I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 103. It’s time to cut off your son: Ramit’s 3 Lessons from Ep 102
Episode Date: June 1, 2023Today marks our first ever reaction episode, where Ramit breaks down each Tuesday’s conversation to give IWT listeners a deep dive on specific tactics, themes, and patterns. This week, we have the f...ascinating Janis and Michael. Make sure to stream episode 102 to catch up. 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 and use code 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 Episode #102: “If he doesn’t stop supporting our 31-year old son, we won’t be able to retire” Connect with Ramit Get Money Coaching with Ramit Download the Conscious Spending Plan 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)
How are you both feeling about our conversation today?
Excited and scared, I guess.
I feel like I'm going to look really stupid.
Oh, why are you worried about that?
Just because I don't like Mike does most of the finances.
You know, I'm just like, tell me how much I should spend.
Okay.
And Mike, you mentioned excited, great and scared.
I scared.
Well, I guess I know that I'm not a good conscious
spender.
And I have a history of, I guess, enabling where I want
my family to have what they want.
Wow, we really need somebody to kind of put these things in front of our face
and help us.
Finally, after 38, almost 39 years of marriage,
be able to, you know, dream and make it happen instead of one day, one day, one day.
One day, one day, one day.
This week, in episode 102, you heard from Mike and Janice. There are a couple in their early 60s, and they told me,
we've been together for 39 years, and we've been broke for 39 years.
This was an unforgettable episode with lots of twists and turns.
We heard about their 31-year-old son that they can't seem to cut off financially.
We heard about Mike feeling like a commodity
when he was growing up.
And we heard about the ducks and the cats
and the dogs and all kinds of farm animals.
So today I wanna do something a little different.
Starting today and every Thursday from now on,
I wanna take you behind the scenes of this week's episode.
I want to share the can't miss moments and even some cut moments that you didn't hear
the first time so you can go deeper when it comes to your money psychology.
So let's kick it off with three can't miss moments from my conversation with Mike and Janice.
First up, you've got to listen to this background of Mike and Janice. Now first up, you gotta listen to this background
of Mike and Janice.
You've heard me talk about how our upbringing
affects the way that we look at the world of money.
Listen to Janice as she describes
what Mike's parents gave him at his college graduation.
At the graduation, my parents were there and for my mom
and her husband were there and Mike my parents were there and her mom and her husband were there and
my 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. Yeah. Mike's mom listed every expense he incurred as a kid. In bagged chair, college, yeah. And what was the minus 100?
What is that?
That was for gifts.
For graduating with a mask.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah.
And Mike, was your reaction?
Here we go again.
Right.
Yeah.
You didn't do anything.
I ripped it up and threw it on the ground.
Imagine getting a card like that from your parents
on your graduation day.
How would that affect the way you look at the world?
And how do you think of it affect the way you think
about money and time going forward?
We spend a lot of time talking to couples
about how they grew up.
And one of the reasons I do this is I want to disabuse you
of this idea that we are all rational robots that we go to their grocery store
and we compare the price of bread by a number of slices per dollar and then we buy rationally.
That's just not how it works. We are a product of our experience. It actually is shocking to me that
people will listen to a hundred episodes of this show and they'll be like, wow, childhood really
matters. And then they'll go right back out in the world and post on Twitter,
oh, pull yourself up by your bootstraps.
It's just a matter of showing up to work.
That's not how it works.
We are a product of our experiences.
What I didn't get to tell you on the episode with Mike and Janice
is a little bit more about their background.
If you listen to them, you go, why don't they just get their CSP in order,
have a conversation about money, stop paying for their deadbeat son, and live a rich life.
Mike actually sent me an email after our conversation, sharing some of his upbringing that I didn't
know about.
Let me read you some of what he told me.
He said, I had an alcoholic father.
My grandfather would often send my mother his paycheck because my father had spent it on weekend drinking
binges and not coming home. Janice also had an alcoholic father. Her parents divorced when she was
13. Her mom remarried when she was 17 to a guy who turned out to be horrible. So at 17 Janice and her older sister moved out of their house. When Janice was 19,
her sister was killed by a drunk driver. Janice's father was a homicide victim when our daughter
was three and a half and our son was only ten months old. These experiences are deeply interwoven
with who they are.
But share this because if you see someone acting in a peculiar way with money or a way that
doesn't match up with how you would act, there's often a reason. Sometimes they don't even
know what the reason is, but there's often a reason way, way, way back in their history.
