I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 150. “We’re broke, but I spend $350/mo on clothes” (Part 2)

Episode Date: April 2, 2024

In part two with Elizabeth and Jonathan, 36 and 38, we continue unpacking their complicated personal backgrounds with money as they relate to current spending, investing, and saving habits. They’re ...stuck in a loop of debt and financial stress, but are they ready to make positive changes? This episode is brought to you by: Sidebar | Join thousands of leaders from companies like Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta who have taken the first step towards accelerating their career https://sidebar.com Trade | Right now, Trade is offering our audience a free bag of coffee with any subscription at https://drinktrade.com/ramit. Netsuite | Get visibility to everything in your business one one place. Sign up and defer payments, with no interest, for six months at https://iwt.com/netsuite. Masterclass | For unlimited access to every class and 15% off an annual membership, go to https://masterclass.com/ramit. Fabric by Gerber Life | Protect your family today with Fabric by Gerber Life. Apply today in just 10 minutes at https://meetfabric.com/ramit. Links mentioned in this episode • “We have no savings but bought our kid a $500 toy for Christmas” (Part 1) 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)
Starting point is 00:00:00 I've always put myself last as far as I want things for my daughter, for my husband. Just want to reiterate, you have $25,000 in credit card debt and you spent $350 in a month on clothes. I should not be buying more clothes. I have plenty. I'm not here to beat you up or berate you. That's not my job. That's not what I do.
Starting point is 00:00:25 No. There's just not enough money. We've tried to get out of debt many times and we never get out of debt ever. That's why it keeps accumulating. It just keeps getting worse. Why have you created a life where you have to do this? Probably because we didn't value ourselves enough to create something good. We created something bad because that's what we thought we deserved.
Starting point is 00:00:51 Wow. You think you deserve a bad life? Some days, not all days. Welcome back to part two of my conversation with Elizabeth and John. Recall that they are in their mid thirties. They have an eight year old daughter and they can't seem to figure out why they struggle to save money. They have fallen into this pattern of paying some bills, but letting others go late and
Starting point is 00:01:22 they are rotating things while Elizabeth desperately tries to manage the money using a notepad where she tracks random expenses. Last week, we left at a pretty dark moment where they were just starting to realize how serious their situation is. Well, today we're going to get back into that conversation. We're going to go over their numbers and I think you're going to be surprised. I wanted to know what is it going to take in order for Jonathan and Elizabeth to get serious about making a change? I'd like John to be more honest. I think he hides his true feelings a lot and he buries
Starting point is 00:02:03 them deep down. When I ask you to be honest with me, I don't think you're being honest with me. That's why I ask you, are you being honest a lot? Because I know you're not. I can tell that you are holding back and I need you to actually be honest with me and tell me the truth.
Starting point is 00:02:22 I need you to Help me in a way that you don't currently help me Everything else you do is great But I need you to be in it with me So I'm not doing this by myself because I feel like I've been doing it by myself for a long time. I Have by myself for a long time. I have held back for the fear of the fight. I know. I'm willing to stand there with you if you're willing to hear me honestly and actually take my thoughts into consideration when it comes to the finances. I don't feel like I'm always heard when we do talk about it.
Starting point is 00:03:17 Yeah, that's probably true. I'm very stubborn and set in my ways and I know I need to change that. And that's a big part of why I've kind of been Passive all this time why say anything if what I'm gonna say is just gonna fall to the floor. I feel terrible that I've let it go for this long, but And I still do we shouldn't got the pony and sometimes I do I Don't want to say ignore you but maybe it is I ignore you I ignore what you have to say because I have in my mind what we should do and I
Starting point is 00:03:58 Should take your thoughts into consideration more Sorry Sorry, I haven't been here for you. I should have worked harder. Thank you both. How did that feel? Good. Good. When was the last time you had a conversation like that?
Starting point is 00:04:16 That's been a hot minute. John, I think you did a great job right there. You were proactive. You acknowledged where you have not done a great job You also said what you want. I want to be heard. I want to be listened to I Think that was great. You gave an example all that was fantastic Elizabeth How do you think you might have to radically?
Starting point is 00:04:41 Reconceptualize how you show up with money. I'm going to have to loosen the reins of the control that I have over everything and over the money. Yes. Let's use a different phrase, shall we? Loosen the reins. That implies you are still totally in control. That's true. Do you want a passive person in your marriage?
Starting point is 00:05:04 No. Okay. Then what's the real word you want to use? I Want to share? There you go burden. There you go. Oh wait. It was so good until you Try that again, you're so close. I want to share go ahead. I want to share the financial responsibility with him Ah, so good. So good. So good. That's really good words matter Go ahead. I want to share the financial responsibility with him. So good. So good. So good.
