How is Get Right with Money Different From Other Programs?
By the time a woman arrives at Get Right with Money, she’s usually already done a lot of work. Mindset work. Financial coaching. Skill-building courses and well-meaning workshops that promised to help her finally get a handle on her money. She may have tried budgeting systems, read the books, taken courses that talked about rewiring her beliefs or even rewiring her nervous system — and still, money feels heavy. Confusing. Sometimes terrifying.
And underneath it all, she just wants to be done with it. Not because she doesn’t care, but because it feels like she’s tried everything and nothing has shifted in the way she hoped it would.
So when she finds her way to this work — work that includes Yoga Nidra, nervous system regulation, honest conversations about trauma and wounding, and a steady refusal to offer quick fixes — she wants to know what makes it different.
That question isn’t really about features. It’s a more protective kind of discernment.
It points to a deeper question: Is this something I can trust?
That’s the question I want to answer.
Because if you’re here asking it, it means you haven’t given up. You’re still open — even if cautiously — to the possibility that your relationship with money could be different from what it is right now. And that openness, even if it’s tender or guarded, is sacred.
Why mindset and skill-building often aren’t enough
Most money courses fall into two general camps.
The first is what I think of as scarcity-soaked mindset work. These programs often talk about abundance and wealth, but the underlying message is frequently built on urgency, pressure, and performance. There’s an emphasis on changing your thinking as a way to quickly earn or manifest more, which may be helpful for some, but can feel deeply misaligned if you’re spiritually grounded, service-oriented, and more concerned with sustainability than chasing the next thing.
If you carry wounding around money — and most of us do — being told to “just think differently” can feel not only unhelpful, but dismissive.
The second type of course focuses on financial skills. Budgeting. Debt payoff. Understanding your numbers. And these skills matter. There is nothing wrong with wanting competence and clarity in the practical aspects of money.
But if your nervous system goes into overwhelm at the thought of opening an account or looking at a bill — if trauma or scarcity wounding live in your body — these skills become almost impossible to implement. And when they don’t stick, shame rushes in.
That’s the cycle so many women find themselves caught in. They want to do better. They’ve tried. But their system isn’t ready — not under that kind of pressure.
Where Get Right with Money begins
Get Right with Money doesn’t start with mindset or mechanics. It begins in the body.
It begins with the simple but radical premise that safety — a deep, felt sense of safety — is the foundation for real change. We begin with practices like Yoga Nidra not as a spiritual accessory, but as a way of signaling to your entire system that you are not in danger. So your body knows that this is not another place where you’ll be shamed for what you haven’t done. That your pace, your nervous system, and your truth are welcome here.
When safety is present, something important happens. You don’t have to brace. You don’t have to override yourself to keep going.
There is so much relief in that, isn’t there?
This work is relational, not corrective
This work is different because it recognizes that money is not separate from your body, your story, or your lineage. Trauma and wounding are not treated as an afterthought here — they are understood as a core part of money behavior.
You won’t be asked to power through.
You won’t be told to override your body to “get it done.”
Instead, you’ll be offered practices that help you stay with yourself — even when things feel hard.
It’s also different because I trust you.
Yes, there is teaching. Yes, there is structure. But I trust that you carry wisdom about your values, your priorities, and your strengths. When trauma begins to heal, your own inner knowing becomes accessible again. The clarity you’ve been longing for doesn’t come from me — it emerges from you, when the static quiets.
So rather than telling you what you should do with your money, I help you listen. And I help you stay present with what you hear. The guidance is there. The framework is there. But the authority ultimately lives with you.
I believe money is a lifelong practice
This is not a one-and-done course that promises to “fix” you or your money. That’s not how I see you, or money, and it’s not how I teach.
You and money are in relationship for life. Like any long-term relationship, it will shift. It will ask for your attention. It will reflect things to you — some uncomfortable, some profoundly healing — especially when you meet it with curiosity rather than control.
This work doesn’t promise to fix you, because you are not broken. It doesn’t assume you just need more discipline, another spreadsheet, or a perfectly optimized system. Instead, it honors the complexity of your history, your body, and your dreams.
It makes space for the grief, frustration, and longing that so often live beneath financial struggle, and gives you tools to stay present with those feelings rather than bypass them. From there, new choices become possible — not out of urgency, but from calm, rooted clarity.
An invitation
If you’re asking what makes this different, you may already know that what you’ve tried before hasn’t touched the part of you that most needs care — and that is where we begin.
With the nervous system.
With rest.
With presence.
From that ground, we build a practice — not a perfect system or a quick fix, but a sacred practice of relating to money in a way that is honest, doable, and nourishing. In a way that honors the fullness of who you are.
If you’re ready for that, Get Right with Money is open to you.
This isn’t a shortcut.
It’s a remembering — and a relationship.

