Youβve walked away from situations that no longer served you. Youβve let go of friends who didnβt respect your boundaries. Youβve ended relationships that made you question your worth. But what about your relationship with money?
Because if weβre being honest, many of us are still stuck in the most toxic relationship of all: the one we have with money and debt.
This Valentineβs Day, letβs talk about a different kind of love story. The one between you and your finances. The kind of love story that doesnβt involve flowers or overpriced dinners, but clarity, boundaries, and healing.
You canβt afford another year of avoidance, shame, or emotional spending. Not when your future is on the line.
Letβs talk about whatβs really going on.
The Truth About Toxic Money RelationshipsΒ
Toxic money habits donβt always look like financial disaster. Sometimes they look like:
- Overspending to βtreat yourselfβ after a long weekΒ
- Avoiding your bank app because it gives you anxietyΒ
- Feeling guilty for having money when othersΒ donβtΒ
- Saying yes to expenses youΒ canβtΒ afford because youΒ donβtΒ want to disappoint anyoneΒ
- Ignoring your debt because it feels too overwhelmingΒ
These behaviors are easy to justify. But over time, they create patterns. And patterns become your lifestyle.
Toxic doesnβt always mean dramatic. Sometimes itβs quiet, familiar, and wrapped in survival. But it still holds you back.
Culture and the Money Wounds WeΒ DonβtΒ Talk AboutΒ
If you grew up in a culture where money wasnβt openly discussedβor only brought up during stress or crisisβyour relationship with it likely started from a place of fear.
Maybe youβre the first in your family to make real money. Or the one trying to break cycles. Or the one whoβs expected to carry everyone else because youβve βalways had it together.β
In many Latina and first-gen households, money is more than just math. Itβs responsibility, silence, guilt, and identity.
You might have been taught to:
- Save everything just in caseΒ
- Never talk about money becauseΒ itβsΒ rude or shamefulΒ
- Take care of others first, even when it stretches you thinΒ
- Feel bad for wanting more, even ifΒ youβveΒ worked hard for itΒ
These arenβt just bad habits. Theyβre generational patterns. And while you didnβt start them, you can decide where they end.
SignsΒ YouβreΒ Still in a Toxic Relationship with MoneyΒ
Letβs name it. If any of this feels familiar, youβre not alone, and thereβs nothing wrong with you.
- You check your bank balance with a knot in your stomachΒ
- You shop to cope, then avoid looking at your statementΒ
- You earn well but still feel likeΒ youβreΒ βbad with moneyβΒ
- You avoid budgeting because it feels restrictiveΒ
- You fear debt or ignore it completelyΒ
- YouΒ donβtΒ know your numbers, but you know your triggersΒ
This type of relationship is exhausting. Especially when youβre working hard and doing your best. You deserve better.
Hereβs one simple way to start shifting it: clarity.
Before you jump into any budgeting app or financial plan, start with the truth. Write it down. Not to judge, but to get grounded.
Three Quick Things You Can Do TodayΒ
1. List Your DebtsΒ
Write them on paper or in a note on your phone. Credit cards, personal loans, student loans, anything you owe.
2. Add the APR for Each OneΒ
If youβre not sure, log into the account and look. The APR tells you how much interest youβre paying to borrow that money. Itβs the silent cost most people never check.
3. Write Down the BalanceΒ
Not to shame yourself, but to finally look your numbers in the eye. This isnβt about panic. This is about power.
When you see the full picture, you can make decisions that serve you. Even if you donβt take action right away, awareness builds momentum.
This Valentineβs Day, Choose YouΒ
Valentineβs Day can still feel special, and it doesnβt have to come with financial stress.
Maybe in the past, you said yes to things that didnβt align with your goals. Maybe you spent more than you wanted just to feel enough. Or gifted out of pressure, not joy.
But this year, you get to do things differently.
You donβt have to prove love through purchases. You donβt have to perform wellness or generosity to be worthy.
Love can look like a quiet evening, a movie from the library, and a meal that reminds you of home. It can be a letter to yourself about the woman youβre becomingβsomeone grounded in clarity and intention.
Let this year be the one where your celebration reflects your values, not someone elseβs expectations.
Self-respect is a form of love, too.
Three Small Ways to Start Healing Your Money StoryΒ
You donβt need to change everything overnight. You just need a starting point.
1.Β Start a Money Confession JournalΒ
Write openly and without judgment. Reflect on questions like:
- What did I learn about money growing up?Β
- What habits no longer serve me?Β
- What makes me feel anxious when I think about finances?Β
- What does a healthy money relationship look like to me?Β
You canβt shift what you havenβt made visible. Give yourself space to reflect.
2.Β Schedule a Weekly Money DateΒ
Choose a consistent timeβmaybe Sunday mornings with cafecitoβand take 20β30 minutes to check your balances, look at your expenses, and see whatβs coming up. Not to criticize, but to stay connected.
Light a candle. Play your favorite playlist. Make it a ritual, not a punishment.
3. Invite a Money Accountability BuddyΒ
You donβt have to do this alone. In fact, itβs easier not to.
Text someone you trust and invite them to check in with you weekly. Hereβs a message you can copy and send:
βHeyβrandom but real. Iβm trying to break up with some toxic money habits this year. Want to be my accountability buddy? We donβt have to do anything fancy. Maybe we just check in once a week with a voice note or text like βDid you look at your money today?β Thatβs it. No pressure, just support.β
Sometimes, all it takes is one honest conversation to build momentum.
YouΒ DonβtΒ Need to Live in Financial Survival ModeΒ
You are not here just to push through and βmake it work.β You are not here to live on autopilot, doing mental math every time you swipe your card, or waking up at 3 a.m., wondering if you forgot to pay a bill.
That kind of constant financial tension isnβt normal. Itβs just familiar. Especially for those of us who were taught that stress is just part of adulthood. As long as the lights are on and rent is paid, we should be grateful and keep going.
But what if survival isnβt the finish line?
You deserve more than just getting by. You deserve to make decisions from a place of peace, not panic. To know that your money is supporting your goals, not constantly working against them. You deserve softness, space, and options.
Survival mode teaches us to fear money, to avoid it, obsess over it, or use it to prove weβre okay. But healing your relationship with money teaches you something different: that money is a tool. That clarity is self-respect. That you get to decide what ease looks like in your life.
This is about more than budgeting. Itβs about reclaiming your power.
Because toxic habits donβt just drain your account. They steal your energy. They cloud your ability to make long-term plans. They hold you back from negotiating higher pay, setting boundaries with family, or building generational wealth.
And the longer you stay in that cycle, the easier it becomes to believe itβs just who you are.
But itβs not who you are. Itβs just a season. A pattern. A story you get to rewrite.
Hereβs what thriving might look like:
- You check your account without shameΒ
- You say no to things thatΒ donβtΒ align with your prioritiesΒ
- You use your money with purpose, not panicΒ
- You stop punishing yourself for past mistakesΒ
- You ask for help when you need itβwithout guiltΒ
Itβs not about having it all figured out. Itβs about being honest about where you are and committed to where you want to go.
And most importantly, itβs about knowing you donβt have to do it alone.


