I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 102. “If he doesn’t stop supporting our 31-year old son, we won’t be able to retire”
Episode Date: May 30, 2023Janis and Michael have been married for 39 years. They share two adult children; the first is a therapist that recommended coming on the podcast. The second continues to take advantage of them financi...ally. Their story is heartbreaking, totally unique—concerning, but far from hopeless. This episode is brought to you by: Ness Well | IWT listeners can get an extra 5K welcome bonus when they apply for the Ness Card at https://nesswell.com/ramit. DeleteMe | If you want to get your personal information removed from the web, go to https://joindeleteme.com/ramit for 20% off. Methodology | Visit https://gomethodology.com/ramit for 10% off your first order of Methodology. All The Hacks | Check out All the Hacks by Chris Hutchins on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. Your wallet will thank you later. Links mentioned in this episode • Download the Conscious Spending Plan Connect with Ramit • Get Money Coaching with Ramit • Get my New York Times best-selling book • Get my no-numbers journal • Other episodes • Instagram • Twitter • YouTube If you and your partner have a money issue and you want my help, I occasionally select a couple to work with, free of charge. Apply for my help here. Produced by Crate Media.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Your son is 31, you're 63, and you're helping him with his finances.
It was an agreement that they were going to pay it back.
His kids, he says he's telling us the truth, so they want to believe him.
The question is, will I see it again?
Well, that's what my wife and daughter think,
but I think family loyalty will somehow come through
where they'll make attempts to pay a back.
Tell me about that.
Family loyalty to you means what?
That I try and trust that they'll do what they say.
You think your son has that same sense of duty?
It's not a parent that he does, no.
I don't want to accept that.
Even though it's probably I probably should, but...
You don't want to accept it because?
He's my son and I want him to succeed.
We've got to cut him off.
If he wants to do this by himself. He wants to be independent and
all that, so we've just got to do it. And Mike actually said, because I said, what are
you afraid of? And he said, I'm zero, money to zero. It's bad.
What'd you do for your 31-year-old son still called you for help with money? Well,
today I'd like you to meet Mike and Janice. They're both in their early 60s, and this conversation
is absolutely fascinating. They wrote me with a list of issues
from a foreclosed farmhouse to a dozen orthopedic surgeries
and ducks and dogs and animals,
but it's really their interpersonal dynamics
that make this conversation unforgettable,
especially when Mike talks about their son.
Before we go on, I want to remind you that you can watch this full episode on YouTube,
which lets you see the body language.
I would highly encourage you to do it.
And do me a favor.
If you like this podcast, hit pause,
go over to Apple Podcasts and leave a written review.
It really helps.
Alright, now, Mike and Janice. Tell me about a time where you were not on the same financial page as each other.
This should be easy. Yeah, for us not on the same page.
Okay, give me an example. When I found out that the beautiful shed that Mike built me,
and it's just gorgeous and spend a lot of time on it
and everything, but I didn't know that he charged it
on the Home Depot credit card.
I saw him have the money.
Mike, you have a Home Depot credit card?
Why?
Explain that.
Well, originally,
we did not say I was gonna get 10% off a two by four and save 45 cents.
How about 24 months? No finance.
When we were getting the flooring, right? Do you still have this home depot card with a balance that
you carry over every month? Yeah. How much is the balance? Oh, 1100. Okay. 1100. Yeah. That was 11,000. Oh, no. See, this is the disconnect. Wait, that's kind of a big
difference in numbers to not know, Janice, wouldn't she say? Yes. I feel like we're just always
and I don't want this. This is just my mindset that we're just always going to go from money to zero, money to zero, money to zero.
So it doesn't really matter if it's 1111,000, it's bad.
It's bad.
How much did the whole shed cost?
All the labor was free, so.
But yeah, it was maybe 1500 in materials.
All right, 1500 on the credit card.
And how'd you discover this, Janice?
We ended up using the, our tax return, which we're really happy about,
because there have been a lot of years where we had to pay and stuff to pay down some debt.
And then I said, why is there that much on the Home Depot credit card?
You know, and he said, well, the shed. And I, what why is there that much on the Home Depot credit card? And he said, well, the shed.
And I, what?
The shed?
Where did you think he would have gotten the money to pay for it?
I thought we had it from different jobs he's done.
Do you have access to each other's financial accounts?
Yeah.
Do you have a joint account?
Yes.
Any individual accounts?
No.
Okay, it's all joint.
Great.
And you both have access.
Now, the real question is, do either of you ever log in?
He logs in all the time.
Are you the money guy, Mike?
Yeah.
Okay, you're the money guy and Janice, what, what, how would you describe your role?
Financialy speaking.
Oblivious.
Oblivious.
Okay, you're financially oblivious. He's the money guy.
Fair?
Yeah.
All right.
Yes.
And before we continue, are these roles working?
No.
What's the communication like between the two?
You've been married 39 years?
We're really a really good team like building a shed or, you doing things like that but as far as like emotionally and
the way Mike explains things and you know stuff with computers and all that I just get frustrated
I'm not getting the the answer that I asked and so I just I kind of shut down and he shuts down and
It just
Doesn't happen when you think about money. What words do you see?
I guess
More or more opportunity loss because not having a plan
Of what to do with the money that we had as far as mainly with
investment and savings. So what does that feel like? What's the feeling? If you
had to describe it in a word? Loss. What's the feeling you have with money?
Because it's lack of structure unstructured.
Yeah, that's a bit of a cerebral word.
It's not really a feeling.
Can you give me a feeling?
He could get that a lot.
Really?
Yeah.
Is there a offline?
Who says that to you?
Our marriage concert before.
Okay.
She said that you're telling me what you think,
not what you feel, that kind of thing.
Right.
I understand deeply.
Yeah, we used to have to have kind of thing. Right. Okay. I understand deeply.
Yeah, we used to have to have the color wheel, you know?
I totally get it.
So Mike, if I'm thinking like there's a part of my life that's unstructured, I feel
what?
I guess we'll really be stressful.
Is it stressful to you, money?
Yes, because I don't know what I'm doing with it.
Either of you know what you're doing with money?
I mean, I know how to save it, and I know how to not spend it, but I certainly wouldn't
hire myself to invest in it.
Okay.
Yeah.
I don't know how many times a week I asked Mike if there's something wrong because I always
feel like he's holding something in, you know.
So I think if we worked on these things together, they're, you know, he wouldn't feel like he doesn't
want to tell me we don't have it,
and I wouldn't be wondering.
Got it.
So Mike, you go, you build this shed because you think
that Janice wants it.
Janice, did you want a shed out of curiosity?
I really did, but I have asked him with everything
to tell me if we don't have it.
Like I would have been fine without it.
Hold that thought.
And Mike, what did you do that?
Or if so, tell me and if not, why not?
No, I didn't ask her as far as you're really needing it or whining it, but like
I said, for the most part, I've, I guess we've gotten, I've gotten this into trouble with
the money because when someone would say that they want it, you know, it's like, okay, well, I got to do it.
Instead of really sitting down and saying, okay,
well, yeah, we want to do this,
but what's it going to cost?
And then what do we have?
And how long would it take to save for it
if we were going to wait?
And I'd be right on board with that.