And as part of this podcast, my dream, my wish, is for us to all become
a little bit more compassionate about the people as it comes to their spending and financial
behaviors.
I want to thank the sponsors that have made this episode possible. We think they're fantastic.
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Next up, financially supporting their 31 year old son.
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. Okay. 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 you said to your own detriment. Hold on, Jen is just
let out a huge sigh and she looks down at the floor. Don't worry, Jen, I'm coming to you
soon. I know you got a lot of stories. She's probably going to pull out this scroll. 35 pages
she goes, repeat, 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. Yeah. Okay. So Mike, to your own detriment, give me an example
where you have helped your son financially speaking
to your own detriment.
I think it's really in the past few years
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?
That there were three loaders basically.
Okay. 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, you know, they he couldn't pick it up till he paid for it.
He's insurance laps.
Yeah.
How much what 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
What do you say the car? You know, you and the
The bad thing was that he actually worked at the car dealership. There was repairing it And they wouldn't give them a break. This is crazy. Yeah, okay, so they wouldn't
It's like well, I take it on my paycheck, but
They wouldn't do it.
They wouldn't release a car until he paid for it.
What kind of car, by the way?
Well, that was actually a Land Rover because he worked.
A fucking Land Rover!
Are you kidding me?
He made $3,500 a month and he drives a Land Rover!
Well, no, there's this.
What world is this?
Well, previously, previously he had worked for Land Rover.
He was making a lot more. You don't get that much of a discount. No, again, instead of saying, no, I don't have the money either. I put it on a credit card to, you know,
bail them out because he needed a card to get around. But with the intention that he was going to pay us.
Right. Right. Yeah. Who's it? Who's intention? Who said that? Well, it was it was an agreement that they're going
to pay it back and they started to when he stopped paying you were were there any consequences.
No. Well, does they laid him off because of co of COVID? They laid him off from his job.
Yeah. Okay. And they still made him keep
the lease on the land Rover for $400 some months.
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?
I don't know.
No.
No, because I like Mike's honesty.
No, because he drives a jack or.
I have to admit that when I heard about their 31 year old son,
calling them up and basically extorting them
to send money otherwise,
they're never gonna see their son again.
I got pissed.
I'm still pissed.
How can you do that to your elderly parents, especially
knowing how they were raised? I just can't stop thinking about this. I want to point out
what happens when you enable someone else financially. And we've seen it. We've seen it in many
examples of couples on this show, on the Netflix show, and many other places,
if you do not actually feel the effects of your behavior,
like if you don't have to have a job
because someone's just sending you money,
it's probably likely that you're gonna lose touch
with reality.
It's no surprise that Mike and Janice's son lies to them,
evades them,
doesn't take responsibility because in many ways,
the way that they treated him with money was to enable him.
Mike and Janice know this, Janice rolling her eyes the entire time, she knows it.
But I want to emphasize for you to really be critical about any areas where you might be enabling someone else
or even allowing yourself to be enabled.
Think about it.
A lot of people go,
how would I turn down money from my parents
if they wanna give it to me?
And sure, if your parents have the ability and willingness
to give you some money for down payment or a car,
whatever, fantastic, that's awesome.
But you have to remember that there are strings
that come along.
It may be explicit like you need to have your wedding
the way we want, or maybe implicit like
because somebody gave me this money.
I don't take it as seriously,
or I don't understand how hard it was to earn it.
Now, I want to add one last thing
to confound this entire example.
I used to think, going up, going to public school, that if you had wealthy parents and you
went to private school that you were spoiled.
I just thought that.
I don't know where I got that idea from, but I think a lot of people believe that.
I certainly did.
And then I went to college.
And within my first week, I met a lot of people who had wealthy
parents and who had gone to private school.
And I, it was like my world shattered in front of me because I realized this thing I had
believed fervently for so long was totally wrong.
Doesn't mean your spoil just because your parents have a lot of money and even sent you
to private school.
My college friends, some of them worked really hard.
Some of them less so, but there was basically no correlation at all.
And in fact, I really admire a lot of the friends that I met who grew up really wealthy and
work insanely hard.
So being enabled or enabling someone with money is not as simple as it's good or it's
bad. It is complex, but I just want you to understand that if you are considering paying for somebody
enabling them in a certain way, it might have effects.
And if you are the recipient of that, it also might have effects.
Finally, we have to talk about the phantom costs of these pets.
