A Year-End Pause: What Work and Money Taught Us This Year

As the year ends, what did work and money really teach us about living well?
Philippine money
Written by
Melody Samaniego
Published on
December 31, 2025
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Table of Contents

As the year winds down, many Filipinos find themselves tired—but thoughtful.

Work deadlines slow, calendars fill with reunions, and somewhere between holiday traffic and late-night budgeting, a quiet question surfaces: Was this year worth the effort?

For many, the answer is complicated. Work demanded more. Money felt tighter. And yet, lessons emerged—about balance, resilience, and what “smart living” really means.

Rethinking Success Beyond Hustle

For years, productivity culture told us that more hours meant more success. But research in occupational psychology suggests otherwise. Studies published in The Journal of Occupational Health Psychology show that chronic overwork is linked to burnout, poorer decision-making, and declining mental health—without corresponding gains in performance.

Filipino workers know this intuitively. Long commutes, side hustles, and caregiving responsibilities often collide. The past year reminded many that rest is not laziness—it is strategy.

Financial Wellness Is Emotional, Too

Money stress consistently ranks as one of the top sources of anxiety worldwide. Research in Behavioral Economics shows that financial strain reduces cognitive bandwidth, making everyday decisions harder.

Financial wellness, then, is not just about income. It is about:

  • Predictability
  • A sense of control
  • Having buffers, not just goals

Small habits—tracking expenses, building emergency funds slowly, avoiding lifestyle inflation—create psychological safety. For many families, progress this year came not from earning more, but from spending more intentionally.

READ: A New Season of Joyful Wellness Begins

Entrepreneurship: The Year of Trying (and Learning)

The Philippines has seen a surge in small businesses and freelance work. While entrepreneurship is often romanticized, studies in Small Business Economics highlight that early ventures are marked by uncertainty—and growth through failure.

Many Filipinos learned this year that entrepreneurship is less about instant freedom and more about adaptability. Skills developed—problem-solving, customer empathy, financial discipline—often matter more than immediate profit.

Work-Life Balance Isn’t Equal Time

Work-life balance does not mean perfect division. It means alignment.

Research in Applied Psychology suggests that people feel more satisfied when their work reflects personal values—even if hours are uneven. A meaningful project, flexible schedule, or supportive workplace often offsets long days.

The year taught many that balance is seasonal, not static.

A Year-End Reflection for Smart Living

As the year closes, Joyful Wellness invites readers to ask:

  • What drained me?
  • What sustained me?
  • What can I carry forward more gently?

Smart living is not about optimization. It is about awareness—knowing when to push, and when to pause.

As the year ends, what did work and money really teach us about living well?

Photo by Dylann Hendricks | 딜란 on Unsplash

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