I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 12. "My husband won't talk about money with me"
Episode Date: October 5, 2021Laura came to me frustrated about their bathroom. She wants to renovate it, but Greg isn’t interested. In fact, he doesn’t really want to talk about money at all. For Laura and Greg, life is “fi...ne.” They’re running on cruise control, earning a good income, saving a little, and not investing in anything other than a house. But Laura wants more than a “fine” life. When Laura says this out loud, Greg’s response is: “Well, it depends, right?” Greg is resistant to change. He’s skeptical about investing, about renovating, about travel. When I ask him what he really wants to do, he has no idea. He won’t engage. How would you handle money in your relationship if your partner didn’t want to talk about it? What if your partner had lost the ability to dream and simply wanted to “play small?” 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)
But 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.
What if you wanted to live a rich life?
What if you wanted your life to be better than fine?
But when you tried to convince your partner to dream just a little bigger,
his response was, well, it depends. Well, no, we would. We would want it to be better than fine.
Yeah, but like, I mean, I think that 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 just don't have a lot of trust in certain things, like, for a lot of reasons, right?
When I pulled and pulled, try to understand
what their rich life is, specifically what his rich life is.
I just got a lot of resistance.
We can go tomorrow, like if we wanted to, right?
But I don't know. Do we need to go like one of those things?? But I don't know.
Do we need to go like one of those things?
Like I don't know, like just go.
Greg, you don't need to do anything.
You could sit up and drink out of a straw
for the rest of your life.
I've just kind of been like an old-fashioned guy
who just puts money in the bank.
Hi, I'm Remi Tseati and welcome to the I Will Teach You To Be Rich podcast.
Today's couple, Laura and Greg are from Canada and between the two of them they make about
$150,000 per year.
Laura contacted me for advice because she wants to be able to spend some of their money
on renovations that she believes their house desperately needs.
Now, Greg doesn't want to spend any money on their house
because they plan to move somewhere else in a few years.
What do you do when one partner sees money
completely differently than the other?
And not just sees it differently,
but one partner wants to engage on money
and the other doesn't even want to talk about it at all.
That's what we're going to find out today.
Oh, and by the way, she only told Greg that she applied to be on the show right before
we got on the call together.
That's a little clue that's going to be important as you listen to today's episode.
I think we should spend some money on our home and Greg thinks that we should save every
dollar we have.
I didn't think that we'd be here forever so I don't see the point in putting a whole bunch of
money into it if we're not going to be here. My thought is like we're living in this home for
likely the next like three to five years. It shouldn't just be like we're squatting here like we
should be making it our home. We should be adding to the value of the home. So when it is time for us to sell and buy our forever home, you know,
we've we've lived in this house. We've not just waited here. We know we have the money.
I think Greg's just a little bit more weary about spending anything where I'm like we're fine.
It's safe. We can do this.
where I'm like, we're fine, it's safe, we can do this.
Already, you can hear lots of layers here. Greg and Laura have totally different views on saving and spending money.
And there's also some financial literacy issues,
like the idea that renovating your house adds to the value.
I just want to go on a quick side note here,
because lots of people mistakenly believe that
if they renovate their house for $10,000, then they can automatically sell their house
for $10,000 more.
This is wrong.
Most renovations don't make you money.
They just cost you money.
Now there are a few renovations that tend to be more profitable like kitchens and bats,
but again, most of them are simply costs.
So if you spend 10,000 bucks, you might get
an ice or stove or a wall or an archway,
but you're not gonna get that money back.
This is one of the many lies that we tell ourselves
about money.
We take the things we want and we disguise them as investments.
Part of your rich life is getting educated
about the basics. Okay, that's what we're here to do and you can learn about that in my
book, I will teach to be rich. Another part of your rich life is being honest with yourself.
If you want to renovate something, learn if it will pay you back. And then acknowledge
the real reasons. Are you doing it because it's an investment?
Or are you doing it because you just plain want it? Either one is fine, but you've got to be honest.
Okay, that was Remiates real estate rant of the week. Let's listen in for even more layers
between Laura and Greg. Greg bought the house on his own. Before like a week before we met.
before like a week before we met. And it is very much a bachelor pad type house.
Like it's very small.
I don't find it to be very functional for me personally.
But I know that currently we do need to stay in this house.
We can't afford a larger house at this moment.
And it wouldn't like, it just doesn't make sense for us to move.
But I think for me, if we could improve upon things,
it would feel more comfortable for me
and it would just make both our lives easier.
So for me, like, it doesn't look good
and it doesn't feel good.
