Money isn’t a fixed thing. It moves—like the tide. Sometimes it rushes in with abundance, and other times it slips away when we need it most. I used to panic during the low tides, feeling like I’d failed somehow. But now, I try to approach it differently. I remind myself that this ebb and flow is natural. It’s not a personal flaw. It’s just part of life.
Just like the ocean, money has rhythms. We save, we spend, we earn, we give. Some months feel full and secure; others feel stretched and uncertain. But either way, I try to meet it all with patience instead of fear. That’s the shift that’s helped me the most—learning to ride the waves without letting them drown me.
I’ve started thinking of budgeting not as restriction, but as paddling with the current. I try to use what I have wisely during the high tides and trust that low tides won’t last forever. I don’t need to panic every time I feel the water recede. It will return.
And in the quiet moments—the financial low tide—I find clarity. I notice what truly matters, what’s worth holding on to, and what I can live without. That’s a kind of wealth too. The kind that doesn’t always show up in numbers, but in peace, in perspective, and in learning to move with life instead of against it.