I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 124. “We make $113,500. Why do we feel poor?”
Episode Date: October 3, 2023Bebe and Paul are 37 and 40. They have two young kids and in the last few years, they have moved about ten times for various family reasons. They’re stuck in false narratives that are sinking their ...finances—unable to recognize the long term negative effects of their actions. This episode is brought to you by: DeleteMe | If you want to get your personal information removed from the web, go to https://joindeleteme.com/ramitfor 20% off. Fabric by Gerber Life | Protect your family today with Fabric by Gerber Life. Apply today in just 10 minutes at https://meetfabric.com/ramit. Masterclass | For unlimited access to every class and 15% off an annual membership, go to https://masterclass.com/ramit. Babbel | Right now, when you purchase a 3-month Babbel subscription, you’ll get an additional 3 months for FREE. Just go to https://Babbel.com and use promo code RAMIT. Links mentioned in this episode • Download the Conscious Spending Plan Connect with Ramit • Get the Podcast Newsletter and exclusive Q&A about the show • Get Money Coaching with Ramit • Get my New York Times best-selling book • Get my no-numbers journal • Other episodes • Instagram • Twitter • YouTube • Submit a question for the newsletter iwt.com/askramit 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.
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Discussion (0)
It feels more like a rut, you know, that we just can't get out of because climbing out
of it is harder than trying to keep going.
We have struggled for as long as we've known each other.
It's just been one of those things that we've always done.
What percentage are your fixed costs?
Combined 82%.
It's worse.
It's actually 94%. How do you pay your rent if you don't have the money for it?
It's late every month. Never more than 10 or so days, but it's it's always until the next paycheck.
It's the whole paycheck. Yeah, and so we just keep going further further. And then my paychecks get us
through to the next week. That's the cycle we're in.
It's horrible, and it doesn't make any sense.
We make decent money, it shouldn't be this way.
We just want to do better.
Wanting to do better is awesome.
It's an awesome vision, it's an awesome goal.
It's not enough.
Meet BB and Paul.
BB is 37, Paul is 40 40 and they have two young children. In the last
few years, they have moved about 10 times for various family reasons that you're going
to hear in today's conversation. I have to tell you that I found today's conversation
pretty confusing at times. I wasn't sure why they were stuck in this financial situation,
but as I started to peel the onion,
I asked a lot of questions.
Some things became more clear.
So stick with me as we go through today's conversation
with BB and Paul.
We need a new mattress.
So we went to mattress farm, got a proof for a credit card,
got like a midline mattress.
I think Paul kinda just ran with it like a low-s credit card and a home depot credit card, got like a midline mattress. I think Paul kind of just ran with it like a
low-s credit card and a home depot credit card. But it was all things that had been piling
up that needed to be addressed. But he can say the same for the credit cards that I have.
How much did that mattress cost? $2,200? Is that a lot or a little, what do you think about
that number? I think it's very midline for someone who has to take a line of credit to get a decent mattress
that's going to last what eight years, the recommended eight years. We've never had a new mattress
in our lives knowing that we couldn't pay cash for it and being approved for a line of credit.
You couldn't pay cash because you didn't have enough to pay.
Correct. Absolutely not.
All right.
Yeah. Would you say that there are any other examples
of that in your life, making short-term decisions
that end up costing a lot more?
Oh, yeah.
Everything is now.
Everything is in the now for us.
All right.
Do you want to change that?
I do.
But at the same time, I don't want to be those people
who don't enjoy life now because they're
saving for something
that may or may not happen in the future.
Paul, what about you?
What's a time recently where you were not on the same page financially speaking?
I recently got a new job, started traveling just a little bit, making a little bit more
money, but times were still really hard.
It was still kind of new.
I was away and they were home and we had zero dollars. I just felt
so bad, you know, just because I was I couldn't do anything about it. So I got like Googled, I don't
even remember what it was, but it was in like in five minutes, like alone, how much money can I get
right now signed up for some, like,
if $750, I didn't think it was much goddess through the week.
I knew the payments were $200.
And it was biweekly.
And after about the sixth one, I was like, wait a minute, that $750 was paid off.
Let me go back and look at that.
And I looked at the interest rate.
And I want to say it was something like 650%.
680.
And yeah, the total amount that we end up paying off,
which our last payment gets made two days from now,
the total amount will be $3,500.
So you borrowed 750, you paid off $3,500?
Yes.
Yes, that was detrimental and we didn't even talk about it until like two months ago or something,
but in his defense, I didn't notice it and we have one bank account.
So that's on me too.
It was getting paid every two weeks just like clockwork.
And then other bills, you know, other things were not getting paid because we got behind
in credit card payments, we got behind with pretty much everything and it didn't seem to help us
like we're exactly where we were whenever I needed to get that loan. So all it did was push
us further down the road in the wrong direction. I felt bad for him because I knew how guilty he felt.
I also blame myself because I didn't catch it.
I should have caught it on the bank account.
Like we both need to be more vigilant on so many levels.
And it's so simple.
There are people with such more complicated situations with multiple bank accounts,
with investments that they keep up with and everything. And like we have one bank account, with investments that they keep up with,
and everything, and like we have one bank account, and if we can't keep up with that, then that's on us.
But we make enough money, like we make decent money for a middle class family, and it shouldn't
be this way, and it's detrimental to our kids. How old are your kids? Our son Liam is 11.
He just started sixth grade.
He has autism.
It comes across as like,
he's very academically brilliant,
socially and emotionally.
It's where it hits him the hardest.
Our daughter, Pearl, she's eight.
She's a jock.
She's not our academic,
but she's anything sporty or socially, like she's got it.
I got it.
So we kind of have the Yin and Yang happening.
Why are you deciding to try to change something now?
Because their lives have been fraught with change. We have moved probably 10 times in Liam's
life.
Why? For many different circumstances. He was a surprise.
When Paul and I met, I was a flight attendant for JetBlue. He was a touring musician. We saw
each other in Austin, I don't know, two to four days a month or something like that.
I don't know, two to four days a month or something like that. And Liam happened, and obviously that changed things like our way of life.
Our, like somebody had to come off the road.
We moved to be closer to his mom in hopes that she could help,
which was in the middle of nowhere.
And then after he was born,
we ended up moving back to Austin.
Shortly after my dad in Alabama,
who was like my person, he was diagnosed
with terminal brain cancer.
And I said, when I quit my job and I came home
and I said, Paul, we're moving to Alabama.
