

I help couples and business teams break free from financial tension, create powerful money partnerships, and build wealth that strengthens their relationships. My three-pillar approach combines mindset transformation, energy alignment, and strategic activation to create lasting financial breakthroughs.

I'm on a mission to change how the world sees money—creating financial clarity that strengthens relationships and builds wealth aligned with your deepest values. Through speaking, coaching, and workshops, I help people discover that money can be a source of connection rather than conflict.
My own financial breakthrough came when I found myself asking my boss for a pay CUT.
I needed my son's specialized tutoring, but we were $2,000 over the scholarship limit. Instead of reducing my pay, my boss gave me a RAISE and challenged me to see money differently. That moment TRANSFORMED EVERYTHING.
I realized my relationship with money—my thoughts, feelings, and beliefs—was shaping my financial reality far more powerfully than my income or knowledge ever could. This revelation led me to develop the Three-Pillar Approach that has now helped clients transform financial tension into relationship strength.
Today, I'm on a mission to change how the world sees money—one couple, one business, one person at a time. Through speaking, coaching, and my Financial Launch Program, I help people discover that money can be a source of connection and empowerment rather than stress and conflict.






You check your bank account and wonder what the hell happened.
Again.
The spending made sense in the moment. Each purchase had a reason. You weren't being reckless. And yet here you are, looking at a balance that doesn't match your intentions, feeling that familiar mix of confusion and guilt.
Here's what's actually going on: Your money habits aren't random. They're not evidence that you're "bad with money" or lack self-control. They're a direct communication from your emotional relationship with money, which was formed way back when you first learned what money meant.
Welcome to your Financial Attachment Style.
Every money decision you make is trying to tell you something about what you need to feel safe, loved, valued, or free.
That impulse purchase? It's communicating something. The money you can't seem to save? That's saying something too. The guilt you feel when you spend? Message received, loud and clear.
Most people think their spending patterns are about willpower or discipline. Adorable. Your money habits are actually about your nervous system trying to get needs met the only way it knows how.
You've probably heard of attachment theory. The psychological framework that explains how you learned to feel safe (or unsafe) in relationships based on your early experiences with caregivers. Whether you seek security, avoid intimacy, or swing between the two, those patterns were formed when you were young.
Financial Attachment Styles work the same way.
Just like you developed patterns for how to connect with people, you developed patterns for how to relate to money. You watched how your parents handled finances. You absorbed what money meant in your family. You learned what felt safe and what triggered anxiety.
Those early lessons created an emotional blueprint that still runs your financial decisions today. A Security Saver isn't just cautious by nature, they learned that having money saved equals being safe. An Experience Creator didn't randomly decide to prioritize joy, they absorbed the belief that life is short and memories matter more than bank balances.
Understanding your Financial Attachment Style means understanding the "why" behind every money decision you make. Once you know why you do what you do, you can work with your patterns instead of fighting them.
After 25+ years working in finance, I've identified five distinct emotional patterns people have with money. These aren't personality types you're born with. They're learned responses to what money meant in your family and your early experiences with financial security (or lack thereof).
What your habits look like: Multiple savings accounts with specific labels. Emergency fund that could handle multiple disasters. You research every purchase extensively. Spending money, even on things you can afford, triggers anxiety.
What this is telling you: Safety = having money saved. Your nervous system learned that financial instability equals danger, so you're constantly building a fortress. Every dollar saved whispers "you're going to be okay."
The shadow side: You can't enjoy the money you have. You saved for the vacation and stress about every meal out. The emergency fund exists, you're too anxious to use it for actual emergencies.
What your habits look like: You prioritize travel, concerts, nice dinners, spontaneous adventures. Savings accounts feel boring and restrictive. You'd rather create memories than watch a number grow. YOLO isn't just a phrase, it's your financial philosophy.
What this is telling you: Connection and joy matter more than future security. Life is happening now, not someday when you retire. Money is meant to create experiences that make you feel alive.
The shadow side: Your savings account looks sad. Long-term planning feels like punishment. You feel guilty about being "irresponsible" even though you're actually just living according to your values.
What your habits look like: You pick up the check. You buy thoughtful presents. You help family members financially. Saying no to money requests feels impossible. Your own financial needs consistently come last.
What this is telling you: Love = generosity. Your worth is tied to how much you give. Making others happy through money feels better than saving it for yourself.
