Wealth is a state of being.

It goes far beyond subsistence surviving to vibrant, vital living.

What if we had a new vision for wealth?

Are you wealthy? Do you long to be? Whether your gut response was to reject the idea of wealth, ignore it or long for it, it points to a story that you tell yourself everyday about the ways that you are not enough.

I’m Elizabeth Husserl, a change maker and an innovator in the world of finance. I am committed to shifting the rules of engagement on how we accumulate, experience and define wealth. When we do, we reconnect wealth to its roots of wellbeing and purpose and we realize that our relationship to money is just another mirror into knowing ourselves.

My work offers a timely and insightful exploration as industry expert. I am intimately familiar with the framework of the financial world as an investment advisor and as a money coach. It is a guide to help you craft your wealth plan with purpose, vision and goals, even it means diving through psychological upheaval and change. The result – empowerment, advocacy and change.

Join us. Your life will be forever changed.

Embodied Wealth

Despite its reputation as one of our culture’s last remaining taboos, money is not the cause of our ills. Money is a mirror; a neutral object onto which we project our hopes and fears. That makes money one of our greatest assets and a potential teacher. Like all true mentors, money is brutally honest. It sees us at our depths, takes us at our word, and holds us accountable to ourselves. When we acknowledge money’s true purpose, we integrate the truth that we are enough just as we are.

Embodied Wealth is a fresh take on how we envision, experience, and relate with the concept of wealth. The book posits that rather than a thing to possess, accumulate and hold, wealth is a state of being. It is closely connected to a sense of wellbeing that goes far beyond subsistence surviving to vibrant, vital living. This work offers a clear path to deeper visceral levels of joy, fulfillment, and meaning, no matter your financial net worth.

“Our Relationship to Money is a Doorway into Who We Are”

—Elizabeth Husserl