People who are "bad with money" usually don't lack the basic math skills. They lack a system for tracking their expenses. They lack awareness of their spending triggers. And they lack the confidence to say no to unnecessary spending.
As soon as you give them a solid budgeting process and the confidence to stick to it, their financial situation often improves significantly.
I've heard many developers say they're "bad with accessibility." Like it was some natural talent you're born with.
But it's rarely about that and more about not having a solid process, a general lack of awareness and low confidence that makes them second-guess themselves.
Having a solid process translates to working with checklists, using the right tools and making accessibility part of the definition of done.
The general lack of awareness comes from not understanding how people with disabilities use the web and not being exposed to how they navigate with assistive technologies or what common accessibility barriers look like.
And low confidence comes from "getting it wrong" or "not knowing enough." This creates a self-fulfilling prophecy where lack of practice leads to continued discomfort with accessibility.
No one is "naturally good" at accessibility. It's rarely a lack of skill and usually a lack of process, awareness and confidence.