Money Scripts, Part 2: How to Rewrite the Ones That Don’t Serve You

Published June 16, 2026

At a Glance

  • Money scripts aren’t good or bad on their own. Left unexamined, though, they quietly drive how we spend, save, and worry.
  • For each of the four common scripts — status, worship, avoidance, and vigilance — there are practical ways to keep the strengths and loosen the grip of the costs.
  • Lasting change comes from spotting the habit loop and making small, steady adjustments.

In Part 1 of this series, we looked at where our money beliefs come from — the unconscious “money scripts” we absorb early in life and then perform on autopilot as adults. We walked through the four most common ones: money status, money worship, money avoidance, and money vigilance.

Naming the script is the first step. The harder, more rewarding part is deciding what to do about it. None of these patterns is inherently a problem — each carries real strengths alongside its costs. The goal isn’t to erase them. It’s to keep what serves you and loosen the grip of what doesn’t.

Here’s where to start with each.

Managing money status

When self-worth gets tied to net worth, the drive to prove it can show up as overspending, creeping debt, or a constant habit of measuring yourself against others.

The most useful tool here is a pause. Put intentional space between the urge to buy and the act of buying, and use it to ask one question: am I buying this to meet a real need, or to soothe an emotional one? A luxury purchase isn’t wrong — but it’s worth knowing whether it’s moving you toward a goal you care about or just quieting a feeling for an afternoon.

It also helps to remember that we rarely factor in other people’s debt when we size them up. The neighbors you might be tempted to keep pace with may be stretched thinner than they look, carrying more than their lifestyle can actually support. That’s not a race worth winning.

Managing money worship

Money worship is the belief that enough wealth will finally deliver happiness, freedom, or security. Money certainly helps — it can relieve real stress — but the research on whether more money keeps making us happier is genuinely mixed. Some studies suggest well-being levels off once basic needs and a comfortable margin are met; others find it keeps rising, but slowly. What’s consistent is that money alone is a poor engine for lasting contentment.

The practical move is to take money out of the happiness equation on purpose. Redirect some of that energy toward the things that actually produce joy for you — experiences, relationships, a hobby you keep meaning to start, time with people you love, giving back to your community. Get specific about what matters to you beyond the number, then spend your attention there.

Managing money avoidance

Money avoidance often grows from a belief that money is somehow tainted or shameful. It can look like neglected finances, an unopened-statement pile, or guilt around earning and spending.

The fix is built through small, repeated contact:

  • Create a habit. Start with 15 minutes a week — review the budget, check balances, glance at where the money went. The more routinely you engage with your finances, the less intimidating they become.
  • Reframe the tool. Money isn’t good or bad; it’s a tool. Picture what financial security actually lets you do: help the people you love, support causes you believe in, sleep a little easier. Familiarity and a healthier frame slowly replace the shame with a sense of control.

Managing money vigilance

Money vigilance usually produces good habits — diligent saving, low debt, careful planning. Its cost is on the other side: anxiety about spending, and difficulty enjoying what you’ve worked hard to build.

Watch for the signs that vigilance has tipped into something more restrictive:

  • Are you checking your accounts far more than any decision requires?
  • Do you feel guilty spending on things that genuinely improve your life?
  • Are you afraid to spend even when you can clearly afford it and the purchase fits your goals?

Saving matters. So does enjoying the result. Build a little intentional room into your budget for the things that bring you pleasure — and give yourself permission to use it.

Discovering your own script

These four patterns aren’t a complete list, and they aren’t mutually exclusive. Most of us carry a blend, shaped by experience. The work is figuring out which ones pull hardest on you. A few honest questions to sit with:

  • What did my family and community teach me about money? Was it a source of pride, stress, or something we didn’t talk about? Did financial success signal status?
  • What did my circumstances teach me? Scarcity in childhood can leave money feeling like something to hoard or fear. Security can make it feel like safety.
  • What did my culture teach me? In the U.S., talking about money is often taboo — even as the surrounding culture pushes hard toward spending and accumulating.

As you reflect, sort your beliefs into two piles: the ones that have served you well, and the ones that may be holding you back.

Flipping the script

Identifying a script is the beginning, not the finish. Changing one takes ongoing attention and a willingness to try new behaviors.