My dad has terminal cancer, we need this time with him.
So we moved to Alabama for nine months,
but it was difficult. We were on food stamps, we had our electricity turned off like all of that, but it was worth the time
with my dad. But the reason we moved back to Texas is because his dad got diagnosed with lung cancer.
So we moved back to like be closer to him and we moved him with him and they both ended up dying
in the same year in 2017. So it's been a lot of things that have made us move, but looking back, it's always been
for good reasons.
There's never been like any evictions or anything dramatic like that.
There are so many clues in just the first few minutes of our conversation.
Now first I have to acknowledge how much BB and Paul have been through to move 10 times
to have both their dads pass away, to have two children, including an autistic son, that
is a lot, and I don't think any of us know how we would react in a similar situation.
I also noticed that they tell themselves certain stories.
Did you catch it?
When I asked what they think of buying a $2,000 plus mattress, which I consider expensive,
she said she considered it midline.
Even though they had to take a line of credit out to afford it.
We're talking about a mattress.
Later, BB said they were on food stamps
and had their power turned off,
but there wasn't anything dramatic like evictions.
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What made you decide to fill out the application
so that we could have this conversation?
I think because I know we can do better,
and I know that with just even the most basic training,
we can make things happen. It's just that we don't know.
Like we have no clue how to invest, how to handle our money.
Like our neighbor across the street printed out our tax or tax documents one year.
And it was like 40,000 for the year.
And like we were okay. and I don't know how
because I wasn't really working. I was like teaching Pilates a little bit but nothing substantial.
It just seems like we keep getting to the same level no matter how much money we make. And we just
like we were happy then and then we were happy when he got another raise. And then when I started teaching at the schools here,
we had more money coming in.
And now we're at a point where, like, we make decent money.
But every time we get paid, it's all gone already.
We just don't know how to handle it.
We just have ourselves in a vicious cycle
that it's just, it's never ending.
I was gonna say, it feels more like a rut a rut you know that we just can't get out of because
if we feel like climbing out of it is harder than trying to keep going in it.
Sounds pretty reasonable. That's true for most people. I'm sure. Yeah. It's easier to keep doing what
you've been doing than to make a complete change of your
lifestyle.
But we've been in this cycle of conversation.
We do it every few months.
Like, we have this cyclical conversation.
We've got to change.
We've got to figure out our budget.
We've got to learn some investing strategies, but life, like it is just so moment to moment, slammed busy that we don't
have time to dig in and we need someone, something to spark it and make us move.
Well, I can't make you do anything. That's the fact.
Encourage. I mean, I can encourage you, but. We just don't know where to start.
We've tried creating a budget.
And then we're like, I don't even know what is coming in
or going out.
Like, I.
Ah, okay.
So you try creating a budget.
How long did it last?
Like, never.
Yeah.
No days.
I created a budget, but that budget was more of a expense tracker. That's why it didn't really work because there was just so so many small things.
You know, a day goes by you're like, I've spent $100 and if you do that five, six times a week, that's, you know, $600 on what? I don't know. We just want to live. I don't want to think about buying my kid a candy bar at CVS when I'm
picking up a prescription and thinking about where I need to put that on my list or whatever. I just
want to buy her the candy bar, buy him the candy bar, buy him the donuts because they didn't get to
go on a fucking vacation this summer, like everyone else and they're going to go to school the first day and everyone's going to be like,
I went to Hawaii, I went to do this and they're going to be like, oh, I stayed home. We got COVID.
Maybe you don't need to track the price of a candy bar. Is that possible?
I don't think that I need to like write things down in my freaking checkbook. I think that I,
I want to not have to think about it.
So how should it work that if you don't think about it?
Because we're not extravagant people
and we don't spend on frivolous things.
It should be okay for us to go to the Mexican restaurant
down the street for happy hour night when the aditious 6.99.
So is it?
It's not right now. No. So what's going on?
I don't we don't know. I mean, we do know. We know that it's like us both
Nicolaine Doming are bank counted death and not collaborating with each other about what we're doing. What does that mean? Nickel and Diaming ourselves today.
Klarna, an after pay.
Oh, hey, I bought these little lemon pans for work.
That's him, not me.
On after pay, so we're going to pay monthly for that.
All these tiny things building up,
all these credit cards that he has,
and then I have building up and
before we realize it, all of these monthly payments are his entire paycheck and
we can't afford rent. But in the moment, our son had a great birthday party, he
got what was on his list, which was simple things. And then our daughter, she had
her birthday and she got what she wanted, which was simple. You think that that would be considered the same as spending extravagantly on stuff?
Yeah. Yeah.
Come on, interesting.
I mean, in your book, you said if you can't afford to pay off a credit card
in the same month that you rack up the charges, you can't afford a credit card.
And that was eye opening for me. Like, Really? No one ever told me that. Yeah.
I'm telling you, we are so like bottom line basic when it comes to finances that you have
talked to us like toddlers. What does that mean bottom line basic? We just, we have no clue.
We've never invested.
We don't know what that looks like.
We don't know what that means.
We don't know the terms.
We don't know any of the, anything.
We don't know the first thing about investing.
We have struggled for as long as we've known each other.
It's just been one of those things
that we've always done.
The solution for someone who, like she says, doesn't know any better seems to be spend less.
What if you did that? Right. And that seems to be easy. That should be easy to do. But for some reason, we get back in that rut of, we do the things we want to do.
And then before the things that we have to do, and then we get to the things that we have
to do, we don't have the money to do those things. What's the examples of the rent?
Rents. Rents. Yes. Wait, how do you pay your rent if you don't have the money for it?
It's late every month. Oh, that's not good. No.
And like our neighbor is the owner's son and the property management company is very lenient
with us, but we pay late fees every month. So yeah, it's never more money down the drain.
Never more than 10 or so days, but it's, it's always until the next paycheck.
Drain the whole paycheck. Yeah.
And so we just keep going further, further, and then my paychecks get us through to
the next week. And then the cycle we're in.
It's horrible. And it doesn't make any sense.
Like we make decent money. It shouldn't be this way.
Narrative number two, we're simple people.
We don't really spend money on anything extravagant, followed by narrative number three. We don't
know anything about money. We've struggled for money as long as we've known each other.
It's all we've known. My dad carried cash and road tracks until the day he died. What year
was your dad born in? 1947.
I wonder if anything's changed since then.
