Financial Feminist - 77. Raising Financially Confident Kids with Bobbi Rebell
Episode Date: March 16, 2023You don’t want to just raise financially savvy kids –– you want to raise financially savvy grown-ups. When you ask people for their advice on parenting, you’ll get a hundred different answers,... most of which are probably valid but may not be right for you. Teaching kids about money is the same. In this episode, Tori sits down with financial educator and Certified Financial Planner Bobbi Rebell to talk about her new book, Launching Financial Grown-Ups. In the episode, Bobbi dives into the framework she’s used raising her kids to help them financially thrive and how to build your own financial framework that works best for your family and situation. Learn more about our guests, read episodes transcripts, and get bonus content on our show notes page: www.financialfeministpodcast.com Not sure where to start? Take our FREE money personality quiz! www.herfirst100k.com/quiz Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, financial feminists. Welcome back to the show. We have gotten tons of emails and messages
asking for more content around raising financially minded kids. So we brought in
Bobbi Rebell to talk about her upcoming book, Financial Grownups. In this little snack-sized
interview, we get into how Bobbi raised her own financially savvy kids, what she recommends you
help pay for and don't help pay for as parents, and how to navigate conversations with your spouse
when you might have different opinions on how to teach your children about money. I took a lot from this episode, but especially
there's no really like one size fits all advice when it comes to teaching kids about money.
You'll even hear like Bobby compromises on her own rules when it comes down to it. So whether
you have kids or are planning to or are the cool aunt, you're going to learn something from this
episode. A couple of logistical things before we get into it. One, if you aren't already subscribed
to the show, it's the easiest way to make sure that you never miss an episode. And if you're listening
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the show. Last thing I'll let you
know about is we always love taking your voicemails. If you have a question about money, a question
about maybe something that you'll learn in this episode about raising financially minded kids,
about navigating money conversations with your family, we would love to hear from you and
potentially answer that question in an upcoming episode. So head on over to the show notes,
link down below to send us a
voicemail. We love hearing from you. All right, let's go ahead and get into it. But first, a word
from our sponsors. I'm used to this.
This is just, I'm a very, I'm a Gen X-er, Tori.
And I just embrace being like very much a rule follower
and just doing like exactly as I'm told.
I'm not necessarily the free flowing person
that you know, you youngins are. Oh, but I'm very much like a rule follower in that way.
So are you? Yeah. Oh, gosh. Yeah. I'm like straight A student was like teacher's pet.
Oh, 100%. I completely believe that. Yeah, I do. But like, starting like in high school, college,
I would like crack jokes,
and I was a bit of the class clown, but I was the class clown who got A's. So it was like,
yeah, I don't know. We it was a fine line to walk. We're so excited to have you.
I'm so excited to be here. We're such dear old friends. And I know I just, you know,
I never had any doubts about you. I think that I'm delighted
at the timeline because you I love and I am a listener of financial feminist the podcast. And
I love when you refer back to like, so many years ago, you know, you're talking about like your blog
and I'm like, that was a hot second ago. Like, like, you're like, that's like nothing in adult
years. You know, can we just talk about that? Like adult years to where you're you're like that's like nothing in adult years you know can we just talk about that like
adult years to where you're you're like 28 years old I mean this is like ridiculous that you talk
about the olden days like it's really been a minute okay it just feels like so much has happened
especially like pre and post pandemic or what I mean arguably not even post pandemic but it's like
everything happened during this time where all of the rest of the world was burning too.
And so it just feels like such a longer period of time.
Like my four years of college like blew by.
And I mean, all of the time has really.
But like especially these last couple of years, like they felt both simultaneously shorter and longer at the same time.
And I don't know how that works.
But yeah, it does feel like a long time ago.
Yeah, a lot of us.
But you know what? You were hyper productive during the pandemic. And that's
not always it's really like that's like a social experiment. Like what did people do? Some people
were like just Netflixing. And there's nothing wrong with that. I certainly did a lot of that.
Some people like had the most productive periods of their careers, just finally having the space,
both in time and in mental space to just do something that they might not have been motivated
to do. And I think you were motivated regardless. But it also gave you the space to sort of observe,
take a step back and then push forward into things in a way that maybe you saw opportunity
in that timeframe.
Yeah. And it also just happened to be, of course, everybody's stressed about money, where are we turning on TikTok? And we happened to be there. And that was both an intentional
choice and also just like a fun, like, I don't know, the kismet thing.
