Financial Feminist - 155. Overcoming Cultural and Generational Money Stories with Jannese Torres
Episode Date: May 7, 2024Feeling stuck and unsure how to break free financially? This episode is your wake-up call. Join host Tori Dunlap for an inspiring conversation with repeat guest, Jannese Torres, award-winning Latina... Money Expert and author of the bestselling book "Financially Lit." Jannese became an accidental entrepreneur after a job loss led her to create a successful Latin food blog, Delish D’Lites. Now, she helps her clients and listeners build successful online businesses that allow them to pursue financial independence and freedom. In this episode, you'll hear Jannese's powerful insights on: Why financial security is the key to unlocking your true potential How to ditch the limiting beliefs holding you back The art of negotiation & why you deserve to be fairly compensated How to reframe your mindset for financial abundance The power you have to change your community through financial literacy Jannese is on a mission to educate marginalized communities on topics like entrepreneurship, investing, and financial independence. She's here to debunk the myth that wealth is reserved for a lucky few and show you exactly how to become "financially lit."  Read transcripts, learn more about our guests and sponsors, and get more resources at https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-show-notes/155-overcoming-cultural-and-generational-money-stories-with-jannese-torres/. Not sure where to start on your financial journey? Take our FREE money personality quiz! https://herfirst100k.com/quiz. Jannese’s podcast: Yo Quiero Dinero Jannese’s book: Financially Lit! The Modern Latina’s Guide to Level Up Your Dinero & Become Financially Poderosa Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I always go back to this mantra, if you will, where I get very metaphysical with it, but
it's pretty much like your ancestors survived so that you could thrive.
Okay?
So we're not doing basic shit anymore.
We're beyond that.
We were talking about Book of Mormon before this.
I'm trying to figure out, so I'm going to New York again, and New York's my favorite
place in the earth.
We can start with this. This is fine. And I'm bringing my partner and my partner has not been to figure out. So I'm going to New York again, and New York's like my favorite place in the earth. And we can start with this. This is fine. And I'm bringing my partner and my partner
has not been to New York. So I'm trying to decide he is a massive Les Mis fan, like knows more
Les Mis lyrics than I do. But he's he's a sports boy at heart. And so we're I'm trying to figure
out what is the musical that is not too musical-y, if that makes sense.
You know the people in your life.
They're typically your dad, right?
And you're trying to find the musical that your dad will like and appreciate, but is
still fun for you, the more theatrical goer.
So that's what we're dealing with.
So right now I'm thinking Book of Mormon or Six, but I've seen both of them many times before. This would be my fourth time for Book of Mormon and actually my
fourth time for Six. And so I am trying to also see a show that maybe we haven't seen.
So if you have suggestions, I'm going to see Gatsby. I think I'm going to see The Notebook,
maybe Water for Elephants. I still haven't seen Kimberly Akimbo. There's stuff that's on my list
and I have a week to myself before we start
and then he comes a week after.
So we're going to see what happens.
Hi, my financial feminist.
I'm thrilled you're here.
Thank you for being here.
If you're an old, too, but a goody, welcome back.
And if you're new here, hi, I'm Tori.
I have a theater degree in case that wasn't obvious.
And now I teach people about personal finance.
Fucking crazy.
We are a community now of 5 million people, which is absolutely wild.
And actually, we talk a bit about it in this episode. But I'm a New York Times,
specificity and author. We hosted this show, which is the number one money podcast for women
in the world. And we just appreciate you being here. If you like the show, you can subscribe,
you can share it with a friend, you can do all that. Today's guest is a repeat guest. She is a
colleague and a friend of mine who is also a finance educator and her episode on side hustles was still one of our most popular episodes. So
if you haven't listened to that one, go back and listen to that one. But Janice is back,
baby.
Janice Torres is an award-winning Latina money expert. She became an accidental entrepreneur
after a job loss led her to create a successful Latin food blog Delish Delights. Now she helps
clients and
listeners build successful online businesses that allow them to pursue financial independence and
freedom. Janice is on a mission to educate marginalized communities on topics like entrepreneurship,
investing, and financial independence through her personal finance podcast, Yoquero Dinero.
Her first book, Financially Lit, is out now and you can get a copy wherever books are sold.
Today's episode, we talk about Latina first gen finances, overcoming generational money
stories and the pressure that a lot of first gen and immigrants feel to quote unquote,
do the right thing when it comes to money. We also talk about managing the grief that
comes of making different choices than your family wanted you to and also outgrowing your
friend group, all of that fun stuff, which is something I think
we all experience, which is like, I have ambitions and I have goals and I need people around
me who are going to support those ambitions and goals.
We also talk about divorce and how to protect your finance in partnerships.
She tells her story about her divorce that she went through and learned a lot.
So if you are consciously uncoupling or something more dramatic than that, this is going to be a good episode for you.
All right, team, let's go ahead and get into it.
But first, a word from our sponsors. I got to know what all the sticky notes are behind you.
Oh, that's, um, enrollment for my side hustle program.
Latest launch.
I love it.
Yeah.
If you're not watching on YouTube, she's got what?
Probably 30.
Yeah.
40. Yeah. Yeah.
Little beautiful sticky notes with people's names on them. And I love that.
I like remembering that like there are whole humans that invest in you as a creator. And
it's a nice reminder to just be like, these are actual people and be grateful for them.
