Here's How I Change When I'm in Love — Test
Words, touch, gifts, time, or acts of service? Find out how you actually love — and how you need to be loved back. Take it with your partner and compare results.
Mood Spending Era — What Kind of Emotional Spender Am I?

Rational 55%, Emotional 45% — Your wallet literally reads the room. Good day? One more item on the order. Bad day? Comfort spend loading. 'I worked so hard today' just became your natural checkout trigger. You're not fully riding the emotional wave — there's a line somewhere — but that line shifts depending on the vibe. Check your card statement from last month. You can basically see your emotional timeline in there.
Great day with your partner? Fancy restaurant. Fight day? Solo delivery for emotional processing. Your wallet follows your feelings in the relationship, and on the good days, the generosity comes naturally. Once you recognize this pattern, you can actually use it — fewer impulse purchases after conflict, more intentional treats when things are good.
End of a tough project, something gets bought. 'After everything I went through' is a perfectly valid checkout justification for you. The good news: it usually stays as a single purchase. The stress doesn't snowball into a shopping spiral — you get your reward, you're done. Your daily spending stays manageable even during the tough months.
You can look at your card statement and tag entries as 'bought this on a bad day' or 'bought this when things were good.' That level of self-knowledge is actually your biggest financial asset. Set a dedicated emotional spending budget and suddenly spending with your feelings becomes a strategy, not a habit you're fighting.
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