I remember us talking about you going on TikTok. We've been friends for a long time. And we had
these conversations partially because I was interviewing you, by the way, for my book and you play a pivotal role in my book, which we can talk
about, but you were saying how you went on TikTok, but you didn't put yourself out there until you
spent some time listening. And that's a theme that you talk about in launching financial grownups is
that we all have to take a step back and actually hear what's going on. And I think that you did
take the time to really see, okay, what is resonating with people in tech talk? How does the message have to be communicated
for it to be heard? Because there is so much noise on every social media platform, but certainly
on TikTok. And I think that's something that can be applied to so many aspects of life of ambition
of career of relationships is listening. I appreciate that. I'm often a better talker than I am a listener,
which is why I host a podcast. But no, that's a perfect transition into like, I wanted to
talk with you today mostly about like how to raise financially minded kids, right? And like,
I've been asked, of course, what does it mean to be a financial feminist? And I'll give you
the same question, which is like, what does it mean to be a financial grownup? What does that
look like? It's really about taking ownership of your decisions. And you talk a lot about the
systemic things that we can't control. Acknowledge that and then focus on what you can control and
then move forward with that. Don't get mired down in people telling you, you can't do this,
you can't do that. I mean,
we've talked both of us about the pivotal role that our fathers played and it's father daughter relationship in giving us the confidence that we can, like, it's just assumed like people say,
Oh, how did you write two books? You've written now this huge bestseller. Well, I, it never
occurred to me that I couldn't write the book. I just decided one day that I was going to write
a book and I marched into the editor in chief at Reuters and I told day that I was going to write a book and I marched into the editor in
chief at Reuters and I told him what I was going to do. I actually, I shouldn't say I just marched
in. I took a step back. I learned how to do Squarespace. I made a dummy website. Then I went
in. I did. I presented it. I said, I'm writing this book. I want your blessing. And will you
be the first person I interview? And getting that, then you get the ball rolling. So that confidence
is what I think is the key thing for a financial grownup is just
make the decisions of what you're going to achieve and then execute it.
Do it.
Don't listen to people that say you can't find the way to get it done and just keep
going.
I mean, I literally, there was, I had no business.
I look back, I had no business saying I was going to write a book.
I was a TV anchor.
I had three little kids at home and I just like decided, and I just worked around my schedule. I'd looked at, you know, I have to be
at work from these hours and I'm working 12 hours on page four, seven, cause it's eight plus lunch.
Cause I was forced to be in union, which I have mixed feelings about. But, but at the end of the
day, again, can't control that. Right. I could not control that. I was in a union that caps in
theory, caps my pay. I have no doubt. And I'll just say this, that some mainly men may have worked and gotten raises, but I was always told this is the union
raise. So that was to me something I had to eventually get out of. And I was like, what am
I going to do? Well, I'm not going to work 12 hour days anymore. I'm going to work what they're
paying me because I'm going to spend the other time writing my book so I can leverage my career and take control myself.
And so I just, one day I had no book deal. I had nothing. I had people that said, well,
who are you going to do? You have money to hire someone to write the book for you.
Tori, I was a journalist, literally. I was a global business news anchor. I had a column
on Reuters, on personal finance, globally syndicated. And people asked, well, who's
going to write your book for you? And I just said, I am. And they were like, when? You have three kids,
a husband, a dog, and a full-time job. And I said, I am. And I just figured out when drop-off,
the earliest possible drop-off to drop my kid off, who was seven at the time. I paid the 20 bucks for
the extra babysitting. Again, money buys you things. You got to pay the extra money for childcare. And I just went to the same coffee shop, head down with a baseball cap,
didn't make eye contact, didn't socialize. And every day for two to three hours, I wrote that
book. And I think taking control of your life like that and saying, I'm going to create a second
career. Yeah, that's what I could control. I couldn't control that they weren't giving me
raises. They gave me nice titles, Tori. They really kept giving me nicer titles. It was great.
