Lights. Camera. Build a life that survives money pressure.
The spotlight is on your choices: real costs, economic pressure, needs, wants, assets, liabilities, saving, investing, debt, family expectations, and impulse spending.
The week in one sentence
Prices tell you what life costs. Economic indicators tell you what is changing. Personal finance tells you how to make better decisions anyway.
Real costs
Cars, rent, furniture, phones, moving, gas, weddings, funerals, and bills can turn a paycheck into pressure.
Economic clues
Gas, inflation, interest rates, unemployment, layoffs, and the stock market help explain why families change their moves.
Money decisions
Needs before wants. Assets over liabilities. Save before panic. Invest with patience. Debt with caution.
Tap a clue to remember the strategy
Big money can disappear when decisions move faster than wisdom.
Impulsive spending means making unplanned purchases without thinking through the consequences. Today, we connect that idea to athletes, family pressure, taxes, wants, needs, and budgeting.
Video 1: Joe Haden on NFL money, family, taxes, and responsibility
Open the Joe Haden video on YouTubeVideo 2: OBJ and Cam Newton on the headline contract vs the real budget
Open the OBJ and Cam Newton video on YouTubeHeadline money vs real money
Change the numbers. Watch how taxes, family support, houses, cars, and annual lifestyle spending can shrink the headline.
Wants are not evil. They just cannot outrank needs.
Choose Need or Want for each item. The active team earns points for strong money judgment.
Build from survival to future.
Your money decisions climb a ladder. If the bottom is weak, the top gets shaky.
Choose the strongest first move
Scenario: You just got paid $1,200. You have no emergency fund, need groceries, have a phone bill due, and want new shoes for the weekend.
Your ladder
What do you have? What do you owe?
An asset has value or helps produce value. A liability is an obligation, debt, or responsibility that can pull money, time, or energy.
Ain't this a university?
Fast questions from the week. Pick the active team, answer, reveal, and keep moving.
Choose a topic. Speak your mind.
This board is for honest reactions, takeaways, disagreements, questions, and stories. Keep it respectful and useful.
Choose a topic above to get a discussion prompt.
Powerful statements worth remembering
Use these as pause moments. Let students pick the gem that hit hardest, then explain why.
Add a gem from the room
The $25,000 Life Decision
You are 22. You received $25,000. You want to move out, help family, travel, buy things you want, invest, and stay ready for the economy. What kind of plan survives?
Choose a plan
Shock reveal
After a team picks a plan, reveal a shock. The team must explain how their plan responds.
