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[F] Why Your Brain Sabotages Your Money [GREATEST HITS]

13 snips
Dec 22, 2025
Dr. Daniel Crosby, a clinical psychologist and behavioral finance expert, discusses how our brains often sabotage our financial decisions. He reveals that physiological states like hunger and needing to urinate can drastically alter risk assessments and investment choices. Crosby highlights four behavioral risks that can derail wealth: ego, conservatism, attention, and emotion, while emphasizing that awareness and community support are key to improving financial well-being. He urges listeners to take actionable steps to better manage their money and reduce stress.
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ANECDOTE

Hunger And Bladder Affect Judgment

  • A study found judges' rulings varied with when they last ate, linking hunger to harsher sentences.
  • Another quirky study showed people who had to pee became more risk-averse due to inhibitory spillover.
INSIGHT

Evolution Opposes Long-Term Investing

  • Evolution wired humans for immediacy, alarm, and action, which conflicts with patient long-term investing.
  • Our survival wiring makes long-term market patience difficult without guardrails like automation or advisors.
INSIGHT

Laziness Drives Heuristics And Herding

  • The brain is metabolically expensive, so we favor cognitive shortcuts and mimicry to save energy.
  • Those shortcuts create herd behavior, but they can be exploited positively via automation and default systems.
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