I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 146. “I'm jealous when I see friends' vacations on Instagram”
Episode Date: March 5, 2024Erik is 44 and Andrea is 43. They’re trying to determine what to do with a bump in income. Andrea wants to save for college tuition, because that’s what her parents did. Erik’s did not, so he’...d rather use it elsewhere. Can they overcome their inherited patterns and come together on a shared vision? This episode is brought to you by: Rocket Money | Stop throwing your money away. Cancel unwanted subscriptions – and manage your expenses the easy way – by going to https://rocketmoney.com/ramit. Trade | Right now, Trade is offering our audience a free bag of coffee with any subscription at https://drinktrade.com/ramit. Eight Sleep | For a better, smarter sleep, go to https://eightsleep.com/ramit for $200 and free shipping. Netsuite | Get visibility to everything in your business in one place. Sign up and defer payments, with no interest, for six months at https://iwt.com/netsuite. ZocDoc | Download the ZocDoc app for FREE at https://zocdoc.com/ramit then find and book a top-rated doctor today. Connect with Ramit • Get the Podcast Newsletter and exclusive Q&A about the show • Get Money Coaching with Ramit • Download the Conscious Spending Plan • Listen to my book—now on Audible • Get my New York Times best-selling book • Get my no-numbers journal • Other episodes • Instagram • Twitter • YouTube • Submit a question for the newsletter iwt.com/askramit If you and your partner have a money issue and you want my help, I occasionally select a couple to work with, free of charge. Apply for my help here. Produced by Crate Media.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you're in New York City or the Tri-State area, listen up.
This year, I'm looking to coach couples live in person on this podcast.
So if you and your partner want to be personally coached on money and relationships, this is your chance.
Now, whether you can't get on the same page with your spending, maybe one of you has loads of debt,
maybe you're about to go through a huge life change, like a baby promotion, career change,
and you're just stuck on how to handle the financial side of it.
And you live in the tri-state area.
I want to hear from you.
Please apply at IWT dot com slash apply.
We never get around to the dreaming vision casting as much.
We just kind of talk about the hard stuff.
I think we used to talk about the good stuff.
Even when we had way, way more debt than we do now.
When I think about money,
I am afraid of not having enough.
I feel like it's never going to be enough.
I don't know that there will be a time when I say,
oh, I feel secure.
What do you say to your husband about money?
What are the most common phrases you say to him?
We can't afford it.
We need to make more money.
Maybe you need to make more money, Esther.
And what do you say to yourself?
I say to myself,
if you stop being hyper-vigilant about money,
it's all going to go to ****.
There's something wrong with you.
Meet Eric and Andrea.
Eric's 44, Andrea's 43.
And I really love this episode because you're going to see how many of our worries and fears
about money are unexamined.
I mean how many of us worry if we'll have enough?
Or if our kids will have enough to pay for college?
Those worries are real.
But have you ever tried to actually answer the question?
For most of my guests, they will spend decades worrying about money, but they haven't even
spent a few minutes trying to find out when their debt will be paid off, or if they can
afford to retire.
Eric and Andrea are going to walk us through a beautiful example of how you can go your their debt will be paid off, or if they can afford to retire.
Eric and Andrea are going to walk us through a beautiful example of how you can go your
whole lives worrying about money.
But I think there's a different way.
Different way you can choose that lets you feel confident about money by becoming competent.
Let's get started with Andrea and Eric.
We were sitting in our TV room. I think the kids had just went up for bed. So Andrea had a raise going into the new year. And one of the things that's come up is putting money away. We have three
kids. One of our kids is in eighth grade. And one of Andrea's things is she wants to start putting money
away for the kids college.
And we're not on the same page about that at all.
And it was a reoccurring conversation,
but it really came up again kind of heavy.
I think at the time we were sitting on separate couches.
We have two couches that kind of make a little corner in our room. And I don't know, I just kind
of felt the distance because we're so different when it comes to that stuff.
Let's talk about it. So what was the number of the raise? Andrea, in dollar values, how
much of a raise did you get?
It's about $400 a month. $400 a month. Okay. All right. Cool. Congratulations.
Thanks. And so did you bring up the topic of the raise and where you wanted to put the
money? I did. I said, I want to take my raise and
I want to funnel it into a college savings fund. I said, I don't want to put it in our
savings account with our other money. I want it to go into a college savings fund. I said, I don't want to put it in our savings account
with our other money.
I want it to go into a different account
that's dedicated to saving for college.
So that's how you started the conversation, Andrea?
Like no preamble?
No.
What do you think, babe?
I love you.
No.
Okay.
Because I was already mad
because we had already talked about this and Eric had said,
they can figure it out.
Nobody paid for my college and I was fine.
And I said, we're still paying off your college loans still to this day.
We're in our mid forties.
We still have 30 grand paying off in your college debt.
My parents paid for my whole college.
Eric's mom couldn't.
No shame on her. She was a good person,
but she couldn't help him. And Eric's like, well, they're going to be fine. They're going
to figure it out.
All right. So this has been a heated topic already. So you came in, guns blazing. I'm
getting this money and I want to put it away for our eighth grade son. Right?
Yeah.
All right. And what do you remember his reaction?
I think he immediately kind of turned old
in conversations with Eric.
I typically feel very unsafe because he
he shows little to no
concern about the future.
And he's kind of always been like that.
So he doesn't think a lot about tomorrow.
He just thinks about like what feels good right now.
Okay. And just a question for you. Is it to worry about the future or is it to properly
plan for the future?
They've kind of been synonymous for me for a long time.
Do you think that they are inherently synonymous?
No. But that results in me feeling really anxious and upset every time we talk about money
Hence starting the conversation fairly aggressive
Yeah
Yep, do you recognize that that was a bit of an aggressive way to start the money conversation?
Yes, but I didn't feel bad about it because I already was feeling so
Angry, I just felt like I needed to just say
Hey throw down a gauntlet like this is what we're gonna do very righteous
This is how it's gonna be very self-righteous and in fact no matter what he says
That's actually gonna fuel my anger and make me even more angry
Yes, if he disagrees with me, I will get even more angry. Okay, so in your mind, saving for your son's college fund
is A, the right answer.
Yes.
Okay, that's based on the math?
I think it's based on, that's what my parents did for me.
I didn't ever have to worry about,
where's the money gonna come from? They just paid for it because they had saved over the years.
I don't agree with a lot of my parents' decisions.
So across the board, I don't try to emulate them.
But in this situation, when I think about my child's future, I would rather
tell him, don't go to college, go to trade school, because I
don't want him to walk away with a hundred grand of debt.
Okay. So your decision, would you care to restate your answer? How do you know that
you are right about taking your money and putting it away?
It seems to be the most responsible thing to do for my child so he won't have to worry about his
future and he won't be saddled with a lot of debt.
Okay.
All right.
Eric, what do you remember happened next in that conversation?
In the most recent conversation, I just kind of felt resigned.
She came in a little hot, which isn't her typical posture on paper, we put down $350 a month.
And I'm like, well, that's not a huge amount. I don't want to argue about it. I'm kind of,
I'm over that argument. It's not, doesn't feel like we're going to get anywhere different
on. So I just kind of felt resigned.
And is there any element of she got the raise, you know, she obviously is working hard,
being recognized at work.
Therefore, she should be able to make the decision or are your finances decided jointly?
There was a little of that in this instance, but for the most part, we have always and
do consider our incomes one.
