Your Inner Work | Why Women With Money Still Feel Stuck | Anu Rames, Lexington MA
Your Inner Work

You know
what to do.
You're not
doing it.

Sunday morning. Accounts open. Everything looks fine.

Nothing is moving.

The 401(k) sits. The cash stays "temporary."
The inherited account waits.

You say: not a top priority. Money is fine.

You are NOT confused. You are NOT uninformed.

Something else is stopping you.
And it has nothing to do with the market.

Find out what's stopping you → Take the Investor Identity Quiz. 5 minutes.
02
Who This
Is For

This is for you
if this feels familiar.

Recognize this

You have money sitting still.

  • You earn well, but avoid putting capital to work
  • You've said "I'll start soon" more times than you can count
  • You feel a quiet tension when decisions involve risk

The gap between knowing and acting has a name.

The pattern

This is not a knowledge problem.

  • You know what to do
  • You're not doing it
  • Something else is in the way

That something has a name too.

Not for everyone

This is not for someone starting from zero.

  • Not for someone looking for tips
  • Not for someone who wants to be told what to do

This is for a woman who already has money — and still feels stuck.

What changes

You start to see the pattern clearly.

  • The moment you hesitate — and why
  • The story that shows up when risk enters
  • The loop that keeps repeating

And from there, you move differently.

03
The Work
Before
the portfolio.

What actually
happens here.

This is not financial advice.

This is the part that happens before action.

You begin to notice what you usually move past:

01

The hesitation moment The instant before you make a decision — what happens in you, right there.

02

The story in the room What narrative shows up the moment risk enters the conversation.

03

The repeating pattern The loop that keeps coming back — even when you can see it clearly.

You understand the resistance.

And from there, you start to move differently.

You've handled
harder things
than this.

The gap just needs a name — and someone
who won't talk past you.

Schedule a conversation with Anu →