I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 11. “My wife wants to quit her job but I’m worried about money”
Episode Date: September 28, 2021Nicole and John have already won the money game. Combined, they bring in $650,000 a year. But it's not an even split. Nicole currently earns $150,000 and would like to leave her stable job to create a... startup. John feels this gamble has not been discussed at length. They keep talking about “having the conversation,” but they never do. Both complain that they’re not feeling appreciated. John yearns for acts of service from Nicole. Nicole feels like her contribution is never enough. (You will frequently hear the lower earner talk repeatedly about “contributing” to the relationship.) Listen as this anxiety slowly bubbles to the surface. On John's side, the growing pile of money in his bank account is making him more paranoid than ever before. He worries he could lose it all -- like what happened when he was younger. The fear runs so deep, he doesn't even believe me when I use math to demonstrate they will be more than fine for the rest of their lives. On paper, Nicole and John have a rich life, but they're not fleshing it out together because of their fears, insecurities, and lack of communication. Listen in as I nudge them towards a Rich Life. Connect with Ramit Website Instagram Twitter Facebook YouTube Linkedin 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)
In our current kind of jobs, you know, I am kind of the higher earner of the two of us.
There's been kind of a battle around.
Well, if you're not the majority provider in this family, why are you kind of dedicating
so much time to your job?
There's sometimes where like he tells me, why am I doing this if I'm the person that provides the most?
And you are the person that works the most.
You should be maybe doing more for the house instead of me
that I make more and I bring more to a table.
So I feel like it comes from there.
And then when he made the joke, I was like,
okay, if you don't want us to put me, I can do it myself.
My name is Ramit Saiti and this is the I will teach you to be rich podcasts. My guests
today are n**** and n****. They're both high earners, but between the two of them n****
earns more. And this has placed them into a dynamic where until now he's had the majority
of the power
when it comes to making household decisions.
You'll hear them describe that.
Recently, I decided to quit her job and become an entrepreneur.
This has disrupted the normal dynamics of their relationship.
They came to me because they believed that they had an issue about entrepreneurship, her
decision to become
one. But as we peel the layers, you're going to discover through listening to these clues
that the real problem here is actually not about her becoming an entrepreneur. It's about
something much, much deeper. Let's listen.
We're on a particular juncture in that is quitting her job to pursue a startup.
And that, of course, brings conversations about money.
She currently works at a tech company that has grown likely to kind of do an IPO relatively
soon.
And when I questioned her about what we're living on the table as a family and what that implies for us,
her response was, well, I have my own savings and I can do whatever I want.
So I think that's kind of the destructive cycle that I mentioned.
I tend to revert to saying, look, you're not thinking of the big picture.
That's kind of a very selfish point of view.
What it felt like to me is, you know,
kind of feeling unappreciated as a provider
and family member and just kind of, you know,
we're all doing whatever we want
and kind of that's the way we operate here.
In our current kind of jobs, you know,
I am kind of the higher earner of the two of us.
Just for some context, it earns $150,000 a year, which is a very good salary,
but it earns more than triple that. He's earning about $500,000 a year.
The way we've approached expenses and all that is divide by know, kind of divide by just the percentage of whoever
brings in, right?
There's been kind of a battle around, well, if you're not the majority provider in this
family, why are you kind of dedicating so much time to your job and not to me, I wouldn't
call that a sacriest fight, but, you know, I've definitely put a lot into providing for
our, you know our family of two.
When it comes to making a decision of jumping from where she is to something more entrepreneurial,
it wasn't properly discussed or consulted. It feels not necessarily taking on a win,
but without the proper conversation with us as a family unit.
This is how we're going to approach this and think about this
and get a manager of finances around this going forward. I remember about it a little bit different.
I was pitching something internally in the company. I had a conversation with someone where he
encouraged me a lot to become an entrepreneur and we had this conversation with word
to become an entrepreneur. And we had this conversation with word,
he was like, yeah, you should.
And I got super excited.
And I was, okay, this is what I wanna do.
I remember we were like discussing about,
hey, so you're leaving your job.
And it was kind of a joke or something around,
like I'm going to pay for everything.