Okay.
Which, what she makes, what I make, we're in it together.
It's...
All right.
So how did you end up resolving this?
We have a line item in the Conscious Spending Plan for the Kids College Fund.
Yeah.
It's true.
That's what we landed on.
Yeah.
But we, I think we still
We just know that we're so different fundamentally when it comes to money that
We don't hope for perfect harmony. It's just
It's not gonna happen. I
Asked Andrea, how do you know if it's the right decision to save for your son's college?
And she basically said because that's what my parents did. This is
the life of most Americans. What I am begging for you to do is to actually learn how to
make these decisions the right way, to take even 15 minutes and run a few numbers to read
a single book on personal finance, like I will teach you to be rich and I'm begging you to take this seriously.
This is your rich life. What could be more serious? Making impulsive decisions about
multi-hundred thousand dollar decisions is how you end up with no income, no investments,
living solely off social security. The exact thing that my guests often worry about.
What they don't realize is they have the power to craft their own future.
And you can't do that just blindly following what your parents did.
We'll be right back.
You ever feel like you're making money, but you don't know where it all goes?
Well, for a lot of people, the answer is subscriptions.
Think about it between streaming services, fitness apps, delivery services, parenting apps,
it's endless. And a lot of times we signed up for something months or even years ago,
and we don't remember. Now you could look them up all yourself and cancel them one by one,
or you can just try Rocket Money to help you find out what subscriptions you're actually spending
money on, and then they will cancel the ones you don't want anymore. Rocket Money is a personal finance app that finds
and cancels your unwanted subscriptions, monitors your spending, and helps lower
your bills. I can see all my subscriptions in one place and if I see
something I don't want I can cancel it with a tap. I don't have to get on my
phone with customer service. They'll even try to get a refund for the last couple
months of wasted money and negotiate to lower your bills for you by up to 20%.
All you have to do is take a picture of your bill and Rocket Money takes care of the rest.
Rocket Money has over 5 million users and has helped save its members an average of $720
per year with over $500 million in canceled subscriptions.
Stop wasting money on things you don't use.
Cancel your unwanted subscriptions by going to rocketmoney.com.
That's rocketmoney.com.
Rocketmoney.com.
Trade Coffee is here to help you make better coffee at home.
Trade brings roasted to order coffee for more than 55 of the nation's top roasters right
to your doorstep.
Stay tuned for a special offer for I will teach you to be rich listeners in just a moment.
You know, a rich life does not always have to be incredibly expensive.
One of my indulgences is having two French presses.
That way, when one is dirty, I can put in the dishwasher and I have another one ready
to go the next morning. Speaking of that, also having great coffee can be a nice indulgence every single morning.
And when you subscribe to our sponsor, Trade, you'll discover new favorite coffees
while supporting small businesses across the country. The best part is you can personalize everything.
They send coffee that's matched to your taste preferences and you choose how often you get
it delivered.
One of my favorite coffees that I have delivered is Verve Coffee.
I like their variety.
I just like their beans, especially the ones from South America.
Jumpstart your daily coffee routine by signing up for a trade subscription.
Right now, trade is offering up to $15 off select plans and you get your first bag of
coffee free.
Just visit www.drinktrade.com.
That's www.drinktrade.com.
For a free bag and up to $15 off select subscription plans www.drinktrade.com.
Okay, now back to Andrea and Eric.
What was the worst dish your parents ever cooked for you?
Okay, so my mom made this.
It was a scalloped potato casserole
with cut up hot dogs and green beans in it.
This is disgusting.
I grew up in the Midwest.
I knew it!
I knew it.
I grew up in the Midwest.
When you said the word casserole, green beans,
and then you threw in hot dogs,
I'm like, this is Midwest as it comes.
Yes.
Now, do you make the same thing for your kids?
No.
Why not?
Never.
I never even thought about it.
Isn't it a right to do what your parents did for you?
I see where you're going with this.
I just had to show Andrea how following
what your parents did with money
doesn't automatically make it the right decision.
And the best way to illustrate that
was with a disgusting casserole meal
with green beans and hot dogs.
Please, everybody listening to this
and watching this on YouTube,
do not write me to tell me how it's actually good.
And you just have to use the right spices like your mom did.
Black pepper is not a real spice, okay?
Send your emails, your angry, furious emails
to culinaryfeedback.remethwillneverread
at iwillteachyoutoberich.com.
How long have you been married for?
Almost 16 years.
Oh, congratulations.
Thank you.
Thank you.
What's your wisdom for couples who want to have a long marriage?
We've actually talked about this,
like have fun together.
Yeah, I think in the past, you know, we had regular date nights.
We would, you know, try to get out and do things together.
It's often been work trips for Andrea or for me, and we've kind of like tagged on
some us time and we can leave the kids behind.
I have really fun memories of those trips, you know,
when we get away and spend some time together,
even if there's work like mixed in.
What was the last time you took one of those trips?
Together.
Probably about a year and a half.
Okay.
Or more, maybe two years.
We were trying to re-institute the state on Thursday night.
We just got back from the date and Eric was like, I did not have fun.
And I was like, you didn't have fun on our date?
He's like, no, we just talked about heavy things the whole time.
We just talked about money the whole time.
I want to have fun with you.
And I said, well, our lives don't have any fun in them, babe.
Like we don't have fun.
And so then we kind of just looked at each other
like what is happening?
Like why don't we have any space for fun in our lives?
Which I think a lot of that for me
is my fears about money prevent me from the freedom
of, hey, let's take a trip or hey, let's go out
for this really nice dinner. I in the back of my mind
I'm always like oh crap like we're gonna pay for this later
Can you give me the full sentence on that?
Like when I think about money, I am afraid of
Finish the sentence for me
When I think about money, I am afraid of not having enough
What is enough? I When I think about money, I am afraid of not having enough.
What is enough?
I don't know.
I feel like it's never going to be enough, which is what tells me that I have, the problem
is me.
I have the scarcity mindset of I'm always going to need more.
I don't know that there will be a time when I say, oh, I feel secure.
What do you say to your husband about money?
What are the most common phrases you say to him?
We can't afford it.
Okay, what else?
We need to make more money.
Maybe you need to make more money.
Is that true? Andrea?
Yes.
I have a lot of feelings about money,
but they're not based on anything like
empirical evidence. It's just kind of all,
well, that's not enough
and we need to have more.
And what do you say
to yourself?
If you stop being hyper-v hyper vigilant about money, it's all going to go to
What else?
And there's something wrong with you.
Like what?
There's something wrong with you that you're in your bid forties
and you don't have the
kind of financial security that your friends have.
You aren't taking the trips that your friends take.
You don't have the kind of cars that your friends have and you worry about money constantly.
What kind of cars do they have, the one that sticks in your brain?
I'm not even a car person, but we have these like dumpy cars.
So my friend just got a brand new, but she just got a brand new Toyota Sienna, which
is the car that I drive, but it is the new model and it is super nice.
It's loaded.
Okay.
How old is your model?
It's a 2011.
Okay.
So like 13 years old and theirs isn't you.
And the trips, can you remember,
are you sitting on your couch
and you see a friend on vacation, on Instagram?
Is that how you experience that?
Yes, a lot of the time.
Or my best friend, she,
they just have more money to spend,
and they go on a ton of trips.
And I've even told her, I said,
I feel jealous of the fact that you get to go on these trips.
You said that.
How did she respond?
