Non classé Test psycho

Are you more of a cicada or ant?

Written by Laure G.



Like the fable of the Fountain "the cicada and the ant", our attitude towards money speaks volumes about our personality. Depending on whether we are spendthrift (cicada) or thrifty (ants) the place of money in our lives is different and our relationship to it is complicated.

What category do you fall into? Are you more like a cicada or an ant? To help us, a small quiz will guide us to determine your behavior.

  • Do you know how much money you have in your bag and bank account?
  • Are you able to say how much you spend each week?
  • Do you follow your accounts on a regular basis?
  • When shopping, do you prefer the cheapest foods?
  • Can you save money every month?

The affirmative answer to these questions actually makes you an ant. Negative responses will inevitably categorize you as cicadas. Nevertheless, the majority of us are a mixture of these characteristics. The way we spend is often unrelated to our income and some of us are really at the end of our lives and that is a problem.

Are you an ant?

Indeed, you seem to manage your money well and life should be more comfortable and enjoyable.

It's just important that you stay in reasonable saving and not in the obsession with your savings so that you can still enjoy life and have fun regularly.

Are you a cicada?

Yes, you are undeniably a spender! See are not alone… Many people know that it is much easier to spend rather than save money earned. However, it would be desirable to manage to save in order to deal with the unforeseen events that may present themselves to you.

It is not a question of being here in a value judgment, but of trying to change and improve our financial management. The role of money is to express our desires, our emotions and our way of understanding life.

It should no longer be considered taboo but a source of development.

How to improve your relationship with money

Visualize: what is the place of our education in our relationship to money?

  • Getting to know each other: money for our personal development.
  • Knowing how to assert yourself: money to support one's personality.
  • Knowing how to organize: money factor of well-being .
  • A good relationship to money is the real luxury.

 

About the author

Laure G.

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