You wanna be able to, like, you know, I'm in my home,
I feel comfortable.
I wanna go into the bath and take a bath,
but our bath is disgusting.
It was that way when Greg
moved in.
I understand what she's coming from. I mean, I've always just had the opinion that like
a lot of this stuff can be expensive and the price can run up, right? And why do you want
to spend so much money when you're just going to leave, right?
Greg has a point. If you're going to leave in a couple of years, certain renovations might
not make financial sense. Now, one thing I notice is that his money lens, the way that he views
the world, is financial. While Laura's money lens seems to be comfort, right? She wants to be comfortable
in the place that she lives. She wants to make it feel like it's theirs, not just his.
When you are working on money with your partner, it's very important to be transparent about
what your money lenses are.
For certain things, my money lens is comfort or security.
For another part of my life, it's speed or results, sometimes security, and sometimes
it's cost.
You can Google, remeat, say,
tea money lenses to find out some of the other ways
that you might think about money.
What do you think the real problem is here, both of you?
We have differences on what we each need
to feel comfortable in the home. I obviously want things to be a little bit nicer
Greg would probably be happy like with a tent in the backyard
Is that clear?
Yeah, like I didn't really need it much right like I don't know like I didn't really have much even furniture before she moved in
So and I was good then like I didn't need anything extra, right?
before she moved in. So, and I was good then.
Like I didn't need anything extra, right?
But obviously it's nice.
I love having her here.
I love her.
I don't know.
I didn't really put much thought into it, right?
Well, so we started like really talking about the bathroom,
probably like December, January.
And the thing is my dad is able to help us do the work.
So we're not paying for somebody's labor,
which makes it a little bit more reasonable.
Anyways, Greg was not on board with doing anything. So we started making a budget.
Like, I think this is how much we spend in a month. And then in March, we actually tracked,
like, this is actually how much money we spent. So we could say, okay, we have this much money
extra. And we can put this much money into our savings. And, we have this much money extra.
And we can put this much money into our savings
and we can put this much money towards home improvement
like every month, right?
So at the end of a year, we should be able to do X, Y, and Z
depending on what the costs are.
So I think that slightly helps to get Greg on board
with just doing the downstairs bathroom.
And my dad was able to price it out for us
and it is like fairly cheap.
It's a small space.
It's just a toilet, a vanity and flooring.
That's not a lot.
Why buy versus rent?
Well, so you have some, you can build equity and such,
right, like I've rented before in university
and like, you know, to me it was just like,
okay, well, I lived in this place and I was paying somebody else's kind of mortgage, right?
With regards to my rent, right? So I decided to buy because it made more sense to me at the time
to kind of get some assets and build equity, right? For when you do want to move, you know what I mean?
So.
Mm-hmm.
Okay, when I'm on these calls,
my job isn't to correct people
for any mistake and beliefs they might have.
My job is to help them solve their money issues.
But for you listening right now,
I just have to give you a list of common misconceptions
that Greg just said.
First, he said, build equity.
Yes, maybe true, but you don't build equity if you move out after two to three years.
A good rule of thumb is to live in the same house for at least 10 years.
Next, I don't want to pay someone else's mortgage.
You know, it's funny when people use that phrase as if they absolutely hate someone else
making money off of them.
But it's funny.
We don't say I went out to eat it in an Italian restaurant, but I just hated paying that
restaurant to our mortgage.
We only say that for real estate.
Isn't that funny?
That's the power of propaganda.
When you are paying rent, you're not simply paying someone else's mortgage.
You are paying for value and you're getting it.
And finally, Greg said to get some assets.
Okay, assets are important, but compared to what?
A house is an asset, but it also has huge phantom costs.
In many ways, Greg is pretty knowledgeable.
He understands that renovating the house might not be profitable, especially if they're
going to move soon.
But in other ways, the very decision to buy a house wasn't fully thought through.
And I'm not sharing these points to disparage Greg.
I'm sharing them because Greg's money lens, that way that he views the world, seems to
be profit and ROI, but he hasn't
even done the basic fundamentals of understanding why he bought a house. And that's the biggest
purchase of his life. You can imagine that if he continues down this path, all the financial
mistakes that he will make over the course of his life and their lives together.
that he will make over the course of his life and their lives together.
So when Greg continues caring on about profit and why should we spend money here when we're going to move soon, I see lots of red flags. If she comes to me with an idea and says,
hey, I want to do this, this is this. And we, and I say, okay, like I'm open mind, I'll listen,
but when it's the end of the day, it turns out it's gonna cost us a blowload of money, right?
