Dear sugar is supported by the universe has good news for the lost, lonely and heartsick sugar is here, the both of us speaking straight into your ears.
I'm Cheryl strayed.
I'm Steve Almond.
This is dear sugar radio.
Oh, dear son, won't you please share some little sweetness with me?
I check my bell vibes every day.
Oh, in the sugar you see in my way.
Hello, Steve.
Hello, Sheryl.
So we are back today we're gonna be talking about money, money, money, which I'm so interested to hear your insights about.
And we have a couple of fascinating letters and a wonderful guest.
But I think about money a lot.
Money is just makes people crazy.
And in their personal lives, their relationship with money is so twisted and pathological, and that's certainly true in my life.
I'm going to drop a little Freud on you.
I'm just going to do it.
I come by it naturally, as I am wont to do.
It is impossible, Sigmund says, to escape the impression that people commonly use false standards of measurement, that they seek power, success and wealth for themselves and admire them in others, and that they underestimate what is of true value in life.
So now I am going to read a letter from somebody who I think is struggling with these very confusions about wealth and what it means to be rich.
Dear sugar, my family is rich.