Supplementary Sheet:
Changing Your Environment to Support Your Money**
- What This Means (Simple Explanation)
Managing money is not only about discipline.
It is about what surrounds you every day.
Your environment includes:
Your space
Your routines
Your systems
Your people
Your tools
When your environment supports you, money becomes easier to manage.
When it works against you, everything feels like a struggle.
- Why This Matters (Especially in Poverty Trauma)
Many people are taught to “try harder” with money.
But if your environment is built for survival:
You react instead of plan
You spend to cope or to belong
You feel constant pressure and urgency
This is not a personal failure.
It is often a system issue.
Changing your environment helps shift from:
Survival → Stability
Chaos → Structure
Pressure → Breathing space
- The 5 Areas of Your Money Environment
A. Physical Environment (Where You Live & Move)
Ask:
Where does my money usually go?
What spaces make me spend more?
Examples:
Constant exposure to shops = more spending
Having basic food at home = less emergency spending
Small shift:
Create one “safe zone” habit (e.g., simple meals at home).
B. System Environment (How Your Money Flows)
Ask:
Do I decide every time, or is it already planned?
Examples:
No system = constant stress
Simple system = less thinking, more stability
Small shift:
Set one automatic action (e.g., small weekly saving).
C. Digital Environment (Your Phone & Technology)
Ask:
Does my phone make spending easier or harder?
Examples:
Saved card details = fast spending
Budget alerts = awareness
Small shift:
Remove saved card details, or
Turn on one spending alert
D. Social Environment (People Around You)
Ask:
What is “normal” in my circle?
Examples:
Pressure to spend = financial strain
Supportive conversations = better decisions
Small shift:
Say once: “I’m trying to manage my money better.”
E. Mental Environment (Your Inner Space)
Ask:
How do I feel when I think about money?
Examples:
Fear → avoidance
Clarity → action
Small shift:
Spend 5 minutes once a week looking at your money (no judgement).
- Change Needs Safety
Real change does not happen under constant pressure.
If your environment feels unstable, your mind will choose survival over change.
Creating even small moments of safety—
a plan,
a routine,
a pause—
makes change possible.
- Important Reminder
You do not need to change everything at once.
Start small.
Even one change in your environment can:
Reduce stress
Create stability
Build confidence
- A Grounding Thought
Don’t just manage your money.
Build an environment that manages it with you.
- One-Step Action (Start Here)
Choose one:
Move money automatically (even a small amount)
Remove one spending trigger
Create one stable habit (like a meal routine)
Have one honest conversation
Check your money once this week
That is enough to begin.