I guess the way I see it is, there's no guarantees
that when you resell this place,
that you're gonna get that kind of back.
I just assume that it would cost quite a bit of money, right?
Oh, oh, wow.
Okay, you assume that it will cost a lot.
Laura, do you assume it will cost what?
I don't think it'll, okay.
I mean, I personally don't think it'll cost a lot, but my version, my thoughts on what
a lot of money is, I think, is different from what Greg's thoughts are on a lot of money
when it comes to spending on the house.
Why is that?
I think because I can maybe be a little bit more realistic about what things actually
cost.
I've looked into how much, okay, we've already bought flooring, but we looked into how
much will flooring cost, how much would a new tub cost, how much would tiling cost, how
much would a new, so then I can kind of get a slight perspective on things.
And also both of our parents have recently redone
their bathrooms to a much nicer degree than what we would do ever here. And I know it's not
going to cost as much as their bathrooms costs. So to me, I'm like, well, ours is going to be
not too expensive, but Greg, I think, disagrees with what is expensive or inexpensive.
But we have the money.
The thing is, we currently have the money, and it's not like we're trying to do it like
everything at once.
We would do one room.
Okay, we did it.
We're still good.
We're still saving every month.
And then move on to the next one.
And oh, okay, there was all these unexpected costs, then we're going to halt it for a bit, and we're still saving every month. And then move on to the next one. And oh,
okay, there was all these unexpected costs, then we're going to halt it for a bit, and we're
going to save some more. But we currently have the money, and it's just sitting in the bank
doing nothing, waiting for us to spend it to make our house nicer.
If Greg doesn't want to spend money on his house, where does he want to spend it?
If Greg doesn't want to spend money on his house, where does he want to spend it? Greg, what do you want to do with your money?
I don't know, save it.
And then?
Well, I don't know.
I've never been much of a traveler or anything, so like, I don't know, I've always just like
got a paycheck, put in the bank, box groceries, gas, etc.
And that's it, right?
I don't have any long-term plans or anything.
But dream with me for a minute.
You're gonna have a lot of money.
You guys make a very good income together.
What are you gonna do with this money?
It's saving, it's accumulating.
What are you gonna do with it?
I don't know.
What do you spend money on that makes you happy?
I don't know. Like, I don't know. Really, like, I spent a lot of time at work.
Like I played golf sometimes. I just set up a home gym in the basement.
That costs a little bit of money. But again right now there's no gems open.
About myself a new truck last year.
That's pretty much it right now.
Okay, that's cool. So golf, home gym sounds awesome and a truck.
Okay, that's good. I didn't know that. So that's fantastic. So let's assume you keep your savings
right up. Let's assume you get a couple more raises over time. You're going to get the house,
you'll have a down payment. Let's assume that that works out over time. Then you skipped right to
your kids going to college, which is like 20 years away. That it seems like that's a big hole.
All this work you're going to work every day,
like what's the point of it all?
Well, like that's a great question.
I don't know, right?
Like, well, that's why I'm here.
So, I never really thought about that,
to be honest with you, right?
Because again, like I didn't do a lot of trips or anything,
like I know some people who went to year up or whatever cost them a fortune.
And like I just never did that, right?
So.
And I just, I don't like that kind of life where we're just living for one day in the future.
Don't worry Greg, I'm not saying go out and renovate the whole house and spend all your
money.
Not saying that at all, okay? What I am saying is we probably all know somebody
who saves and saves, and there's just no point at the end.
They die at 64, or they literally don't know how to spend money.
I think I know a lot of people like that.
a lot of people like that. What do you think about the money?
What do you think about the money?
What do you think about the money?
You're not a great person.
You're not a great person.
You're not a great person.
You're not a great person.
You're not a great person.
You're not a great person.
You're not a great person.
You're not a great person.
You're not a great person. You're not a great person. What does this person will call them Gregory? What does this person do with their money
from now until Gregory retires?
Paint the picture for me.
For who? For me or for someone like hypothetical person?
Hypothetical Gregory.
I don't know what they do to be honest
because I'm trying to think about from my...
I guess you think about it like every...
the value of a dollar, right? And I guess, you think about it like every, the value of
a dollar, right?
And you get to hear that all the time and all the time.
And I don't know what people would do, right?
Like to be honest, because I never did it myself.
So I have a hard time picturing it.
Is this not fascinating?
Even in a hypothetical, Greg struggles to imagine what someone would spend money on.
He just cannot put himself in someone else's shoes.
He can't dream.
