Subscribe
Sign in
Home
Podcast
Classes
Bookshop
Budget Free Basics
YDNAB book
About
Latest
Top
Discussions
Money date No. 31: A season of navel gazing
Plus, gratitude for my public library, why the good chicken is worth the price and a sneak peak at my new creative project!
Aug 28
•
Dana Miranda
12
1
How gerrymandering in Texas impacts your personal finances
And why California is right to strike back
Aug 26
•
Dana Miranda
28
1
3 common money myths that harm your financial well being
How to spot misleading financial advice and overcome our culture’s bad approach to money
Aug 19
•
Dana Miranda
49
7
Money date No. 30: A break from the hustle
A visitor in town, accounting nerdery and experiencing, dare I say, peace?
Aug 14
•
Dana Miranda
8
How to use ‘anti-budgeting’ to automate money management and spend without worry
4 experts weigh in on their alternative methods to ditch your budget and use money with joy
Aug 12
•
Dana Miranda
44
5
EoR No. 25: What’s the most joyful way you’ve used money this summer?
Plus, LGBTQ+ retirement, the history of tipping, buying clothes with debt and more
Aug 7
•
Dana Miranda
24
25
How I vet online financial advice as a financial educator
Questions I ask as a journalist, educator, activist and person dealing with money to decide when a financial move is right for me.
Aug 5
•
Dana Miranda
28
4
July 2025
Let’s normalize talking about our credit histories
Learning about our experiences helps reduce stigma and understand our financial situations
Jul 29
•
Dana Miranda
26
2
A happier way to manage money: Saying ‘yes’ to you
Organize your money to create a yes fund that lets you spend freely without planning, restricting or tracking every dollar
Jul 24
•
Dana Miranda
38
11
6 months later, my new relationship with Amazon
How this year’s trending shopping boycotts have changed (and not changed) my relationship to consumption
Jul 22
•
Dana Miranda
78
12
Money date No. 29: Doing what I love through collective burnout
We’ve got to take care of ourselves — not just get by.
Jul 17
•
Dana Miranda
19
8
Why we’re going — and staying — in debt for quality child care
How one family uses debt for a sense of safety for their child
Jul 15
•
Amy Medina
48
12
This site requires JavaScript to run correctly. Please
turn on JavaScript
or unblock scripts