Welcome to Money Rx, SELF’s monthly financial checkup that goes beyond the numbers. Each month, financial educator Tiffany Aliche—aka The Budgetnista—explores the emotional side of money, diagnoses common money stressors, and prescribes practical, judgment-free solutions for budgeting, saving, debt, and wealth building formulated to support lasting financial health.
Since you’re reading this in January, you might be nursing a very specific kind of hangover. Not the champagne kind, but the financial and emotional kind that follows after the holidays. It’s that classic collision between “New Year, New Me” optimism and doom-scrolling your bank app with one eye open. (I see you. We see each other). But beyond the physical receipts, there’s an invisible bill: guilt, shame, regret.
For many of us, holiday spending isn’t really about money. It’s nostalgia, pressure, loneliness, obligation, all the layers we peel back after the wrapping paper settles. Overspending becomes less about money, and more about trying to soothe or avoid something inside of us.
Trust me, I’ve been there. I call it Post-Traumatic Broke Syndrome. My younger self made some major financial mistakes. I lost a house to foreclosure, got hit with a credit card scam, and felt like I couldn’t recover. But the problem wasn’t just what happened, it was how I was talking to myself about what happened.
When I looked back at 28-year-old Tiffany, I said, “I don’t trust you anymore.” I punished myself for years. I denied myself joy, held myself to impossible standards, and never allowed myself to feel proud of financial wins. I did all the spreadsheets and automations, but none of the emotional work. (Spoiler: the emotional work matters more.)
That loop played on repeat until I finally recognized the pattern of fear, pain, and betrayal. I was eventually able to forgive myself because being human means making mistakes. It does not mean sentencing yourself to a lifetime of guilt and overcorrection.
So if you overspent and ended the year with both a balance and a side of shame, you’re not alone. But what you need now isn’t a run-of-the-mill routine rooted in punishment. You need a mental reset.
A reset invites gentleness. It doesn’t demand that you “start over,” it says “let’s begin again.” It honors the emotional reasons behind your decisions instead of pretending they never existed.
Acknowledge mistakes and forgive yourself.
Forgiveness is the most powerful financial tool we rarely talk about. Guilt compounds just like interest. Shame festers like a looming storm. Decades-old mistakes eventually shape how we treat our current selves.