I'm getting a lot of clues already.
Are you?
Here's what I've noticed.
Janice is oblivious.
And from the way she describes it, I don't think she actually thinks it's a problem.
Mike feels confused and overwhelmed, but he can't articulate why.
And it seems like he makes a lot of assumptions about what the people around him actually want.
Let me try to find out a little bit more about their backgrounds. I'm so excited for today's episode sponsor,
methodology, because I know the founder personally. Her name is Julie. We met at Stanford. We were
classmates and you may have seen me interview her in my dream job program. She's the same Julie who I helped get dream jobs at different companies.
Now she runs her own.
And if I wanted to get food delivered to me, healthy food, delicious food,
so that I could save time and not have to think about what to cook,
this is the company I would use.
The company's called methodology.
And I want to tell you a couple of reasons that I love it.
First off, what is it?
Methodology is a gourmet, sustainable, nourishing meal
delivery service for busy professionals and parents.
And I have been wanting to recommend
an amazing food delivery service for a long time for you
because food is one of the things that most of us love
and we also spend a ton of time on it.
So what if you could actually have food
that was delicious and saved you time?
Well, one of the things I wanted to share is that I follow Julie on Instagram.
I know her personally, but I also follow her journeys.
She goes around the world to learn about food cultures from different cities,
and then she brings that to her products.
And she's obsessed with delicious food.
The meals and methodology use Michelin quality ingredients grown in greenhouses and
hand harvested. Check out some of the items on her menu.
Wagyu beef meatloaf and mushroom jus gravy,
ultimate healing chicken soup with shredded pastured chicken breasts, basil, blossom,
petite thyme, forbidden black rice, roasted vegetables, and kale, and finally vegan and grain-free salted
caramel pecan donuts.
The food sounds amazing, it looks even better and it's super easy to make.
These meals are all calorie controlled and you can see the nutrition facts and ingredients
for every meal you get.
You'll never see processed fake ingredients and all the protein options are sustainable and
whole foods. Methodology has even been scientifically validated by Stanford University and
published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. I want you to visit gomethodology.com slash remit and use code remit for 10% off your first order of methodology. That's g-o-m-e-t-h-o-d-o-l-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-o-d-d-o-d-o-e-t-h-o-d-o-l-o-g-y.com
slash remeat-r-a-m-i-t for 10% off your first order.
Now, if you've ever thought about spending some of your money
to save time and have healthy, delicious food,
this is the service I would recommend.
It's called methodology.
One of my money dials is generosity. For example, I love tipping big. I love buying gifts and
experiences for my family. And recently, I bought my parents a subscription to Delete Me, this episode's sponsor.
Delete Me is a subscription service that will remove your personal information that's
being sold online.
If you've ever Googled your name, you'll notice tons of search results with your personal
information being shared online.
That's not okay.
It's not okay for you. It's definitely not okay for your family,
including your parents.
Now, delete me will remove it all.
Your name, address, phone number, all of it.
It automatically works in the background
to scan and delete your personal information
from over 30 data brokers,
but they'll do custom requests on over 580 data brokers total.
The thing is, identity theft is a real issue.
An estimated 15 million Americans had their identity stolen in 2021.
We've had a number of people on this very show who were victims of identity theft,
and often it put them into tens of thousands of dollars of credit card debt
and it ruined their credit.
That's why I find delet me so valuable.
It's a service that I personally use and I love it.
They reviewed over 4,600 listings for me and removed dozens of pieces of personal information.
I knew it would be important to protect my parents too,
but I also knew that they probably wouldn't sign up themselves,
so I just got it for them.
So if generosity is one of your money dials, great.
If you care about your parents at all,
if you have ever given them a hug, just sign them up.
You know they aren't gonna do it for themselves,
but you also know that they probably need it.
So if you wanna get your personal information
and the personal information of your loved ones
removed from search results on the web.
Go to joindeletme.com slash remeat
for 20% off a plan for you or your entire family.
That's joindeletme.com slash remeat
R-A-M-I-T for 20% off.
Both Jan and I come from alcoholic families and we as kids really didn't have anything.
My father was an alcoholic and somewhat abusive but a lot of times absent. My parents were divorced when I was six.
Then we live with my grandparents for five years, which was really our saving grace.
They were great people.
And then my mom got remarried. And up until our mid to late teens, he was okay, but then once we started,
he was a real competitive person. And so that when we started beating him at games and things like that then is sort of hold back and, you know, but it was like where he would be on a golf
league, two bowling leagues, but he couldn't pay for us to be at Little League or whatever.
We weren't worth paying to be participating in different sports.
And are you talking about you or did you have siblings as well?
Yeah, three brothers.
Oh, wow. So did you have siblings as well? Yeah, three brothers. Oh wow. So
Did you go to college? Yes, what was that like being away to college?
What was
the first one was interesting when I first went to
college when we went to meet with the financial people and you know the expected parent contribution and
My parents were like, there is none.
So, they were gonna count however many thousands towards it.
And it's like, well, no, we don't have it.
My mom was one that was like, with the four boys,
everybody had to be treated equally.
So, even though we're all different, she had to be treated equally. So even though we're all different,
she had to treat us the same.
So I was on my own, you know, work in
and then getting student loans for it.
When you heard that,
were you sitting in the meeting with your parents
when they said there is none?
Wow.
What do you remember feeling at that time?
I know it's hard as a teenage boy to remember feelings,
but do you remember anything about that moment? Yeah, it was that, you know, even though, you know, it was,
it was my stepfather and it brought home really where he treated his own kids, even though
they were living separately, better than he was treating us. We both pretty much said we want to do the opposite of what our parents did.
So I think that I really wanted my family to be able to have things, experience things, because I didn't, you know, I just didn't know when to say no. Can I tell you a little story that tells about his parents at the graduation?
Sure.
Mike's parents were there, and they handed him a graduation card, and he looked at it,
and then he handed it to me, and I opened it up, and it had every single scent that he had borrowed,
like Christmas present for dad, $20.
And she had listed every debt that he had to them
and then put minus a hundred were proud of you.
And he had a master's in architecture
from University of Illinois.
Wait a minute.
Yep.
Mike's mom listed every expense he incurred
as a kid. In bag chair, college, yeah. And what was the minus 100? What is that? That was
for gifts. We're graduating with a mask. Yeah. And Mike, was your reaction? Here we go
again. Right. Yeah. He didn't do anything anything I ripped it up and threw it on the ground right the keeping track of everything
If you had to describe how that makes you feel that sort of that card and keeping track is there a word that comes to mind for you Mike
I guess
Almost like a commodity
What does that mean that it's like I'm a I guess, almost like a commodity.
What does that mean? That it's like I'm a,
maybe like a product, you know, being,
as I developed, there's a cost to developing
and instead of investing in my future, you know, it was alone, basically.
That's very perceptive. To see yourself in their eyes as a commodity, as someone who's got it,
you know, it's like factory expense. Oh, we got a factor in the lights on, write it down,
versus, you know, nobody
thinks about a child like that, you know, you don't calculate the diapers, you don't calculate
the time teaching them to write a bike and investment. It's just life.
