Money as Integrity
Abundance without the hustle spell
Money is not your worth.
But the way you relate to money will expose where you abandon yourself.
Some people chase money like it’s love.
Some people avoid money like it’s danger.
Some people moralize it—calling struggle “virtue” and ease “selfish.”
None of that is sovereignty.
Integrity-based abundance is simpler:
Money becomes clean when it matches truth.
Money follows clarity. It follows self-trust. It follows alignment.
The money spell
Money gets messy when it becomes a substitute for something else:
approval, safety, belonging, control.
That’s the “spell.”
Chasing it like it will finally make you feel enough.
Avoiding it because you associate it with pressure or danger.
Moralizing it because staying small feels “good,” even when it costs you.
But sovereignty doesn’t romanticize struggle.
And it doesn’t demonize ease.
It gets honest.
What integrity-based abundance sounds like
Truth like:
- I am allowed to be compensated for my labor.
- I am allowed to desire more.
- I am allowed to build something beautiful.
- I am allowed to invest in what strengthens me.
- I do not have to prove I’m “good” by staying small.
Abundance is not a vibe.
It’s a relationship.
A relationship with decisions.
With standards.
With what you tolerate.
With what you keep spending your energy on even though it doesn’t pay you—emotionally, financially, spiritually.
The real question
Integrity abundance asks:
Does my life reflect what I say I value?
Because money follows clarity.
It follows self-trust.
It follows alignment between your inner standard and your outer choices.
Not instantly.
Not magically.
But inevitably—when you stop leaking your power.
You don’t need hustle-fluff.
You need a spine, a rhythm, and clean choices.
Read next: Discipline as Devotion
Also: Sovereignty + Boundaries