Why Blindly Trusting Financial Advisors Is Dangerous—And How Financial Literacy Puts You in Control

Helen Novak • May 8, 2026

Author

Helen Novak

Date

May 8, 2026

Share

What Banks, Schools, and Advisors Don’t Teach You About Real Wealth

Most people are passengers in their financial lives. They work, spend, save “a bit,” and hope it will be enough. This week, we’ll explore what you were never taught about money, what it really means to be wealthy, and how to step into the role of CEO of your financial life.


What Banks, Schools and Advisors Don’t Teach You About Money

Schools teach math, but not money. Banks teach products, but not principles. Advisors often teach what their company sells. What’s missing?
• How cash flow really works in a household
• How debt quietly steals your future income
• How taxes, inflation, and fees erode your wealth over time
• How to read a simple personal “profit and loss” statement

Once you start viewing your life like a small business—with income, expenses, assets, and liabilities—money decisions become clearer and less emotional.


From Passenger to Pilot: How to Become CEO of Your Financial Life

Being CEO doesn’t mean doing everything yourself. It means:
• Having a simple written money plan
• Setting clear goals for debt, savings, and investing
• Hiring professionals when needed—but staying in charge

Ask yourself CEO-style questions:
• What are my top three financial priorities for the next 12 months?
• How will I measure progress each month?
• Which decisions am I delegating—and to whom?

When you adopt this mindset, you stop drifting and start steering.


Are You “Rich” or “Truly Wealthy”? The Difference Could Save Your Life

Being “rich” is about what people see—income, car, house. Being wealthy is about what you can’t see—freedom, options, reduced stress, and time. Rich people can feel trapped; truly wealthy people feel more in control.

True wealth includes:
• Enough savings to sleep at night
• Protection for your family if something goes wrong
• A plan to support your health and well-being, not destroy it

Chasing “rich” can lead to overwork, debt, and constant stress. Building “wealthy” means aligning money with health, family, and purpose.

Closing homework for Week 2: write your first one-page “CEO Money Plan”: your current situation, your top three goals, and the next three actions you’ll take. Simple is powerful.

Our Latest ARTICLES

This is the text area for this paragraph. To change it, simply click and start typing.

Most people were never taught how money really works. They’re told to “invest for the long term,” si
By Sterling Dupree May 15, 2026
Most people were never taught how money really works. They’re told to “invest for the long term,” sign whatever their advisor recommends, and hope it all works out. Meanwhile, the financial industry earns steady, predictable fees
By Helen Nowak May 13, 2026
Most people are passengers in their financial lives. They work, spend, save “a bit,” and hope it will be enough. This week, we’ll explore what you were never taught about money
By Sterling Dupree May 11, 2026
Most people are playing the money game with passion, effort, and good intentions—but with the wrong rulebook. From an early age, we’re told to “work hard, save what you can, and trust the experts.”