Yeah. It breaks my brain a little bit to think about, cause you know, we have about
2 million on Instagram, over two on TikTok.
So we're at like almost five now total.
And, um, every once in a while when I just need to like, you know, touch grass,
I Google stadium seating, like how many people can you fit in a stadium?
And like the biggest stadiums are about a hundred thousand people.
There you go.
And I'm like, Oh, we've got 40, 50 of
those. That is perspective. Okay. Yep. Breaks your brain a little bit makes you a little
terrified. But yeah, it's like, okay, there's actual people out there that you are serving
and that you are in this community. Yep, totally. We're really excited to have you back on the
show. Thank you for being here. It's still one of our most popular episodes where we talked
about side hustle. So if you are listening to this episode and you're like, haven't listened
to the first one, I would recommend going back because it's a great one. We hosted the
episode kind of together, but this time we're of course focusing on you. So I would love
to start the episode how we usually start episodes with money experts, which is by asking, what is your first money memory? What is the first
time you remember thinking about money?
I want to say it's something to do with my mom balancing a checkbook, which if you're
Gen Z, you probably don't even know what the hell a checkbook is. So my apologies. But it was this thing that you would use to account your balances in your bank account, just basically
keeping track of purchases. And I always saw her managing the money in the household, but
she was never the one to make all the money in the household. It was my dad. So there
was this duality of the women handle the money, but the men make the money.
I think that's the first memory I have.
And then I realized, well, I want to be the man.
So I'm going to go figure out what the hell my dad's doing to make a bunch of money.
And that's literally how I ended up being an engineer just like him.
Because I'm like, he's bringing in the bank.
I want to do that too.
I love it.
Yeah, I think that's a common response, which is just, yeah, I saw my parents manage money.
Typically what we draw from, if you are a new listener to the show, is we have a whole practice on this
in my book is like that your first money memory to your point about how, what it made you
do in your career. It's very typically very indicative of like how you continue to manage
money, what your money beliefs were as you continue to age. So it's always a fun little
question we like asking of like dig into your financial trauma. Yeah, tell me more about your childhood.
Feels a bit like therapy.
It's an awesome icebreaker.
I know you've had a lot of changes in your life, both personally and professionally in
the last couple of years. Give me the rundown on a few of those.
Well, I quit my job, got a divorce, moved to another state, started a new relationship, or shall
I go on?
I mean, there's just been so much that's happened since I've started this platform and it's
been cool because there's OG followers who have followed along the journey.
And I guess I didn't realize how much just you sharing your life can inspire people to
then make necessary
changes in their lives. And so as I've shared both my personal and professional milestones,
if you will, I've just had so many people reach out and just be like, thank you for
helping me navigate this life stage, whether it is a breakup or learning how to transition
from corporate to your own business and things like that. So it's been cathartic almost to share this stuff because you realize you're not the only
one going through things. And I think it's the same thing with money. A lot of the times
we feel like we're the only ones dealing with the situation. And when you find out somebody
else is actually having the exact same struggle as you, it can make you feel better and it
can give you that boost that you need to start making some changes within your own life. Yeah, I think the thing I've realized about my work about any,
especially woman creators work when it comes to money, is it's like, yes, we're really good
at teaching you how to be better with money and the actual like, you know, actionable steps. But
people come to us for reassurance, they come to us to feel seen, they come to us to feel like,
yeah, they're not alone and that they maybe
have hope for the first time in their lives. And I think one of the things that you do
really, really well in your content and in your own life is, pun intended, but investing
in yourself as your best asset. And I wish that more women understood how powerful it
is to bet on yourself and to believe yourself worthy of
opportunities and love and money and success. So maybe just speak on that investing in yourself
mindset that you've really had to put to the test over the last couple of years.
Yeah, I think the best example is absolutely making the decision to leave a nine-year marriage,
16-year relationship, even though I knew I had to do it. It wasn't
a question of like, is there something that we can work out here? It was an untenable
situation. And just like the loss of identity that happens when you decide to make a shift,
whether it's like, oh, this whole group of people I'm no longer going to have a connection
to or this life that I imagined for myself is no longer going to exist.
I think that's the thing that scares the shit out of people more than anything.
It's not knowing who that next version of yourself is going to be.
And that is absolutely the case if you decide to quit your job and start a business or become
a mom.
There's so many things that you just hope you're making a good decision and you hope
it's going to pay off in the future, but you don't have a hundred percent guarantee. And I think I've gotten
really good with not needing the guarantee because I have a lot of examples of figuring
shit out in my life. When I look at the things I've been through, the things I've been able
to overcome. And I think a lot of us could do more of that self analysis,
if you will, of just what's all the shit I've actually overcome? And is this new thing that
I'm facing the scariest thing I've been through? Probably not. You probably have some really
great examples of you being resilient. And I think that helps me be able to invest in
myself because I know I'm going to figure shit out one way or another.
You really have to just get to a place where you're confident in being able to navigate
whatever life comes your way.
And money absolutely helps you do that much easier.
Right.
We've had a lot of conversations on this show about loss of identity or like knowing you
need to make a decision, but realizing that's going
to be a life altering decision. And I think what a lot of people do is, to your point,
they know the decision, right? It's what happens when you are about to fall asleep at night,
and there's something inside of you, something in your brain, something in your gut that's
just like, I'm not happy.
