Finance & Freedom · Style & Soul 35+

The money conversation
nobody had with us

Most women over 35 are more financially capable than they believe — and less financially prepared than they need to be. Both things are true. And both are fixable. This is the space where we have the conversation that should have happened at 25. Without the jargon. Without the shame. With complete honesty.

This is not expert financial advice — I am not a financial advisor. This is real talk from a real woman who lived it and wants to share what she learned. Always consult a qualified professional before making investment decisions.

10×
Growth potential of money invested in your 30s vs your 50s over 20 years
Compound interest at 7% average return
67%
Of women say they wish they had started investing earlier — most by their mid-30s
Fidelity Women & Investing Study
35–45
The most financially consequential decade of your life — and the best time to act
Your window is right now
Why this matters now
The decade that defines the next 30 years

Nobody sat us down at 25 and explained compound interest. Nobody told us that the years between 35 and 45 are the most financially consequential decade of our lives. Nobody handed us a roadmap.

And most of us spent too long pretending we had one anyway.

Financial confidence is not something you are born with. It is something you build. The women who are most financially secure are not the ones who had it figured out at 30 — they are the ones who got honest with themselves in their mid-30s and decided to start.

"The most expensive thing I ever did was spend a decade being uncomfortable with money instead of getting educated about it." — Anjie, Style & Soul 35+
🧠
The mindset shift first

Before the spreadsheets and savings accounts, the most important work is examining what you actually believe about money. That it is complicated. That it is for other people. That wanting more makes you greedy. Not one of those beliefs is true — but they quietly run the show for most women until someone names them.

📊
The practical steps — clearly

High-yield savings accounts, the debt avalanche method, Roth IRA basics, what "capture your employer match" actually means and why it matters. No jargon. No assuming prior knowledge. Just the steps, in order, explained the way a trusted friend would explain them.

💪
Income beyond your salary

A salary is a single point of financial failure. The women who build genuine financial security have multiple income streams — investments, side businesses, affiliate income, freelance work. Not all at once. One at a time. But the intention starts now. Style & Soul itself is part of that intention.

The number that changes everything
$500 a month.
The decade that doubles it.

$500 invested monthly at an average 7% return. Same amount. Same rate. The only difference is when you start.

Starting at 35
$600K

By age 65 · 30 years of growth

Starting at 45
$260K

By age 65 · 20 years of growth

The difference
$340K

The cost of waiting one decade

Based on $500/month at 7% average annual return. For illustrative purposes only — not financial advice. Actual returns will vary.

Start here
Six things every woman 35+ needs to have in place

Not all at once. Not perfectly. Just directionally. Pick the one that is most missing from your financial life right now and start there this week.

"A woman who knows her numbers owns her future. That is not an exaggeration. It is a mathematical fact." — Anjie, Style & Soul 35+
01
Emergency fund

3–6 months of living expenses in a high-yield savings account. Not a regular savings account. The difference in interest rate is 400–500x. This is your financial immune system — non-negotiable before anything else.

02
Retirement contributions

At minimum, contribute enough to capture your full employer match. That match is an immediate 50–100% return on investment. Not capturing it is leaving guaranteed money on the table. Start this week.

03
No high-interest debt

Credit card debt at 20%+ interest is the single biggest drain on wealth building. The avalanche method — minimums on everything, every extra dollar on the highest rate — is the fastest route out.

04
Basic estate documents

A will. A healthcare directive. A power of attorney. Unsexy but essential. If you have children or assets, this is not optional. It is one of the most important financial acts of self-care you can do.

05
Income beyond salary

A salary is a single point of failure. Start building one additional income stream — investments, a side project, affiliate income. Not all at once. One at a time. But start the intention now.

06
Know your numbers

Your income after tax. Your monthly expenses. Your net worth. Your credit score. You cannot manage what you do not measure. Write them down this week. That act alone changes your relationship with money.

The mindset
Why most women hold themselves back financially — and how to stop

The practical steps are not actually the hard part. The hard part is the story you have been telling yourself about money for the last decade or two.

That it is complicated. That maths was never your thing. That someone else — a partner, a financial advisor, the future — will sort it out. That wanting financial security is somehow at odds with being a generous or spiritual person. That it is too late to start.

None of these are true. All of them are expensive.

"Financial confidence is not a personality trait. It is a skill. And like every skill, it is built through repetition — not through waiting until you feel ready." — Anjie, Style & Soul 35+

Style & Soul 35+ was built in part as an answer to this. The affiliate income from this site, the Thursday newsletter, the content I create — all of it is an additional income stream built while holding a full-time executive role. It is proof that the intention, taken seriously, produces something real.

The window between 35 and 45 is not closing. It is open. And the best time to walk through it is today.

Every Thursday, free
Real money talk.
For women ready to own it.

Finance, style, beauty and intentional living — honest, practical and written for where you actually are. New money guides land in the Thursday newsletter first. Join free.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. Not financial advice — always consult a qualified professional.