I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 13. “I’m dumb with money and he’s making me feel worse”
Episode Date: October 12, 2021A few years ago, Adam spent nine months aggressively paying off $75,000 in debt. He loved it. It gave him a purpose and he was happy to work seven days a week to pay it off quickly. His girlfriend, El...izabeth, has debt, but she isn’t excited by paying it off. Instead, she feels trapped, describing herself as “dumb” with money. (Notice the words she uses to describe herself and her debt: “disgusting,” “bad,” and “stupid.”) Adam’s aggressive approach of constantly talking about money isn’t working. Even though he wants to help, she craves emotional security and support. At one point, as Adam is about to go into yet another long monologue, I cut him off. Sometimes, what worked for you doesn’t work for your partner. Listen in to hear how Adam and Elizabeth navigate their Rich Life. Connect with Ramit Website Instagram Twitter Facebook YouTube Linkedin If you and your partner have a money issue and you want my help, I occasionally select a couple to work with, free of charge. Apply for my help here. Produced by Crate Media.
Transcript
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I've been through all my entire life in the sea, the amount of money that I am accumulating
in debt, like absolutely is disgusting to me.
And I can't control it.
I had a car issue and I went on a whim with my dad and I bought a new car and didn't
tell him at all.
I just did it within hours of finding out that my car couldn't get fixed.
He wouldn't talk to me because the huge issue.
I don't know, like, I just...
Like, sorry, I don't want to be emotional about it.
I just...
I know I can do better.
It's like, I put up this invisible wall
that's not making you go forward.
I'm Remeded Saiti and you're listening to the I Will Teach You to Be Rich Podcast.
This is the podcast where I feature real stories about love and money from behind closed
doors.
Today, I'm speaking with Adam and Elizabeth.
Now both of them have lived with considerable debt, but they've taken two totally different
approaches to dealing with it.
At one point, Adam had $75,000 of debt.
But one day, he was sitting down getting his haircut, and he realized he wanted to make
a change.
And so, you're going to hear him tell the story of how overnight he wanted to make a change. And so you're gonna hear him tell the story
of how overnight he decided to pay off his debt
and how he paid it off within nine months.
Okay, compare that to what his partner
is going through right now, Elizabeth.
She's living in debt right now.
She's about to start her fourth year of grad school
and she's almost $100,000 in debt right now. She's about to start her fourth year of grad school and she's almost a hundred thousand dollars in debt. And you're going to hear her call herself some
pretty negative things in this episode, which is heartbreaking. Now, even though they have
both been in debt, they're fighting over their different approaches with money. My goal
is to see if we can get them on the same page. Let's listen. On balance, what do you feel about going back to grad school and
incurring this debt? I think it's going to be a good career move for me.
I just can't see the light at the end of the tunnel. Why is that? Just because I've
never had this kind of debt before. I didn't really again know what debt was
until I my mom said, okay, you're out of school now. You're just start paying
your loans off. I'm like, oh, I didn't know that was a thing. Like,
let's be an adult here, you know? So that kind of slapped me hard in the face,
but it's just like horrible to see that every year, I'm putting 10 grand on
each semester. If not more, it doesn't seem to get any better. I had a car issue and I went on a whim with my dad
and I bought a new car and didn't tell him at all.
I just did it within hours of finding out
that my car couldn't get fixed.
He wouldn't talk to me because the huge issue.
What kind of issue?
That he says like we're not married,
but we want to think about like our finances together
and we should have conversations like that, especially for a big purchase.
And I didn't, I didn't even think about talking to him, honestly, because I said, well,
it's my money.
I'm doing what I want with it.
And I understand his point of view, but I felt like this is my life.
And I should be able to do what I want with it.
He was so angry. He wouldn't talk to me. He was pretty much saying that I made a huge
stupid mistake. And I would learn from my dumb lesson, you know. I just, I felt a little belittled
a little bit like I'm an adult. I can buy a car, but I kind of understand where he's coming from,
but it was hard to see it at the time.
And what happened the next day or the day after?
I guess like for the last like a couple weeks or you know, he would constantly,
if I said something about my car, he'd come back at me and say, oh, since you did this and wasted
your money on that, you know, like bringing it up when it wasn't necessary. And it makes me more mad that he's, that's how he expresses his emotion about how upset
he was that I just bought the car.
How do you feel about the car?
I mean, I thought I needed it.
I need it for my job.
So I thought I have to do this now or never.
I can't live without a car.
So I love my car.
Well, what kind of car is it? It's some afford eco sport.
Okay. What is that? A car or SUV? What is that?
It's kind of like an SUV, I guess. Okay. Yeah.
So what do you love about it? I love the color. It's my favorite color. It's red.
I never had like a car that had like leather seats as heated seats.
You hear like a heating steering wheel.
