I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 131. “We’re worth $5.5M but I feel like it doesn’t belong to me”

Episode Date: November 21, 2023

Matt is 40 and Ruane is 38. They have two kids and live in Toronto. They’ve done incredibly well for themselves, with an eye-popping net worth of $5,500,000—but lingering anxiety about money and t...he overwhelming responsibilities of parenthood have driven them apart. This episode is brought to you by: Trade | Right now, Trade is offering our audience a free bag of coffee with any subscription at https://drinktrade.com/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. Facet | Get affordable, accessible financial planning with a flat fee membership. For a limited time, the $250 enrollment fee will be waived when you sign up at https://facet.com/ramit. DeleteMe | If you want to get your personal information removed from the web, go to https://joindeleteme.com/ramit for 20% off. 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.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 I'm not a gold digger. I'm not trying to get you for all your properties and all your money. I make my own money. I'm a full-time career woman and I don't need your money. There's no pre-knock that we're married. The next month she decides to make a mistake, she can walk away with half or more or worse. I don't want to be afraid to talk about money. I live in the past. There's a lot of hurtful things that got us to where we are, and it revolves around money. And I hold on to that. It's just, what I tell Rana, whenever she asks me
Starting point is 00:00:34 on my birthday, it's time with her. I just want my wife back. That's the wish like for me. This switch hasn't flipped. It's fully from the end. Where now I can say, say okay let's enjoy this. You know it's been years of darkness. They can't go on.
Starting point is 00:00:56 What would you do if you felt disconnected from your partner of nine years? What if both of you felt alone and you both won in more quality time together, but you couldn't figure out how? Well, today I'd like to introduce you to Matt, who's 40, and Ruane, 38. They both live in Toronto. They have two kids. And in today's conversation, you're going to hear some shocking admissions, including a conversation they had before they got married that has haunted their relationship ever since. I'd like to read you a little bit from their application. We've been married for nine years and lived together for 13 years, and I have always subsidized
Starting point is 00:01:33 our lifestyle. Our kids are getting older, and soon they won't be the glue to keep us together. This is a fascinating conversation, and before we get into it, I want to ask you one question. When was the last time you had a productive conversation about money with your partner? You know, on this show, you'll hear me recommend to guess that they have regular money dates. I talk about money with my wife regularly. Well, this Saturday in my newsletter, I'm going to share how to have a money date with your partner, including specifically, what do you talk about?
Starting point is 00:02:05 When should you have them? And how do you make sure that they're actually fun as opposed to being filled with conflict? I'll even share a simple agenda you can use to guide the conversation. And you can only get it by signing up for my newsletter before this Saturday, November 25th at iwt.com slash podcast newsletter. Matt Baudicondo. We bought a condo. It wasn't necessarily about a disagreement. I'm more. I'm more cautious with money. Matt's more.
Starting point is 00:02:41 He's riskier with money. He loves to invest. He wants to always, you know, let's always looking at property, I was looking at real estate and I'm kind of always shutting it down. Are you sure we have enough? Is that, you know, is it going to be too much? And we talked about this condo. We decided collectively that it wasn't going to move forward. And then he still bought it anyway. What even he bought it anyway?
Starting point is 00:03:00 He came, like I got home after the boys from school. And he's like, oh, we got a condo. I was like, huh? What? That's like me saying, oh, we got an extra bag of chips from the grocery store. Matt, you're just like, we got a condo. He's like, yeah, let's celebrate. I was like, out of curiosity, did you celebrate?
Starting point is 00:03:22 No, I was pretty pissed off. It didn't go very well in our household that evening. So what did you celebrate? No, I was pretty pissed off. I didn't go very well in our household that evening. So what did you say? I don't understand. I thought we weren't gonna, I thought we talked about, we weren't gonna go forth with it. And his response was,
Starting point is 00:03:37 it was an opportunity that agent kind of called him and it was kind of like very time sensitive and he made a decision. We talked about it in depth about this condo and I gave my opinion. I just didn't, you know, the numbers made sense. It was, it was affordable. You're not going to get a condo that caught, like I understand that. I understand the market.
Starting point is 00:03:57 I understand, I understand all of that. But then there was some nuance about investing with someone else and you know, it can get mucky and we decided I think it's best to just do it us. And then I don't think the money really worked at the time. So we decided that it wasn't going to go forward. And I thought it was it, like we're done out of the mind. And then when he bought it, it was like, oh look, we purchased something. Yeah. And I'm like, that's not exciting for me. Like, I wasn't, I thought this wasn't happening. Okay.
Starting point is 00:04:29 Ruan, how did it make you feel when you heard that Matt had gotten the condo, which from your understanding, you had agreed not to get? Like, left out, not even just left out, just deflated. I was like, well, thanks for making a decision without me. You know, I didn't feel good, didn't feel great. Deflated, what does that mean to you? I just, I don't feel valued as in the relationship to be a part of that conversation or that decision. The condo that I did by is actually different
Starting point is 00:05:06 than the one that I think we talked about. Previously, it was the same development where there's a little different situation. It was time sensitive. Now, maybe I got caught up in the excitement, but it was a time sensitive offer that afternoon, that day, that hour. And I made a decision.
Starting point is 00:05:25 At the time, she was with her kids. She was tied up. You know, I'd take her away from that. I felt as the right thing to do. Where was she specifically when you got that phone call? In the playground, as was the guy. Wait, you're at the playground while she was there. Yeah, we're both in the playground.
Starting point is 00:05:42 She was watching her kids. She was talking with one of the moms, and I got a call. I walked away and made a call. Why don't you just walk right back over to that slide and be like, hey, babe, I got a question for you. It didn't seem like the place. I could have. I passed a lot of ideas past her and she's never counted the table ever to buy one I think the last condo I purchased was 11 12 years ago Before we're married we haven't bought any since we've been married and before that I bought in a multiple condo So I've waited and waited and waited how much was this condo by the way? Just over 400,000 you Canadians, about 300,000 US.
Starting point is 00:06:29 Okay. Is there any feeling, Ruan, from your perspective, about the number itself, or is it, is your feeling more about being left out and not valued as you put it? Left out and not valued, to be honest. Like, 400 is a good cost, like, for that condo, it's great value. He always comes correct. He comes with all of this information. He talked about the location, how much we can get for it, Airbnb it, rent it out, talked about how close it was to the transit system. So like, Rand, why did it, it sounds great. Why did you, when you wait in, why did you say no to the condo?