And then, like, I don't remember the kind of joke,
but I felt it like a joke saying, like I will have to pay for everything. And then I don't remember the kind of joke, but I felt like a joke saying,
like, I will have to pay everything for you.
I mean, my mind was that I can pay for myself.
So it was not like I'm not thinking
about ourselves as a family.
Well, this is a huge clue right here.
A lot of times when couples come and speak to me,
there's one inciting incident
that stands out both in their mind,
seared hot in their mind.
Why?
Because out of the blue,
they had a relationship dynamic
that they thought made sense
and then one partner said something
that threw everything off-kilter.
At least that's the way it's perceived.
What we can see here is that
clearly they had different perceptions of money. And it was this amazing convergence of this situation
with discussing leaving her job that caused this sentence to come out and then it escalated from
there. I always listen in for these kinds of clues, the inciting
incident, because there's almost always something much deeper beneath it.
It was more like I was reacting and defending myself, saying like, give you don't want to
support me, like I can support myself. I felt that we are aligned that he wants me to become
an entrepreneur. And for that, I need to quit my job.
That then last week, I was planning on having
the conversation with my boss.
And then Nico told me, we haven't
had the proper conversation.
Do you think that if you had the proper conversations,
you would disagree if we fast forward
to the end of these conversations? I think I would agree. I'm very excited about her journey. I want to support her.
I just want us to be aligned on how we think about this.
Okay. Just cut to the chase for me. What are the issues up in the air that you are not aligned about?
I think we're not aligned about how do we not operate
as economic individuals, but as a family unit economically
and what role do each of us play?
And that touches everything from,
yes, what we do in our professional lives,
but also how we spend time in the house,
with the family and all those things.
And so, do you mean who cleans the kitchen floors?
What are we talking about?
It could get to practical points like that.
Yes.
What else?
I think an upcoming thing for us is we're planning to start a family.
What I feel is that there's like this power dynamic where I will never be like the powerful
person in this relationship.
It's always like, I'm cooking for you, but I make more than you,
and you work more than me. So it's like, I feel that I will never be the one that, like, for a moment,
I will never be the one that provides more. There's sometimes where, like, he tells me,
why am I doing this if I'm the person that provides the most, and you are the person that works
the most. You should be maybe doing more
for the house instead of me that I make more and I bring more to a table. So I feel like it comes
from there and then when he made the joke I was like okay if you don't want us to put me I can
I can't do it myself. And how did he react when you said that? He told me like it doesn't work like that.
We are a family, but we didn't have a conversation.
It was more like, no, it doesn't work like that.
So you two both keep mentioning having a conversation.
I'd like you to have a conversation right now.
I'll just listen in.
I think we started and stopped on this Paula
about how we have an ongoing conversation about this.
This is probably about, like, a power dynamic between both of us.
And I think we're coming up at a specific point, which is this point around you putting your job,
and which fits within that overall bigger picture.
With this issue, specifically, you were taking a decision that wasn't properly discussed
within us.
It felt, there's probably a deeper point about,
how we entangle this point of who's providing what
and how does that tie into other elements of roles
we play in the relationship.
Yeah, I think that I totally agree that we need to make
this decision together. I also feel that sometimes we are like thinking we are
agreeing on something but never having this this visit conversation. For two
years or more probably I will not make any money. Like we have a very good lifestyle
we do like a lot of things that we like to do
without limiting ourselves on that sense.
So I think the important thing is how we make sure
that we are agreeing on investing in me and this project
for two years as a family.
And I do feel that we need to deal with the power dynamic
because I feel like a lot of the time,
just because I'm not, like I'm not able to provide it more,
like I feel that I'm not valued either in the family.
When we have a family and we maybe have to make a decision
of taking some time if we need it,
it would obviously be me because for the family,
as a whole, it will make sense.
So those are the things that worries me
choosing my time over you will be never like the right decision.
Yeah, to I mean, I think there's one point that kind of cuts through both to me, which is
it seems like you may feel underappreciated because you don't bring an equivalent amount
to the table in the monetary sense.
