
Local Women Are Quietly Talking About This “Money Mindset” Course That’s Changing the Way They Think About Wealth
In a community where conversations around money are often filled with stress, pressure, and “how are we going to manage,” one Monsey woman is helping hundreds of frum women completely rethink the conversation.
And with the next round beginning tomorrow, women are rushing to sign up.
Chany Rosengarten, founder of The Money Tree, has spent the past seven years helping frum women transform their relationship with money, abundance, self-worth, and opportunity. Known for her warm, relatable approach that resonates deeply within the heimish community, Rosengarten has led more than 50 courses, hosted 26 retreats, and worked with over 3,500 women seeking a healthier, more empowered relationship with money.
And now, the course is opening again.
Video here https://youtube.com/shorts/lZ9XzQhLEOw or https://vimeo.com/1189892107?share=copy&fl=sv&fe=ci
The course, called The Money Tree, is a 12-part guided program designed to help women shift the way they think and feel about money – not through gimmicks or “get rich quick” promises, but through mindset work, emotional clarity, and practical reframing rooted in personal growth and Torah values.
The headline that’s been catching attention?
“Money doesn’t grow on trees. Unless you learn to plant one.”
Participants say the course helped them stop living in constant financial fear and start recognizing opportunities they once ignored.
One testimonial shared by the program describes a woman who wrote down an income number during the course that felt completely unrealistic at the time – only to later discover her husband unexpectedly began receiving that exact amount monthly through a side commission.
Another participant wrote that after taking just the first class, she eventually found herself earning over $10,000 a month – something she previously believed was impossible for her.
The course includes:
12 pre-recorded classes
3 live group sessions
Interactive support
Live Q&A opportunities
One year access to materials
Topics range from rewiring limiting beliefs around money to communicating about finances with a spouse, recognizing opportunities, clarifying personal worth, and learning how to stop operating from scarcity.
Rosengarten says the goal isn’t simply “more money,” but helping women become emotionally and mentally open to receiving abundance in healthier ways.
“We open up to getting more by changing how we think about money,” she writes on the course page. “You become the person money looks for.”
The program has especially resonated with women who feel overwhelmed, unsupported, or stuck financially despite working hard and doing “everything right.”
And unlike traditional financial programs, The Money Tree intentionally avoids shame-based messaging.
“I don’t make you get a better job. I don’t make you do a budget. I don’t tell you that if only you were more spiritual you’d have more money,” Rosengarten explains in the course description.
The current enrollment is priced at $797, with payment plan options available.
Women aren’t only walking away with new financial habits. They’re walking away feeling capable, supported, and open to opportunities they once thought were out of reach.
More information about The Money Tree can be found at: