Financial Feminist - 39. How to Live Your Rich Life with Ramit Sethi
Episode Date: August 30, 2022What does it mean to live a truly “rich life?” Tori is joined by financial educator, Ramit Sethi, to talk about his work centering on creating a unique rich life for yourself, his work with couple...s, and how his background in psychology influences how he teaches people about money. Ramit and Tori dive into their money memories, the common pitfalls they see with individuals working through financial goals, and more practical tips for spending less time stressing about money and more time figuring out what a rich life means to you. Get resources mentioned in the show, learn more about our guests, and read episode transcripts: https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-show-notes/rich-life-ramit-sethi Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello, financial feminists. Welcome back.
Cannot believe we are already at the end of August. Even me saying that makes me want to
throw up. I'm like, how is summer almost over already? But we're slowly, surely sliding from Stock Girl Summer into Funded Girl Fall. We're
still workshopping the title. Let us know what you think. But either Fund Girl Fall or Funded
Girl Fall, we're figuring it out. Because growing your wealth, learning how to be a confident,
badass money bitch is a year-long endeavor. Today's episode is straight up solid
financial advice from one of my personal favorite money educators, Ramit Sethi. Through talking with
Ramit and reviewing his work, I can see a lot of how my work was shaped by him and his perspective
on money. And it's just a fantastic interview today. You may already be familiar with Ramit's
platform and book called I Will Teach You to Be Rich.
We have a lot of financial advice in common.
But Ramit is really excellent when it comes to communicating about money, specifically in relationships, thanks in part to his undergraduate degree in psychology from Stanford.
No big deal.
Ramit has written about personal finance for The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times.
Ramit has written about personal finance for the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times.
And he's also been interviewed on dozens of media outlets, including NPR, ABC News, and CNBC,
and also popular podcasts like the Tim Ferriss podcast. We dive into quite a few big financial topics like renting versus owning when it comes to housing, which is a question we get all the time.
A lot of the things that couples fight about most when it comes to money. So if you're managing
money with a partner, this episode is definitely for you. And for everybody listening, we talk about
what a rich life means. How do you cultivate a rich life, even if you're not making a ton of
money, or even if you're not able to save a bunch of money right now. So without further ado,
let's go ahead and get into it. I would love to know your first money memory.
The first time you remember consciously thinking about money
and how it informed your experience or
your relationship with money? I remember my parents driving us, all of us kids in the back
of a van and we were going somewhere and they stopped at a bank and they needed to get a money
order. And they walked out of the bank. They left us in the back and they walked
into the bank and came back out about five minutes later laughing. And we see them laughing across
the parking lot. And when they get in the car, we go, why are you laughing? And they go,
they told us that they would waive the fees only if we had $10,000 in our account.
only if we had $10,000 in our account. And they were just laughing because it was impossible.
It was not a figment of our family's reality that we would just have $10,000 lying around to get a fee wave. And I kind of look back on that and I smile because there's so many lessons
just in that tiny example of them walking towards the van in the parking lot
laughing first of all we didn't have that kind of money and that actually forced us to learn
frugality growing up so i was raised by my two immigrant indian parents and although my reputation
these days is mr anti-frugality i am i grew up it's deep in my bones. I grew up with frugality every day of my
life. The other thing is my parents had a sense of humor about it. They just laughed. What,
are they going to get angry? Is that going to change it? No, they just laughed. This is
ridiculous. How would we be expected? And the third thing I love is that they were looking for a deal, which they also taught
to me, right?
So I love a deal.
Sometimes I think people, especially in the frugality world, take it a little too far.
But I appreciate that they were trying to look for a way to get their money or whatever
for free.
That's what I remember.
Yeah.
I think one of my takeaways from that too, and I've talked with my team about this, is unfortunately, the systems that exist
in the hopes of aiding and increasing somebody's net worth and increasing somebody's financial
stability, there's so many barriers to entry. And I know you know the stats around under or
unbanked people, right? I think it's like 33% now of United States residents are either under or unbanked,
meaning that they don't have a bank account or don't have access to a bank account.
And one of the biggest things is because they can't meet the minimum account threshold.
And it sounds like this was a similar experience of,
I can't take advantage of something that the bank offers me
because I don't have $10,000 in my account.
Yeah, exactly right. And so the irony is that I now would get all those things for free,
but I don't need it. It's like people who, you know, those celebs who go to the Emmys or whatever,
and they get $140,000 gift bags. And of course, they are the very people who can afford to buy
all that stuff. You know, now I remember after a while in my career growing and somebody would take
me out to a nice dinner or drinks in New York.
And I was kind of like, how come this never happened when I was a poor college kid?
It really would have been appreciated much more back then.
But it's 10 times worse or 100 times worse when you talk about those systemic issues about somebody who's basically breaking even and they have to commute three hours a day to get to work. That becomes much trickier. idea of just try harder while it is interesting. And while, yes, there's a lot of truth in try
harder and the American dream, but it's not as simple as that.
No. And I think it's also really expensive to be poor.
Yeah.
It's expensive to be poor. If we're already here, I want to keep diving into it.
We, I think both of us, try to be among this breed of financial educators who are pretty
frank about our criticism of capitalism, of the lack of acknowledgement of systemic oppression
when it comes to a lot of personal finance advice.
But we also, unfortunately, kind of have to play the game.
While we're working to change the system, you still have to pay your rent and you still
have to buy your groceries and you still have to figure out how to pay off your debt. So how do you personally grapple with that kind of dichotomy and toe the
line between helping people build this rich life, which we'll talk about in a little bit, but also
recognizing that our systems are inequitable and not really all the time attached to our behavior?