You mentioned navigating, writing a book, of course, working a nine-to-five and also having
children. A good chunk of your platform is raising kids to be good with money. And one of the questions
I get all the time from our audience is like, how can parents start talking to their children
as they grow up? And of course, I have some ideas, and I mentioned this in your book,
from being the kid, but I don't have children myself. So for you, and happy to hear some
stories from your book as well. What are some
common ways that parents can start educating their kids or talking to their kids about money as they
age? Really listen. And again, this is something you talked about, but I'm going to emphasize some
more about it is listening to your kids. And I just, I don't mean just like have a talk and like,
be like, tell me what you think. Actually listen to their everyday conversations and figure out what's going
to resonate with them, right? What do they care about? So for example, we had with my now 15-year-old,
the one that was seven at the time, we've had many allowance failures. Why does the concept
of allowance keep failing? And allowance, by the way, for parents can be very controversial. People
have very strong feelings about allowance. And we've always had things you
just do because you're in the family. It's just his job. He takes out the garbage. That's the
thing. And kid number two, he does the dog late night walk, whatever it is that we just expect.
But I set up certain things for him that I'm like, okay, if you make your bed every day,
you will get $15 a week allowance. Here's the problem. I didn't listen to the fact that he valued the privilege of not making his bed every day more than he valued $15.
There was nothing he wanted to buy. Right? So what was the point? Right? So that's when I say,
and that's a mic, it's like a microscopic example of like, I wasn't hearing him, even though he
wasn't saying, no, mom, I don't want the allowance. He just, he was cool. He was like, awesome in his head. I don't have to make my bed anymore. All I
do is not get the money. Right? So you have to listen. What do they really want? And another
theme that you talked about was if your kid is doing something that you think is not good
financially, how do you make that case? You don't shame them. You don't judge them. You listen to them. Gee, you want to buy. And this
happened with my 20, now she's 26 years old, my stepdaughter. I will tell you, she saved $100,000
by 24. We can talk about the privilege involved in that. And she owns her own apartment. She owns
a co-op. I love it. I love it when women quote unquote beat me. Like people message me and
they're like, I did it at 23. I did it at 24.
And I'm like, hell yeah, great.
But it's not a competition.
It's about being deliberate.
She lived at home.
I feel she, in retrospect, when I heard she did a podcast episode with me and things come
out and things came out that I was like, wait, but you missed your friend's thing.
Cause you were like, it's not in the budget.
I'm like, you know, come on.
I wouldn't give you the money, you know, but it's, it's so hard.
But you know, one of the ways that she did this was she had gone to school.
She started Indiana University, got in as a teacher.
She was always a great teacher, taught swimming.
And when she did swimming, by the way, she made sure she got every level of credential
so she could make the maximum money.
She was always financially savvy.
If I'm going to show up for a swimming lesson, I want to get the top of the pay scale, right?
Think about that stuff. But she really realized when she went to Indiana that she did like urban life. She did miss, she grew up on the Upper East Side of New York City with all the
privilege and all the things, but you know what? She kind of liked that freedom. She liked being
able to take a cab if she was late. She likes being able to go out for a fancy drink if she
wanted. And she sort of started doing the math. And my husband, her father was very instrumental in like
looking at the numbers with her and just being like, this is what your life will look like.
You choose, you know, think about this. You know, we're going to pay for your college no matter
what. You will graduate debt free. However, this is what a teacher makes. This is what the max is.
This is what it costs to live in New York city at the level you want. And she switched to the School of Informatics. And she is now a very,
I'm so proud of her. She's very successful. I'm going to cry. She's a cybersecurity analyst for
a major consulting firm. She's been promoted. She owns her own apartment. Everyone, if you're
watching, I'm going to cry. I'm so proud of her. And she's proud of herself. And I think that those talks, and I do have a really
good life partner in my husband who is very clear with his children, all our children that, you
know, you should choose what you want to do, but choose with your eyes open and make those decisions.
And she made that decision because if you make that decision, if you push them to make the decision
and it's your decision, not theirs, it you push them to make the decision, and it's
your decision, not theirs, it's not going to end well, they're going to resent you for the rest of
their life, or they're going to just quit. I mean, I know people I know of someone I'm thinking of
that the parents, because it was more socially acceptable for that person to go to medical
school, they barely got in after years of trying. And then it was such a struggle. And it never
worked out. And the person is, you know, in a blue collar job now that they're very good at and they
earn enough money and they're happy.
So it's not about choosing the job with the most money.
It's choosing the right job for you.
And the parents have to accept that and let the kid live within their means.
You know, you can pay for dinner.
You can take your kid out to get a manicure, whatever you want to do that stuff.
