Financial Feminist - 148. Your Parents Aren't Always Right
Episode Date: April 4, 2024In this episode of the podcast, Tori examines the common misconception that parents always know best when it comes to financial advice and life decisions. Drawing from personal experiences and listene...r anecdotes, Tori challenges the notion that parental guidance is infallible. This candid discussion explores the impact of outdated advice and societal expectations on individuals' financial and personal journeys. Read transcripts, learn more about our guests and sponsors, and get more resources at https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-show-notes/148-your-parents-arent-always-right/. Not sure where to start on your financial journey? Take our FREE money personality quiz! https://herfirst100k.com/quiz Leave Financial Feminist a voicemail: https://www.speakpipe.com/financialfeminist Mentioned in this episode: Renting vs. Buying: What’s Right for Me? Job-hopping to Increase Your Income with Cinneah El-Amin How to Win the Financial Game: Money Coaching with Tiffany Aliche Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello, financial feminists.
Welcome to the show. I am so excited to see you. If you're
an oldie, but a goodie, welcome back. And if you're new here, hi, my name is Tori.
I run her first 100K, which is a money and career platform for women. I believe I was
put on this earth to fight for your financial rights. Our work's been featured in the New
York Times, Good Morning America, The Today Show, CNN, CNBC, a bunch of others. I'm a
New York Times bestselling author of a book also called Financial Feminist. And we help you save money, pay off debt, start investing, feel financially confident,
all while talking about how money affects women differently and how we can fight the
patriarchy doing it. A reminder, a little housekeeping before we get into it. You can
like subscribe the show. You can click the plus or the subscribe button wherever you're listening
right now. I always joke that this podcast is expensive for us to produce, but free for you to listen. And the best thing you can
do to support the show is by subscribing, which is making sure that you don't miss
an episode and just clicking that button right there. So we appreciate it. You can also follow
Financial Feminist on Instagram at Financial Feminist Podcast. And you can also send us
a voicemail. We have our SpeakPipe voicemail box down below in the description. You can
send in a question, comment, concern
about what's going on in your life. And we would love to potentially answer it on an
upcoming episode. What's going on in my life before we get into the episode? Dune 2. It's
perfection. This is probably going to come out much later than maybe when it's in theaters.
Let's hope it's still in theaters. First of all, if you have not seen Dune 1, you're going
to need to see it. My partner went with me to Dune
Two and he was a little confused and he kept turning to me and being like, you didn't tell
me about this part. And I was like, one, because I didn't remember and also two, this is new.
I didn't know this. So it's a perfection. It's a perfect movie. And yes, I'm biased
because Timothy Shalime is in it. It's incredible. People are saying this is like our generation's
Lord of the Rings or like Empire Strikes Back. And it's true. It's in it. It's incredible. People are saying this is like our generation's Lord
of the Rings or like Empire Strikes Back. And it's true. It's fucking incredible. It's
a great movie. It's visually stunning. It's really well acted. We're probably going to
get a third one. The critics love it. It's fantastic. I went to see it twice in theaters.
I highly recommend seeing it in IMAX. This is one of those movies. And I know that it
sounds pretentious anytime somebody says this, but like, do not watch Dune II on a streaming platform in four months. Like, it
deserves a big screen. Denny Villeneuve, who's the director, the writer, the purdu- like, his work
is so cinematic, it needs the biggest screen you can get. So go watch it in a theater,
go watch it in an IMAX if you can. And yeah, it's just fantastic. Rebecca
Ferguson, if you've never seen an interview that she's done, please look
her up. She is mommy. She's incredible. She's the Riz just drips off of
Rebecca Ferguson. So go see Dune 2. Nobody's paying me to say this, except
my future marriage to Timothee Chalamet. Like, just just go see this movie.
It's fantastic. I'm obsessed with it.
I can't stop talking about it.
My poor team has heard me say like Dune II 25 billion times, but it's it's the best.
It's the best movie. It was so good.
I'm obsessed with it. Listening to the audiobook now, 10 out of 10 would recommend.
OK, today we started talking about the topic of this episode,
Kristen and I, a couple weeks
ago. And it was kind of prompted by this, actually a LinkedIn post that I did, but based
on a Glennon Doyle quote, Queen Glennon Doyle, who wrote, untamed is married to Abby Wambach
as is just incredible. One of my favorite people producing work. It's this great quote
that says, stop asking directions of the people who are not where you want to be. I'm just
going to say that again and let it sink in a little bit. Stop asking directions of the
people who are not where you want to be. And I posted this on LinkedIn and it got Kristin
and I talking about all of the times in our lives and in our money
that we take advice from people who might be well-intentioned and who might love us
a lot, but are not giving us advice for a life that we actually want to live. Or are
not giving us advice because they've been there, done that, but just are giving you
advice because they feel like it's the right thing to do.