I think you can simultaneously acknowledge that we have
real systemic problems and you can focus on your individual situation. And that's a core part of
the I will teach you to be rich philosophy. We can do both. It doesn't take away from anybody
to acknowledge that there are these barriers. It doesn't take away from anybody to talk about these things. And I'm not intimidated by people who tell me to stay in my lane.
It's always the same type of person, always. And I treat them the same way that a nuclear
engineer would treat me walking in and critiquing the way that they set up their nuclear plant.
in and critiquing the way that they set up their nuclear plan. What are you talking about? Have you read one page of a book? Have you talked to one person outside of your own socioeconomic situation?
And I think that if you do that, you will realize these are real barriers. At the same time,
what I teach is that we can acknowledge those things and we can also improve our individual situation.
We all start at different places in life for a variety of different reasons. We can't change
that today, but we can change some of the things that we do with our money, with our psychology,
with our relationships. And that is very gratifying to me to see that individual progress as well.
Yeah. Yeah, I agree. And I think even
the acknowledgement that there is things out of your control, so you control what you can,
I think is really important because unfortunately there is a good chunk of personal finance that
we will not be able to sway at the individual level. Here's a good example. There's new
legislation talking about 401ks being auto-enrolled for people who start off.
Now, let me just tell everybody this. A lot of people think that education is the solution to
everything. I'm an educator. The name of my business is I will teach you to be rich. I love
education. I have a graduate degree. However, if it is mandated that 401ks will automatically enroll you, that will do more
for Americans' financial situations than 60 years of personal finance advice, which is bullshit.
Everyone's like, oh yeah, they should teach this in high school. I got two comments that,
number one, they did teach it in high school. You just didn't care. And number two, if you
really want it to be taught, then start to ask these questions. Who's going to teach it?
Oh, the public school teacher who is already overwhelmed with curriculum demands.
Oh, and then what curriculum are they going to teach?
You think they're going to go out and discover you or me or other good trusted sources?
No, what they're going to end up doing-
They teach Financial Peace University.
Exactly.
They're going to have things shoved down their throats, such as corporate automatons,
Wells Fargo and Bank of America as one, or these sort of Christian-influenced finance,
which doesn't make any sense to have public school students be taught this kind of stuff.
And then look at some of the curriculum out there. Oh, how to balance your checkbook.
People don't balance checkbooks anymore.
And they're also being taught about things like what to do with an inheritance.
Yeah, that's a really good idea.
You're going to teach an 18-year-old what to do about estate planning when they really
don't care at all.
So when I tell people this, they're actually quite surprised that I would suggest high
school is probably not the place to focus on financial
literacy. There are other things that matter more. Teach students when it matters, when it's relevant,
and change the structure of things like auto-enrollment for 401ks. That will make a much
better influence than anything else. By the way, the one final thing I want to say, which is
hilarious about the people who go on Twitter and they go, oh my God, Ramit, how could you not want people to be taught in high
school? I go, when was the last time you picked up a personal finance book and read it for fun?
And they'll, they go, oh, then they disappear. If you don't want to learn it as an adult,
when you're paying taxes and making an income, it's very unlikely that students are going to
pay attention, even though they've had the option for many decades. Well, and especially attaching it to a grade. I think about my
motivation in high school was, of course, yes, I am committed to learning, I'm committed to growing,
but I needed an A. And so I learned a bunch of stuff and took my test and hopefully did well,
and then completely let that stuff go. Yeah, it's not relevant to learn
about personal finance until you are making money. Now, I do think parents should teach children.
I will teach children one day. However, to mandate it requires all kinds of tricky curriculum
questions that most people have not grappled with. Who's going to teach it? How are you going to measure it? How about the fact that they have measured financial literacy and lots of studies,
not all, but lots of them show that there's no change in behavior when you teach high school
students. Why would there be? Right, because you have to start with financial trauma. You have to
start with the psychology of money before you even get to how to create a budget. Yeah, it's a tricky, it's a very tricky situation. So anyway, there are structural
solutions that are really promising. I love seeing them. That's why I'm such a fan of automation.
Chapter five of I Will Teach You To Be Rich is all about automation. I love flows,
not just because I'm a nerd. I love money flows. And that kind of stuff actually can be much more
meaningful than, you know, I'm going to try harder to save money on cottage cheese this month. One of the questions that I know both of us get
asked a lot, we are high earners who are renters. Why do you rent? Lots of reasons. I love renting.
I rent because it fits the season of my life. I moved from one coast to another. It required virtually nothing. I just ended my lease,
started another one, and that was great. It is a better financial situation for me.
Let me say that again because a lot of people think I just switched from English to Martian.
Renting is a better financial decision for me. How can that be?
Because as I always say, run the numbers and in high cost of living areas, for example, Manhattan,
LA, et cetera, if you run the numbers, you will discover that renting is often a better financial
situation than buying. Here's how that can work. If you rent,
it's cheaper than buying an equivalent place. For example, when I lived in New York,
if I bought the place just next door, same unit, same type of place, it would have cost me
more than twice as much as I spent renting. So you know what I did? I took the difference
and I invested it. And over time,
you can see in the data that those investments tend to handily outperform real estate. Again,
run the numbers because if you're living in a different city, if you're living in somewhere
in Michigan, for example, it might make better sense to own. And then just finally, from a
lifestyle perspective, I like being able to text someone and have
them come and fix any problems.
I love that.
Yeah.
So for everybody listening, I think here are the key messages I would take away.
Number one, never be ashamed to rent.
Okay?
I can afford to buy today and I don't.
Rameet, can you say that one more time?
Because I felt shame when I first started because I was told you need to buy a house
and that you're not financially you need to buy a house and that you're like not financially stable
until you buy a house.
You were told as so many people
that the American dream is a white picket fence
where you own a house in the suburbs,
where you have to drive everywhere,
where you can't see your friends
unless you drive 45 minutes
and you need more space for your dog,
which in turn produces you feeling lonely,
low social contact, high maintenance phantom costs that you never considered.
