I didnβt know how to ask for help. Β
The truth isβI was ashamed.
Ashamed to raise my hand and say, βI donβt know how money works.β Maybe it was my perfectionism. Or maybe it was growing up in a household where money was sacred but never spoken aboutβonly felt.
As a first-generation professional, I went into debt not just for tuition, but also to cover expenses such as meals, books, and transportation tickets to visit my family. I knew it wasnβt my money. I knew there would be interest. What I didnβt know was how that interest could snowballβand how shame could silence me for years.
I thought I was doing what I had to do. But one day, life hit me hard. I had a life transition, and all I had in my checking account was less than $2,000, and no paycheck on the way.
That was my wake-up call. That was the moment I realized: this debt is not just financialβitβs emotional, itβs cultural, and it was keeping me stuck.
You Might Be Navigating Two Systems at OnceΒ
If youβre a LATAM immigrant, a first-gen college grad, or someone building wealth from scratch, youβre probably navigating a new system (U.S. banking, credit scores, APRs) while also carrying cultural money lessons from back home.
In many Latin American countries, financial inclusion is still limited. For example:Β
- Only 51% of adults in Latin America have access to formal banking services.Β
- Financial education is rarely taught in schools.Β
- Credit access may be limited or predatory in nature.Β
Growing up in the U.S., the system expected us to understand concepts that no one ever taught us, such as compound interest, credit utilization, financial goal-setting, and retirement planning. Meanwhile, many of our families back home lived by one simple rule: work hard, save what you can, and donβt ask too many questions.
But hard work alone doesnβt pay off debt.
Not when interest compounds and youβre just making minimum payments.
Debt = Silence, and Silence Keeps You StuckΒ
When I finally told a family member about my debt, they replied:
“Thatβs normal, everyone has debt!”
And in a way, they were right.
Americans carry over $1 trillion in credit card debt.
But normal doesnβt mean healthy. And it doesnβt mean you should stay there.
Sometimes people give us their βtwo centsβ to make us feel better, but it ends up keeping us stuck.
They mean well, but deep down theyβre saying: just leave things the way they are.
And when debt becomes normalized, shame quietly deepens.
You feel bad for not knowing.
You feel behind because others seem to have it all together.
So you stay quiet.
And the silence costs more than the debt itself.
Why Goal-Setting Matters (And Why Itβs Hard When Youβre in Survival Mode)
When youβre carrying debt and juggling cultural expectations, setting financial goals can feel impossible. But hereβs the truth:
According to a Dominican University study, people who write down their goals are 42% more likely to achieve them. Β
And those who create clear, measurable goals and track progress weekly can double their success rate.
But hereβs what nobody tells us:
We donβt set financial goals because weβre lazy.
We donβt avoid numbers because weβre irresponsible.
We avoid them because they trigger shame.
Thatβs why starting small is key.
Step 1: Start Small, Think BigΒ
You donβt need to map out a 10-year plan at this time.
You just need to take the next right step.
Day 1: Write down three financial goals, even if they seem distant or uncomfortable.
Day 2: Collect your logins, statements, and balances. Bring it all into one place.
Day 3: Create a 3-year vision. Ask: βWhat kind of financial peace do I want?β
Reminder: Youβre not behind. Youβre getting organized, and thatβs a power move.
Step 2: Know Your Debt (So It Stops Owning You)Β
Clarity is the first step toward healing your relationship with money.
Make a list:Β
- Who do you owe?Β
- How much?Β
- Whatβs the APR (interest rate)?Β
- Minimum monthly payment?Β
- Due dates?Β
It might be scary, but when you see it all, you stop guessing. You stop avoiding. You take back control.
Step 3: Reframe the NarrativeΒ
If you grew up in a household where debt is seen as a moral failure, this part may feel challenging.
But hear me clearly:
Your debt is not a reflection of your worth.
You are not irresponsible.
You are resourceful in a system that profits from your confusion.
