I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 15. “I have a $1 million trust fund and I’m scared to spend money on food”
Episode Date: October 26, 2021Andy and Kate bring in $200,000 a year and live rent free. Andy feels bad about money every day. His partner, Kate, says she wants to work as a financial team, but she walks on eggshells. Andy wants t...o make her happy, but he has a poor relationship with money. And that’s not all. Andy has $1.1 million dollars in a trust fund, managed by a financial advisor, and he still has holes in his shoes. I asked them, “Do you want to turn 65, have $10 million, and still worry about getting dessert?” Andy will have to decide if he’s going to let his old money stories determine the next 50 years of his life. Connect with Ramit Website Instagram Twitter Facebook YouTube Linkedin If you and your partner have a money issue and you want my help, I occasionally select a couple to work with, free of charge. Apply for my help here. Produced by Crate Media.
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I don't feel like we are working as a team when it comes to money.
There are days that I couldn't afford food.
I felt like, wait a second.
You could definitely afford food.
I mean, I guess I could.
I see how much it affects Andy and I think that he and I miss out on shared experiences
because of that.
I think for example, like we've not ever taken any sort of like extravagant vacation together because the cost associated with that was anxiety inducing and stressful.
I used to use New York's expensive as my excuse to not really deal with money.
I don't live there anymore.
So, jokes on me.
I know my father sometimes got very upset if he felt
I was being wasteful with money. It took me more than four years to finish
college. She wasn't super happy about that. Have you ever felt good about money?
Yes, no, I guess I should now, but I don't.
I'm Remi Satee and you're listening to the I Will Teach You To Be Rich podcast. Today I'd like you to meet Kate and Andy.
Andy feels very anxious around money.
In fact, he doesn't feel like he has enough to cover the basics, like rent, bills, food,
let alone luxuries so that he can enjoy his life.
Oh, and by the way, his household income with Kate
is over $200,000.
Let me tell you how that breaks down
because it's important.
160,000 of that comes from Kate.
Andy makes 45,000 from his job
and a further 25,000 from a distribution. Yep, that's right. Andy has a trust fund
with roughly $1.1 million. And on top of that, they both inherited his family home, so
they now live rent-free. I'm featuring this couple because I want you to understand that just making more money
will not change the way you feel about it.
Your feelings are highly uncorrelated with the actual amount of money you have.
You tell yourself stories about money, stories that may or may not be true.
And it's critical that you work on your money psychology, which is a totally separate
skill from making money itself.
Otherwise you might end up with lots of money, but you won't actually find any joy in it.
You won't even know how to spend it.
Andy can't even bring himself to buy new shoes.
And instead he chooses to wear old shoes with holes in them.
Let's listen.
Andy, you mentioned that when you think of money, one of the words that comes to mind for
you is nervous.
Why is that?
I guess what I'll say was that for me, money is a finite resource.
I don't think I have a job that compared to my, let's say,
my parents who made a lot of money, in my opinion, that kind of matches up to them.
And so I worry about having enough money to have a life that, I guess, I'm a costume
too, or I grew up with.
It just makes me scared.
I guess an emergency or just having a normal life that I don't make enough to then, you
know, have a life that can be happy.
So it makes me nervous to think about it
and just think that like,
hey, I can't contribute enough or I can't pay enough.
I guess.
OK, and when you say it makes you nervous
that you can't afford something, how does that manifest
itself?
Like, if I were in the same room as you right now,
give me a situation where you would be getting nervous
about not being able to afford something.
I don't buy a lot of things for myself.
I don't buy a lot of new clothes.
Like I will hold on to clothes or shoes.
We'll have holes in them.
And it doesn't really necessarily bother me
because I'm like, I don't wanna be buying shoes
every however often.
So like I'll hold on to shoes for a very long time.
I don't even have holes in them.
Things like that.
But I guess maybe I'm not out really talking
about other people being nervous,
but if you were kind of looking at me and you're like,
Why is this guy walk around with holes in his shoes? Or I had an iPhone 6 for I don't know how long I just finally got a 12
I doubled up on my iPhone. That's how long I was holding on to that old phone. Do you really have holes in your shoes? Yeah
I've holes in my sneakers that I wear. Yeah
Why is it?