A good place to start is watching for habit loops. What do you actually do when money crosses your mind? Open a shopping app? Reorganize a drawer to avoid the bank balance? Notice the trigger, the behavior, and the result — bouts of overspending, denied small pleasures you could easily afford, or financial tasks left undone.

Reshaping a money script is a lifelong project. New experiences keep refining how you relate to money, and small adjustments compound into lasting change. If you’ve worked at it and still feel stuck, a financial therapist can help you get underneath the emotions steering your decisions — that’s a real and worthwhile resource, not a last resort.

And as always, we’re here to help however we can. If you’d like to talk through how these patterns show up in your own plan, reach out anytime — we’re always glad to start that conversation.

Related reading


Past performance does not guarantee future results. All investments include risk and have the potential for loss as well as gain.

Data sources for returns and standard statistical data are provided by the sources referenced and are based on data obtained from recognized statistical services or other sources we believe to be reliable. However, some or all information has not been verified prior to the analysis, and we do not make any representations as to its accuracy or completeness. Any analysis nonfactual in nature constitutes only current opinions, which are subject to change. Benchmarks or indices are included for information purposes  only  to  reflect  the  current  market  environment;  no  index  is  a directly  tradable investment.  There  may  be  instances  when  consultant  opinions  regarding any fundamental or quantitative analysis do not agree.

The  commentary  contained  herein  has  been  compiled  by  W.  Reid Culp,  III  from  sources  provided  by  TAGStone  Capital,  as well  as  commentary  provided  by  Mr.  Culp,  personally,  and  information independently  obtained  by  Mr.  Culp.  The  pronoun  “we,”  as  used  herein,  references collectively the sources noted above.

TAGStone Capital, Inc. provides this update to convey general information about market conditions and not for the purpose of providing investment advice. Investment in any of the companies or sectors mentioned herein may not be appropriate for you. You should consult your advisor from TAGStone or others for investment advice regarding your own situation.


Published June 2, 2026

At a Glance

  • How we think about money is mostly shaped before we ever start managing any of it — by family, upbringing, and the conversations (or silences) we grew up around.
  • Most of those beliefs fall into four patterns: chasing status, worshiping wealth, avoiding it, or guarding it too tightly. Most of us carry pieces of more than one.
  • Spotting your pattern is the first step to changing it. Part 2 will cover how.

When families come to us, the conversation usually starts with numbers — accounts, balances, projections, tax brackets. But the more time we spend together, the more another conversation surfaces: the one about how each person thinks about money in the first place.

Psychologist Dr. Brad Klontz calls these underlying beliefs our money scripts — unconscious rules about money that we absorb early in life, usually from family, and then carry into adulthood without ever revisiting them. Some serve us well; others quietly steer us off course. Most of us don’t know we’re running them.

“The problem is that we take these beliefs for granted as adults, and we rarely go back and examine them, let alone decide to change them,” Klontz says. “Instead, they’re kind of like an actor’s script in a movie; we just continue to read the lines in our heads…and believe that they’re true, when in fact, they are often quite distorted and limit our success.”

The good news: once you can name your money script, you can decide whether to keep following it.

Why scripts get written in the first place

Most money scripts are inherited. A parent who grew up with scarcity might raise a child who equates spending with danger, hoarding savings they never feel free to use. A household where one big raise or windfall changed everything can produce adults who treat money as the answer to every problem. Research from the UK found that children who were raised in households where spending was secretive were more likely to develop hoarding and other compulsive money habits as adults.

These patterns aren’t character flaws. They’re scripts — written by experience, performed automatically.

The four most common scripts

Klontz and his colleagues have grouped money scripts into four broad patterns. Few people fit neatly into one. Most of us carry pieces of each, with one or two pulling harder than the others.

  • Money status. Self-worth gets tied to net worth. People in this pattern may overspend to project success — the right car, the right address, the right watch. They may round up when describing their income or keep purchases hidden from a spouse. The underlying belief: what I have signals who I am.
  • Money worship. Money is treated as the path to happiness, freedom, and security. The belief that “if I just had more, the problem would go away” keeps the goalposts moving. This script often shows up in high earners who keep working past the point where additional income changes anything — because the script says it should.
  • Money avoidance. Wealth itself is viewed as suspect or even shameful. People with strong avoidance scripts may sabotage their own accumulation, give too much away, or simply refuse to look at statements. Underneath is often the quiet belief that I don’t deserve to have money, or that having it makes someone a worse person.
  • Money vigilance. Money is treated as a tool to be managed carefully. Vigilant savers tend to be frugal, private about finances, and uncomfortable spending on themselves — even when spending is clearly warranted. The strength of this script is discipline. The cost is often a reluctance to enjoy what they’ve worked to build.