The shadow side: You have trouble with boundaries. You give until it actually hurts your own financial stability. You're funding everyone else's life while neglecting your own needs.
What your habits look like: You manage all the bills, track all the expenses, organize all the financial systems. Everyone depends on you to keep things running. You make sensible purchases and plan responsibly. You're the adult in every financial relationship.
What this is telling you: Worth = reliability. Being needed feels like being valued. Control over logistics creates a sense of stability when emotions feel chaotic.
The shadow side: You resent being the only "responsible one." You're burning out from managing everyone's financial life. Spontaneous spending feels wrong because you're always on duty.
What your habits look like: You need multiple income streams. Joint accounts feel suffocating. Financial dependence on anyone triggers alarm bells. You make money decisions independently, sometimes to your detriment.
What this is telling you: Autonomy = safety. Control over your own money means control over your own life. Financial dependence feels like emotional suffocation.
The shadow side: You resist shared financial goals even when they'd benefit you. You struggle with financial accountability. You make money decisions in isolation, which can lead to missed opportunities.
Traditional financial advice assumes everyone has the same emotional relationship with money. Just make a budget. Just save more. Just stop spending on unnecessary things.
That advice fails because it ignores what your money habits are actually communicating.
A Security Saver and an Experience Creator need completely different financial systems. A Gift Giver and a Freedom Facilitator will never follow the same money rules. A Practical Provider needs strategies that don't burn them out.
When you understand what your money habits are telling you, you can design a financial life that works WITH your psychology instead of fighting against it.
If you can't stop checking your bank account: Your nervous system is seeking reassurance that you're safe. This is Security Saver energy trying to manage anxiety through control.
If you feel guilty every time you spend money: There's a belief that spending = being irresponsible or selfish. Usually a Security Saver or Practical Provider pattern running in the background.
If you prioritize experiences over savings: You're an Experience Creator who values present joy over future security. This isn't irresponsible, it's a different value system.
If you can't say no when people ask for money: Gift Giver pattern where your worth feels tied to your generosity. Boundaries feel like withholding love.
If shared finances make you anxious: Freedom Facilitator needing autonomy to feel safe. Financial dependence triggers old patterns about losing control.
If you're managing everyone else's money stress: Practical Provider carrying the mental load. Your value feels connected to being the reliable one.
Your Financial Attachment Style was formed when you were young, probably before you even understood what money was. You watched how your parents handled (or didn't handle) finances. You absorbed messages about what money meant. You learned what felt safe and what felt dangerous.
That seven-year-old version of you developed strategies to feel secure in an uncertain world. Those strategies made perfect sense at the time. They might have actually saved you.
The challenge? Your nervous system doesn't automatically update when your circumstances change. So you're an adult with a stable income, yet you're still operating on outdated threat information.
Your money habits aren't the problem. They're the solution your younger self created. Understanding them is the first step to updating those solutions for who you are now.
First, stop judging your money habits. They're not character flaws. They're communication.
Second, identify which Financial Attachment Style (or combination of styles) resonates most with you. Be honest. The goal isn't to be the "best" style, it's to understand YOUR style.
Third, design money systems that honor your actual psychology. Security Savers need different strategies than Experience Creators. Gift Givers need different boundaries than Freedom Facilitators. Practical Providers need different support than everyone else.
Fourth, if you're in a relationship, learn your partner's Financial Attachment Style. Most money fights happen because two different styles are trying to communicate without a shared language.
Your money habits have been trying to tell you something for years. Maybe it's time to actually listen.
Take the quiz and find out which of the 5 Financial Attachment Styles is driving your money decisions. You'll get personalized insights into your patterns and practical strategies for working with your psychology instead of against it.
Take the Financial Attachment Style Quiz →
Connect with others who are learning to decode their money habits and build financial systems that actually work for their attachment style. Inside the community, you'll get ongoing support, monthly workshops, and access to deep dive trainings on each Financial Attachment Style.
Join the Money Clarity Community →
Because honestly? Another budget that ignores your emotional reality isn't going to work. Understanding what your money habits are actually telling you? That changes everything.
Whether you're planning a workshop, podcast, team training, or large-scale event, Kris brings energy, expertise, and a transformational message that inspires real change around money.
If you're ready to create a powerful experience that helps couples and teams shift their mindset and take actionable steps toward financial clarity and connection—let’s talk.
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