And then somehow one day, someday you will magically sell this house for a profit. And then
what? No one ever finishes that sentence. How are you going to actually make money from this?
How are you going to actually make money from this?
Oh, you're going to move to Florida, downsize, get sun for the remaining days and then die.
That was not my rich life.
So instead, my message is never feel ashamed for renting.
You can choose whether you want to buy or not.
You should run the numbers. Sometimes it does not make financial sense to buy.
And I'll also say this. I have nothing against owning. I will own a house one day. I already have the money set aside. And you know, when I buy this house, it will be the biggest luxury
purchase I ever make. It will not be an investment. In fact, it will be the worst financial decision
of my life. I can tell you that right now. Imagine buying a luxury car or a luxury handbag times a hundred or a thousand.
That's what this house will be. And I will be totally fine with it. But that is the way I
think about real estate. And my investments are totally separate. I've taken the exact same
approach. People have asked me all the time, like, why don't you own?
And I'm like, because the houses in Seattle for a two bedroom, two bath are going to cost
you $900,000.
And then you'll be in a bidding war where you'll have to increase your offer by another
300K in order to get it.
You know, it's funny when you talk about it and you start to pull on these threads of
people's beliefs in real estate.
It's so fascinating.
of people's beliefs in real estate is so fascinating. The only time that you will hear words like generational wealth thrown around is tied with real estate. Why is that? Why is that?
Now, real estate has been a good source of generational wealth, but there are other ways
to pass on generational wealth, such as a large portfolio.
That's one way to do it.
You will also hear people saying things like, well, what about when you get old and you
stop working?
At least you have a paid off house.
That is true.
That's one way to go.
Another way to go would be to have a large portfolio that can pay any rent or even pay
for a house in cash in perpetuity.
Again, what you'll find is that people who have
bought into this message, typically propagated by the National Association of Realtors, one of
the groups that I will meet in hell, they have basically taught people that buying a house is
the only way to become financially successful. And because of various structural reasons,
housing has gone up
in price. That doesn't necessarily mean it's a good investment. You can buy a house for 200K
and everyone knows the story about grandma bought it for 200K somewhere in West Texas.
And then 70 years later, she sold it for 500K. Everybody goes, oh my God, she made a killing.
She made 300K, But they never really factor in
the phantom costs, the taxes, the interest, inflation, opportunity costs of what you could
have made in a simple index fund. And so all I call on for people to do is to get a little
savvier about the biggest purchase of your life. That's the way to look at it.
I love that. And for listeners, when he says portfolio, investments, right?
Opening either a 401k, an IRA, a regular individual investment account, and then contributing
money through that or to that over time.
And yeah, that's the way I've gone is I'm like, I can make more money investing and
growing my wealth that way than I could be when my roof
leaks and I need a new roof. Speaking of renting, you negotiated your rent in New York City.
I don't think a lot of people realize that you can negotiate your rent.
Can you take us through how you approach that negotiation? I love negotiating. So I teach people how to negotiate their salaries and
how to negotiate fees from their credit cards and bank accounts. So rent is just a natural one.
Because for most people, rent is their largest single expense. It's a high leverage point.
And this is just a typical way that Americans believe that they simply have
to accept what's handed to them, right? Oh, my bank leveraged a $37 late fee on them. Well,
your bank works for you. Why don't you call them up and ask for them to negotiate that? And they
will. Chapter one of my book. Well, I did the same thing with rent. You don't simply accept
a rent increase. You want to understand the context around it.
So my building was quite aggressive. They would always try to raise rent. Of course they would.
It's a capitalist system. Of course they're going to try to maximize their profit. I get that.
No hard feelings, but you need to know that I'm going to maximize my opportunity as well.
So I would always have my eye on articles
on New York City rent. And I would just file them away. I would tag them. And then when time came
for my lease, we'd have a meeting. And they would say something like, we want to raise your rent
X dollars. So first, I would understand the power dynamic. At a time like this right now,
First, I would understand the power dynamic.
At a time like this right now, tenants have very low power.
Okay, very low.
So you try to negotiate your rent, you have low power because there's a housing shortage and there's more demand.
That's why prices are going up.
Simple supply and demand.
Sometimes, especially during the 10 plus years I lived in New York, prices were going down.
So I would go in there and I would use my briefcase technique. especially during the 10 plus years I lived in New York, prices were going down.
So I would go in there and I would use my briefcase technique. And that is a whole procedure of how you can present to clients or a boss and you can negotiate 10, 20, $30,000 raises.
And I would say, I appreciate you. Tell me where you came up with that number. And they would give
me some bullshit. And I would say, okay, thanks. Now let me show you my research. And I would show them that the comps in the neighborhood were down 6% sometimes or flat. And I would say, so that rent increase isn't
going to work for me. In fact, I would like to discuss a decrease. Now, landlords will almost
never decrease your rent. They play lots of games. If they decrease it, it has to show. So what they would
do instead, they would say, we'll give you a couple of months free. I said, great, I will take
it. And of course, I took that money and I floated through my chapter five automation system. Some of
it got invested, some of it got saved, and some of it got spent on guilt-free spending. Over 10 years, this is going to shock people. Over 10 years,
I essentially paid the same amount in rent at the beginning and at the end.
Let me say that again. It's crazy. My rent went up and down. And that is how rent works.
Everybody listen. Rent does not just go up. Rent is subject to the laws
of supply and demand, just like chicken. So if chicken prices go up and down and gas prices go
up and down, so does housing. The key is you have to ask. My rent went up sometimes and I accepted
it. I would try, but negotiation is a dance. And sometimes it stayed flat and that was fine. And
sometimes it went down and I took the win. Over the course of 10 years sometimes it stayed flat and that was fine. And sometimes it went
down and I took the win. Over the course of 10 years, it went up and down, up and down,
but essentially it ended up with a slight increase, basically flat.