Yeah, things have, my parents actually owned
roller skating centers, most of my life,
which when they divorced, my mom took them over
and she had this like roller skating empire
across Alabama and Georgia for my whole life.
That's cool.
Until I was 18.
It was cool. How good of a roller skater are you?
I'm pretty damn good. I grew up
very wealthy. We had a penthouse on the beach in Destin. We had a lake house on Lake Martin and Alabama. We had a
huge house multiple skate centers. We're well-known in society in our hometown, country clubbers, all that stuff. Fast forward
hometown, like country clubbers, all that stuff. Fast forward till I was 16 or 17, massive spiral. My parents divorced when I was six. My mom had multiple husbands, multiple
step siblings that involved. It just, uncomfortable things. And then she hit an ultimate spiral and she is now homeless.
Oh my gosh.
Despite everything.
And when my dad died in their divorce decree in 1992,
he said she could remain the beneficiary on his life insurance policy.
Should anything happen to him that his money would get paid out to his minor children?
So she discovered that because we were no longer minors at the time, she could keep it, which she did.
Wow. Almost $700,000. That was 2017 and we're here now and the last I heard she was arrested
at Walmart for shoplifting and she's homeless. So, so quite the financial journey for me personally. So she took
the $700,000 from the life insurance in 2017. Yes. And it's gone. My stepmom got nothing and she
went through breast cancer like right after as well after my dad died.
Sorry, that's extremely tragic. It is, but you know what she was who she was my whole life. So
when people apologize, I'm like, you know what, it tracks. Yeah, she is who she was. So. And
I assume you do not have a relationship with her anymore? Is that oh no, I told
actually, I told her in 2014 when she sued him for back child support after his first brain
surgery that I would never speak to her again if she went through with it. And I figured out how
to like file, pro say to fight her, whatever she won, he lost his house. He and my stepmom had to move. It was
a whole thing. So you filed Jose and you went through with that? I did. I learned how
but and then she threatened to throw me in jail for practicing the law of federal license.
That was great. That's very impressive that you learned how to file for yourself.
That's not easy.
He couldn't do it.
So somebody had to.
She's vicious and she's still one.
Okay.
And when you said you grew up wealthy, sounds like you grew up extremely wealthy.
What were some of the messages that you remember about money as a child?
What did you learn from your family? I don't think what were some of the messages that you remember about money as a child?
What did you learn from your family?
So that's the conflicting thing,
is I never cared about any of it?
I just wanted to be with my friends
and have a normal family and I never did.
It was always like constant drama
and not being comfortable in my own home.
She would send us to our penthouse in Desson
with our nanny and I just wanted to be home.
Like I hated all of it.
But I also like the bragging rights back then.
Ah, like bragging about what, give me an example.
Like I got to go to the beach in the summer
or just being able to stand up to comparisons.
I don't know, I guess I don't want my kids
to be the have-knots and for them to feel less than
because of that.
And the school that my daughter goes to is in an area that's just not even real.
It's very, everyone has.
Do you feel like the two of you are have knots?
Yeah.
Yeah.
For sure.
How about for your kids, do you feel like they're have nots?
No, because they don't know that.
But I think it's unfair to them if we don't build something for them.
Oh, I didn't even say this.
I lived in the back of the roller skating center,
the original roller skating center until I was like five.
What really?
They made an apartment in the back of it in Auburn, Alabama.
And that's where we live.
So I'd like walk out onto the skate floors like my playground.
Whoa, that's cool.
It was really cool.
That's amazing.
It was it was a cool life.
I have to tell you, this is one of the reasons that I love these conversations.
Because it would be easy to be listening to this and screaming, how could you take a loan out of bio-matrists?
But on this show, we have the luxury of time.
I get to spend hours with couples like this to understand how they grew up, and suddenly
you start to see a different side of BB spending.
She grew up extremely wealthy, yes, but she also suffered many tragedies.
One of my goals with this show is to help us all understand the peculiar ways in which we behave
with money. Hearing BB's history isn't meant to justify her actions, but I think it helps all
of us understand them just a little better. Now let's talk to Paul about how he grew up with money.
just a little better. Now let's talk to Paul about how he grew up with money.
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That's spelled B-A-B-B-E-L.com slash Remete. We never had the money to do whatever I asked for.
If I wanted a drum set, oh, it's too expensive or wanted to play football.
Oh, we don't have the money for pads.
I didn't go without food, clothes, that sort of thing,
the basic necessities.
I wasn't deprived.
I wasn't unhappy, but we just didn't have money.
Money was never even, it was, money was always
shortcomings, I guess.
When you look back, would you call the way you grew up?
Middle class, lower middle class, working class, four?
I would say lower middle class.
What do you remember about your mom and stepdad
talking about money?
It was always a not taboo, but it wasn't discussed
with the child.
Like it was off-limits.
Okay. So let's skip through your adolescence,
and you become a young adult in your 20s.
What changes with money for you?
I went to college,
got into some trouble,
had to move back home after the first year,
stayed for a bit, then moved back away to all my friends
in college and got some student loans with the help of my mom and kind of lived on that, got into
an abandoned and used my student loan money to buy a guitar. Hold on, how much did you have in student loans? I think total was $32,000.
And did you end up ever graduating?
No. Okay, $32,000.
Do you still have those loans? Did you pay them back?
No, there's still about $4,000 left.
Like his mom and his stepdad got in this huge fight
about the student loans.
Tell me, yeah. My mom signed up for the student loan
as a co-signer.
For me, I didn't know she was doing it.
She wanted me to go to college with my friends.
That was her way to do it
because they didn't have the money to send me down there.
And so I think she did it without my stepdad knowing.
And then he found out a little bit later
and just exploded.
20 years later she's still paying it off. Yeah. Paul, do you see any similarities with the action
that your mom took and the action that you took when you were traveling? What connection if any,
do you see between those two behaviors? An emotional decision without thinking about an impulse
to behaviors, an emotional decision without thinking about an impulse, yeah, trying to fix a situation without thinking about it. And what was the emotion behind each of those decisions?
Love. I want to help the person I love. Yeah, I feel bad for them. I want to give them something.
Yeah. And what was the consequence of that decision, the long term
consequence?
Oh, the consequence.
I don't even want to begin.
How much is that $100 a month for 20 years?
It's a lot.
Yeah.
And what about for you making that decision
to take out $750 of loan?
to take out $750 of loan.
I feel shame.
Yeah, yeah, it's very shameful to admit that, like, oh my gosh, I can't believe I did that.
