Book Review: Financial Bliss - A Couple's Guide to Merging Money Styles And Building a Rich Life Together by Bambi Holzer

Looking from the outside in, you'd probably think that when marriages and other long-term relationships go bad, it's usually due to marrying too young, infidelity, maybe getting fat. You know, all those things people think about in relation to love and sex. But what people in these relationships quickly realize is that the real threat is often money. More specifically, where the money goes that the two people in the couple bring into the home.

Author and financial advisor Bambi Holzer's new book Financial Bliss: A Couple's Guide to Merging Money Styles And Building a Rich Life Together tackles both the psychology of merging (or not) your finances, as well as the nuts and bolts numbers game in terms of where you should be concentrating your cash. Her financial advice on such aspects as mortgages, insurance, and retirement isn't anything you couldn't find elsewhere - it's the time spent on getting couples on the same page that makes the book worthwhile.

Think about how little couples often know about each other's money style going in, and you'll realize all the things that need to be discussed. What things do you and your partner consider important to spend money on? Maybe he thinks the latest vehicle is a must while you want to save for a house, or vice versa. Maybe he thinks you waste money on too many clothes, while you think he doesn't need the latest cell phone every other month, or vice versa. Maybe he wants to put your money in high-risk investments in a bid to get rich today, while you want to hit the 401(k) and index funds, getting rich via the tortoise route. Or vice versa.

The point is, a relationship that started with love words and gifts under the pillow can end up in hate words and accusations of treason if you don't work to understand each other and then come up with a plan to make it work. Holzer says that plan is different for every couple. Maybe you pool your money and each side does some compromising, maybe you keep the majority of your finances separate so no one can get angry about the other's spending.

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Article Author: Justin McHenry

Justin McHenry is president of Index Credit Cards, a site offering credit card comparisons, research, tips, calculators and a listing of over 1,200 currently-available credit cards.

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