Yeah, I think it has a little bit to it with how I walk, but I think it's just because,
again, it's hard to put in the words, but like in my mind, I'm like, oh, I've got to
go spend $100 on shoes and I'm worried that I'm not going to have that $100 to eat later,
which I know sounds silly looking at, again, now, I know it sounds ridiculous, but I worry
about eating and buying groceries and being able to go out and spend time with, can't have
a good time, or that I am about how my shoes look. I'm less interested in if it sounds ridiculous. I'm more
interested in why you feel this way. Did you hear what I just did there? I don't love the labels
that we put on ourselves and our money behavior. In a previous episode, you might have heard one of my guests calling herself stupid, disgusting dumb. She was talking about herself and her
debt. And this kind of negative self talk makes me so sad. Growing up, I was a
skinny Indian guy. Those were the words I used. I also had hairy arms. Well, I
still do, but I did back then too.
You know, it's so easy for people, especially young people, to lapse into using these negative
phrases.
I even started making it a joke.
Oh, I'm just a skinny Indian guy.
But it became a self-fulfilling prophecy.
It actually became part of my identity.
So when I hear people making jokes about their
identity, like an Indian person who jokes about being cheap or someone who says, I'm just bad
with money or this probably sounds ridiculous. I try to stop them right there. Your words have
power and the way you talk about yourself is one of the most defining and important things you can do.
Andy's self-talk comes all the way back from his childhood and specifically his parents who were
wealthy. Listen to how this affected him. And as you do, I want you to think about how your wealth
might affect your children. How much did they make? I honestly could not tell you. I'm sure my mother,
my mother was a very, she was a first female lawyer hired at Maryland. She worked there for 30-some
odd years. My father worked at banks, also including Maryland. I mean, he was a Cuban immigrant.
So he came here basically with nothing, but then he worked his way up and was able to work up
in the financial world. And I just know, again, we, my mother owned a apartment in downtown Manhattan on 57th Street.
Again, we were never hurting for anything, but we also weren't riding around in benzes.
We had an automobile minivan.
I wasn't like we were extravagant, but they made enough money that I was never hurting
for anything.
Honestly, if I really need anything, they could always buy it.
Usually they bought things in cash.
It wasn't like they were paying off car payments.
They would pay the whole car on the spot, things like that.
I know my father sometimes got very upset
if he felt I was being wasteful with money.
It took me more than four years to finish college.
She wasn't super happy about that.
So I think those type of things came through.
I can never, he's passed away, both my parents passed
away so I can't necessarily ask them now. Yeah, I'm sorry to hear that. It sounds like they certainly
set an example for you and I appreciated hearing the positive and negative sides of it. I have
so many questions. What do you think the costs are of living this way?
I guess in my mind, the cost is that I'm able to sustain now.
Does that mean I'm the happiest?
I don't know, but I also don't know what I'm missing out on.
I don't know what the flip-flide is.
Well, let's talk about that.
How often are you anxious about something in your life?
Oh, a lot.
All the time.
I have anxiety.
Oh, yeah, every day.
Every day.
Every day.
And how about around money?
I would say it's probably gotten better,
especially since Kate has been in my life
and is able to help me out with some things in my mind,
but I'd say before her and having a trusting relationship
that way, it was every day.
I mean, there were days that I couldn't afford to. I felt like, I mean, I guess I
could. I didn't know I could at my mind, or I was worried about dipping into the money
that I had in a certain way, but I was living, I had gift cards that I would get for Christmas
style, I would then use for to buy food because that's.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait a second. You could definitely afford food.
Let's be clear, there's a difference between actual numbers and how you feel about numbers.
You said I couldn't afford to eat, and then you added, at least I felt that way.
Those two are completely different.
You could afford to eat.
In fact, you're doing much better than most Americans.
What I want for you is to be able to examine yourself
and be able to accurately ascertain
if something is a story about money,
what that story is and whether you believe it and whether you
are going to keep following that story. So looking back, do you think you had
enough money to eat if you ever were desperate? I'm sure I could find a way in
terms of from someone yes. Kate, what do you think about what you just heard?
It makes me sad that he felt that way. Do you think he had enough that if you were in desperate straits,
he would have been able to eat?
So yes, but I think, I mean,
but it's like he didn't open the envelope for Marilyn's
that said what was in his account
until three months ago, maybe.
So it was like, he got the letters every month
and just put them away and never opened them.
So I think he and I spoke about it.
And if you would ask him before he ever opened it,
how much is in there, he would have said about 20%
of what was actually in there.
And I mean, I think we can agree,
like $200,000 is very different than a million, right?
And so I think it was a...
Hold on, is it?
