“Most academics don’t actually have a money problem. they either have a system problem, a behavioral problem, or a burnout problem.”

In this episode of Academics and Their Money, Inga Timmerman and Neeka Miremadi break down a curated set of personal finance ideas designed specifically for academics who are financially stable but still feel like something is missing. Rather than focusing on earning more or optimizing investments, the conversation centers on how money behavior, psychology, and life design shape financial well being.

They introduce a three part framework for thinking about money: building simple systems that reduce friction, learning how to actually use money in alignment with personal values, and preparing intentionally for retirement or major life transitions.

The first section explores how automation and simplicity outperform constant financial optimization. The core takeaway is that most people benefit more from “good enough” systems than from complex, manually managed financial setups. Automating savings, investing, and bills reduces cognitive load and helps ensure consistency over perfection.

The second section shifts into spending and value alignment. The conversation challenges the idea of endless saving and highlights the importance of using money to reduce stress, increase freedom, and build meaningful experiences while you are able to enjoy them. It also emphasizes that spending should reflect personal values, not social comparison or inherited habits.

The final section focuses on retirement and identity. Retirement is reframed as a lifestyle transition rather than a financial milestone, with emphasis on what life looks like after work ends. The discussion also explores how subconscious beliefs about money, often formed early in life, shape long term financial behavior and can either support or limit financial wellbeing.

They close by reinforcing that financial success is not just about accumulating wealth, but about having a system, understanding your behavior, and intentionally spending on what actually matters while maintaining the energy and clarity to enjoy it.

Books mentioned as part of our framework:

I Will Teach You to Be Rich — Ramit Sethi (with a grain of salt…not an endorsement of the author!)

The Psychology of Money — Morgan Housel

The Art of Spending Money — Morgan Housel

Die With Zero — Bill Perkins

How to Retire — Christine Benz

Mind Over Money — Brad Klontz and Ted Klontz

+ The Money Script Quiz Inga mentioned: https://www.bradklontz.com/moneyscriptstest

“Extra Credit” book:

Unraveling Faculty Burnout — Rebecca Pope-Ruark

+ We also interviewed Rebecca! Here’s the link to her amazing episode: https://attainablewealthfp.com/academia-wont-love-you-back-rebecca-pope-ruark-on-money-burnout-and-balance/