And my side of things is feeling under-appreciated because I feel that I do bring more and it's
not kind of being kind of, I guess, properly tallied or whatever you want to say.
How do you wish you were more appreciated by?
It's small things, really.
It's starting from just verbal recognition of it, as opposed to, it feels the other way
around, right?
Like, oh, you're so demanding because you're the provider, right?
You demand as opposed to, yeah, thanks for this.
You know, that's great. Let's just go on with our lives.
It's not like some tangible point really.
Let's not minimize how you want to be appreciated.
Did you notice you just did that?
Yeah, maybe. I think what I was getting at is it's not like a barter thing, right?
Where I'm saying, yeah, I should get these privileges in exchange.
It really is the recognition.
Like how do you want to be appreciated?
So I was going to, my first response was going to be words, but it's not really words.
It's a recognition that that
factor matters and affects our lives and affects the quality of our lives and
bringing put-and-quote value to the table with those efforts. I think it's a that. It's just that.
Is it a verbal praise? Is it making breakfast?
Is it touch?
So I think details,
and like small details,
acts of love and kindness,
which can be expressed through all the elements.
I just heard a lot of words, but I didn't really hear a clear answer.
And I pushed him and he still didn't have an answer for me. I'm gonna tell him that.
I'm finding a little difficult because
if you can't be explicit about what you want,
then it's gonna be very hard for your partner to give you what you want.
So let me give you an example from my own life. I don't need words of affirmation. It just does nothing for me. I don't need it.
But I absolutely love acts of service. For example, when my wife has packed my suitcase for me when I was going to go travel somewhere,
that meant a ton to me. It meant so much. Or the coffee mug is clean. It's a tiny coffee mug,
but it really means a lot to the ****. So I'm going to give you five different love languages,
and I want you to really think Nicholas about what yours is. Start with one. So one is words of affirmation.
The second is quality time.
The third is physical touch.
The fourth is acts of service.
And the fifth is receiving gifts.
Which would you say is the most meaningful to you?
Acts of service. Great. What would be an example of an actor service that would be really
meaningful to you? Thinking ahead and acting upon that. So like over the last year, we live in a
place where it's very affordable to have help. We were fortunate to have that, but over the last year,
it has been possible all the time.
And it has turned into a dynamic where, yes, we both collaborate and do things,
but I'm the CEO of the house.
If I don't say, yeah, this has to get done this day and this has been this day,
it doesn't, right?
And so switching those roles and having her be on top of that and taking
ahead and thinking how she can clear things for me, I think that would be very
meaningful. Great. Okay. Perfect. Thank you very much. Did you know that about
Yeah. Yeah. And I think that it makes a lot of sense. I think that my problem, as we mentioned before,
or what is harder for me is that for a while,
maybe a little bit less now,
but I worked much more hours than he.
And also, maybe I'm easier to please in some ways,
so I don't have to eat at some point,
and I don't have, I can organize my life in some way, and it's harder when it's, I have to eat at some point and I don't have I can organize my life in some way
And it's harder when it's I have to organize my schedule that it's already crazy
And then it's not that flexible and we need to eat early and we need to do X and Y
So yeah, I know this is something that he appreciates. I think it it hasn't been hard even when I've tried to do it
Like really be good at it.
Okay, okay.
What is your love language?
How do you want to be appreciated?
I think more with words.
And I feel that maybe on my side,
what I've felt is that it's never a hundred percent
what we think we do together.
So I feel that it feels that he does, I don't know, 80% and I feel that I do 40%
We are biased on our way of thinking what we are able of
Giving to a family in a lot of things.
I paid for our Christmas trip and then he said I paid for it.
I was like, no, I paid for the tickets.
I paid for the hotel.
So I feel that, of course, I know for it. And I was like, no, I paid for the tickets. I paid for the hotel.
So I feel that, of course, I know that I'm in the economic side.
I'm giving less.
And I know I'm giving less on the shores in the house.
I know, maybe my time is more complicated.
But even when I do something, it's never appreciated.
Never appreciated? I don't know if I believe never.
Not never, but like a lot of times it's not appreciated.
No, so even if it's appreciated, like there's like a way of making me feel bad.