I think I kind of apologized,
because I could tell that my jealousy was leaking out.
And I think I had made a comment to her like, I've never met anybody who takes as many trips
as you.
And I caught myself and I said, that's just straight up envy.
So I apologized to her about that.
Well, you ever bring up trips at home?
Yeah, we talk about it a lot.
What do you say?
Most recently I said, I want to go on an Alaskan cruise.
And I said, but when I looked up how much Alaskan cruises
cost for a family of five, I was like,
probably not going to happen.
Yeah.
Did you actually say probably not going to happen out loud?
I might have said it through my facial expression.
I don't think I actually said it out loud.
But I did put it down when I was writing out my rich life.
I wrote Alaskan Cruise.
Okay.
So I'm kind of holding onto it still.
It's interesting, you said, whether out loud
or to yourself, you said, probably not going to happen.
Do you believe that?
That it's probably not going to happen? Yes. Because?
I think the past predicts the future. Meaning you haven't been able to save or accumulate
enough money, so it's unlikely you will change in the future. That's right.
Have you been diligent about your finances in the past?
I mean, here's what you wrote in your application.
This was like in the first two lines.
We have spurts of trying to get on the same page,
get on a budget and have a conscious spending plan,
but then we get tired or busy or just forget about it.
Then a month later, we're back to the usual.
Exactly. Exactly.
Yep.
I've always been super meticulous
about tracking the money I have.
And so when we got married,
I was already meticulously tracking the money I had.
It rolled over into me tracking the money we had.
And then often when it wasn't much,
Andrea would just get anxious about it.
So she would kind of step back and just be like,
yeah, you do that.
Because then, you know,
it would alleviate her anxiety for a short period.
Okay, are you still meticulous about tracking?
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
And does it work?
Uh...
Uh, not, it works okay. When I was single, I was very diligent. I saved a lot. And then when Eric and I got
married, we kind of got into a ton of debt and really struggled to pay that off.
We started having kids right away, not purposefully,
but we'd only been married a year when we had our first kid.
So we never got on our feet financially.
Eric ended up losing his job right after we got married.
So it's just been super rough.
Our whole marriage has been rough.
And so it's hard for me to have an imagination
for what life looks like when money is not an issue.
What I hear is Andrea being fearful of money,
worried about money, and even envious about money.
And what I also notice is these are all feelings,
but she and Eric haven't really taken effective action
to change their situation.
Remember what I say, people with problems
love to talk about their situation. Remember what I say, people with problems love to talk about their problems.
And people who feel bad about money
love to talk about how they feel bad.
But very few of them are willing to take specific steps
to change their financial situation.
Emotions matter, feelings are real,
but your personal finances are not going to change
with your feelings alone.
You need automation, investments, calculations, all the things I teach in my book and my coaching
program.
We'll be right back after this.
I have a friend of mine who's always cold.
She told me she and her partner have totally different temperatures when they sleep.
She goes to bed in a flannel pajama.
She's got extra blankets.
Her partner's running hot.
So now she recently started testing the pod cover from AteSleep, one of our sponsors.
Before she goes to sleep, she gets on the app, cranks up the heat, and when she gets
into bed at night, it's already warm and waiting for her.
The pod cover by AteSleep fits on your bed like a fitted sheet, and it collects information.
It has sensors.
The pod then uses that information to understand what you need to get better sleep.
You can set it to heat up or cool down before you get into bed.
It also adjusts while you sleep.
And you can set it to change temperatures to gently wake you up in the morning.
Best part, there are two zones.
So if you run hot and your partner runs cold, you can each set your side of the bed to exactly
how you want it.
Improve the way you sleep by using my link at 8sleep.com slash Ramit for $200 off plus
free shipping on their Hi-Tech Pod 3 cover.
That's 8sleep.com slash Ramit.
E-I-G-H-T sleep.com slash Ramit. If you are a business owner, listen up. As your business starts to grow, you and I both
know what happens. Those things that you used to do manually start to break, they start
to take up all your time, and you decide decide I'm going to look for some automation.
Things you used to do take a week, but how do you automate these things?
Well, if this is you and you are in charge of your business, there are three numbers
you should know, 36,000, 25,000 and one.
36,000, that's the number of businesses that have upgraded to NetSuite by Oracle.
NetSuite is the number one cloud financial system.
It's Streamlines accounting, financial management,
inventory, HR and more.
25, NetSuite turns 25 this year.
That's 25 years of helping businesses do more with less,
close their books in days, not weeks and drive down costs.
And one, because your business is one of a kind.
So you get a customized solution for your KPIs
in one efficient system with one source of truth.
You can manage risk, get reliable forecasts,
and improve margins.
It's everything you need all in one place.
And as you know, I like to see all my numbers in one place.
That's exactly what NetSuite can help you do.
Right now, download NetSuite's popular KPI checklist,
designed to give you
consistently excellent performance, absolutely free at IWT.com slash NetSuite. That's IWT.com
slash NetSuite, N-E-T-S-U-I-T-E to get your own KPI checklist. IWT.com slash NetSuite.
Let's get back to the show.
You can hear Andrea and Eric going the rest of their lives feeling bad.
Not enough, can't afford it, you don't earn enough.
What a dismal life.
I wonder where all of this came from.
That's what I started asking about next.
My parents worried about money constantly.
You did not spend money ever.
Tell me two Midwestern parents were worried about money and passed that down to their daughter?
Yep. Everybody who comes for me about Midwestern culture, money culture, don't. Okay, just stop.
We're seeing yet another example. Okay, just a couple questions about this Midwestern upbringing
parents didn't talk about money very much in front of you because
Money is for adults not for kids
true or false?
True your parents own their house. They did a few things around the house probably your dad did it
Maybe you're talking about like renovation stuff like that repairs he did it himself he's very proud of it true or
false true you have to save you have to save you have to save and it's never
enough what did they say exactly that made you feel that?
Can I tell you something I observed?
Please.
When we would go to visit my grandparents,
which is what we did once a year,
that was our vacation.
My mom, she had a notepad,
and every time we stopped for gas and we stopped at
Burger King to get a fish fillet,
she used coupons.
And then she would take out her notepad and write down exactly how much we spent.
There was always a running tab.
There was no sense of freedom like, we're just going to go have a good time.
It was kind of like very restrained by this like over over responsibility if that makes sense.
What did you take away from her pulling that notepad out and writing down the ish purchase?
I think I, in my young mind, thought that's how you have to do it.
When did things get tough in your family?
So my dad lost his job when I was in high school.
He was a chemical engineer.
He lost his job.
He didn't really work again for the next decade.
He ended up going back to school to be a teacher and that didn't work out.
He was the karmic mechanic out of our garage for a while.
That didn't really work out.
My mom was working.
This is just a little caveat. My dad, the people that he worked for, somehow
they ended up scamming him. They reported his salary as like twice what it was, and they ended
up scamming him out of all this money. So I remember like that kind of playing in the background,
like that was the narrative of like scary bad things or, you know, will happen to you with money.
So therefore you need to be hyper vigilant, write everything down.
Well, I'm sorry to hear about dad losing his job and you were what like a young teenager
at the time.
I was 17 self deprivation became the way I kept myself safe.
So if I didn't spend the money,
I somehow felt powerful and in control.
If I spent the money, it was like,
I was suddenly vulnerable.
What does this sound like as you say it out loud?
What other parts of life have you heard people talk like this?
Deprivation as a virtue.