Starting point is 00:07:04 I think I said to him, the cost is good. I think it makes sense, but can it, does it work for us? Like, is that realistic? Like, so it's a two hour, an hour and a half drive from where we live. You manage your condos. You do all of your management of the condos yourself. Is that realistic for us to drive all the way out?
Starting point is 00:07:21 There's something's wrong. I mean, that didn't matter to him. That stuff doesn't actually matter to him because if he puts his mind to something, he's gonna dedicate the time, he's okay to drive the drive if that's what has to happen. I'm not that person. I'm like, it's just too much work.
Starting point is 00:07:36 When he brought you the proposal for the condo, you thought, on paper, this looks good, the numbers wise. You raise some concerns, does this make sense for your lifestyle, for our lifestyle, et cetera. He said, I don't care, it's fine with me. Was there actually a decision made in that conversation? No. Oh. I think this is the crux of a lot of what happens with between the two of us is that, you
Starting point is 00:08:06 know, we talk about it, we talk around it. Oh. We kind of just put a pin in it and then it just never gets picked back up. I think it's tough for, you know, maybe a part of it is, I know all the numbers. I've just, I live in Burida's stuff. So it's easier for me. I don't think it's as easy for her to be decisive. I think the opening comments she said was,
Starting point is 00:08:33 I'm just more risky. I think like an investor, I'm okay with risk. I think I hear a lot of all of the concerns and risks and challenges when everyone doesn, when someone, when everyone doesn't want to buy a condo, that's when I want to buy it. It's a bit of, you know, oil and water and perspective in that. Okay, a few clues that I noticed. Ruance first comment was, Matt bought WeBot.
Starting point is 00:08:59 Did you catch that slip? That difference of his money, our money. Then Matt mentioning that he's weighted and weighted to buy another property. And the comment that he didn't want to bother her because she was playing with the kids, which was about 10 feet away on the playground. But the clue that really caught my eye was when Ruanne said they decided collectively they weren't going to move forward and then Matt bought it anyway. But when I probed, she admitted that the property was a great deal, it made a lot of financial sense
Starting point is 00:09:32 and she'd actually never really said no. Seems to me that there's a lot of communication issues and I'd like to dive into that. I will say I do love the idea that someone just randomly bought a $400,000 condo and surprised their spouse. Is this inconceivable for anyone else but me?
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Starting point is 00:12:31 There's a lot of hurtful things that got us to where we are, and it revolves around money. And I hold on to that. Boundaries were set from the beginning, and that created the dynamic around money. Like what boundaries? Sorry Matt, but we were driving in New Zealand. We went for six months and I remember us driving and he made it very clear that his money was his money. My money was my money. And there was no crossover. And that was when we were just, we were dating.
Starting point is 00:13:14 And he's like, I, you know, he talked about a prenup. And, you know, I felt, I didn't feel good sitting in the car. I thought it was going to spend my life with. Here he is saying to me, what's mine is mine, what's yours is yours. Basically, you don't have any say in that. I'm not a gold digger. I'm not trying to get you for all your properties and all your money. I make my own money. I'm a full-time career woman, and I don't need your money. So I didn't understand that.
Starting point is 00:13:53 And I came from a family where my mom and dad are married and everything's collected together. So I just thought that's what it was going to be. And he made it very clear that's not how it was gonna be. Okay. And when you heard that conversation, what were your feelings? Oh, I felt destroyed.
Starting point is 00:14:11 I felt like what am I actually just myself in my head? Like, what am I doing? Is this the right person for me? I just felt like, you know, he doesn't trust me. Mm-hmm. You know, that's the clear indication that you don't trust your partner. Like, you don't wanna blend our money together, you don't want to blend our money together.
Starting point is 00:14:25 You don't want to tell me how much you make, how much you actually make, what you're worth. Like, you didn't know how much you made. Not really. Can you use, he was in school. Now that you've been married, now that you have two children, now that you understand more of Matt's views on money,
Starting point is 00:14:43 if you look back at that conversation in the car, does it take on any new light for you? No, I mean, I'm not surprised. I mean, he's worked hard for where he's at. He's worked hard for where he was before. He met me and he was holding on to that. And I don't blame him for that. I was hurt.
Starting point is 00:15:04 I'm not gonna lie. I was very hurt. But I also was able to understand where it was coming from and I don't think it was, I convinced myself that it wasn't personal. It was his way of protecting himself. And I couldn't blame him for that. Like I'm, I was like, well, I'm not want your money. So fine. Do you all do me? So fine, do you all do me? I remember the deafening silence, I guess, after I said that, what exactly did you say? I said, what's mine is mine, and what's yours is yours. Okay. I don't know, I can't remember what inspired that or, you know, what's,
Starting point is 00:15:51 there's anything that brought it on other than it seemed like risk protection. Did you end up signing the prenup? We never did a prenup. Okay. All right. He never brought it up again. You never brought it up again. Matt, what the hell? Beyond being insulting, that's just bad strategy. You brought up this extremely weird self-protective phrase,
Starting point is 00:16:13 and then you didn't even do the prenup. And notice, by the way, how Ruin remembers every single detail of this conversation 10 years later, even after having two children together. This is a great reminder that a single conversation about money can truly change everything. And sometimes that's for the better, sometimes for the worse. So you make a lot more math than Ruane, is that right? Yes. Okay, so you got married, no pre-nup.
Starting point is 00:16:48 Did you combine your finances when you got married? Ruin's shaking her head, no. All right, so we have a marriage that was started where one person had a disproportionate amount of assets. It sounds like he had some condos, probably a bunch of cash and portfolio stuff. Ruanne, maybe not nearly as much. And Matt, your income has continued, probably grown. Ruanne, I'm sure yours has grown as well, but maybe not as much as Matt's fair enough.
Starting point is 00:17:20 Yeah. Okay. Yeah. So my, my checks from work went into my account, his check from work went to his account, and then we put a percentage based on how much we work, how much our incomes were, and we put it into a pool, and that's what paid all our bills. Okay. You still do that? Yeah. Okay. What's the percentage breakdown? 80, 20, 90, 10. Okay. Something like that. This all 80, 20, 90, 10.
