“Making More Money Isn’t Fixing It — Here’s Why”
Let me describe someone you might know.
They work harder than almost anyone around them. They say yes to every opportunity. They’re the first one in and the last one out. And every time their income goes up, within six months, so does their spending, their obligations, their stress level — and somehow, the feeling of not having enough follows them right up the income ladder.
This is the Overearner Trap. And it’s one of the most misunderstood money patterns I see, because from the outside it looks like ambition. From the inside, it feels like running.
Overearning is not a strategy. It’s a coping mechanism. It’s what happens when your system learned that earning more was the way to feel safe — but safe never quite arrived, so the solution was always to earn more. The finish line keeps moving not because you’re lazy or unfocused, but because income was never the actual variable. The pattern was.,
I’ve sat with clients making $30,000 a year and clients making $300,000 a year who had the exact same relationship with money: terrified it wasn’t enough, certain more would fix it, and quietly exhausted from the effort.
The overearner doesn’t need another income stream. They need to interrupt the loop that convinced them the only way to be okay was to produce more.
You cannot outwork a nervous system pattern. You can only interrupt it.
Wednesday’s episode of The Soul’s Truth Podcast™ goes deep into this — Pattern 2 of five money patterns I see running in high-functioning adults who cannot figure out why their relationship with money feels like a part-time job they never signed up for.
Episode 3 drops this Wednesday. Subscribe now so you don’t miss it.
— Adam | The Soul’s Truth™