Well, besides Midwestern culture, I think a lot of religious...
Yeah, I don't know what else other than that.
I mean, you're nailing it. Midwestern culture, totally right. I hear this all the time.
Some religions eating disorders.
Listen, sometimes we do need to cut back on certain things.
There's no doubt about that.
If we want to save more for retirement,
maybe we can't go out to eat as much.
That makes perfect sense.
Hey, if we've got coupons and we're going to go out to eat,
okay, why not?
Fine. But it can go too far. And in fact, you then redefine that self-restriction as a virtue.
Have you continued doing that until today, age 43?
Yep. I can't even go to the grocery store because I feel so anxious about spending like over $100.
Well, you do spend over $100 because I have your CSP. So this is the worst of all worlds.
You feel horrible and you still do it anyway.
Yep.
So where did your mom learn to be scarce with money? Where'd she learn that from?
Oh, that was from her parents. These were my paternal grandparents. Ah,
Okay, we went to visit got it. So you learned the scarcity from your mom who learned it from her mom
Yes, how many generations do you think it goes back at least back three or four generations back to at least back to the Great Depression?
Definitely probably farther and of your three kids. I know you have an eighth grade son
What are the ages of the other two and what's the gender?
We have a sixth grade daughter at a third grade a third grade boy
Okay, if I talked to your sixth grade daughter right now and I asked her what do you feel about money today?
What would she say?
This is a very it's a very sad to me. She would say, we can't afford it.
Parents, if you don't spend time searching out your invisible scripts, interrogating
your invisible scripts, and working on improving your invisible scripts, you will pass along
your parents' invisible scripts with money right
to your kids.
If you're scarce with money, you're currently doing 20 unconscious things right now, today,
that your kids are picking up on.
You're saying we can't afford it.
You're wincing whenever they bring up taking a school trip.
You're rolling your eyes when they talk about another family friend's vacation.
We spend a ton of time working on helping our kids have a healthy relationship with food.
I want you to start developing your own healthy relationship with money and then pass those lessons on to your kids. If I asked, when does mom put herself first? What would she say?
put herself first? What would she say?
She'd probably say, I can't think of a time that she did.
That's fast-forward. Does she put herself first?
No, she would potentially potentially Foul in my footsteps because I may have unwittingly
Communicated to her that it's selfish to put yourself first
What do you want her to be saying and doing when she's 30 years old? It's not selfish to
Enjoy your life, it's not selfish to enjoy your life. It's not selfish to ask for what you want. It's
not selfish to invest in yourself or however you want to say. Give
yourselves the things that you want and deserve. It's passing on these invisible scripts generationally.
Yes.
Sometimes our parents taught us something and they did their best, but they didn't have
access to the type of information you do.
They certainly did a podcast they could go on and all these books on Kindle.
They did their best and they passed on certain messages. The difference is that you two live in an abundance of information.
And you actually have the ability to decide which of these messages you want to continue
passing along.
Some of them are very good.
Some of them, like that disgusting casserole, you do not want to pass on.
The funny thing is you know that.
You knew that casserole, you're like,
oh, it's never occurred to me to make that.
But somehow your sixth grade daughter
has absorbed the phrase, we can't afford it.
She's only in sixth grade.
I hate it.
I hate it so much.
I'm embarrassed about it.
I mean, for me, I grew up single parent home, pretty poor. My mom
worked two or three jobs a lot of times when I was growing up. I don't know exactly precisely where
it came from, but I just always got the message like, if you have it, then you spend it and when
you don't have it, you clamp down. If you have it, you spend it. And if you don't have it,
then you just kind of clamp down and you eat ramen it, you spend it. And if you don't have it, then you just
kind of clamp down and you eat ramen noodles for the month or something like that. Would
you describe your family as poor? Yeah, growing up. And I kind of had a job out of college
that was a little bit feast or famine. And when I had good months, I lived well. What
did you do? Oh, yeah, I mean, I would go out with my friends,
I would eat wherever I wanted.
I like nice things.
So I'd buy a new pair of shoes or expensive pair of jeans
or when I had it, I would spend it.
And then once I didn't have it, I was like,
I was okay with that too.
Cause I just knew those months.
I was eating ramen that month and I kind of like ramen.
Are you okay to do feast or famine now?
Um, no, I'm not.
Are you seeing Andrea's face, by the way?
No, I wasn't watching.
Andrea, what were you just doing when I asked that question?
Freezing my eyebrows because I do think that Eric has a very high tolerance. I think an abnormally
high tolerance for financial insecurity.
Would you agree, Eric?
Yeah, absolutely. I just can't foresee a scenario where we would wind up in a
A famine where you know, we just wouldn't have money to pay the bills or something like that
I'm just not worried about that. I mean no doubt
We've had lots of times when things are tight and we've had seasons where we've lived on credit cards
But we've never missed a
A payment a minimum payment
Yeah, yeah, are you okay with that here? Uh, I mean, there had been seasons where that was what we could do.
And as long as we were doing that, I had a sense, you know what?
It's going to be all right.
This kind of tight time is not going to last forever.
Like we'll get through this.
It'll be fine.
How did you know when you were paying the minimums on your credit cards that it
was going to be okay?
It just always has been.
You know, I've always gotten through those times.
You know, I'm a person of faith, so I have a trust, hopefully not a trust I want to like
take advantage of, but I have a trust that I think God's
going to provide for us.
Honestly, my story is I feel like he has.
That's not that kind of faith or trust or just confidence in the future is something
I don't want to take advantage of.
So I think I have to participate.
I have to do the work.
I have to have a goal.
I have to take advantage of opportunities.
I'll always be able to find something and figure it out.
That's one of the things I've learned in our relationship,
not to say although it's constantly in my mind.
Figure it out.
Yeah, we'll figure it out, it'll be fine.
Okay, here we have it.
Andrea is a warrior and Eric is a believer.
Andrea loves to worry.
It's become a habit to her, even something that comforts her.
Eric, on the other hand, waves away the worries.
It'll be fine. We'll be okay.
These are common phrases, especially from men who see their role as a provider or someone to take away their partner's worries.
It's also common to hear from people who grew up poor.
You'll notice, for example, his comparison to famine and feast.
And when he says, if you have money, spend it.
And also his description of, we've had times where we made minimum payments, but we were
fine.
So, not only do we have two people with vastly different views on money, they've never really
talked about what their views are.
And they've never come up with a vision of their life that fits them together.
What I really needed right now was for Andrea to get specific about what she wants.
And I wanted to see if she could ever talk about money without worrying about it. In contrast with him,
I sound like the biggest buzzkill in the whole world
because Eric's like,
we're going to figure it out,
everything's going to be okay,
we're going to work through this.
I continually say,
no, that's not good enough and we need to do more.
Eric at times will just be like,
so irritated with me because I keep putting need to do more. And Eric at times will just be like, so
irritated with me, because I keep, I keep putting these kind
of expectations on him, that he's just like, Oh, like he
doesn't, he doesn't want that.
Do you know what you would want?
Right now, what I would say, and I've said this to Eric before,
I would say, and I've said this to Eric before, is that I would like him to get another job,
not just with the one he has and get another one,
but an additional one,
because I feel like he has the time and the energy to do it.
I just wanna see him making what I personally consider
the same amount of effort that I'm making, I would like to have
$10,000 a year to go on trips. Yeah, where's the vacation that's coming in your mind?