I see this so often, especially with people who want to be entrepreneurs or want to be business owners,
is they take advice from people who have never been entrepreneurs or even are not the kind of entrepreneur they want to be.
But for some reason, we take that as gospel. And I think that it is one of the
most damaging things we do without even realizing it, because especially as women, we've been
made to doubt ourselves, and we've been made to seek validation from any source that will
give us validation. And often when we seek advice and seek validation, what we end up
getting is a different opinion
about how we should live our life that has nothing to do with how you actually want to
live your life.
So there's this societal pressure from our family and specifically our parents often
to do what they think is best or to follow their generational rules.
This is the way it's always been done, or this is the way I did it, or this is what keeps you safe.
I'll talk about this in a second with my own parents, but their number one job as a parent, right, is to keep their child safe.
So if you're asking advice or getting advice, sometimes you don't ask for it, sometimes
you just get it.
If you're getting advice from a well-meaning person, especially a family member and especially
a parent, they're not there often thinking about what is the best career move for you?
What is the best financial move for you?
Even if it is a little risky, they're thinking, how do I keep her safe?
How do I make sure that she is safe and stable and avoids risk at all costs? And I think
that there is this cultural difference as well between generations and between how a
lot of us approach different decisions in our
lives.
So, I'll give you a couple examples from my own life and my own parents where my parents
weren't always right, even though they were well-meaning and they loved me and they wanted
me to make the right choice.
Really, they wanted me to make a certain choice that preserved my safety or that was down a certain path
or along a line of certain expectations. And we've talked about some of these on the show
before. The first one is that my parents told me that renting was throwing away money and
I should buy a house. And that was not the right decision for me. That was not the right
decision for me. We will link the episode down in the description
where we talk about why this wasn't the right decision
for me in greater detail.
And why not buying a house was one of the best
financial decisions I've ever made.
But if I would have gotten caught up in this narrative
that my parents and I think many other people
of a certain generation believe is that like,
renting is throwing away
money. It's throwing money down the drain. You're not doing anything. You don't get anything
with that money. So you should buy a house the moment you can. That's not always the
case. And for me, I was going to have to buy a house that was away from my friends. That
was an hour and a half away from my work, because that was the only house I could afford when I was 22, 23. So that's one of those where, you know, I was listening to my parents
literally up until the day before I closed on the house. I just remember it was such a whirlwind at
that time. I remember like looking at condominiums, because again, that was the only thing I could
afford. And just thinking like, I don't even know if I like this place. But I, I, they clearly want me to like it.
So I guess I'll like it. Like that was the people pleasing was just so, so obvious. It
was just like, I don't even feel like I have sat down and actually figured out if this
is something I want, but they're telling me it's a good thing. So I guess I should do it.
We actually just had a call in on the show in our episode where we did like coaching
with Tiffany Aliche. And it was kind of like my coworker told me that I need to buy land
because that's smart. And I don't even, it was very clear, like she didn't even know
if she wanted this land, but it was just like, quote unquote, the smart financial thing to do.
And it was like, this is the classic version of that, which is like, sometimes the thing
that I'm putting in the biggest air quotes possible is the right financial thing to do.
Sometimes isn't first of all, but second, well, it doesn't take into account, like,
do you actually want this?
Do you yourself actually want to do this?
And just because it's financially smart doesn't mean it's emotionally smart, right?
Again, I was going to be removed from the city.
I was going to not get to hang out with my friends.
I was going to be living an hour outside of Seattle.
That would have probably severely impacted my mental health and my social life because
I just wouldn't
have seen anybody.
And I think it would have severely impacted my ability to grow a business because I wasn't
in a thriving city with networking events and I wouldn't have met certain people that
were integral to me growing a business.
So I think it's just this moment where you realize that like sometimes the right financial
choice is not necessarily the choice that's right for you
at this current moment in your life.
And your well-meaning parents, well-meaning coworkers,
well-meaning uncle, well-meaning whoever
is just trying to perpetuate something
that they were told or that they believe.
And it's just not always right.
The other big example from my life,
my parents told me that I should keep my job no matter what,
even when my business was thriving.
This was late 2019, I literally had saved my 100K at 25,
the business had momentum.
Again, we've talked about this in the show before,
but there was this moment where it was very clear
that it was time for me to leave my job.
It had gotten pretty toxic.
They didn't like that my business was succeeding and it was so obvious that it was time to
go.