Like yeah, but I don't know, for example, we do this thing where I buy dinner on Friday and on whatever,
I buy dinner on Friday and then he always makes me remind that, yeah, but I'm the one buying Saturday
and Sunday and it's like the most expensive one on things like that where I feel like, yeah,
this is the whole point of dividing me, like I feel that the appreciation is never,
like, I don't feel it because I always feel there's like
the other side of the coin reminding me that, yeah,
maybe you did something, but it will never be
as much as I'm giving or I'm buying or I'm doing in the house.
Do you think that means to do that?
I don't think that he does it in purpose.
I think that sometimes he does it to remind me that on his side,
he's trying to, for me, to recognize what he's giving.
But I think that he does it in a way that I feel bad.
I'm never recognized.
So I think we get to a point.
It's hard for me.
Thank you for today's and tomorrow's dinner,
because I felt that he already told me that I did it,
like that it was, he's giving more than me.
What do you wish he said to you
when you order that dinner on Friday?
I think that I wish to be like, thank,
and knowing that like in for our memes and what we make,
like we all, like we are giving a lot to our family,
we are investing in ourselves and being happy.
So recognizing, hey, thank you,
I really like this dinner, thank you for buying it.
I did not know that her priority language,
as I say, was words.
It's interesting to see the differences
between what's appreciated, definitely it's interesting to see the differences
between what's appreciated definitely.
And I do kind of see the dynamic that she's playing out
as useful, whereas opposed to using the languages
that each prefers to acknowledge each other.
We're just saying, yeah, I do more, I do more,
I do more, I do more.
We're kind of elevating the stakes of the negotiation.
Right now, and have a combined income of about $650,000 a year.
And on top of that, they have about $2 million in their net worth, which is quite impressive.
I'm sharing this so that you can understand the stakes of what we're talking about.
Like for example, how much do they actually need?
Somewhere between five and ten million plus a primary residence. Well, you're going to have that in a few years. If you do nothing, you can quit your job and you have that in a few years.
Well, yeah, I've seen your thoughts on compounding and kind of expected returns. I think from
that perspective, I also operate from a conservative point of view
of what happens if, I don't know,
the next few years are very bad.
It just doesn't compound at that rate.
But you're right, no, there's a scenario where
that does happen.
So this says, he's seen my thoughts on compounding.
Yes, my thoughts include math.
Okay, those are my thoughts on compounding.
I'm not gonna push much deeper on this yet,
but just take note of how not
doesn't seem to quite believe me
about how secure his future is.
We're gonna get into this later.
This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp.
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I mean conservatively by the time you're sixty five you have over twenty
million dollars just from your current portfolio
That's a lot of money
I know what it's like to feel that you are comparing your finances to somebody else especially somebody who's I would say
A very high earner, like, a **** with a large portfolio.
What does that feel like to you when you compare
your financial contributions to his?
It feels that I'm not enough, like, good enough.
I kind of feel that I'm not good enough.
Maybe I will never be good enough for this family.
Exactly.
Can you understand why I feel that way?
I do.
I got into this very fortunate position
where because my peer group, my buddies in Colombia
do very different things.
And if you compare me to most of them, I earn an order of magnitude more than them.
So I'm kind of very cognizant of not bringing up the subject of money, all that stuff. And just because I know it's how it would feel
to be on the other side of that.
I can see how that can create that type of feeling.
Definitely.
It's structural.
It's not that you're intentionally trying to make her feel bad.
Although there are little things you might be doing that might contribute to that.
For example, thanks for Friday, but I'm also getting Saturday and Sunday.
That's probably not helping.
But imagine she might work really hard to save $15,000 or $20,000 in a year. The portfolio you have made that like overnight,
right, and the amount you contributed with zero,
zero heartache at all.
You just wrote a check,
is like five times that large.
So you can imagine that,
that starts to feel like,
I wrote a $20,000 check or I really saved hard and did this.
Is it even moving the needle at all?
I want you to pay close attention to this example that I'm giving here with
they may have more than you, but the dynamics are very, very relatable. In many couples, you have one person who's earning more
than the other. And they approach things with a certain perspective. Now, the lower earner approaches
things from a different perspective. It doesn't mean they're better or worse. It just means that they are
earning less. Maybe it's by choice. Maybe it's because they're taking care of children, whatever the case
may be.
