I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 128. “We have $285k in debt. Can we achieve financial freedom in 5 years?” (Part 1)
Episode Date: October 31, 2023Trin and Lucas are 35 with two kids. They’re bleeding money but they don’t know why, or how to fix it. Lucas is an extreme entrepreneur, leading to trust issues related to his shocking risk taking... and lack of transparency. Matters are complicated further by a fixed-costs percentage of 150%+. This episode is brought to you by: Methodology | Visit https://gomethodology.com/ramit and use code RAMIT for 10% off your first order of Methodology. 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. Rocket Money | Stop throwing your money away. Cancel unwanted subscriptions – and manage your expenses the easy way – by going to https://rocketmoney.com/ramit. LMNT | Right now, LMNT is offering 8 single serving packets FREE with any LMNT order. This is a great way to try all 8 flavors. Get yours at https://drinklmnt.com/RAMIT. Connect with Ramit Get the Podcast Newsletter and exclusive Q&A about the show Get Money Coaching with Ramit Download the Conscious Spending Plan Get my New York Times best-selling book Get my no-numbers journal Other episodes Instagram Twitter YouTube 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
How do you build wealth in America?
That is where all of this stuff started happening.
A lot of people that had wealth in America had rental property or a business or some combination
of both.
So I said, okay, why not just start a real estate company?
When it all went down, I had to sell everything.
So I took a loss, I sold everything, fire sale.
A lot of poor decisions and transparency
if I'm being completely honest.
You know, I'm a bully.
You know, I heard that.
I'm a dictator.
So I start to get defensive.
And for me, it is an emotional thing.
Lucas feels that I am not good with money
and so he doesn't feel like my input is important.
Look at your wife.
What's happening right now?
She's feeling emotional.
She's crying.
And you're telling me about your income projections?
We've been in the deficit for months, like we are on fire.
Now this is a fascinating conversation.
Trin and Lucas are both 35 years old. They have two kids, one of them is still in the home, three year old,
and they know that they are bleeding money, but they don't know why and they don't know how to fix it.
Trin feels their finances are out of control. She doesn't trust Lucas's system.
Lucas is a hardcore entrepreneur
who wants money and financial freedom fast.
The way that they talk about money is totally disconnected,
and I think you're gonna be very surprised
as you hear their discussion about money today.
By the way, last week you heard me speak to Susan and Jeff.
They were about to pay $800,000 in fees to a financial advisor.
They didn't even realize it.
And this is very shocking to people because the math is not intuitive.
That 1% fee can mean you're paying 28% of your returns to your financial advisor.
So I'm going to break that math down for you.
This Saturday, I'm going to share the surprising math between paying 1% to a financial advisor. So I'm going to break that math down for you. This Saturday, I'm going to share the surprising math
between paying 1% to a financial advisor.
If you pay a financial advisor,
if your parents pay a financial advisor
or your friends, you need to sign up for this newsletter.
It's free, plus I'm going to give you word for word scripts
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Fun fact, for me, okay, we actually attempted to do this before even watching your podcast.
We attempted to do this earlier this year, like February, I think, because our counselor,
we are a mayor's counseling.
And so our counselor had suggested that we do the simple, I'm like, this is awesome.
This is simple.
Let's try it.
Let's do it.
We tried it.
We had a big blow up. The first time.
Tell me.
What happened?
Now we're talking about you two trying to do
the conscious spending plan together.
Correct.
Before we knew we were going on.
Okay, what happened?
The first time.
Oh my God.
Damn.
CSP, hold on, I'm adding a new acronym to this CSP.
It's called CSPD conscious spending plan drama. Let's hear it.
Tell me what happened. I was like, hey, let's sit down. Let's read through the instructions
to make sure that we have a clear understanding that we both have the same understanding because
culturally he and I are different. Like we both identify as black African American, but I am Black African American from the south of the United States.
And Lucas is Nigerian, right?
Raised in the North, so raised in New York City,
and just culturally, we view the world differently
and interpret it differently.
And so because we do, when we can read the exact same thing,
but the comprehension is just different.
I got you. So for me, I'm like, okay the comprehension is just different. I got you.
For me, I'm like, okay, this is my partner.
Let's sit down, let's read through it.
He would prefer to just skim through all of that
and get to the exciting part, which is the numbers.
But for me, it's more of like a, let's warm up to it
because it is so emotional for me.
We've had so many, you just toxic meetings in the past
regarding finances that it is hard to sit down with him to discuss finances. It was pretty bad.
Look as you can unmute and comment as well, but anytime we attempt to meet, it's just a challenge.
And I know you in previous, you know,
in your previous sessions, you spoke to just the emotions
of being on or talking about finance
and the emotions around it.
And for me, it is an emotional thing.
Lucas feels that I am not good with money
and so he doesn't feel like my input is important.
Okay, so when we sat down to do it,
I'm ready to jump in because I skimmed
the material ready and I'm like, okay, I've done budgets before. Right. This is a nice little
budget. Not a budget going. Sorry. I've done the con. I've done a plan before. Right. Um,
and I'm like, all right, let's, let's look at this. First thing, did we read it yet? So
we argued about that. Are you about reading it? Like reading the actual instructions.
Once we got past that, we get to the part where we're starting
to input numbers in. And I'm like, okay, what are we going to do
with this line item here? Are we going to go back three months
and look things up? Sure, let's do that right now. I'm like, wait, what do you mean
let's do that right now? Whereas me,, wait, what do you mean? Let's do that right now.