Starting point is 00:17:45 Okay. Something like that. This all sounds very familiar to me. I know this situation. I completely understand some of the dynamics around this. We never struggle. We don't struggle for, we buy what we want. We pay off for credit cards.
Starting point is 00:18:01 I don't have any actual debt, no line of credit. We buy everything outright. We got a card, it's a bot cash, or a flow. We don't take on any leases or finance or anything like that. I think we're doing pretty good, to be honest. It's just, what I tell her in whenever she asked me on my birthday It's time with her. I just want my wife back That's that's the wish life for me back means what back from where?
Starting point is 00:18:34 Back from involved You know just our world or Vols are on our kids day in and day out and That's the irony of this whole thing is it works so hard to provide for your kids and then your life gets taken over by your kids. And we've forgotten about ourselves. And that's what I miss. I miss real quality time on my own with this brand. It was one of my birthdays, Matt, that you took me to Niagara Falls and we are having dinner and it's the first time he has ever said to me, I want my wife back. That blew my mind.
Starting point is 00:19:18 It was like, you know, like a earthquake in my life because I never, it's never said that to me since uh-huh. Since having children. How long ago was that? Uh, four years ago, maybe two, maybe four, yeah, pre-COVID, so four years ago, and I remember sitting there and I, it brought, I was, I was sad. I was, um,
Starting point is 00:19:42 hurt. That he felt that way. I was like, oh my God, I didn't know that you felt like this. I didn't know that that was a priority for you. I didn't know I was a priority for you because we were just existing. When you have two small kids under the age of four, you are literally on survival mode every day. Every day. I call it the thousand days of darkness. And we just came out. Being a mom is a tough job.
Starting point is 00:20:16 And I embody it to the extent where I sacrifice what I want, sacrifice, getting stuff for myself for them, and sacrifice our relationship. What's an example of something you sacrifice for yourself? I just don't buy myself anything. I don't, I wear very the same clothes all the time. I don't shop on a regular basis for myself. I just haven't prioritized buying something new for myself. Could you?
Starting point is 00:20:48 I could, I could. Is it a money issue? No. Okay. Is it because Matt tells you like don't buy a new pair of pants or something? No. Okay, it's just that you are putting your energy
Starting point is 00:21:01 into your kids and your job, not yourself. Correct. I have a, I worked full time up until last year, 17, 16 years and I work in a healthcare and it's very stressful and I take care of people every single day and then I come home and I take care of my family every single day. So I just, I don't find room for myself. Putting yourself last is such a common thing among the couples I speak to, especially the moms.
Starting point is 00:21:32 And it speaks to our cultural expectations, our gender expectations, and also the way that we treat money. Let's talk about how money influences this feeling. Matt and Ruin make a lot of money. If a couple makes as much money as they do, they can pay away a lot of stresses of parenting. Not all of them, but they can use money to buy back their time. If you are watching or listening to this, you should look at Matt and Ruan as a crystal ball, because many of us believe that if we just earn more money, all of our problems
Starting point is 00:22:05 would magically vanish. But they make $650,000 a year. And she still puts herself last. And he still says that he wants his wife back. However, as we've heard on this podcast over and over, just having money does not mean you know how to spend it meaningfully. Part of my job today is to try to peel away the layers of money and resentment to find out what's really going on here. Before we go on, what do you think is happening here?
Starting point is 00:22:38 It's an easily solved problem with money. There's lots of money to go around. I don't know why she doesn't. I feel guilty. Otherwise, I don't know why she doesn't. I feel guilty. Otherwise, I don't know why she says it to me. Do you think that when she says, I don't have clothes, she means something about you? Yeah. Because when I need something, I buy it. I don't ask, I just buy it. I think she's worried about money. I think she's worried about spending. I don't think I tell her all the time that there's, I can do analysis paralysis with money or dollars. It doesn't seem to resonate in the way of the spreadsheet.
Starting point is 00:23:17 What do you show? A quick book. I'm sure it will. I've lost the spreadsheets. Is that where it tries? I've tried to distill it down. No, it doesn't work so how many how many sheets are on your spreadsheet that you show tell me more than I can count
Starting point is 00:23:36 What you doing finance were you in banking PE? Yeah, I was an investment banker for And is so when when you sit down with your model and you're like, you're like, babe, babe, come over here. And then you show her this model, right? Has like the most beautiful colors and like borders. You go, babe, you're never going to understand the complexity of this model. Okay, just forget about it.
Starting point is 00:23:58 It's not humanly possible, but just look at how everything flows correctly. Go ahead, type in two instead of three. Just watch. You know honestly this is like a conversation that's happened. I know because every single banker has this conversation and then Matt what's through Anne's reaction is she's super excited to jump into the model. No she starts to snooze off. Wow that's so shocked. Wow.
Starting point is 00:24:23 Bankers take notice. Nobody gives a sh** about your model. I personally think it's really cool. If anyone is a banker and wants to help me with my models for free, great. However, I don't want to pay. And I don't care about the complexity of it. I certainly know that spouses of bankers really do not care
Starting point is 00:24:40 as I've learned. Can we talk about the numbers now? Yeah. Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha. not care as I've learned. Can we talk about the numbers now? I'm laughing because bankers and PE guys and other finance people always want to talk about the numbers. That's part of the problem. No, we're not going to talk about the numbers yet. What do you both think that the primary problem is here? Describe it to me in a sentence or two. One thing is,
Starting point is 00:25:06 Gary's city mindset, one of the things that I think we've both seen our parents do is deprive themselves of all kinds of things in the goal of trying to give a better life for us. And that's just what we saw on us, what we're trying to emulate. I just don't think it's necessary in this instance. I think it's hurting more than it's helping.
Starting point is 00:25:30 There's a lot of the skills I've learned to get here, saving and modeling and all of these things and boosting my income. This switch hasn't flipped fully from me yet. Where now I can say, okay, let's enjoy this. Let's not, you know, die when we're 90 with 25 million in the account, let's start spending and I don't think that's fully switched for me. Okay, that's honest, I appreciate that. And Rueanne, how about for you, what do you think that the problem is here in one or two
Starting point is 00:26:00 sentences? I think because Matt makes more money than me and I don't make the money, I feel like it doesn't belong to me. You feel like the household money is not your money. I feel like any money he makes is not mine. Well, he did say my money is my money and your money is your money. Correct. I've expressed to him that my money psychology, when it comes to him is because of that conversation.
