Your Money: When strangers spill their financial secrets
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[October 09, 2018]
By Chris Taylor
NEW YORK (Reuters) - One recent Monday
night in New York City, seven strangers sat around a dinner table
sharing the biggest money secrets of their lives.
Part dinner, part group therapy, part financial planning, this
gathering, aptly named "Comfort Circle," is the brainchild of New York
City financial behaviorist Jacquette Timmons.
“I got the idea from a conversation I had with a client, who never
shared her money concerns with friends because she was more comfortable
talking about literally anything else – even sex,” said Timmons, 52,
author of “Financial Intimacy: How to Create a Healthy Relationship with
Your Money and Your Mate.”
Her idea was to host intimate dinners as a way of giving people safe
space to have the conversations they would not normally have with the
people who are closest to them.
One poll by the bank Northwestern Mutual found that money was the most
uncomfortable subject of all to broach – outranking sex, and even death.
September's Comfort Circle was at Stella 34, an Italian trattoria tucked
away on the sixth floor of the flagship Macy’s department store in
midtown Manhattan. The cost was $150. Anyone could sign up on Timmons’
website (https://www.jacquettetimmons.com
/comfort-circle/), although the size of the dinner parties is capped at
around 12 participants. So far, the 15 confabs since 2017 have taken
place in Timmons’ home base of New York City. Most of the participants
have been women.
Over dishes like roasted Brussels sprouts, beef ragu and eggplant
parmigiana, the money challenges, and emotions invariably entangled with
them, come tumbling out.
One of those in attendance: Gilmanda Atkinson, 36, from Nutley, New
Jersey. Atkinson signed up to network with other women entrepreneurs,
and get some guidance for her budding side project combining life
coaching with her business expertise as a project manager.
“I was amazed at how open people were, to talk about their deep personal
situations with strangers,” Atkinson said. “In the Latino community I
grew up in, you don’t see that very often. And women, in particular,
tend to be afraid to speak up. We elevated each other.”
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One hundred dollar notes are seen in this photo illustration.
REUTERS/Lee Jae-Won
Although money has a reputation as a dry subject, Timmons has seen one
consistent byproduct at the Comfort Circles: Tears.
“I don’t think anybody comes to the table thinking they are going to cry, but
during the conversation something just bubbles up for them,” she said. “Maybe it
is something they haven’t fully processed, or even shared with anyone else. It’s
an opportunity for release.”
Each dinner has a different theme to get the conversation flowing. September's
topic: “How To Finish the Year Stronger.” Among the money issues that came up
were everything from how to secure a book deal, to crafting a will and
appointing executors, to launching a new business idea.
The subject of the next one, to be held in late October, is “Cravings.” In other
words, which cravings you are repressing, which you are expressing, and what
those cravings – financial or otherwise - are saying about you.
What Timmons finds most fascinating, after two years of Comfort Circles: The
lasting bonds that are created. Afterward, Timmons sends around a spreadsheet
with everyone’s contact information, as a kind of instant networking circle.
After winding up at Stella 34 with Italian desserts and coffee, participants vow
to stay in touch and support each other’s ventures.
“I’m totally blown away by how quickly bonds are formed,” Timmons said.
“Sometimes it’s easier to share more with a stranger, than the person who is
closest to you.”
(Editing by Beth Pinsker and Matthew Lewis)
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