It has a bunch of luxury accessories.
So I love that.
I can hear you light up as you talk about this car.
What's really interesting to me here is that this car, this cause of this huge fight between them,
seems to be a really good purchase for Elizabeth. It might not have been a
good purchase for Adam. And there's definitely something to be said for them not communicating about
it. But what strikes me is that she doesn't sound like she regrets buying the car at all.
And yet, did you hear the way she described her decision to buy it?
It's so interesting that some of the other words you used to discuss it are words like
dumb, stupid, mistake. So how do you reconcile those two things? Again, it was like really hard to
in the beginning when he was making me kind of feel upset about doing it. I was kind of like
stepping back, but maybe I should have done that, whatever. But then I really do love my car.
And I thought it was a good purchase for me.
And I have to remind myself that sometimes
it's something that I want.
And I should respect my wishes, you know?
Yeah.
So I wanna preface it.
This was like three years ago.
And I feel,
it was last year, last year.
Either way, I feel like we've made strides since then, both of us.
So the background to the car purchase was, she had a car that was running fine and then
all of a sudden, like out of the blue, boom, the engine blue, took it to the shop.
The people at the shop said, the engine is done, you need a new car, that's all.
Hold on, before we go on, I just have to ask the question.
What's that car afford? It was. Yeah.
It shows your new car.
Why do you guys keep buying fords when they always break down?
What is the problem here? Are you against Ford?
You know what Ford used to stand for and I heard you still stands for
found on roadside
or fixed or repaired daily. Okay.
I'm just messing around.
We had a bad experience with a Ford tempo
in my childhood, so I'm still bitter,
but it sounds like the one you got is a lot better.
Okay, sorry, Adam, back to you.
She took the car to the shop
and it was in there for like a week or so
and the mechanic said, look, the engine is dead.
The car is not fixable, that's all.
And so then I receive a text that says,
or maybe it was a call that says,
oh, the mechanic said that the car isn't fixable.
And like immediately, I know people,
like I know ways to go to the junkyard,
get a spare engine, put a spare engine in a car,
or you can put a new engine in a car.
So like, now I'm getting all these ideas,
like, oh, no problem, we'll just get an engine
that'll be a quick one week from now
to have a new engine in it and it'll run like new.
Like, there was no problem.
So you heard the problem, you wanted to fix the problem.
Right, and then like, literally, I'm saying that out loud.
And then as I'm saying it, she says, oh, well, it doesn't matter
because I traded that card in and I have a new card now. I was like, oh, my goodness.
It just caught me off guard. That's all. And I don't not not to say that it was a bad
purchase in the end. Like, it may have been a good person, but the problem was that we didn't decide it together.
And like Elizabeth said, we're not married and it is her decision in the end, but it just
felt like, you know, we're living under the same roof and things like that.
So just felt like we could have communicated and I was caught a little off guard.
And the reason I decided back then,
what I've done the same way, probably not,
from doing it today,
but the reason I decided back then
was for the weeks following the purchase
to sort of throw it into conversation
and just like jab it in there, like that car,
was because I wanted, I was trying to simulate
the feeling of making a poor financial decision or like being in debt.
Because like, I've had those feelings for real in my life, and that's why I'm so the other
way.
So hold on.
So, let me make sure I'm understanding.
So she would bring up something about her car a couple of weeks after buying it and then you thought
yourself, okay, let me jab a little, let me say, whoa. Just to feel a little, like, oh, okay, you know what I mean Elizabeth?
What kind of thing would Adam say? Like if I was talking about like, I don't know, something good
that happened or something that I bought,
he'd be like, oh, just like that car that you spent this amount of money on. I'm like,
okay.
When you rolled your eyes, what would you be thinking in your head?
Like, get over yourself, it's done, there's no going back, we need to just move into the
future.
Okay, okay. And Adam, I gotta say I got to say I'm fascinated by the the
jab psychology here. What were you trying to do with the jabs? What was the the goal there?
I just sort of want wanted to simulate the feeling of being in a lot of debt or making a poor
financial decision.
And like, like I know I've had feelings like that
in the past and it like hits you in the gut.
Like, oh, I shouldn't have done that.
Oh, I wish I didn't have this much debt, things like that.
When you were in debt, did you have somebody jabbing you?
No, but I was trying, I didn't, you're right.
What I like about what you said is it wasn't an accident.
You really did this strategically.
So the great thing about this kind of call is you get to find out if your strategy worked.
So, why don't you ask Elizabeth, did your strategy accomplish the goals that you were going after?
Asker.
Did my strategy accomplish the goals I was trying to achieve Elizabeth?
Absolutely not.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry, babe.
I wouldn't do it the same way.
Okay, so Adam made a bone-headed move.
He knows it.
She knows it.
Everybody knows it.