Starting point is 00:26:28 That one conversation. That one conversation paved the way for how he looks at us as a relationship and what he was like. These are my condos. They don't belong to you. And I was like, well, when we get married, they like theoretically, they do belong to me because we're together, but I don't want, I don't want your condos. Well, did you ever talk to her about that conversation directly? Wait, maybe not.
Starting point is 00:26:58 I don't think we ever did. What were you feeling when you said that to her? What were you feeling when you said that to her? Maybe I felt I was working harder. I was putting more into the relationship, putting more into our future studying, working. I remember I was working well, we were traveling. I was working and studying. I was booking all the vacations. I was paying for a lot of it. I don't know if all of it, but a lot of it. Maybe I felt like I was booking all the vacations. I was paying for a lot of it. I don't know if all of it, but a lot of it. Maybe I felt like I was doing more. And maybe I felt like I felt like
Starting point is 00:27:32 an advantage of it. Ray, what do you think? I mean, I can go in defense. And I mean, I paid for a lot of parts of that vacation, all of that vacation. I thought pretty much equally. I was never living off of him. I took my savings and went, took a leave of absence from work and went with him to Australia. I thought I was doing my part and contributing my part. was I working as hard as him? No, he went into an exchange and was doing classes and he was studying for his CFA and I was not.
Starting point is 00:28:13 And I don't know if that could have contributed to the fact that well, here I am just chilling and I'm not having to study because I've done it. I'm a registered respiratory therapist, I'm done. I have my career. I don't need to study. So I don't know. I've never, he's never expressed that before. I've only just met both of you and clearly both of you, very intelligent, very professionally accomplished. I don't get the sense that Ruin was like outhunting for somebody with money. She seems
Starting point is 00:28:46 quite accomplished on her own. And I'm trying to get into that car. I'm almost trying to be like in the back seat listening in 10 years ago. I mean, it's a reality. Like Ren said, I can say whatever I want, but there's no pre-knocked and we're married in the next month. She decides she made a mistake, she can walk with half or more or worse, you know? That's a reality. As a man, that's how it works. And has she ever given you that indication? I think at that time, I think about in that car, there's a lot of dynamics in our relationship in the family.
Starting point is 00:29:31 And maybe it's afraid as well that maybe I just frictioned walk away that her family would get her ear and she could lose her. How about now, 10 years later, two kids later, has she given any indication of that ever? That was a no. That was a no. It was a horrible mistake. Yeah, it's the worst of both worlds because she still remembers this.
Starting point is 00:30:06 This is over a decade ago, and I don't know how to undo it. Matt, if you could say anything about that conversation, I'm not pressuring you to say anything you don't feel comfortable with, but have you ever thought about what you might do if you were in that car in New Zealand again? I guess I would say, I don't think I have the skills then that I do now, but what I'd say is I want to make a life together. And I want to both committed to that. So I wonder if it's maybe time to turn the page on the fears from a decade ago.
Starting point is 00:30:50 I mean, you have built a life together as deep of an integrated life as you possibly can. Kids living together, property together. You haven't integrated your bank accounts, but okay, fine. You know, aside from a joint account, that's fine. I mean, if she was going to leave, she left or she would. That hasn't come up at all. So instead of worrying about what might be, which was like the mat of, I don't know, a
Starting point is 00:31:20 decade ago, it's like, wow, what if we could actually go on offense together and talk about all the things that could go right? If the two of you approached the world like that, just for the next 60 seconds, how do you think it would change the type of conversations you have about money? I think it would improve it. How so? I think Matt's love language is money. His love language is. That's not a love language.
Starting point is 00:31:51 For him it is. Maybe if his love language is money, maybe you should just spend some time with his Excel models. And that would actually make him really happy. What do you think? It would make you so happy. I mean, I have, and when I say, when I say his love languages, my, he enjoys when I
Starting point is 00:32:08 engage with him on the things that he's passionate about. And that is about finance and about investments. And to be honest, that's why I started listening to your podcasts more so. One, you're very captivating and it's intriguing. The other piece is it makes him happy. And I think I haven't made him happy in a long time. Do you wanna acknowledge what she's been doing? Do you want to acknowledge what she's been doing? Yeah, of course, but I appreciate You taking the time and
Starting point is 00:32:55 listening and giving this podcast. I'm sure this was a big stretch for you It means what to me fill it in Matt It means a lot to me, fill it in Matt. It means a lot to me that you make an effort. It's a way of showing that you care. That was nice. Ruin, you ever hear that before from him? Sometimes, not enough. Not enough. Yeah, I've shown gratitude to something. I'm not good at it, but I know that it means a lot. I find sometimes
Starting point is 00:33:37 it's difficult to get Matt to be soft and sensitive. And I'm soft and gooey and he's hard, tough. I just want someone else to help him to understand how I view things and also help allow me an opportunity to meet him halfway. I want us to meet halfway. I want him to understand me and I need to understand him in order for us to be united. To be honest, my mom, I love her, but my dad did everything. I don't want to paint that picture. And I don't, and Matt knows that that's where this is going, which is also why he's pushy. He doesn't do it in the right ways, but he's his he cares. Let's say he does. He does. No, the the intentions are so pure. Yeah. Execution. That's a powerful moment. Both of them love each other,
Starting point is 00:34:36 but he doesn't express gratitude. And she makes jokes like Matt's love languages money. But those jokes actually obscure that he really wants quality time, which interestingly enough, she's been actively doing. In many ways, both of them have great intentions, but notice that they're dancing around what they are doing and what they truly want, instead of coming right out and saying,
Starting point is 00:35:00 I love you. I know you value this, and I wanna support you as a partner. We'll be right back after this message from our sponsors. Okay, here's the scenario. You go to in and out. You get the meal. The whole thing costs $7. Next month, you go, same meal, same food, same taste, 14 bucks. What the hell? Then the next time three weeks later, it's 20 bucks, then 50 bucks, then $475. You go, what planet am I on right now? That's what it's like to pay a percentage of your portfolio to a financial advisor. That 1% fee that so many of your parents are paying and don't even know
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Starting point is 00:38:27 Give me a specific example. He wants to buy a dream home vacation home. And I want to do that as well. I just struggle with the responsibilities of it, the responsibilities of managing it. And I'm afraid all these investments that he puts his self into, he takes away from us. If there's something that happens in the condo, he has to leave on a weekend to go deal with it. And. It's funny because he's mentioned that he wants more quality time with you
Starting point is 00:39:06 and you now mention that you want more quality time with him. I think we are so focused on our family and our children and we just don't make real quality time for each other. And when he- How many millions of dollars do you need to do that? I don't know. I don't know. Matt, you want more quality time with Iran? What's stopping you?
