“It’s only $10. It doesn’t really matter.”
That thought shows up more often than we realise. A coffee here, something convenient on the way home, a quick online purchase after a long day.
Each one feels small, manageable, and easy to justify in the moment.
The problem is not the $10 itself. It is the pattern those small decisions create over time.
REPETITION
Spend $10 a day and you are looking at $70 a week, which becomes $3640 over a year.
Extend that across a number of years and the numbers start to become meaningful. Add in multiple categories where this happens and the impact compounds even further.
Most people are not held back by one big financial mistake. They are shaped by hundreds of seemingly small, repeated behaviours that feel irrelevant in isolation but powerful when they are added together.
This is where concepts from the book Atomic Habits by James Clear becomes relevant.
Your financial life is not driven by occasional decisions. It is driven by habits that run in the background, often without much conscious thought.
YOUR HABITS DRIVE DECISIONS
Many of your spending choices are not active decisions. They are responses to routines, triggers, and emotions.
You finish work and feel tired, so you opt for convenience. You catch up with friends and spend a little more than planned. You have a tough day and reward yourself with something small.
These behaviours feel normal because they are familiar. Over time, they become automatic.
Once something becomes automatic, it no longer feels like a choice. It feels like part of your day.
This is where a real shift can commence. Not by trying to control every dollar, but by becoming aware of the patterns that are already in place.
HIDDEN COSTS
One obvious impact is simply the money that has been spent. Another more powerful layer is what that money could have been doing for you when given a clear task to perform.
That same $10 could be building an emergency buffer, reducing debt, or contributing to future plans.
It could be creating a sense of progress and control rather than maintaining a cycle that keeps you feeling stuck.
Financial confidence is rarely built through big, one-off decisions. It grows instead through consistent actions that reinforce a sense of forward movement.
When small amounts are redirected with intention, they begin to work in your favour. Over time, that shift builds real momentum.
Every small financial decision is a signal. It reflects what matters in the moment and what is being prioritised over the longer term.


