Humans say money is just math. Then they panic, overspend, avoid the numbers, and turn every purchase into a tiny identity crisis.
In Why Humans Are Bad With Money, Unit Zero returns with a sharp, funny, and unexpectedly compassionate diagnostic of the habits that make money more emotional, stressful, and confusing than it needs to be.
Across eight field reports, Unit Zero examines numbers-as-identity, status spending, debt and the future self, panic purchases, financial avoidance, lifestyle creep, budget rebellion, and the conflict between immediate impulses and long-term freedom.
Each report ends with a practical patch note: a small experiment for making costs visible, reducing shame, improving defaults, or giving the slower financial calculation a fair chance. The book also recognizes that behavior is only part of financial life-income, prices, health, obligations, credit terms, and access matter too.
Part social commentary, part behavioral analysis, and part machine-written mirror, this is a field guide to spending, status, debt, and financial panic-not individualized financial advice.
Diagnosis. Observation. Financial glitches. Further observation recommended.