“Until we understand the “why” behind how people handle money, every financial argument will feel like a battle when it should really be a conversation.”
Finance breaks more marriages than we admit, second only to infidelity.
Because money is never just money. It carries identity. It carries fear. It carries control. Major life decisions rest on the handling of finances.
Let’s talk about Dami and Tope.
Dami likes to save. Tope prefers to invest.
And somewhere between both of them lies a conversation many couples are not having.
Dami is disciplined. She puts money aside, locks it away, and finds comfort in seeing her balance grow, steady, predictable, and untouched. To her, savings is security. It is control. It is peace of mind. Typical of most women, though.
Tope, on the other hand, sees things differently. Money, to him, is not meant to sit still. It should move, multiply, take risks, and yield returns. To him, idle money is wasted potential.
So he asks the question many have asked in different forms: What is the point of saving if the money is not working for you?
Now, this sounds logical. Almost persuasive. But it is not complete.
Because beneath this debate is something deeper than money. It is about fear. It is about control. It is about identity.
You see, saving is often driven by the need for certainty. It is shaped by experiences, times when money was scarce, when help did not come, when survival depended on what was kept aside.
For people like Dami, saving is not just a habit; it is a shield against vulnerability.
Investing, on the other hand, requires a tolerance for uncertainty. It demands belief in the future, in systems, in growth. It is, in many ways, an act of optimism. But optimism is easier for some than others.
So, in a situation where Tope insists that all money should be invested, what he may not realise is that he is not just challenging Dami’s financial decision. He is challenging her sense of safety.
And when Dami refuses, she is not necessarily rejecting growth; she may simply be protecting herself from risk in the only way she knows how.
But here is where both perspectives must be carefully examined.
Saving alone, while safe, can quietly lose value over time. Inflation does not announce itself loudly, but it erodes purchasing power steadily. Money that does not grow may, in real terms, shrink.
So Dami must ensure that, while she is saving, there must be a certain interest on her money put aside.
On the flip side, investing everything is neither practical nor wise. Markets fluctuate. Assets are not always liquid. Emergencies do not wait for the “right time” to sell shares.
The idea that one can simply liquidate investments whenever the need arises ignores timing risks and potential losses.
So, can one invest everything? In theory, perhaps. In practice, rarely.
Financial wisdom is not found at either extreme. It lies in balance.
An emergency fund is not a sign of fear. It is a sign of preparedness. It is the quiet assurance that life’s unexpected moments will not derail everything else.
At the same time, investing is not reckless. It is strategy. It is how money grows beyond survival into stability and wealth.
The real question, then, is not whether Dami is wrong or Tope is right or vice versa.
The question is: What kind of financial life are they trying to build together?
Because money decisions in relationships are rarely just about numbers. They reflect values. They reveal priorities. They expose unspoken fears.
A person who saves excessively may need to learn trust. Trust in systems, in growth, in the future.
A person who invests aggressively may need to learn restraint, an understanding that not all risks are necessary.
In the end, financial maturity is not about choosing between saving and investing. It is about understanding when to hold on and when to let go.
It is about building a system where security and growth coexist.
And, perhaps most importantly, it is about recognising that behind every financial habit is a story, one that deserves to be understood, not dismissed.
Until we understand the “why” behind how people handle money, every financial argument will feel like a battle when it should really be a conversation.


