This isn't it.
This isn't the life that I want.
And that is an opportunity for you to either listen to yourself, to trust yourself, and
to remind you that if you start denying yourself what you know, you're literally gaslighting yourself to the
point where your intuition won't speak up anymore.
It won't be there in the same way.
Or you can say, I'm going to investigate this more and I'm going to figure out, yes, even
if it's hard, even if it happens my entire life, you deserve a life that is deserving
of you.
I always go back to this mantra, if you will, where I get very metaphysical with it, but
it's pretty much like your ancestors survived so that you could thrive.
So we're not doing basic shit anymore.
We're beyond that.
That's the first line of your book.
She's carrying the heavy
weight of her ancestors and their sacrifices. Talk to me about this weight that anybody
feels, but especially first gen, second gen. How did this show up for you?
Well, I think the sacrifices are very apparent in our faces, whether it's like your family
literally left their home country. They don't speak the native language of where we live because they just came from somewhere
else.
They might not have paperwork.
They might be undocumented and so they can't even work a traditional job.
There's just a lot of examples of the privilege that you have that you're somehow supposed
to maximize these privileges.
And there is so much pressure, I think, for
folks who are eldest daughters, first gen kids, people who have been given, quote unquote,
the opportunity to pursue the American dream, to just make sure that you are squeezing out
every single last drop of that because it's not only about you, it's about repaying the
sacrifices. It's about making mom and dad proud. It's about
giving the family back home a reason to say, oh, this is why they had to leave because
this is what they were able to accomplish. And what I think happens is what we're seeing
right now. There's like this collective burnout. A lot of people are just fucking tired because-
Well, and the pressure.
The pressure is you say that
I'm just like the pressure's nuts of like, it's hard enough just to, uh, you know, live
up to your own expectations, yet alone the expectations and the, the stress and the,
the weight of, Oh, everybody's sacrificed for me to be here.
I think it's also the fact that when you are given these privileges, let's say just like,
being born an American, you have access to spaces that your family members did not, whether
that's education or corporate jobs and things like that.
And then you got to navigate these spaces on your own because nobody else knows what
the hell's going on.
I couldn't ask my parents, hey, how do I fill out the FAFSA? Or how do I apply for student
loans? Or how do I negotiate my salary? I don't fucking know. My parents have been working
in the same places for 20 something years. They're like, you don't leave jobs. You don't
leave once you're there. And there's just this kind of clash that's generational in a
sense where their advice doesn't necessarily
apply to like all of the things that we're having to navigate. And then there's just
this feeling of overwhelm that, you know, compounds the issue.
Well, obviously, this feeling is more intense for for women for people of color, if you're
a member of any minority group, but like, I see this, like, scarcity mindset or this like pressure in every single person
and in myself. Like, I am, you know, my partner is a white man. And what we've done over the past
couple years since we started dating was like, the realization that a lot of his beliefs in his
family about, yeah, you stay in one job, you don't ask for more, you just keep your head down and you
do good work. And I'm having to coach him through like, no, you are worth more. It's a John Mulaney quote
where it's like, I didn't realize how I should be treated until my girlfriend was right next
to me telling me how I should be treated. The bus driver shouldn't talk to you that
way. No, he shouldn't. So it's like, it's very much that like realization of, you know,
you have, you know, all of the pressures and the privileges or not privileges
of your skin color, of your gender identity, of your, your sexuality, all the rest of that.
But also, it's just like, what did your parents teach you or what did they not teach you?
Or how do they manage money? How do they look at their careers? How do they think about
their own self-worth and how did that then impact you?
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, I had the same situation with my partner.
When I first met him, he's like, I don't have any credit cards.
My dad told me credit cards are the devil because he listened to Dave Ramsey and he
said you should buy everything with cash.
And I'm like, honey, unless you're going to buy a $500,000 home in cash, I'm going to
need you to open a credit card and improve
your credit score because your dad is not living in reality. And so it's just like,
you don't know what you don't know.
Yeah. Yeah. And to your point about, you know, I think about a lot if you grew up in the
United States and you had maybe parents, maybe even grandparents, great grandparents who
grew up here, it's hard enough to navigate this financial system. Like it's confusing, it's predatory, it's often just complete and
utter bullshit. Yet alone, someone who is coming here for the first time, like I studied
abroad, I tried to navigate other financial systems, it's hard enough. Like I think that
pressure is again, the pressure and just the realization of you're not starting
at zero, you're starting at like negative 50 or negative 100 just to try to figure out
what everybody else knows.
Well, and if you want to take a look at just like the wealth gap and the pay gap and how
people of color are being asked to pursue the American dream with a third of the budget,
half of the budget, and it's just like when you get to the point where you hear all this
bullshit about, pull yourself up by your bootstraps and just work harder.
It's like, what the fuck are you talking about?
Let the US make 54 cents to a white man's dollar.
We literally don't get the same amount of money to do the same work.
So how the hell can we accomplish the same things? And then somehow we're going to like project that as, oh, well, they just don't get the same amount of money to do the same work. So how the hell can we
accomplish the same things? And then somehow we're going to like project that as, oh, well, they
just don't work hard enough, or they don't pursue the right careers, or they're just not educated,
blah, blah, blah. It's a very toxic narrative. And that's why I think it's so important for
the work that we're doing to diversify the conversations around money and also taking
cultural context and putting it into the conversation because it's an essential part of this.
