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Owned by Kristjana

Confidence through understanding. Learn money and investing in a supportive community built for women.

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9 contributions to Financial Clarity Club
Which Team Are You?
2025 was the year of tax payment for me. What about you? Any surprises?
Poll
5 members have voted
1 like • Apr 24
I want to get a close to zero as possible. I’d rather owe than get a refund so I’m earning interest on that money all year but this year I got a very small refund.
Hey Book Club Fam! 👋 The Money Habit
I am so excited to open up the floor for our very first discussion. Chapter 1 is in the books (pun intended) and I'm stoked to dive in! Pick one question to answer below or all 3! 📝 Mike talks about emotional steadiness coming from always knowing what funds are for what purpose. For those of you tracking your money right now, does knowing where every dollar is assigned actually make you feel more confident? Or does it sometimes feel overwhelming? 📝 One of the big ideas here is building money systems that work with your natural tendencies instead of against them. What's one money habit you've tried to force that just never stuck? And have you found anything that worked because it fit how you already operate? 📝 How do you balance "cash confidence" (knowing exactly what everything is for) with staying flexible when life inevitably throws curveballs? Drop your takeaways, your "aha" moments, or even the parts that challenged your current mindset below. My Achiever heart loves to see the progress we are making together as a community. Let’s help each other stop restarting and start compounding. What's your biggest Chapter 1 takeaway? 👇
Hey Book Club Fam! 👋 The Money Habit
1 like • Feb 8
One of my biggest Chapter 1 takeaways was realizing that emotional steadiness doesn’t require rigidity. I’ve tried a lot of systems, and none worked exactly as designed for our life. What finally stuck was pulling pieces from different systems and adapting them so we’re tracking intentionally without tracking every penny. That was a big mindset shift for me, letting go of the idea that control meant tracking everything perfectly. Our income and bills fluctuate too much for rigid rules, and tracking every dollar was more overwhelming than grounding. What actually gives me confidence is knowing the job of each bucket, not the exact details of every transaction. For example, we move a set amount into a discretionary account each month. Once it’s there, those purchases don’t need to be tracked. If we want more flexibility, it comes from a buffered grocery/household category. As long as we stay within our overall limits, the exact breakdown doesn’t matter. That balance (clear guardrails with built-in flexibility) is what finally made the system feel steady instead of stressful, and it’s what helped us stop restarting and start compounding.
Are You a Multi-Account Master?
Hey Book Club! 💸 We’re diving into Chapter 2 of The Money Habit, and it’s hitting on a major pain point: the "one big pile" trap. The book suggests a 6-account system to build "guardrails" around our spending and ensure we aren't under-monitoring our progress. I’ll be honest, I’m currently sitting at 4 accounts (2 business, 2 personal). However, I use "buckets" in my Novo account to mimic some of this structure without opening a dozen different banks. 🧐 I’m curious about your "Financial Plumbing": - How many accounts do you currently use? Are you a "one checking, one savings" person, or do you have a separate home for every dollar? - The "Tsk Tsk" Factor: The book pushes for liquid accounts, but I’ve been leaning into investment/retirement accounts for that higher yield. Am I playing with fire, or are you doing the same? 📈 🔄 My Next Move I’ve been sketching out how to bridge the gap between the book’s 6-account strategy and my current 4-account reality. I’m not sure I want to open more accounts, but I definitely see room to optimize the percentages, since he did not mention a tax account for those that may need it. Drop your account count below and let’s talk strategy! 👇
Are You a Multi-Account Master?
1 like • Feb 8
We use 2 checking accounts, 7 HYSAs, and 3 investment accounts. One checking covers my husband’s pension and pays the mortgage, and the other is for discretionary spending. All of my income goes into our sinking-fund account, which handles irregular expenses, pays off credit cards monthly, and keeps a large buffer so the emergency fund stays untouched. We also use HYSA buckets for bigger goals, and once those targets are met, everything extra is invested into retirement or taxable brokerage.
🍂 Financial Seasons: Which One Are You Living In? 🌸
Hey Book Club! 🥂 We’re diving into Chapter 3 of The Money Habit, and let’s be real: trying to grow your wealth without knowing your current "Season" is like trying to plant tomatoes in a blizzard. It doesn’t matter how hard you work; if the environment isn’t right, the strategy won't stick! Whether you’re in a Winter of consolidation, a Spring of new growth, or a Summer of harvesting your hard work, today is about finding your coordinates. I’ve built a custom tool for us to gamify this chapter! Before you post your thoughts, go run through our Season Qualifier App. It’ll help you self-qualify in seconds. https://claude.ai/public/artifacts/9309061b-ef14-4277-b02f-cc8ea1e7f61c Once you’ve got your result, come back here and spill the tea: 1. What’s your current Season? 2. Is this the season you thought you were in? 3. What is ONE thing you’re going to stop doing now that you know your season? Remember: There are no "bad" seasons. A Winter season isn't a failure; it’s a setup for a massive Spring. Let’s own where we are so we can get to where we’re going! Drop your Season below! 👇
🍂 Financial Seasons: Which One Are You Living In? 🌸
1 like • Feb 7
I’m in the Balance season, this is the season I expected to be in. My husband retired from the military last year, and we intentionally chose for him to stay home and not work. After 20+ years of service, this season is about time with our kids and recalibrating life at a different pace. He does receive a pension, so while we lost earned income, we didn’t lose stability. We’re not perfectly at our long-term target percentages yet because of that transition, but we’re very comfortable and on track, if not a bit ahead. - Needs are under 60% of our take home (long-term target is 50%) - Wants are under 10% for now (eventual goal is 15–20%, but we are currently savings for some fun big purchases over the next 3 years) - Emergency and sinking funds are fully funded - Retirement savings are ahead of target This season feels less about optimization and more about alignment. We’re funding the future, enjoying the present, and giving ourselves permission to enjoy the process, and not make it a race. Truly appreciating the journey we’re on. 💛 I loved this exercise.
🛑 Stop Restarting. Start Compounding. 📈
New year, new US tax laws, and if you’re a Side-Hustle Scrambler or a Chaos Creator, this is your peak week to build Self-Authority. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act is here, and it’s a game-changer for our community. If you receive tips, you can now deduct up to $25,000 annually from your taxes. But there’s a catch: you need grounded systems to prove it. Don’t let another tax season trigger the Shame & Avoidance Cycle. This is the week to: 1. Untangle your money: Separate personal and business accounts once and for all. 2. Setup your Consistency Dashboard: Track every dollar so you’re "funding-ready". Financial clarity isn't the outcome; it’s the prerequisite for your growth. Action: Check the new IRS provisions here: https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/one-big-beautiful-bill-provisions Remember: Financial clarity first. Self-leadership always. Stop restarting. Start compounding. 🫂
1 like • Jan 3
This is so well said. I used to be a tax preparer, and most of the issues people run into at tax time aren’t about missing deductions, they’re about inconsistent tracking and blurred personal vs. business finances. Systems first really does change everything.
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Kristjana Richter
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@kristjana-richter-4349
Hi I'm Kristjana, a financial educator helping you build calm, confident money habits with simple systems and 10-minute steps.

Active 1h ago
Joined Dec 30, 2025
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