But it just felt so risky.
And it felt risky in part because I called my parents, who I'm so thankful always chose
the stable option because it meant that I had a very stable upbringing. but I don't have dependents. I don't have children. It was the perfect
time for me to see if this business could have legs and run on its own. But I called
my parents and they told me, you need to do everything you possibly can to keep your job.
And it's really risky to go out on your own. Where's your health insurance going to come
from and you don't have a stable paycheck and what's going to happen?
And again, we've mentioned this before, but I had money in the bank. I had a business
that had momentum. I had just been gone good morning America. It was making money. I was
doing just fine. All of the ducks were in a row. It was time for me to make a go at
this. And I remember just this pressure of thinking like, this is what
my parents want me to do. This is what they think is right. I do value their opinion.
And also like, I need to do what's right for me. And I think, I just remember feeling this
almost like taste in my mouth that was just gross of like, no, I don't need to keep my
job no matter what. I don't need to stay in a situation
that doesn't like me or respect me or see my value, just to like tough it out. Now,
sometimes we have to do that if we're not financially able, right? I'm not saying go
off and quit your job immediately. At the moment, things might be a little terrible,
right? We have to pay our rent. We have to be practical. But this is why financial freedom
is so important. This is why I talk about it. It's like, I want you to have the ability to get out of a situation that you don't want to be in anymore or doesn't respect you anymore or doesn't value you anymore because you have the money to do so.
And I had the money to do so. I was ready to go. And again, well-meaning parents who wanted to keep me safe wanted me to choose the stable option. I understand why, but I call them all the time now and jokingly tell them like,
hey, if I would have taken your advice, my life would be very, very different. So that was a
classic moment of like my parents, your parents aren't always right, because they're not inside
of your body. They're not inside of your experience. What they want for you might
be different than what you want for you.
So those are some of the examples in my own life, but we talked to our community and talked,
Kristin and I kind of polled our team at her first 100K as well to talk about some of the
financial advice that out of date that your parents or your like well-meaning adults might
give you.
So a couple of these examples that might spark something in you.
The first one is that $1,000 emergency fund that that's all you need for emergencies that
$1,000 is enough before you pay off your debt or proceed to pay enough debt.
This comes directly from Dave Ramsey. We know this. $1,000 is an incredible accomplishment,
but it's not enough. It's not enough to actually keep you afloat. We at Her First Hundred K
talk about a three month of living expenses for your emergency fund, and that needs to
live in a high yield savings account. So that's one of those that we hear all of the time
is that $1,000 emergency fund. Another one we hear is that credit cards
are bad and you should never use them. This can be perpetuated from a family that didn't have a good
relationship with credit cards, which is totally normal. I talk about this more in my book of like
this financial trauma that is passed down from generation to generation. Yeah, never using my
credit card, just keeping my debit card because credit cards are bad. You've probably been told this at some point in your life and you
maybe are still just using your debit card. On the flip side, it might be opening a credit card,
but no one's ever taught you how to use it. Like, yes, it's important for you to build credit,
but like we're not going to teach you actually how to manage one responsibly. Again, your parents
aren't always right. We believe in credit cards here at Her First
100K. We believe in smart management of credit cards, of using the perks and benefits of
credit cards to boost your credit score and to also get you free shits while paying your
bills on time and in full.
This was one straight out of my playbook, but buying a home, right? The importance of
buying a home and getting that as soon as possible. We know now that it's just not the same. Homes are a lot more expensive now
than they used to be. People are much more transient, I think. They don't want to be
in one place for as long. Home ownership, because it's so expensive in and of itself,
is a privilege. Now, if you want to buy a home and other people are also telling you,
buy a home, great. That's fantastic. I am getting that itch a little bit in my own life. I'm an infamous millionaire who rents. We've talked about this
before, but I will say like, I am starting to get the itch of buying a house. If that's something
you actually want to do and can afford to do it and it makes sense for you, great. I think for
a lot of people, you're just told that buying a home is smart, renting is throwing away money,
and that's just not necessarily true.
This is another common one that I hear all of the time is that combining your finances
with a partner is 100% the right choice 100% of the time. No, please no, please no, no,
no, no. Again, said this before, I will say it again a million more times. If you are
financially coupling with somebody, you should never completely combine your finances
for many reasons.
And you need to sign a prenup.
If you get married, fun fact, you've actually signed a prenup.
It's the prenup dictated to you by the state.