Well, and what you mentioned, I wanted to like double click on that dig deeper is like,
we know that, you know, if you're a woman of color, you're making less, but that Latina
specifically are one of the worst groups for income inequality compared to other women,
definitely compared to white men. Talk to me about that a little bit
more and some of the reasons that you explore in your book for why this is.
Yeah. Well, there's obviously a multitude of reasons why this is the case. Some of it is
definitely attributed to just the fields of work that Latinas can find themselves in.
One of the great examples is a pandemic. Latinas were overrepresented in. One of the great examples is of the pandemic. Latinas
were overrepresented in the retail and service industry space during the pandemic, and a
lot of them had to leave the workforce because of everything that happened with COVID-19
and the pandemic. So there is that sort of, we're overrepresented in lower paying industries
that's playing a role. But even when you equalize for education,
there is still a pay disparity. And I share the story of Caridad Garcia, who was a counselor
who found out that her employer was paying a fellow employee who was a white man, I think
it was like $10,000 more for the same job and like same experience, same
qualifications, whatever. And when she brings it up to them, it's just like, well, there's
nothing we can do. And she ends up going off starting on business doing all that shit.
And it's just like, these jobs know what they're doing. And in the chapter of the book where
I talk about the pay gap and how to negotiate for your salary, I end it with a letter to corporate America
because it's not just for us to fix this shit.
I can job hop till the cows come home,
I can negotiate my salary,
but these companies are still funding politicians
who are actively working against paid parental leave
and paid sick leave.
And we're the only industrialized country that does not have
guaranteed time off that's paid. So it's just like, we can be part of the solution, but there
has to be collective action. And we do need people in power to take accountability and
responsibility for the system that they've created. But they're not going to, because it is in their
incentive to pay us as little as possible and send those profits over to investors, which is why we also need to educate ourselves
in that aspect of things too, because that's a way that we can bridge the wage gap when
these jobs just don't want to pay you what you deserve.
Right.
And then we also talk about the societal expectation beyond just the system that exists, but specifically the, okay, I'm
asking for more money. And then the response is, well, you're being greedy. Why do you
want more money? Or we're more likely to punish women who negotiate because, you know, all
the data and the research is coming out now that says like, you know, women are negotiating
slightly less than men, but it's a lot higher than it used to be. So the problem is less
women aren't negotiating and more when they do negotiate, they're either
being punished, there's some sort of backlash or just they're met with like, who do you
think you are?
No.
Yeah.
Like, no, I'm not going to give you more money.
It's like, okay, well, you're paying Chad more money.
So like, what is that?
Well, I also think that's why we see more and more women following a different path
and deciding to explore entrepreneurship.
Because that is the way that we can also become the system that we're trying to change.
I always tell people, if you get to a point where you actually can employ people as a
business owner, you're actively bridging that wage gap. You are actively reshaping this
capitalist system.
And I do believe that-
And offering the kind of benefits that everybody else should offer.
Absolutely.
And, right.
Yeah. So we have to be a part of the change that we wish to see. And that's why,
even though entrepreneurship is not for everyone, I do think that it is a powerful tool that we can
utilize, especially as women and people of color, to reshape the system and create something new,
because this shit's not working.
I think you're the perfect person actually to talk to you about this more. I have wanted, let me first say nine to fives. If you love that, if you're compensated fairly, if you feel like you're in
a good company that treats you well and that, you and that you can at least tolerate it's a job that you like enough or
you're like, cool, great.
I am not going to say, okay, you have to become an entrepreneur.
Here's the thing though, and I think you agree with me.
A lot of people ask me, Tori, how did you become a millionaire?
How did you go from $100,000 at 25 to a multimillionaire less
than two years later? It was entrepreneurship, guys.
Facts. Yeah.
Yes. It was investing. Yes, it was saving. Yes, it was budgeting. But like 98% of it
was because I started a business that was doing numbers and making good money. And especially
when I barely had anybody working around me, like all of that money was, that was my money. So again, I don't think you have to be an
entrepreneur. I will say that there is a lot of shit you got to deal with as an entrepreneur
that I don't love and wish I wasn't a nine to five all the time, but the flexibility,
the opportunity and the potential money that's there is substantial.
Absolutely. And I think if we're getting real about how expensive it is to pursue the American
dream right now, most of us are not going to be able to do that with a single income.
If you have aspirations to buy a home, to have a family, because literally having
kids at this point is a privilege for people with money, because it's so goddamn expensive.
Or even to rent in most cities. You're what? Are you Miami, Puerto Rico? Where are you
at?
I'm in Tampa.
Tampa. Tampa's pretty expensive.
Tampa's seen explosive growth since the pandemic.
I'm in Seattle. It's crazy. Now, I think percentage wise, from where we were in 2019 to now, the
percentage is one of the highest, if not the highest in the country. So yeah, shit's expensive.
Shit's crazy expensive.