You know.
Is it?
I mean, I think so.
How so?
I mean, I think that it's, or I guess,
200,000 at this age feels like, okay,
can't touch it, need to let it sit there,
know like trying to be responsible versus,
I don't know when it's over a million,
it feels like, okay, I can have $10,000
and it's like not a big deal.
Now, even saying that, I'm like, well,
that seems kind of silly to say.
And if I really needed it, it should be fine.
But I guess I like-
It's not you're both sitting here telling me
I wanted to take a yacht to Santa Rini for two weeks
and drop, you know know 30 grand a day.
We're not talking about that. And I understand Andy that this was years ago with the food thing,
but it's really important. This idea that whether or not it was $200,000 or a million dollars,
$1,000 or a million dollars that you genuinely believe that you would have struggled to be able to eat.
That's a really important story for us to disentangle.
I mean, I don't think I was covering my bills in terms of rent.
So in my mind, I was a negative every year.
I didn't wanna see the numbers go down
because then I thought it was gonna make my anxiety go up.
Okay.
Have you ever felt good about money?
Yes, no, I guess I should now, but I don't.
I mean, I'm just being honest with you.
I appreciate the candor.
Do you think you ever will feel good about money?
I think if I'm equipped with the knowledge that I'm doing, then I'll feel better.
But I don't necessarily have a person.
I don't have parents.
I don't have a lot of family to guide me with this information.
And I think that's part of the problem.
Let's assume that we check all the boxes and we figure out all the things you should be doing and
we look at your allocations and all that stuff and it's good. Tell me if I were sitting in the same
room with you, how would I know that you are feeling positive about your money?
What I'm doing here is I'm trying to get Andy out of his head.
I want to talk about behaviors, not just what he feels.
Clearly the way he feels is misleading.
He tells himself these stories that are not necessarily true.
So what I'm pushing him for here is if I were sitting in the room next to you, how would
I know that you
were positive about your money?
How would I know that you were feeling positive about your money?
And so there are some very obvious ways that we know if someone is feeling positive.
Think about it.
What do they do?
They smile.
They laugh.
They're relaxed.
They order food and they tip generously.
There's so many things, but they are behaviors.
It's very difficult for people who are stuck spinning in their head to step back and even
think about behaviors.
They're trapped in their own mental quicksand.
And that's what I'm trying to get them out of.
I mean, well, I'd buy some shoes to let that.
I guess for me, I don't know if I buy per se anything as much as be confident in being able to start a family
with Kate or again, have our wedding provide
for this house that we are living in.
Like, I just having that security.
Would you smile?
Sure, I don't know if I'm not been smiling now, sorry.
I'm like, well, this is serious stuff.
Yeah, no, serious stuff.
But I haven't seen you smile about money.
What else, when you went to the grocery store,
what would you do differently if you felt positively
about your money?
I don't think I would feel super bad about spending money
on fleas for weekends.
I don't feel bad about it now,
but I would feel probably more comfortable
as I know, okay, like,
like, fly out of the fly,
we get some fleas on weekends
and hit that up for dinner on Saturday nights, you know?
Good.
I want to point out to your language here.
I asked you,
what would you do differently
if you felt really good?
And you said,
I wouldn't feel bad.
I think it's going to be very difficult for you
to feel good about money
when your only lens on money is feeling bad. Everything you've said is in the context of feeling bad and you can actually move completely
beyond feeling bad about money because you're going to check the box, your finances are
going to be in the place they need to go
You're gonna have some good guidance
But it's gonna take work in order for you to even remember how to feel good about something in and of itself
Yeah, I mean, I don't disagree. I definitely think there's try that again. I don't disagree
Refraise that for me.
I agree.
I agree with you.
I think you're right.
There we go.
There you go.
I can't get from the negative words.
Very good.
I appreciate that.
That's a big step.
So thank you for that.
And I believe you that you do want to feel good
about your money.
Kate, how would you describe your joint financial situation?
Well, right now there is no joint situation.
We don't have anything together.
And I would say that is something that bothers me.
Andy knows this.
I, I don't feel like we are working as a team when it comes to money.
We say that a lot to each other, just in the other aspects of our life when someone's having a
you know a rough time at work or you know something's going on with family or whatever it is.
It's like we're a team we're in this together and I think money is the main and only really please that I don't feel like that's true. And if you were working together on a team
financially, what would that look like specifically? Specifically, I think that would mean that
we decided amongst each other how we were going to spend our money.