Starting point is 00:39:32 I don't want to point to finger, but I find there's a lot of excuses about there's a lot of reasons why it can be difficult. But if we both wanted, we should be able to get it done. It's only been nine years, maybe the next 19 years, you guys will correct the code. What else? I mean, okay, I agree. There's definitely reasons,
Starting point is 00:40:03 a couple who's been married a long time, who have jobs, who have kids. Of course, there's reasons not to spend quality time. We get that. But you're both smart. So what else, what's beneath that, that you can't find quality time for the two of you? Silence. For a long time, kids has strained our relationship. I think we just didn't want to spend time with each other.
Starting point is 00:40:37 I think we, I say, and I say this, and I'm not ashamed of it. I didn't like him for a long time. It was hard with our second kid. Our second son, he's challenging. He's a second born. All second borns are challenging. All of American can hate me, but it's the truth. And he put a wedge between us. And I say to people all the time, I said, marriage is hard.
Starting point is 00:41:06 And I only started loving my husband again recently. And I need to show more effort. I need to show more effort for him. And I think that's also what brought me here. This is me showing up. I don't think I want to believe that this is happening. Like, I, I, yeah, I don't think I want to believe it. And Matt has tried to show me through his Excel, through all the numbers.
Starting point is 00:41:38 I think I want to believe that question in the car. I've got a decade ago, but that's not the situation now. I think we both have to make a real effort because there's so much other competing priorities. We both work with different schedules, we're tired. I just feel like it has to be a real priority for both of us. Is it? I don't think it was for a long time. I think it was one sided.
Starting point is 00:42:11 Who sided? His side more than me. And this is my way of showing you that I wanted to. But it's just, it's hard. I just don't think there's time for excuses anymore. You know, it's been years of Darkness It can't go on We always find our way through things
Starting point is 00:42:38 Yeah, it works out. It's fine in the end. Right. It's fine in the end That's that's not the life I want, a fine life. Why'd you work so hard if you make millions of dollars if you want to have a fine life? This isn't the, I will teach you to be fine show. I'm serious. What's the point of all this money, which is going to compound into tens of millions of dollars?
Starting point is 00:43:01 What's the point? If it's truly serious serious and you were two young parents with two kids and you were financially struggling, that would be hard and that would be one thing. And that is a lot of people around the world. In your case, your two young parents who have been incredibly successful in your careers, you have tons of money and you can use that to make life a little, in fact, a lot easier for you. What is the point? Why do I work so hard?
Starting point is 00:43:31 Why should we work so hard? Stop working. I mean, if you can't enjoy the money, you can't enjoy it together. What is the point? I agree. What's the point of it all? What do we get for our hard work? These are the questions you should be asking yourself and your partner.
Starting point is 00:43:49 Literally, put your hand on, go, what do we get? We work hard. Maybe we have a business. We sacrifice X, Y and Z. What do we get? Do we get to travel three times a year? Do we get to not have to do laundry every day? What do we get? After all, what's the point of working and saving and investing? Does it mean a nicer house? Does it mean a nicer car or the ability to donate generously? You have to remember that a rich life cannot simply be chasing more money and then worrying about more money until you die. I want to turn to their numbers, which is gonna give this conversation
Starting point is 00:44:26 a very surprising perspective. Their assets, $5.5 million. Their investments, $2 million, savings, $65,000, debt, $2 million for a total net worth of $5.7 million. That's actually really good. Yeah. So good. Congratulations. All right. Fantastic work. That's very impressive.
Starting point is 00:44:54 Uh, and I like that you two are smiling. Sometimes I get these couples on this podcast. They have like millions of dollars and they look so depressed. Oh, my debt ratios just a little too high. I go, shut up. Ah. So I like that you two are smiling about it. Let's keep going along the number, shall we?
Starting point is 00:45:15 On an annual basis, you make $649,000. Does that sound about right? Yes. How come Matt answered that not Ruanne? Ruanne? I mean, do we? So tell me the disconnect for you is what? Because Matt, I want you to listen closely here.
Starting point is 00:45:37 That's combined, but most of it's him. Okay, I agree. Your monthly income that I see here is $5,500 a month, correct? That's correct. What do you see in those numbers? What does it mean to you? And not worth as much.
Starting point is 00:45:55 Do you believe that? Do I personally believe that in my heart? No, I know I'm worth a lot. I do a lot. I'm a huge part of this. But money is more quantifiable. Then all the unpaid things that is done. What would be some of those unpaid things that you do in the family? Being a mom, coordinating the groceries, making sure the student, the house, making
Starting point is 00:46:22 sure there's clothes, making sure there's clean clothes, making sure the kids get to all their activities on time, make sure that kids' activities are paid for or not as they paid for, but like coordinated, make sure the the calendar is all up to date, make sure he knows what my schedule is, I know what his schedule is, what the kid's schedule is, so that when he looks in the calendar, he knows exactly what's happening, make sure our caregiver's schedule sounds like a lot and I don't I bet we didn't even cover a third of what's happening. Make sure our caregiver is scheduled. Sounds like a lot. And I don't know. I bet we didn't even cover a third of what you do.
Starting point is 00:46:49 You look at these numbers and you say, ah, I don't feel that I'm contributing as much. There's unpaid labor. It's unquantifiable. Quantifiable stuff seems to be worth more. Just by virtue of putting it on a spreadsheet, that's actually really common. But ultimately, we need all of us to make it work, right?