Is it possible that Greg of tomorrow could find a way to spend his money that gives him joy?
Yeah, possibly. I mean, I think it's just got to be within reason and not reckless, right?
Like to me, it has to kind of make sense, right?
Well, you're going to stop before it's reckless. I have no doubt about that.
Yeah.
So let's take that off.
Well, you've got to start before it's stopped.
Yeah, yeah.
But notice what you just did. You went from zero to maybe we're going to go 150 miles an hour,
but right now you're going zero.
So why worry about the reckless part? You're not even in first year.
Yeah, fair.
Something to think about, because otherwise the alternative is you save fairly well your
diligence, sounds like you have a budget. We'll talk about the numbers in a minute.
But you end up at the end of your life with a house and a couple million bucks.
And what else?
I don't know.
Yeah.
I think we're doing okay considering we don't really have much debt.
Like, it's not like we're still paying off school loans.
Obviously, we have the mortgage and we have car payments, but it's not like we have credit card debt and stuff.
I think we've been okay in saving.
I just started putting money into RRSP
a couple of years ago, and we do both
have very good pension plans through work.
So everything we put away, well, everything
that I'm putting into like an RRSP is additional
to what is already being taken off our
paychecks. How much do you save every year? Save and invest. Invest? I have like, well, it's
until like a mutual fund RRSP I have and it's not a lot but but when I started it to be fair, we were planning our wedding
$50 every other week Okay, which is not a lot. I know that and then Greg what about you? How much do you save an invest career?
I would say probably
Three to four hundred a month
Just savings yeah, okay, and then I also contribute like into our joint savings account.
How much is that for you? I don't know. It kind of depends what we've got going on. Like if
we're buying something like we bought flooring for our downstairs bathroom, I didn't put money into
the joint savings account that month because we paid for that. Greg, how come your money is sitting in savings
and it's not being invested?
I'm curious.
I don't really know much about it, to be honest,
investing.
I never really researched it or looked into it.
So, yeah.
It's curious because, you know,
you have a decent amount in there,
but you talked a lot to me about, you know talk a lot to me about not wanting to be reckless
and wanting to make sure you have enough and things like that,
but you're actually losing money every day.
You're not investing a lot of money.
So what do you think's behind that?
I don't know.
I guess my lack of kind of understanding or knowledge about the subject just kind of,
I don't really want to be involved in it because I don't have a lot of trust in it.
There's been a lot of like, you know, like I've always looked at, if you're talking,
like are you talking about like stocks and stuff? Or, like to me like I look at it and like I just never really had a lot of trust in it, right?
Partially probably because I don't know, right? And I never really looked into it, right? But
Look, I'm not here to change your mind. I'm just here to understand and suggest a couple things. I will tell you that
a couple of things. I will tell you that you go to work every day, you work hard, you make a lot of money. You will lose hundreds of thousands of dollars over your lifetime,
probably over a million dollars by not spending a weekend learning how to invest. So all
the time you go to work, all the hours you grind and make all this money is just sitting
there. You will lose over a million dollars in your lifetime by not learning how to invest.
There's no vision of what you want to do with your money. It's just that, you know, I don't care,
Greg, that's what you're saying, whatever, put it over here. And, and Laura, you're saying,
let's spend it on a mirror and a floor and this
and that. And Grabs, like, what? Why are we going to do that? We're moving out of here in
three, five, seven years anyway. So you guys are down here. You're in like a ground war.
You're in the weeds. But nobody has ever stepped up and said, what are we doing all this work for? Making 150 grand a year.
The hell, what are we doing with all this money?
And then you spend the next 30 years fighting over tile?
I don't know.
It doesn't sound inspiring to me.
Feeling comfortable always?
I really like going out for a really nice dinner or something.
Nice feel to just do that without thinking.
Like, okay, this is our one time every three months or whatever it is.
You know, if we wanted to travel, like not being like,
okay, let's plan a trip for two years from now.
You know, being like, okay, you know what, we have the funds,
we have the time, let's go next week.
Give more specific.
I want to be able to get our bigger house or do the
renovation on this house. I want to be able to, I mean,
someday, no time soon, obviously, but travel. Go on a couple of
vacations somewhere. Okay, wait, wait, wait, hold on.
Let's get specific, because you're in the clouds.
You can't start using your money for a rich life.
If you can't get specific about it.
When I started off when I was younger in my parents,
I'll tell you how small my rich life was.
I wanted to be able to go to a restaurant
and order appetizers because when I was a kid,
we never ate out.
We ate out once every six weeks or so.