I think it's very, I spend my money a certain way and he spends, or it doesn't spend his
money other ways.
And so it would be deciding what we chose or prioritized to spend money on.
I think it would look like us collectively saving money for shared things, whether that's updates we want to make to this house,
whether that's a vacation that we want to go on, whether that's our wedding, future of children,
I think right now it's sort of like we'll figure it out very much so, but there's not a lot of
planning or sort of like purposeful meaningful discussion or teamwork happening about it.
Okay. And got it. So what's the problem with that? I mean, you guys about it. Okay.
And got it.
So what's the problem with that?
I mean, you guys made it this far.
You're about to get married.
What's the problem?
Keeping on doing what you're doing?
I know it makes Kate feel uncomfortable.
And I care about her and love her.
And I want to see that.
I know it matters to her.
So something matters to her matters to me.
So I want to build in the way that she wants to build
and be a detective.
I see how much it affects Andy.
And I think that he and I miss out on shared experiences
because of that.
I think for example, like we've not ever taken
any sort of like extravagant vacation together
because the cost associated with that was
anxiety inducing and stressful or, you know, not go on super fancy date nights in New
York when we live there or go out to shows or sort of do those things that I think we both
acknowledge we would enjoy or spend time doing, but we don't because I know that it's an
anxiety inducing thing. I also think we're in this sort of new place in our life
of this house and planning a wedding and knowing we want kids.
And so it feels like almost a flip switched
where it's like, okay, now is this moment
where it's time to prioritize this.
I used to use New York's expensive
as my excuse to not really deal with money.
I don't live there anymore.
So jokes on me, like now I have to kind of figure it out.
And I think it's more so like, I have a good job, I have great friends, I love my partner
and want to spend my life with him.
So like this is sort of the next thing.
I meet a lot of people who have some kind of money problem and they absolutely love to
talk about it.
They revel in talking about it.
It actually energizes them.
But as soon as you ask them what they want to do to fix it, they shut down.
These people are what I call problem aware. They're aware of their problem. In fact,
many of them are addicted to talking about their problem. I want to know if Andy thinks this describes him or if he might be solution aware,
people who are looking for an answer
a way to change a solution.
Where would you say you fall on that spectrum, Andy?
I'd like to say I'm solution aware
and that's why I'm here with you and being
public-spot-cast.
Why don't you say it then?
I'm solution aware. There we go. Okay post podcast. Why don't you just say it then? I'm solution aware.
There we go.
Okay, great.
You don't need permission for me to tell me who you are.
You get to decide who you are.
If you're solution aware, all you need to do is just say,
I'm solution aware.
Boom, that's it.
I'll take you at your word.
I believe you are solution aware.
And that makes my job a lot easier.
So Andy, you feel like you don't contribute because Kate is here bringing in, you know, approximately three times what
you're bringing in. And so so far, the solution that you've taken has been, you just keep
your finances separate. Okay. But from what I'm hearing today, Kate, you really feel you
want to bring it together. Andy, you're on board, at least conceptually,
because you care about Kate, you're considerate
about her feelings.
Am I reading all that right?
Yeah, I'm done.
I guess the one thing I would just add as a caveat is that
I don't necessarily feel like I don't,
or I wasn't necessarily contributing.
I feel like in her idea of moving forward
of like having a joint bank account,
I was going to be afraid that I wasn't going to be contributing enough.
Why don't you just ask Kate how much would be enough?
She's right here.
I think she'd be, I think she'd be too kind to like say what she really feels.
Well, that's why we're here.
We're here to tell the truth.
Ask the question.
What would be contributing enough, Kate?
I would say now for me, I think one of the things
that I've told him a couple times is this house
is his family's house.
So that's a pretty sizable contribution
to make to this family.
Maybe it's not a dollar amount in a bank account,
but has a lot of contribution to our life.
To me is a major contribution.
And then I think beyond that the day to day, I mean, again, I just want to feel like we're sort of contributing together. If I'm contributing 90% to whatever total we decide,
and he's contributing 10, I'm cool with that. If we decide it's 50-50, I'm also cool with that.
I just want to decide together and both be comfortable
with it.
Okay, you two seem to dance around each other a lot. A lot. What I was looking for in that
last answer, Kate, was something specific. And I don't really care what the number is.
It's really for you to decide, but you talked a lot. And I didn't hear anything. If anything, you
distracted me. You said it could be 90, 10, it could be 50, 50, whatever he's
comfortable with. But Andy is not comfortable with anything.