I think we can find a little levity in situations like this.
When somebody acknowledges they made a mistake,
that's a great opportunity to accept it, laugh,
and then move on.
Yeah, long term, we wanna build systems
and change our money psychology.
But for now, let's lock in the wind.
Elizabeth, do you wanna tell him what it did accomplish?
You accomplished like hurting my feelings.
If that's like kind of what I felt at the time, like I,
it made me feel like stupid.
Like I made a horrible life decision, not a lie.
Like it, it really, I hated it every time he did it and he did it a lot.
So I was really upset about it because I'm like, can you please just push this,
you know, behind us, it's done. I don't know, can you please just push this, you know,
behind us, it's done.
I don't know why we're reminiscing on it, you know?
Boom, done.
Now let's move on.
Adam thinks this was just about the carjabs, but I'm willing to bet there's a history
here.
I'm going to problem on it because I want to connect his views on money today with what
happened in the past.
Remember, he used to be in severe debt.
Walk us back to that time in your life.
I'm guessing you're in your early 20s at that point.
Yeah.
And you have 75K of debt you're walking around with.
What was life like for you on a day-to-day basis?
I was at my barber getting my haircut and I'm kind of saying this to him, like,
oh, it's hard, it's tough to make it a little bit.
He put me on today of Ramsey,
bought his book and then just literally did that,
step by step for the next nine months
and worked seven days a week,
like honest to God, 16 hours a day,
and I was just like, this is all I'm gonna do.
Not go out to eat, not, you know,
see friends not gonna vacation, not buy anything.
I'm going to get out of debt, fast and fast,
we're right now.
And I did in about nine months.
So that nine months of paying off that debt,
what was that like when you look back at that time?
I loved it.
It was, yeah, it was awesome.
It was like chasing a goal. Like it was, it's
so like I like, I'm goal oriented. And this goal is so easy to see the progress. Like you
can put it right up on a chalkboard. And like this has how much left. Bam, pay this off,
bam, pay this off. It's, it's a great feeling. Okay, what do you notice? There's one big
clue. Did you catch it?
Adam described being in debt and getting the wake up call from his barber, but those weren't
the real clues.
You see, part of mastering your money psychology is learning to listen to an enormous amount
of information, but discarding 95% of it to find the golden nugget.
That single thing that actually matters. The real clue,
the one clue that matters is that he loved paying off his debt. He loved it. In fact, the
more severe the challenge, the more he loved it. Work seven days a week, done 16 hours a
day. No problem. Personally, I love his energy. I love setting that big goal and then working to achieve it.
But guess how his experience affects his view of money.
Here's a hint. How do you think he feels about other people who are in debt?
He's been always goal oriented and all about money, so that makes perfect sense to me.
All about money means what?
Like more so, if I buy this,
it I will spend it with cash,
I will not take out loans, no credit cards,
that kind of thing.
And does that strike you as unusual or surprising at all?
Kind of, because I wasn't like that and I kind of, I'm still not, I guess.
I've never owned a credit card, whether that's a good or bad thing.
I don't know.
My debt is disgusting if that's the right word to use.
I don't have, I have a lot of money because I'm in school again.
I'm just digging a bigger and bigger hole.
Well, let's talk about that for a second.
So I mean, those are pretty strong words, disgusting, digging a hole.
So let's talk about that before we get to the numbers, when you think about your
debt, what words come to mind for you?
Horrifying.
Disgusting's the best word for it because I've I've always been like a I
don't want to say a penny pincher but I've been frugal my entire life in the sea the
amount of money that I am accumulating in debt like absolutely is disgusting to me.
Okay.
And I can't control it.
And um you grew up frugal were your parents frugal?
My mom was my dad didn didn't really spend money.
Yeah, she was frugal, but she loved spending money.
On what?
She was stupid things that she didn't need for a trip.
Stuff that she probably already had just didn't want.
She wanted the newer item.
Okay.
And what do you remember growing up
about your family and money?
My family, I would like grew up very well off.
Money never seemed like an issue.
Granted, I don't really know behind the scenes,
but it never seemed like an issue for them.
They had their cars paid off.
All the cars that I had were bought by my parents
and they were completely paid off.
I don't know. I suspected there was a connection with her parents, but it didn't quite pan out.
You might have caught her mom. You might have caught her say that her mom used to buy all these stupid things she didn't need. Again, that's a pretty strong language, but I don't really think
there's much here for now. So I'm going to leave that thread open and move on.
And this is actually a great meta lesson.
When you talk to your partner about money, it's a very valuable skill to know when to
move on.
You have lots of chances to talk about money.
You don't have to cover everything at once.
So just open up a few conversations, have a little laugh, and then move on.
