Heather King Loaded: Money and the Spirituality of Enough

Published: May 18, 2016, 7:45 p.m.

b'Heather King\\xa0\\u2013 author of\\xa0Parched,\\xa0Redeemed,\\xa0Stripped,\\xa0Stumble,\\xa0Shirt of Flame, and\\xa0Poor Baby\\xa0\\u2013 joins me on\\xa0The Catholic Foodie Show\\xa0today to talk about her latest book\\xa0Loaded: Money and the Spirituality of Enough.\\n\\n\\nWhether rich or poor, most of walk through our days wounded in the area of money and finances. We fear money. We fear not having enough money. We fear what would happen if we had too much money. We fear what people would think of us if they knew how much money we make and what we spend our money on. The way that we see and use money intimately affects the people in our lives.\\n\\n\\nMost books about money are written to help you make more money. But what if more money isn\'t the answer? What if the real source of our fear is our relationship with money? In\\xa0Loaded: Money and the Spirituality of Enough, Heather King shares her own story of recovery around money. In doing so, she opens a door of opportunity for us... an opportunity to examine our own relationship to money and to open that relationship up to healing by our loving God.\\xa0\\n\\n\\n\\n"So, as you\\u2019ve now assuredly figured out, unlike so many money books, mine is not about how to make more and consume more. It\\u2019s about how to detach from the idea that our identity could possibly lie in how much or how little money we make or have. It\\u2019s about discovering that money is a means of love and service. It\\u2019s about learning that the real economy is \\u201cAs you give, so shall you receive.\\u201d We get to follow the deepest desires of our heart. The money will come. And we\\u2019ll want to share it.\\n\\n\\n\\n\\n"That hasn\\u2019t happened for me by praying a whole bunch of rosaries, holing up in my room, and hoping for the best. The solution for me and many people I know has involved clarity around numbers\\u2014how much we spend, how much we earn. It has been clarity around how we spend our time. And it\\u2019s been community\\u2014meaning friends, a realistic acceptance of the fact that we\\u2019re not going to change overnight, and laughs."'