Yep. I did the same thing with my apartment. I was at my apartment for almost four years.
And in the pandemic, she was telling me she was going to increase my rent.
And actually I did not know it, but basically used the same technique, which I was like,
I have paid on time.
I've been a loyal renter.
I have been very responsible.
And here's this article in this article that says that rents are decreasing in Seattle.
So I would like to maintain my same rent price.
And she was like, done.
Love that.
And that's a huge win, right?
$2,400 a year.
There's a lot of reasons that landlords will negotiate. So one, they like a good tenant.
And even one month of vacancy can wipe out an entire year of profit for a small landlord.
Or trying to replace the on-time, reliable, doesn't throw a party until 4 a.m. and trash
the place renter that they have
right now. Yep. And then you as a tenant have also lots of options. You can offer to prepay in
advance. You can sign an extended lease. There are a variety of different things you can do.
So again, treat this like you would treat any other negotiation and use some of the techniques
that I cover in the book and on my site that will allow you to take
this huge part of your monthly expenses and potentially negotiate it.
Right. And I appreciate that because we talk at Her First 100K when you're negotiating salaries
too, is it's not just the dollar amount, right? Or the salary, it's PTO or flexible time off or,
you know, an education stipend or a better title. There's a bunch of things you can negotiate
besides salary.
Same thing with your rent.
Are there ways that you can get creative
in terms of that negotiation?
I think that's really smart.
I want to ask you about your business
because I have admired and watched your growth now
for like five or six years.
And it's been so cool to see.
So you've built kind of this model
where you sell higher price courses. And when you build
these courses, are you building based on a need you see? Or are you building based on what people
asks for? Is it, I know that this is something I want to talk about and something I know would
be valuable? Are you having people come to you and saying, Ramit, can you do this?
A little of both. We do look at what the market wants. I have an email list with hundreds of
thousands of subscribers and I read every one of those emails that comes in. I used to be able to
reply to each. I can't do that anymore. But I keep a close pulse on what people are talking about
with money. For example, when I talked about having parents who are nearing retirement age,
but they don't know how to spend their money.
That produced a flurry of responses from other people who want their parents to spend money.
And so I'm always listening.
At the same time, there are certain things that I feel strongly about.
I have a point of view about.
I have knowledge about.
And so in our team internally, we're
always trying to match those up. What does the market want? What do we want to talk about?
And once in a while, just create something that I just think is cool. Nobody asked for it,
but it just needs to happen. My podcast was an example. Nobody asked,
hey, can I listen in on couples talking about money and sharing real numbers?
Nobody asked because nobody thought it was possible.
But when I kind of stumbled upon it, I was like, this is gold.
We got to do this.
And that was how the podcast launched.
Yeah.
Speaking of the podcast.
So yeah, you're interviewing couples about their different financial either situations
or a certain point of contention between them.
financial either situations or like a certain point of contention between them. Do you find,
like, do you have a common denominator that you see between couples? Is it like bad communication?
Is it different money habits? Like, do you see common threads through all these conversations?
Most couples that are not on the same page with money think it's one thing but it's quite another that's what makes each episode fascinating so i'll get somebody that comes on they go they go uh she spends way
too much at target and they've argued about target for you know 10 years i go i go i go well
it's it's a real thing and actually i, I'll tell you about Target. So I went
on a long rampage because Target is not a one-off thing. There's a number of people who come on the
show and they get excited, animated, talking about spending at Target. And I go, well,
so that's what I asked. I said, why Target? Now, remember, let me just say
this. I grew up in suburbia. I know Target, okay? I've been there a million times. I know TJ Maxx
and Ross. I'm a TJ Maxx girl myself. That's my target. Marshall's Home Goods, TJ Maxx, like
kryptonite. Well, because they're all the same parent company. And so I walk in and I know
exactly how this store is laid out. And I'm like, go into the stationary aisle. I'll start there.
And yeah, it's... I commented to one of the guests, you know, you sound really excited.
And I go, what do you buy there? And she goes, well, I buy clothes for my kids.
That's code for I'm a good mother. And I go, what else do you buy?
And she was just like, you know, just stuff around the house.
I go, but what do you buy?
Formula 409, Saran Wrap?
Like, what makes it exciting to you?
And it turns out that when she was a kid,
her mom would take her to Target and let her buy, you know, candy and things like that.
And she now, this guest had done considerably well in her career.
Her and her husband were doing pretty well. She was shrinking her dreams to shop only at Target.
And I said, listen, Target cannot be the only part of your rich life. You're so successful.
What else do you want with you and your partner?
What excites you?
Because I don't think going to a store and buying a bunch of commodities
is the only part of your rich life.
I think you're beyond that.
And that was the key denominator with many of my guests.
They think it's one thing.
You know, in this case, the husband saying
she spends too much at Target.
She actually didn't spend that much at Target
relative to their income. It was fine. she spends too much at Target. She actually didn't spend that much at Target relative to their income.
It was fine.
I have no problem with Target.
What was missing, what the common denominator is, is most couples that are not financially
aligned do not have a vision of their rich life.
So they are stuck in the weeds asking $3 questions about Target and about video games and how much you spend on coffee and organic drinks
when really they should be asking $30,000 or $300,000 questions.
What is our rich life?
What kind of life do we want to live?
What values do we want to teach our children and each other?
That's what we talk about.
You were kind enough to be interviewed for my book.
And one thing that we've already talked about a lot on this podcast and that we talk about in the
book is this concept of a rich life. And I'm going to ask you the same question I asked for the book.