Right. Interesting. All right. Like, what do you think? The lessons you learned about money
as a kid, all the way up to being a teenager are
You look back you put yourself in young Mike shoes 10-year-old Mike
17-year-old Mike what are those lessons you absorbed from your family?
I think my my grandfather when we were living with him
He was 68 when we moved in with him, he was 68 when we moved in with him. And he kept working
all the way through while we were there. So it seemed like, oh, you know, you worked forever.
And was this in the Midwest? Chicago, yeah. Described like the socioeconomic was it working class middle class? I would say
I would say between lower middle and working class. Okay. We had they they always
rented an apartment they never owned a home. Okay. But my aunt owned the building they lived in.
So you learned that you know you pretty much work into your old age, that's
what you do. What else do you remember as a kid and as a teenager learning? Well part
of it was that they didn't talk about money and that it was for it seemed like it wasn't
a topic for whatever reason. I think it just seems like when we were kids
It was the old thing of seeing but not heard kind of thing. Oh, that's a good one
See that's for adults not for kids. Yeah, and keep going what else? Yeah, well, yeah
I know the thing was like you know, especially
With my mom and grandpa working, then it was my grandma
taking care of us.
And she was 60 at the time.
And so it was like, eat breakfast, go outside, come back for lunch, leave, come back for
dinner.
It was like, we were out exploring and doing whatever, but not really, I guess that really seeming
or not feeling like we're a part of the family.
It was that, that was, like you said,
for adults to talk about it.
And we were just there to be kids.
What did they teach you?
I mean, I know that any parent or grandparents
teaches a lot of things just
by osmosis, but were there things like, for example, my parents, you know, they were like,
gotta get good grades, A's, A's, like that was really important. Gotta respect your family.
Like they explicitly taught us these things repeatedly. Were there things that your family
repeatedly taught you?
Boy outside of being a constant fixture of church,
my grand even to this day, Jan jokes, because I tie my shoes differently, because my grandpa paid me 50 cents to tie my shoes the way he did versus the one bowing around where he taught my
brothers that for a quarter. So I went for the 50 cents. What is that time I choose that
way? What's the lesson you take away from that? I'm part of that was it was okay to be
different because I did things differently than my brothers. I still do. I still think I'm
a little different than everybody else. And for sure, or bad. I think it's good.
Studying, I think, was one of the main things because we would come home from school,
sit at the dining room table until our homework was done. Okay. And then then we could leave. No. Duty. Yeah. Duty. Yeah. Yeah. Oh,
tell me about that, Mike. And Janice, thank you for the helpful nudge. The partner always
knows best. Oh, they're just waiting in the wings. And they just drop a little word and
they go, here you go, Rumi. Okay, Mike. A little birdie told me the word duty. Can you clarify?
Again, I think it ties back a lot to the religious practice that we had that your Catholic
was really ritualized. So we had that and you know, actually was an altar boy for a while.
Because not necessarily for a sense of duty, but because I got out of the first period
class for a half hour to get in late because I was an altar boy.
We did things out of a sense of duty to the family, whether we liked to or not, it was just
expected whether there was any joy in it or not that
didn't matter. It was just expectations to do these things. So Mike, would you say
that now you still embody this sense of duty? Yes. You know, when I talk to
people about money, I'm always hunting for a single specific vivid moment that gives me
some insight into their relationship with money. And I honestly cannot think of a
more vivid example than what Mike's mom did at his graduation. Can you imagine
your parent or parents hand over a card at your graduation, listing off every single expense that you
incurred as a kid minus a hundred dollars, which is their gift. And they say,
here you go, I literally cannot imagine this happening in my family. But you can
tell that this is seared into Mike's memory and Janice's as well. Think about
what this example means for the way that Mike's family communicated,
for their family structure,
for their ability to articulate things verbally,
for the way that they just expressed love.
Is it any surprise that Mike,
who grew up working class, being told,
you should be seen and not heard,
now struggles to articulate his feelings decades later? I speak to a lot
of diverse couples on this show, and Mike and Janice are adding a texture that we haven't
seen before here. I so appreciate them coming on and sharing their story with us.
One of my favorite things to talk about is this concept of money dials.
The areas where you love to spend money.
The most common one is food, the next most common one is travel, and the third most common
one.
A top money dial is health and wellness.
Now I get it.
I spend a lot on certain areas of my life.
For me, I love hotels that falls under luxury, I love convenience, that falls under having
my food delivered, etc.
And I also love the ability to spend on health and wellness, like a personal trainer
or selecting where I stay by how close the gym is.
Health and wellness is a top money dial for most of my audience.
That's why I'm excited to partner with Ness who
I want to tell you about today. With the Ness card, you can earn 5 x points on health and
wellness spending at grocery stores, gyms, salons, pharmacies, restaurants, and 2 x points
on everything else. Then, just like you use travel card points for travel rewards, you can redeem the points
from your Nest card for health and wellness experiences.
This could be things like a Chipotle burrito, to recovery gear, to an all-inclusive retreat.
Now, in my own personal life, I love spending money on health and wellness.
I have a personal trainer.
I get a weekly beard trim.
I buy protein powder and when I travel
I make sure to prioritize where I'm staying by how close it is to a good gym. Right now,
Ness is offering a 50,000 point bonus to members who spend $6,000 in the first 90 days plus
a $200 statement credit for health and wellness spending.
They have a special offer for our I will teach you to be rich listeners and extra 5,000
point bonus when you apply for the Nest card and get approved using the link nesswell.com slash remit. That's N-E-S-S-W-E-L-L dot com slash R-A-M-I-T. Offer and benefit terms apply.
You know, travel is one of my money dials. It's one of the areas that I love to spend money on.
I travel for months every year and I'm fanatical about the hotels I stay in and the experiences
that my wife and I go through when we go on these trips.
And I wanted to share another podcast that I really love called All the Hacks.
It's by my friend Chris Hutchins.
Chris is the person I actually called when I wanted to build a personal playbook for how
to use my airline points.
I got on the phone with him and my assistant and Chris said, okay, which cards do you have?
And we went through it and we built a personalized travel playbook because Chris knows everything
there is to know about travel.
And now he's got this amazing podcast that I want you to check out.
Again, it's called All the Hacks.
Chris has traveled to over 60 countries, mostly for free.
And each week on All the Hacks, he shows listeners how you can do the same with expert guests.
He even does deep dives on specific travel locations.
For example, there was recently an episode with the founder of a travel company where he
broke down where to find off the beaten
path experiences in Italy and the best way to use points and miles for your next trip there.
I've had the opportunity to be Chris's guest multiple times. Most recently we talked about
money and relationships and building a shared vision for your rich life. You can check that out
on episode 112. So check this podcast out is actually very interesting.
I want you to search for all the hacks on Apple podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Your wallet will thank you later.
And now you have a daughter as well, is that right? Yeah.
Son and daughter.
And your daughter is the one who actually turned you on to this podcast, I understand.
Yeah, she's amazing.
Amazing.
Now, she's a, she's some type of therapist, is that right?
Yeah, she's a marriage and family therapist.
Okay.
Great.
And financially speaking, how does she handle money?
She's following your book to a letter.
She got married two years ago,
and they're both like talking about money together
and making a plan and investing together.
Yeah, she's, she's on board.