Whereas me, again, I'm looking at and trying to like eyeball or spit ball the the the numbers. Like I like to put something realistic in there that I know that we can possibly hit.
So that that's where we started arguing and she just said, you know, I'm a bully.
You know, I heard that. I'm a dictator. So I'm like, I think I know everything, you know,
like, I'm not so I'm hearing all these things. So I start to get defensive. And it's just
just, it's just what I don't know where. Okay. It's challenging. Yeah. And it's challenging
for me because sometimes when I start to talk about money and finances and investments
and things like that, I lose
Trinity. Like her eyes just like she's not paying attention anymore, right? Yeah, like I lose
Trinity and I lose her from a couple different perspectives. One one perspective is, you know,
we're building trust in our relationship. Like there's no infidelity or anything like that,
right? But we're building trust in, hey, can I trust Lucas?
Can I depend on Lucas if I say, hey, um, cause, you know, just taking responsibility.
There's some agreements that I set up that I did break.
So it's like, from one perspective, is can I trust what he says?
Well, your family isn't in the red, right?
Has been for several months.
What's that?
Do you?
the red, right? Has been for several months. What's that YouTube?
A lot of poor decisions and transparency, if I'm being completely honest, so I did not work all of 2021. 2021, because I took a step away from my job, I was not invested in our finances. I
allowed Lucas to take care of that. 2022, I decided to go back to work. I went back to work still trusting him
to run our finances.
As he had, we began to acquire a lot of cash.
We had savings, great.
He's doing a fantastic job.
Towards the end of 2022, he came to me.
So a lot of things had transitioned and it had happened.
And I'm sure we'll get to that part.
But at the end of 2022, he came to me and was like, hey, we don't have anything.
And I was like, okay, he was like, I need help.
And I'm like, okay.
Hold on, Tom.
Was that a surprise to you?
It was.
Okay, so you had no idea that your family
was running low on cash.
I did not.
Because I was told, like, we had moved in the month prior and so since we had and we moved states and so in moving
I had asked them before we moved. Hey, do we have enough to move? He said yeah, we got it
I didn't ask any questions. So you asked for help you raise your hand and said, Hey, I need help
Yeah, she took that as okay, let's cut back. What was your approach?
Not only let's cut back. What was your approach? Not only let's cut back, it's more so like,
hey, let's destroy all the systems that you already created
because that stuff obviously doesn't work.
That's what we started arguing about.
She's like, hey, I understand you did a great job, Lucas.
You know, we got us to this point, blah, blah, blah,
but obviously what you're doing doesn't work.
So we have to change what you're doing
and do something else.
And what exactly?
I'm like, what do you propose that we do?
I'm like, okay, what do you mean arm?
Like I need something there.
So it's more so, I don't even know what it was,
but I'm like, she, it's a me, I felt stressed again,
because it's like, let's throw away everything that you did.
Let me summarize, when Lucas asked for help,
Trin was caught off guard,
that their family finances had deteriorated so much
that they were running low on cash.
She wanted to make a change,
and Lucas took that as her not trusting his systems.
I'm curious what happened. Now Now keep listening because there's a lot
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Now back to the show.
And also in the summer of 2022, that is when our family introduced credit cards. So since we have been together, we had one credit card,
credit limit did not exceed $5,000, balance remained low or no balance at all.
$5,000 balance remained low or no balance at all.
And so last summer, we acquired
at least I think a minimum of four credit card. So credit card usages new for our family.
And so in me trying to wrap, excuse me,
wrap my mind around what all is happening
because he came to me and was like,
hey, I need help.
I'm trying to understand what's happening, what's going on.
And it honestly was just so overwhelming that I, I couldn't grasp it.
And so we would have our financial meetings.
Well, we would try to have our financial meetings.
And it was just literally argument after argument after argument because for me,
I am a simple black and white person
whereas Lucas is more gray area
and I'm like, okay, this does not make sense to me.
And so because it doesn't make sense to me,
can we change it?
He is very much like, well, it makes sense to me
and this works for me and I am over the finances,
I am over the family, so no, we're not changing this.
Okay, we've argued and went back and forth
about this a couple of times.
And right now, we were in a cash flow negative position
for the last three to four months.
So we had to use the credit cards.
I know you're saying, hey, why were you using $3,000
to pay the credit card?
We would've used cash to pay it.
I just used the credit cards to gain some points.
So that's why I'm like,
I don't, I don't understand. I don't agree with that. Look, it's because one, we know that in
previous weeks, we are in a cash deficit. You've communicated that as an entrepreneur, you are all,
you know, your income fluctuates. Understandably so. That's fine. However, we did not make as much as we had anticipated for last month.
So, I understand what you're saying, Trindy.
However, what I'm paying off is what we spent money on.
Let's say we spent about $4,500 in credit cards,
because her paid bills.
If I did not use the credit cards, I would have used cash the only reason I use the credit cards was one to gain points
And also because we didn't have the cash at the time. I'm looking at the expenses again. I'm trying to handle all the stuff and
The conversation got resolved like she said it didn't really get resolved
We just went our separate ways and said, all right, you handle the accounts
that you manage the way you want to and I'll do it my way on the way, you know, I want to.
Meaning that you train, manage certain expenses and you have certain bank accounts or credit cards,
you handle in your marriage and Lucas, you do the same for different accounts, different expenses.
Are they separate?
They're separate but we all have we have access to everything.