Yeah. And if you want to make financial progress, you have to figure out other ways to make
money. And ideally, that's you utilizing your existing skill set and turning
it into some sort of side hustle. You never know if it's going to be able to blow up into
a business. But I think even from a financial security standpoint, because let's be honest,
with all the layoffs that we've seen in the past couple of years, even those quote unquote
safe tech jobs and all that shit that people were telling you, just get into this industry,
you'll be fine.
It's all bullshit. At the end of the day, these companies are beholden to investors. If their numbers aren't
making sense, you're going to be the first to go. And you need to just be able to become
your own money printer, because you just never know when you're going to have to deploy that
skill set. So I'm very much in favor of like, everybody needs a side hustle. It may not
be something you're actively doing right now because you don't need it, but you
better have a way to make money if and when that time comes.
Right.
And even opening up a high yield savings account, something like that, right?
It's like, is money, is income?
It's not a lot, but it's better than nothing.
So yeah, even just thinking, neither of us are advocates for hustle culture, right?
But we are advocates for giving a trap door exit. And that's why the emergency
fund is so powerful. That's why to your point, like diversifying your income sources. And
again, that doesn't have to be more work right now, but just having the idea and the understanding
of, okay, I do get laid off. What happens next? Okay. I do want to afford a house and
I'm willing to work maybe a little bit more for six months because this is the thing I really, really want and it's going to set me up for success
later.
So yeah, I appreciate you saying that.
There's a line in the book, quote, no one talks about the grief that comes with growth.
Oh, buddy, buddy, buddy, buddy.
This one.
Share with me more about what this looks like for you and some of the women in your community.
And I will also chime in because this quote just hit me right where it hurt.
Well, this is from the chapter that's called, When Jenny from the Block Becomes Jenny with
the Bag.
And I wanted to have a chapter specifically dedicated to this concept of wealth guilt,
because everybody's out here
telling us to go pursue that shit. But what about the feelings? What about all these emotions
that I was not anticipating having to navigate? And being part of a community where poverty
and struggle is the norm, when you make it out of that and you come back and you realize how many
people are still in that place, it's a lot. You feel guilt, you feel shame, you have this
sense of why me? There can be things that cause you to self-sabotage. People start asking
you for money. Everybody starts looking at you as the savior.
Nobody explains to you how to navigate this stuff.
And so for me, that grief that comes with growth is not being able to relate to the struggle
anymore.
And potentially feeling like there are people in your community who you no longer have this
direct connection with because you just have such different lives now. It's hard
to feel like the instructions that you were given to get out of the struggle now make
you unrelatable to the people who gave you those directions. It's like this weird cycle
of, but I'm supposed to do this, but why do I feel like the more I do this, the further
away I get from the people who made me who I am. It's just a lot. It's a lot of shit
to navigate.
I will also say just beyond the money in your bank account too, one of the ways I interpreted
this quote was when you do start, we were talking about before, investing in yourself,
when you do start growing as a person, there are many people in your life who will not grow with you, who have either their own shit
that they're dealing with, or who don't have the same ambitions you do, and who might be
really kind people, but are they the people that make you the best version of yourself?
Or situations that make you the best version of yourself, or situations that make you the best version
of yourself. And you know, we all know that quote that you are the sum of the five people
you spend the most time with, are the five people, even let's call it 10 people that
you spend the most time with, the kind of people that inspire you that push you to be
better that show up in their own lives so that they can show up for others.
Because that's the thing that happens too, is when you start realizing your own worth,
when you start pursuing certain things, when you start being committed to your own growth
and development, there's a lot of people who end up being left behind.
And there's a grieving process for that too.
And again, it doesn't mean you never have to talk to them again, but it might mean that
you reevaluate that relationship in a different way.
Yeah.
And you also reevaluate the advice because that's the thing too.
I always say, I do not take advice from people whose lives I don't want to live.
And I think that's just like a guiding light where I might tell you what's going on, but
I'm not actually asking
for your approval or your consent because you have no fucking clue what I'm navigating
because we are just living on completely different planes.
And like one of those instances for me was when I decided to quit my job and I told my
parents and they're just like, well, what do you mean?
Like just do this thing on the side and like work your job and keep your healthcare and keep your pension.
Yep. Literally the exact same conversation. They told me do anything you have to do to
keep your job.
Exactly. And I was like, you know what? I cannot expect them to understand what I'm
doing because they are not the ones doing it. They do not have any context for this
decision. So while I can respect their opinion, it does
not apply. And I'm going to have to be okay with being the loudest voice in my head.
And trusting that you will figure it out. The number one thing I see with women, and
I'm sure you do too, is that we have grown up in a society that constantly makes us doubt
ourselves, that constantly tells us,
you're not good enough, you're not this enough, you're not, you know, it's perfect or nothing.
Right. And we've talked about that on the show a million times. So it's not, if you're listening
a lot, you just, I'm going to sound like a broken record. But the thing about it is it's like,
there's something so powerful about a woman saying, no, I can do it. Yeah. And if I don't figure it out, I'll figure that out.
Like, you are trying to find answers to questions you don't even know yet. So like, why is that
preventing you from doing something that you know is right for you? Yeah. Because it's
a little scary. Yeah, everything's scary. And we also need to remember, like, how many
things have you already been through?
That bird's eye view of what's all the shit I've overcome?
What are all those hard things that I've done?
Is this really the hardest thing I'm trying to do right here, right now?
Probably not.