She's not so different financially speaking.
Right.
I don't know.
You raise him the same way?
Well, not really.
Oh really, tell me.
Can I tell you? Please. I'd like to know this too. Well, not really. Oh really, tell me.
Can I tell you?
Please.
I'd like to know this too.
Yes, Alex.
Alex had a, you know, when he,
when it was the typical,
they get to the end of third grade
and you, you, and they discovered
he had ADD, but he also had a processing disorder.
So it was really hard for him to express himself. and so he started playing guitar at like five years old. This is your son when he was five
This is the son. So he started being in this band and then we moved into the house that we lost
Which was out in the country. So he went to a little country school where he was like
idolized I would say to the principal, he
wants to go travel the country, but I want him to go to school.
He was idolized because he was in a band?
Yeah. Like everybody just thought he was it. Yeah. And so the principal was trying to convince me that he could go to school online and still tour with this band.
And so he basically didn't get a high school education.
Whoa, hold on. Why did you move to the country?
My daughter had a really hard time in the school.
We were in it. It was real. Clicky and sports oriented or you
had to be a cheerleader on the dance team or good at soccer. And she was good at
everything that she wanted to do, but she didn't fit a mold. I got you. And so I
used to come and have lunch with her every day through high school because
she didn't have any friends. And she's beautiful and she's talented in everything, but she had no friends.
Alex had all the friends, but didn't get any of the academics through high school. Mike
would would bail him out, like do his projects him, and do his papers for him.
With him.
Well, which one was it?
For him or with him?
With him.
Listen as the clues start to gel together.
Mike was raised with a sense of duty that you help people around you that you work until you die.
Then Mike and Janice took their son and daughter out of school because their daughter was having
a tough time and so Mike decided he wanted to help his son now in school.
He started helping him with work.
He started doing the school work for him.
Now imagine you replace your rich life with a duty to help everyone else around you to your own detriment
for five years, ten years, thirty years. What do you think happens when you take that to
its logical extreme? Well, let's find out. So, Mike, would you say that now you still embody
the sense of duty? Yes. What is your duty now? I still have the sense of duty with even, you know, supporting the family and the kids to
to part of my detriment with my son that we've helped him financially more than we should have
instead of paying the kitchen with the tax return,
we paid off a credit card that I had used
to help him on a couple occasions.
How old is your son?
31.
Your son is 31, you're 63,
and you're helping him with his finances.
Yeah.
Does he have a job?
Yes.
How much does he make?
Ballpark.
Right now he's at like 3500 a month.
Okay, all right.
And for his area is that...
He's up in Seattle, so it's pretty expensive.
Yeah, that's expensive.
All right, so you help him with some stuff
and you said to your own detriment.
Hold on.
Hold on.
Janice just let out a huge sigh,
and she looks down at the floor.
Don't worry, Janice, I'm coming to you soon.
I know you got a lot of stories.
She's probably going to pull out this scroll.
If I pay just she goes,
remit and run the tape.
I got a few things I want to talk about.
All right.
I wasn't the only one who kept the list.
Because when he was younger, we helped him financially
as far as he was in a few bands.
He traveled the country.
So we helped him with that.
And it was great experience for him.
But then when he moved out, he got himself into situations with a variety of girlfriends
that were not helpful as far as economically.
That's a very nice way of putting it.
What does that mean?
They were freeloaders basically.
Okay.
He was paying for them what? Food? Everythingers basically. Okay. So he was paying for them, what?
Food, everything.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
So how many times did this happen, by the way?
It sounds like it's not just one.
Now, it's been a few times, but there were two big incidents.
One where his girlfriend wrecked his car and to get it fixed, he couldn't pick it up till
he paid for it.
He's insurance laps.
Yeah.
How much?
Oh, his insurance lap.
Okay, that's not good.
And how much did he have to pay?
It was about $3,600.
And so what do you do?
He picked up the phone to you?
Yeah.
How'd that call go?
Hey, dad.
We'll see.
Yeah. The car, you know, and the bad thing was? Hey dad Yeah, the car you know, he and the
The bad thing was that he actually worked at the car dealership. There was repairing it
And they wouldn't give him a break. This is like out of a sit. This is crazy. Yeah, yeah, okay
So they wouldn't it
It's like well, I take it on my paycheck, but they wouldn't do it. They wouldn't release a car to be paid for it and what kind of car by the way
Well, that was actually a land rover because he's fucking land rover
Are you kidding me? He may start a 500 a month and he drives a land rover. Well, no, there's this well previously
Previously had he had worked for land rover
So they he was making a lot more you don't get that much of a discount.
Actually, what they did was they actually gave him a stipend for the car because they used it
as advertising because he was driving around and running into trees and stuff. All right, great.
Wow. Great. I'm so glad you got a stipend for his, yeah, you know, $1,600 a month car. Okay. Anyway, so the girlfriend
runs it into whatever he calls you and what was your response? In fact, did he even
ask for money or did he just tell you the problem?
He told, he said what the problem was and first it was like, well, how are you gonna pay for it?
You said that. Yeah, that's a good answer. Okay. And he's like, well, how are you going to pay for it? You said that.
Yeah, that's a good answer.
Okay.
And he's like, well, I have, I mean, he had a few hundred dollars he could pay on it.
Again, instead of saying, no, I don't have the money either.
I put it on a credit card to, you know, fail them out because he needed a card to get
around.
But with the intention that he was going to pay us back.
Right. Right. Yeah.
Who's who's intention? Who said that?
Well, it was it was an agreement that they were going to pay it back and
they started to and then his girlfriend lost her job.
And so then he started paying more for everything else. So then
how much was the 35500 you said? Yeah.
And what was the payment that you agreed on?
You'd pay back every month.
It was going to be 100 a month between the two of them.
What?
That's like, there's a lot of months of payments.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, again, it was because of his finances at the time
that he couldn't afford or he said he couldn't afford more than that
He's let me just get this straight. This is Land Rover. We're talking about right?
So you got a guy at the time 20 something
Rollin what color was this Land Rover black
It was like a charcoal gray.
Beautiful.
So nice.
All right.
Yeah.
27 year old kid driving a land rover.
What does it cost?
80 grand.
And he goes, uh, dad, uh, can't afford it, uh, to pay you back this 3500.
Let me pay you a hundred dollars a month for three years.
Of course, you didn't factor in interest. These are some. You're not going to charge them interest rate. Right. So three years of $100 a month for three years. Of course you didn't factor in interest.
These are some, you're not gonna charge them interest.
So three years of $100 payments,
how many payments did he get before he stopped paying that?
Let me get, don't even tell me.
Okay.
I say three payments, he gave you a half month of payment
and then never paid again.
That's basically it.
Four months and then stopped paid again. That's basically it. So four, four months and then stopped.
Yeah.
Mike, when he stopped paying you, were, were there any consequences?
No.
Well, because they laid him off because of co, of co- did they laid him off from his job.
Yeah. Okay.
And they still made him keep the lease on the land Rover for $400 some.
That's horrible.
That's why we don't take those kind of obligations
from our employer.
It's handcuffs and people think they're getting a great deal,
but they're actually being encumbered.
Did he learn any lessons from this?
No, I don't know.