We had a coupon, go to a pizza place,
and we would never, ever order appetizers.
So now to be able to go to a restaurant,
and if I see two appetizers, I go, yeah, I'll take them both.
What is it?
15 bucks, but it feels unbelievable.
Just to know I can do it.
And then, you know, my dreams got bigger.
Oh, I wanna be able to get an attacksy
instead of the subway or I wanna sort my airfare
by direct flight only.
Right now I'm like, oh, this feels good.
Be able to work out with a trainer
or whatever it may be, felt good.
So you're saying you want to travel?
Yeah.
I'd like to see more of Canada.
I'd like to go to the West Coast, like to BC.
I'd like to go to Calgary, maybe up farther north
in Ontario.
I don't, I guess, visit every province at some point
would be nice.
Love it.
And is that expensive or inexpensive?
What does that look like to you?
I'd say fairly expensive.
Like traveling, I'd say trips I've taken in Canada are more expensive than trips I've
taken in the US.
Okay.
Airfare.
How are you driving. Are you driving?
Are you flying?
I fly.
Well, driving out there take about four days.
Yeah, fly.
I mean, in Ontario, could drive.
You could do it.
But anywhere else, you have to fly.
You know that people from the United States
are horrible with geography.
So we don't know where any, I'll take your work for it.
I need to talk about geography with everybody for a second because I suck at it.
Couple of examples of why.
Number one, I wanna go back to seventh grade
where my arch rival Albert C,
if you're listening to this,
you know what I'm about to say.
Albert and I competed with each other
in the spelling bee and geography bee.
Now Albert was very smart and crushed me in geography, but it's very important for me to make
sure everybody knows that I absolutely dominated in the spelling bee. Albert, don't ever forget that.
So fast forward, oh, about 20 years and my wife and I were planning our honeymoon around the world.
And we were like, where should we go?
Let's go on a long trip and we started writing down all these different countries.
And then I found a site where you can just plop all the countries and it shows you what
the flight paths would be from one to the other.
It was literally the most inefficient travel that I could have possibly plotted.
I showed it to a couple of my travel friends in there like,
are you stupid? You want to fly from there to there?
I just flash back to seventh grade.
Albert would have known better.
All right, back to the conversation.
Okay, you're flying around great.
What seat are you flying in, by the way?
I just am happy with the regular seat, honestly. Great. And what seat are you flying in, by the way?
I just am happy with the regular seat, honestly. Like it's never crossed my mind to, you know, be in whatever business class or first thought,
like that's not crossed my mind, ever. I'm happy to honestly just get on a plane and go.
Okay, great. By the way, I'm glad it crossed your mind today.
That's what I want the two of you to do.
I want the two of you to start thinking about, what do we want to do with our money?
It doesn't mean you have to sit in business class for a first class.
It seems like you don't care about that.
Fine, I totally respect that.
I have a car that's 15 years old.
More than 16 years old, I really don't care.
Okay, but
At least I've thought about oh do I want to get a Tesla and I decide no, it's not that important to me
So I love hearing you say never cross my mind. Let me think. Is that important to me?
No, I've decided it's not. Happy with economy, great.
But I do want to get on a plane and go to this part of Canada.
Okay, love it.
So now we've got, you want to travel to Canada.
What do you say, Greg?
You want to go on that trip?
Sure.
Great answer.
Love it.
Okay.
Now we have an vision.
Just keep on not know.
Like, it's like, do we need to go?
Like one of those things, like, I don't know, like just go.
Greg, you don't need to do anything.
You could say I've only been a drink out of a straw
for the rest of your life.
You know, I made a mistake here, and I really wish
that I had taken a different approach with Greg.
For the entire episode, I have been chasing Greg.
Feels like I've been pulling teeth.
Have you noticed that?
Every question I ask, I'm getting back a one word answer or just stonewalt.
I'm not getting engagement from him.
In my life, I've found that if you are inside a dynamic you don't like, our tendency is to
just try harder to chase more.
And that's what I did on this podcast.
And as you can tell, it's not working.
But a better approach is to step back
and try to change the dynamic.
One thing I could have done here
would be to call out the elephant in the room.
You know, hey Greg, I'm really enjoying chatting with you.
I've enjoyed hearing how you bought your house so early in life, but it also feels like
I'm chasing you.
Like I'm pulling teeth.
And I'm just not sure if I'm feeling you want to have this conversation with me today.
Am I reading that right?