So I think it's just give yourself some credit for all the shit you've already been able
to accomplish and realize most of the time we can figure it out. You just need the right information or the right resources
or a mentor or something. But who is it? Marie Forleo? Everything is figure-outable?
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. It is. It absolutely is.
Well, and the really actionable version of this is if you're not already keeping a hype
sheet, keep a hype sheet, which is just you writing down everything that's gone well in your job, everything that's gone well in your life.
I've like everything that you were like, Oh, I figured that out or Oh, I feel really accomplished
about this. And we have it literally in our Slack a channel called nice things, which
is when people say nice things to us about our work and like trolls are just trolling
way too hard. I go in and to your point before about
like the stadium example for me or just the post-it notes of like, okay, there are real
people I can impact.
There are people I've impacted before.
I can do this again or whatever that looks like for you.
Okay, I'm going in for that promotion at work.
Here are the five biggest things I've done in the past year where I'm deserving of that
promotion or deserving of that relationship or whatever that looks like.
Yeah.
So yeah, if you're not keeping a hype sheet, highly suggest it.
It's very, very helpful.
Absolutely.
I would love to talk about your divorce.
I would love to talk about divorce and finances with prenups and all of that jazz.
So statistic from your book, 35% of people blame finances for the stress they experience
in relationships.
And I honestly, I've seen stats that are higher.
I think the number one cause of divorce or of a partnership breaking up is money, is
like stress around money.
So, I would love to discuss the need to evaluate financial compatibility before you make steps
towards marriage or any binding partnership.
I really wish I had been thinking about this when I decided to get married because looking
back at it, my partner and I could not have been on more different financial planes.
Our value systems were completely different.
And I think subconsciously I knew that and that's why we never commingled our finances.
So even though we were together 16 years and married for nine, we had our own separate
bank accounts, separate investment accounts.
And I just always felt like I don't want any part of this mess.
But I thought it was enough to just be able
to let him handle his own chaos as if it wasn't going to somehow impact me until I found out
that he had maxed out a credit card to pay for legal fees for some DUI incident that
happened. And when I asked him, what the fuck fuck, it was kind of just like, oh, but
I'm going to pay it back. So it's fine. I'm going to pay you back. So there was just a
series of financial chaos in the marriage and looking back at it now, well, and now
being in a new relationship, that was honestly one of the first things that we talked about
was money. That's how I found out, oh, this guy doesn't have credit score because Dave Ramsey's fault,
blah, blah, all that shit.
But we've been so transparent about our financial values from the beginning.
And gosh, what a blessing it is to just know that from the start instead of finding out
what somebody else has going on a couple of years in when you're like into deep quote
unquote. But that whole financial values is something that you really need to understand in the beginning
because it's going to make or break your relationship. And it's funny because this
chapter in the book where I talk about love and money was not even a part of the original
book proposal. It was a function
of the fact that I did go through a divorce during the writing of this book and opening
up that part of my life to my followers, people were just like, holy shit, this is the first
time we see a Latina talking about the importance of a prenup or talking about just the importance
of having financial transparency in a relationship and financial abuse, all
the things we touch on in that chapter.
And for me, it's been really powerful to just see how, again, an example of just like me
being alive and like sharing my story can motivate people to have these really uncomfortable
but very necessary conversations, especially when we take into context the historical period in which we are living,
where for the first time, women are actually even capable
or legally allowed to create the level of wealth
that we now have to protect.
So it's like when people are like,
oh, why didn't anybody tell me about this prenup shit?
Well, your grandma is not gonna tell you
about why you should have a prenup because grandma couldn't have a house on
her own or grandma couldn't have a bank account in her name. So that's why nobody told you,
but I'm here to tell you, you got to protect that shit because we worked way too hard for it to be.
Now we're on the other side of things and having to pay alimony or whatnot to, you know,
chaotic partners because we just didn't make
the right decisions.
I say this every time the word prenup comes up in an episode, which is if you get married,
fun fact, you have signed a prenup. And it is the prenup that has been established for
you by the state in which you were wed. So I live in Washington state, I believe it's
a 50 50 split unless you decide otherwise.
So one, I don't want the government in my marriage. I'm okay. I don't, I don't know.
Thanks. I'm gonna make that decision for myself. And two, again, there's all this shame about
pre naps or all this like taboo around talking about it. You have signed one if you have
been married. So I would like for you, and I hope you would like for you,
to have those conversations with your partner
for both of you to decide what works for you
rather than just what the government decide works for you.
I think also there's a lot of people
who still don't understand the concept of marital assets.
I'm talking to those entrepreneurs right now.
If you build a business during a marriage, guess what?
That's a marital asset that is subject to divorce.
If you write a book, those book royalties are subject to divorce.
There's so much shit that you're building in this process that if you
do not protect it, it is going to be catastrophic financially. And it is much easier to have
these conversations when you're in love and you respect each other than when you are in
divorce court and you want to poke somebody with a pencil in the eye.
Right. And even if you decide for whatever reason, no, we don't need a prenup,
talking about money in this way that's transparent, like it's not so much it is definitely the
legal document, don't get me wrong, but it's also the like act of having this much transparency
with your money and realizing that like, oh, this is something I care about, or no, that isn't
something I really care about. That's fine. But you don't know that unless you've had
the conversations about it.