These categories sound extreme on purpose. Read straight through, none of them are particularly flattering. But that’s the point — extremes are easier to recognize than nuance. In reality, we likely contain a bit of each of these patterns to varying degrees. Some may pull stronger than others, and some that sound overtly negative may offer strengths. For example, a money vigilant saver might also have a little money status running underneath, which is why the same person who clips coupons all year may also buy the flashier car. Both scripts are operating; both are inherited; both can be examined.

Why this matters for planning

With an understanding of the most common money scripts under your belt, you’re equipped to start keeping an eye out for where echoes of each appear in your own life in positive and negative ways. This identification process is important, because it allows you to move away from tendencies that don’t serve you well and toward those that do. In the second part of this series, we’ll offer strategies for flipping the script on these common behaviors and exploring your own personal money scripts. Stay tuned!

And in the meantime, we’re here to answer questions or offer strategies that can help you better reach your long-term financial goals. Reach out anytime — we’re always glad to start that conversation.

Related reading

How to Have Family Conversations About Money

Spend Better, Not Less: A Guide to Thoughtful Spending

The Power of Purpose in Retirement

Five Behavioral Finance Resolutions for a Better Financial Year

How to Master the Markets by Mastering Ourselves


Past performance does not guarantee future results. All investments include risk and have the potential for loss as well as gain.

Data sources for returns and standard statistical data are provided by the sources referenced and are based on data obtained from recognized statistical services or other sources we believe to be reliable. However, some or all information has not been verified prior to the analysis, and we do not make any representations as to its accuracy or completeness. Any analysis nonfactual in nature constitutes only current opinions, which are subject to change. Benchmarks or indices are included for information purposes  only  to  reflect  the  current  market  environment;  no  index  is  a directly  tradable investment.  There  may  be  instances  when  consultant  opinions  regarding any fundamental or quantitative analysis do not agree.

The  commentary  contained  herein  has  been  compiled  by  W.  Reid Culp,  III  from  sources  provided  by  TAGStone  Capital,  as well  as  commentary  provided  by  Mr.  Culp,  personally,  and  information independently  obtained  by  Mr.  Culp.  The  pronoun  “we,”  as  used  herein,  references collectively the sources noted above.

TAGStone Capital, Inc. provides this update to convey general information about market conditions and not for the purpose of providing investment advice. Investment in any of the companies or sectors mentioned herein may not be appropriate for you. You should consult your advisor from TAGStone or others for investment advice regarding your own situation.


How to Have Family Conversations About Money

Money plays a role in so many of the decisions we make, yet it remains one of the last true taboos in American life. Despite its importance, 62% of people say they don’t talk about money at all—not with family, not with friends and in nearly half of cases, not even with their spouse or partner. In fact, most Americans feel more comfortable discussing politics, religion or even the details of their love lives than their bank accounts.

In our work with families, we see this reluctance constantly—and the avoidable problems it creates. Money is tied to identity and emotion, including feelings of self-worth, fear of judgment, embarrassment or shame around things like spending, saving and debt. As uncomfortable as these feelings may be, avoiding these conversations carries a real cost. Silence can create stress, undermine financial security and strain relationships across generations.

These conversations are especially important to have with family. Understanding each other’s expectations, responsibilities and values leads to smarter planning and strengthens families along the way. Talking about money—even imperfectly—is one of the most powerful steps families can take toward long-term financial well-being.

Discussing Finances with Adult Children: Setting Expectations Early

For parents with adult children, looping them into your financial plan helps give them the information and tools they may need to help you one day or ensure your estate plan and legacy wishes are fulfilled. Consider discussing:

Your financial plan: Share how you expect to spend your retirement and what lifestyle adjustments you expect to make. For instance, do you plan to downsize or relocate? Are you planning to spend more time with the grandkids? Take the time to understand if your plans align with your children’s so there are no misunderstandings.