Okay, but like one of you's in charge of these four things and the others in charge of these four
things. Right. Yeah, now it's like that. Is it like that because you just couldn't agree on a
way to do it together? I'll let Trin talk about that part.
Okay, tell me.
You know, when her and I met, my like, my word was like almost coming crashing down.
You know, I had been going from a place where I was making like 10, $20,000 per month.
This is the business now, like Gross Revenue,
to have a bunch of credit card debts,
the credit cards got canceled because I was doing some things
with it.
So when I had met her, there was a lot of things.
You were doing some things with it.
What the hell is that?
You know I have to ask.
Okay, well, there's a way,
so I hate paying interest,
like absolutely hate paying interest, right?
So all my credit cards, I leverage them to make money. So I would buy houses with them,
like rental properties. Okay, sorry, go on. Okay, so I would buy houses with them, I would do
marketing, sales, I would also take trips as well on them, but I would always, I would always always get them off. There was a point in time where
I used to make money off of my credit cards by, by having people on the credit cards as
an authorized user, and I was literally getting like $50 a month from each person that I
added on my credit card. The limit was like 60,000 on one card, 20,000, 80 on another. And my balance
was always low. It was like less than a thousand. So I would literally make money off of my
credit cards. They would give me cash flow. Something happened where one of the people that
I put on was a fake person. Like they had fake social security and IDs and all that.
So the card canceled me. And I was like, I'm not paying the card if you just cancels me.
Why am I going to pay the balance if you cancels me and tell me I can't use the card anymore.
Okay, let it go to collection. So I let all of that go to collection, let go to charge us. And I said,
I'm just going to start over. And around that time is when you know, Trin and I met and we started
get into our relationship and get it better. At that time too, like I had to sell all of my rental properties because I had mismanaged them.
How many rental properties?
So I had about 26 units at that time.
Okay. Was this your full-time thing?
Rental properties was not my full-time thing, but real estate was.
26 rental units across, I think seven buildings,
eight buildings.
I'm very creative when it comes to getting into the deal.
Again, Tranny will tell you, like,
I'm a strategist, I live up in the sky.
So I know how to get into creative structures.
I've never used a bank, like to get into
any one of those properties.
So wait, hold on.
So when YouTube met you two met,
like what was that? Was it going up or was it going down?
When we first met, yeah, it was up. And at that time, all 26 units,
I basically hide a rental property manager to handle most of them.
I didn't know that I had to give the property manager a strategy.
I thought he just knew what to do. No, no, no, no, no, you don't have to do that. On the internet, everybody tells you it's free. It's passive income. You literally just put a quarter in and then
free money comes out of the real estate machine. That's right.
It's nothing. No, it's not right. Nothing, nothing's passive. I do believe in passive income
in terms of what the IRS calls it or classifies it, but it's just more leverage, right?
Okay.
But I didn't know that I had to give a system to my property manager and basically manage
the asset.
I know that now.
How many times do I have to tell you guys that anyone in the real estate industry, you
should literally treat them like they're going to reach in your pocket and steal all of
your money?
What do I need to do? Do I need to feature more stories about realtors,
time share salespeople, property managers?
How many stories do I have to bring on here before you realize that the entire real estate industry
is built to generate commissions from you?
They are not fiduciaries. They do not care about what happens after you transact.
They don't care about your kids.
Most of them are very nice people.
I'm sure.
And some of them may actually give you good advice.
But at the end of the day, they exist for a commission.
Property managers are slightly different than realtors, although they are related.
I'm going to do you all a favor and let you in a little secret of the financial world.
Anyone who's dealt with property managers hates their property managers. Okay, if you walk into a relationship
with them, expecting them to magically handle all your problems, you're doomed. Better to
treat them like a high school kid who's mowing your lawn. He's nice, sure, but he's incompetent.
You need to walk him through your exact expectations. you need to write them down, and then you need to check his work for the next 20 years.
Let this be Remete's Money Lesson, number 4,960.
Start treating everyone in the real estate industry like they're here for one sole reason,
the commission, because they are.
So I hired a property manager and one of my buildings,
I'll just give one story, one of my buildings,
the entire roof was leaking.
I was playing rugby with one of my friends,
I hired his uncle to fix the roof,
paid him all up front, and I was supposed to do that.
So three months ago, my property manager was like,
hey, I'm not able to collect from five
of you new units because water is leaking and they don't want to pay.
I'm like, why is water leaking?
I paid this guy three months ago.
He's like, oh, yeah, about that.
He never came.
When it all went down, I had to sell everything.
So I had some investors.
I did not want them to lose any money.
So I took a loss.
I sold everything, fire sale.
And then I said, how do you build wealth in America? That is where all of this stuff started happening. I said, how do you build wealth in America? That is where all
of this stuff started happening. I said, how do you build wealth in America? A lot of people that
had wealth in America had rental property or a business or some combination of both. So I said,
okay, why don't I just start a real estate company? What are the lessons you took away looking back?
Management is key. So it's good that you can get into a deal.
Your exit strategy is great as well, but the management of the deal, the management of
the asset is very important.
It's a credit card thing.
The credit card, don't do things like that.
Like add in otherwise users and people like you don't know that it's not family members.
I agree. Why? Why should you not do that? Because one is illegal. Not worth it. First of all,
50 bucks a month is not that much. And second of all, the risk is disproportionate. Like really
high risk for 50 bucks. I'm not even saying I would do it for 5,000 bucks, but at least I'll be like,
okay, I get why you did it. But for 50 bucks, I'm just like, what?