Because you hear somebody on a podcast like this
talking about that, like, oh my gosh, why would you do that?
But you get in that situation and it, like, oh my gosh, why would you do that? But you get in that situation and it's like, oh my gosh, I did exactly what I
shouldn't have done. So you articulated that you and your mom both made an impulsive
decision out of a seemingly positive emotion. I want to, I love them. I want to help them.
Probably didn't understand what coasts any means
or what that highly damn near extortionate
interest rate meant.
And then finally, the consequence was,
you both ended up spending thousands and thousands
of dollars on something you never imagined you would.
Can you foresee a future roughly seven years from now?
For both of you see your son going off to college.
You don't have the money saved.
And what do you do?
Repeat the cycle.
Yeah.
Yeah, we'd start figuring out a way to get along.
Yeah.
The pattern will repeat.
It will.
You will do it out of love, but ultimately,
it will not be a loving action. So this is interesting because I have been focused,
really highly focused on breaking the cycle as far as growing up under a narcissistic mother, her mother was a narcissist and they're very
much alike and the catastrophic damage they caused to anyone they touched in their path
was just astronomical.
I mean, I've been focused on that aspect of it and not the financial aspect of it, which
is awakening for me because I've been so hyper-focused
on that for myself that we've never addressed it. Are you ready to? Absolutely. Okay. How about
we take a look at the numbers and then I want to come back to you and want to hear what you think.
What do you say? Oh, this is going to get real interesting real fast. So let's keep in mind that you have mentioned your late on rent, essentially most months.
And I want to contextualize that as we go through this.
By the way, did you two do the conscious spending plan together?
Yes.
What was that like?
It was pretty easy.
Anybody listening?
Go to the link in my show notes.
That's how a CSP works.
I really think that we both needed a common task,
common goal, which is this, what we're doing right here.
The pressure.
Right.
Oh, you needed me to be like, I'm going to show up
and talk to her me, then we better have our shit on paper.
Last night I literally said to Paul,
I hope he rips us a new one.
So whatever you need to do,
we need to be scolded.
No, wrong.
I'm gonna tell you right now.
Like, okay, let's take your daughter.
You what, what is she, right?
A bike, do you scold her if she's not writing the bike correctly?
No.
Oh, that's so weird.
And she loves it, right?
Yes.
But why don't you scold her?
Because that's what you want me to do to you.
Okay, fair comparison.
Because we're adults.
It's embarrassing.
Like, he's 40.
I'm 37.
Like, we shouldn't be where we are.
It's embarrassing.
It's embarrassing. Okay, I understand 37. We shouldn't be where we are. It's embarrassing. It's embarrassing.
Okay, I understand that, but you are here. And the same principles of getting you to actually
love talking about money and to actually have a joint vision that's exciting to you.
That doesn't come from scolding. Yeah. And you intuitively know this because that's how you raise your kids.
Yeah, that's fair.
So don't turn it around and ask me to scold you because I don't do it and it doesn't work.
Alright.
Fair.
See, that's what we are.
No, it's not pathetic.
It's that you, there hasn't been a compelling reason for you to do this yet.
Or we're just terrified to address it.
This is a very childlike approach to behavior change.
The idea that they need someone to scold them,
to call them on their shit.
That's the kind of thing children believe.
What's really going on here is that they are trying
to delegate authority to someone else.
In this case, me.
And they're pulling the innocent dough technique,
saying us, little old us, Paul and Beauty,
just simple people.
We don't know what we're doing wrong.
We need a big, strong adult to come in here
and tell us what to do.
That's not my approach.
And when you start trying to change
with the wrong expectations, you're doomed to fail.
This is like someone who hires a coach and says,
I wanna make a million dollars next month.
You are not going to succeed,
or you wanna lose 50 pounds in two months.
Not gonna happen.
I have to tell you, I'm honestly puzzled by BB and Paul.
They're unlike any couple I've met before.
I'm hoping that looking through their numbers
is gonna shed a little light on what's going on here.
Their assets, 12,000, investment, 6,000, savings, zero,
debt, 10,000, and their total net worth is $8,000.
So together you make, can you read that number out?
One hundred thirteen thousand, four hundred forty five. What do you you read that number out? 113,445.
What do you think about that number?
It feels good.
It's a lot of money.
I think it should be adequate.
Are you actually proud that you have a household income of $113,000?
Yes.
What does it mean to you?
It's always kind of been $100,000 was kind of a mark for so long. I think it's probably
a dated, you know, I'm sure with my age, I remember I never would have dreamed of paying
$2,000 a month in rent because I remember in 1997, my dad had a $3,500 square foot house with a pool and everything and he paid $1,500
a month. And so I kind of kept that mentality of, oh, once I'm making, once I'm able to
pay $1,500 a month, I made it. I made it. Exactly. Once you make $100,000 a year, life is easy. But I'm learning that it's not quite.
Okay.
I agree.
I agree.
Times have definitely changed.
Housing is very expensive.
But I am struck that we started that.
Q&A just now with me asking you,
what does it,
what does it feel like?
And you said proud and then it ended with you basically being depressed.
Sure.
You noticed that?
Yeah.
Potentially, is that a recurring pattern when you talk about money?
Yeah, absolutely.
Uh-huh.
Beebees over there nodding her head.
If you both cannot feel good about money, then you will never want to actually work on it.
I think the reason, I think that we don't feel good about it, despite
this being an astronomical amount to us that we never thought we would really reach,
is the reason that we have reached out and the reason that we're here.
I'm glad you did. I'm really glad you did.
And you could see this desire to almost
escape from money in several different ways. Would you say escape would be a
word that characterizes the way you treat money?
Absolutely. Like I said before, we're very simple. We don't require much.
You're not that simple. You have a $2,000 mattress.
You have stuff you spend on, Lulu, Lemon, etc. That's a nice brand.
I think that's a narrative you tell yourself. We're not extra. Yeah, you don't live in a country club like you used to, but you're not that simple. Maybe it's time to turn the page on that.
All right, the rent, your your renting is $2,250. I added up your utilities as well, so that's about
24% of your gross income. What do you think about that number?
I think it's astronomical, but we have been in this house for four and a half years and they
should have raised our rent several hundred dollars by now. We shouldn't still be here.
Why do you think it's astronomical? I don't know, a friend's from back home, but that's in
Auburn, Alabama. They're like, holy crap. I'm more just $800.