What is a rich life? How do you define that? And I think one of the most enlightening things I think
you said during our interview was, and maybe I'm taking the wind out of your sails, but I think it
was so interesting where you were like, when you ask people what they want,
they will tell you what they don't want instead.
And so why is the mission or the rich life so important to you
in terms of getting people on board?
I think all of us want to know, what's all this work for?
What are we going to work for?
What are we saving for?
Why are we listening to all these podcasts
talking about compound interest and tax advantaged accounts? Who really gives a shit unless you are using it to connect
and design your rich life? What a tragedy to accumulate tens of thousands, hundreds of
thousands, even millions of dollars, and then not have any skills on how to spend it.
What a tragedy.
What a tragedy to believe that your rich life is only buying saran wrap and being able to
buy $3 or $10 children's clothes.
There's got to be more than buying some commodity junk and then claiming that that's your rich life. It's not.
It's got to be more than that. It's got to be something that is personal to you. Something
where I ask you, what is your rich life? Well, I don't start with that because the answers I get
are not that good. So I say this, I say, what do you love to spend money on? And that is such a
beautiful reaction. people's eyes light
up you know why because they've never been asked that question they've been judged oh and they go
like this well it's not like i really need like a fancy house but like one day i'd like to have
like a a cottage i go stop shrinking your life. We're talking about your fantasy and you are starting
off by shrinking and minimizing your own desires. No. Well, we've been told that's what to do,
right? And especially with women, even that example of like, I have to be a good mother,
right? I can't say, because it's quote unquote selfish, if I say I want money.
And it's, I don't want to stack a government issued paper. That gets me nothing. I want money. And it's, I don't want to stack a government issued paper. That gets me nothing.
I want the really incredible pasta in Tuscany that I can't have anywhere else. And that's what I want.
And I want to be able to donate to causes I believe in because I can actually see the change
that happens, right? Like that's what I want. And I think especially any marginalized group,
but of course I work predominantly with women, is we've been taught to immediately justify our spending or our choices in order for us to be
altruistic. Because we've been told as women, that's our value in society is be altruistic.
You can't be selfish. You have to give to other people. You can only want money if it's for your
team or for your children or for your relationship. And it's such
bullshit. Yeah. I'm so glad that you are sharing the message that you can help people and you can
be altruistic and you can be generous and giving, but you can also focus on yourself and you don't
have to defend it. People, you know, they start talking about something nice they bought for themselves
and they immediately start justifying it.
And so what I think they find so surprising
is that I go, you don't have to justify it.
I like nice things and I spend a lot of money on it.
And they're like, wait a minute,
I thought Mr. Finance dude was going to come in here
and bust out his spreadsheet and show me why
that $10 purchase would actually turn into $73 if you invested it over the next
18 million years.
I don't really give a shit about that.
Yeah, but then you're miserable.
Yeah, miserable.
So I actually love to live with them for a moment, right?
Take me, walk me a mile in your wallet.
Tell me what excites you.
And so they do.
They do. They finally do because
for the first time in their lives, often, they're being asked and truly listened to.
So I pull it out of them. And whether it is, I want to get a massage once a week. Whether it is,
I want to take my family and go with a chef in a farmer's market in Rome and then cook all this food together by hand.
What a beautiful vision.
I want to take my elderly parent and let her fly business class because her legs cramp
up when we fly across the world.
Or I want to pick up my daughter from school every day at 2 p.m. and not have to rush out
of there.
Those things can be free or they can be luxuries.
But I don't need to hear your defense of it.
I just want to hear your vision.
And once you tell me your vision,
then we can start to talk about how to get there.
Yeah, I love that and if i mean my natural inclination then is to have listeners like
that's your question like if you're a journaler if you just want to take a walk and think about
it like that's the perfect place to start is like if you don't know what you want you need to figure
out what you want and it's what you, not what you've been told to want.
Again, like I was told you need to buy a house and I ended up not buying a house.
What else were you told?
It was 100% the right choice.
Think about those messages you received.
What else were you told you have to do?
I mean, I could go on for years and this is part of what I talk about in the book, especially
as women, right?
I mean, the message that you shouldn't talk about money because it's taboo, that you shouldn't
want money because it's evil or bad.
Again, for women, I think in particular, if you do want money well then you're selfish and
that you should only want to earn money or want to make money for somebody else or for something
other than yourself um gosh what else would i yeah the big one was like you need to buy the house i
literally i think i've told you this but i was like a day before signing on a condo and backed
out. And it was a hundred percent, like one of the best decisions I've ever made. Cause I was not,
I was 22. I was not ready to be a homeowner. I was 22. It was not ready to be a homeowner.
No, it was an hour outside of the city. I wouldn't, I would have commuted two hours.
What a horrible decision that would have been.
Right. And yes, that value of that property, I would have spent $175,000 and now it's worth $350,000. Cool. But also-
That's not that much. Yeah. It's also, I've made more in investing. I would not have probably
have grown my business because I wouldn't have been in a city that would have allowed that. So
there's so many things. Yeah. And I know that these, if you're a woman of color,
if you're a member of another marginalized group, there's so many things that you're taught about either how to manage your money. Again,
like the classic, you're not rich because you don't work hard enough. You're not rich because
you buy too many lattes. And I think, um, of course that, that acknowledges or fails to
acknowledge systemic oppression, but also like if, if your goal is to, you know, save this amount
of money or pay off this amount of debt and you're in utter misery
doing that, that's not full. 99% of diets fail because the more you tell me I can't have fried
chicken, the more I want fried chicken. It just doesn't work. Well, I'm glad to hear that you
made that decision for not buying a house. I think it's so fascinating that when you hear
it went from $175 to $375, my,000, my reaction was, that's not that much.
