Kia ora, welcome!

We knew we should be investing, saving and all that. But we weren’t. We felt stressed, overwhelmed and tired about money. It was like we were meant to be ‘good’, or ‘smart’ or instinctively know how to do it. But no matter how hard we tried budgeting, saving and making spreadsheets, secure financial wellbeing remained out of our reach.  
Then, just for fun, we side-stepped the logical, practical stuff and started exploring how we thought and felt about money using some simple therapeutic tools. 
Boom! 
Things immediately started to shift. 
We felt better, clearer, more conscious and in control. As our relationships with money rapidly changed, so did our behaviour. Miraculously, we were suddenly hungry to learn all we could about investing, growing our emergency funds, thinking about our retirements, and building the kinds of futures we wanted.  It felt different. For both of us, this psychology-first approach offered multiple light-bulb moments, meaningful action and results.
Did we really experience all of this transformation from a few simple therapeutic explorations and some laughs? To make sure, we road-tested our approach with hundreds of women, in-person and online. We heard laughter, saw tears, and listened to many stories of newfound clarity, radical improvements in financial wellbeing, huge shifts in attitude, and a renewed enthusiasm for mastering our financial lives. 

Please join us.

Petra, a recent participant said,
“This has been my financial enlightenment, an awakening.”

Jane Wrightson, NZ Retirement Commissioner describes Hi Money as 
The missing-piece of the financial puzzle.”

Rachel Davies works as a therapist in private practice.

Angela Meyer works as a gender-equity specialist in the finance sector.