You already mentioned you don't feel confident about money. In fact, you shy away from
it. Right. What is something in your life you do feel confident about? Give me a
couple of examples. Like how I project myself to people. Like I know I have a
bubbly personality and I know that I'm not afraid to show that and I'm not
afraid to be heard. So I feel like that is like a big thing for me because I never used to feel that way,
you know, but now I do, I'm comfortable with myself and that's a good feeling.
That's really interesting. So it sounds like personally and professionally, you feel confident
and what is most interesting is that you didn't use to feel that way.
And something shifted.
Can you give me a basic approximate age when that shifted for you?
So I'm a twin.
And I think I used to be the shy one, not really like talking to anybody kind of self-reserved.
She was the social butterfly.
She had to go to all the events, whatever.
I think that shifted probably when I got to like six grade
and I started like talking more when I went to college.
Like that was a whole different light for me
and I really just shined.
Love that.
And can I go out on a limb and guess that when you were younger,
your parents would describe you as she's the shy one.
Oh, she loves being around people.
Is that what would happen?
And how do you think that that label affects you?
I don't, I want to say maybe like it made me feel
like the cast away, I guess.
Like I'm just like, I don't belong, you know?
Cause like my mom's a social butterfly too.
And like I wanna be like her, like my sister, you know,
competing to be that way.
And I just couldn't at the time.
Yeah, yeah.
And after you started to flourish,
was there a while where your parents still referred to you
as the shy one where you had changed your own opinion?
A little bit.
Like then it's like I I still had that shy and then it was like oh well she's the star. I was the scholar.
I was the athlete. I became this whole different person. I completely changed dynamics as I was growing up.
She was describing herself.
Are you starting to see that connection now?
Words really have power.
Remember earlier when Elizabeth used
those extremely negative words to describe her debt?
She said stupid, disgusting, horrible.
She wasn't only describing her dead. She was describing herself.
Are you seeing the connection now? The words you use, I'm picking up on a lot of them,
worry, disgusting, horrible. Is that accurate in how you feel about your financial situation?
Yes. Okay.
And if you had to describe something physical, how would you describe that on your body?
Shaking almost like my whole body is going to explode.
Like I get so nervous talking about it.
Like I can hear my own mouth right now.
Like, like just shaking back and forth because I don't like to talk about my debt.
Yeah.
You don't like to talk about it because what?
Because of how high the number is, and I feel like I'm like being judged a little bit,
but I know like, again, how Adam said, like his mom said, you know, everybody has dead.
It's just part of life.
I just, I don't want to see it that way. But I don't know how to get out. Okay. Well, first of all, how would it feel if I were to tell you that
there's definitely a light at the end of the tunnel and you absolutely will be able to pay off your
debt? How would that feel? Good. And I, and I know that, you know, right now that I'm in school,
like I'm not obviously making as much as I was before
I went back and I know that once I get to my career, it'll, you know, I will feel a
little bit lighter.
It's just, I'm struggling to see it now.
Yeah.
Keep going on that metaphor of feeling lighter.
If you mentioned that it feels shaking, right in your body, your teeth, you can feel that
shaking. Now, just for a moment, pretend with me,
pretend that that feeling was gone
and that it was just, you never felt that again.
What would that feel like to you?
And it kind of walked me through it physically,
the shaking, where's the shaking going?
Is it going up, is it going down?
Talk me through that. These questions might seem a little odd, but I'm asking them for a specific reason. I want her to
get out of her head. When she describes how her debt feels, how it physically feels,
you can actually hear her describe these finances in a totally different way. It's much more vivid.
She's actually feeling it as we're all listening.
I'm going to say this shaking is going to go down. Completely leave my body down to my feet.
And if I didn't have to worry about this, I would actually feel less stressed. My head would be
in a clear space. Like anxiety would be gone. You know, like I wouldn't have to think about it.
Okay, fantastic. I mean, what would it feel like to be able to wake up, you know,
getting the car, the beautiful red car you have, driving, you got a big smile on your face? I mean,
how would that feel to you? Oh, that would feel almost heavenly. Yeah. You know, like you foric. Yeah, that's those words to me are words that belong in a
rich life. Okay, you foric, heavenly, light. That's beautiful. And we can get there. We can get there.
But we need to do a little bit of digging before we figure out how what label do you think you give yourself now?
Let's think about money, for example.
Now that I have adult money.
What were the words you used to describe yourself and money in the first five minutes of
us talking?
Like horrible and dumb, stupid, disgusting.
Yeah.
So how do you think you using those labels
for yourself affects the way that you behave with money?
It feels really bad.
Those are strong words that I describe that.
And I think that's my problem too.
I know that I have those, like, characteristics about it,
but I've tried to throw them in the closet
and pretend they're not there until it comes up.
Yeah, you're trying to change,
but you have a leash around your own neck.
And that leash is of your own making.