And then of course,
and of course, that's about like,
$3,000 to $4,000 a month with all the time.
Okay, but the key lesson, which I didn't hear you say,
by the way, is,
the risk.
Trent did it.
Did you know all this stuff?
I did.
Okay, was it make you feel when you hear this
and when you heard it?
I was very nervous.
All of this happened simultaneously as he was moving in with me.
Oh, damn.
How did you deal with that?
Man.
It was extremely challenging.
I felt like I was making a mistake.
Lucas is what I call a believer. He believes that the big deal is right around the corner.
He's always looking for the angle,
always trying to beat the system,
believing that if this one deal works out,
success is right there.
Now sometimes believers win,
but most of the time they waste their efforts
on small time stuff that often ends in disaster. And if we took all the time and money Lucas
spent on these properties, and he'd simply invested in index fund, he would probably be far
ahead. Now, I also have to tell you that is very difficult to be financial partners with
a believer because they often live in the clouds,
hoping that that big win is coming.
So what I did now is I turned to Trin to learn about her background.
We'll be right back.
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So I come from a very structured home.
My dad is a veteran.
My mom was very structured.
And so I have lived a very structured life.
You don't say, you know how I knew that? There's one big clue.
It's when you started the CSP. You insisted on reading the instructions. Yeah. A couple of
guesses you like to get things right. Yeah. You hate to get it wrong. Uh-oh.
To get it wrong
Sounded oh look look at look at this face. He's like hmm. Uh-oh. How does guy know it? Okay?
Carry on and so I have
lived my life in a very structured way
I've set out goals the same goals that I set out when I was 18 I am still on track to achieve those same goals or have already achieved them.
Hold on, that's amazing.
I'm a, that's cool.
I'll give you a round of applause for that.
I never hear that.
18 to now, that's very impressive.
Yeah.
Well done.
So would you say that being goal oriented
is helpful in your life?
oriented is helpful in your life.
I would have said that, for sure, 100% a year ago, I have over the last year, I've done some inner work and realized that I am a perfectionist.
That's awesome.
That's a, most people spend a lifetime not realizing that.
So I think that's very commendable.
How would you describe yourself?
Did you family grow up middle class?
So I didn't grow up with a lot,
probably lower middle class.
Do you remember a moment when you realized
you didn't have as much money as the people around you?
Oh, you're coming.
It's okay to cry.
It's okay to take a break too if we need to. We have all the time in the world.
When I was, it's great.
When I was at fifth grade, military, you know, you move around a lot. We just moved, we hit just move to a, I just went to a new school.
And, you know, sometimes it's hard to make friends. I remember being on the playground and then being on the
playground. Some kids were like look at, look at trend, her shoes are talking and I
didn't know what they were talking about. I thought look down at my shoes and saw that they were falling apart.
And I know nowadays it's a really big deal for kids before they go to school to get the
new clothes and the new shoes and things like that, but that didn't always happen for us. You know, we had to wait until Christmas ticket new shoes.
And it was at that moment that I realized like, wow, I have, you know, I'm taken care of,
but I don't even have decent shoes to walk around in right now.
And it was at that moment that I felt like, are we poor?
Do we not have enough money?
You know, making my mom used to joke about, we would ask to go to McDonald's
because you know, the big thing back then in the 90s
and she would always tell us no.
We're gonna go over her name.
Her name is Mary and so she'd be like,
no, we're going to make Mary's and I'm like,
no, I want to go to McDonald's.
But looking back, it was, you know, we just didn't have enough money for that.
We had to be very frugal.
It was me and my other two siblings and they did the best that they could.
What do you remember her saying about money when you were young?
Similar to what my dad would say you definitely want to ensure that you pay your bills
But she was really big on she was big on saving money
But not in the sense of like an a bank account But just more so like putting money away hidden in a purse or hidden
Under the mattress for emergencies things like that money away, hidden in a purse or hidden under the mattress
for emergencies, things like that.
Money that you put away, that you don't have to think about.
And then when there is an emergency,
you know you have those funds somewhere.
Looking back, how would you characterize
the lessons that you learned about money from childhood?
The best way I could characterize it was I wish it kind of makes me a little emotional because I
wish I knew more. I wish my parents had that type of financial capital, if you will, like that financial
learning so that they could teach me. I think that they did in our culture, if you
do better than your parents, right, then you've done well. And so I think my
parents have done better than their parents. And so that's a great position for them to be in.
And for me to do better than my parents, that's a great place for me to be in. But that also doesn't mean that I came into the world as an 18 year old adult knowing the knowledge that some of my counterparts may have and having different experiences, right?
Like, I had to take out student loans to obtain an education.
There was no other option.
And I think that that helps shape your outlook on what that looks like.
I was taught one key principle was that credit cards are bad.
And so my parents instilled that into me at a young age,
hey, credit cards are bad, don't use them,
which is why now that I'm thinking about it,
maybe that's why I am so emotional
about those credit cards that are introduced to my family.
Because I was taught, oh, you should be afraid of them,
you should be afraid of them, you should be scared of them,
they'll mess up your credit,
whereas, you know, I'm learning through Lucas
that there is a way to manage it,
but that doesn't mean that it's still not scary for me.
What a moment.
Without even getting into the rest of trend story,
can you see how she looks at money
completely differently than Lucas?
Can you see how a lifetime of experiences
being raised by a strict dad,
being encouraged to get things right,
realizing she didn't have as much as the people around her?
And I'm sure many more moments
caused her to treat money completely differently than Lucas.
