Why you might feel the urge to overspend as the pandemic win

Why you might feel the urge to overspend as the pandemic winds down


This story is part of a group of stories called
Yes, I had a budget on the day I looked up when my favorite outdoor venue would again open for concerts.
Yes, I had a financial plan in place when I saw the words “Tame Impala rescheduled” and felt a memory flash of standing in a crowd listening to that same band, on that same stage.
Yes, though I have a financial accountability coach, I lost consciousness and came to 90 seconds later with a two-Tame-Impala-ticket-sized hole in my budget.
Yes, I am concerned.
After this year of no — no festivals, no plays, no shopping in stores without concern for a deadly virus — “no you can’t” is slowly transforming, with 60 percent of adults in the US now having at least one dose of the vaccine, to “yes you can.” Many of us, regardless of disposable income levels, will and will and will, budgets be damned, if we don’t prepare for the powerful emotions about to swoop through our experience-deprived brains.

Related Keywords

United States , Americans , Amanda Clayman , Bon Jovi , Natasha Knox , Financial Therapy Association , Instagram , Decision Lab , Brooke Struck , Daniel Kahneman , Roaring Reopening , Glad Pressn Seal , Great Depression , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , அமெரிக்கர்கள் , அமண்டா களிமண் , பான் ஜோவீ , நடாஷா நாக்ஸ் , நிதி சிகிச்சை சங்கம் , இன்ஸ்தக்ராம் , முடிவு ஆய்வகம் , ப்ரூக் தாக்கியது , நன்று மனச்சோர்வு ,

© 2025 Vimarsana