Growing up in a working-class household outside Manchester, I remember the exact moment I understood what “stretching money” really meant.
I was about twelve, watching my dad carefully count out coins at the kitchen table, dividing them into small piles for different bills. The gas bill pile was short that month. He looked at me and said, “We’ll make it work. We always do.”
And we did. My father, who spent his days in a factory and his evenings at union meetings, taught me something crucial that night. Financial stability isn’t just about how much you earn. It’s about the habits you build along the way.
I’ve spent years observing people who, like me, started with very little but managed to build solid financial foundations. Through conversations, interviews, and my own journey from that kitchen table to running my own business, I’ve noticed patterns that might surprise you.
These aren’t the typical “skip your morning coffee” tips. They’re deeper, often counterintuitive habits that transformed how people think about and handle money.
1. They became obsessed with learning, not earning
Here’s something that caught me off guard when I first noticed it: financially stable people who grew up poor often prioritize knowledge over immediate income, especially in their twenties and thirties.
I saw this with a friend who grew up in social housing. Instead of chasing the highest-paying job after university, she took a lower-paid position at a company known for its training programs. She spent evenings reading industry publications and weekends at free seminars.
Five years later, she was earning triple what her peers who’d gone for the quick money were making.
This reminds me of something I read in Cal Newport’s “So Good They Can’t Ignore You.” He argues that passion follows mastery, not the other way around. The financially stable people I know embodied this principle before they even knew it existed.
They understood something fundamental: skills compound faster than savings accounts.
2. They practiced selective frugality
You’d expect people who grew up with little money to be universally frugal once they achieve stability, right?
Not quite.
What I’ve observed is more nuanced. They’re incredibly frugal in some areas and surprisingly generous in others. They might drive a ten-year-old car but invest heavily in courses or coaching. They’ll buy generic groceries but won’t hesitate to spend on quality tools for their work.
When I started my business, I applied this principle almost instinctively. I worked from my kitchen table for two years but paid for premium software that made me more efficient. I packed lunches but never skimped on books that could teach me something valuable.
This selective approach prevents the scarcity mindset from taking over while still maintaining financial discipline.
3. They built their confidence before their bank account
This might be the most unexpected habit of all.
People who successfully transitioned from poverty to stability often spent years working on their self-worth before their net worth reflected it. They knew that without believing they deserved financial security, they’d sabotage themselves when opportunities arose.
In my case, running a solo business forced me to confront every weakness I had, including a deep-seated belief that financial struggle was somehow noble. That belief came from generations of working-class pride, and while there’s nothing wrong with honest work, I had to separate my identity from financial limitation.
Many people I’ve interviewed described similar internal work. They joined public speaking clubs, took on leadership roles in community organizations, or simply practiced stating their worth in mirrors before salary negotiations.
4. They became students of systems, not just hard work
Growing up, I believed hard work conquered everything. My dad’s factory shifts and union involvement taught me the value of effort. But financially stable people understand something more sophisticated: systems matter more than sweat.
They study how money actually works. How compound interest functions. How tax systems operate. How businesses create value. They read books on economics not because they want to become economists, but because they want to understand the game they’re playing.
When I traveled through different countries with various economic systems, I noticed how much of my assumptions about money were just that, assumptions. The people who escaped financial instability questioned these assumptions constantly.
5. They normalized talking about money
People who’ve built stability do something radical: they talk about money like they talk about the weather.
They ask colleagues about salary ranges. They discuss investment strategies with friends. They share their failures and successes openly. This transparency strips money of its mysterious, shameful power.
Starting these conversations felt deeply uncomfortable at first. But each discussion taught me something new and reduced the anxiety that surrounded financial topics.
6. They developed multiple income streams before they needed them
Here’s what fascinated me: people who achieved stability didn’t wait for crisis to diversify their income. They started side projects while fully employed, not from desperation but from prudence.
A former colleague who grew up on benefits started selling items online while working full-time in marketing. Not because she needed the extra twenty pounds a week, but because she wanted to understand e-commerce. That knowledge eventually led to her launching a successful consultancy.
This isn’t about hustling yourself to exhaustion. It’s about creating options before you need them.
7. They chose growth over comfort, repeatedly
Would you leave a stable job to take a riskier position with more learning potential?
That’s a tricky question, isn’t it? But people who built lasting financial stability often did exactly that, multiple times. They chose discomfort that led to growth over comfort that led to stagnation.
When I started taking fitness seriously in my mid-thirties, after years of sedentary stress, I realized this principle applied everywhere.
The temporary discomfort of change led to long-term benefits. The same mindset that got me running despite initially hating every step also pushed me to take calculated professional risks.
8. They gave before they felt ready
This last habit seems paradoxical. People who grew up without money but achieved stability often started giving before they felt financially secure.
Small amounts. Five pounds to a food bank. Buying coffee for a struggling colleague. Mentoring someone for free. These acts weren’t about the money itself but about shifting from a scarcity mindset to an abundance mindset.
I remember the first time I donated to charity after establishing my business. It was a modest amount, but the psychological shift was profound. I went from someone who needed help to someone who could provide it.
The bottom line
These habits aren’t quick fixes or life hacks. They’re fundamental shifts in how we relate to money, work, and ourselves.
What strikes me most is how these habits address the psychological barriers that keep people trapped in financial instability, not just the practical ones. They’re about rewiring beliefs inherited from childhoods where money was always tight and opportunities seemed limited.
If you recognize yourself in any of this, know that change doesn’t happen overnight. I’m still working on several of these habits myself. But awareness is the first step.
The journey from financial insecurity to stability isn’t just about numbers in a bank account. It’s about transforming how we think, what we believe we deserve, and how we show up in the world.
What matters isn’t where you started. It’s the habits you’re building today.