That's how you call out the elephant in the room and maybe possibly changed the dynamic. I wish that I had stopped chasing Greg and
instead made him put some skin in the game. Hey Greg, what do you want to have happen
here today? Do you want to change anything? That's okay if you don't. It's your life,
not mine. If you want help, I'm here. But what would you like help with? If I had done that, and also if Laura had told him earlier
than right before the call, what they were gonna be doing,
I think we would have had a better chance of success.
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On this podcast, you've heard me recommend therapy
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Some of the couples are already seeing therapists,
which I love.
But if you wanted to get therapy, if you wanted to have a space where you and your partner
could talk about money and any other topic, would you know where to go right now?
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A lot of us need a lot more conversations
in order to lock in change.
That's why I think therapy is really important
for a lot of us.
My wife and I saw a therapist
to help us deal with our early money conversations.
And therapy gave us a place and a time
to talk about how we felt.
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R-A-M-I-T. Like we can go tomorrow, like if we wanted to, right?
But I don't know.
Keep going. I want to hear the end of this.
That's it. If we wanted to go tomorrow, we can go.
Like we're not in a position where we can't go.
I guess we haven't taken any steps to go.
Is I guess the issue?
Yes. Do you see my point? Yes. You guys are down here
arguing about tile, but the stuff that you actually want to do, you've never even thought about it.
You never talked about it. You make $150,000 a year and you have no idea what you want to spend any of it on, except
for what is literally in front of your eyes, which is this house that is not making one of
you happy.
Yeah.
It's not really a budget problem.
It's Greg saying, we don't need to, which is true.
You don't need to do any of this
You don't even need to be on this call, but you're here and then Laura
It's you not acknowledging that you both have two totally different perspectives and actually saying well, hey, let's let's start up here
Let's talk about what we want and Greg although I think you have a hard exterior Greg about you know, I don't know
I don't know what I want but Laura I think you could pull hard exterior Greg about, you know, I don't know what I want.
But Laura, I think you could pull it out of him.
And honestly, how do you know what you want if you've never actually spent money and seen people who get joy out of it?
Do we want to travel more or eat differently?
If you had the ability to do it, would you?
Yeah, probably.
I think so. Like, if you're talking about like if money is no object, then yeah, of course, right?
Play a lot. What would you do? What would you do if money were no object?
Well, there's lots of things that you would do, right? Like, you'd go to the Super Bowl, right?
You'd do all kinds of stuff that you, like I guess, you wouldn't.
I would not, but I love hearing that you would go
to the Super Bowl as money or no.
It's just one of those things that,
like if money were no object,
then you could literally do whatever you want,
but I think you can do that.
Well, I don't know if I can afford that, but okay.
I can show you how to afford it easily.
If you want to do it, you could go.
Well, I don't know about that.
I kind of skeptical about that, right?
Because I mean, I don't know.
But anyways, I'm just saying if money is no object,
then I mean, you could literally do anything you want,
but I think in the real world that it actually is,
and you have to live within a budget and means
and prioritize what you're going to spend on.
This Super Bowl thing is really fascinating to me.
It is really, really fascinating.
And Greg, I don't know if you know how interesting it really is
that what you just said, because, first of all,
I don't know the first thing about how much it costs
to go to the Super Bowl,
but let's dream big.
Twenty grand.
Yeah, I would say close to that.
Perfect.
Into the day, yeah.
I love it.
When I talk about the kind of stuff you guys love, like, I'm not just talking about eating
in some restaurant.
I asked another guy, what do you love?
You know what he told me?
He goes, coffee.
I go, okay.
I said, what do you spend your money on?
He goes, I love coffee beans.
And I have a coffee machine.
I go, okay.
Anything else?
No.
I said, look man, I like coffee too,
but that's kind of boring.
I'm talking about love,
like the rest of your life, you're 32.
So when I hear you talk about something,
it's 25 grand.
And it's like a life dream.
Man, I get excited. Cause because no, you might not be able
to afford that today, but if that's something you want
to achieve in your life, I can show you in five seconds
how you can afford that.
Okay, 25 grand is not that much for the amount
of money you both make.
You want to go there, we can put on the calendar
and project when you would accomplish.
That gets me excited.
$25,000 things, $30,000 things.
And again, I'm not talking just the numbers.
I'm talking about the scope, the scale.
You wanna go to Canada, different parts?
Love it.
Now, I wanna point something out to you.
I looked at your numbers.
If you were to conservatively invest $2,000 a month, I'm being conservative because you
actually have more money than that.
Right now, it's like you have a pot with holes in it.
Money is just leaking out because you don't have a plan.
You don't have a vision.
Money is just kind of coming out of it.