Your estate plan: Let children know what you intend to leave behind, whether it’s financial assets, property or personal valuables. Surprises can lead to conflict, while clarity early on can help prevent it. There are no hard and fast rules about what you need to share. If you’re uncomfortable with specific dollar amounts, for instance, you could use percentages or rough ballparks.

Your goals and values: Wealth planning isn’t just about assets; it’s also largely about purpose. Explain what’s important to you and what you hope to accomplish with your wealth. For instance, are you hoping to help fund your grandchildren’s education? Are there philanthropic causes you value? Helping your children understand the “why” behind financial decisions can make it more likely your legacy is carried out.

Discussing Finances with Aging Parents: Planning Before a Crisis

For children of aging parents, approaching financial topics can feel daunting. It might feel like prying, or maybe money is a topic you’ve never broached with them before. But doing so now is far easier than navigating decisions in a crisis. Honest conversations about future plans and resources can prevent stressful last-minute decisions later. Consider discussing:

Long-term care plans: Do your parents have long-term care insurance or funds set aside for potential future health care needs? Have they thought about where they want to live as they age?

Key decision-making roles: Understanding responsibilities in advance can eliminate confusion when timing matters most. Find out who holds powers of attorney and will oversee medical or financial decisions if parents are unable to.

Financial safety and organization: Ask how parents have organized important documents and where they are kept. Who needs to know passwords to important accounts and where are they stored? Is there an estate planning attorney who has copies of documents such as wills and trusts?

How to Have Productive Money Conversations

While knowing what to talk about is important, having this discussion is another matter. They can be uncomfortable, to say the least, and they’re often downright emotional. A structured, thoughtful approach helps. Consider the following:

Choose the right setting: Avoid holidays and major family events. These are often already stressful times when emotions may be running high. Instead, schedule a dedicated time that allows for calm, uninterrupted conversation. Let participants know the topic in advance so they can come prepared with questions and concerns.

Set an agenda: Be clear about the purpose of the conversation. Are you educating loved ones about your financial situation? Discussing an estate plan? Addressing specific concerns like debt or spending? Putting the agenda in writing can help keep the discussion focused.

Acknowledge emotions: Money is deeply emotional, and strong feelings are a normal part of the conversation. Acknowledging that reality upfront can help defuse tension. Aim to create an environment where everyone feels heard and respected—by asking open-ended questions, encouraging family members to share their perspectives and resisting the impulse to blame or shame.

Turn conversation into action: By the end of the discussion, make sure everyone understands their role. Sometimes the goal of a meeting is simply transparency, and no follow-up is required. In other cases, families may need to outline next steps or ask for help.

We’re Here to Help

Conversations about money within families can be complex, emotional, and consequential. As your financial advisor, we can help clarify complex issues and outline planning strategies for you and your family to consider. We can also help facilitate family meetings, serving as a resource to guide conversation and answer questions as they come up. If you’re ready to talk to your family about money, reach out. We’re here to support you every step of the way.


Past performance does not guarantee future results. All investments include risk and have the potential for loss as well as gain.

Data sources for returns and standard statistical data are provided by the sources referenced and are based on data obtained from recognized statistical services or other sources we believe to be reliable. However, some or all information has not been verified prior to the analysis, and we do not make any representations as to its accuracy or completeness. Any analysis nonfactual in nature constitutes only current opinions, which are subject to change. Benchmarks or indices are included for information purposes  only  to  reflect  the  current  market  environment;  no  index  is  a directly  tradable investment.  There  may  be  instances  when  consultant  opinions  regarding any fundamental or quantitative analysis do not agree.

The  commentary  contained  herein  has  been  compiled  by  W.  Reid Culp,  III  from  sources  provided  by  TAGStone  Capital,  as well  as  commentary  provided  by  Mr.  Culp,  personally,  and  information independently  obtained  by  Mr.  Culp.  The  pronoun  “we,”  as  used  herein,  references collectively the sources noted above.

TAGStone Capital, Inc. provides this update to convey general information about market conditions and not for the purpose of providing investment advice. Investment in any of the companies or sectors mentioned herein may not be appropriate for you. You should consult your advisor from TAGStone or others for investment advice regarding your own situation.