Meaning starts with hope, and hope begins with action. Many of the challenges we face today, such as financial stress, burnout, and indecision, don’t just come from a lack of time or money. They can very often stem from something deeper: a subtle loss of meaning.
We don’t intend to lose meaning in what we’re doing and who we are; life simply happens, and if we’re not aware, our meaning evaporates.
And meaning doesn’t magically appear. It begins with hope.
As Viktor Frankl once wrote, “Those who have a ‘why’ to live can bear with almost any how.” His work reminds us that when we lose sight of the future, we start drifting in the present. And that’s when even the best plans fall flat.
That’s why we’re not just here to crunch the numbers. We’re here to help you reconnect with what matters, and move toward it with confidence.
Hope is not wishful thinking
There’s a common misunderstanding that hope means blind optimism. That it’s about pretending everything will work out. But true hope isn’t about certainty, it’s about direction.
Hope is active. It’s grounded in goals, driven by belief, and sustained by a sense of possibility.
Psychologist Charles Snyder breaks it down into three parts:
- Goals – A clear sense of where you’re heading
- Agency – The belief that you can take meaningful action
- Pathways – Multiple routes that help you get there
It’s a simple framework, but it’s incredibly powerful, especially when life feels overwhelming or uncertain.
So what does this have to do with financial planning?
Everything.
When a client says, “I just want to feel more in control,” or “I don’t know what’s next for us,” they’re not asking for a new spreadsheet. They’re asking for a new sense of direction.
And sometimes the best thing we can do is pause and ask:
- “What would give you more hope right now?”
- “What’s one small step I could take this month?”
- “What goal would make the effort feel worth it again?”
You don’t need to figure everything out at once. But taking one small action, backed by purpose, is often what breaks the cycle of stuckness.
As author Rebecca Solnit says: “To hope is to give yourself to the future, and that commitment to the future is what makes the present inhabitable.”
Financial planning is a vehicle for that kind of hope. Not a guarantee, but a guide. Not a promise, but a path. And when the path feels meaningful, we find the strength to walk it.