There's a natural power dynamic when one person is earning more than the other.
And here's the key.
The higher earner needs to be aware of that dynamic.
If you earn more and you're oblivious to it, you go, oh, yeah, hey, here's some money.
I'll throw in this and that.
You are going to cause resentment.
So it is the obligation of the higher earner
to be aware of this dynamic.
Now with, it's great that it's appreciates
how fortunate he's been.
And he also appreciates that just because he's earning
three times more than, he's probably not working
three times harder than her.
I appreciate that mutual respect.
But now I want to address something that's come up a few times in this episode.
It seems to understand that he earns a lot of money, but he doesn't seem to believe
me when I tell him how secure his future is.
What do you think the implication of that is?
Well, the implication is that he's playing defense
with his money, not offense,
that there's scarcity as his money lends.
He's looking through this lens of scarcity
and everything he sees with money is what can go wrong.
You can't just tell someone, stop feeling that,
stop looking at the world that way.
You have to approach it quite differently.
Let me show you what I'm going to do.
We joke that I want to go back to my hometown and have a really nice house.
And then I feel that we love traveling, and I would love to continue traveling and being
able to travel with our family.
We want to say and try to give the same opportunities that we had to our kids
and hopefully like sending them to undergrad or to grad school to the US.
I think one that's equally important is what am I trying to avoid with that money,
which I think is very important in my frame of mind. One very kind of important experience
from my life was like I said very kind of comfortable growing from my life was, like I said, very kind of
comfortable growing up, no kind of massive luxuries, but everything was around and available
within some limits. And Latin America had a very big crisis in the late 90s, and my dad
lost his job, right? He had been a person that had been, you know,
a decent earner, we lived very kind of comfortably,
but he hadn't set aside money adequately.
And he'd gotten to appoint him his career where,
to following his late 40s,
and in the midst of a crisis, you know,
he was kind of unemployable in a way.
And his our life changed, and his life changed from that point
because he had to re-adjust his standards.
And so I think internally I said,
that's never gonna happen to me, right?
I want to kind of incrementally move up my living standard,
but never get to a point where I want to kind of incrementally move up my living standard, but never get to
a point where I have to adjust standards or depend on a job or something else. And like I told you
before, I have a fantastic job right now. I don't want to depend on it because I know if it's
probably not going to be around always, and if it doesn't, it's going to be very hard to replace
for something equivalent.
So I think a rich life for me means getting to a point
where I don't have to worry about being put
in that situation.
And I'm kind of set at a certain standard for life.
Let's pretend just for the sake of this conversation
that the same thing happens to you.
You get laid off, jobs disappear.
What's your financial situation going to be?
Ten years from now.
It's weird for me because as I've gotten closer
to that point of comfort,
as you get closer to it,
I found myself thinking more about money
and having more anxiety about money, which is weird.
I've told this about that.
It's not weird.
It's what everybody does.
Because they believe that when they find the answer in their model,
they think that all their anxiety's gonna vanish.
They're gonna open up the doors in their French doors,
in their bedroom and beautiful pool outside,
and they're just gonna say, I made it.
But what they don't realize is that money
for people who are modeling out 20 years in the future
and people who are making very high incomes.
The money was never the problem.
They were always gonna make money.
Whether it was gonna take them until they were 30,
or 40, or 42, they were always gonna make the money.
The real problem that they rarely address
is up here in their head.
It's the psychology of knowing what is enough
and what do I actually want to do with this money?
You have accomplished a lot that I don't know
you've really set back and taken account and said,
wow, we did it.
And I don't think you realize that you've won the game. The game that you were trying
to play the one of financial aspiration, you won. So over, it's done, you won. And this is where most
people continue chasing more and more and more. I don't mind if you want to grow that portfolio.
I love it. Please do. I think it will be great. I think it will open up even more possibilities.
But you could double or triple that today. That's not going to take your anxiety away.