No, Mike.
No, because...
I like Mike's honesty.
No, because he drives a jackpot.
I am so mad right now.
A fucking 20 something deadbeat kid calling up his elderly parents and saying, Hey, Dad,
I know that you're a total pushover because of the way you were raised.
Anyway, it's your deadbeat son.
Me and my deadbeat girlfriend ruined this $80,000 black land rover.
So can you go ahead and send us some money?
No, we're not gonna pay you back.
Oh, $100 a month?
Yeah, okay, whatever.
Anyway, send the money, Dad.
Thanks, bye.
Who would do this to their parents?
Now, Mike has some culpability here.
For 30 years, he has indulged and never said no to his son.
And Janice has intentionally put her head in the sand.
They have some responsibility as well, yes.
But if I ever hear of some dead-be-20-year-old
taking advantage of their elderly parents,
just know that you're going to hell.
By the way, if you drive a Land Rover or a Jaguar
while your parents are struggling, I hate you.
There was one more incident after the car
that was pretty much the last straw part that we haven't, it hasn't been that long, but we haven't helped them financially since then spend what six months or whatever, but what happened. He and his girlfriend moved from Portland up to Seattle to, you know, stay with her mom
to try and save money.
And her girlfriend and her mom have a real toxic relationship.
So they ended up having to move out.
And again, didn't have the money to do that.
And when he asked that he didn't have the down payment for the security deposit, he called me the only thing that he needed to agree upon was that he would be there by himself, not with a girlfriend because she never contributed. And so we again, loaned him the, it was $1,600.
He's our kid, he's, he says he's telling us the truth.
So okay, I want to believe him.
And he hasn't, he hasn't come home for a few months
because of not having enough gas money to come down.
And so, so Jan and my
daughter decided to take some birthday Christmas presents up there since it's three months after
Christmas and guess who was in the apartment. Oh, this is the girlfriend. The girlfriend.
And she ended up getting a job like three blocks away. So it's like, well, she's going to be living
here because she's not going to travel a half hour or so. Is this the same land Rover girlfriend? Yes.
She's really not relying on her paying it back. So I'm saying to my son that you're really
ultimately responsible for it. Okay. Well, the question is, will I see it again?
Is that really a question? I mean, shouldn't we just drop all the pretense here?
Well, that's what my wife and daughter think, but I think family loyalty will somehow, you
know, come through where they'll make attempts to pay it back. Tell me about that. Family loyalty to you means what?
That I try and trust that they'll do what they say.
And even with proofs to the contrary on some occasions.
You're a smart guy, right?
I think I heard you have a master's degree in architecture, is that right?
Smart people can do things that are hard to understand,
but as you're saying this, out loud,
your son hasn't paid you back,
he's driving a Land Rover making not that much money.
I mean, it all starts to sound a little bit absurd,
would you agree?
Yeah, realistically, do you think he's gonna pay you back
the money that you quote loaned him?
I'll say realistically, I think he'll pay part of it because, you know, with the help of your book,
I've given him a conscious spending plan that we're working on, basically over the next three months to see
what he's spending and what would be left where he could start paying us back.
And who's the one who's driving the creation of that conscious spending plan?
I am because nobody else thinks he'll pay us back.
I'm trying to give him the benefit of the doubt that if he has a plan, he can hopefully
start paying us back.
So it's a plan that he's lacked and that is why he hasn't paid you back.
I think that's how much he's paying you every month, that he hasn't paid you ever yet.
Well, that's why because he always says he doesn't have any money.
It's like, well, why don't you have any money because you don't have a plan.
You think your son has that same sense of duty? I would say it's not a parent that he does, no.
What about to his girlfriend or girlfriend's?
For some odd reason, yes he does.
It's so interesting.
I have a lot of questions now for you, Janice.
Hearing everything Mike just told me.
Are you surprised in any way?
I thought the commodity I'd never heard that told him. Are you surprised in any way?
I thought the commodity I've never heard that from him.
I think it's sweetly sad that he's still
trust that Alex will do the right thing. It makes me feel sad
because we both raised him that way and Yeah, and we held that like telling the truth
being a person of your word being there on time like all these things we taught him and
Mike is still
trying to hold on to that when he
trying to hold on to that when he continually, like, hasn't come here for a year, almost a year. And Michael say, he hasn't come for a couple of months because he doesn't want to realize that our
son would take from us and not care. During that time, that algebra time where you were helping him,
what habits do you think might have been co-created with the two of you?
I guess that he could own on me to help and bail him out in a certain aspect
that I would be there with him to really help them through a situation.
Yeah, that's one way to look at it.
You would be there to help them,
but wouldn't any good parent be there to help their child
with a situation?
I think to a certain point that,
I think from other parents, I know they would back off at a certain time and just say, you
know, either I'm out of my element or, you know, I've taken you so far, you have to finish
out.
You ever do that?
Rarely.
There was, there have been a bunch of times that Mike has tried to get Alex steered towards a good profession
Because now, you know, he can do all kinds of trades. Yeah, so Mike being an architect
We thought when we bought our house we thought about the home inspection thing and I said hey
This is a good thing that you and Alex could do together and so we put in
And I said, Hey, this is a good thing that you and Alex could do together. And so we put in the, it was over $1,000 for the material and the program.
And Mike was the only one doing the homework. Mike did or Alex didn't do anything with it. And Mike even passed the test for him.
Does this surprise you at all? I don't know, boy. I'm looking back at it, no, because it was something
that we steered them towards,
and I don't know if he was really interested in it.
If he wasn't interested in something before going through it,
it would have been nice if he would have said something because
that happened to me once where I started, of course, I started, I really didn't want
to because of what other people wanted.
Do you say anything back then?
No.
Do you say anything when you bought the shed and put on the credit card? Nope.
Any connections anyone see around here? There's a lot. So sometimes things are really complicated.
Like right now I'm still trying to un-peel the dynamics here, but sometimes things are also really simple.
Your son hasn't paid you back repeatedly.
He's probably not gonna pay you back.
Again, I don't want to accept that,
even though it's probably, I probably should,
but I don't want to accept it because.
He's my son and I want him to succeed. I want him to too, I don't even know this guy. I want him to be worried about your 31 year old son, especially when your other daughter,
is doing so great.
I want him to succeed. What I can tell you just from being on the outside here is,
I'll actually ask you a simple question. Is the approach you're taking working with him?
It doesn't seem to be no. We've got to cut him off like we've got to, you know, he wants to do this by himself. He wants to be independent
and all that. So we've just got to do it. And Mike actually said, because I said, what
are you afraid of? And he said, I'm afraid that I won't see him ever again.
Yeah. That's honest. Because Mike, to you, duty means what?
But that there would always be a connection somehow
that we would work together on figuring it out.
Being a provider is such a common identity for men.
In fact, I would argue it is the identity
for married men. That's why so many married men come on the show and I ask them, what's
your rich life? And they all make the same dad joke. Well, I just want my wife to be happy.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha. Okay, seriously, though, what is your rich life? And they stare
at me blankly. They have provided themselves
right out of a rich life. In fact, they've provided themselves out of an identity altogether.
Do you see any connections between the way that Mike has treated his son trying to be helpful
and the way that both of you treat money.
