The Life You’re Creating — Part 3
April 23, 2026

Designing Your Next Chapter

A practical, reflective guide to shaping the life you want — with clarity, intention, and emotional honesty


Every chapter of your life has its own rhythm, its own lessons, its own energy. Some chapters are about survival. Some are about rebuilding. Some are about growth. Some are about rest. And some are about stepping into a new version of yourself with intention.


Designing your next chapter isn’t about creating a rigid plan. It’s about choosing a direction that feels aligned with who you are and who you’re becoming.


This blog is an invitation to design your next chapter with clarity, compassion, and purpose.

 

Start With What’s Working and What Isn’t

Before you look forward, take a moment to look inward.

Ask yourself:

  • What feels good in my life right now?
  • What feels heavy or draining?
  • What do I want more of?
  • What do I want less of?


These questions aren’t about judgment. They’re about awareness.


Your next chapter doesn’t need to be a reinvention. Sometimes it’s simply a refinement.


Direction Matters More Than Goals


Goals can be helpful, but they can also feel rigid or overwhelming. Direction, on the other hand, is flexible. It allows you to move with your life instead of against it.


Direction sounds like:

  • I want more peace
  • I want more alignment
  • I want more time for myself
  • I want to feel more grounded
  • I want to trust myself more
  • I want to spend in a way that reflects my values


When you choose a direction, your decisions naturally begin to shift.

 

Designing a Chapter That Matches Your Energy


Your next chapter should support your real life — your energy, your responsibilities, your emotional capacity, your financial reality.


Ask yourself:

  • What pace feels right for me
  • What boundaries do I need
  • What habits support the life I want
  • What financial choices align with my values
  • What would make my daily life feel more spacious


Designing your next chapter is less about doing more and more about choosing well.

 

How FinFit Supports Your Next Chapter


Your next chapter deserves clarity — both emotional and financial. FinFit is here to help you create that clarity in a grounded, compassionate way.


Through the tools I build, the resources you can return to anytime, and the one‑on‑one conversations we share, FinFit offers a supportive space to design a chapter that feels aligned with your values, your energy, and your future self.


You’re not just planning. You’re creating a life that feels like yours. And I’m right here with you as you do.


Sources & Further Reading

  • Designing Your Life — https://designingyour.life
  • Positive Psychology — https://positivepsychology.com
  • The Financial Diet — https://thefinancialdiet.com
  • MindTools — https://www.mindtools.com
By Tina Stroman-Valdez April 16, 2026
#TheLifeYoureCreating #IntentionalLiving #AlignedLife #BecomingYou #LifeDesign #FinFitFam
By Tina Stroman-Valdez April 9, 2026
#TheLifeYoureCreating #IntentionalLiving #AlignedLife #BecomingYou #LifeDesign #FinFitFam
By Tina Stroman-Valdez April 2, 2026
A lighthearted pause between deeper conversations Before we move forward with new content, I wanted to pause for something a little lighter. We’ve spent time exploring spending habits, emotions, and self‑trust — all meaningful work — but money also has a funny, very human side that we don’t always talk about. We all have little quirks, rituals, and habits around money that are oddly universal. The kind of things we rarely admit out loud but instantly recognize in each other. And sometimes the best way to ease the pressure around money is simply to laugh at the things we all do. So consider this a small breather — a playful moment before we step into whatever comes next. 1. The “Add to Cart and Abandon” Ritual You know the one. You fill your cart with things you’re convinced will change your life — the perfect water bottle, a book you swear you’ll read, a candle that promises “calm.” Then you close the tab like nothing happened. It’s retail therapy without the retail. A little dopamine hit with no consequences. Honestly, it’s kind of brilliant. 2. The Bank‑App Peek Through Squinted Eyes As if looking at your balance straight on might make it worse. We all do this. It’s the financial equivalent of watching a scary movie through your fingers. And somehow, squinting makes it feel safer. 3. The “I’ll Start Fresh on Monday” Budget There’s something magical about Monday. It’s the day we become new people. Until Wednesday. Then we become next‑Monday people. 4. The Subscription You Forgot About (But Keep Meaning to Cancel) It’s always something random. A meditation app you opened once. A streaming service you swear you’ll use “after this busy season.” A free trial that was not, in fact, free. We all have at least one. 5. The Notebook That Will Fix Your Entire Life Every year, a new planner or notebook appears in your home. This one will be different. This one will make you organized, intentional, and unstoppable. It won’t. But it will be very pretty. 6. The “Treat Yourself” That Doesn’t Actually Feel Like a Treat Sometimes it’s perfect. Sometimes it’s a soggy sandwich you bought because you were tired and stressed. We’ve all been there. 7. The Refund That Feels Like Winning the Lottery Twelve dollars back from a return. A surprise credit. A random reimbursement. Pure joy. Unmatched energy. You feel financially invincible for at least an hour. Why This Matters (Even in a Playful Post) These quirks aren’t flaws. They’re reminders that money is human. It’s emotional. It’s messy. It’s funny. And noticing these patterns with humor makes money feel less intimidating and far more approachable. It softens the edges. It reminds us that we’re all figuring things out as we go, and that progress doesn’t require perfection — just awareness, compassion, and a willingness to keep showing up. I’ve done several of these things myself over the years, and I probably will again. Being able to laugh at them makes the whole experience of money feel lighter and a lot less stressful. It’s one of the reasons I created FinFit in the first place — to offer a space where money doesn’t have to feel heavy or shameful. A space where you can learn, grow, and build confidence without pressure. Nothing rigid. Nothing judgmental. Just support, clarity, and a little humanity along the way. A small pause. A shared smile. And then, when you’re ready, you keep going. A Few Fun, Light Resources These aren’t heavy financial guides — just enjoyable, relatable places to explore money, habits, and being human. The Financial Diet — relatable money stories https://thefinancialdiet.com NerdWallet’s “Money Questions” column — surprisingly funny at times https://www.nerdwallet.com BuzzFeed‑style “Money Diaries” content — light, voyeuristic fun Search “BuzzFeed money diaries” r/Adulting on Reddit — chaotic, honest, and very human https://www.reddit.com/r/Adulting The Minimalists Podcast — episodes where they poke fun at our stuff habits https://www.theminimalists.com/podcast These aren’t meant to teach you everything. They’re meant to remind you that you’re not alone in your quirks — and that sometimes, the best financial skill is the ability to laugh.