Andy's asking you, he explicitly asked you, what does
contribution look like? So what I would like for you to do is to dance a
little closer. I'd like for one of you to take a risk.
And you could do it something like this.
You could say, you know what Andy?
I don't think we've ever talked about money in this specific of a way.
So I'm going to throw out a number that, for me, feels good.
But before I throw that number out, I want to say that I care about you.
And this is just my
first number that comes to mind and I'm totally willing to dance.
I'm willing to work with you on this number so that we both end up feeling good.
Are you okay with that Andy?
Andy says, of course, I love you.
And then you give a number and you're reasoning.
We need somebody to take the lead in this.
Otherwise you two are going to dance around this for the rest of your life.
Kate, you're nodding your head, why?
Because I think I've always known that he felt
uncomfortable about money, so I never took that leap.
Your script is perfect, I should have said all of those
things. But it just, I went to, okay, I'm just not even going to approach it because I know
that it's going to be uncomfortable. Yeah. The two of you are like magnets that are
repelling each other. Neither of you wants to get closer on this. But deep inside, both
of you do have a yearning to connect on money. So, Kate, take the lead on this.
All right, Andy, I love you. And I want to talk about this specifically and I. And I would hope or want it to perhaps evolve as we sort of establish a little bit more what housing expenses look like or goals that we have for the future if we want to change that.
But that's my initial thought.
Sure.
I mean, I'd be very open and happy to do that.
I think that's not, I have no problem with that.
As long as you feel comfortable with that.
Again, I don't, I said before, Ness, I don't want any resentment to build up, but I don't
think you will because you're the one that's creating these terms, which I hope you're comfortable
with them.
And I'm happy to do that.
Pause right there.
Kate.
You're both doing great.
Kate, did you notice what Andy just said that last two sentences that he said?
Oh, both of you know, okay, go ahead, Kate, pick up on that.
Oh, I mean, it was, well, if you've suggested this,
then we'll just do it.
There was no counter, no, you know,
other recommendation or reason.
So tell him, tell him what you want.
Yes, you correctly identified it.
Now, tell him what you want.
In a dance partner, do you always want to be the leader?
No.
Tell him what you want.
5%.
I just want you to also think about it
and think about what you would feel comfortable with
and knowing that it's on the table to discuss anytime we want.
Yeah, no, I feel completely comfortable with that.
I think you're being very fair and reasonable.
I don't think I wouldn't want you to actually pay more.
It's a lot of your paycheck going into that.
That would I be able to step up and contribute more
if I needed to.
I think you're a better planner than I am in general.
So if this is the plan you're going with,
I'm down with it.
Okay, there's something really interesting happening here.
Things seem to be going well a little too well.
And I want to share an example so you know what I mean.
Have you ever planned a trip for a group of friends? And you ask people, you know, you send
that a little email and you go, Hey guys, I'm thinking of this trip. What would you guys want to do?
And everybody writes back, OMG, that sounds so awesome. Hey listen, whatever you think is good with me,
I'm easy. I'm easy. I fucking hate that phrase. I'm easy. Okay,
cool. Then I'll plan it. So then you take, you know, these four, six, eight people on a trip,
and they get there. And the first thing they do is they sit down at the breakfast. I don't like
Kiwi. And then the next person goes, oh my god, we have to go to a museum today. I don't like Kiwi. And then the next person goes, oh my God, we have to go to a museum today.
I don't like museums. Then the other person says, I don't want to go to a club tonight.
And you're sitting there with your knuckles are clenched. You're about to choke yourself out.
You go, I thought you said you're easy.
The problem here is that they didn't put any skin in the game.
And if it seems like I speak from personal experience,
that is 100% correct.
I have learned that when you plan a trip for people,
everybody's got to have some skin in the game.
And the skin in the game could be money,
but it also should be something like
you're responsible for breakfast
or you're responsible for planning
what we do on Tuesday between 2 to 4 p.m.
Anything because if you don't, it's human nature that they're going to sit back and cross
their arms and complain.
By contrast, if they had any part of planning, if they had some skin in the game, they're
going to appreciate all of the details. Okay. Doesn't mean everything's going to be like
heaven, but they're going to know how much work went into the entire trip. This story is not simply
about planning a trip for your friends. It's about life. The people around you, if you want to do
something together, everybody needs to
have some skin in the game.
It could be for parents.
