Some of the most profound truths are those, once revealed, that seem self-evident. And that may also be the most potent gift possessed by the greatest writers and thinkersโthe ability to reveal something we already know with such clarity that we can act on it.
One of my favorite contemporary thinkers, Shane Parrish, recently shared a quote from one of the greatest writers of (at least) the 20th century, C. S. Lewis, that can be a helpful guide in any number of pursuits, especially financial wellness. Implicit in his counsel is the answer to the question, โHow do we fix broken financial plans?โ Letโs check it out:
โYou canโt go back and change the beginning, but you can start where you are and change the ending,โ Lewis said.
How much time and how many calories do we spend wondering what could have been rather than acknowledging what is and progressing forward?
The good news, at least, is that if youโve suffered from this tendency, youโre in good company. Through behavioral finance, weโve learned that we, as humans, have some tendenciesโmaybe even biological hard wiringโthat can manifest as suboptimal in pursuing our best interests financially.
For example, from Kahneman and Tversky, we learned that we feel the pain of loss (at least) twice as intensely as equivalent gains. This tendency (dubbed โloss aversionโ) may lead us to amplify our financial failures and inhibit us from more confidently pursuing preferable outcomes.
Yet, at the same time, we demonstrate a propensity to put good money after bad. Arkes and Blumer suggest that we may cast rationale aside and continue to invest in bad investments, doubling down to prove that our original hypothesis could have beenโshould have beenโright. A better understanding of the โsunk cost fallacyโ helps us acknowledge when itโs time to part with our past and pursue a preferable future.
Youโre likely aware of the โstatus quo biasโโthe fact that we tend to be more comfortable enduring a less-than-perfect present that we know than charging into a better future that we donโt. And Dr. Hal Hershfield has helped us understand whyโthat we, as humans, struggle to view our future selves with the same level of familiarity as our past and present selves. Heโd suggest we may even see our future selves as strangers, which could certainly help explain why many struggle to save for the futureโฆbecause we donโt even see that act as something we are doing for ourselves.
These tendencies can manifest as suboptimal, however, that doesnโt mean they must. In fact, Dr. Meir Statman does an exceptional job of helping our understanding of behavioral finance evolveโby pointing out that these inclinations that are often accompanied by seemingly pejorative words like โbiasโ and โfallacyโ arenโt unfortunate accidents and have likely helped us, as a species, survive. And it is through our acknowledgment of reality and a better understanding of the human condition that we can identify the formerly unknown and exercise our volition to our own benefit and those we love.
So how, therefore, can we fix broken financial plans?
1) Start with the present, because it is the most accessible.
No matter how sophisticated the analysis, the first step in every financial plan is to answer the questions, โWhere am I?โ and โHow am I doing?โ This is the reality check, and while a skilled financial advisor can be helpful in each of these three steps, it may be especially important here because of the benefit of an outside perspective. Please also acknowledge that this is one of the reasons so many people donโt ultimately benefit from a healthy relationship with a financial advisorโbecause revealing ourselves as we are can feel exceptionally vulnerable.
2) Examine the past, because it reveals our personal tendencies, for better and worse.
We donโt want to get stuck in the past, but only through its assessment can we determine our optimal course forward. Or, as Sรธren Kierkegaard illuminated, while life โmust be lived forwards,โ it โcan only be understood backward.”
3) Act into the future.
That might seem like a strange way to articulate the third step in this triune prescription, but itโs quite intentional, because all the illumination and understanding we can muster through self-analysis is useless without action designed to improve our futures. As a necessity in honing our craft, we, as financial advisors, conduct a great deal of hypothetical analysisโand we have our own biases and tendencies that may lead us, and our clients, to arrive at surprisingly high degrees of satisfaction upon completing said analysis. But such satisfaction is bordering on dangerous, because an unimplemented financial plan is worthless.
You canโt change the beginning of your financial plan, and I encourage you not to judge yourself based on the past. Instead, view your financial planning as an opportunity to rewrite the ending and judge yourself not on past performance, but your future trajectory.
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