You know, you pay for the fun, not the needs, but let them choose and then help them get where they
want to go. Not where you think is the quote, right thing, or that's going to kind of bring
you the spotlight. The spotlight needs to be on them. Well, let's talk about, like you mentioned,
you know, we're going to pay for your college or like maybe, you know, there's opportunities where
you're paying for certain things.
Either, I think one of the things is like, what will I help pay for?
Do you have strong feelings about that?
You know, I think that one of the common things that I hear too is it's like, you know, student
loans suck and I went through that and I don't want my child to go through that.
But we have a lot of parents who are sacrificing their own retirement to pay
for their kid's college or a portion of their kid's college. And then what happens, of course,
is that there's no loan for retirement. And so people end up having to rely on their children
anyway. So are there certain things where you're like, yep, this is the path? Or I mean, for me,
it's always personal finance is personal. What does that look like? I 100% agree with you. And one of the big themes of my book is that it is a call to
action to the, you know, the parents of the almost adult. So people in their, you know, 40s, 50s,
60s, whatever it is, primarily Gen X is at this point to put your oxygen mask on first. And I
think that is essential. That is everything. If you
don't want your kid to have student debt, you really don't want your kid to be supporting you.
So you need to process that and do the math. And I do agree. I also want to make a point though,
in my personal case, and I've been very outspoken about this, we were able to do it
without loans. And also I have a partner. I really felt the kids
should have some skin in the game. My partner didn't. And we made a compromise. That's how we
did it. The kids are very clear. They had their own spending money. They've always been employed.
These kids earn money and they are focused on earning. Both of my stepchildren who are now 23
and 26 are earners.
They take their earning power very seriously. They are hyper aware of their privilege. The
younger one now is working in the movie business and he comes home and he will just say, this is
funny. He says, he'll say one day, he said, I have content for you. I want to tell you things.
And he's telling me what he's learning about how other people live, that not everyone gets to live. And he's banking his money living here as his sister did right after college.
That's the plan. And he tells people, he said, our neighbors will come up to us and be like,
we spoke to him. He said, he's banking money. He's living at home so that when he leaves,
whether it's to rent or buy, he's got that emergency fund. He's got that financial backstop.
So these are kids that are very aware of what's going on. And that's always been the deal
that they work, they earn money. I know exactly how it's invested. We've had a lot of very tough
conversations in the last year because the stock market has not been our best friend. And it's hard
to tell a kid to keep dollar cost investing when they see what's been going on with the stock
market. So I think it's important that if you're, you know, if you are a single parent and you make
these decisions in a bubble, you do you, right? You make the best decision for you. But if you're
in a partnership, you do have to take into account, not just the financial part of it and making sure
obviously that you can afford it, but also how it's going to impact the other financial stakeholders
in the decision. And I really respect the fact that my husband felt strongly that this is something we can do for them. They're financially responsible kids. Our parents did it for us.
We will be fine with retirement. This will not make, it will not make a material impact on our
retirement. And we chose to do that. One of the toughest things to write in the book, I'll tell
you, and I'm curious to hear your reaction to this, is I do feel strongly that kids should not just be given cars just because they
became an age. But here's the problem, Tori. My dad gave me a car and I've talked to him about it.
I'd be like, why'd you do that, dad? Like you just gave it to me. Like I had a job. I could
have paid for the insurance. We never talked about the fact that you just like went to a car dealer
and you just were like, which one do you like? And it wasn't a fancy car to be clear. It was quite a modest car. It was focused on safety.
I wasn't driving the Ferrari far from it, but he said, well, it wasn't a financial thing that I
couldn't afford. And I needed you to drive your siblings. You know, it was, it was his convenience
for me to drive because he saved money to figure out transportation.
My mother, and she's no longer with us, but I'm so proud.
And I'm proud of her.
The older I get, the more proud I am.
She went and just became a lawyer in her 40s, which was so unheard of at the time.
And she always wanted to.
And she always sort of had this resentment that she went to Smith College.
She had been a teacher.
And then when she had kids, that was it, you didn't work. And she felt like she was always
working for charity and doing the mommy things. And she's like, but why don't I get paid?
Right. And she went to law school, you know, as soon as my brother was in kindergarten.
And, you know, I'm so, I'm just so proud of her too, looking back because she didn't have the
opportunities that we have.