You have to factor in what does that imply. Two hours commute, you don't just walk away with $200,000
in cash more. You have to factor in all kinds of transaction costs, taxes, maintenance,
all kinds of variety things. Totally. And I could not afford to buy in Seattle. And so I was buying
in Puyallup,
Washington, which is an hour outside and about 15 minutes from where my parents live. And I
love my parents, but I would have spent every weekend as a 22-year-old palling around with my
parents. So when it comes to the rich life, I love hearing about what people envision.
I also think that sometimes we have been taught to shrink or minimize our dreams.
And so one of the most meaningful things that I do is when I talk to people, whether on my podcast
or in the book or on book tour, I get to share how big they can dream. So I'll share an example
that happened in DC I'll never forget. so there's this thing called money dials.
And I asked people, what is your money dial?
And you can Google it.
Money dials are the things you love to spend money on.
And this exercise maybe will be fun for everyone listening
because it really allows you to imagine your rich life.
So I'm sitting there on a book tour in DC
and I asked people, what's your money dial?
And the most common money dial is eating out.
Okay.
Then it's travel, health and wellness.
And then it's a steep drop off from there.
Mine is convenience.
I love convenience.
And it's called a money dial because you can turn that dial way, way, way up as you're
about to discover.
So this guy says, my money dial is eating out.
I said, great.
What do you love?
He goes, I eat out.
Like, I love it.
I love the restaurant.
I love not having to clean my dishes.
He's getting excited.
The whole crowd's getting excited.
I'm getting excited.
I go, okay.
I understand what your money dial is.
Now I want you to dream with me.
What if you could quadruple your spending on eating out?
What would that look like?
And what would that feel like?
So for everybody listening, you have your money dial, whether it's eating out, travel,
health and wellness, convenience, luxury, experiences, relationships.
It's what you love spending money and you would love spending even
more on it okay got it yeah we call them at her first okay we call it like value categories so
like what are the like the things you value and we i have people assigned like their top three so
for me it's travel food out and like making my apartment or my living space nice so flowers
weekly flowers throw pillows candles at t Maxx, all of that stuff.
Okay. So he's thinking, he's deep in thought and he makes a really common joke. He goes,
ha ha ha, I'd probably have to go to the gym more because I'd be eating out four times a week.
And I laughed, but then I said, I don't want you to think that linearly.
Notice that your first jump was if I eat out once a week and I quadrupled my spending,
I would eat out four times a week.
It's a very linear way of thinking.
One times four is four.
I said, think about where you would eat.
Think about who you would eat with.
The bottle of wine you now get to buy.
Yeah, he gets very quiet.
The whole room is quiet.
And he goes, I know what I would do.
I said, what?
He said, I have a list of every Michelin star restaurant in DC.
I would go to it. I said, who would you take with you?
Yep, love it.
He goes, I'd take my family.
I said, why?
He said, because they could never afford to eat at those kind of places.
That is a money dial.
That is a vision.
That is a reason to earn more, to be unapologetic about starting a side business,
negotiating your salary, investing your money.
That is exciting.
That's not being reprimanded for cutting back on lattes.
No, that's telling you, I'm going to earn money.
I'm going to love it.
I'm going to be unapologetic.
And this is what I'm going to do with my money.
That is a rich life.
I joke all the time that I can't get through an episode of this podcast without crying.
And I'm literally tearing up, Ramit, because I think, especially in a society that is told,
women in particular, play small.
We are told, play small, because then we are controllable,
right? If we are told don't talk about money, don't want money, don't use money as a tool and
a resource for you, we are forced to play small. And I think one of the most transformational
things, I can speak to this personally, the most transformational thing in my life has been
having a financial foundation because I don't have to stay in toxic situations. I can speak to this personally. The most transformational thing in my life has been having a financial foundation because
I don't have to stay in toxic situations.
I can, yeah, I go and I get to go with my best friend to Italy for a month.
That's literally what I did last October is I went to Italy for a month and went to any
restaurant I wanted because that's what we love to do is eat good food.
And we had the best fucking time.
And like, that's the feeling I want for every single person, but especially every
single woman, because we have been actively told, play small, don't make a commotion,
don't want for anything because that's selfish. And I think just that story, it's also,
food's my big thing too. So that literally, that sounds like something I would do.
I was dying. The whole crowd was in love with this guy.
I was in love.
I'll never forget that story.
And everyone in DC who's listening, who was there,
you know exactly the story I'm talking about.
You know, I think I have learned about money a lot from my wife as well.
And when we got together and we were engaged,
we started to talk about money between ourselves.
And that was quite revelatory because, you know, here I am, Mr. I will teach you to be rich.
And I've been talking about money for 15 years at that point.
But to talk about it in a personal relationship really unpacked layers that I had not tackled.
That was one of the reasons for starting the podcast.
that I had not tackled.
That was one of the reasons for starting the podcast because I wished when we were talking about things
like a prenup, I wish that I had been able
to hear other couples and how they talk about money.
Think about it.
When was the last time anybody listening to this,
when was the last time you ever heard a real couple
talking about money, sharing real numbers,
talking about how they spend it. Never. Because people
don't talk about this except behind closed doors. And I wish that we could have had other couples
that we talked to. It became heated and we ended up seeing a therapist. That was amazing. I can't
recommend it enough. And we started to learn how to develop our language around money.
With that said, my wife also, she will admit she did a ton of work herself on her money psychology.
And she also started earning a lot more money. She plays big in her own business as a personal
stylist. And so those two things, again, also with me working on
my money psychology relating to my wife, we were spending a lot of time and effort on this.
And so I was talking to a couple yesterday for the podcast and they did not have great
communication. So I shared a story about how one of the things that my wife and I do, we talk
about money once a month.
We have a money meeting.
We sync up.
This is a great exercise.
We call it a money day to her first 100K.
And we actually have a whole episode about it.
