do your body a favor when you forgive. Recent research has shown that the act of forgiveness pays dividends in the form of less illness and physical maladies. Some schools of thought state that the lack of forgiveness is the root cause of all physical illness, and that the first thought you should have when you discover a physical ailment is, “Who or what do I need to forgive?”
2. You are happier and more peaceful.
A human being is an energy-producing and energy-consuming organism. The state of non-forgiveness, along with feelings of vengeance, hate and self-recrimination, drain you of energy – they divert large amounts of your daily energy allotment, leaving less power for positive emotions and for enjoying life. Once you learn to forgive, you free up the energy that was invested in maintaining your negative emotions. Now you have energy to invest in positive experiences and enjoyment of your many blessings.
3. You enjoy improved mental health.
Recent research shows that people who learn to forgive suffer from fewer incidents of depression than before. In addition, people who forgive experience less anxiety. Before learning forgiveness, your spirit is stuck in negative emotions such as anger, resentment, and vengeance. When you forgive, you make room for more positive emotions such as love and compassion.
4. Your stress level decreases.
Stress is your response to a perceived threat. What one person perceives as a threat is not a threat to another. If you remain in a state of non-forgiveness, you have less energy to devote to seeking other perceptions of a stressor and seeing it in a different light. A large cause of stress is a lack of control over a situation or your life. When you forgive, you are choosing a different response from the past, which gives you more control over your life and reduces your stress level.
5. It is easier to stay in the present moment.
The process of forgiveness frees you from the tyranny of remembering past hurts. Your spirit no longer is bound to the past, your mind stops reviewing and re-living grievances, and you stop clinging to a victim’s role. You are able to live in the present moment, which is the most spiritually mature way to live. When you live in the present moment, you live with a heart and a mind that are wide open to perceiving the wonders and blessings of life.
It is hard to contemplate an employee in today’s workplace who doesn’t have someone or something to forgive. Forgiveness opportunities range from relatively minor annoyances to major grievances. A minor annoyance at the office, especially in cubicle-land, is the allergic co-worker who sits in the next cube and loudly clears his throat all day in the most annoying way. Can you forgive him? Or what about the customer from hell who yells at you for something you have no control over? Is that forgivable? Consider the boss who repeatedly overlooks you for promotions that you clearly deserve or who gives you a bad performance review? That is not easy to forgive. An even bigger grievance is the boss or business partner who swindles you out of a large sum of money, or who sexually harasses you. Now, that’s a big deal.
Everyone constantly faces forgiveness opportunities – at work, at home, towards you and toward others.
In my new book, A Forgiveness Journal, I present a seven step process of forgiving, that includes identifying your feelings, talking it out, changing viewpoints, gaining perspective, writing to the other person, acting and blessing the other. By following these steps, you too can reap the benefits of forgiveness. It’s like eating chicken soup when you feel bad – you will feel better all over
If you like what you’ve read so far, you might check out my book, A Forgiveness Journal, put in on your bedside table, look at it every night before going to bed. Also, you’ll want to sign up for my free monthly newsletter at http://www.brioleadership.com
Kristin is President and Head Coach of Brio Leadership, a coaching, consulting and training firm that helps builds spiritually intelligent individuals and teams so they can live lives of integrity, meaning and fulfillment. She believes that incorporating spiritual intelligence in the workplace is a way to positively transform lives and create highly productive work environments.
Values and Living Well
November 18, 2008 by Jean Keener, CFP, CRPC, CFDS · Leave a Comment
Most of my posts are pure financial planning. Looking at the dollars and cents of how to use your financial resources most efficiently. However, I find from time to time it’s helpful to take a step back and look at the bigger picture of how money inter-relates with so many other aspects of our lives. If you’re looking for hard-core financial knowledge, you’ll want to skip this category of posts. Or, if you like to occasionally walk on the philosophical side of life, I hope my musings provoke your own thinking. Feel free to comment.
An important part of living well to me is having my values in sync with my lifestyle. In addition to all the other reasons, that’s one of the main elements that attracted me financial planning because being financially responsible and helping people are two of my top values. I also really wanted to believe in the work I was doing and feel that it served a higher purpose. Providing the tools, motivation, and knowledge for people to make sense of their relationship with money fits right into this.
I had the opportunity on Saturday morning to participate in a wonderful session that brought me back to re-examine my values. Life Coach and Business Consultant Kristin Robertson of Brio Leadership led a wonderful 3-hour session called “Building the Temple of Well Being.” She walked us through activities that looked at how we spend our time and our money and how that reveals our true values. She talked about the difference between the values these two exercises revealed and our aspirational values — the ones we’d really like to have. We also did several activities to reconnect with our spirituality in our daily lives. I found the focus on gratitude and forgiveness as definitive actions that promote personal happiness, optimism, and satisfaction a wonderful reminder that we determine much of our level of happiness in daily life through our actions. If you’d like to read more about Kristin’s workshops or life coaching practice, I encourage you to check out her blog at www.brioleadership.com.