Can I just say something?
If you want to turn a new page in your financial book,
in your life, it might be time to stop listening to people
who have no idea what they're talking about.
That's fair.
Because you're literally being guided by ghosts
and also people who live in a completely different place.
Yeah.
You're actually doing a very good job
with your housing cost. It's shocking because these days almost everybody is exceeding that number.
You're doing great. So I'm going to take the one. I'll give you a round of applause on that. 24%
very good. Don't move. You got a great thing going. And then what is this money lion thing? What is
it? Money lion. it's like a credit card
that you have to pay back because you connect it to an auto pay account. So you can pull out like 50,
$120 at a time with pretty much little to no interest unless you need it quick, which we usually do.
So my line of credit with money lion right now is $875 and I don't remember the last
month that we haven't had to use it. So for every $100, it's $8 to deposit it.
What the fuck? What? Say that again? I know. I know. Made again. For every $100, it's $8. So if I take out $870,
yeah, it's a lot.
Do you understand what that means?
Like, does that seem like a lot to you?
But this is the cycle. Yes, absolutely.
Like, we have talked about this every month.
Like, we've got to get out of the cycle of the money line.
We've got to stop using this.
But when it comes down to buying groceries and milk,
we don't have a choice.
I understand that it feels like that.
And I understand that you're making a choice
and simply kicking the can down the road.
But you need to buy groceries. I get that.
You said a second ago that this is like a credit card,
but it has no interest.
Well, no set interest rate.
There's definitely interest.
I know.
Like crazy interest.
For people like us, and that's how they get you.
Exactly.
Yeah, I know.
Funny fast.
You're gonna get fucked.
I know, I know.
And it's a cycle that we're in that we need to get
out of and we can't find our way out. All right. Let's get out of it. I'm going to help
you get out of it. This is driving me insane. What the hell is money line? I'd never even
heard of it before. And if you look at the pricing page, even for a guy like me who does this
for a living, it all seems so simple, so friendly. It's only when you go deeper that you realize
this is a financial trap. Do not use money, lion, or anything like it.
And can you read me the number, what percentage are your fixed costs?
I'm buying 82%.
82%. What number should that be?
I have no idea.
Well, the number is 50 to 60%.
Okay.
Okay.
So you're at 82%.
So if you want to know why you feel anxious over a candy bar,
if you want to know why you're late on rent,
if you want to know all of it,
it tracks to this category right here.
That's it.
That's a simple answer right there.
Excuse me.
I just realized there's a
mistake in this. I don't know why this isn't translating, but it's not 82% because watch, we need to
add a thousand dollars here. It's actually 94%. Yeah. So you are losing money every single month.
Yes. That's right. Like I don't know. I can't imagine
spending 750 for on groceries versus a thousand, you know what I mean? Like I can't imagine
taking, you know, some cell phone lines away or that sort of thing. I already kind of feel like with certain things we're at the bare minimum. You're not. You're not at the bare minimum.
Like not even close. You're wearing an Apple watch.
Every single person in your family has a phone. You're not even close to the bare minimum.
Not on the income you currently have.
So I would like for you to ask deeper questions, rather than just how do we quickly get rid of this,
which is impulsive, and and is gonna end you back up
in the same situation.
The question I would love to hear is,
how did we end up getting into this situation
with 82% fixed costs?
What choices did we make that brought us here?
And what if anything, are we willing to change if we want to get out of it?
What do you notice about the difference of questions?
I mean, a lot.
Tell me.
But I also feel like we're already living.
Are we going back into your story right now?
Can you stick with my question?
What do you notice?
No, I am.
I understand the question.
I just feel like we're already living below.
I don't know.
I don't know what we would want to get rid of. Just a quick reminder that the reason I'm such a stickler
for 50 to 60% fixed costs
is that once you elevate something to a fixed cost,
like a nice house or a car,
or even your grocery spend,
it is extremely difficult to cut back.
You hear it every single week on this podcast.
Couples will come on here spending literally 70% or 80% of their take home pay on fixed costs,
and then they'll be completely bewildered at how to reduce it.
That's because people cannot imagine having to sell a car
or cut back on groceries or even downsize their house.
Now, the ideal situation is to never get into this scenario
in the first place.
But sometimes that can't be avoided. So we have to understand why. The ideal situation is to never get into this scenario in the first place.
But sometimes that can't be avoided.
So we have to understand why.
Why did they get into this situation in the first place so that they don't get back into
it again?
All's question and yours was, what do we get rid of?
What I'm saying is what I wish you ask is how did we get here?
What choices did we make and what if anything are we willing to change? What is the difference in those two questions? That's super hard to answer. I feel like they're intertwined. We got here because of the
decisions that we made. The difference is that you're looking for simple, easy answer to strip something away.
And you're already telling me all the reasons
you can't do it.
Like, oh, I feel like we're already cut to the bone
and we don't do anything, et cetera.
We're not, we're simple people.
That's getting you nowhere.
You're putting yourself into like a cul-de-sac
where you can never get out of it.
Yeah.
And what I'm asking you to answer are some really deep questions.
They go maybe on some, can we cut off $100 off our groceries?
Yeah, and that's why we're here.
Paul, what do you notice about the difference? I can see you nodding over there.
I understand, I guess, both sides, but I don't know what the answer.
I don't even know where to start.
But I'm not even asking you to answer them.
I'm just asking you what's the difference between the two sets of question.
Yeah, I mean, it's a quick, easy fix versus thinking out the long term.
I think you two have been thinking short term for so long that you have lost the ability to even
think beyond the next week. No, that's absolutely true. And each time I try to gently get you to
stretch to look just 10 feet further.
It's so much more comfortable for you
to go right back into your story.
It's just because that's what we've done
and what we've known for so long.
And is it working?
No, and that's why I applied.
It's not working at all.
I'm tired of surviving.
I wanna live, I wanna build, I wanna grow. I'm tired of surviving. I want to live.
I want to build.
I want to grow.
I want to leave something for my kids.
And I want to learn how.
And I don't know how.
You can notice that BB and Paul are problem-oriented right now.
But not solution-oriented.
As I've always said, people with problems love to talk about their problems.
But until they're ready to talk solutions, nothing will change. I spent a lot more time working through their
fixed costs. So let me just summarize. In two months, their debt payment goes down by 400
bucks. We temporarily removed that money, lion BS. We factored in that their AC bill is
going to go down after summer. Now their fixed costs went down to 77%.