Anybody see any connections? Well, Matthew, be Janice, go ahead.
Let's toss him out.
Okay, I think that the connection is that Mike wants to be able to provide for us and he wants
things to be easy for us.
He keeps it all to himself, all the trouble on it,
and just wants us to be happy.
I've always tried to avoid conflicts.
So I think by not confronting Alex with the money
or by not sharing my concerns with Jan,
that I'm avoiding a conflict that may or may not happen,
as opposed to more like more of a discussion and teamwork
on the approach to the money.
I just, I think that if I said no,
then conflicts would arise from that that I'd
be really uncomfortable. Yeah. And are you uncomfortable with the conflicts that have
currently arisen? Yes, because I'm denying what seems to be the inevitable.
Mike, my man, that's very perceptive.
Yes.
That's extremely insightful.
You can't just turn off how you feel.
I never come on here and tell people stop feeling that way.
It's pointless.
We all have a certain way about vivid things in our life.
I've found it's much healthier and much easier to instead talk about
what do we want this next chapter of our lives to be like.
So then we get to design it almost like a Blake page.
And that helps naturally for us to focus on things that we want to do.
We want to feel and the other things that we want to do, we want to feel.
And the other things slowly get pushed to the side.
They'll always be there.
You may always feel guilty.
That's okay.
But you can also replace some of that feeling with perhaps some new positive feelings.
So let's talk about the finances.
Because if you two have like $20 million and you got to write a $3,000 check to your son,
go ahead, do it for the rest of your $3,000 check to your son. Chris.
Go ahead. Do it for the rest of your life.
Is that the case?
No.
No.
All right.
Shall we look at the numbers?
Definitely.
All right.
Let me do a quick numbers recap here of Mike and Janice.
Recall that they are in their early 60s.
They have $458,000 of assets, $180,000 in investments, $1,000 in savings, and $307,000 of debt.
That debt is made up of $270,000 on their mortgage, about $18,000 on a Subaru, almost $10,000 on
credit cards, $3,100 on medical bills and a consolidated loan. Their net worth is 316,000.
Mike's income is about 9,000 a month. Janice's income is 1,000 a month. She works part time
tending the grounds of her property. And their combined gross income is about 118,000 per
year.
You ever tried to negotiate your medical bills?
Uh, no.
Look at the other faces.
No, I don't think so.
Both of you looked up like what?
Yeah, you can negotiate.
I didn't know you could do that.
Yeah.
A lot of things could be negotiated.
Medical bills are one of the most common possible.
It's not always the case, but that would be one
of the first things I would do.
Be call up those medical bills, say, look, I have a lot of difficulty paying this.
I'm spending more than I make times are tough.
I need your help.
And they can often work with you or even dramatically reduce the amount that you owe
or lots of options.
All right.
So that's one thing you can do right off the bat.
There's one thing that we haven't mentioned yet.
Your pension and social security.
Have you calculated how much you will get from that?
Uh, yes.
All right.
What do you know?
Um, that was.
All right.
I'm sorry.
Okay.
So if I went to 70, so Security would be 43, 48. It's 4,348 per month.
Yeah.
And then the pension at 70 would be 24, 28.
And what about for you, Janice?
I just started taking that.
So I did.
She just 9.68 for $9.60.
So to take a look at your fixed cost, you're 79%.
What do you all think about that number?
That based on the target were quite above it.
Yeah, should be 50 to 60.
Yeah.
One question is, I guess if you look at guilt-free spending, I say that our pets should be
part of the guilt-free spending and not a fixed cost, but other people think otherwise.
No!
Okay, I have to step in here.
I want to point out Janice's question, which I find so fascinating and in a way a lovely
Commentary on the human condition
There are so many massive dynamics here and Janice asked the question about how should we categorize this?
The truth is the categorization doesn't really matter. It's almost like you're on a boat and it's sinking and you're busy folding
your clothes making sure that they are meticulously put away in the closet. You know, for many of us,
$3 questions are the only way that we can exert control on the world around us.
No! Okay, well, let me, I'll answer your question. First of all, like, trust me, how you categorize your pets is the least
important issue of anything or something.
It does not matter.
So, all right, this is like a good guideline.
First of all, you can't go wrong.
One way or another, if you wanna put it in one.
If I had a pet, I would probably put
that pet's expenses under fixed costs
because you're not gonna sell your dog or whatever.
So it's like, let's get real.
It's a luxury item.
Yeah, some people are like, some people are like, look, if times get tough, like chesters out
to door.
I mean, we're going to do.
We're going to do.
All right, Genesis is looking like truly mortified right now.
She's like, I can't believe this.
It's the limit.
We have to limit the incoming pet.
That's what we did.
Wait a minute.
What the hell?
What does that mean?
How many pets do you have?
Oh, God.
Oh, how many?
We have three dogs, a cat, five rabbits, two ducks.
And three chickens.
What, answer me this.
As someone who does not own any pets in nor do I want to,
how come any time someone owns more than one animal,
it becomes like Noah's Ark.
Like they have to get every single species on the planet.
Why is that?
Well, we help out at a farm sanctuary.
And when like rabbits and chickens are the most given up pets.
So yeah. So I'm like, sure, it won't cost that much.
And then we figured it out.
And it's like $500 a month for all our animals.
Hold on, Mike, you want to say anything about selling these animals
for a profit?
No.
Mike, I'm not saying it.
I'm not saying it.
I'm asking Mike to say it.
For me, Satan is not saying sell your pets for a profit.
Please don't write me.
No, but it's, that's why, you know, I think it's more of a
a luxury item.
I, there's another failure that I did.
I wanted to stop like three dogs ago, but, you know,
oh, again, again, my enabling behavior has
helped to, help to keep the farm going.
So, but it will say we have rescued 25 animals in our 40 years together.
So, that's pretty cool.
All right, I'll get your round of applause for that.
That's pretty cool.
We give them a good life.
You got pets for 500 a month.
What else?
We don't do anything. We don't go anywhere. We don't take the cake. Mike took a vacation by himself. So I could stay home with the animals. I'm gonna go
Back to Illinois and he's gonna stay here. You two you two have been married almost 40 years and you can't take a vacation because of no duck.
A fucking duck. What's this duck home? I would sell the duck.
fucking duck. What's this duck home? I would sell the duck. Oh my God, that literally, the tail is literally wagging the duck. This is insane. I couldn't write this. What else
besides the pets for five? Does any pet ever get sick and you got to take them in for
some special treatment? Oh, yes. Oh, wow. And how much is that cost when that happens? I've had two rabbits and two chickens that I've taken into the vet and
That was like $800 a shot. What and so yeah, so I and they died and sometimes the sanctuary helps us
But I hate to ask them because they're nonprofit so well right now you're nonprofit, too
Yeah, right
So well right now you're non-profit too. Yeah, right.
Right.
What the hell?
Yeah.
All right, so look, these pets are not 500 a month.
This is a thousand dollars a month for pets.
No.
Oh, yes.
Yes, the menagerie is truly costing you.
So we got to get, Janice, remember how you were like?
It's kind of sweetly sad that Mike really believes that his son will pay him back.