And I'm, you know, I think my father was supportive, but I also think it was unusual that your wife would suddenly up and do that.
So she wasn't really around to like be the mommy chauffeur.
So I think part of the reason that he just bought the car was, you know, convenience.
And that's, that's the other thing is there's this layer of practicality sometimes, right?
I always had jobs from age 15
on. So I was working at a bakery. I was working at a department store doing gift wrap. I was folding
clothes at a clothing store. I was always working. So I had to get to my jobs and I had to drive my
siblings around. So sometimes these decisions, which seem ridiculous, you just bought the car,
were actually made sense in
that moment. I am putting myself in the shoes of a listener who, you know, we're both white women
who have had a ton of privilege and who also, really hard who are like, my family's not even,
there's not even a thought of can I afford a car for you? There's not even a thought of maybe even
going to college period, yet alone paying for part of, if not all of it. How do you navigate
a conversation raising financial grownups, raising financially minded kids when you're
financially struggling?
Yeah, I think that that's a really important point. And it points out that there are these huge systemic things going on. And I think that this is beyond my ability to solve and your ability
to solve. And the thing that's most important is that we raise these issues, and we acknowledge it.
that we raise these issues and we acknowledge it. And we understand that it is definitely not an even playing field. And so, you know, we do our best. We put content out that hopefully is
helping people and we try to be a resource to people and we try to just be supportive
and hear them. But the truth is it's just not okay. And I think that there's, you know,
we can talk about legislation and different programs
that are going on. I mean, I can start rattling off, you know, a better balance is one organization
that I would encourage people to, are you familiar with them? I don't know. I think I've heard of
them. Tell me more. Yeah. So they have been successful in getting, especially when it comes
to balance, obviously. But, you know, for example, if you are a cashier, there were cashiers at places,
I don't want to misname a company, but I'm thinking of some very large employers where
if you were a cashier and you're pregnant, you can't even get necessarily the bathroom breaks
that you need, the childcare, the things that don't allow you to go just do your job.
I mean, paid family leave, we're still the only quote unquote industrialized country who does not have required family leave at the government level.
Right. And the family leave we have, I mean, if you don't get paid for your family leave, what's the point? That's not family leave.
Right.
No, there's no family leave if there's no paycheck. Who can do that? Right. So, you know, I think that, you know, being part of these organizations, supporting them, I'm also part of an organization. I'm on the board. Actually, I just finished a meeting with
jwi.org, jwi.org. So it stands for Jewish Women International, but it is for everyone. That's
just how it was founded. And it serves every any, any race, you know, religion, whatever.
But what they do is they support women who are victims of domestic violence. And what you say,
which is correct, is 99% of that.
And that's actually a statistic.
We're not just being, you know, we're just not throwing out that number.
That's actually the statistic.
99% of those women are victims of financial abuse.
Yep.
Okay.
And I was in, I will tell you, I was in a marriage, very brief marriage in my 20s.
I'm now married to, I call my forever husband, but I was in a very, um, you know, verbally and mentally abusive marriage and money got me out of it. And I say
that all the time. If I didn't have money, money and family, money and an amazing family got me
out of a toxic situation that I was afraid to leave for three years. I was so afraid of, of,
it was just the shame of it. I was embarrassed for people to find out what this man was doing to me and how condescending
he was.
I mean, I was working on camera journalist and he made me feel like a piece of you know
what all the time.
I mean, I had no confidence.
I didn't know who I was.
He made me feel so small, as you like to say, and without family, but also money, and the education,
I don't know how I would have gotten out of that. And I come from so much privilege.
So where does that leave someone who doesn't? Right. And so that's one of the reasons that
I'm on the board of directors, please look up jwi.org. And also a better balance.
We'll put it in the show notes. Yeah. And I think, again, I like these solutions,
we don't have solutions at the individual level beyond as transparent and open as you can be about money,
especially if we're talking largely financial grownups, right? It's probably high school,
college age, right? And so it's starting to have more transparent and honest conversations
about money, about debt, about saving. And if you have made certain financial mistakes,
that's a perfect opportunity to actually discuss those with your kid of like,
yep, when I went to a certain retail store and they told me it was a rewards card and I later
realized it was a credit card. That's a perfect opportunity to have that conversation with them. And also, the other thing I've realized, too, is that anybody learns by doing. And sometimes you just have to, like, create the space and the grace for your kids to make the bad decision, because they probably won't do it again. Or at least they'll think twice before they do it again.
before they do it again. Because I know, you know, plenty of people have told me something.