You're going to hear me really push them
to come up with solutions.
And deep down what they want is for me
to fix their finances for them.
But that's not what I do.
The key is for them to take the responsibility
to make the changes on their own.
Listen it.
It's high, but it's not in the 80s. I'll take that as a win.
I feel good just narrowing it down and focusing in on every little nuance,
instead of being paralyzed by all of it in your face at one time. We need to get this down to 60%.
Okay. So you tell me how you want to do it. I made a list recently of charges
that we were being charged for an embarrassing amount of time
for things that we're not even using,
like reoccurring charges, like ESPN,
through Roku or something like that.
And that I've just, I made a list
and I disputed most of them either through the bank
or I canceled them or figured out how the hell we were subscribed to them,
which is half the battle.
I got through that list pretty well.
I think I recovered like 450 bucks just doing that.
Just looking back at how long we'd been paying them
was like shocking.
Mm.
They're on your iPhone, they're on your cable, they're everywhere and they just stay with you forever.
All right, what else?
I can cancel my gem membership.
That's $79.
All right, what's next?
Figure out the phone thing, there's a better option somewhere.
I've heard your ads.
Yeah, why don't you just do that?
Was it mint?
Yeah. So it's supposed to be do that? Was it meant? Yeah.
So it's supposed to be $15 per line, right?
Yeah.
So if we have, if we get rid of Liam's watch, we have three phones, three watches.
You guys are broke.
You can't have three Apple watches.
It's just not going to happen.
Yeah. I can give mine up.
Sell it. Can you do that? Yeah.
All right. Great. Love that. Great answer. So you're going to sell a watch, maybe two, you're
going to save. First of all, you're going to make a little bit of money. Second, you're going to
save on the monthly recurring. That's great. So let's take this number down to what?
Pick a number.
Go for it, babe.
I don't know.
Like, I don't even know what's ridiculous.
Is $100 ridiculous?
Why don't we switch it?
Let's make it $100.
And then you two can see if you can get around there.
I think you could.
You may have to cut some stuff. You're going to have to search. Use the ad that you mentioned.
Mint mobile sponsor here on the show. Let's see. A hundred bucks and it may turn out that somebody who had certain access may not be able to have that anymore or somebody had a watch.
Definitely does not have a watch anymore. That's life. Okay,
there's a vision behind this by the way. You're not just taking things away arbitrarily. Yeah,
we just want to do better.
Wanting to do better is awesome. It's an awesome vision. It's an awesome goal. It's not enough.
Oh no, that's why we're here. We need help. Well, I'm helping you by asking you
what changes you're willing to make.
I'm gonna put these numbers back up on screen.
You're at 76%.
Get me down to 60%.
$870 is getting paid to Money Lion.
What? Okay. And then what happens to that money? It gets just refreshed. Like, oh, it's back. You can borrow it again if you need to.
I'm so confused. It's a payday loan, right?
Technically, pretty much.
You get the advance money from your paycheck and then when your paycheck gets deposited,
it takes it from the paycheck.
It comes in and takes it out.
Takes out what you borrowed.
Well, with an interest rate, I guess.
Yeah, yes, definitely an interest rate.
Yes.
So, you're using that money for like day- day to day expenses, paying rent, paying bills.
You're making zero progress on the credit card, correct?
Right.
Okay.
So that debt is going another example of making short term decisions and
actually incurring way bigger costs that you may never get out of.
Yes.
Can I just point out something like really honestly?
Yeah.
I mean, you.
Hold on.
You got $10,000 in credit card debt that's going up.
You got a mattress that's more expensive than the mattress.
I sleep on.
You have.
How many cell phones four in the house that are all brand new?
Three. Three. Three. They're are all brand new? Three. Three.
Three.
They're not all brand new.
Mine's a year old.
Oh, okay.
But yeah.
We stay on top of the technology where we can.
That's one way to put it.
Remember when you told me that we're simple people?
You still believe that, baby?
No.
What are you?
I...
Yeah, we like nice technology, I guess, but...
Keep going.
I guess when it comes to...
Hold on, you like nice technology, I agree.
What else do you like nice things of?
Streaming services? Yep. What else do you like nice things up? Streaming services. Yep. What else?
groceries. Yes.
Like a lot actually.
I might restate my story. If I were being really honest and
we're in your situation, I might just say we spend way above our
means and we don't know how to say no.
No, that's absolutely fair.
Yeah, that's 100%.
Well, okay, but that's a totally,
that's a 180 degree difference then.
We're simple people and we don't understand
where the money's going.
We don't understand where the money's going.
And in comparison to everyone else around us
and our peers and our children's friends, we are the poor people.
Maybe you are, and I hate to hear that. And I would like for you to get out of that,
the reason that you are stuck and every month it's getting worse and worse is the debt payments.
The reason you have the debt payments is what?
The reason you have the debt payments is what?
Because of us, because of our dumb decisions. Impulsive decisions.
Yes.
Inability to say no.
Big and small.
Candy bars to credit cards.
And telling yourself a story that it's actually not that bad.
Oh no, we know what's bad.
No, you don't. In fact, you're doing it right now. You don't,
because when you come and you say like, we're simple and like, we don't know where the money's going,
and we just need to like sit down and make a budget. That's actually not being honest with yourself.
Yeah, and that's fair. I think it also shows how clueless we are financially. You love to live there in that story and that narrative.
That's 100% true for sure. Paul, did you catch that? I did. I don't know if I've ever
really noticed it. Okay, well, I want you to know how to manage money. You've read my book, right?
Yes. Talk to me about what that was like. I'm impressed that you read it. That's awesome. A lot of people come on this. They've never read the book. So I give you major props for that.
Hey, did you make, did you make any changes after reading?
No, I didn't make notes. BB is playing the innocent dough technique. When I point
something out, she immediately agrees. I know we're clueless, we just don't know anything, we make
dumb decisions. It's her unconscious way of escaping from having to actually change. But innocent
dough doesn't work on me. It would be a disservice for me to allow her to use that technique,
which by the way, she doesn't even realize she's employing
to squirm away from making changes.
And change is what she actually wants to make.
I guess we're so aloof to the whole thing.
We don't even realize when we are.
And it takes someone like you that's like, wait, got your doing it again. And we had no idea. Well, one way to know is like when you talk
about money, do you ever get anywhere? No. Okay. So why? I think we just give up. Yeah.
