Andrew Austin – Metaphors of money
Metaphors of Money
Money as a subject is generally not taught in schools and colleges, and thus many people’s understanding of money relies on cultural and familial biases.
There are many models of money, and most of them are significantly inaccurate and based on these biases and misunderstandings of how economies and money operate. These biases are reflected by the expressions, Biblical [mis]quotations, and metaphors that we commonly hear, such as:
“Money doesn’t grow on trees.”
“[The love of money is] the root of all evil.”
“It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter heaven.”
Some of these beliefs about money come from antiquity via spiritual and religious texts. A powerful image from Christianity is that of Jesus overturning the money tables outside the temple. Misunderstandings arising from spiritual texts can take on significance whereby a person feels that poverty is equal to divinity and wealth is virtually equal to Satanism.
With such powerful cultural programming in the background, these ideas, or memes, can infuse culture and can manifest in self-sabotage or failure to apply adequate effort into creating wealth and money.
Models and metaphors reflect three primary processes:
Acquisition (i.e., earning, wealth creation, etc.)
Money for old rope
Having the Midas touch
Storage (i.e., saving, investing)
Saving for a rainy day
Looking after the pennies so the pounds look after themselves
Disposal (i.e., spending)
Spending like it is going out of fashion
Frittering it all away
Money itself takes on values and symbolism, such as: “Filthy rich.” “Dirt poor.” “Filthy lucre.”
The way a person perceives money will affect how they use and utilise money.
This will often also impact how the person gives monetary value to themselves. Such as, “I am worthless,” “I don’t value myself,” or “I’m very poor at succeeding.“
A person’s relationship with money often goes undiscussed and unexplored throughout their life. Yet an exploration of our relationship to money can yield powerful unconscious reasoning and processes that can impact significantly on our interaction with other people, as well as our financial and business lives.
Recently, we consulted with a client who was always “struggling” with her finances. We inquired what it was that she was “struggling” to do with her finances. She told us that she was “struggling to get on top of everything before everything got on top of her.”
Now, needless to say, successfully wealthy people do not necessarily carry this perception. It quickly became clear that this client perceived money and finance as something to be conquered, much like a mountain – to get on top of it. But of course, this mountain had a life of its own and would try to conquer her.
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