CBC's 'The Current' recently interviewed three separate financial experts. They discussed how childhood financial traumas can lead to challenging behaviours for adults.

The full article and podcast can be read or listened to here: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/thecurrent/struggling-to-kick-a-bad-financial-habit-it-could-all-stem-from-childhood-experts-say-1.7423841

The three contributors are all amazing ladies who have done great work to elevate awareness of how money impacts human behaviour and vice versa.

Jessica Moorhouse has a new book out, has a cool podcast (419 episodes!), an active YouTube channel, and is a regular in Canadian media.

Megan McCoy may not be known to many Canadians, but she should be. She is a well-respected prof at Kansas State University, one of the few schools offering a PhD in financial planning. Megan's list of publications includes co-authorship with every major thinker in the field of financial planning. She is leading the way in developing the profession of financial planning.

A short excerpt from Prof McCoy's list of publications

I clicked on the headline fully expecting to see this third person show up, and it was no surprise to see FP Collective contributor Natasha Knox interviewed for this piece. I recently posted two articles here that drew heavily on a case study on which Natasha was a co-author.

An excerpt from the CBC article

If you're looking at the future of financial planning, following these 3 would be a great start. We've got a finfluencer, an academic, and a practitioner, all coming at this question from a different angle. Despite their different backgrounds, they have arrived at similar ideas. Maybe it's my own confirmation bias, but I think this speaks to the concept that good ideas are spreading in the right places.