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Renewing Your Mind

How the thinking we inherit shapes the money decisions we make.
By Leslie Wallace · JoMar Business Solutions · June 5, 2026

Many of us inherit more than eye color, family traditions, or recipes.

We inherit ways of thinking.

Without realizing it, we often adopt beliefs about money, success, opportunity, risk, and even our own worth long before we’re old enough to evaluate whether those beliefs are true.

Some of those beliefs help us. Some quietly hold us back.

The lessons we never knew we were learning

As children, we absorb messages from the people around us. Sometimes those messages sound like:

Often these statements were not spoken out of malice. Many were spoken from experience. Some were spoken from fear. Others were spoken from survival.

The people who taught us may have been doing the best they could with what they knew. But inherited thinking can continue influencing decisions long after the circumstances that created it have passed.

Survival thinking has a purpose

Many families developed habits that helped them survive difficult seasons.

When money was scarce, caution made sense. When opportunities were limited, avoiding risk seemed wise. When uncertainty was common, playing small felt safer than failing publicly.

The problem occurs when survival thinking becomes permanent thinking.

What protected us during one season may limit us in another.

Why we make the same mistakes repeatedly

Many financial challenges are not simply knowledge problems. They’re thinking problems.

A person can learn:

Yet still struggle to apply what they know. Why? Because behavior often follows belief.

If someone believes “I’ll never get ahead anyway,” their decisions will often reinforce that belief.

If someone believes “people like me don’t succeed,” they may unconsciously avoid opportunities that could change their situation.

Transformation begins with awareness

Before we can change our habits, we often need to examine our assumptions. Questions worth asking include:

Awareness is often the first step toward transformation.

Renewing your mind

Scripture encourages us not to be conformed to old patterns but to be transformed through the renewing of our minds.

Renewal is not pretending problems don’t exist. Renewal is learning to see situations differently.

It is replacing assumptions with understanding. Fear with wisdom. Reaction with intention.

Renewal allows us to move from inherited thinking toward intentional thinking.

What renewal looks like financially

Renewing your mind may mean replacing:

Small changes in thinking often produce significant changes in behavior over time.

The real goal

The goal is not simply to earn more money. The goal is not simply to improve a credit score.

The goal is to develop healthier ways of thinking that support better decisions.

Because every financial choice begins with a thought long before it becomes an action.

Final thought

Many of the limitations we experience today were never intentionally chosen. They were inherited. Passed from one generation to another. Accepted without question.

But inherited thinking does not have to become permanent thinking.

Renewing your mind is the process of examining what you’ve been taught, keeping what is true, and releasing what no longer serves your future.

Transformation often begins long before your circumstances change. It begins when your thinking changes.

Continue learning

In Clarity Command Life™, we explore:

Your future is not determined by the thinking you inherited. It is shaped by the thinking you choose to develop.

From inherited thinking to intentional thinking

The Clarity Command Life™ track examines the beliefs behind financial behavior — identity, family patterns, and the move from survival to strategy — so your decisions are shaped by intention rather than inheritance.

Explore the Life Track

See all available classes — Clarity Command™ Classes →

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