The real solution is to turn the page on your joint lives and say, what is our rich life? What do we want to do together? What
does it look like? Do you want to become an entrepreneur? Okay, let's talk about that. Why?
What's it going to give you? What's it it gonna give us?
Okay, how can we find a way to make that work? Financially, yeah, we can fund it,
is that what we wanna do?
Or what's the deadline?
Because what if this goes on for 10 years
and you're not making anyone?
Let's have a discussion about that.
But where does this decision to be an entrepreneur
fit into our rich lives?
Is it gonna let you travel more?
What about work around the house?
How are we gonna manage that?
You're gonna be an entrepreneur, but who's arranging Friday night dinners?
These are the conversations to have,
but I wanna point out the key difference.
It takes changing from playing defense to playing offense.
You're still playing defense.
As if you put a couple more million bucks in there,
you're going to feel better.
But the millions of bucks are already there.
They just need a little time to develop through compound interest.
Plus, I'm guessing you're saving quite a bit of money every year.
Now, we get to have a much more interesting conversation
about chapter 2 of your rich lives. What do you want? What's the difference in your lifestyle
between 25 and 32 million? Nothing! You can worry your way into 30 million dollars and then you die.
way into $30 million and then you die. That's it. End of the game. Now paint the other picture for me.
The rich life scenario. We work in our jobs for five to ten more years. We moved back to home town. We built a house from scratch with a fantastic open kitchen where we cook our meals every night. We
have two kids which I spend a lot of time teaching things to, whether it's sports or working out or philosophy, doing
their homework, etc.
We don't worry when we want to travel.
It doesn't mean we do it in luxury, but we want to be able to go to Bogota, which is
the capital of Colombia, where my friends are weeks, weekends, we might have a small apartment to go there in the summers.
We like to spend as opposed to traveling around many places. We like to go and kind of live in a city. There's many cities like we like.
So we'd get an Airbnb for six weeks in Lisbon or in Buenos Aires.
And we just live life there normally.
This is pretty amazing.
Compare this to their answer earlier.
Total night and day answer in the vividness of what their rich life is.
I want to hear from you.
What does it feel like to hear? This vision.
I love it. We have talked about like exactly like how he pictured.
What we have never talked about is like the timing and how we believe it can be like
sooner than that later. I feel very excited about thinking about the future and what we can do together
and how we can enjoy life and what we have built.
Beautiful.
I appreciate you for appreciating.
Because he's done something tremendous
to be able to even open up the conversation
about you potentially becoming
an entrepreneur. That was something he started years ago. And that's fantastic. I also
think that in your relationship, money is a small but important part of it. There's
so much more than money. Okay, the money part is great. You want, you solved it. And in fact, it's only
getting bigger now. You can't stop it. But there's just so much more. There's having a positive
partner. That's something that I treasure with my wife. She's always laughing, smiling,
love that. There's somebody who, you know, you can count on. There's all these things
that are equally or more important than money.
And so I would love for the two of you to really start thinking about that.
And that starts to shape that entrepreneur conversation.
You know, hey, for example, if you become an entrepreneur,
here are the things that worry me.
Here are the things that concern me.
You know, what's the stress level gonna be?
What about finances?
Yeah, I have that conversation.
But then also talk about what might happen positive?
Who I love that you would be in control of your time.
That means we could travel for weeks at a time.
And even if I can't go all the time you could take our future
children.
Oh, it means that you would be able to do XYZ.
Right, talk about both, put them on the table and you will come to see that this discussion
about whether you should be an entrepreneur is actually really about much more than this
micro decision.
It's really about the rest of your lives together.
Here's what you'll find next week on the I Will Teach to Be Rich Podcast.
I think what you said first, that's the problem.
It'll be fine.
We don't want our lives to be just fine, though.
Right?
We'd want it to be better than fine.
We'd want it to be great.
Okay.
Well, no, we would.
We would want it to be better than fine.
Yeah, but I mean, I guess it depends, right?
Like, what your priorities are.
Well, I just don't have a lot of trust in certain things.
Like, for a lot of reasons, right?
I guess I've just kind of been like an old-fashioned guy
who just puts money in the bank and then that's it, right?