Welcome to Money Mind Revival

The Money Revival helps people break free from debt and impulse spending that is keeping them trapped!

We help heal the relationship with money through faith-based mindset shifts, AI technology, and proven psychological strategies, so they can finally experience true financial peace and freedom.

Listen friend, take a breath — because what you feel is exactly what so many people quietly carry but never say out loud. And I want you to hear this clearly: you’re not broken, you’re simply burned out from fighting a financial battle without the right emotional armor.

Let’s walk through this with both truth and empathy — the kind that cuts through shame and rebuilds belief.

Our journey began back in 2022 when owner/founder Lindsay Nichole started to build out the Money Mind Revival dream! But it is not without failures or struggle.

Read more about Lindsay’s story below!

“From the outside looking in, it looked like we were doing great as a family. I grew up in an outdoor child's dream in the sense of I had a trampoline, I had a dirt bike, I had the horses, the animals, I got the car at 16, we had an RV for camping, totally had it all.

But what was underneath was far from the truth. Now I don't mean to bash my parents because they were truly amazing, and back then not having easy access to the internet or a cell phone made it easier to escape the dire need to spend gobs of money online, right? And to be fair, it's not even my father's fault as it was really just a lack of financial education.

I mean, look at our schools, they teach us numbers, we learn how to solve math problems, but where are the accounting classes, where are the personal finance classes or how to do your taxes, investing, where is all of that?

Many of us have a rooted psychological belief about money due to what we witnessed growing up. This is a scientific fact, look it up.

What I mean by this, is it took me over 15 years to realize what my true root cause was on why I could not get out of debt, no matter what I did, I kept spiraling. I couldn't figure out as to why I kept impulse spending, why I would black out and max out a credit card and then panic and get depressed because I couldn't pay it off.

Does any of this resonate with you?

A woman with long blonde hair and a subtle smile, wearing a beige top, in warm indoor lighting.

I had to rewind back to the depth of my childhood because remember we had it all, but in reality, that meant maxed out credit cards, loans taking out left and right, debt going so deep that it drove my parents into bankruptcy. Yet as a child, I didn't understand that. I just saw the dirt bike. I just saw the things we received as gifts. I was taught you get a job and you can buy things, whatever you want.

When I was 16, my mom allowed me to get a credit card. I believe the limit was only $250 a month. And she sincerely did this to help me to build credit, learn about money. So this was all out of good intention, but the problem was my underlining money belief. I could just swipe my credit card and occasionally pay $20 here or $50 here towards the credit card. I was constantly maxing it out. And even though I had some embarrassing moments where my card was declined checking out at Panera, I still continued down the spiral.

Fast forward to college and now I had that credit card with a $500 a month limit. And then I also applied for an Ulta credit card because hello, buying makeup at Ulta with just a swipe of a card is super easy. I began to constantly max out my credit cards and making minimum payments.

And let me just make you cringe even further. I moved from Michigan to North Carolina by myself right out of college. I had no clue what I was doing, only $180 to my name and I didn't know a soul. A few months go by and I still had no job, but I had to pay rent, which meant in my mind, to just simply get another credit card. Even when I did get a great job by the good gracious of God, I still failed him by consistently maxing out the cards. It got so bad that I ended up taking out a personal loan to consolidate all of my credit card debt, which can be a very good idea if you stop freaking spending money and focus on paying that loan off. But did I do that? No. Now I had a personal loan and another credit card that I kept using.

Do you see these patterns here?

I tried to do the right thing, but I failed. Because if you are missing even just one piece of this money mind revival wheel, you are prone to fail. It is your relationship with Jesus Christ, your faith and your mindset, that will greatly impact the tone for your finances.

This is exactly why I created Money Mind Revival. This will be the largest financial movement that not only defeats the chains of debt.. but honors our Lord and Savior.”

-Lindsay Nichole; Owner/Founder of Money Mind Revival

Sunset viewed through dark clouds with rays of sunlight streaming through.

Contact us

Interested in working together? Fill out some info and we will be in touch shortly. We can’t wait to hear from you!