If you're deciding on where to go on vacation or where to go for dinner, you may want to
involve children if you expect them to behave.
It could be the same at work.
Listen, I'm CEO of my own business.
I have to get buy-in from everybody.
It's important if I want the entire business to get behind it.
So these are examples where skin in the game matters.
You're not seeing skin in the game as Andy and Kate are talking to each other.
Andy may agree with everything Kate's suggesting here,
but I need him to put some skin in the game. I need him to create at least one rule himself that way he's not just doing what Kate said.
That will be a recipe for resentment.
So I want him to take charge of at least part of this agreement so that it's what he and Kate have agreed to not just what Kate came up with and he said, okay.
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I want you to change at least one thing Kate said.
I don't care if you fiddle with a number, a percentage, or you have some term, or you
tell her, I insist that I get new shoes or I go to an Italian restaurant.
I don't care.
What I want is for you to speak up and tell Kate
what you need in this relationship financially.
Say it explicitly in one sentence.
Just Kate needs to hear it.
Whatever money that we do, save together,
and that setup that you were talking about before,
I think whatever's yearly,
10% of that should go to some sort of trip or fun activity
for us, and we should be mindful
of using that money towards that,
and not just things that are expense-related.
Kate, how you feeling about this so far?
Feeling good? Okay.
You're good.
I counted with 20.
No.
I like where you're going, Andy.
I'm going to push you a little further.
10% I like it.
It's a, it's aggressive number, but okay.
I like it.
What I want to know is where do you want to go your first year?
You have to pick the place.
Pick it right now.
We're picking it right.
We're going Argentine, now let's do it.
I love it.
Where'd that come from?
I've always kind of wanted to go.
I know her stepdad is actually from there.
I've always kind of wanted to go.
Kate, what do you think about this?
I'm down.
I would love to go to Argentina.
And I also just want us,
I'm excited about the prospect of us
planning a trip together
and not being stressed about how we're gonna pay for it.
Exactly.
You're not gonna be stressed.
You already picked the numbers.
So you already know your budget.
And by the way, you two were very, very smart.
You picked your numbers based on your salary, not on distributions and bonuses, which may or may not happen.
You picked it on straight salary. So you can actually mathematically calculate right now exactly
how much that's going to be. And you know, oh my gosh, we have $3,500 or $6,000, whatever the number is for
this trip. No need to worry. We know exactly how much we've gotten. We've got more than enough.
What I just heard was you two actually getting much closer, a bit of a negotiation.
I really love that. Both of you feet in, totally engaged. Well, you know, I hear you on that, but I also
think we should think about this. That's a financial discussion. That's a really rich discussion.
Okay. Normally, I'd be starting to wrap things up and I'd be telling you, you should visit
the best website in the world, Iwt.com. Maybe you should check me out on Instagram at
Ramith. But there's still something we have not covered yet. And that is Andy has a
$1.1 million trust fund. And that adds a beautiful layer of complexity to his
financial situation with Kate. And I want them to address it now because once Andy
gains full control of his trust, which happens
in a couple of years, their financial situation is going to be completely different.
I assume when you get that money, you don't know what to do with it.
Is that accurate?
I mean, again, it's all right now.
It's basically all on mutual funds right now.
I mean, but I wouldn't know what to do with it beyond it just sitting in those mutual funds
first time.
Yeah.
Okay. There's a financial advisor that kind of controls
all those things about that way.
I bet there is.
Okay.
Sorry.
I bet that financial advisor is being paid
a very fat one, one point two, five percent fee.
Yeah, he takes a nice, takes a nice amount of money.
Yeah.
That's gonna change.
I'll tell you that right now.
Okay, okay.
Quick sidebar because I need to explain this comment
that I just glazed over.
A lot of people think that a 1% fee that they're paying their financial advisor is not that
much.
Let me explain some surprising things that I almost certainly guarantee you do not know.
So some people use financial advisors and many of those advisors charge a percentage-based
fee.
It's often 1%, it used to be 2%. And you say to
yourself, 1%, that's not that much, you know, maybe I have 50k or let's just say 100k for easy
math. Well, they're only paying, you know, they're only taking a thousand bucks a year, no big deal.
If you do the math throughout the course of your lifetime, A 1% fee means that you will pay approximately
28% of your returns to your advisor. If you're paying 2% in fees, you will pay over 50%
of your returns to advisors. I know the math is not intuitive. I cover it in my book. I will
teach you to be rich. So you have a lot of options. First off, you can get my book, learn how to do this yourself. It's not that hard.