And I don't know about you, I don't often like what the government has in store for me,
or has in mind for me. And every person
who gets married actually does have a prenup already. It's dictated by what the state laws
say. So if you want to make sure that you and your partner are making that decision
together, you actually need to create your own prenup. We'll do probably a whole specific
episode about this, but the word prenup just gets such a bad rep. Preenups are associated
with,
you know, gold diggers and one person has a shit ton of money and the other person's
just trying to get it from them. Or if you sign a prenup, it means that you think your
marriage is doomed. None of that is true. Again, anybody who's getting married, you
actually do have a prenup. You have a prenup already. It's through your state. It's through
the state laws. That's dictating what happens to your money should you separate. I want
you to make sure that you're dictating and your partner is dictating
what happens to your money should you separate.
The aversion of stability that's perpetuated where your parents aren't always right is
it's like, get a government job and get a pension or some version of this, right? Become
a teacher because teachers are always something that's needed, which probably is true. But like there is just this narrative of like,
get the good stable job, get a pension, which I don't even, do pensions exist anymore? Get
the thing that is stable and consistent. And that's how you go about it. Because again,
your parents, your family, they're just trying to keep you safe. If this is something you
actually want to do, great.
Again, this whole thing,
if any of these are things you want to do, fantastic.
But I think there is just this like narrative
over and over of like, this is how it's done.
This is the American dream is you get a good job
and you work for 35 years and you buy a house
in the suburbs with the white picket fence
and you live in it for 30 years and that's your life.
If that sounds great to you, I'm gonna to be honest, part of that really does sound
nice. I love stability, then great. And the other part of me is like, no, that sounds
awful. That's not a choice. That's just like what, what the box I'm supposed to live in,
not physically, but you know, the metaphorical box you're trying to trap me in. So that's
one that's just perpetuated.
One that we pulled that one of our team members said, I think this is generational
is that you should tip 10% or even like 15% like good service means 10%.
Like, sorry, no, we're at 20%.
This is a whole other conversation about how basically society and the system has dictated like tipping culture in the US is insane and that people don't get paid often unless they
get tipped is nuts.
But that's where we're at right now.
And while we work to change it, leave a good fucking tip for people.
Don't be disrespectful.
Don't tip 10%.
That's not a thing.
In the line with like buying a house, you can buy a house for less than 20% down.
But I think a common misconception, especially from your parents or from other people in
your life is that you need 20% down on a mortgage.
Not necessarily.
If you are a veteran, there's options for
you. If you're a first time home buyer, there's options for you. And almost everybody potentially
can qualify for what's called PMI, which is private mortgage insurance. And it's the way
of purchasing a house even if you don't have that 20% down. So that's a misconception as
well. There's other just like traditional thoughts of like, you need to go to college
in order to get a good career.
I went to college, I'm very happy I did, but I also graduated without student loans.
And I imagine I would definitely feel differently about college if I walked out with $50,000
or $100,000 in student debt.
I think there are of course some careers where if you want to do that, you got to go to college. And I think we're just now starting to understand that the idea of
college is so fucking nuts and cue the John Mulaney. I wish I, well, I'll just quote the
whole thing because I just said, I wish we could splice it in, but we'll have copyright
issues or that's what I was going to say. But then I'm like, I can just do the whole
thing. I'm not going to, but I'm thinking about it. Anyway, the John Mulaney bit from his, was it Kid Gorgeous? Is it Kid Gorgeous? Yes. Kid Gorgeous,
where he talks about how expensive college is and how we should stop going until we figure out what
it is and how he paid $120,000 to get an English degree and how that he signed on a dotted line
when he was 17 in sweatpants and how that was fucking insane.
And yeah, he literally says, stop going till we figure out what it is.
I paid $120,000 for someone to tell me to read Jane Austen and then I didn't.
That's my Mulaney. It's not fantastic, but it is what it is. I mean, I kind of agree. It's fucking bonkers that we ask a literal minor to commit to getting a
degree in four years when most people don't know what they want to do with
their lives and it's so goddamn expensive.
And like, I graduated college in 2016 and I think before any sort of scholarships, before anything, which you know,
almost 100% of students at my university qualified for, just the sticker price of
tuition with room and board was like $52,000. That's fucking bananas. Now it's like 60, 65.
I'm seeing colleges where like the full in sticker price is $70,000 a year.
And then we went through the whole pandemic.
Now I'm on a rant.
We went through the whole pandemic where people went to virtual class and they
paid the same amount as they would for in-person, like that's fucking insane.
So this isn't me saying don't go to college, but it is a larger, again, issue
of like policy where college should not be this expensive.
It just should not be this expensive.
You do have to start thinking about, wow, is it actually a good financial move for me
to go to college?
Because yes, in theory, you're going to get a higher paying job, but one, that's not guaranteed.