This is why I love being able to speak to my guests. You and I can look at numbers all day long,
but it's the story behind these numbers that I find fascinating. And what a gift that Trin and
Lucas are sharing their story with all of us. Trin and Lucas, I appreciate your story and I know
that all of us do as well.
So they told you don't use credit cards. Did they use credit cards? Your parents?
They may have had one. Right. Okay. And when you were like 18 to 30, did you use a credit card?
I had one credit card in college. What was it? $500. So you had one credit card in college. $500.
So you had one credit card and did you manage it or did you get into debt?
I actually went into debt.
I was working at a summer camp at the time and I was working with less fortunate kids
and we were having an event and I spent, I probably had a $200 balance on the card at that
point and I spent the rest of the $300 doing for them that summer. And I know Lucas will speak to that because that's another thing, another
dynamic in our finances is that I show love. One of my love languages that I like to show
is gift giving. And so I went into $300 of debt to assist those kids.
Let's fast forward to now.
Many years later, maybe a decade later.
Do you ever say no when it comes to money?
I have.
I'm learning to.
I'll say that.
But that's not an answer.
Oh.
Have you achieved nuclear fission, repeat safety?
I'm learning to.
I.
No, I, I, I, I don't.
Do you ever realize that before now?
No, because if I've always felt that if I have it, then I can give it. I don't
go and just make outrageous purchases. I don't spend foolishly for me. I don't think so. Lucas may
argue, but like I don't go and make like a large purchases. I don't put my family in the deficit
for clothes or shoot.
Like I don't have anything that I'm really fixated on.
If you had to describe the way you feel about money
in your relationship today,
what word or words would you use?
The only word I have right now is stress.
That really is what it is.
It's stressful.
Okay.
Like if something was to happen to me right now, we won't have money to survive.
So that's how I'm looking at that.
You have insurance?
What kind of insurance?
Term life insurance?
No, that's something that we're talking about.
We don't have insurance. One, I didn't understand it. He went through a whole process last year
of trying to get, I think you, were you trying to get whole life or term life term?
Both. Okay. What does in process mean? I've already filled out the application. I'm supposed
to have a medical examination upcoming.
So I am in process.
My application is out there.
And that's good.
I'm glad to hear that.
And is this term or whole life?
This is term.
We're still handing on whole life.
I'll put it into that pending right now.
Don't do whole life.
Okay.
I knew you were gonna say that,
but this is a specific reason why I'm in the whole life. Tell me, tell me, me because the only let me just tell you before you tell me and I trust me, I'm
open ears, open eyes, I want to hear it. Whole life insurance, you know, these, these
quacks out there selling it on TikTok, telling you, you can leverage against it. There's cash
value, you can borrow against it at blah, blah, blah. And then when anyone even remotely
smart, ask them a few questions, they all crumble and they will
eventually admit that really it's only good for rich people.
I still can't figure out how to make it work for me or my rich friends.
So please tell me what you discovered.
Why is it a good idea for you?
I want to overfund it so that I can pull money out to put it
into rental properties to invest.
Basically, essentially becoming my own bank.
Instead of putting my money into a bank and getting, I don't even know what the interest rate is, who cares.
I'm not looking at the whole life insurance policy as an investment.
I'm looking at it as a place to store my capital.
I get it.
And in the event that I do die or something happens to me, they give you what, you know,
a 10 extra turn on the actual cash value that you have.
If you don't die, you can take out 90% of it and put it into an asset or something like
that.
It is not for everybody that I'll put that out there.
And it's even not for me right now because I don't make enough to actually execute the plan. So I, you know, like I've read about whole life insurance, I've studied
it, I heard what, you know, a lot of people say about it. I'm a person that looks at risk.
I'm a person that looks at, okay, what is the pros and cons of these things?
What do you mean you look at, what are you talking about? You lost 26 properties and all
this credit card stuff. What do you mean you look at risk? No, you don't. Yeah. I mean, so I don't know if you like I don't know if you believe but people do grow. I learned from that
situation. Like so I'm again, I'm not the same person that I am or was before where I'm just,
oh, let's just jump into this property. Oh, let's partner with this person because now I have a
family. Also, that experience taught me, I can't just go out there and just start businesses or just do some deal because I have people that depend on me.
And that is something, you know, like my father passed away when I was 10.
My mother at the time, my mother was raising, she was pregnant at the time, I was 10.
My sister was five. So then when my brother was born,
he had a condition with sickle cell anemia.
So growing up was very, very tough.
I did not have like a male role model.
I pretty much had to raise myself
and my brother and sister.
So I acted like as if I was their father
and I'm 11 or 12,
having to like take care of them when my mom went to work. So to say my childhood was difficult,
you know, it is what it is. And I'm working through those things now. But when I got into grad school,
I was in a position where I'm like, I don't even know what money is. Like, I don't, I've heard of this thing.
Like, the school is paying me to go.
I have two fellowships to go to school,
but I don't know what money is.
And then I found Dave Ramsey, the other first time I seen him.
And I also found another guy, Robert Kiyosaki.
Uh-oh.
They have two very different viewpoints on business and money.
I went Robert Kiyosaki route.
No kidding. I could tell.
His fingerprints are all over you.
So I didn't want my family to grow up poor, like how I did.
I wanted to be able to provide for my family.
Reflecting on the way that the two of you
describe your journey with money,
it's just two totally different universes. You know? Train raised in a
very simple way, simple. Don't use credit cards. They're bad. Pay your bills.
