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Summary of Maria Wendt's I Love Money and Money Loves Me

June 20, 2026 in Personal Development · 5 min read

Maria Wendt built a multi-million dollar business and became a millionaire by 30, and after privately studying manifesting since 2013 she finally made a course about it — largely because her audience kept asking. I Love Money and Money Loves Me is deliberately conversational and anecdotal rather than scientific or homework-heavy; Wendt is upfront that everything she shares is her own experience and opinion, not proven fact, and that you don't even have to believe in manifesting for the ideas to be useful. This summary walks through her whole approach.

The course's tone is set early: no homework, watch it more than once, stay open-minded, and treat the whole thing as playful rather than high-stakes. Wendt also positions herself usefully — she considers herself a master at manifesting money but a complete beginner at manifesting love and a relationship, so she can speak from both the expert and the beginner side at once.

The core framework: three steps

Everything reduces to three steps: get clear on what you want, say what you want, and stop worrying about it. Wendt insists it's simple but not easy, and that the third step — releasing — is the one most people get wrong and the one that quietly blocks everything else.

**Knowing what you want** is framed as the hardest step because it takes courage. You have to separate what you actually want from what you think you should want, and admitting a real desire means facing the possibility of not getting it. The signal that you've landed on the real thing is a "full-body yes" — a desire so strong it's almost physical. Wendt ties this to a belief she's held for over a decade: that the desires placed on your heart are themselves proof you were meant to have them.

**Saying what you want** can take any form — writing, a vision board, speaking it aloud, even typing into ChatGPT — and there's no single correct method. The point is to get the desire out of your head and into a declaration, which takes bravery. She pushes back hard on rigid manifesting "rules" (write it 55 times, do it daily) as limiting and counterproductive, and stresses you should say what you want once, not repeat it obsessively, because repetition signals doubt.

**Stop worrying about it** is detachment, which Wendt treats as the heart of the whole practice. Her favorite framing is the line from Shakti Gawain — "this or something better" — which she's put on every vision board for a decade. Attachment to a specific outcome repels it; genuine openness to that outcome or something better attracts it. She uses the analogy of ordering a pizza: you place the order and get on with your day rather than calling the restaurant every five minutes.

The supporting concepts

Get the complete, organized summary of every framework, concept, and example from I Love Money and Money Loves Me in one document you can read in under an hour and revisit anytime. Maria Wendt's I Love Money and Money Loves Me — Full Summary.

Around the framework sit several ideas. **Calibration** is the in-between state where your internal reality is so ready for something that it feels strange you don't have it yet — your green light. The **aligned action myth**: Wendt argues that forcing "aligned action" is really just control in disguise, and control is the opposite of manifesting (the money or the relationship may show up in a way you'd never have planned). **Creating space** (the Law of Vacuum) means making physical and energetic room for what you want, with becoming fully debt-free as her single most emphasized money move — she paid off ~$113,000 while broke, before the serious money came in.

She also covers receiving (if you can't accept a compliment, you'll struggle to accept wealth), the idea that a skeptic can't attract (so you genuinely celebrate other people's wins as a way of tapping into that frequency), careful language ("when" not "if"), resetting scarcity with a gratitude list, and — above everything — playfulness, which she calls the single most important ingredient. She's candid throughout, including reframing her divorce as the clearest example of "this or something better."

The money-specific teaching and the Paul Santisi audio

The back half of the course centers on a meditation audio by Paul Santisi that Wendt credits with unlocking her first seven-figure year, walking through its core ideas. The big ones: money itself is a low-vibration, man-made thing, so the goal is to pull from love rather than the "dark side." Her secret hidden in plain sight is "love people and use money" — not the reverse — which means creating more value than you ask for in exchange (the reason she gives so much away free). The rules of wanting money: you must genuinely want it (hoping and wishing push it away), pick a number big enough to excite you but small enough to believe, and stay willing to give it all up — full detachment even from the things money buys.

The bottom line

I Love Money and Money Loves Me is a personal, practical take on manifesting wealth, built around one simple framework and a lot of lived experience rather than theory or rules. Its through-line is detachment and playfulness: know what you want, declare it once, and release it — because it's this, or something better.

This summary covers the backbone of the course, but the full experience includes Wendt's vision-board walkthroughs, her detailed commentary on the Paul Santisi audio, and the conversational nuance that's hard to capture in text. If you want every concept and example in one place you can revisit, the full summary document is below.

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