I'm trying to remember what episode it is.
I think it's 11 of like how to go through this, how to go through your money.
Yep.
Yeah.
It's so good.
And whenever they talk about money, it was so depressing.
I was like, what do you guys just like sit there and look out the rainy window
and listen to Sarah McLachlan songs?
It's so depressing the way you two talk about money.
You've got your graphs and charts
and like the dullest colors ever.
You know, it's like someone's like mascara
running down their face.
Just their charts are just like running in the rain.
I'm like, God, this is so depressing.
So I was like, can we make this a little fun?
And you know, that's, and by the end,
they actually learn. Make it a date, make it something to look forward to. We literally tell people, I'm like, can we make this a little fun? And by the end, they actually learn.
Make it a date.
Make it something to look forward to.
We literally tell people, I'm like, get takeout from your favorite restaurant.
Wrap yourself in a down comforter cocoon if you need to.
Make it a comfortable, relatively exciting experience.
Yeah, make it a thing.
Money can be fun.
Money can be joyful, especially if you're talking about it like that gentleman in DC.
Especially if you're talking, yeah, what is our rich life vision together?
And even individually, my wife and I did an exercise where we wrote down what's on our
bucket list.
And that was exciting.
Some of the things we want to do together, some of them we don't.
That's okay.
And then how do we use money as a tool and a resource in order to build that life together?
So if we want to buy a house in three years, we want to have kids in 10 years.
If we want to retire early, how do we use money as a tool and a resource to get there collectively?
Yeah. Cool. So in talking with couples, do you find, are you talking to same-sex couples as well?
Yeah.
Cool. Do you find that there are gendered expectations or fears about how finances and spending should be handled,
either in heteronormative relationships or in same-sex partnerships?
Yes. I'll speak to heteronormative relationships. They are the more common couples that I speak to.
And there are a couple of fears. A know, a common fear that women have in these relationships.
It's almost like they all saw a similar movie.
The common fear is being left in the rain with just a backpack on and two kids.
I was just about to guess.
And that was my guess of just like being left behind or being abandoned.
Yeah.
Yeah. It's so vivid. It's so dark. And I understand it. You know, I've had these
conversations with my wife. And I remember when we talked about it, I was getting extremely
frustrated because I said, look, this was my reaction. This is way back then. I was like,
look at the math. That was my answer. Look at the math. I was like, look at the math. She's like very emotional. And you're like, look at the math. That was my answer. Look at the math. I was like,
look at the math. She's very emotional. And you're like, look at the math. Totally. I was
holding up this 10 by 10 spreadsheet. I go, it's impossible to be left in the land.
She's like, no, but what if I get abandoned? What if you leave me?
It was just this classic moment. I was like, we are not speaking the same language.
Right. And in retrospect, we look back and we can smile on it. But when I
speak to couples where they have this fear, I totally get it because I was in that conversation
with my wife. Now, I did a survey on social media and a surprisingly high number of women
agreed with this fear. And then interestingly, some of them said, this is outrageous. It's
misogynistic to even suggest this. But I said, look at the stats. These are just the people who
are saying yes of my audience, much less a general group. There's a fear and many for rightful
reasons. And so that's one thing that we unpack. Now, I will say this. As I learned in my own
situation, simply showing the math does not change the feeling about money.
No, not at all.
It's very tricky and quite fascinating to be able to show people you actually will have enough.
Or if you will not, let's talk about a plan to get there.
So we have an episode, episode 28 with Katie and Sean, where she has a fear of being abandoned.
with Katie and Sean, where she has a fear of being abandoned. We have different expectations,
gendered expectations of who should pay for things. We talk about that on episode 17 and 18 with Monique and Pablo and episode 34 and 35 with Ashley and Josh. Both of those were examples where
she expected him to pay for dates or a variety of other things.
Then I would say that we have couples where the woman is out earning the man. And those are also
great episodes, 25 and 31 and 32. You see these things like, I don't want to have to be taken
care of. That was what one of the husbands said. From men? Yeah, from men. Well, that's the societal expectation that men are still providers,
right? And we have an episode about undefining masculinity. I don't know if you know Justin
Baldoni's work, but his work's amazing around this of societal expectations and toxic masculinity
hurts men as much as it hurts women, right?
And that's still- I need to be the man.
And then I ask them like, what does the man mean?
Right.
And they'll say, well, provider, I say, well, okay, well, your wife earns twice as much
as you.
So what does that make you today?
And it's quite a moment.
So I do think that we can choose and redefine what these terms mean to us.
I think that if it works for you and your partner,
great, right? But you have to be able to have these difficult conversations.
I do think that money and gender is such a real issue in personal finance and less talked about.
Many people are comfortable talking about compound interest charts and 4% safe withdrawal rates,
but I find it much more fascinating to talk about societal expectations, one partner dramatically
out-earning the other, and a variety of these things that are the real deal when people think
about money. On a day-to-day basis, they are not thinking about compound interest. They're
thinking about why didn't this person do the dishes or how come I earn way more and I still have to clean up around the house, etc., etc.,
etc. We want to unpack those and then let people define what their rich lives are.
One of the stats I found when researching my book, and maybe you know it, it shouldn't have
shocked me as much as it did. When they took the census data most recently, if you were in a heteronormative
relationship and you were a woman out earning your male partner, you lied as a woman and you
said you earned less. And then the other half of it was that men who were out earned by their
female partners lied and said they made more than they actually did. That's fascinating.
Again, shouldn't have been shocking, but I was like, I was so angered by that.
Because again, it's like women play small, men play big.
And if that is not the situation you're in, well, you're actually self, like assigning
yourself those roles.
And I think about in my own life, like I am dating and I am not partnered and knowing
that probably 99 times out of 100, I will out earn the person I end up being with.