And I'm like, Okay, cool. That sounds good. And then a year later, I go out and do the thing. And only when I've done it, do I actually learn? Oh, yeah, that was not the smartest decision. I'm
not going to do that again. Yeah, I love that you said that. So the 15 year old made a mistake.
He Well, he almost did. He was prevented from it because of communication, because he knew that I wouldn't judge him. And he came to me, he said, you know, someone is asking me on this video game. I think
it was on discord. And he said, they're saying that my account is locked and they need me to
give them $50 to restart it. And I'm like, Oh no, no, no. He wanted the money from him. Like,
no, no, no, no, no. Cause I have, I use an app where there's sort of spending controls on it
for him. And we were able to, I was able to show him, you know, this is
what's happening. Like, you know, you gave them your password and they locked it. So he's like,
but I've known them for years. I'm like, you've known their acronym online. We've talked about
this, but so at the end of the day, you can have, and he's a smart kid. And this is someone that,
he trusted because his other friend, his real life friend trusted this. It's a whole, and that's how scams like Madoff and Sam Bankman Freed happened because people don't vet because
they think their friend vetted because that friend thinks someone else vetted. So, you know,
what saves us is keeping the kids or allowing the kids to make mistakes, but also not judging them
when they do. So I didn't judge him. I was like, this could happen. I'm glad
you're coming to me and sharing this with me. And I immediately, of course, got my brilliant
stepdaughter, the cybersecurity expert into the conversation. And I was like, Ashley,
what are we doing here? Walk me through this. How do we, you know, get this bad guy away from
your brother and so on. And the other thing that I think is really important, and this is something I asked you on my podcast, what have you learned since your book came out?
What's been fascinating to me is so many people have come up to me and said, I love this book,
but I'm bad with money. So I can't teach my kids. And I've said, you are the perfect person
to teach your children because every mistake you made, not only is a perfect lesson,
but if you show them that
you're vulnerable and you screw up too, they're going to feel a lot more comfortable coming to
you when they screw up. Because the only thing worse than a kid grinding themselves into credit
card debt is a kid in credit card debt that hides it from their parents. So it's really important to
let your kids know they're going to make mistakes and you're going to be there. You may not write a check to solve their problems, but you're going to help them figure out how to solve
their problems. And you're going to be there to listen to them, to support them, to guide them.
And maybe you're not going to literally like wave your magic checking book, even though we don't
actually write checks anymore, but you're not going to, you're not going to wave the magic
wand and fix it, which is what I tell people not to do, which is concierge parenting,
but you're going to be. But you're going to
be there and you're going to get them out of it. You're going to be a family and you're going to
support each other. And if you don't have a biological family that's there, find a family,
however you define family. I think that's the other thing that's really important.
You and I have amazing families. We're very privileged. Not everyone does, but find someone,
find a mentor. It might be someone in your office. It might be somebody in a social group. It might be somebody in your religious organization, but find someone who can
be there. If you don't have the family member that can be the light for you.
Yeah. The chosen family. And I love that we talk about vulnerability so much on this podcast and
you're exactly right. If like, you know, you you want to to have an open space where your kids can come to
you and say they fucked up rather than bury it or lie about it or feel so ashamed that that,
you know, that they're going to get in trouble. And it's Yeah, I think that that's incredibly
powerful. And I think it's important for parents to kind of stop themselves
from saving kids that don't need to be saved. Let them make decisions. I remember when Bradley,
who the one that works in the movie business, he was finishing up his project senior year at
college. And he was a film major, which is of course, music to every parent's ears when you're,
you know, paying for college. But by the way, he has a full time, you know, good, really good job
in a major motion picture with lots of NDAs. So that's all I can say, but it's really going to be
big. But, you know, he came to us and he said, you know, I know that I'm supposed to NYU budget
is whatever, you know, $500, whatever they give the kids and the equipment, but I really need more
money to do the film. And, you know, I guess he was thought we were going to write a check,
but my amazing
husband and I, who are very in sync on this kind of looked at each other. We were definitely on
the same page and we were like, how are you going to raise the money? There was no check coming.