And we do this. We do this like every few months. We'll sit down and be like, okay, we're
going to figure this out. And then we get to a point where I don't even know. We just
give up. The groceries is the outlier. Tell me.
We need to focus. We need to make. Be more focused to make a list and buy a bunch of what we know we're gonna need,
especially with the kids with us, be like,
Mom, dad, can I have this?
Bottle blind, we gotta tell our daughter
because she goes with whoever's going.
And then if you say no, she begs.
And then most of the time it's like just to get her
to shut up, it's like fine.
And can you just like play that out for me?
You tell her no she begs, you give in
and then what happens as she becomes 16, 18, 20 years old?
No, I know.
It's a thing that we've discussed at length
that we're creating a monster.
Okay, do you do anything about it?
We try and then we're just suckers.
I'm meaner than you are, I think.
Yeah, 100%.
You're literally late with rent every single month.
Yeah.
And you're worried about being mean to your eight-year-old daughter by telling her no and teaching
her the importance of
You have an amount you can spend at the grocery store. It just doesn't add up for me
Yeah, well, I think for me I
am really paranoid about them developing any kind of
I don't know I feel like we talk about money in front of them too much and they are way
to aware or like nervous that we don't have enough of things and I don't want that
to be something on their minds.
Oh, you want to shield them from it?
Yeah.
Uh-huh.
So like, don't talk about money because money is always negative.
Yeah, pretty much.
And then like, we'll take care of stuff.
Like, you go to college and be a kid.
Am I getting this right so far?
I think for me, yes.
I was really smiling.
Uh-huh.
Because I never had that.
Everything was always like fraught with, um,
like holding it over your head or like you owe me something or.
Okay. And then as they go to college, if they do,
and they become in their early 20s, how do they figure out how to navigate the world of money?
I hope that we're better equipped to teach them than either of us were taught.
I just don't want them to ever think that we don't have enough or that we're less than.
You don't have enough. You're losing money every single month.
Yeah, and that's on us, and that's our fault,
but that it's not fair to them to take that on their shoulders.
But that brings me back to the fact
there's so many lessons that we need to learn.
We can't lead by example without knowing what we're doing.
Yeah.
So I hope you can see that if you want to change
the way that your money is behaving,
you're going to have to dramatically change so many parts of the way that you live.
It's the grocery shopping, it's the phones, it's the idea that
kids get to dictate what they get at age 8 or 11 versus parents setting a vision for the family and leading.
It is. A vision is something that we do not do. We've always been very now, now, now.
All right. So now we're going back to the numbers and now you're going to tell me what you want to do.
I'm not going to drag it out of you. You tell me what you want to do. I'm not going to drag it out of you. You tell me. No, at that
rate, I mean, I, that's extremely eye opening and it's worth canceling pretty much anything.
Tell me. There's nothing that we can cancel besides subscriptions.
I just, I'm not sure you have a powerful enough vision for wanting to get out of this.
You know, the way you talk about it is like, oh, we got to do better.
That's going to last about two days.
No, that's for sure.
I don't think that we've ever allowed ourselves to have a vision of where we want to be and
how we're going to do it.
What is the vision that tell me I'd love to hear.
I want to hear what is the rich life for you?
I don't think we know that yet.
Wanna do it right now?
Sure.
So take our kids on a vacation.
Okay, where do you want to take them?
Lego land.
Perfect.
Right by you.
Perfect, you want to take them to Lego land?
Great. And when do You want to take into Lego land? Great.
And when do you want to do this?
I don't know.
I mean, tomorrow, if we could, but setting an actual goal.
Can we start with something a little more modest?
Because Lego land trip to California probably costs like thousands of dollars. Yeah. I don't mind it. But and I love that dream. But what I've actually done, just Galveston.
And how long is this trip? I say three days, four days.
Some time to be away from home, some time to surround yourself in a different environment, see some different things, relax
a little bit, have some dinners out, like that.
Maybe what do you think hearing this vision?
I don't know, I'm trying that to cry.
Tell me why.
It's just been so far fetched for us.
And it's not fair to the kids.
Far fetched to dream about something like this.
No, not to dream about it, but
not to be able to do anything.
So when you start thinking about a trip to Galveston, what comes up for you?
Honestly, jealousy of other people, everyone else just seems like it's just so easy.
Or like, they have parents that are putting the bill or I don't know.
So that feeling is like, what are we doing wrong?
Are we the only ones?
Yeah.
We're not giving our kids the kind of childhood we want to give them.
Yeah.
I'm going to give them the ones that we think are like us, they're like,
send their kid to camp.
And it's like $2,000. I don't know, but I don't know like what their finances are. It's all like
left to my brain to run away with it and just be jealous.
And is that what your brain does? Yeah. Yeah. That can't feel good after a while.
No, I'm tired of it.
It's exhausting.
What do you want to feel instead?
Equal?
I love that.
Keep going.
I just want to not worry anymore.
Paul, what about you? What do you want to feel?
Confident in the decisions, financial decisions and future.
Yeah.
Some security.
Yeah. You'll feel that right now, right? No. Not even close. Haven't really ever. Yeah.
You know what I'd like for the two of you to feel when it comes to money?
Yeah, that'd be nice. Proud of what you have accomplished.
Proud that you make six figures.
That's very impressive.
I'd like to see you feeling proud of making a plant with your fixed costs.
And actually executing on it.
I'd like you to feel proud of making some
difficult decisions when it comes to grocery shopping and Apple watches and
subscriptions. I'd like you to feel pride when it comes to paying off your debt.
A plan that you've never made before because it's further away than one month.
This plan is going to take you over a year, but you made a plan, you set it in motion, and you trusted the process, and
you didn't deviate. That's what I'd like you to feel pride about. BB, what would it feel
like if you felt pride around money like that? I think investing and putting money somewhere instead
of every dollar that comes in being all that we have,
I want to learn how to invest.
And I am tired of feeling like an idiot
whenever people talk about investments or flipping houses
and making money,
like it seems like everybody else has this like
innate understanding of investing
and or has a leg up with like someone giving them this thing
that allows them to build on that we have never had.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
I want you to feel pride about your investments too. You can start investing.
We just don't know how. We don't know anything about that world.
You know about it. It's in chapter three and chapter seven of my book. It's not that you don't
know about investing. You know more than 90% of the American public if you've read those two
chapters. What is it really? Fear of losing. Yes. What else?
That's the biggest one for me. It's the fear of just failing.