Absolutely. You can't talk about it enough, in my opinion.
Yeah. It was something that my partner and I, I mean, I do money for a living. It's the
expectation. You're going to be friends with me, we're going to talk about it. You're going
to date me, we're going to talk about it. You're going to date me, we're going to talk about it. So, and it's, it's made our relationship so much better. And,
you know, there have been moments because, you know, I joke all the time, any man I'm going to
date, I'm going to out earn. Absolutely same. And there's just this level of like, you know,
we've had great conversations about like masculinity of like, you know, he is the least,
you know, he's a golden retriever boy, like the least toxic person you could be around. But like he's often like, I remember early, especially, you know, we were having
conversations where he's like, I know I shouldn't feel this way, but I feel like I need to like
take care of you. And I feel guilty that I can't spend as much money. And I'm like, no,
we're not in an equal partnership when it comes to money. We're in an equitable partnership.
Like if you and I live in an apartment together someday or, you know, buy
a house, I'm not going to ask you to split rent with me 50 50. That doesn't make any sense. We're
going to split it based on what I make versus what you make. And so even having those kind of
conversations about like, what matters to you, what your values are, how you manage money, how
the other person does, I think helps mitigate even the fact that you might need the prenup
someday because you've already talked about it.
Yeah. And that's why I put scripts in a lot of different parts of the book because just
having those initiations, just having a place to initiate a conversation or just some context
for it, I think is very helpful. And so a lot of the people who find out about the whole
prenup thing, they're just like, well, how did you even have that conversation? Because that shit sounds like it would be
very awkward. And for me, I deferred the responsibility to my CFP as to why I'm having the conversation.
So I spoke to a CFP before I quit my job. She told me XYZ, do this with your money and
also get a post-nup. And so I brought it up to my ex-husband and I was like, hey, I'm quitting my job.
I'm taking on this financial risk.
I want you to be sheltered and insulated from it in case it does go wrong.
And so this post-nuptial agreement is going to be a way to protect you from that risk
that I'm taking.
And it was a very easy conversation to have when you have that context versus just like,
oh, well, why are you talking about this?
You just want to get divorced, so you plan to take all my money.
So it's just depending on who you're with, you're going to have to bring it up,
you know, in whatever context makes sense.
But if somebody is really like resistant to it, that shit's a red flag to me.
And there's probably like other red flags that you've been ignoring that you
should probably start to pay attention to.
If they're not going to be willing to talk to you
about one uncomfortable topic
that they understand is important to our relationship,
they're probably not gonna talk to you about other things.
Like if you feel like you can't bring up money,
maybe you can't bring up sex or pleasure
in your relationship.
Maybe you can't bring up your values.
Maybe you can't bring up, do we want children or not?
Like I think that
talking about money, because it is the hardest thing to talk about statistically. And we know
just from talking with people, if you can't bring up money, it's going to be a hard road to bring
up anything else uncomfortable to. Absolutely. I love this concept in your book of being financially
I love this concept in your book of being financially unfuckable with. And I have the same perspective. I've mentioned many times that there is something so powerful about having your
own money because you don't have to deal with shit anymore. Somebody disrespects you. You're out on a
date. Cool. I put my card down and I don't have to worry about him buying because the date's over.
I'm good. I don't want to be in this relationship anymore. I can afford my own
apartment. I don't like this job anymore. I can leave. It's something so powerful. Even
something like, oh, I had maybe one too many drinks or it's really dark outside and I could
take the train home, but no, I'm going to be safe and I'm going to be able to take an
Uber.
Something about that is so powerful.
So break down what it means to be financially unfuckable with.
Yeah.
I mean, it's exactly what you talk about.
It's the sense of just knowing that you've got your own back financially.
So you do have the ability to make decisions that are not influenced by money. You're not forced to stay in that
relationship. You're not forced to live in that apartment that is roach infested and
loud fucking obnoxious neighbors. You just have options. And when you know that you have
your own back, I feel like as a person, it just helps you carry yourself with this sense
of confidence.
Everything in your life changes.
You just can't fuck with me.
I don't even have the energy to be stressed about this shit because I know at the end
of the day, this is easily resolvable with a couple of dollars and some time invested
to just make that change.
So I think more of us need to see money as that, as a tool to have options in life. Why we're still preaching
this bullshit narrative of money doesn't buy happiness. Okay, fine. It might not be happiness,
but I know I'm happy when I'm not stuck in a toxic fucking relationship. I know I'm happy
when I don't have to tolerate a boss who keeps giving me the run around about getting a promotion even though I'm doing three people's fucking
jobs. I know I'm happy when if my car breaks down, I can walk into a dealership, sign a
lease or buy a car and not have to worry about like where the hell that down payment is going
to come from. That makes me fucking happy. So we can agree to disagree. But at the end of the day,
we aren't actually pursuing money. The folks who talk about like the importance of building wealth,
we're not actually pursuing money, the number in the bank account, we're pursuing what money gives
us choices, which is the freedom to make fucking choices that are aligned with the lives that we
want to live. Yeah, I say in my book, I don't want a stack of government paper, because that's what money is,
right? That doesn't get me anything. It's a stack of paper. I want what money can buy me.
And to your point about money can't buy you happiness, another section of my book where
I literally debunked that where I'm like, yes, in theory, if you're going out trying to buy a
Ferrari and thinking my life will be better, and you're using material things to provide you happiness.