And we did sit there and brainstorm with him. He eventually did, you know, basically a GoFundMe
project. We got to learn about how it's taxed, all the fees involved, you know, it's important
to walk them through, not just say, okay, good, go do that. Do that. And then you sort of brainstorm,
okay, you can't just put it on the platform and think people will come. Who are you going to hit
up? How are you going to approach them? How are you marketing this? What rewards are you going
to give them? What are going to be your benchmarks? And what do you do? I think one of the best things
ever is he didn't reach his total goal. He got a lot of it, but not all of it. So what lesson did that teach? You got to work with what you got. What compromises will you make on the movie? Maybe you're going to shoot in one location instead of three. Maybe you're going to have a smaller cast. Maybe you're not going to have the extra person that you wanted on. Maybe you're going to ask a friend to supply food for the cast rather than have it catered,
whatever.
Not that he, I don't think he was ever in the catering idea, but you get the idea.
What are you going to be trading?
They do a lot of bartering in film school.
I'll work on your film.
You work on my film, all that stuff.
So I think that he learned a lot about the business of film in doing that, but also in
the fact that, yeah, he's living here.
We don't charge him rent.
We don't charge him for food, but we do watch that he's investing the money and we do
expect him to be at work every day. And we do expect him to chip to do. And it's great. He does,
you know, it's kind of weird when your kid starts like doing the things without you asking,
you know, like whatever, like empty the dishwasher. They just like start doing at a certain
day, your kid will just wake up and be an adult and start emptying the dishwasher without you asking. It's magic,
Tori. I don't know if you ever just suddenly one day started like doing chores around your
parents' house. I think my mom would like to listen to this podcast and manifest that a little
bit. My last question for you, if somebody's listening and they are trying to figure out how
to raise financial grownups, and maybe they didn't have the best experience around money
and didn't have the best experience with examples from their parents or their family.
What is one thing you have to say to them? Do it together. Do it together. Just own it.
Tell your kid, this is how my background was. I want more for you, but I also want more for me.
So let's figure it out together and let's make a plan and you help me and I'll help you and let's co-motivate. Let's find an app we can both be on.
We can be each other's cheerleaders. Let's talk about what goals do we really want to accomplish?
What matters to you? Here's what matters to me. Here's what I want to be in one year, five years,
10 years. Here's my ideas for you. There's nothing wrong, by the way, with having expectations for
your children, as long as you balance them with what their goals are. If you have a child that
you think maybe is, as you like to say, thinking small, give them the confidence to think bigger.
You know, don't just accept, listen, but be their cheerleader, be their support, tap into, you know,
what are they good at? A lot of younger people are sort of, it's not ambivalent about their
career goals. They might not have a passion or a passion that pays, which is important to separate
that. It's great if you can do something as you do that you're passionate about and earn a very
nice living at it. But sometimes the things we're most passionate about are not income producing.
And sometimes if they are, we lose our passion for it when it becomes our job. We all talk about
like the chef
that doesn't wanna cook dinner when he gets home.
So you gotta be careful what you choose, right?
So I would just make it a family goal.
Keep it all together and just love each other
and support each other and focus on financial wellness
and living your lives together in support of each other.
I love it.
Thanks for being here, Bobbi.
Where can people find you?
So find me, first of all, at boRebell.com is my primary website. And I also have a new company.
We actually, I forgot to talk to you about that. It's called Financial Wellness Strategies. So
that's the URL, Financial Wellness Strategies. And I'm going to be working with companies to
help better educate their employees on all things financial, and also working on generational
communication and making sure that parents are communicating with the next generation, maybe the next two generations about money and about
their hopes and expectations for the generations to come. I love it. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you again to Bobby for joining us and chatting about her new book. If you enjoyed
this interview, you can grab a copy of Financial Grownups wherever books are sold. As always,
Financial Feminists, we appreciate you being here. We appreciate your support of
our work and we'll catch you later. Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist,
a Her First 100K podcast. Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap, produced by Kristen
Fields, marketing and administration by Karina Patel, Sharice Wade, Alina Helzer, Paulina Isaac,
Sophia Cohen, Valerie Oresko, Jack Koning, Khalil Dumas, Elizabeth McCumber, Beth Bowen, research by Arielle Johnson
audio engineering by Austin Fields
promotional graphics by Mary Stratton
photography by Sarah Wolf
and theme music by Jonah Cohen Sound
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