You know, a lot of people in America don't like to talk about costs when
it comes to their pets. It's like very unromantic. It's like talking about the cost of how much
it costs to date or, you know, being love and build a relationship. It's like, hey, money
is real. Just because it's romantic doesn't mean that the money part of it fades out of the
equation. Let's be honest. It costs money to have pets, it costs money to date,
cost money to get married and all and have kids and all and all. Whenever someone dares to bring
up the idea of the cost of pets, people get really defensive. Mike and Janice were actually great.
They acknowledged, particularly Janice, that she hadn't really thought that if once a year,
she has to take her duck to the vet and it costs 1,200 bucks, that
she actually needs to spread that cost out or amortize it over the course of a year.
That'll be 100 bucks a month for the ducks.
In fact, in America, we're simply taught to look at the sticker price.
That's it.
And companies incentivize us.
They have no reason to tell us about all the secret phantom costs.
They're just like, oh, look at the price, the house,
the car, they're dinner.
But of course, phantom costs are prevalent.
For example, whenever I plan a vacation,
I know whatever the hotel nightly rate is,
I add 50%.
That accounts for 38% taxes, if I get a drink,
tip, et cetera.
It was really important for Mike and Janice to grasp the importance of these phantom
costs.
One, whenever you buy something, in fact, the more expensive you buy, the more phantom
costs you're going to have.
Second, there are one-time costs that still need to be accounted for in your conscious spending
plan.
And if you don't do this, you end up like millions of Americans who earn decent money, but they
are always confused, where's it all going? That's because you didn't honestly calculate
the insidious phantom costs that are present in many purchases.
So we talked about your pets costing $600 a month or $1,000 a month because we factor in right we got to amortize or spread all those costs out
I think that you need to be thinking very carefully about how much you can actually afford to spend on pets
Like I know you have a good cause
But if if I were in your position the first thing I would say is like absolutely no more animals. Oh, yeah
No, where is it reading on that. Okay. And next is how long and like,
what's the plan for these animals? Do you plan to provide for them forever, et cetera?
Just because a thousand dollars a month is a lot of money right now.
It's a lot of 500.
I thought everybody, but let me I thought that was a lot.
So let me give you an example why this is so important.
So when I, you love ducks, I love hotels.
Okay.
Let's just perfect examples.
So a duck, you go, oh, this duck costs like 50 bucks a month.
But then you forget that once a year you need to pay some expensive vet fee.
For me, I go, oh, this hotel is 300 bucks a night,
but I got a factor in taxes, tipping,
eating at the restaurant.
What it actually adds 50% to the price.
So 300 actually becomes $450 a night.
It's a lot of hidden costs in all these things
that we choose, and a hotel is just a hotel.
Animals are a whole different story.
We don't make a thousand dollars in eggs. Yeah. All right, I want to make sure you, this is clear,
Janice, it's really important. So let's say you spend a hundred dollars a month for your pets,
just easy math, a hundred bucks a month. That's twelve hundred bucks a year, okay? Let's say that you
easy math, a hundred bucks a month. That's twelve hundred bucks a year, okay? Let's say that you have to take one of the dogs to the vet and that costs twelve hundred bucks, okay? So if I were to ask you
how much do you spend on your pets every year? What would you say?
So you said I already lost it. It's okay. We'll go slow. Okay. So $100 a month. Yep. Over 12 months. Yep. Yeah. That would be how much?
1200. Yep. And then your dog has an accident and it costs 1200 bucks. So that doubles it.
Yeah. So how much will that be per year? 2400 which is 200 bucks a month not 100 right?
Food and stuff exactly so what I'm doing is I'm helping you to kind of think at a higher level
So now you have a bird's eye view over all of your expenses fun fact in their screening interview
One of Janice's primary questions was to ask
my producer, should we put the cost of our pets in this category or that category?
It's like, who cares?
There's so much chaos going on in their financial life.
And she was worried about cell B32 versus B46.
Again, we find comfort in three dollar questions
because it allows us to control something,
how it's categorized is totally irrelevant.
We simply need to start from ground zero
and calculate what's really going on here.
You'll notice this in episode 80,
where I point out to Sarah and Kevin
that the amount of their vacation is probably double
what she thinks it is and she's visibly startled.
Same thing here, but this time with pets.
All right, I want to thank you for listening to this Thursday episode.
I have a podcast newsletter where you can come and ask me questions about these episodes
or money psychology.
Go to iwt.com slash podcast newsletter.
Ask me your questions there and I will answer them every
Saturday.
See you next week.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
I'm Remeteed Saiti.
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