You're holding the leash.
And the leash says, I'm stupid.
I'm dumb. I'm horrible.
At a curiosity, by the way, would you ever call anyone at work, dumb, stupid, and horrible?
Yeah, sure, I would probably say you'd call them that to their face.
No, no, no, my God, no, I would never say that out loud.
Damn, that did not go the way I thought it would, but I think she gets the message.
Okay.
Would you ever call someone to their face in your family, dumb, stupid, and horrible?
No, I don't think so.
I would say more of their actions, but I would never say like, you are stupid.
Okay.
So how come you say you are stupid to yourself? Yeah, I don't know.
I don't know if that's just like making me, I want to make myself feel that, you know, to push
through that I am maybe making, you know, horrible decisions with money. Maybe it's like a wake-up call.
Does it work? No. No, it doesn't.
So, but I'm curious, what do you get out of it?
Because you do get something out of calling yourself dumb, stupid and horrible.
What is it?
I mean, definitely not gratification.
I don't even know why I do it.
You want to ask Adam, what do you think?
Yeah, what do you think about that?
I think you may get an excuse not to engage in money conversations with us.
That is true. I guess I do say like when I am faced with that conversation, I do say I'm done.
I don't understand what you're saying.
Wow.
I use that a lot.
And Elizabeth, do you think that you consciously
are using that?
Again, like I feel dumb right now, you know?
Like I don't, I don't know.
You hear that?
Notice that automatic unconscious retreat to saying she feels dumb.
You can't get a more obvious clue than that.
You ought to feel dumb.
Nobody knows you better than you.
So tell us, you're using this consciously.
Tell us more.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I just, like, sorry, I don't want to be emotional about it.
I just, I know I can do better, but I just can't let myself.
It's like I put up this invisible wall that's not making me go forward.
I'm stuck.
Stuck?
So I feel like a lot of this stuck feeling and just these high emotions it Elizabeth is
experiencing are partly because of me because I feel like I put such high value on money.
She worries that if it's like she doesn't live up to my expectations or something like that, then I might
be disappointed or whatever. And that will never be the case. The importance of money, I know,
is not as important as our relationships. I don't know if I believe that. I don't know if I
believe that. I appreciate the candor. I do think that you put a lot of pressure on her. Elizabeth, would you agree?
Yeah, a lot. A lot. So realistically, and I've actually never told this to you, Elizabeth,
but this is truly how I think. Realistically, I know that $100,000 in debt,
even if you had a single income, at the income you're going to have when you get out of school is nothing.
You could do that in one year.
If you wanted to just work your regular job out of school and pay the debt off, we'll
be married and I have an income as well.
And we're going to attack the stats together.
I'm not worried about the debt.
That is going to go away quickly,
and I know that.
Pretty much the whole thing of this
that I've been doing, of just putting the,
I don't know, like putting debt on this pedestal.
Can I interrupt for a second?
So, yeah.
You just had this very nice sentence you shared with us
about, you're not worried about debt, and she could even pay it off if she was just on a single income.
I hear you.
I know you're seeing the math floating in your head.
I see it.
Mm-hmm.
Do you think she believes what you just said?
Deep down.
Mm.
I don't know.
Do you believe that Elizabeth?
To a certain extent, I guess.
I don't know, I just, it's uncomfortable.
I don't like cutting my guess off,
but Adam was about to take us down a very
unproductive direction,
and I saw it happening from a mile away.
Here's what just happened.
He had this very nice comment about how realistically
she could easily pay off her debt quickly, which he knows because he understands the numbers and he used to be in debt too.
There's just one big problem. Elizabeth isn't hearing a word of what he's saying. Sure, she can hear it, but she's not really listening. She doesn't believe it. And that's because Adam is approaching this from a tactical,
logical approach. Did you hear what he said? $100,000 in debt. One year, you could pay that off. It's
nothing. I'm not worried. Yeah, but she is. For someone who calls themselves stupid and lacks confidence in money? None of what Adam said means anything.
In fact, it often makes them feel worse because their partner just doesn't understand them.
I cut Adam off because he wasn't looking at Elizabeth as he launched into this grand
monologue and she was starting to withdraw. I want to give him a chance to redirect it
and really reconnect with her.
I get a lot of questions from people
who have used my book.
They've automated their finances.
They've set their investments up.
They go, all right, I did the basics.
What's next?
And when you've made a lot of money,
you'll notice that there's not a lot of advice
specifically for you.
The blog posts that are typically focused around
people who are just starting off or even people in debt
do not really apply to you anymore.
And it can also be embarrassing to ask.
You can't really post about certain topics
when you have money because your friends don't know
how much you make.
And nobody really wants to hear about how do I take cooler vacations?
Or what do you all do for tax optimization?
Because the first response is, oh, rich people problems.
