Most of us don’t sit around chatting about money for fun.
Usually, if money comes up, it’s because something feels off—stress, a mistake, that vague sense that things should be better than they are.
In this episode, Shannon and Janine talk about financial perfectionism—what it looks like, how it sneaks in, and why trying to “do money right” can actually make everything feel harder. They also share a much more doable approach: paying attention, getting honest, and letting your spending reflect what actually matters to you.
What We Talk About00:00 — That uncomfortable feeling when your spending doesn’t match what matters to you
01:26 — Why most money conversations start with stress, not curiosity
03:10 — “Give every dollar a job” and why that shifts how money feels
06:11 — How having a plan (even if you have debt) can feel surprisingly calm
08:42 — The pressure to do money “the right way” and how perfectionism shows up
10:53 — What happens when you’re not actually funding the things you care about
12:44 — The spiral: one mistake → “I’m bad at this” → why bother
13:16 — Why small, steady changes work better than big, perfect plans
15:31 — The surprising moment when getting ahead on bills starts to feel… fun?
16:55 — Why knowing the truth about your money is hard—and also a relief
Key Takeaways- Feeling “bad with money” is often about misalignment, not failure
- Perfectionism turns normal mistakes into a reason to give up
- There’s no perfect system—just the one you’ll actually use
- Small shifts add up (and often feel better faster than you expect)
- Clarity reduces stress—even when the numbers aren’t what you hoped
- You can start messy and still make meaningful progress
The Bottom LineFinancial perfectionism keeps you stuck because it convinces you there’s a “right” way to do money—and that if you’re not doing it that way, you’ve already failed. So you avoid looking, or you give up after a mistake, or you keep trying to get it perfect before you really engage. Meanwhile, nothing actually changes.
What Shannon and Janine come back to is much simpler (and honestly, much more doable): pay attention to what’s real, decide what matters to you, and start letting your money reflect that—even imperfectly. The goal isn’t to never make mistakes. It’s to stay engaged even when you do. That’s where the shift happens.
If you want a place to start: write down your accounts and balances. No fixing, no optimizing. Just… look. That small act of awareness is the first step out of the perfectionism trap.
- Watch the conversation on YouTube!
Want More Like ThisEpisode 85: Doing Good in the World
A surprisingly relevant tie-in: how perfectionism and overwhelm stop us from taking action—and how doing something small (instead of perfect) is what actually creates change.
Episode 87: Financial Peace
One of the first episodes about money. It's more about how having a plan (and giving every dollar a job) reduces stress and helps your money feel supportive instead of overwhelming.
Episode 196: Building an Anti-Perfectionist Toolkit
A really practical follow-up if you're thinking, “Okay, but what do I do when I get stuck?” This episode is all about having tools ready for those moments when perfectionism starts to take over.
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