The Alaskan cruise. Beautiful. What do you see?
I see us on the deck of a huge ship and we're just looking at this crazy beautiful
a huge ship and we're just looking at this like crazy beautiful landscape with you know bears and moose and all kinds of you know wildlife.
Cool.
I love that.
I would like to have 401k and be on track by the time I'm 67 I think you're supposed
to have 10 times your current income.
I would want to be on track towards that.
I would want to have like a three-month emergency fund, three to six-month emergency fund. I would like guilt-free for Eric and I to each have fund money that we can spend every month. Right now,
we just don't have that. Okay, how much? 200 bucks. 200 bucks a month. All right, fine.
What else?
I would like to be able to help my children
$5,000 a year for a child.
So that's $15,000 a year for four years.
So 60K.
What if they want to go to grad school?
I didn't.
I never considered that actually.
I would really like to be able to help other people
pay off their debt.
Hold on.
Hold on a second.
I love that.
But don't you two have a considerable amount of debt
right now?
Yes, we do.
I was thinking ideal scenario. Like I would want to have enough money that
not only am I personally out of debt, but that I could help other people get there too.
Why don't we just focus on ourselves for right now? So I told you we've been in a lot of debt over the years. And I heard, this was probably five years ago,
that there was a church or an intentional community
where they paid off each other's debts.
So they didn't necessarily just pay off their own debt.
They helped each other to be debt free.
Something about that stuck. I bet it did. It be debt-free. Something about that stuck.
I bet it did. It stuck in my head. What about it stuck with you?
Feeling like you have somebody on your side, somebody on your team that you're not all alone.
Yes. That you're not drowning. Somebody will come alongside of you and help you.
That was a very, very perceptive answer.
Have you both ever been debt free?
I was before I was married to Eric.
Eric, how about you?
Not that I, I mean,
no, I remember I played tennis in college and I got my first credit card
But you get Bank of America
Yes, it was America and you know
I would go on these big tournaments especially for spring break and I would you know rack
I think I had a thousand dollar limit. It's huge. Yeah, and just rack it up. So I mean since
College I probably always had some debt
It's kind of interesting, right? You've learned to live with debt Eric
Like it's like someone learning to live with some pain in their leg after a while. They're just like, oh, yeah
this life I can't remember what life was like before and you know your wife
who's
been in debt for like 16 years, but before
then has this window of time, right, Andrea, where there was no debt. And even though you
were still worried about money, you had no debt. Does it almost seem like paradise, you
know, those first few years of not having debt?
Yeah. I can barely remember what it even feels like.
I don't want to carry balances on our credit cards. I just I don't want to be in debt anymore.
Okay, what do you want to do more? Do you want to be debt free or do you want to pay
help your kids with college? Oh, geez.
That feels impossible to answer.
I think if you held a gun to my head, I would probably say I'd rather be debt-free.
It's okay if your kids listen to this.
They're not going to say my mom hates me.
Trust me.
Is that the worry you have?
If I say that I want to prioritize being deaf free,
it means that I'm not a good mom?
I think it just means that I would be prioritizing myself.
I typically prioritize what's best for others,
especially my family.
I try to think about,
look, I try to think about like what's best for the family.
It works for me a little bit like for my ego
to know that I can kind of anticipate their needs
and I can meet their needs
and that they don't have to struggle.
All right, Eric, what do you want?
We heard a lot of what Andrea would want.
What about you?
You ever thought about it?
Yeah, I mean, I just want to not worry about it.
For anyone keeping track at home, here's what Andrea wants.
She wants Eric to get a second job
and to put in more effort.
She wants $10,000 a year to go on trips,
a 401K at 10 times the current income,
a three month emergency fund, a guilt free spending account of $200 a month
each, a college fund of $5,000 a year times three kids is $15,000
a year times four years $60,000. She wants to be debt free.
She wants to help other people with their debt. Now I got to
say, I do love the specificity. You can see what happens when you spend decades worrying about money.
It narrows your field of vision to negative feelings about money, but you literally don't
spend 10 minutes working on a plan to see what's possible.
In a way, worrying becomes a protective cocoon against reality.
It's easier to worry about what might happen than to actually look at what is going to happen.
Incidentally, what does Eric want?
He just wants to not worry about it.
Andrea wants an Alaskan cruise.
That's exciting.
What do you want? I want to travel. I want to go to Europe and travel
and see cathedrals and vineyards. And like, that's one of the things I haven't ever done is travel
internationally much. And I want to do that. I want us to be able to take a vacation to the beach
and I'll have to argue over the $100 extra for the nicer Airbnb. I'd love to do that at least once a year, if not twice
Okay, great
Anything about debt in there anything about savings anything like that if no, that's okay. Just tell me. Yeah. Yeah for sure
I mean specifically in our relationship and our family and honestly when I turned 40
Was probably the first time I ever
Felt anxiety about money because I realized, you know, just one of those moments you're like, huh, I don't, we
don't have any retirement.
We haven't been able to like think forward at all.
And so since 40, that's, you know, I read a half a dozen books on finance and all those
kinds of things and, you know know try to figure it out and
Like we just didn't have the money at the time to
To go forward with some of that
But I think that's why debt didn't pop up in the list I made because I feel like oh we're
We're on our way and with that. I'm not worried about that, but maybe that's a pattern. I think so. I
Don't foresee ever retiring. I love what I do. And so I
could see myself, to some extent, doing it for forever. But when
our kids are out of the house, I want us to be able to like
travel together. And I want us to be able to do what we want.
It revolves around freedom. I think a lot
of the things I would say specifically revolve around the freedom to go and do.
How would you travel when you're both empty nesters? If, as you put it, you still have your
job because you want to keep working for a long time, how would you do that?
I do like coaching, spiritual coaching, spiritual direction for pastors,
nonprofit leaders, ministry leaders.
So it's really flexible.
I can kind of work wherever I am for perfect.
All right, so you can do that.
My style wise, okay, great.
And Andrea, what about you?
Would you be able to travel,
in the next few years or later?
Not with what I'm doing right now. I'm a director of communications for an Anglican diocese
my goal in my life is to become a
novelist so if I ever was able to realize that dream then yes I would be able to travel I'd be able to write from anywhere. What about if not I?
Guess just take my three weeks of vacation a year
and we would go somewhere together.
Would you be okay with that?
I'd be okay with that.
There's a little town on the coast of Italy
that a friend of mine, he traveled the world for a year
and he lived in, I think it's Positano, Italy
for a month and a half.
And I just remember seeing those pictures
and being like, I'm gonna go there one day
and get a little villa on the side of a mountain,
drink wine, just see the sights.
I could imagine being on a little patio with Andrea
as we look over the, you know,
the coast and having a glass of wine and having fun and laughing.
I love that. I love Andrea's reaction to you. Big smile over there. All right.
You two ever talk like this about money?
We never get around to the dreaming vision casting as much.
We just kind of talk about the hard stuff.
We never get around to the good stuff.
We just stay stuck on the bad stuff.
I think we used to talk about the good stuff.
Even when we had way, way more debt than we do now,
I think we would dream a little then.
But what happened?
I think we just have gotten a little worn down.
I think that's a really honest description
of living in America today for a lot of people.
You struggle to make it with expensive housing
and healthcare prices.
And after years of doing this, just feel worn down.
And this is one reason that I think
everyone should experience at least one moment of awe
every year.
