I’ve recently started reading (the audiobook version) Suze Orman’s Women & Money book. You can expect I will expound upon what I learn as well as my vast opinions in the coming weeks. Most recently I wrote the post “Don’t Put Yourself on Sale” over at my Coaching4Lesbians blog. In it I talk about the key ways Suze says women devalue themselves by putting living their lives on the sale rack:

  • Not negotiating for a better salary
  • Reducing our rates for customers that say they can’t afford the products/services we offer as business owners
  • Bartering even when we would prefer the cash and/or don’t want the service we are bartering for (or worse yet, bartering in unequal shares ” hour for hour even if our hourly rates are different)
  • Giving our products or services away because potential customers balk at the price or say they can’t afford what we offer
  • Not asking for a raise when we deserve one
  • Volunteering our time and expertise when we can’t really afford to be doing so (volunteering itself can be great and rewarding, but if we do so at a detriment to ourselves financially or otherwise, it is not helping anyone!)

I thought this was a great way to frame how we as women often devalue ourselves financially. That got me to thinking – how else do we put ourselves on sale even if it isn’t directly tied to money? How often do we put our personal well-being, self-worth, and value on sale? What impact does this have?

As I thought of this I instantly thought of ways women, especially lesbians, often put themselves on sale.

  • Not being honest or authentic about who we really are.
  • Hurting ourselves and our relationships when we deny that they exist by dancing around the question or making up stories to avoid coming out. Even the little subtle dishonesty by ommission counts and I know more than one relationship that has gone south because the partner feels disrespected or not valued because her other half doesn’t acknowledge that she exists.
  • Saying “yes” when we mean “no” to obligations, offers, careers, volunteer requests…you name it
  • Overbooking our schedules to within an inch of our sanity
  • Ignoring our intuition
  • Disregarding our true feelings and what our body and spirit really want to tell us
  • Beating ourselves up with negative self-talk or other self-abusive behaviors (overindulging, addictions, unhealthy lifestyles, etc.)
  • Staying in careers or relationships that don’t serve us
  • Not speaking up when we have something to say

I’m sure there are other ways but these are just the ones that pop off the top of my head. When we behave in this way we are telling ourselves, others, and the world that we don’t deserve more. We say “it’s ok, I’ll settle for a little less” or “I don’t want to make waves so, I’ll hide in the corner on the sale rack”.

While these examples may not have a direct, quantifiable financial impact like the examples Suze states in her book, I believe they have a huge impact on life quality and even on our financial health since our relationship with money, is after all, a relationship built on our own personal opinion of ourselves.

Where in your life have you been putting yourself on sale? What is one thing you can stop or start doing right now to start appreciating your own value?