What's left is yours. Simple. And to a large extent, it worked for your parents.
But why it worked was never really made clear to you,
which is probably, do you know why, why were they able to make a living? It wasn't because
they did not use credit cards. What was it? What'd your dad do for a job?
Um, he was in the military and then got out and honestly he just worked at a factory.
Yeah, and he has a pension?
Yes.
So there you go.
That is probably the key driver of why it all worked.
Okay.
Now, I'm guessing neither of you have a pension.
And you certainly didn't grow up in the 70s or the 80s.
We're housing costs. We're way, way lower than they are.
So sometimes we take away the wrong lessons from life
because nobody really makes it clear to us.
Like here's what's actually going on.
Instead they just tell you this little tidbits,
some A-SOP fabled, don't use credit cards.
Okay, well true, even though it's not really true,
but even well possibly true,
that's not really what's but even well possibly true, that's not
really what's going on here at all.
And then Lucas, I hear you, you know, coming from a pretty tough background, right?
You had to take on an adult role really young and seeing your family struggle.
That leaves marks.
And then obviously you have a lot of intellectual horsepower.
You get into these very
challenging programs. It's like, damn, that's impressive. No doubt. Also, I noticed you're very street
smart. I noticed that. And that can be good. Like my family is also very street smart. We had to be.
My parents immigrated here. Four kids, we got to be street smart to figure out
how to do stuff. Okay, but being street smart can go a little too far and you can simply
become the guy who's constantly chasing another hustle. I am very troubled by what I hear
from Lucas. A few minutes ago, I described him as a believer. And now I am sure that that is right.
Lucas seems to be deep in the get rich quick world.
The idea of over funding and insurance policy for a death benefit makes no sense.
It's over complicated.
Why not take all that time and effort and money, a term life insurance policy and then invest in index funds?
And why are we talking about leverage anyway? Lucas and Trin are losing money every single month.
You know when I was a kid, I remember that movie Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. And you remember the foot clan?
It was this group of disaffected teenagers who got recruited into a gang
where they basically committed violence
as part of this brotherhood.
Back then, parents worried about their kids
getting into a gang and doing drugs.
You know what I worry about today?
Someone clicking on a f***ing Robert Kiyosaki video
which then leads them to Robinhood.
Or worse, listen to Joe Rogan,
which the algorithm then uses to serve
Jordan Peterson videos, then Ben Shapiro,
and two weeks later, you're a white nationalist anti-vaxxer.
It is incredibly difficult for simple basic truths
to complete with the radicalized nonsense
that you hear online.
How is someone like me saying,
hey, actually 7% returns on a low-cost index fund are pretty good and you can build serious wealth given enough time
How is that message gonna compete with some guy screaming in front of his
$150,000 car saying over fund your whole life insurance policy so you can operate your money like the banks and cut out the middleman and leverage your money for rapid wealth creation.
These are just more examples of the get rich quick BS that permeates our culture, but
now they're on overdrive because people literally see thousands of others desperately commenting
and they feel they're being left behind.
Lucas wants to do the right thing.
He wants to provide for his family.
He wants financial freedom.
But in my opinion, he has taken a very wrong turn.
I want to get back into buying rental properties.
In order for me to buy rental properties,
you can do the buy or cash,
or you can use debt.
Take 20% down, and then you get 100% of the asset.
I'm looking at my credit.
I fixed my credit to the point where there's
no negative items on my credit,
but my credit isn't going up.
I started looking at how do you
want to make my credit struggle up?
I need accounts on my credit.
That strategy of adding positive credit line,
like trade lines to your account.
So I went and got an unsecured credit card, three of them.
And then they eventually turned into an unsecured credit card.
And so on.
And I did some other things as well, like rent reporters, boom pay.
So I did that.
And I told, I told Trinity what I was doing.
And the reason why I was doing it.
She said, okay, then next to you know, my credit score jumps and I'm like great.
I'm in a great financial position to now go out and get rental properties.
If we need to get a car, I can do that.
So that is my focus.
Not that I'm going to do it right now is that I'm setting it up to do it like a year or
two from now because I still have to save up for for the money like it.
In my opinion, no business, no job could ever pay me what a business could pay me.
And I'm, you know, I graduated, I have two degrees, chemistry, chemical engineering.
I'm trying to probably tell you about that as well.
I went to grad school, stayed there for three years.
I was in a PhD program in material science and engineering.
So one of the conversations and arguments
that Trent would have with me is,
why are you going down this path?
Why don't you just go back to school, get your PhD,
or you can just go get a job,
like in engineering and use a degree.
But me, again, I'm a long-term thinker.
I'm like, if I go get a job,
I will be making, yeah, I'll be making it anywhere
from 50 to 70,000, right?
Great money.
What?
50?
What are you talking about?
Are you aware of what's going on in the job market?
50K?
Well, this was back then.
This was back in 2019, right?
Oh, OK.
2019, 2020.
Chemical engineering?
That's a pretty good degree.
All right.
Whatever.
You would make 50K.
I say you make triple that, but go on.
Again, I grew make 50k. I say you make triple that but go on again I was I grew up very poor and the only reason I went to into chemical engineering is because they make a lot of money and
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, hold on, hold on, that's very interesting. Thank you. Hold on
So first of all did you enjoy chemical engineering?
Yeah, I did
Like I enjoy the theoretical part of it. Where did this idea of, I got to choose a high paying major come from.
Was it from your peers?
Was it from your family?
