Here’s a little experiment: ask your partner, “What did your family teach you about money growing up?” Then see what happens. Maybe a laugh. Maybe a long pause. Maybe a story you’ve never heard, even after years together.
Money is one of those things we’re supposed to know how to talk about, but almost no one taught us. We learned the math (sort of). We didn’t learn the feelings. And in a relationship, the feelings are the whole point.
So… What Is Financial Therapy?
Financial therapy sits at the intersection of two things that rarely sit at the same table: your money and your emotions. It’s not a budgeting class. It’s not your accountant. It’s a guided, judgment-free space to understand the why behind your money behavior — and your partner’s — so the two of you can build a financial life that actually feels good.
In practice, that means helping couples:
- Untangle the money stories you brought into the relationship — from childhood, culture, past partners, past mistakes.
- Name the feelings around money — shame, fear, control, scarcity, generosity — so they stop running the show in the background.
- Build shared habits and language that turn money from a fight topic into a team sport.
Most couples don’t have a money problem. They have a money conversation problem. Once the conversation gets easier, the money tends to follow. Erika · Your Financial Therapist
It’s a Lifelong Skill, Not a One-Time Talk
Talking about money with your partner isn’t a single conversation you have before the wedding. It’s a lifelong skill — like cooking, or communication, or remembering to take a breath before responding. It gets stronger with practice, easier with repetition, and richer over time as your life keeps changing.
Couples who build this skill notice things shift: arguments get shorter and actually resolve, big decisions (a move, a baby, a career change) feel collaborative instead of contentious, old shame loosens its grip, and the future starts to feel like something you’re building together — not negotiating against each other.
Start the Conversation at Home
The best money conversations don’t happen in an office. They happen on your couch, at your kitchen table, on a long walk. These two tools are made to help you start exactly there — together, in your own space, on your own time.
Let’s Talk Finances: Couples Edition Cards
If “so… let’s talk about money” makes you both freeze, the cards do the heavy lifting for you. After working with thousands of people, I created a beautifully designed deck of conversation prompts that eases couples into money talks — without the spreadsheet energy. Pour the wine or take a walk or a drive, draw a card, take turns answering. You’ll learn things about each other you didn’t know you didn’t know.
Conversations with Your Financial Therapist
If you like to understand something before you try it, start with the book. Conversations with Your Financial Therapist walks you through the real, human side of money — the stories, the patterns, the fears, the breakthroughs — with prompts and reflections you can do alone or together. Read a chapter on a Saturday morning. Pass it to your partner. Talk about what hit you. Repeat.
If you’ve read this far, here’s what I want you to take away: the fact that you’re even thinking about how to talk to your partner about money already means you care. That’s the work. That’s the whole thing.
Start where you are. Pick up the cards. Pick up the book. You don’t have to do this perfectly — you just have to start. Your future selves are going to be so glad you did.
With warmth,
Erika · Your Financial Therapist

Erika Wasserman
A few free 15-minute consultations are available each month for HelloPrenup couples who want to learn more about working one on one with their financial relationships.
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Erika Wasserman is a Certified Financial Therapist and founder of Your Financial Therapist. She helps people have the money conversations they keep avoiding. Author of Conversations with Your Financial Therapist, endorsed by Shark Tank’s Barbara Corcoran, she mixes real talk with practical tools so you can feel calmer, clearer, and more confident with money.