Or if you really want the help of an advisor, that's fine. I'm not categorically against them.
I am against paying AUM or percentage-based fees.
You want to pay 500 bucks an hour? Great. You would be way better off paying $500 an hour instead of a 1%
AUM fee. Now, I'm going to suggest something. It's a little dark and vindictive, but you're
listening to me. So what I'm just going to tell you, call up your parents and say, you
know, mom, dad, I know, I know you work with this advisor. Any idea how much you're paying
in fees?
Now they're gonna get very uncomfortable
because deep down they know that they're overpaying.
But they really like this guy
because it's their uncle's friend.
He's got a nice mustache and he sends him a card on Christmas.
Oh, I don't know, but he's so nice and his kids are so nice.
Ah!
You go, mom, just find out how much you're paying in fees.
Now, when you find out, be careful.
The point of this story is not to psychologically destroy
and eviscerate your parents.
It's simply so that you know how much they've paid
over the course of their lifetime,
probably because they were trying to do their best
and that's what they knew at the time.
And more importantly, so that you can make the decision
not to pay the same type of fees
that they have.
One percent fees, in my opinion, are unconscionable.
You should not be paying them.
On top of that, these advisors who charge one percent fees are typically selling you bullshit
investments like whole life insurance.
And they are making money from offering you substandard services. I don't want that for you.
I cover more in my book, take control of your money. So, you know, Andy, you can go the rest of your
life worrying about if you're going to have enough to eat and, you know, get your shoes and all that
stuff. But I ran a quick calculation myself. How much do you think you're going to have by the time
you turn 65? If you just do nothing, you don't even save,
but you save the two of you together,
you save like 10 grand a year,
which by the way, you can easily do on a $200,000 salary.
How much do you think you'll have?
Oh, you're talking to the guys clearly bad with money.
I don't know, $500,000?
I don't know, that's a number of throwing out there. Okay. Don't worry. I'm not going to
judge you for your math skills. Okay. Well, I meant like, are we
talking about like what the money already have now? Like,
were you saying about like, how much do we have? We're talking
about just between the money that we're saving over those
years? No, what are we? Everything? The trust. Well, yeah,
now, I don't know, at that point, well, let's just go two
million, we'll double it. Why not?
But twice as old as I am right now, let's double it.
Okay, so the answer is actually over $8.5 million.
I'm calculating you taking $1 million and investing it for 30 years at a very simple 7% return rate and adding $10,000 a year,
which is extremely conservative for the two of you.
You could probably triple that and you'll have $8.6 million.
I think it sounds great.
I think I have no idea how to do that.
You're like a very simple 7% and I was like, really?
7% simple. Well, that's easy. That part is easy. Listen, you know what's harder? You
know what's hard about this discussion? Easy part is 7%. You can find that in chapter 7 of my book.
Take you five seconds to find it. Okay. The book is at the library. I know Kate's read it,
but Andy, this is your involvement in the dance as well. Yeah, that's exactly right. The hard part of this is you changing
your psychology to recognize that you're going to have over 8.5 million dollars. And if the two of
you contribute 30k a year instead of 10k, which is easy, okay, because your incomes are going up,
you're both very young, you'll have over $10.5 million.
What do you want to do? You want to turn 65? Have 10 fucking million dollars and still be worrying about eating dessert?
Now we're good with that.
When do you get to stop worrying Andy?
No idea.
I mean, I'm not so good at number. Nobody can tell me except you.
You're the only person who knows the answer.
I mean, I think this is the first step for that happening, I mean, not worrying is again,
going towards solutions.
Yes.
Love that answer.
So it's not a number, is that what you're telling me?
Yeah, I don't think it's a number per se.
I don't need an answer.
Great answer.
You're not, it's not a number because you already have a ton of money.
You're fucking rich.
Yeah, yeah.
You have a ton of money.
You have a free house.
Yeah.
It's not a number.
That is very insightful.
I think you're totally right.
You know what the missing piece for both of you is?
Going after what we love, I don't know. Yeah.
I love to spend money on a great meal out, get cocktails, get
dessert, get whatever on tray I want, and have it be like an
experience of an evening.
Okay, this is what I want to go back to four Charles
in the West Village, and I had an amazing meal there
for birthday a few years ago, and I would like to recreate
that and get in old-fashioned, and the filet menu on the bone,
and all the sides, and the chocolate crumb cake thing that we had for dessert.