But let's just say $2,000 a month.
You invest that plus the money you've already got 75 grand or so on being conservative.
By the time you retire, you have $953,000.
Okay, and that's just, that's like conservative.
You can do more than 50% more.
You could do double that.
It's millions of dollars if you really wanted to. We're talking like a lot of money.
You're young, you have pensions which plus people in the US don't have and you have money sitting
around literally earning nothing. But if you don't like make a plan, make a vision start investing it properly then There's no super bowl. There's no you know
You suddenly take like five years to go travel somewhere on an airplane for 700 bucks
Guys, that's like I feel like you could be thinking so much bigger
I don't think that 150 in Canada and the US are the same
I think we're probably a lot lower like you don't get as much for that here
just like with regards to how much you could actually realistically save. Like I know it might sound like a lot if you live in a certain place
but up here it's like it's not really not really much. Not a lot. So then, isn't it more of a reason for you to
invest your money and make it work for you. Yes. Yeah.
Yeah. I mean, of course, but at the end of the day, I think like when
you're looking at a dot, like that way, like it's not as much as you make
it sound, sound to be, right?
I'm sure things are expensive up there.
I believe you, but this, this is not really the point, right?
The point is you have $50,000 just sitting in cash
and each month you save approximately 4% of your income, which is, you know, it could be better,
I understand there are certain expenses, but like if those are the numbers that we're talking about, then if you want the money to work for you,
it won't happen by just saving it alone.
Like basically you have opportunities
to turn that money into a lot more,
but it would require you to learn about investing
and to start putting some of that money to work for you.
Otherwise, it just sits there.
So that's something I would suggest, right? You can get educated. I totally
understand if you're skeptical about investing, but I always ask people, what is the cost of
your beliefs? If you believe that investing is like super risky and scary, okay, fine,
but I can calculate for you right now how much that will cost you and it will cost you
like hundreds of thousands of dollars to just let the money sit there.
So that would be my suggestion to you.
Like, you're losing money every day by not investing it.
Greg, what do you think happens if you don't change anything going forward?
If we don't change anything?
I don't, I don't, I don't think it'll be fine.
I think we'll live comfortably.
Let's basically see how I was raised, right?
But that being said, I'm willing to make some concessions or agreements on something,
right,
with regards to spending.
But yeah.
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 than fine. We'd want it to be great. Mm-hmm.
Okay.
Talk to each other.
Well, no, we would.
We would want it to be better than fine.
Yeah, but like, I mean, I guess it depends, right?
Like, what your priorities are, right?
If you want to be fine, it feels really comfortable
because you know exactly what to do.
Go to work, put money in the bank, one day get another house.
Maybe we fight once and all about this to that, but we're fine.
Just like your family's.
But if we want more, well, I don't even know what more is.
How do I even decide what I want to do with my money?
I never thought about that. It's uncomfortable
and it's scary and isn't the stock market like a scam and you're just going to lose all your money and
forget it. Let's go back to what's comfortable. That's an option. What do you think? Why you're laughing, Laura.
That's funny because that would be like Greg, he would say like it's a scam.
That's funny because that would be like Greg, he would say like it's a scam.
Well, I don't know, I just don't have a lot of trust in certain things, like for a lot of reasons, right? That, you know, I think like I have friends and, you know,
co-workers that day trade and stuff and like, it seems to me like these guys have their
head in the clouds and they're just like waiting for one day when they strike at rich and they can just leave.
And in my view, could that happen? Sure could, right?
But you can also lose your shirt too, right?
Great. That's my whole thing, what's up?
You work out? Yeah.
What if I told you that I feel like working out is a scam cuz like I don't want to look like Arnold Schwarzenegger
I go in there. I squat suddenly I'm squatting three plates and I'm gonna look like Schwarzenegger in two weeks scam. What would you tell me?
I'd say you're probably wrong. You'd say you're wrong because it's you know proven fact right like
You work out. You're gonna get bigger. You're gonna get stronger, right?
But it's a scam because what if I look like Schwarzenegger?
Well, then don't do it. Don't work out. Thank you. Now, what if somebody came to me and said,
I don't want to invest because my co-workers day trade and that seems really stupid. What do you think I would say to that person?
You'd say that I'm kind of looking at the wrong place, right? But my perception of this whole thing
is like I listen to these guys talking like they're they're going to be like the next guy that
writes a book like you and like they're going to retire when in reality that I don't think that's
going to happen, right? Your friends are never going to do that. Exactly. Right?
Day trading is not investing. It's not investing. Okay.