Now, it could be a beautiful sunset in a national park, could be a glamorous hotel with incredible
food, but we need a way to shake us out of our day to day and to inspire us to think
bigger.
Let's pause for a quick message from our sponsors.
Let's have a pleasant discussion about some of the worst
things in the world.
One of them, finding a doctor.
First of all, you realize, oh, I got a problem.
But you don't know if you need to call a dermatologist
or a podiatrist.
So you just start calling everybody.
Half of them aren't even there.
They don't even pick up the phones.
Then when you finally get somebody on the phone,
you're like, hey, I have this thing.
They go, oh, okay, cool. We can see you in July.
Then you ask them, are you in network?
Half of them aren't. And you're spending three days just making phone calls. What if there was actually a better way to find a doctor? Check out our sponsor, ZockDoc, the place where you can
find and book doctors who will make you feel comfortable, listen to you, and prioritize your health. ZockDoc is a free app and website where you can search and compare highly rated in-network
doctors near you and instantly book appointments with them online.
Once you find the doctor you want, you can book them immediately, no more waiting on
the phone with a receptionist.
And these doctors all have verified reviews from true real patients. We're talking about booking appointments with tens of thousands of top rated,
patient reviewed, credible doctors and specialists.
The typical wait time to see a doctor is between 24 to 72 hours.
You can even book same day appointments.
If I need to book a doctor and I wanted to be convenient and
I wasn't sure where to start,
I would try ZocDoc.
So go to ZocDoc.com slash Ramit and download the ZocDoc app for free.
Then find and book a top rated doctor today.
That's Z-O-C-D-O-C dot com slash Ramit.
ZocDoc.com slash Ramen. Let's get into the numbers. I'm going to do a deep dive
this week and you can follow along visually on YouTube. Let me give you the quick numbers
right here. Assets, $689,000. Investments, $49,000. Savings, $3,600. Debt, $610,000. That includes
a mortgage, student loans at 2.4% and IRS taxes, which are like 2 to 4% interest rate
Their net worth is $132,000 their combined income is
$147,000 and if we drill down further we find some interesting signs their fixed costs are 63%
Housing is 28%
monthly loan payments five hundred sixty nine dollars car payments are zero dollars very nice family mental health is
$580 which includes marriage counseling and children's counseling love that
Now let's hear some of the details beneath these numbers
132 thousand dollar net worth in your early 40s. How do you feel about that, Andrea?
I don't feel great about it.
Is there a number that you would feel great about?
$5,000 to $700,000. I would feel good about that.
You think so?
I don't know. It seems like so...
That's an honest answer. I don't know. Thank you.
Okay. That's an honest answer. Eric. What do you feel about that number?
I feel pretty good about it. We've recently paid off a car
um, we've paid off
our last credit card
So our only debt left is some irs
We have left to pay for the last from the last couple of years and my school loans.
Now it's like, all right, how do we figure out how to begin to really save and invest
and move forward, like being future minded?
What's the answer then?
Yeah.
I mean, I think the answer is learning from you.
And this is one of those things.
I know it and we haven't implemented it
is just automating that.
We just, and we, Ann and I talked about that.
We really need to just say, okay,
we're putting this somewhere,
we're not thinking about it.
We're just, it's coming out right away every month.
Okay, the interesting question is why haven't you done it?
I'm not judging, but I think this is the crux of it, right?
If you know it, why haven't you done it?
I think the reason I haven't done that is things have been tight enough, especially
for the last seven years or so.
Every month I feel like I'm like, all Well, we had we have money to put into
You know our investment account do we have money? So I feel like I'm always nervous to automate it because that's
84 months 84 months. It's been tight. Yeah, I don't know about that. Do you believe that story? I think my actions would say yes
but
My mind knows better.
Things were a little bleak in our in our life.
I had started a business.
I planted a church and that failed.
And so we did that for like three and a half, four years.
It was just a pretty hard season of life.
And that was reflected financially as well.
And I think that's one of the reasons
I was trying to learn about so many things
because things were so hard.
I'm like, all right, if I can just get some knowledge,
but it just didn't feel like we had the resources
to implement a lot of that.
I can't point fingers at him because I'm also like 100%
in the black hole of debt.
But I do,
I think you've really hit on something
that is holding us back.
We cannot get past it.
We just are so stuck.
Why?
I think we're stuck looking at our bank account
and seeing, hey, we're making good money, but it's not enough to cover
All of the like there's so many things that we have to do especially with our kids
It's not enough. It doesn't stretch that far. So it's super hard for us to even think like
Beyond that mm-hmm I don't think we know how to do that.
Let me put a pin in that and we'll come back to it because I want to see where the rest
of the spending is. Okay. Yeah.
All right. Your investments are, well, this is a simple box. Hey, Eric, why don't you
read this number to me on your investments? What's that number there?
No, thanks.
No. Yeah. Andrea, care to read the number here on investments?
Zero.
Zero. So it's just $0 going to investments.
I will sporadically, occasionally put $100 in our investment account or...
What is that?
Sporadic?
I worked for Apple for two years. I quit that job maybe a year ago or so. And so for
those years, we did have regular investment. Gosh, and during that time, did your investments grow?
Yeah, it was great. All right. I think we have an area of opportunity here. We could probably work
on that. Again, I want to remind you investments are not just for the sake of it. This is where true wealth is created.
True wealth.
Yeah.
Grows, compounds.
Talking about safety.
You're talking about knowing if you have enough.
You're talking about being able to take a trip without looking at the price of drinks.
That's this.
Investments.
Okay.
All right.
Next up, we got savings.
Andrea, what do we got here?
Savings, $400.
$400 a month, which is 3 percent.
Okay. And just by the way,
I like how you broke this down.
You got $150 a month on vacations,
$50 a month on gifts,
and $200 a month on personal goals and travel.
Is that accurate or did you just fill that in for this CSP?
I would say that that's our goal.
So we try to put that away,
but we don't always hit that goal.
Would it be more accurate to say this is zero?
Not zero.
I think it's close to zero.
Let me just step in right here.
I don't care if you're 97 years old.
If you're alive and breathing oxygen and you wonder, why don't I have more saved?
This is the answer.
If you try to save money sporadically, you will never win.
It will be like trying to teach your kids to read sporadically.
Unless you're planning to win the lottery or IPO, you cannot
grow any substantial amount of savings or true wealth without making it automatic.
This single decision right here is worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. It's the
difference between taking a nice tour with your friends in your 70s versus sitting around
watching Vanderpump rules in the dark while eating a stale bag of Doritos for the rest of your life
Please if you're gonna make one decision in life, do not make it. Should I get these kibbles and bits for my dog?
Should I buy this soup spoon from Target because it has such a cool design. It just came out. I love it
No, make it to set up your automatic savings and investments
I love it. No, make it to set up your automatic savings and investments. That single decision alone will guarantee that you have more money than you ever thought possible.
Alright, zero. Which leaves in your guilt-free spending 37% or $4,337 a month on guilt-free
spending.
Our son taking violin lessons,
our daughter doing cheer camp and things like that.
We have a budget for each of us for spending money,
like going out for lunches and things like that.
We have a family entertainment budget we have in there.
And that's kind of where all that gets eaten up
Does your budget map to four thousand three hundred thirty seven dollars a month or even in the ballpark?
No
So the other thing is literally just last month we paid off our last credit card and we paid off my car
We had been putting a thousand dollars a month on that credit card
Um the car we were putting that that was a $350 car payment.