Starting point is 00:47:08 I think so. Different way to look at it. We're gonna keep talking about these numbers because I want to understand what's going on. The root column D. It's all the investment property stuff. Amazing. God, this is so good. Matt, you want to pick up a part-time job working on some CSP stuff for me? I'd be happy to. He's very good. I know.
Starting point is 00:47:30 Every banker's dream. Dream is that someone goes, hey, quick question. Can you help me with my model? And they're like, what did you say? God, it's so beautiful. Everything flows. This is so good. 63%, I don't really have any comments, whatever.
Starting point is 00:47:48 50% to 60%, fine. Let's move on. Investments are at 18%. It's pretty good. And we're not even counting the investment properties, right? So what do you think that number is off the top of your head, Matt? 18% right now of investments. If we were to factor in all the money going towards those other things.
Starting point is 00:48:07 It'd be another 5% to 10%. Yeah. So like 30% of net. Not gross net. Okay, fine. Your savings are at zero. Why is that? Well, that's all in the investments, I guess.
Starting point is 00:48:25 Okay, let me cut in here. When it comes to money, the usual rules break for the very poor and the very wealthy. For example, the usual advice is to aim for your total housing cost to be less than 28% of your gross income. But let me give you an example where this makes no sense. If you make $30,000 a year, it's going to be nearly impossible to hit that number. Similarly, if you make $200 million per year, it would be ridiculous to follow that advice because you'd be spending tens of millions of dollars
Starting point is 00:48:56 every single year on housing. The theory to understand is something I call toothpaste and bread. Essentially, everyone buys the same toothpaste and bread. Essentially everyone buys the same toothpaste and bread. Sure, you might get a little bit more expensive toothpaste, but we're talking about $3 or $5 difference. And what that means is that if you're making hundreds of thousands of dollars a year, a very high salary, you should have a lot more in savings and investments compared to a median income because you're spending the same amount as everyone else on your toothpaste and your milk and your ordinary day-to-day expenses.
Starting point is 00:49:32 But I see that Matt and Ruan have a zero savings rate. That's a big red flag, especially because they have such a high household income. After listening to your book, I was like, oh my god, I said to Matt last night, I was like, oh my god, like I could have been, I could be rich. If I had started saving. Hold on, everybody listen. Okay, ruin everybody. I could be rich. What's that now? We're through in, read that number off to me real quick. 5.6. 5.6 what? Million. 5.6 million at 38 years old. I could be rich if I had started. Anybody, anybody know? I was, I'm back at my single thoughts. This is, this is where the single, we're going, we're erasing that, right? But that, that reaction was my single reaction.
Starting point is 00:50:25 But that's so interesting, isn't it? The idea that you go back to, I am not contributing, I don't have enough. I could be rich had I started earlier. I could have brought more to the table if I started early. Okay, I agree with that. Sure, you could have brought more to the table if I started early. Okay, I agree with that. Sure, you could have brought more financially to the table.
Starting point is 00:50:47 Okay, you were focused on other things. You do quite well in terms of your job and all the contributions that are not showing up on this spreadsheet. Can I just say something like, at a certain point, how much do you both need to bring in in order for you to win the game? I think I just need to accept it. I can't change your feelings, you know that. But what I can do is to help you see that maybe you've been ignoring the entire game that's sitting over here and you are already winning it, you just don't realize that it exists.
Starting point is 00:51:27 The game of being a great partner, being a great mother, investing your own money and maybe even starting to create a vision together on how you can start to use your money today instead of just blindly accumulating it? What do you think? Oh, I think that's exactly what I want. Okay, let's keep looking at the numbers. So you're saving nothing, which is insane. And then you're guilt-free spending.
Starting point is 00:51:56 Oh my God. How are you, the only people on this podcast who are under their guilt-free spending and you have five and a half million dollars. And then I have people on here who make like $75,000 and they're truck costs more than their annual income. Can you explain that to me? That's math. It's math.
Starting point is 00:52:14 He keeps us, he keeps us, he tells the line. Do you realize how absurd it is to be spending as little as you do on guilt-free spending. And do you also realize that that is why the two of you don't have quality time together? Yeah. Matt, do you get that? Yeah, 100%. How come you're not spending like $6,000,, eight thousand dollars a month on guilt-free spending? I don't know. Do you even know what you would do with that? No, no.
Starting point is 00:52:53 Can I make a few suggestions? I want you to listen very closely the next part of this conversation where I talk about spending money to buy back their time. Remember what I said earlier, most people love the idea of buying back their time more than they actually love doing. And this is exactly what you're gonna hear from Ruin. We'll be right back. Now back to the show. Let me remind you that we have a multi-millionaire couple here who both want to spend more time together.
Starting point is 00:53:26 Try to spot the psychology of why they are under-spending on guilt-free spending to buy back their time. So you mentioned quality time. Who does the laundry? Okay. Why do you do it? That's how we broke up. The divvy of the responsibilities, I guess. Do you enjoy it? I don't enjoy broke up, that divvied up the responsibilities, I guess. You enjoy it?
Starting point is 00:53:47 I don't enjoy it. It's a task that has to get done. All right. Plan, organize, who's going where, when, et cetera. Enjoy it? No, but I do it. You make $650,000 a year. Why are you doing laundry?
Starting point is 00:54:06 There's a famous phrase in self-development, the more money I made, the less I could afford to do certain things. And this gentleman was saying that as he started to earn more money, he couldn't mo his lawn anymore. Because his time was so limited, he would rather spend it with his son. And I wonder what it would look like and feel like to you if you were to contemplate maybe having somebody else do the laundry. So our caregiver does the kids
Starting point is 00:54:37 laundry. So we share it. So I do it but between and I, we share it. If someone was to fully take it over, I mean, if I fully gave it to her, that would be good, but we're also a bit OCD and like how things are done and folded and you know, so sometimes it's better left better to do it yourself. Then let someone else do it. I know, I know. better to do it yourself than let someone else do it. I know, I know. For everyone just listening and not watching, I'm just shaking my head. This is so classic, the inability to give up control for something as trivial as laundry.
Starting point is 00:55:16 I know. I explain it to whoever this person is, whether I'm getting it sent out or this person is in the house, and I make it very clear, like these ones don't get dried, these ones get hand washed, whatever. And of course, I pay. I happily pay for the additional service.