And two, it's a financial trade off for most people because you're taking on a massive
amount of student debt
to do it.
So I just want people to start thinking more about like,
is this actually a good decision for me?
Does this actually make sense?
Or is it just, again,
what my well-meaning parents are telling me to do,
or because society's telling me I have to go to college.
You might not have to go to college.
And again, college is so fucking expensive.
And the last one is like
staying at one job for years and years and years and years or a version of this, which is like not
being a job hopper. My parents, again, every time I quit a job, they're like, you haven't been there
for that long. Are you really sure you should quit? And I'm like, yeah, because I'm about to
get $20,000 more. Like, yeah, we talked with our friends, Sonia over at finance before about this, we'll link the episode down in the
description. But the importance of job hopping in a job market
like this, if you feel like you're not being treated fairly,
if you've done some market research, and you're not getting
promoted, and you're not getting, you know, yearly
increases, it's probably time to start looking. And my, I mean, my dad, he's in a job now,
his previous job he was in for 13 years. My uncle, my dad's brother was in the same job.
I'm not kidding from graduation all the way to retirement. He was at the same company
that entire time. He did not leave. Like that's, that's not a thing anymore. Like that he was
happy he I think he was treated well. That's why he stayed. But Like that's, that's not a thing anymore. Like that he was happy. He,
I think he was treated well. That's why he stayed. But like to me, that seems absolutely
insane. You don't have to stay in a same job for years and years and years. Loyalty does
not pay. That's not a thing. Especially for women, we get caught in this trap where it's
like, they'll notice us. We'll do good work. I'll do good work and I'll show up on time
and eventually they'll notice me. No, they won't. I'll do good work and I'll show up on time and eventually they'll notice me.
No, they won't.
That's a myth.
That's a lie to keep you in a underpaid overworked position.
You don't need to stay in the same job for your entire career.
Job hopping is not a bad thing.
There's a lot of new research out there that shows that job hopping every couple years,
again, if you don't feel like you're being compensated well, if you're not loving your position, at least just looking, looking at
what's out there. So I think that that's one really, really important thing to keep in
mind is, yeah, I think it's again, a generational thing is job hopping was so frowned upon,
and it looks like you, you know, couldn't keep a job or couldn't be consistent. And
like, that's just not a thing anymore. It's more standard now every couple of years to potentially look at what's out
there. We would love to hear, especially if you're on Spotify, any other,
your parents aren't always right things. And I just want to say,
like I started this episode,
stop asking people for advice if they've never been where you want to go.
If you want to be an entrepreneur, ask other entrepreneurs for their advice.
The advice from people who have not done it is not going to be as good as the advice from people who have.
Like that sounds obvious, but I think we just seek so much validation.
We seek so much approval from people who have never lived the kind of life we want to live.
And if you want to go out and like live in a van
and travel around and do that, and that sounds great to you,
a lot of people in your life that will not compute with them, that will not
compute in their brain, and so they're going to tell you not to
do it. Have they ever tried it? Probably not.
Your life is different than somebody else's life,
and you also need to seek advice and perspective on certain things from people who have actually done those things
If I was going to Italy I
Wanted to go to Italy. I'm not asking where should I go?
Where should I eat? What museum should I visit from someone who's never been there?
Right. That's the metaphor here for all of our life and our advice. Stop asking,
where should I eat pasta in Italy from people who have never been to Italy? Cool. Thank you,
financial feminists. I would love to hear other examples, maybe where you've seen this in your
own life or even maybe stories like leave us voicemails. We would love to compile some versions
of I took this advice from someone who was well-meaning, but it didn't align with me. And here's what happened. I
think those are really, really important for the rest of our community to hear as well.
We just appreciate you being here as always. We appreciate your perspective. If this episode
connected with you, feel free to like, subscribe, share it. We really appreciate your support.
And yeah, go to Italy, eat some pasta and then tell people where to go. Okay. Thanks for being here. Have a good big fight.
Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist, a Her First 100K podcast. Financial Feminist
is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap, produced by Kristen Fields, associate producer, Tamesha
Grant, researched by Ariel Johnson,
Audio and Video Engineering by Alyssa Medcalf,
Marketing and Operations by Karina Patel,
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Promotional Graphics by Mary Stratton,
Photography by Sarah Wolf,
and Theme Music by Jonah Cohen Sound. A huge thanks to the entire Her First 100K team and Janelle Reisner, promotional graphics by Mary Stratton, photography by Sarah Wolf,
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A huge thanks to the entire Her First 100k team and community for supporting this show.
For more information about Financial Feminist, Her First 100k, our guests, and episode show notes,
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