To me, it's more like gambling more than anything.
I would never encourage you to do that. In fact, in chapter three and six and seven,
you will see me take a huge shit on all these day traders
and scammers, okay? Point blank, I name names.
That example kind of worked, but not as well as I had hoped. The reason that I used the
workout example was I could see that Greg clearly worked out. Now, he automatically got
what I was saying about working out being a scam, which is, of course,
ridiculous. But when I brought that example back to money, he couldn't make the connection.
You see this skepticism in people a lot, especially people who haven't been exposed to different
ways of thinking. They instinctively feel something is wrong. And rather than get curious, they circle the wagons and they say,
that's not for people like us or even that's just a scam.
Personally, this kind of thinking drives me crazy.
There are so many small-minded values like this that keep people in their same, unhappy
situation for generations. If one of them had the courage to say, hey, is that
actually true? They could change the trajectory of their entire family for the rest of their
lives. But it's often too hard. The simple black or white worldview is so compelling. It's
often intoxicating and giving people a sense of control over a very uncontrollable
world.
Really, there's only so much that I can do if somebody does not want to participate with
me.
And that's why I think we're all feeling a little stuck right now.
So Laura, what do you think is the next step here?
I think the next step is to learn about investing so we can work on maybe investing some of our money
and then we don't have to have fights about like a $1,000 home renovation because $1,000 is in a lot
for us anymore.
Close. Before you get to that, because you know what?
$1,000 is a lot.
If you don't know what it's supposed to look like, right?
I get it.
Especially now, I get it.
You know, it's hard to look forward
when you're so deeply in the weeds.
You need to kind of have some basic benchmarks.
Then you can start to say, ooh, $1,000 is not that
much because we already checked the boxes on all this other stuff. And then suddenly, you're
just not fighting about this stuff down here. You're actually talking about the big picture.
So surprising to think that like, okay, that is something that maybe we could actually do.
Well, not we, Greg could do it.
But you could both do it if you want to do it.
Well, I probably wouldn't even spend that kind of money on one thing, right?
But that was just an example.
All right.
So pretty much none of the conversation I had here really produced any change whatsoever.
And I am disappointed.
I had here really produced any change whatsoever. And I am disappointed. I know that not every conversation can produce some life change. But every time I have a call, I want to help a couple take at least
one step towards their rich life. As I reflect back on this conversation, the bathroom is just a symptom.
This bathroom that they've both fixated on and argued over really has nothing to do
with the problem whatsoever.
It's just a symptom.
The larger problem is that they have two different worldviews towards money and that
they have not brought them together towards a vision of a rich life whatsoever.
Now, is it possible for them to change?
Yes, but in my opinion, it's highly unlikely.
That's because there's no pressing reason
for them to make a change.
If they had children, yeah, maybe they would be forced
to change, but unless they have a big, big life change,
it's really hard to look inside and interrogate
yourself.
How was I raised?
What do I think about money?
Just alone, much less to do it with a partner and change those dynamics.
And in this call, I found that there wasn't much change towards their joint dynamics.
One of the key differentiators of people living a
rich life and everybody else is that people living a rich life proactively
plan before they have to. Before they have children or before they go by a
really expensive house before they're back as against the wall. And that is my
wish for you. In every episode I do, I want to show
you the dynamics of a couple who are struggling with some aspect of money so that you can see yourself
in there and say, you know what? If we don't start making a bigger shift towards a rich life,
boy, we might end up stuck. And as I've always said, I believe it's a tragedy to live a smaller life than you have to.
So I have one question for everybody listening today.
How would you have handled this conversation differently?
What would you have done differently?
I would love it if you sent me a note and tell me one thing you would have done differently.
You can DM me, you can leave a comment on my Instagram comments,
get on my newsletter at iwt.com and
you'll get my email address send me a note.
I want to hear from you and I want to know one thing you would have done differently
on today's call.
Thanks for listening. Here's what you'll find next week on the I Will Teach To Be Rich Podcast.
I said, hey, if we want to make this easy, we could just buy flights in business class
and she's like, how much is it?
I was like, how?
It's like $6,000 a person.
I barfed.
Absolutely not.
I'm sorry.
I mean, there's like a real,
probably messed up satisfaction of being like,
I know I spent so long,
but I got this thing that everyone else has to pay for
and I got it for less.
And therefore, what?
I don't know that therefore.
To me, that's a hard line that I'm like,
you are going too far.
This is bananas.
It's like beyond sanity, please stop.
We are so caught up in playing the game now
that I just don't, I don't see an end-minute fight.
you