Or was it just something you sort of absorbed?
No, my mom always wanted me to be a doctor.
Yeah, a doctor.
A doctor.
A doctor.
A doctor.
A doctor.
A doctor.
A doctor. A doctor. A doctor. A doctor. A doctor. pharmacist. So where we got two failures on this call. Two sons whose moms
expected them to be doctors. It's like, sorry, mom. Yeah. So I'm looking at this
and I'm like, okay, I'm gonna spend all my time doing this, you know, 40 to
60 hours a week. How am I going to get enough money to invest so that we can be
financially free? What does that mean? Right? Do you want to be financially free?
How old are you two?
35.
You're both 35.
Yeah.
And financially free, like you have a sense of when you want to be financially free by?
So before, yes, I do.
I want it to be financially free while I'm 35 now.
I've moved that goal.
It's a 40.
40, okay.
So five years from now, and financially free means
your bills are being automatically paid.
So I want 187,000 coming in to our family
on a yearly basis after taxes.
Post-tax.
Post-tax.
What does that do for you?
So that would allow us to have the lifestyle that we want.
Lucas is saying that he wants to go from where he is today in $285,000 of debt to having
about $3 million in the bank post tax within five years.
This is not feasible.
When people set outlandish goals like this,
they are basically covering their ears
with their hands and saying,
la la la la la la la la.
And the next thing they do is they take outlandish risks
to hit the goal that they never should have set
in the first place.
Now it's one thing to set ambitious goals.
I love that. I don't mind it at all.
It's another to be totally unrealistic.
Let me walk you through their numbers.
Train and Lucas are 35 years old with two children.
They have $40,000 in assets, $27,000 in investments,
$20,000 in savings, and $285,000 of debt.
Total net worth negative $198,100.
All right, what do you think about that?
It's pretty scary.
The negative net worth kind of puts things into perspective, especially for me because I don't see numbers
the way that Lucas does.
And so I don't stare at this all the time.
I'm not in it every week or even on a monthly basis looking at that.
And so when we did it, I think when we do things like this together, I know he is very emotional
about finances and so I try to be the more stable one, but I was bothered by it.
And I'm sure that's news for him, but I was a little shaken up and alarms are going
off.
It's more emotional because I know the majority of it is mine.
What is that? Student loans? Yeah. How much? I know it's be about 12,500.
Okay.
I think I owe one of my friends $5,000.
$5,000.
Okay.
All right. Well, the numbers aren't quite adding up, but we'll leave it at that. It's close enough.
I think I understand that situation. Let's carry on to the next part. Lucas, income,
can you tell us what is your combined gross monthly income?
This one was kind of tough. It says the combined gross monthly income here is 11,692. Yeah. Okay.
Is that right?
Sometimes.
Okay.
140K a year.
That's how much you make.
That sound right?
I think so.
It might be, yeah.
I think so.
Like, it's difficult because of the fluctuation of the business.
Yeah, I get that.
I will say that you're the only couple I've ever seen who has a higher net income than
your gross income. Can you explain that to me the only couple I've ever seen who has a higher net income than your gross income
Can you explain that to me because I'd like to have that myself and I can't figure out how
Yeah, so
If you look at the 8,000 in your
The CSP is said just average what you made over the last three months
So every month
Money comes in and I put away money for taxes about 20%.
Because we're in a net negative situation, I transferred more money from our business
to our family than I made.
The money that was set in there was supposed to be paid for taxes, but you need the money,
so I have to take more.
Oh, so this is like a real emergency?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
All right.
So like for the, yeah, the last three months,
outside of the last month, but I think I mean,
May, June, July, I had made about $6,000 of gross income
from, you know, from the business,
but my family, as you can see, it needs, we need about 12,000 for me.
So I have to pull money from there, right?
All right, how long can you go making what you're making?
Not that long.
If you want to count credit cards,
not count in credit cards.
I don't know.
Can we not overcomplicate it? Do you all see that the problem you're causing
yourself? I'm asking simple questions and you're going, what about this? What about that? Do you count
this? Like, we need simple answers. You're running out of money. So tell me the simplest honest answer.
Two months? Damn. I don't know. It's a be honest. I don't know.
Okay. That is surprising to me though, because you are the one Lucas who's like very in the details
with money. You're very concerned about providing for your family. But because you told me to give
you a simple answer, but in my head it's not simple. It's complicated because what you can put more
on credit cards. Yes, because I can put more on credit cards. I could pull from the, from the amount that
I put away for savings for taxes and, and run off of that. But ultimately, you have
to pay that back. Yeah. I mean, that's more debt we'll be going into.
All right. But these are the things that, these are the things that scare me. These are
things that I do not know how to talk about.
Because whenever, I don't care where money is.
We can have money in our emergency fund, we can have money in our trip account, we can
have money that goes to pay for taxes.
But when my family needs money, I don't care where it comes from.
I'm pulling the money and I'm figuring out, you know, I'm going to pay for that stuff.
So yeah, that's why it's come.
Look at me. Lucas, do you see that that's a recurring theme of if there's a problem that comes up,
I'm going to get the money and I'll deal with it later.
Yeah. Well, what's possible?
You noticed that Lucas has wrapped himself in a veil of righteousness.
He could say, wow, I've really overcomplicated things.
I didn't realize I shouldn't be charging these things on the credit card.
I have two months of money left and I really need to make a change together with Trin.
But instead, he said, when my family needs money, I don't care where it comes from. I'm pulling the money and figuring it out.