In a way, isn't it kind of sweetly said that you don't really want to know how much your
rabbits are actually costing you?
Not even sweetly sad.
Please don't write me about pets or selling pets for a profit.
I have no stake in this argument.
I don't want to be a part of this conversation.
Leave me out of it.
Back to Mike and Janice.
So what other expenses are not being counted?
Did we cover medical?
Because yet 12 orthopedic surgeries.
How are you doing now?
I'm doing well.
I'm back to all of my sports except for running.
Okay.
And now my other news starting to give me trouble.
So I had one replaced.
It seems like something is always falling apart on me.
And I'm the one who tries to keep myself healthy.
Like, I don't.
It's not fair.
It's not fair.
And multiple surgeries cannot be easy. It's covered by insurance,
but like I had to have a hand surgery in January, so that was a new year. So they were like,
well, when you come on the day of surgery, how much was it? Like $100. Something like that.
And it's all me. Well, you know, you two are married
That's how it goes you're here for each other in sickness and in health. So
We'll figure out a way to make it work together
Where's all the money for your son Mike? I don't see a line item for my son who never pays me back. Where's that?
You guys are really not getting too specific on the CSP.
Well, that wasn't that the 15% you throw in their extra for unknown expenses.
Okay, this CSP was not good.
That's the frank truth.
It was too loose.
They hadn't accounted for phantom costs of their pets.
They hadn't taken into account major expenses like paying for their
son's car accidents and all kinds of stuff.
And this is very typical of people who make a decent amount of money, but they feel like
they can never get ahead.
It's that they are too loose and often not accounting for all of the expenses, particularly
one time expenses and phantom costs. And because of that, they simply
look at this big number, we make 118,000. Where is it all going? But they haven't actually
sat down and calculated that. If you want to understand where your money is going, you
have to calculate it and you have to understand the insidious effects of phantom costs. Which
brings me now to their debt. So how are you thinking about paying your debt off? What's your and the pandemic. And so, the pandemic is a huge thing.
And so, the pandemic is a huge
thing.
And so, the pandemic is a huge
thing.
And so, the pandemic is a huge
thing.
And so, the pandemic is a huge
thing.
And so, the pandemic is a huge
thing.
And so, the pandemic is a huge
thing. And so, the pandemic is a huge
thing.
And so, the pandemic is a huge
thing. And so, the pandemic is a huge
thing. And so, the pandemic is a huge
thing. And so, the pandemic is a huge
thing. And so, the pandemic is a huge
thing. And so, the pandemic is a huge
thing. And so, the pandemic is a huge thing. And so, the pandemic is a huge thing. And so, the pandemic is a huge thing. And so, the pandemic is a huge thing. And so, the pandemic is a huge thing. And so, the pandemic is a huge paid for that, I'll be able to pay off the Home Depot card and take that hundred from there and put it on the next next card.
So, it's card is that please don't say lows.
No, no, no.
We actually paid that one off.
So, you're working your way down.
Hey, when you pay off these cards, do you actually close them?
I have on some but others I leave open because we've been penalized on a credit score before
for closing the accounts.
Yeah, but what do you care about the credit score?
I guess, yeah, I don't really.
And we have had one that we kept for emergencies, but then emergencies come up and we use it.
Not we.
Yeah, me.
So then, yeah, that's a worry about having anything,
but we usually keep it in a fire box at the house
so we really have to work it, getting it to use it.
Good.
I mean, it's good to have some emergency.
That's fine, it can credit.
I'd rather you have emergency cash.
Right.
We can work on, but okay, fine.
Your groceries, 800, that just can't be right.
I just don't believe it.
I looked through for a whole, and we brought it down
because Mike would stop on his way home from work.
I would have already gone to the grocery store.
It's, something's not right here.
I would like for you to pick a number, and I would like for the two of you to have a
discussion right now about what number should be on here, and then how you want to break
that up.
Okay.
I would say $400 a month.
Hold on.
Is that how you have discussions about money?
One person just like
well if so let's try to change that. Let's have a discussion and two of you do it and I'll watch. Go ahead. Okay. How about $400 a month? I think going from 800 to 400 is probably a little too
drastic. So I don't know if we say we look at maybe 500
and see if that's a realistic target.
Okay.
Both committed at 500.
I can try to do that.
I will hold on.
Can we just like, let's pick a number
that you can both commit to where you're like
500 sounds good.
All right, Mike.
I can do it.
Yeah.
All right, to me, the dollar amount here is less important than the two of you
starting to build habits where you're both like, this is what we're going to do.
And we're both going to be involved.
Yeah.
And this is involved.
Mike's involved.
And what's the entire purpose of this?
Well, we just saved 300 bucks a month.
What are you gonna do with that?
Yeah, 300 bucks.
Put it in that.
Well, you know, I'd like to put it all in for you answer.
Can the two of you talk about it?
I'd love for you to have a healthy discussion about what
to do with 300 brand new dollars you just found.
Go ahead.
I guess, you know, the practical thing, I guess,
would be paying down the debt,
but we also don't, right now we're not putting anything
in investment.
So, I don't know if we can split that up somehow,
partial debt and partial investments are safe,
probably savings because we only have the $1,000 emergency fund.
So, I think we probably need more there.
Let me pause you right there.
So, Mike, you just gave me a whole stream of consciousness.
I want you to give that to, give that to Janice again in one sentence, because it's very
confusing to receive that. It's a lot. Yes.
If we get $300, I would say $100 to debt, $100 to investment and $100 to savings.
That sounds good. I agree. How is this so easy?
It's pretty rare.
But this is like, first of all, Mike, great suggestion.
I love it.
Yeah.
I think that's awesome.
Janice, super cool.
Enthusiastic response.
That was textbook.
How come that's so easy?
And how come you haven't gotten there in 38 years? I think a lot of it is, is that it just gets too busy and then I lose track of, you know,
like, like he has too much, too many words.
Okay.
And I get sick of even thinking about it. And so what do you do when
it when he comes that you with a long sentence? I just kind of tune out and what did I do?
What did I do? I do. You asked him to rephrase it in one sentence. Yes. And I never even thought to
do that. Yeah. Well, because I'm so used to the dynamic.
Yeah, totally. So this is this is exactly why it's so helpful to have a third party. And you know,
working with your therapist as well to be able to have conversations and build some of these tools.
So use that. Both of you. Janice, if you feel like you just don't understand or it's just like
too long, you go, you know what? Let me pause you right there. It's a lot of love in the way you
say it to, right?
You know what, I know this is important.
I really want to understand, I'm feeling a little overwhelmed.
Can you give that to me again, but this time in one sentence.
I would love that.
Yes, I just needed the dialogue.
There you go.
And then Mike, sometimes it may be difficult for you
because you know, you're thinking out loud.
I could see you were talking as you were thinking.
So sometimes you might add a little tool to your repertoire.
You might say, okay, gosh, I don't know the answer to your question, but can I think out
loud for a second with you?
And now you've gotten her permission.
And now anything you say for the next three minutes, stream of consciousness, it's in this
box.
And at the end, she's gonna be looking at you like,
what is this guy talking about?
But at least you both agreed,
it's in the stream of consciousness box.
And then both of you could say,
Mike, you could even make a joke of it.