Starting point is 00:55:34 What is your reaction? If it was done exactly like that, that'd be lovely. Tell me what else the two of you could hire out to use your money and buy back your time. I mean, grocery. It would save me a lot of time. We can spend more time with each other, grocery shopping. But I do think, like, at the same time, I enjoy going grocery shopping. It's my time to myself.
Starting point is 00:56:02 And there's some value in knowing what I'm feeding my time to myself and yeah there's some value and no one what I'm feeding my family um hold on who says that if you pay someone that you're not gonna know what you feed your family no I know I just there's there's not there's there's this is my it's your recreation time I don't mind it what else again you're throwing me the ideas I'm not telling you so you tell me what else could you use money to buy a back quality timer? Baby sitters. You get actually higher baby sitter,
Starting point is 00:56:30 because what we do is rely on family to take the kids. And the family's been great. They go, we kind of rotate between houses, who takes the kids. We kind of like dangle them over their heads. I just want to put this number back up on screen. As you said, we could hire a babysitter. What's that number again?
Starting point is 00:56:46 Matt, read that off to me again. I'm totally not working. Stop. 5.7. It's going up as we speak. 5.7 million dollars. And we're sitting here debating hiring a babies. I would have three babysitters.
Starting point is 00:57:01 And they would be redundant. It's very hard for me to allow strangers to watch my children. That's the truth. Fine. I appreciate the truth. So you don't want to do babysitter. Fine. I totally respect that. What else? Maybe less, you know, less kids activities.
Starting point is 00:57:18 Maybe. That's a tough one for us, but could do less? Okay. Can I just make an observation? And, you know, you two spend under the recommended guidelines for guilt-free spending, which is hilarious already just because your income is so high and your network is so high at such a young age. By the way, the funniest thing is that you both want more quality time. So it's almost like the puzzle pieces are literally built to fit together and when I've asked you, how would you use your considerable income and wealth to buy back some of your time and have some quality time with each other and with the family, did you notice what happened?
Starting point is 00:58:05 Silent. Yeah, and we went through a few examples and what happened with each of those examples? It gave a reason why it couldn't work. Yeah, groceries, laundry, babysitters, etc. Now, I'm not here to tell you how to spend your money. Not my money, but if you came to me and you said I want more of a connection, I want to feel more aligned, I want to meet halfway. The easiest part of that is to spend money to buy back your time so that you two can actually have a setting and piece to be able to talk about the big important things.
Starting point is 00:58:50 But if we can't even get there, if we can't even get you out on a weekly date, well the rest of it's going to be really hard. What is the right way to do that? That doesn't change our identity. That doesn't, you know, put our kids in danger and all these other, you know, reasons or excuses. Help us find that answer. What is the way to get that time together? How much time do you want? I said it was happy with one weekend a month away. All right, and what about even like how about like a date night? Just the two because once a month is great, but that's not enough. You two are really busy
Starting point is 00:59:44 Once a week or a week week, twice a month, I would even say because we've tried that, we have a date night. I think schedule for next month, but it's, I'm now part time, so I schedule my life around the children's schedule. So we just have to carve, sit down together and carve out the time. Well, why don't we do it right now? I'm here. Go ahead. Nothing like the pressure of radio silence and millions of people listening to expedite this. Go ahead.
Starting point is 01:00:17 Well, you're on to do every two weeks? Every week? I think it'd be easier to start with over two weeks. And then as we can ease into every week depending on availability, we would have to potentially find another type of, another person to babysit just because I don't know how available our caregivers. So right now our next date night is October 18. That's a month away. Yes, yes. There's a few in the box. But what you want, do you want it every two weeks?
Starting point is 01:01:09 I think it's a week. I think every two weeks is a good start. Okay. Good to hear what's that? Well, it's the date. So we have October 4th. Well, that's yeah, that's someone's birthday. Um, Saturday to 7. 7? Yeah, that looks free. That's Easter weekend. I don't think we have anything at least not right now.
Starting point is 01:01:45 I figured I know we're seeing your mom on Sunday. The question is Monday if we're gonna see my family for Thanksgiving, but Saturday after, and there's no swimming, so we can figure out where to send the boys. Okay. I can put that in. Can I just pause real quick?
Starting point is 01:02:03 So I like this. I hear like a lot of circling around and like, well, there's this and that and like a lot of talking out loud. And I don't mind it. This is the first time you're doing this. It's helpful for me to hear. Can I encourage you gently that let's just recenter. Do we both want to have time for each other once every two weeks?
Starting point is 01:02:26 Yes or no? Yes. All right, Saturday night favorite is what time? 5 p.m. 5 p.m. done. That was pretty interesting to hear. They both claim they want to spend more quality time together. But when they get into the details of scheduling things,
Starting point is 01:02:47 suddenly they are stuck. They can't seem to cancel any obligations that they've already got. And that's why I said, hey, can we recenter for a second? Can we zoom up to our Norstar? Do you want to spend more time together? Yes. This is exactly why I encourage you to be very careful about what you add to your fixed cost, like your housing, your car, your debt payoff, all that. Because once it's there, whether it's your fixed cost or what's on your calendar, it is really hard to take it off. And your rich life can somehow turn into a nightmare when you open your eyes and you look at your calendar and it's filled with obligations you made a year ago. You open your eyes and you look at your calendar and it's filled with obligations you made a year ago. You open your eyes, you look at your conscious spending plan, it's filled with expenses.
Starting point is 01:03:31 You don't even remember why you're driving this car or why you bought this house or why you spending all this money on these groceries. Critically, you need to be careful of elevating something to fix Costco's. Once it's there, it is really hard to get rid of. I'm sure you and I are both noticing that there's a lot of spinning happening here. Obviously, there's something going on much deeper than the scheduling itself. What I want to do now is to dive into why. Why is it that they can't commit to this when they claim they both want time together?