And there's like only eight tables there. It's like very atmospheric. The service was incredible.
And that was actually a meal that I wanted to try to have before I left New York and it didn't happen.
So it's a thing to do with it.
Yep.
Okay. Who's going with you on this meal?
I want Andy to come.
He loves steak just as much as I do.
Fantastic.
For me, it's going to end out that she's saying me.
Yes, please.
Of course she said you in your night away.
There we go.
That's you.
So that sounds like a really visceral, beautiful vision you have.
And my favorite part is that it has a real meaning to you.
It was the place you were going to go before you left New York,
but you weren't able to do it.
So I really, really love that.
Do you see the difference between this whole hypothetical
theoretical thing you started off?
I like this, and I would kind of like this reservation app. It's all words, but then four Charles and getting the filet mignon, that
is something we can both smell right now. You see the difference? Your rich life is rich
because of the details within it. That is why I push you both for the details. Nobody cares about
theory. You don't even care about theory. You care about going back to that restaurant
and when you walk in, you have your reservation and you've already planned, you have more
than enough money to cover the two of you and you leave a fat tip. How are you going
to feel walking out of that meal in the West
Village?
It's going to feel great.
It's going to feel amazing. You two are fantastic.
I love to build things right now. We have this house. We've got
a backroom. I'd love to change it into a workout room. I know
Kate's there on board. I see mirrors. I see a bench. I see a
treadmill, possibly a TV also up there. I know Kate's there on board. I see mirrors, I see a bench, I see a treadmill,
possibly a TV also up there.
I know maybe she wants a pellet on, we'll see.
Maybe some mats on the floors on the side.
We got some cubbies, there's like a dirt, like a mudroom.
Let's do it.
I want to do that.
This fucking suite.
Why did this come from?
This is crazy.
We've discussed it a little bit, but I have a vision in my mind.
I don't know if I'm just like, okay, I know Kate's probably got a side vision, but I have a vision in my mind. I don't know if that's okay.
I know Kate's probably got a side vision, but I want to make that happen.
I want to be part of it.
I don't want to just pay somebody.
I want to build part of it up.
You want to actually do some of this stuff.
Yeah, man.
Okay, so this is unbelievable to me.
It sounds like you just came alive.
Everything you did had an intention behind it.
You did not equivocate even once.
You have a vision in your mind.
I can almost see it.
Where did this come from?
I enjoy doing home improvement stuff.
I don't necessarily worry about or building whatever.
I do, I have an art project going on.
I don't really mind the cost associated with that.
So that's why in my mind, I was like, okay,
if I'm building to or something,
if I'm creating something, that is something
I'm like spending money on. So then in my mind, I was like, even if we're creating a room or something, if I'm creating something, that is something I'm spending money.
So then in my mind, I was like, even for creating a room,
I know I can't build the whole thing,
but putting money towards that,
it feels like I'm creating the space,
in which case I would feel good about doing that,
creating that space.
And so when you were talking about specifics,
I was like, all right, well,
let's set the room and be intentional about that one space.
What a difference.
This shows you that deep down, every one of us has something that we truly love.
I call them money dials, but we all have something that we love doing.
And it could be as extravagant, as traveling around the world, it could be as simple as I want to have a room
where I can build things. That's it. I am constantly searching for what people's money dial is.
Deep down, we intuitively know it, but we cover it up with all these hypothetical,
hover it up with all these hypothetical academic words that were supposed to use. You could hear it in Andy's voice.
He came alive.
His speech pattern even changed.
Did you notice that?
No doubt.
He had no doubts in his voice.
He went straight for it.
He was intentional.
He was assertive.
I absolutely for it. He was intentional. He was assertive. I absolutely loved it.
Kate and Andy have gone on quite a journey today and my favorite part was watching them learn
how to dance.
They've been doing a dance for so long dancing around each other.
But being able to give them just a little nudge to move towards each other for one person
to take the lead and then to be able to hand it off to the other person to be a leader,
that's a true partnership, that's a joy to watch.
So today I want to thank you for listening and I want to thank Kate and Andy for being
so candid about their rich life.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich. I'm Rameet Saytee.
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I was getting some frozen organic strawberries that I remembered from Whole Foods are like $7.99 and they're
like $15.
And I was just like, I can't do it.
I cannot because what?
It's crazy.
Like that is $7.
I can't bring myself to pay two times the price for the exact same thing.
What is your net worth?
About $8 million.