Emotional Versus Financial Decisions When Divorcing

Date:

Strong emotions often accompany divorce, yet maintaining financial discipline can help preserve your future stability. Studio Romantic/ShutterstockDivorce can trigger grief, fear, and anger. These emotions can cloud judgment, causing individuals to make irrational financial decisions. Psychology Today states that divorce is 95 percent emotional and only five percent legal.But amid all this emotion, how do you make the right financial decisions to protect yourself and be fair to your ex-spouse and children?Emotional Landscape of DivorceCompartmentalizing financial decisions as simple mathematical calculations is usually easier said than done during a divorce. Unexamined emotions, however, can create financial chaos. According to the Financial Planning Association (FPA), if you take better financial actions, you’ll receive better results—but emotion is usually the trigger for the actions taken.

spot_imgspot_imgspot_img

Share post:

More like this
Related

Alphabet Plans to Raise $80 Billion in Stock Sale to Fund AI Spending

Google headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., on July 31,...

Why You Should Still Invest in Stocks in Retirement

A balanced mix of stocks and fixed-income investments can...

Gov. Ron DeSantis Wants Property Tax Relief for FloridiansWhat to Know

Florida lawmakers reconvened in Tallahassee on June 1 for...

Trump Signs Proclamation to Adjust Tariffs on Aluminum, Steel, and Copper Imports

President Donald Trump signs an executive order in the...