I don't like that phrase because rich people problems are problems nonetheless.
How are you supposed to find someone you trust, whether it's an accountant or a travel advisor?
The usual advice that you find on Google it's an accountant or a travel advisor?
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And as I mentioned, I'm a member of long-angle.
I like it because it's vetted.
Everyone on there has a certain amount of net worth
and therefore they are asking relevant questions
of the community.
You're not gonna get people on there
giving the same old advice like,
hey, here's how you save money on salary.
That's not the purpose of this community.
Some of the topics that I've loved
are multi-generational family trips
or questions like, we wanna travel for six months with our children.
What do you all do for school?
How do you make travel more seamless for children?
I've seen topics I loved about concierge doctors.
Topics that no one is really talking about publicly and on their online community, there
are groups for all different topics like education for kids, events, even philanthropy and how
to become more thoughtful about giving.
There are literally thousands of conversations going on right now at long angle, and I love it because it's a super high quality group,
and people are even starting to meet in person.
Now, in order to join, members must show proof of at least $2.2 million in investable assets, liquid or illiquid, and a community organizer will hold
a brief Zoom call with every potential member to make sure it's a fit.
Go to longangle.com to learn more.
That's longangleangle.com. This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp.
On this podcast, you've heard me recommend therapy to a lot of couples.
Some of the couples are already seeing therapists, which I love.
But if you wanted to get therapy, if you wanted to have a space where you and your partner
could talk about money and any other topic, Would you know where to go right now?
No. A lot of us would search. We'd find a bunch of options, but how do we know who's right?
How do we know what to do next? It can be overwhelming. So if you've been thinking about therapy,
give better help to try. It's online. You'll get matched with a licensed therapist after
filling out a brief questionnaire. You can also switch therapists for no additional charge.
One of the things that I love on this podcast is being able to help couples discover a new
way of seeing and talking about money.
But this is just one conversation.
A lot of us need a lot more conversations in order to lock in change.
That's why I think therapy is really important for a lot of us. to Today, to get 10% off your first month, that's better help help.com slash remit r-a-m-i-t.
How do you want to proceed, Adam?
This is a golden opportunity for you.
So it's uncomfortable.
What feelings are you feeling right now?
What is making it uncomfortable?
I'm feeling like a little taken back a little bit, confused in a certain sense.
Kind of like, I mean, I feel like upset.
I see.
Well, I guess where I was going with that is not to make it seem like money is the most important.
I was trying to make a point that actually not worried about the money.
I know you could pay it off at any time, and even if you didn't pay it off, and you wanted to...
Stop, stop, stop. They're going into monologue land.
Yes, sorry.
Nobody wants the monologue. Watch this, watch this.
Hey Adam, I have a really bad sunburn on my arm.
It really hurts, and I'm worried that it's gonna hurt even more,
and it's gonna leave a permanent scar.
Now, give me the same answer you gave Elizabeth
in your monologue.
No, it won't be on your for the rest of your life. Yes, you said, I'm not worried.
In fact, I know that the sunburn based on the geometric numbers of the SPF 45 is going
to blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
I can be here with you.
I'm here with you.
Yeah, how do you think I feel when I'm telling you I'm worried about this scar on my skin
for the rest of my life?
And your answer is, no, don't worry about it.
Don't worry about it.
Elizabeth, am I getting that approximately right?
Yeah, that was actually a good analogy there.
So why don't we try this again?
And let's not get into the numbers because that is the temptation.
Especially of anyone who has been through a debt payoff or investment or anything like that's what I did.
And it did not go well in my own relationship when I first started talking about money.
Let me tell you what happened in my relationship.
My wife and I were engaged and we finally started talking about money.
I know, I know, I broke my own rules. I should have brought this up earlier.
Anyway, we finally started talking about our salaries and investments and all that stuff. I was loving it.
Hey, finally I get to share all these cool systems I built so cool.
And then we started talking about a prenup.
And at first, it was actually pretty good, but soon it got really, really hard.
And looking back, my wife and I would both agree that we didn't approach it from the
best place.
Is she approached it from a position of scarcity?
But do you know what I did?
I rushed straight to the numbers.
Hey, here's why the number is so logical.
It makes perfect sense.
If you just factor in a 4% safe withdrawal rate, which I really think is too conservative,
so we could do 3.5%.
Knowing that you can likely get a 7.8% return. Of course, that includes inflation. Ha ha ha ha.
And the numbers actually just write themselves. Fuck. I hate my past self.
That's why I want to save a lot of you logical dorks from yourself. You know who you are.
You have a little success with numbers. You read a fire forum or 40 of them. Maybe you understand compound interests a little bit.
Suddenly, you think everyone can logically see the world
the same way you do.
Hey, dorks!
