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Other People's Pockets

Other People's Pockets

By: Maya Lau
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Other People’s Pockets from journalist Maya Lau is a show featuring intimate interviews with real people about their personal finances.


How much money do you make, and how do you make it?

How do you feel about your money?

How did you actually get that raise?

That house?

That life?


It’s the show for financially-motivated people who want to go beyond Personal Finance 101: they want to hear the nuanced, messy, lived experiences of people making money decisions and building wealth.


Contact us: otherpeoplespockets@gmail.com

Maya Lau
Career Success Economics Personal Finance Relationships Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Housing & Healthcare: Money Talk With My Husband
    Jun 16 2026

    Today I’m bringing you mini episode — a conversation my husband and I recently had about some aspects of our finances.

    I love knowing about how couples talk about money, or about how any two people navigate their spending together. Because at the end of the day, finance is not something we manage in a vacuum — it’s almost always an exchange and a representation of a relationship of some kind.

    Find all of Maya's socials at: mayalau.com

    Send guest ideas, questions, or suggestions to: otherpeoplespockets@gmail.com



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    22 mins
  • Maya is Secretly Sporty (in a dance way!)
    Jun 4 2026

    Today I’m bringing you a look into a side of my life that is exercise and dance.

    This episode is actually not about personal finance … there is more of that coming very soon.

    Instead, I’m featuring an episode from the podcast Secretly Sporty, where they interviewed me about why I dance and how that informs my life.

    Secretly Sporty is a new podcast hosted by writer and academic Sebastian Langdell about the way that exercise can inform our creative output, even if our workouts don’t necessarily have anything to do with our work.

    Last year, Sebastian wrote an op-ed in the New York Times called “A Medievalist Hits the Gym,” which was about what weightlifting has to do with medieval literature. I encourage you to go check out that article to see how he threaded that needle. The article served as a spark for Secretly Sporty, where he’s interviewed cartoonist Alison Bechdel, NYT columnist Jamelle Bouie, comedian Chris Duffy and many others about their workout routines and how they impact the life of the mind.

    I’m by no means a professional dancer, never have been, never been close to that (!) It’s just something I like to do in my spare time. So it was really fun to be asked about it, because it’s just something I *do* — not something that I *think* about that much. So thank you, Sebastian, for having me on!

    Go listen and subscribe to Secretly Sporty wherever you get podcasts.

    And! I have been working on a stealth side project having to do with the intersection of DANCE and FINANCE. If that at all piques your interest, what DANCE has to do with FINANCE, whether you’re a dancer, or a financier or both, please write to me at otherpeoplespockets@gmail.com or slide into my DM's on Instagram @itsmayamoney, or find me on LinkedIn. However you want to reach me, I would love to talk.



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    31 mins
  • Jessica Slice on the Finances of Being Disabled
    May 14 2026

    Today we're featuring Jessica Slice, a disabled author, speaker and essayist. Her book, “Unfit Parent: A Disabled Mother Challenges an Inaccessible World,” is an amazing look at how her experience in her body — which more often than not needs to be in a reclining position — has been an unexpected asset in her ability to parent & connect with her children. She also writes about the challenges it brings and the very diverse experiences of other disabled people in their lives as parents.

    Jessica has one of the more drastic and interesting financial and life transformations of any guest on OPP. Growing up, she was able-bodied, and then one day at age 28 she went on a hike that left her so exhausted she could barely function. That incident triggered a series of symptoms that would later reveal a disability, which she’ll explain more in this episode. Her disability requires her to do most of her work in her adjustable bed, and largely prevents her from walking very much, or from traveling. This killed her former career as a highly-compensated real estate agent and forever altered the trajectory of her work prospects.

    She talked to me about how expensive it is to be disabled, how she forged an alternate career path and she gave some advice about how to get into the lucrative racket of paid speaking gigs.


    If you haven't already, please fill out the OTHER PEOPLE'S POCKETS LISTENER SURVEY! It really helps us grow the show.


    Email me (Maya) with guest ideas, questions, or hello's at otherpeoplespockets@gmail.com. Find links to my socials here.


    Find Jessica:

    jessicaslice.com

    Instagram

    Substack



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    57 mins
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