Starting point is 01:04:03 And they're obviously both very intelligent. Listen, I don't think I want to believe that we've done so well. Did you ever go into couples therapy? No, we've talked about it though. Would you be open to the idea of it? Yeah, I've researched and got names. I just, you have, we just haven't made the time to sit down and pick a therapist together to move forward with it. Because I go to therapy and I reached out to my therapist and asked for some recommendations. Oh, great. And she gave me some
Starting point is 01:04:39 recommendations. I just happened. We just haven't had the time to sit down and made the time to sit down and look at the two portfolios and decide on who we'd want to go with. First of all, that's awesome. I would totally recommend it and I think that setting that up on a weekly basis for the two of you would force you to at least have one hour with each other at a bare minimum. Okay. Definitely highly recommended. Can I make another suggestion of what people with a lot of money do? Please. I think what I hear from you is that you've accumulated all this money, but you're still playing very small. Would that be fair to say? I mean, and it's not just the groceries and the laundry and all that stuff, it's that people with this kind of wealth
Starting point is 01:05:36 who have learned the skill of spending it meaningfully, they spend it in a way that solves a lot of problems. You can't solve every problem with money, but you can solve a lot of logistical ones So if you were deciding on two therapists, you know what I would do and I had that kind of money I would just be like okay, we're gonna set up appointments with both of them Who cares and we'll talk to both of them and then we'll decide which one we like after it. Let's just get it on the calendar and get it done Right, it's okay to waste a little bit of money. What are we talking about? A hundred bucks, 200 bucks, 300 bucks, when you have a nine out of 10 fire burning and the north star of the
Starting point is 01:06:16 two of you being connected is so powerful. And I will say you make time to talk to me, which I totally appreciate. So I know you can make time for a therapist who can guide you for a long period of time. What do you think? I agree. You know where the hesitation comes in when we have, there's other compound factors that end up on that day that make me hum and ha. I try to look for days that are completely clear and then that would be an easier day for us to execute. Do you think that that hamming and haing is a pattern of yours? Yes. Yeah. So whether it is something as simple as a date night or something as big as a condo that pencils out, the hamming and hawing.
Starting point is 01:07:06 It's actually, it would even be better if you're just like, no, I don't wanna do that that night. Matt, I see a reaction. Yes, yes, say no. A fast note is better than a hymenohana, maybe. Yeah. So perhaps this is the kind of stuff that comes out when you talk in therapy and when you talk over dinner and you just start to you actually start to be able to have this space to have
Starting point is 01:07:29 constructive conversations that are not jabs. You know you can even ask questions like you know what's one thing you wish that I wouldn't do anymore. That he wouldn't leave his side of the bathroom counter so cluttered. Perfect. Matt, what do you want to say to that? It's hilarious. But I can change that. This is beautiful. Like this. This is what you two need time to do. Blah, yeah. All right, I'm not a couple of therapists. And a couple of therapists can help you really well. But what I can tell you is looking at the numbers,
Starting point is 01:08:10 you've done very well, both of you. And together, you are a very powerful unit. None of this happens by accident, none of it. So each of you has done an incredible job in contributing to where you are financially and as a family, but what got you here is not going to get you to the next step. I'm a bit puzzled by my conversation with Matt and Ruin. On one hand, they're both incredibly intelligent, very successful, and they've raised a family. On the other hand, with all this money, even though
Starting point is 01:08:48 they claim they want to spend more time together, they can't seem to bring themselves to do it. Even things like making an appointment with a therapist seemed really hard for them. Oftentimes when I encounter people who have reason after reason to not do something, it often comes down to the fact that they don't really want to. They think they want to, but when we get into the logistics of it, they don't really want to. But I hold out hope, because Maduro and both came, they both had a very candid conversation with me. Hopefully I gave them a few tools where they could build some quality time, get some additional help, hopefully from a therapist. Let's see what their follow-ups reveal.
Starting point is 01:09:29 I learned that Matt and I do a really great job at dancing around topics and not actually making concrete decisions. I learned that I am wealthy and I have contributed and that was something that I never really thought I did and I should be very proud of myself. What surprised me the most here in Matt say that he's afraid of losing me because that's something that has never been told to me or vocalize before. What changes do I want to make? Moving forward. I think what I want to do is I want to, or I need to do, is start putting money into savings. I need to do, we need to do a better job at that.
Starting point is 01:10:23 I want to definitely prioritize more quality time with Matt and consistently set date nights so that we can have that time together. I need to start working on changing my mindset on my money to a mindset of our money. I also need to just spend more money on myself. I was very surprised from our conversation that discussion, though, I have had 12 years ago, very much laid the framework for a lot of our financial behaviors and still being seen today in the way in our psychology. I've learned a lot, I learned about communication being a big, big requirement
Starting point is 01:11:02 for me to work on to make my wife more part of things. I learned that we can and should spend more on guiltry spending. The changes we made are many. We've severed out the investment properties. We know exactly how much cash flows are required to service those, and we're looking to sell one unit. We have reduced our debt servicing. I have one line of credit for 95K,uced it from 5 to 3000 per month. And that frees up more cash for good for spending. We have set five savings goals. We've put in some quality time sacred times as a part of our rich life and to our calendar every two weeks. We're gonna have a date night and we're planning twice a year
Starting point is 01:11:44 Stakecations. We just had one this weekend for my birthday. We're still looking at vacation home or some of them possibilities. We're still looking at potential couple of therapy options. So stay tuned, some more updates for you. I'm pleased to hear the small steps that both of them have taken and more importantly, the realizations that they've had about their relationship, specifically around money. There's no point in accumulating millions and millions of dollars just sitting around in real estate, bank accounts, or investment accounts without a purpose. The point of money is not to accumulate it and hoard it and look at it in a spreadsheet.
Starting point is 01:12:23 The point of money is to use it to live a rich life. Of course you got to save it. Of course you got to invest it. And you can use money to bring your relationship closer together. Thank you Matt and Ruan for speaking to me. And thank you everybody for watching and listening to I Will Teach You to Be Rich.
Starting point is 01:12:43 One favor to ask, if you like my podcast, please go to Apple Podcasts and leave a written review, it really helps us so go over to Apple Podcasts and leave that written review for the I Will Teach You to Be Rich podcast. Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You to Be Rich. I'm Rameete Sayte. Please follow the show on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. If you haven't read, I will teach you to be rich. My book, pick up a copy. You can get it at any bookstore or any library,
Starting point is 01:13:17 and it will show you the specific tactics for how to build the I Will Teach You To Be Rich system into your personal finances. for how to build the I will teach you to be rich system into your personal finances.

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