What's really happening is that he's not admitting his system doesn't work.
He's not acknowledging that his risk tolerance is way off and that his investment decisions have repeatedly led him astray.
Instead, he's saying, if my family needs money, I'm going to find a way.
Nobody can really attack a father for wanting to protect his family. Nobody's going to say,
you shouldn't do that. So what he's done is he's concocted this very clever defense shield
against changing. Because after all, he's just providing for what his family needs.
The problem is, if this doesn't change, it will keep going on for years and years
until finally Trin gets fed up with it.
Meanwhile, I noticed that we've spent a lot of time talking to Lucas instead of Trin.
And I learned that the majority of their debt comes from twins student loans.
All right, let's keep going and look at the costs here.
All right, I'm going to ignore the, let's leave the net monthly income higher.
You even know that can't be right.
It really can't be right.
It almost makes me uncomfortable leaving that here.
If you make, I don't want to do these one-off things because it messes everything up.
If you were to normally make $11,700 a month, how much would your net income be?
Be like, what, $8,000 or something?
Yeah, just about. If you want to do the average for this year, I think that the monthly income is probably close to the 13 on my end.
No, I don't. Or maybe 12 on my end.
How can it be 12?
You put eight here because you told me to do the last three months.
Yeah, which I want.
I want.
I don't.
I want us to remember how you said you're conservative with your numbers.
I want us to be conservative.
So if the last three months were 13K, I would have put 13K,
but the last three months were 8K,
we should assume the 8K is what it's going to be.
Okay, I see how you're looking at it.
We don't want to fool ourselves, Lucas.
We want to look for like worst-case scenario
and build a plan around that.
Let me tell you something.
I like surprises, maybe for my birthday,
and that's about it.
The last place I want to surprise is in my finances.
And if I'm going to get a surprise, I want a fat stack of cash that got surprisingly
given to me, like, oh, I got some crazy bonus.
That's so cool.
Haha, I never want to be surprised in the negative way.
Like, ooh, I owe an extra 10 grand.
Uh-uh.
That's my personal philosophy.
I'm conservative.
Some people are a little bit more aggressive with money,
but in general, you don't want to be,
like, get your back against the wall.
That is why we take the lower amount.
Even though maybe I hope you earn much more, right?
That's how we plan.
All right, let's look at your fixed costs.
And can I make a, I'm going to change it, okay?
Because if you're making $11,700, I'm just going to say,
conservatively, you're taking home $8,000 a month.
Is that okay?
To say that, what do you want to say?
Maybe 10, because trendy already paid taxes.
You can't take home $10,000 when you're making $11,600.
You pay more in taxes than that.
Okay.
You pay like 30% taxes.
I'm just going to say 8K, okay, trust me on this.
Can you watch this number, this fixed cost number?
Watch what happens.
All right, what just happened?
It jumped from 60% that's your fixed cost to 93%. What is this number supposed
to be? I would like it to be 50. 50 to 60%. Yeah. Yeah. So right now already, this is a huge
red flag. Can I point out a couple more things on this? I'm just get work. We're gonna just work our way line by line down this, okay?
All right, your debt payment. This really is honestly is way, way, way, way, way low.
This is probably more like $1,500 a month if you were honestly paying it off.
I'm gonna leave it here just to show you something. Your groceries are $1,800 a month. How can that be?
Probably more. This grocery groceries and household items included.
So like this, the kids, kids things as well.
Clothes are 200 fine phone, 230 bucks.
Okay.
Again, we're now counting like a few dollars here and there, but.
All right, so can we just notice your giving?
Did not make its way over to the right side.
So I'm going to add this here, okay? Watch this.
They have $1,242 a month that they give away,
but it did not properly add up in the conscious spending plan.
So I'm going to fix it.
What just happened to your fixed cost number?
100%.
100% and we're not even done yet.
Medical $500 a month, that didn't get there.
Your fixed cost is now at 114 percent. And your other fixed expenses like childcare, lawn care, house,
cleaning, counseling, grooming did not make it there either. I'm going to go ahead and fix
that. What is the number you have at the top for fixed costs? You're the 54 percent.
You're broke. You spend more than you make and we haven't even gotten to eating out or any other guilt free expenses including travel.
Yeah.
Did you know it?
Yes.
I did. Yes. I knew, again, according to these numbers, like the gross, the income
is more so of a projection. The expenses is what I look at your wife.
Look at your wife.
What's happening right now?
She's feeling emotional. She's crying.
And you're telling me about your income projections?
Then how you feel?
That's true. I feel really stupid because I did not know. I feel like I should have known.
And I know, you know, you're just, you're, you've been trying and you're doing the best
that you can.
But like I told you a few weeks ago, the way that we are doing things does not work.
It does not work.
And it's just like, I know that wasn't surprising for you, but it is very shocking and very surprising
for me to see those numbers change like that and to see like the actual, like what is actually
happening in our lives, even as far as like I know as an entrepreneur that like, the income fluctuates, but the reality is that like,
we've been in the deficit for months, like we are on fire.
The house is burning down with us in it.
There's no magic deal around the corner that's going to fix this.
Trent says that she wants more control, but ironically she has delegated financial control almost
completely to Lucas.
Next week, on part two of this conversation, you're going to hear what happens, including
the follow-ups from Lucas and Trent.
And of course, if you want to learn more about money psychology, get on my podcast newsletter
at iwt.com slash podcast newsletter.
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for how to build the I will teach you to be rich system into your personal finances.