There is an adorable MasterCard commercial about three little boys about six years old on their first day of  the new school year. The little boys greet each other in  the school hall and together do the “robot dance” to their class to the music of “We Want The Funk”. The commercial ends with the statement “Being with people who understand you-priceless”.

The valuable lesson of this commercial is people need to be with people who understand them and do not judge them. This is especially true for women who have endured domestic violence.  I have blogged repeatedly about the fact that women who leave abusive relationships do not have a network of people readily available who understand what they have been through.

This is where The Business of Me helps. The Business of Me takes a disparate group of women who come together at a domestic violence shelter who in all probability have never met until they arrived there. They come from different socio-economic backgrounds, different ethnic backgrounds, and have had different life experiences. But they have one thing in common; their need to get out and stay out of an abusive relationship.

The program teaches the financial literacy skills they need which are as important in life as knowing how to use a knife and fork.

The then the program guides the women to focus on their futures and to be continually seeking new opportunities for themselves. The program provides a support mechanism to help them develop goals and the means to accomplish them.  The program provides the framework for the women to support each other on into the future. 

These women understand each other and together help one another to stay out of the relationship. This bonding experience is the beginning of their network of people who understand them - and yes, it's priceless.