Logic is great, but it's just one tool.
And sometimes it's the least important tool.
That's where a lot of problems happen
when you try to rush to the numbers just as I did.
Now, the numbers matter. But if you try to rush to the numbers just as I did. Now the numbers
matter. But if you've been listening to this podcast, you know that they're actually
one of the last things that you nail down rich life first, then the numbers.
So Elizabeth, can you start us off again? Tell us how you're feeling about your debt, that amount that you have.
And then Adam, I want you to really think about
your approach here.
You have a golden opportunity
to demonstrate the importance of your relationship.
Go ahead, Elizabeth.
So, I feel about my debt is,
what makes me feel stupid
that I got here, it's disgusting about how much
I have accumulated
over the years uncontrollably in some sort of sense again.
And I feel like I'm stuck in this hole
that I'll never be able to get out of
and I don't see how it's gonna get better right now.
Well, life is gonna go on and I'll be here with you
to figure out how it's going to get better as we grow together. I know that you want to help me and I know that you
want to like help me understand and make better choices but like I just don't
want this to be all about money and that's kind of what it seems like.
Play that out for us. If it is all about money, okay?
And you graduate, you have all this debt,
play that out.
What happens in this relationship?
It'll all most be like a contract that I'm signing
that it says I need to have this amount of time
to pay off my debt in this allotted timeframe.
And, or something bad will happen.
Him not wanting to be with me because I have all this debt.
Yeah.
And that was always my biggest fear.
So Adam, hearing this, how do you feel hearing Elizabeth
say this?
Putting myself in Elizabeth's shoes, that must be terrible to go through life in a relationship
that way.
And I wish there was some way I could convey to you and you believe me that that will never be the case.
I completely believe you.
I do.
Like bottom of my heart, I believe it.
Just you just have that feeling still?
Yeah, I can't shake it until like I kind of see
like a more better turn out for me, I guess.
What do you mean by better turn out?
Like when I actually start getting this money
and putting it actually towards the loans
and be done with having loans
and just focus on paying those off
instead of, you know, I'm in school
that's just keeps getting higher and higher.
So that sounds like you almost feel underwater
because, you know, if you only have a few more semesters, but
the loans are still piling and that makes you just feel like this weight.
Mm-hmm, like I can't get out of the hole that I dug.
There's no ladder yet.
I got you.
How do I support you through this short time
until the latter arrives?
Like I appreciate you like helping me
and giving me, providing me resources
to help me through that,
but I just, I don't wanna have every conversation
have to start with money.
Got you. I understand.
Okay, that was fantastic. Watching the two of you engage in this dance,
and it's a new dance you're both learning,
so everybody's a little bit uncomfortable,
but you're both given it all you've got.
And that is really fantastic.
I appreciate Adam's question, how can I support you?
Love that. And Elizabeth, I appreciate the candor, which is, hey, I appreciate some of
the resources, but really, I don't want everything to be about money. Let's zoom out for a second.
We have not gotten to things like creating a debt payoff plan because that is a technical
tactical thing. And, you know, it's covered in my book and all over the place, that's not going to solve the problem. I could show you right now exactly the month and year that
your debt will be paid off. We'll have zero effect on how you feel about money, Elizabeth,
and Adam as well, we'll have zero effect on your relationship.
The deeper issues here, can both of you spot what some of the deeper issues are?
But deeper issues here can both of you spot what some of the deeper issues are. There needs to be a little bit more of like psychological safety in the relationship.
And that needs to be the bedrock of this. And then these tough conversations can come after that.
Let's go.
I completely 100% agree with that. I mean, I do think over time we've gotten better at communicating and I know I've always
struggled with that, but it's a scary topic for me and I'm trying to do what I can to
better us in that sense.
I love this concept of psychological safety.
I want to talk about what that would look like.
Specifically, if I were to come into your
house and observe you to having a conversation or even a fight about money, what would it
look like if the two of you were in a psychologically safe relationship?
This is really important.
They've both agreed that they need more psychological safety and they're right. But I'm pressing them now to define it.
What is psychological safety?
What would it look like?
You'll find that this same scenario happens in your own money conversations.
You or your partner will say something like, we just need to be more supportive of each
other.
And you'll both nod and you'll agree.
And then the next day, you'll go back to doing exactly
what you used to do.
When I work with students, whether it's on the podcast
or in my programs, I insist on getting specific
down to the observable behaviors.
Now just imagine if I were sitting on your couch
observing the two of you talking about
money, I'm eating habanero salsa that I brought in my own Ziploc bag because fucking Tabasco
is not spicy.
Here's my question for you.
How would I know that you're both providing psychological safety?
Would it be a specific phrase that you would say?
Would you have an index card that you would use with a checklist on it?
Would it be that you have an agenda and you talk about money on the first of every month?