And it's very interesting because some men are excited by that and most are very concerned with that still.
And it's 2022.
What does that mean?
Oh, interesting question.
We're going to go full therapy, Ramin.
to. What does that mean? Oh, interesting question. We're going to go full therapy. I think I well, one, the men who are intimidated by any sort of success or money I have are not
the men I am interested in. But I think, yeah, they they realize that, of course,
when I have my own money and my own resources, they have to show up. And I think that weirdly,
it's that it's that realization of like, oh, if she's going to be with me,
it's because she wants to be with me, not because there's anything else on the table,
potentially in terms of money or stability. I can offer that to myself. And so I think that
that's a bit where the concern comes in. And then also just the realization that this happens with
anything or anybody, any relationship, romantic or otherwise, I think when you enter into a relationship with somebody, whether that's, again, friendship, romantic, and somebody maybe has a certain attribute that you don't, you can either see that as a healthy challenge of, oh, I get to work and see this person model this for me to be better.
Or you see it as a threat to you.
And I think that that for a lot of men, you know, somebody who is, I like to think of myself as,
you know, kind and caring and all those things, but also confident and stable and all of these,
you know, the, you know, career and financial and the more traditional like success,
I have that covered too. And so I think in dating, it's been really interesting because
I think a lot of them are like, they're not seeing it as a potential opportunity, but rather a threat
to their own weakness potentially. So yeah. That is so interesting. And I'm glad that you get to
share your experiences with your audience. I know that you're not the only one. I know that for a fact. And so for you to be able to take your perspectives, your experiences, and also
your expertise and to be able to share it with the other women in your audience, what a gift.
I really appreciate that. Thank you. It means a lot. I'll ask you one more question. What is the
most surprising thing that you've learned in your work or similar to like the story you told about DC? Like, can you think of a time in your work where you just remember feeling, because I
have these moments where you just remember feeling like, okay, this is why I do what I do. And this
was, you know, the kind of breakthrough or the kind of transition that like you wish every single
person could have. I remember speaking to a couple with $400,000 of debt.
Is that student debt?
Yeah.
Okay.
And they were calm.
They were loving to each other, supportive.
In that relationship, the wife didn't even know how big the debt was until basically
the day before.
And she was surprised,
but she was still a partner. She was loving, supportive, and they worked on how to make a
plan for it. Then I spoke to couples with $25,000 of debt and they were angry, resentful, stressed. And from looking at their numbers,
I knew that they could pay it off without too much work. However, the big takeaway there is that
your feelings about money are highly uncorrelated to the amount you have in the bank.
are highly uncorrelated to the amount you have in the bank.
We believe that if I pay off this debt, then I will feel safe.
We believe that if we make $100,000 or we have $200,000 in the bank or $20,000 in the bank,
that we will feel successful.
Wrong. I've talked to multimillionaires on my podcast who still worry about money, who still comparison
shop for strawberries.
Still net worth $8 million.
Still opening up two windows.
I don't have quite that much, but I still comparison shop for strawberries.
There's a time.
So your feelings are uncorrelated with the
amount in bank and here's the key if you make an extra 25 higher income or if you have a million
dollars in your bank account you will not feel safe with money you will not feel good with money unless you work on your money psychology as well.
And when I see people realize this, and sometimes it takes a variety of different tactics,
it's the rare person who responds to the actual math.
I show them the math.
I go, you're going to have $7 million when you retire.
Most people, they can't even fathom having $1 million, much less $7 million.
They don't know what to make of that. So I move on from that. But there are other ways,
such as what are your children learning from the way you talk about money?
What are the way you worry about money? What is that costing you with your partner?
Are you showing up playing big or playing small? There's a variety of different techniques that I
use to get people to truly grapple with where they are financially and from a rich life perspective. When they get
it, when they stop arguing about $3 or asparagus or buying another Roomba and they start talking
about their rich life, what do we want to do? Where do we want to live? How do we want to spend our money to create
safety, security, joy, experiences? And they get it. That's when I know I have the dream job.
I love it. Ramit, anything else you want to add?
I thank everyone for listening. You can find me on social media.
Just going to have you plug yourself. Perfect.
Yeah. You can find me at Ramit on Instagram, Twitter, my website, IWT.com, and my book,
I Will Teach You To Be Rich. And of course, my newsletter where I share some of the most
interesting stuff that I have found from my readers. That's on my website as well.
Thank you for coming. I really appreciate it.
Thank you.
A huge thank you again to Ramit for joining us. This was such a fun interview and such a cool pinch me moment for me and my own journey,
not only as a financial educator, but also my own personal finance journey.
Ramit is also one of the featured financial experts in my upcoming book called Financial
Feminist, which releases December 27th of this year, but is available for pre-order
now.
You can also check out Ramit's I Will Teach You To Be Rich website and book.
We've made sure to link all of it, his book, his social website in the show notes. You can also
check out his podcast of the same name, I Will Teach You To Be Rich, where he live coaches couples
through their money frustrations. It's really fascinating. Once again, as always, thank you for
being here. Truly, truly, truly. I know I thank you every episode. I thank you because I mean it.
I appreciate your
support of the show you sharing this podcast listening to this podcast not only of course
supports our company which is women-led women-founded predominantly uh women-run but also
is our way of getting financial feminism out into the world and is a way of taking money
conversations mainstream we talk about every taboo topic, sex, drugs, politics,
religion, death. We'll talk about every single topic before we'll talk about money.
And our commitment with Financial Feminist is to make those conversations less taboo,
more normalized, and for you to start growing your wealth. So I appreciate your support of the show.
Subscribe, leave us a review on wherever you're listening right now, and we can't wait to see you next week. Catch you later, financial feminists.
Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist, a Her First 100K podcast.
Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap, produced by Kristen Fields,
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