Letβs reframe:Β
- Instead of βI messed up,β try: βIβm learning, and Iβm reclaiming my power.βΒ
- Instead of βIβm bad with money,β try: βIβm building skills that werenβt passed down.βΒ
- Instead of βIβm behind,β try: βIβm just getting started.βΒ
Step 4: Donβt Just CutβBuild More IncomeΒ
Debt shame often tells us: βSpend less, cut back, deprive yourself.β
But thereβs another path: build more.
- Ask for a raise Β
- Explore a side hustle (virtual assistant, tutoring, selling digital products) Β
- Offer local help in your neighborhood (cleaning, child care, cooking) Β
- Sell unused items online.Β
Small shifts can help you break out of survival mode and rebuild your confidence.
Step 5: Automate to Escape the Shame SpiralΒ
One of the tools I wish Iβd learned earlier? Automation.
Once youβve identified your payments, set up automatic transfers.
Even if itβs $20/week, automation turns intention into action.
You donβt have to βfeel goodβ to move forward.
You just need a system that works even when emotions are heavy.
Step 6: Know When to Ask for HelpΒ
If youβve tried all the steps and still feel overwhelmed, thatβs your cue.
Not to give up, but to reach out.
Debt coaches, financial therapists, or even a trusted friend can offer structure, accountability, and emotional safety. Sometimes, what we need isnβt more knowledge, itβs compassion with direction.
Try sending a quick text messageβitβs a simple and powerful way to stay accountable.
When I first started my debt freedom journey, I texted a friend to help me stay focused. That small action made a big difference.
My message was simple:
βIβm looking at my finances and need an accountability partner, no need to reply.β
Thatβs it. Clear, intentional, and low-pressure. Sometimes, just saying it out loud (or via text!) is the first brave step toward change.
You Are Not Your Debt: Reclaiming Your Worth Beyond the NumbersΒ
Debt isnβt just a number on a statement; it can feel like a shadow that follows you into every part of your life. For many of us, especially if we come from communities where money wasnβt openly talked about, debt can feel like a personal failure. But I want you to know: you are not your debt. It is not your identity, and it is definitely not a secret you need to carry in silence.
If you’ve spent years shaming yourself or feeling stuck, please hear this: you’re doing the brave thing. You’re breaking a cycle. Youβre naming what others are too scared to say out loud. Letβs stop pretending debt is βjust part of life.β Letβs talk about it. Letβs heal through it. Letβs build a future that honors both where you came from and where youβre going.
Because the truth is, debt doesnβt just hurt your walletβit hurts your heart, your nervous system, and your relationships. When you carry unspoken debt, it manifests in everyday ways: the anxiety that arises when you check your bank account, the guilt that comes with spending money on joy, the isolation that results from avoiding money conversations, and the insecurity that creeps into your romantic or family dynamics. This isnβt just financial stressβitβs a wound to your self-worth.
And hereβs something we donβt talk about enough: debt shame can block your ability to earn more. When youβre in a shame spiral, you may avoid applying for jobs that pay better because you donβt βfeel ready.β You might undercharge for your services, afraid to take up space. You may push yourself toward burnout, believing you have to βhustle your wayβ out of debt to be worthy. Debt shame whispers, βYouβre bad with money, so you donβt deserve more.β But thatβs a lieβa lie rooted in systems that benefit when we stay small, silent, and struggling.
This emotional toll doesnβt end when you log off from work. It follows you home. It can lead to arguments over small purchases, declining invitations that bring joy, and distancing yourself from people who love you because youβre afraid of being judged. But the truth is: you are not alone in this. Youβre not broken. And your value is not measured by your debt balance.
The more you name what youβre feeling, the more power you take back from the silence. Healing begins when we stop carrying debt as a personal shame and start treating it like what it really isβa circumstance, not a character flaw. You are worthy of wealth, worthy of joy, and worthy of a future that isnβt defined by what you owe, but by what youβre building.