So some of that is pretty new as of this year. What are you going to do with all that extra money?
Did you talk about, hey, our car payment is about to end? We talked about the debt snowball.
We're just going to roll it onto the next debt. Did you? That's not reflected in this document, but that is what we have talked about.
Oh, wait.
Talking about versus done.
That's what we're going to do.
Why didn't you do it?
The car is paid off.
Well, this is the month we would do it.
How much money have you paid off that you are now about to redirect to more rapidly paying off your debt? How much per month?
$1,350. All right, so you're about to put $1,300 bucks a month for
years
Towards low interest
debt
How did you guys decide that you wanted to pay a lot more money towards your low interest debt?
How did you guys decide that you wanted to pay a lot more money towards your low interest debt?
Yeah, I mean, our mortgage we got in before spikes or mortgage is like 4.3, I think.
But like, there's no discussion about, hey, we're going to have hundreds of dollars a
month free.
Maybe we should save it or invest it.
It was just, let's roll it over and pay off more debt.
Yeah.
Where do you think that came from? It was just let's roll it over and pay off more debt.
What do you think that came from?
A bad place. Tell me.
That's really important for us to know
where that came from,
because it will come up again.
It'll come up for the rest of your lives.
I want you to understand where that came from.
I will own that. I just don't wanna have debt debt. I don't want to have debt. So I think
it's probably 95% me.
Why?
Because I have a lot of shame around having debt.
Okay. What is that shame?
That I'm a bad person if i have debt wow
If you're not good with money you're a bad person. I know it's
It's there though. Where'd that come from parents religion midwestern culture my parents
And is that true if you have debt you're a bad person? No
How come it's so easy for you to say no? Well because I
Have known that in like my my mental
My mental world. I haven't been able to move it down to my emotional world.
And I've told you that as well.
The debt doesn't mean we are bad people.
It might reflect some bad decisions, but it's not even like this stamp that,
like we're just horrible people or decision makers even.
And I've kind of like jostled back and forth. I'm like, I don't care if I die with that stuff. I'm put the minimum on it, like, you know, if we can ever pay it off great. But my thought has been to try to really tackle all the debt but college and mortgage. But I hadn't really thought about the interest rate so much. It's just really nice not having
You know, there is a psychological component of not having any
What feels like consumer debt?
Well, here's the thing when you say I'm gonna die with it
You may say that and you may be half joking about it
But Andrea doesn't receive it as a joke. What does she receive it as?
Like a weight?
Yes. Yes, it is a weight. Well, it's not just a weight. She thinks that having debt is morally
bad. So she's like, you're making me a worse person.
I think I default to money because that's what my parents did for me. My parents are
super emotionally unavailable, but they always provided for me financially.
What the hell? How come this just came up right now? Your parents were emotionally unavailable,
so they gave you money and now you've become very fixated on money, money, money. But only fixated on enough to worry about it, but not to make a plan about it.
I mean, the other thing, Andrew, you wanted to do was put your raise, which is around $350 a month
away toward college fund. So what if we didn't just save it? What if we invested it? We would
have to do something different. Or can you take a college money out of an Roth IRA?
Well, you can. And you can also, you can always take your principal out after
having it open for a few years. The real question, you have $350 extra every single month. Where do you best want it to go?
I wanted to go into a college fund. Okay, tell me why. Tell me with numbers.
I don't really have any logical answer for that. Well, we need to have it. We can't make
multi-thousand-dollar decisions based on just a feeling. So tell me, let's come up with the numbers.
multi-thousand-dollar decisions based on just a feeling. So tell me, let's come up with the numbers.
Okay, if my kids go to an in-state school
and they get scholarships,
it costs 10 to $15,000 a year.
I would expect them to work and contribute.
I would want to, the way I came up with the $5,000 for kid
is it definitely felt like, okay, well, you still
have to figure it out, but we're going to give you a little safety net. It's going to be like
launching pads, so you're not starting from scratch.
That's not numbers. That's a feeling.
I don't know how to use numbers instead of feelings.
Can you help me?
$350 a month.
First of all, how much will that turn into
when your kids go to college?
Jack will be going to college in four years,
so that's 48 months.
So that's $16,800.
Isn't that way more than you need for him?
How much do you want to give each kid?
I wanted to give each of them five grand.
Okay.
Didn't she just finish off everything right there?
Okay. And that doesn't even account for any interest that might be earned.
Okay.
So, what have you learned already?
I've already learned that if you do the numbers, it kind of eradicates all of the crazy feelings
you have about it because you just see right there.
Yeah.
That's the answer.
They're not crazy. Your feelings are the answer. They're not crazy.
Your feelings are not crazy.
You're not crazy.
Your feelings are real.
But let me just tell you what would have happened
if you had only used your feelings.
Even if you were saving the money for the kids,
you still would have argued.
We need to save more.
We need to save more.
Why are we going on this trip?
Why are we ordering drinks?
We could save for the kids more.
And you would have saved and saved and saved.
And then when it came time,
you would have given more without any regard for
numbers and you would have been even more worried afterwards.
What are we going to do?
Eric, go get a better job.
I don't know what we're going to do.
So your feelings are not crazy.
Your feelings are real, but they're incomplete.
And that's why in just 25 seconds,
we discovered if indeed you truly want to give your kids
$5,000 each, we can knock that out right now.
But I suspect it's not really about 5,000.
I don't think it's about 5,000 either.
What is it about?
I think it's about me being afraid that my kids will grow up, look back on their lives
and say, why didn't mom and dad help us more?
Oh, it's because they were broke.
They were bad with money, they were broke,
they couldn't help us.
That just feels like so crushing to me for my kids
to feel like I wasn't able to provide for them
in the way that they needed me to.
How do you know that they would think that?
Because Eric's family didn't provide for him
and he never once said, oh, my family was broke
and they were terrible.
You don't think that about your family, Eric?
I mean, we have difficulties in other areas,
but no, I've never thought that.
I've never resented my mom or family
for not helping me with school.
Your kids have time.
Even if they go into debt, a little bit of debt is not a horrible thing for student loans.
It's not.
You two have far less time.
You're in your 40s.
You have very low savings.
Your investments, you're at about $50,000. If you want to have retirement, if you even want
to be able to do the things that you talk about doing and take a vacation, unless there's
a dramatic increase in income coming tomorrow, your kids have time and you two have far less.
And so I would prioritize, and I say this as the son of Indian parents, Indian parents
give everything they have to their kids.
So I understand that culture.
But I would say that there's nothing wrong with putting yourselves first, financially
speaking.
You can still teach your kids a lot.
You can still help them get their footing.
You can provide help them get their footing, you can provide for them.
But I really would love to see the two of you put yourselves first.
I mean, I don't even know what to say to that.
I just, I've never thought that I even had permission
to put myself first.
And what you said about they have time and you don't,
that's so absolutely true.
And I just never cross my mind. I can help
them by taking care of myself. And I think this would be an amazing exercise for the two of you
to talk about. Hey, what do we want for each of our kids? Like, let's sketch it out. Let's script it.
And what would that look like? And if we want them to know that they are valuable enough to spend their money on, how are we going to demonstrate? We better be doing that. And we better tell
our kids, you know what? Saturday afternoons, mom and dad are going to be here and we're
going to be talking about money and we would like you to respect our time in the last half
an hour. Yeah, we'll bring you in and we'd love to talk about a few things with you because
money is part of the family.