Cause you know, yeah, yeah, yeah,
maybe you talk a little bit.
You go, ah, all right, let's close the box.
All right.
And I try to answer your question in one sentence now.
And Janice is going to be like, yes.
Yes.
Because I always say that I want to work on this stuff together.
But the way that I'm seeing it in my mind
is that I'm just not intelligent enough.
I don't believe that.
To understand it all.
Why?
Here we're looking at about 10 numbers.
It's straight forward, sixth, greater math.
Yeah.
Does it make you feel stupid to look at these numbers
right now?
Only because, like I didn't know we weren't putting
anything in investing.
The last thing I want anyone to feel on this show or in any of my material is stupid.
I don't think you're stupid at all. Thank you. And I'd like to change that,
to turn it around and start dreaming. But in order to do that, you've got to have a shared vision
together. So that means now the two of you
are actually coming up with it
and basically meshing it together.
Mike, you remember when you tried to buy all those
exam books for your son and he wasn't into it?
Mm-hmm.
It's kind of similar right now.
Janice isn't into the money stuff.
She hasn't felt she has access.
She didn't understand the structure of it.
So it's just neither of you were engaging on it.
What I'd love to see is more of this,
the two of you coming together.
Kind of like Velcro when you look at it under a microscope,
it really clicks in with each other, right?
So what would that look like?
It might be the two of you feeling good about money.
It might be recalculating how long that debt payoff
is gonna take and going, oh my God,
it used to take three years.
Now we're gonna pay it off in 18 months.
That means by 2020, whatever, June,
we are credit card debt free.
That would be amazing.
I just want to see something for a second.
Okay, so that's better.
What I just did so everyone can hear it and see it is,
I took your debt payments, which are $1275 and I just zeroed it out.
Just to see what effect it would
have on your fixed cost percentage.
Yeah, watch this.
Sure.
It takes it down to 58%.
Oh, that's great.
Oh, that's great.
Healthyer.
Yes.
Isn't that cool?
Uh-huh.
So what do you take away from that?
It is that as soon as we get rid of our debts, that we would be living well within our means.
Yes, exactly.
Exactly.
So you have a line of sight
on being able to be much more comfortable.
It's doable.
It's doable if you two are aligned.
And we align in a lot of other ways.
I could tell.
But with money, you know, Janice, you turn a blind eye to it, you know, and Mike, you
are a very indulgent of everyone, and you can't do that.
The dynamics are not good because Mike will start saying yes to everything and Mike will
even go above and be on a build a shed that you don't even care about.
And it's actually causing direct harm to your finances.
So if the two of you have a vision and you can talk about it regularly,
Mike can suddenly have the courage to say, you know what, I really love to build your shed.
I love you. I noticed your head banged on that metal. I really want to buy it. And then
Janice, how would you respond to that? Can we afford it?
That would be one way. I hate that phrase because it's so loaded in our culture. Can we afford it? It makes people feel like on the defense. Try it another
way. Um, do we have it in available spending? How about first appreciation? He's thinking
out. Yes. Yes. Absolutely. Thank you very much. And I love my shed.
I love you. Thank you so much. I love the shed. I love that you're thinking of me.
You know what? It sounds amazing, but I'd love for us to go back to our conscious spending plan
and see if we can make it work together. Yeah.
That's how you do it. Nobody's feeling defensive. You are not arguing with each other.
You're just saying, Hey, listen, we've got a plan. Let's stick with the plan. Let's see if we can make
it work. And if we can't, that's okay. We can't do it today, but maybe tomorrow.
Right. We have a plan. Yeah. I think it's awesome that you came on. I've been very excited
to get a chance to talk to you. I also think that you're in your 60s. You looked to be, you know, quite healthy.
It seems like you do, I mean, you built a shed. I have a, I have a screw that fell off
one of my arm, armrests. It's literally sitting in the other room. It's been sitting there
for over 10 days. I'm not, I don't even know what to do with that thing. So anyway, I admire
the fact that you could build a shed or even know what a shed is. That's awesome.
Look, there's a lot of possibilities, but I will say this.
I love that the two of you came on here, you're in your 60s.
The way I look at it, so some people, they go, is it too late?
And some people even start to make these kind of very dark jokes.
They go, you know, I'll take my debt to the grave with me and blah, blah, blah.
All this really negative, they start talking about death.
I don't like it.
Yeah, we're hoping that people can learn from us in their 20s that start when you're 20 and don't wait.
To me, this was a beautiful and contentious and fascinating conversation.
One thing that stood out to me was Janice's comment that she did not want to feel stupid. She
actually made that comment several times
during our conversation.
The last thing I ever want anyone to feel on this show
or with any of my material is that they are stupid.
I actually find Mike and Janice to be lovely people,
quite caring, quite loving towards each other,
maybe loving to a fault when it comes to their son.
We were able to rearrange some of their money so
that they could put some money towards investments.
And that makes me really happy.
I'd like to share the follow-ups that they sent me.
Take a look.
Janice said, what really surprised me was how my lack of involvement in finances had just
as much to do with our relationship as other excuses.
I've been using the, I'm not good with math and money to remove myself from the responsibilities
of saving and spending money for both of us.
It was so much easier to blame Mike than sit in an uncomfortable place until I helped resolve
our situation.
One thing our marriage counselor told Mike in me was that it takes two people to make a
marriage work.
You helped us to see that we need to sit down together and to make a plan.
It wasn't fair of me to put it all on Mike.
As far as an action plan, I already contacted a few farm sanctuaries and posted my ducks
in hopes that I can re-home them and reduce
our annual expenses. I'm applying to a few plant nurseries in hopes of being hired for
some seasonal work. It makes sense that we weren't being brutally honest about where our
money is going. Again, this was a great opportunity for our
marriage and we owe you big time. One of the reasons we decided to seek your help was
because we hope that the younger people watching this could use our example of financial difficulties and roadblocks to help them get a clear communication before they have made mistakes like we did.
Thank you very much. Janice, now let's hear from Mike.
What surprised me was the process wasn't as scary as I anticipated. I thought we would be in a catastrophic condition, but Rameeth, you were very reassuring and frank about where we were at.
You gave us constructive criticism and a straightforward plan to follow.
Secondly, the takeaway is to engage with Janice in all financial discussions and decisions.
We will also allocate the $300 reduction in food as follows,
100-to-debt, 100-to-investments, and 100-to-long-term savings. Thank you again for having us participate
in your podcast. We were nervous about how it would go, your friendly-ness, down-to-earth personality
and humor that comes through on your podcast was very reassuring to see personally in action.
I want to thank Mike and Janice and I want to invite you to join me on the I
will teach you to be rich podcast newsletter where I answer your questions
about this episode. Go to iwt.com slash podcast newsletter and you can ask me any
questions you want about this episode. Why'd you say that? What if they did this? Thank you for listening.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You to Be Rich.
I'm Remete Saiti.
Please follow the show on Apple, Spotify,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
If you haven't read, I will teach you to be rich,
my book, pick up a copy.
You can get it at any bookstore or any library,
and it will show you the specific tactics
for how to build the I Will Teach You To Be Rich system
into your personal finances.
for how to build the I will teach you to be rich system
into your personal finances.