Remember we talked about your daughter writing her bike? Yeah.
Did you tell her don't get on the bike because I'm afraid you might fall off once?
No.
And even if you start investing and you do something boneheaded with the hundred bucks.
Okay.
I wish you hadn't, but it's a hundred bucks.
Better to learn now than with $500,000 in a portfolio, don't you think?
Yeah.
All right.
So it's a reframing.
It's not that you don't know how to invest.
You know.
It's right in front of you in that book.
That's actually one of the key lessons of today is that you've both been telling
yourself a story.
We just don't know what to do.
I don't know. Where's the money going? You know,
it's right in front of you. There's something deeper. My take is you've never had a vision
for what you actually want to do with money. Money only feels bad to you. So of course you want to
hide it away and avoid it and certainly not talk about it in front of your kids.
You feel like you talk about it too much.
I feel like you probably don't talk about it enough.
How can you talk about it in a healthy way
when you yourself don't have a healthy relationship with it?
And if you decide to go forward with this aggressive plan,
you will get to that future a lot faster
and more certainly than if you just like,
mosey along and make like one percent changes here in there.
Yeah, no, I knew it was gonna take some aggressive changes,
for sure, but I think we just need to wake up.
No, okay.
If you just needed to wake up,
you would have done it over the last 10 plus years.
Trust me that this is not a wake up thing. Yeah, you've been living with the stress of money every day of your life
for the last 10 years. Like 13. Wouldn't you have woken up? Are you hearing what I'm saying
right now? I feel like you're in your own story. No, I am. I hear you. So what is it that needs to change? Because it's not
waking up. That's nothing to do with this at all. Well, we've never had anybody lay it out in front
of us like this. Okay, but you guys could have hired a financial advisor or anybody.
We could have, but we never have. There's no reason. I guess we're just so used to being
small fish that like why well we need a financial advisor
with our tiny amount of money and now that we make a significant amount of money we don't
know how to manage it.
You're still thinking like you are poor.
Yeah.
Your kids are old enough they can learn.
Oh, you know, mom and dad have made some mistakes with our money.
That's okay.
We learned a lot.
We talked to this guy.
We're working through this book.
Let us know if you want to read it. We're going to be talking about it on Sunday, if you want to come
join and listen in, we'd love to have you too. Yeah, that's a really big perspective change for me,
because every time we talk about money in front of them, I'm like, they don't need to know that we're
struggling ever, but I don't know why I have that opinion, I guess because I don't want them to be stressed about it,
but I don't think they are.
I'll tell you something.
Kids and adults are stressed when there's a problem,
but no solution.
Yeah.
So it's like, hey, right now, you know what?
We were a little irresponsible with our spending.
We got a little loose.
And one thing we are gonna do as adults
is we're gonna make some changes
because we want to have a healthy relationship with money.
We wanna set a good example for ourselves and for you.
And we're gonna need your help.
From now on, we're gonna do grocery shopping on this day.
You might say to your son,
we're gonna need your help to do this,
to your daughter, we're gonna need your help to do that. to your daughter. We're going to need your help to do that.
But we're going to need your help because we can't do this alone.
Are you on board with us?
That's what being a family is about.
In my conversation with BB and Paul, I heard them telling themselves a lot of stories,
stories to explain and rationalize how they had gotten into this situation.
One of them happened towards the end of our conversation where I pointed out that BB is working a full-time job and she's being dramatically underpaid to the tune of tens of thousands of dollars. She could make more working in fast food.
And when I suggested that she go out and find a different job, especially in a fantastic job market like right now, she gave me a tepid response.
That $30,000 that she could relatively easily add
to their household would make a huge difference.
So I have to say that I'm puzzled by our conversation today.
I started off being puzzled.
I think I'm equally puzzled at the end of our conversation.
There's a lot that has gone into BB and Paul I think I'm equally puzzled at the end of our conversation.
There's a lot that has gone into BB and Paul making the decisions they made, but it's
unclear to me if there are stakes here that will make them actually want to change.
Let's take a look at Paul's follow-up video to see what happened.
What surprised me the most to really put it put down paper doing that conscious spending plan and
seeing just where all of our money was going that was pretty
pretty eye-opening key takeaways
I'll tell you a big one for me was just
how the
emotional financial decisions
that you make whenever you're trying to mean well,
trying to help those $750 loans,
not realizing that it's a 650% interest rate.
That was a big one for me.
I will definitely think twice
before doing anything like that again.
Fanges.
We've made a few, I think.
I mean, we're not done, but we're going in the right direction.
We have paid off that terrible loan that I got to send that with the 600% interest. So that's $200 by weekly that is no longer going out.
And now let's hear from BB.
What surprised me that 92% when we were done with it,
92% of our money was going to fix costs
and how simple and straightforward it was
to put all of our numbers into the CSP and to finally have a visual of an answer to where does our money go?
Where does all of our money go every month? Like bam, it's right there for you. That was
beautiful and shocking. Key takeaways, we are not simple people as we claim to be, and that taking away these
little things that aren't conducive to building the life that we see or consider our rich
life, taking those away and then putting that time, that money, that energy into what does
contribute to that, even time with each other.
That's a big one.
First, I canceled my class pass. That's a big one. First I canceled my class
pass. That's 80 bucks right there. The two Apple watches, my son's Apple watch,
and my Apple watch. Huge savings right there. Oh, and the payday loans, the money
line. Those are no more. I don't even have the account anymore. We're committing
to opening an HSA for my medical expenses, so we'll save some money
there and I'll be able to use that instead of paying double taxes.
Anyway, we just really appreciate you so much and this is going to be life changing for
us if we continue moving forward with the advice that you gave us.
And I know we can do it and make even bigger changes moving forward.
Okay, I have to say I'm impressed at the follow-ups.
My favorite part of that follow-up is when BB said, wow, I think we've realized we're
not actually the simple people that we have thought ourselves to be.
To realize that the identity you've created for yourself might not actually line up with
reality is a huge realization.
And on that count, I will take the win.
Paul and BB, thank you so much for coming and sharing your story with all of our listeners.
And for everyone watching, make sure if you're interested in the episode today, go on Apple,
leave us a written review, and join our podcast newsletter at iwt.com slash podcast newsletter
where I talk about money psychology every Saturday. That's iwt.com-podcast-newsletter, where I talk about money psychology every Saturday.
That's iwt.com-podcast-newsletter.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
I'm Rumi Tsaati.
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