
One of the biggest myths people believe is that once they have made a decision, they have to stick with it forever.
They stay in habits that aren’t working. They keep following advice that doesn’t fit their life anymore. They continue making money choices based on who they were ten years ago instead of who they are today.
The truth is, change is a normal part of life. We grow. Our circumstances change. Our priorities shift. What worked in one point in our lives may not work in the next.
Yet so many people feel guilty about changing direction.
I see it all the time with clients. Someone gets divorced and suddenly their entire financial picture changes. Someone changes careers and needs a completely different strategy. Someone gets married, becomes a caregiver, retires, or starts over after a setback. Life happens.
The problem isn’t the change itself. The problem is believing that changing course means you failed.
It doesn’t.
Sometimes the healthiest decision you can make is admitting that what you’ve been doing isn’t working anymore.
That takes courage.
Many people stay stuck because the familiar feels safer than the unknown. Even when they are stressed, overwhelmed, or frustrated with their finances, they keep doing the same things because at least they know what to expect.
But growth rarely happens inside our comfort zones.
If you want different results, you have to be willing to make different choices.
That may mean creating a budget for the first time. It may mean finally facing debt instead of avoiding it. It may mean asking for help, learning new skills, changing careers, or making adjustments to long-held financial habits.
None of those things mean you’ve failed.
They mean you’re growing.
So how do you give yourself permission to change?
Start by accepting that financial change is a natural part of life. Just like seasons change, your financial life will have seasons too. There will be times of abundance and times of challenge. Times of building and times of rebuilding.
Every season has something to teach us.
You also need to let go of the beliefs that are keeping you stuck.
Maybe you’ve told yourself you’re “bad with money.”
Maybe you’ve convinced yourself it’s too late to fix things.
Maybe you believe everyone else has it figured out while you’re struggling to keep up.
Those stories are expensive. They cost you opportunities, confidence, and progress.
Give yourself permission to release them.
Have compassion for yourself as well. Every person has made money mistakes. Every person has taken a wrong turn somewhere. The goal isn’t to change overnight. The goal is to make progress.
The people who eventually build financial stability are not the people who never make mistakes. They are the people who learn from them and keep moving forward.
It also helps to surround yourself with people who encourage growth. Find mentors, coaches, trusted friends, or communities that support your goals. Sometimes we borrow confidence from others until we develop our own.
Most importantly, trust that you can learn what you need to learn.
Many people come to me feeling completely lost. They don’t know where to start. They don’t know what their next financial move should be. They feel overwhelmed by all the information online. That’s okay.
You don’t have to have every answer today.
You only need enough courage to take the next step.
There are several reasons why giving yourself permission to change your financial life matters.
First, financial authenticity creates peace. When your money decisions reflect your actual values and goals instead of someone else’s expectations, life feels lighter. You stop chasing what everyone else is doing and start building a financial life that fits you.
Second, you deserve financial confidence. You deserve to wake up without constant anxiety about money. You deserve a plan that supports your life and your goals. You deserve to feel hopeful about your future.
Third, growth requires action. No one builds financial security by staying exactly where they are. Growth happens when we learn new things, make adjustments, and remain open to new possibilities.
Fourth, life is too short to spend years stuck in financial stress when solutions are available. That doesn’t mean change happens overnight. It means deciding that your future is worth investing in.
Finally, you have more power than you think.
You may not control the economy. You may not control interest rates, inflation, or unexpected life events.
But you do control your next decision.
You control whether you learn or avoid.
You control whether you ask for help or continue struggling alone.
You control whether you stay stuck or start moving forward.
Small decisions repeated consistently can completely change the trajectory of your financial life.
Celebrate every win along the way. Celebrate the credit card balance that finally starts going down, not just once it’s paid off. Celebrate the emergency fund that reaches its first milestone. Celebrate the month you stick to your spending plan. Celebrate the lessons learned from past mistakes.
Those victories matter.
If God has been nudging you toward change, don’t ignore it. Sometimes faith looks like taking the next step before you can see the entire path.
As it says in Isaiah 43:19, “See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it?”
New beginnings are possible. New habits are possible. A new financial future is possible.
Give yourself permission to change. Give yourself permission to grow. Give yourself permission to build a financial life that supports the life you want to live.
It won’t always be easy, but it will be worth it.
And that first step you take today may be the very thing that changes everything tomorrow.