Discover which subconscious money beliefs are blocking you from attracting and keeping more money, so you can make small shifts that create big financial change.
You find a surprise $500 in your account. What do you do first?
A.
I tuck most of it into savings, but feel guilty if I spend any on myself.
B.
I split it between bills, savings, and a small treat, then set it aside automatically.
C.
I treat myself to something fun right away, then worry about bills later.
D.
I feel excited but also wonder if it is a mistake, so I hesitate to use it.
2.
How do you feel the day after payday?
A.
Relief, then an undercurrent of worry about when it will run out.
B.
Grateful and intentional, I update my plans or savings.
C.
I celebrate by splurging, then feel stressed and guilty about future bills.
D.
I wonder if I earned it or deserve it, and worry I might lose it soon.
3.
When pricing your work or asking for a raise, your inner voice usually says:
A.
I explain the value confidently and ask for what I need.
B.
I probably do not deserve that rate, I should keep it low.
C.
I hesitate, underprice, and later feel resentful and anxious.
D.
I want the raise but worry about taxes, fees, or whether I can keep it.
4.
What describes your relationship with savings and investments?
A.
I use automatic contributions, have an emergency fund, and review goals.
B.
I start investing, panic at the first dip, and pull money out.
C.
I try to save, but impulse spending or emergencies always drain it.
D.
I avoid looking at accounts, and feel guilty when balances go up.
5.
What money story do you find yourself repeating to kids or friends?
A.
"Money is scarce, you have to fight for every dollar."
B.
"Work hard and enjoy what you earn, but be responsible."
C.
"Save everything, do not enjoy what you have."
D.
"Money is dirty or makes people greedy."
6.
Which money fear feels most familiar?
A.
I fear both not attracting money and losing what I have, so I get stuck.
B.
That I will lose what I worked for or run out of money unexpectedly.
C.
That opportunities will pass me by and I will not attract work or clients.
D.
I worry sometimes, but mostly I have systems and a plan to handle it.
7.
When an unplanned but necessary expense pops up, you usually:
A.
Adjust the budget, use a buffer or payment plan, and move on.
B.
Avoid dealing with it until it is urgent, then scramble.
C.
Pay it, then punish yourself by cutting out all small joys.
D.
Feel undeserving and delay asking for help or negotiating terms.
8.
When someone compliments your pricing or work, you usually respond by:
A.
Deflecting it and saying it was just luck.
B.
Saying thank you and reinvesting part of the earnings into growth.
C.
Feeling like an impostor, then undercharging next time out of fear.
D.
Accepting but then overspending the reward, feeling guilty later.
Quiz Outcomes
1.
Blocked from Receiving
You often hesitate to welcome money because part of you doubts you deserve it or fears it will disappear. You can learn to open to opportunities and accept money with more ease, so abundance feels natural.
2.
Blocked from Keeping
You are good at bringing money in, but it slips away through impulse decisions, guilt spending, or avoiding financial structure. With simple systems and kinder self-talk, you can keep more of what you earn.
3.
Blocked from Abundance
Your money story both blocks incoming opportunities and erodes what you already have, often out of fear or contradictory habits. Once you identify the patterns, you can replace them with consistent, practical moves that protect and invite money.
4.
Money-Aligned
You have healthy habits and a mindset that invites money and lets it grow. You balance enjoyment with planning, and with a few refinements you can keep building stability and freedom.