Andrea, I see you lighting up what I'm talking about this.
Why is that?
It's just so exciting.
It's so fun.
It's like so hopeful to be able to think like,
maybe I'm not gonna perpetuate
this generational attitude towards money.
And maybe I can do it differently
and I can bring my kids along on the journey.
I love that concept of bringing them along.
It almost connects to what we talked about early on
where I was like, I wanna have fun with you.
I don't wanna always to be this heavy stuff
and to think and have the encouragement
that that doesn't have to be,
that means we don't talk about money, but like maybe actually some of these money conversations,
like we can have fun and dream and hope together. You can see the path that I took to get here.
A lot of you message me every day telling me about your partner who won't look at the spreadsheet,
who's always worried about money. And look at how I gently got Andrea to consider another way. One, I listened to her
a lot. Number two, I asked her to tell me about her worries and her fears around money,
but I did not let her dwell on them. Number three, I got really curious about the things that she wants to do one day. Like
the Alaskan cruise, I was genuinely interested in that. Four, I included Eric because he absolutely
plays a part in this. And finally, I helped her run a couple of simple numbers that she can deeply
understand. This is transformative for her because she now went one level deeper than the numbers and she realized oh my gosh I
Can give myself permission to put myself first
Isn't this amazing?
This is why I love my job and I love being able to share this whole experience with you
because a rich life is about so much more than just the numbers or
Blindly following what we think we are
supposed to do. It's about understanding what your rich life is and then using your numbers
to start to live it.
So you told me $1,300 per month, right?
Yeah.
All right. So let's say, right, let's just pretend for Easy Math, you have $0 invested and you're currently
going to do, let's say, 15,000 bucks a year approximately.
That's how much it is approximately.
That's 1,300 times 12, again, approximate.
22 years because you're in your mid 40s.
What does that number say?
Read it out loud, Andrea.
786,542.11 cents.
Your belief about debt would have just cost you $786,000.
Damn, I just didn't know that.
Honestly, what most people don't ask themselves
is if we put all of our resources towards paying off our debt and we're debt-free at 68 years old,
what then?
We have a house, we have no debt, what do we have?
We have no income anymore because we retired, we have a little meager social security check coming, what are we doing?
We have nothing to go and live the kind of life we claim we want. That's not good planning.
It's very empowering to know that I could make a choice to increase my wealth, I mean,
pretty drastically.
And by the way, if you did this, you know how often you'd have to make this decision
to invest?
I think you just keep it going.
We make it once and let it go.
Set it and forget it.
One decision making you three quarters of a million dollars.
Now, if your interest rate for your debt was at like 7%
or 8% or 26%, I would be like,
pay that off as quickly as possible.
But when it's 2.4%, mathematically speaking, it makes no sense
to pay it off for them.
Yeah, Andrea, how do you feel after seeing those compounding numbers? What do you want
to automate toward investments and what do you want to put toward debt?
Well, my mind is blown, so I kind of just want to put it all towards investments.
I just, I had no idea.
I had no idea that that kind of money
was even possible for us.
Yeah, I feel kind of shocked.
Shocked?
As you described, like kind, for the next 20 years,
trying to pay off this debt and then kind of ending up
empty-handed at the end.
I don't really have anything to my name, but I'm debris.
But just kind of seeing the possibility of accruing
that kind of wealth is just super empowering. That impulse to protect yourself
and to guard what you have is essentially just squeezing the enjoyment out of your life. It's
not actually working. It's not it's not keeping you safe. And what you think it's doing, it's not doing,
it's actually doing the opposite.
It's like creating this life of scarcity.
That's powerful.
I think that's what stood out to me is like,
can you drill down to the specifics of like,
why you feel that way, where you're going, and what you want.
What's crazy is in the rare occasions where you row in the same direction, what happens?
We make progress.
Huge progress.
Faster than you ever thought possible.
What would it feel like if you were able to do that with your money?
I would feel so much hope.
I would feel like kind of excited for the first time in a long time.
Yeah, I think that would begin to really help with my desire for freedom from kind of the
weight of money and feeling like the money could actually serve freedom for the things
I want to do.
The final thing I did in those last few minutes was to show Andrea with real numbers what
her fixation on debt was costing her.
And the answer was about $750,000.
Your life is too important to blindly follow some random path that you haven't even
questioned or interrogated or decided for yourself. That is what I want you to take away from this
episode and from this entire podcast. Now let's hear Andrea's follow-up.
Hey, my mates. One of the things that surprised me is that debt repayment is not necessarily the best focus for a couple in
their 40s and that it's actually kind of dumb to end up 65 and debt free but have nothing
to our name. And one thing that I learned is that paying for my kids' college isn't the end all, be all, that money isn't necessarily a sign of love
and that there's other ways I can support them
and be there for them and that they will value those ways
just as much as money.
And a change I'm looking forward to making is
staying fully engaged with the money,
not just avoiding it, hiding from it,
letting Eric deal with
it and then nagging him, but to actually dive in and to be unafraid, to be hopeful, to just
know that I'm empowered to play a role, that there's good things out there for us and that
we're not going to continue living lives of scarcity.
We have agency.
And now Eric's follow up.
And I learned a lot, but probably the most powerful thing was just the idea of
inviting a third party into these important and often difficult conversations.
You'd think I'd understand that. I do that a lot with the work I do.
But when it comes to money, I think a lot of us don't think about taking that step.
It was just like a really powerful experience
and we're thankful for that for sure.
So it was really encouraging to hear
that even though we're a little behind,
that we can do it and that there's hope if we take action.
We're definitely gonna be making a bunch of changes,
cutting things and thinking about money
in a little different ways,
but probably the biggest change
that we're already starting to make
is to prioritize our future,
prioritize making money a positive experience
for our family.
Those are probably the two big things.
It's time to invite our kids into this conversation and to invite them into
some of the responsibilities of our conscious spending plan as you kind of invited us to do.
And that's really exciting. That's really good. It's okay for us to prioritize our future. You
know, we want to be generous. We want to be generous with our families. We want to be generous with others, but it's okay to be generous with our future selves as well.
["Pomp and Circumstance"]
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You to Be Rich.
I'm Ramit Sethi.
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,
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.
You know, travel is one of my money dials.
It's one of the areas that I love to spend money on.
I travel for months every year and I'm fanatical about the hotels I stay in and the experiences
that my wife and I go through when we go on these trips.
And I wanted to share another podcast that I really love called All the Hacks.
It's by my friend Chris Hutchins. Chris is the person I actually called
when I wanted to build a personal playbook
for how to use my airline points.
I got on the phone with him and my assistant,
and Chris said, okay, which cards do you have?
And we went through it
and we built a personalized travel playbook
because Chris knows everything there is to know about
travel.
And now he's got this amazing podcast that I want you to check out.
Again, it's called All the Hacks.
Chris has traveled to over 60 countries, mostly for free, and each week on All the Hacks,
he shows listeners how you can do the same with expert guests.
He even does deep dives on specific travel locations.
For example, there was recently an episode with the founder of a travel company where he broke down where to find off the beaten path experiences
in Italy and the best way to use points and miles for your next trip there.
I've had the opportunity to be Chris's guest multiple times. Most recently, we talked about
money and relationships and building a shared vision for your rich life, you can check that out on episode 112.
So check this podcast out.
It's actually very interesting.
I want you to search for all the hacks on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen
to podcasts.
Your wallet will thank you later.