Announcing The Mental Health and Wealth Summit

by Melanie

“I wish I were more confident with money…”

“Money stresses me out and makes me anxious…”

“I spend money to make myself feel better, but then feel worse…”

“My mental health makes it tough to manage my money…”

“I don’t even know where to start with my money…”

Do these statements sound familiar? As a finance writer and money mindset coach, I hear these comments every day from readers and clients. 

Owing $81,000 to Nelnet (my loan servicer — you may also know their subsidiary U-fi, their refinancing arm) made me so anxious and depressed. I remember when I fell down the Google rabbit hole in 2012 searching “how to pay off debt” and discovered the vast and wonderful world of finance blogs. I felt like I found a path toward something. But something huge was missing. At that time, no one was acknowledging the mental health impact of debt. 

After spending an entire year crying every day, feeling lost and ashamed for having a useless M.A. from a fancy private school, it was clear that my student loan debt was taking a toll on my mental health. 

As someone who has experienced clinical depression, anxiety, and OCD, experiencing situational depression and anxiety due to money sucked. 

It was what led me to start DearDebt.com, my blog (and later book) which shared my journey of paying off debt. 

I remember writing anonymously and thinking I was all alone. As I shared more of my story, people commented and shared and told me they too were feeling depressed and anxious because of debt and money in general. I realized that money and mental health are much more intricately linked than I previously thought. 

Now I’ve paid off my debt and have worked in the personal finance space for eight years. I launched Dear Debt’s sister site, MentalHealthandWealth.com, and the podcast The Mental Health and Wealth Show in early 2020. Just a few months later, these two topics that are so taboo — mental health and money — suddenly became relevant for everyone as the COVID-19 crisis hit. 

Over the past year, I’ve seen how important it is that we change the conversation around money and mental health. We also need to help people talk about these topics and get information in a shame-free, no-judgment zone. So much personal finance advice and mental health care lacks empathy and can feel clinical or straight-up pathologizing. 

I want to change that and that’s why I created The Mental Health and Wealth Summit in honor of Mental Health Awareness Month in May. 

If you want open and honest conversations around money and mental health, while getting actionable advice and resources, this is for you. 

Below is the schedule for the week-long summit. All of the sessions are “live” over Zoom, so you can attend at the scheduled time below and bring your questions and interact with others. Can’t make it but still want the content? No worries, all ticket holders will get video recordings of the sessions (just FYI the hangout and party will not be recorded). 

We have a range of speakers from financial therapists to a Certified Financial Planner®, author and breathwork specialist, student loan expert, and more. Learn more about the Summit here.

Mental Health & Wealth Summit Schedule

Feel free to jump in whenever you can! All sessions are “live” but you’ll get a recording if you can’t make it but still want the content.

Monday, May 17th 

Welcome & Breathwork: Unlocking the Power of Intentional Breathing to Set, Reset and Relax by Jason Vitug 4pm-5pm PT/ 7pm-8pm ET

Break 5pm-5:30pm PT/8pm-8:30pm ET  

Transform Your Money Mindset by financial therapist Lindsay Bryan-Podvin 5:30pm-6:30pm PT/8:30pm-9:30pm ET  

Tuesday, May 18th 

HSAs: Investing in Your Health and Wealth by Begonya Klumb, Head of HSAs at Fidelity Investments 4pm-5pm PT/7pm-8pm ET  

Break  5pm-5:30pm PT/8pm-8:30pm ET 

Breathe In Money: How to Release Money Blocks to Reconnect MIND, BODY, SPIRIT, & BANK ACCOUNT by Dr. Nicole Garner Scott 5:30pm-6:30pm PT/8:30pm-9:30pm ET 

Wednesday, May 19th 

Managing Student Loan Debt and Mental Health — a conversation with Travis Hornsby about the 2021 Student Loan Planner Mental Health survey + Q & A –  4pm-5pm PT/ 7pm-8pm ET 

Break  5pm-5:30pm PT/8pm-8:30pm ET 

How to Manage Your Spending Triggers by Wendy Wright 5:30pm-6:30pm PT/8:30pm-9:30pm ET

Thursday, May 20th 

Ask a Financial Planner by Bryan Ruiz, CFP® (bring your money questions!)  4pm-5pm PT/7pm-8pm ET 

Mental Health and Wealth Hangout  5pm-6pm PT/ 8pm-9pm ET 

Friday, May 21st 

Financial Win Party 4pm-5pm PT/7pm-8pm ET 

I am so excited to share this summit with you and this is the first time I’m doing something like this online (I’ve planned plenty of events IRL with Lola Retreat). It’s no small undertaking and I’m putting my heart and soul into this. I believe this is my life’s work after struggling so much myself with mental health and money. I am paying speakers and putting my time to make this a great experience. 

All of this to say, the summit is not free but there are sliding scale options that are capped up to a certain amount. 

$10 – for attendees with limited to no discretionary income

$35 – this is the regular ticket price, for attendees who can afford the full price

$50 – for podcast and summit supporters who can afford more and wants to help cover the sliding scale. 
Have any questions? Email me at deardebt@gmail.com. I’d love to see you at The Mental Health and Wealth Summit “live”. If you can’t make it, you can still buy a ticket and get the recordings.

Melanie
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3 comments

christopher Dapaah May 10, 2021 - 1:54 am

Wish to apply as participant

Reply
christopher Dapaah May 10, 2021 - 1:55 am

To participate in the Summit

Reply

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