I want to see the behavior, not just the feeling.
Feelings are powerful, but without behaviors, they're often misleading or ephemeral.
Tie those specific behaviors in and you're going to see real lasting change.
Just having the ability to make it through a full conversation about money,
whether whatever it is, tactical stuff about how we're going to pay the stead off
or thinking about the next purchase
and the motion is not rising.
Specifically, what does that mean
in motion is not rising?
You know, nobody's muscles are tensing up.
Nobody is saying, I always look out for you always.
Like you always talk about money
or you always whatever.
No one is saying that.
What are you saying instead?
Just literally anything on the subjects.
Notice how hard it is for Adam to get specific.
This is so common.
I'm gonna keep pushing him.
By the way, I sound really mean in these comments,
but I was absolutely loving this.
So I'm not sure why it sounded like a prison guard yelling
at someone, sorry Adam.
I guess I'm thinking more of like a technical conversation
at QD that could go anyway.
It's not the technical.
What are you saying instead?
It doesn't matter what the topic in personal finances.
Yeah.
You've told me you're not gonna say things like
you always do X.
What are you going to say things like you always do X. What are you going to say?
I just feel like maybe I knew people would be saying I feel okay. And so you're going to talk about feelings good. Yeah. What a
and just like reassurances like I'm here with you. Love that. This kind of thing. Yeah.
Yeah. And and let's talk about that last 60 seconds of the conversation.
Maybe it was a pretty controversial or provocative or even heated discussion.
What happened in those last 60 seconds of the conversation? What are you going to be saying to
each other then? Just like, okay, wow, I'm glad we came to that conclusion. I'm glad we had this
conversation. Watch this, Adam. Elizabeth, in that last 60 seconds of a psychologically safe conversation, what are you saying to each other?
I love you.
I love you.
Nice.
Come on.
Yeah.
You love each other and the way that you can express that is if you feel safe.
Now, I'm going to guess, I'm going to go on a big limb here.
The last 10 times
you talked about money, you didn't look each other in the eye and say, I love you at the
end of that conversation. Is that right?
I fought on, that's fought on. That's fought on.
As you can tell, I am loving this. And so are they. We can have fun, even though money
can be stressful. And this is an awesome moment to create new rituals.
Some of their rituals involve new habits,
like saying I love you at the end of a money conversation
they have.
Some of their rituals will involve getting rid of old stories
that they used to tell themselves.
Once we're done with this call,
I'm gonna give you a little bit of homework.
I want you to take a piece of paper,
dumb, horrible, stupid, write those down on a piece of paper. I am dumb. I am horrible.
I want you to throw those in a fireplace or light them on fire and take a picture of it and send it to
me. Okay, that's going to be your homework for today because those days are over. I feel relieved.
because those days are over. I feel relieved.
Yeah, how come?
Because I feel like this was a weight that I feel like was on our shoulders together
and I don't want to feel that way.
In this episode, there were a few points that really stood out to me.
First, words have power.
When we call ourselves bad with money,
that can often become a self-fulfilling prophecy.
We can rewrite that language to say something
instead like, I haven't mastered the skill of money yet.
But I'm going to put aside time each week
so I can get better at my own finances.
Oh, what a beautiful reframe. The second point that really stood out to me was that each
of us can have very different experiences with money. He was in debt, loved paying it off
as aggressively as possible. She also has debt, somewhat of a similar amount,
and she approaches it in a totally different way.
Doesn't mean one is right or wrong,
we have to be able to hear how the other person
thinks about their financial situation
before we jump in and tell them to do it our way.
And finally, one of the things
that really stood out to me today
was that you can have fun in these conversations.
We can make some jokes about each other,
we can laugh, we can create some new rituals.
If you're having money conversations,
you should be laughing at least once a conversation.
That's a sign that you're on the right track.
So send me a note from today's episode. You can email me if you're on the right track. So send me a note from today's episode.
You can email me if you're on my email list.
You can DM me on Instagram.
You can tweet me.
And tell me one thing that stood out to you from today's episode.
Remember, I want to hear from you with each of these podcast episodes here and I will
teach you to be rich.
Thank you for listening and I'll see you next week.
Thanks for listening to I will teach you to be rich. I'm Remi Tseiti. Please follow the show on
Apple podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. Are you and your partner interested
in being on this podcast?
Every once in a while, I take applications from couples who need financial help.
Sign up to my newsletter at iwt.com to get notified when the application window is open.
Here's what you'll find next week on the I Will Teach to Be Rich podcast.
Our seven year old, he knows, and he has told me, Mommy don't blow all our money.
I'm frustrated I can't do more for myself, but I feel like I'm working hard.
And, you know, doing a lot to fight the family, yet I come last in it,
would like to do more for myself.
There's only so much that people can put up with.