Of course, that's not going to work.
But money can buy you safety and stability and ease and pleasure.
And I would argue that's happiness.
So hell's to the yes.
Tell me I can't buy happiness.
One of the things with that financially unfuckable with thing as well as I love this. You know how
to negotiate pay raises, client contracts, bills and interest rates like your fucking
business because it is. And I just wanted to discuss that for a second. I love this
idea of like it is your business because it's your actual like you're running a business,
which is how much you're spending on things and how much money you're bringing in. So maybe
just talk to me about that of like this reframe of like, no, every dollar is like a dollar
for your business, which is you.
Well, you know, it's funny because when I think about the people who I saw doing this
in my life, especially growing up as a kid, like it was always the men. My father was
an excellent negotiator. Like he never took face value as the price for something. He
was always just like, there's room here to haggle.
And I don't know why, but I just felt like that's just something that men do. And it's
funny because my partner is absolutely like that person too. He's like, will not pay full
price for anything. But absolutely. I think too many people have this idea where you just
got to accept what you're given. And one of the first examples I've had of that, that was not the case, was when I negotiated
my first six-figure salary.
They came in at like 95.
And I had this idea in my head like, no, I want 100.
And I was scared shitless, but I asked for it and I got it and there was no resistance.
And it was just like a light bulb.
Like holy shit, I can actually get what I want,
but I have to ask for it.
And so I always go back to this quote that my father has said
since I was a kid, which is the squeaky wheel gets the oil.
And it's like, you gotta make some fucking noise
if you want people to pay attention to you.
And when we're talking about, you know,
advocating for your money,
you gotta get a little out sometimes
so somebody pays attention.
Yep.
Squeaky wheel gets the grease was a common phrase in my family as well.
And my mom said it too about opportunities.
Like I've told this story before, but like, you know, I wanted to be on the Today Show
really badly and I just pitched and pitched and pitched and they would not take me.
And I got creative and started posting on TikTok and I politely bully people until they get me what
I want. Like, and a no is just not now. It doesn't mean no forever. Absolutely. There's a million
rejections you get on a daily basis, but you just got to keep going. And I think that mindset of
just knowing that it's not no, it's not right now is so powerful. I always go back to this quote, whenever I'm feeling like
this pressure to just achieve something now, which is what is meant for me will wait for
me until I'm ready to receive it. And so I think that helps me realize like, I don't
actually have to do all this shit at once. I don't actually have to check off all of
these things right here right now. But I know that if I want it, it's out there and it's going to come when I have the mental
emotional capacity to accept that too. Because when we think about pursuing wealth, it also
requires a shift in your mindset.
And if you are given access to excessive amounts of wealth that your mindset has not caught
up to being
able to manage properly, it's a fucking waste of time.
You're not actually equipped to be a good steward of them and it's your job to now invest
some more time and energy so that when that opportunity does come for you, you're ready
and able.
What is one feeling you want for every single woman, but especially every single Latina?
The idea that they're limitless in their potential. And one of the things I talk about in the
book is like, I want it to be very normal to be like the millionaire next door and be
a woman of color. Because so often we have examples in our community of like what it
means to be successful. It's the singer, it's the dancer, it's the actress, it's the movie star, blah, blah,
blah.
And I just want regular schmuggler girlies with seven figures net worth to be my neighbor
whose name happens to be like Maria Gonzalez.
I want us to really believe that we have the potential to be the change that we wish to
see. And I hope that this book empowers whoever reads it to understand that where you start
is not where you have to finish.
And that there's something so incredible when you are financially whole and financially
stable, you get to change the system for everybody else. You get to
work to change the system that fucks everybody over because your cup is full, you're stable,
you're content, you're not worried about where's the next check coming from, how am I going
to pay my rent this month, where are my groceries? When you're content and stable and when you've
worked to that financial stability, you get
to change the system for everybody else.
Absolutely.
I think too, it's how powerful money can be to reshape the communities that we're from.
A lot of folks from black and brown communities might be seeing things like gentrification
happening.
You can actually be an active role player in curbing that,
in stopping that by having enough wealth to reinvest in your neighborhoods, to be the
landlord of that building instead of some fucking guy who lives 3000 miles away, who
is just charging predatory prices.
You can be the one that says, I'm going to buy this apartment building and I'm going
to give people affordable housing. And I'm from this hood. I understand
what people need here. There's so much power that we have to influence the world that we
live in. And like it or not, in this capitalist society, money is that power. And so if we
want to actually be able to change things, we have to become the ones with the power.
Thank you so much for being here. I'm so excited for your book. As of this recording, it is
already out. Tell people where they can go get a copy.
Yes, you can get the physical copy as well as the audio book at financiallylitbook.com.
And you can also find out about my upcoming book tour. I would love to see you in your
city, give you a hug and remind you that you
too can be financially lit.
I love it.
Thank you.
Thank you for your work.
I love it.
I always love talking to you.
Thanks so much to Janiece for joining us.
You can get her book, Financially Lit, wherever you get books and you can listen to Yo Caro
De Niro wherever you're listening right now.
So thanks for being here as always.
We appreciate you.
Hope you have a kick ass week.
Bye.
Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist,
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Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap,
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