Starting point is 00:05:28 That's really good. Words matter. They are our destiny. If you are sharing, now suddenly you have a partner who can take some of the load on, who can also inspire you and help you and both of you can hold each other accountable. All that. You can dream together. And it's not a burden alone.
Starting point is 00:05:46 It might be a burden in the short term, okay, but it's a responsibility. That's what money is. It's a responsibility and it can also be a pleasure. So we share that, right? Yeah. Okay, good. So really, how else are you gonna have
Starting point is 00:06:04 to radically reconceptualize how you show up with money, Elizabeth? Probably give up the my notebook. Yeah. Can we use a different word besides give up? Give up implies you lose, you surrender. I'm not giving up. I want to change.
Starting point is 00:06:23 Change the way I view money, change the way that I spend money, change the way that I save money. I need to change everything. Manage money, monitor. I love it. Manage it. Great. Yes.
Starting point is 00:06:41 Great. And what about the spending? Talk to me about that. I'm going to have to stop it. Oh, stop? Just stop? You just stop? No. Just like that?
Starting point is 00:06:49 No. It's not going to be just like that. I wish it were that easy, but no, it's not. I know it's not because I've been trying for a long time. Here's the thing about trying and trying and trying and not getting results. It's extremely demoralizing. And after a while, you start to think, I tried method one, I tried method two, I tried method 10.
Starting point is 00:07:17 It's not the methods. It's me. I'm broken. Yeah. And you're not broken. You're not broken. Yeah. Yeah. And you're not broken. You're not broken. Anyone can become good with money. You don't need to become world class to have a very nice life. Anyone can become good. But to tell you the candid truth, it will be challenging for you. Because you're going to have to radically rethink
Starting point is 00:07:45 the way that you show up. Now it can change. It can change with therapy. It can change with behavioral practices like setting up automation. It can change with the help of a partner. But it has to change. Yeah. I really like the direction they're taking. This all happened after I got frustrated with them at the end of the last episode. And I basically said, you guys are not taking this seriously. And suddenly they are. But you can still see how challenging this is going to be. Even in this serious discussion.
Starting point is 00:08:19 They're cracking jokes. They're using restrictive language. But frankly, all of those are tiny details. What I notice is that they are making progress. And I love that. We'll get into their CSP after this quick break. For the last 10 years, I've been part of a private CEO council. It's me and five other CEOs. And it has been transformative for my career and for my personal life. Every six weeks, we talk
Starting point is 00:08:45 on Zoom. And once a year, we get together for several days to talk about our business and our personal lives. Before this, I was pretty hesitant to join groups like this because they're a big commitment. But once I met the people in this group, I knew instantly I wanted to be their friends. I wanted to get to know them. I knew that I could learn a lot from them and I could have a lot of fun with them. And 10 plus years later, it has been amazing. In our meetings, we challenge each other. We get to talk about something we might be frustrated with or we might just be venting. It's been amazing to be with a group who knows me, who understands where I've come from, what I'm going through, where I want to go, and they can
Starting point is 00:09:25 give me specific feedback. And on a personal level, I find this to be especially rare for men. This has made a huge impact on my personal life. Imagine being able to regularly learn from people who are more experienced than you. Well, if you're looking for a group of peers to challenge you, check out this episode's sponsor, Sidebar. Sidebar is an exclusive, highly curated leadership program where you can tap into a group of supportive peers, including Fortune 500 executives, startup CEOs, for expert advice, new perspectives, and raw feedback to help you in your professional growth.
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Starting point is 00:11:50 Let's get into their numbers. You can download your own free conscious spending plan template and follow along at IWT.com slash CSP. Their net worth reads as follows assets $170,000 investments 38,000 savings zero debt $152,000 for a total net worth of $56,483 Is a very sad little number why I will be honest I am surprised that is as big as it is I thought it was going to be
Starting point is 00:12:25 zero or negative. So I was happily surprised that we weren't negative completely. But as old as we are, I was really hoping like investments would be, I don't know, three or four times bigger than that number is and debt was not even close to that giant of a number. Talk to me about the debt. $152,000. How does that break down? Student loans is about $50,000. Mortgage is about $45,000. Credit card debt is 25,000. Medical debt is 8,000.
Starting point is 00:13:16 I think that's everything. All right. So this is your gross annual income, $88,800. Who here knew that is how much you make jointly? Raise your hand if you knew. That's a no. All right. One out of two. Thank you very much for keeping my average consistent. 50% of people who come and talk to me do not know how much they make. How's that possible, by the way? Can you quickly explain that? John, how'd you not know? I let her handle it. I was passive about it.
Starting point is 00:13:50 Okay, good. I got a paycheck and that was all I cared about. Elizabeth, are you the higher earner? Yes, I am. All right. So you make about $48,000 a year gross. And Jonathan, you make about $40,000. Right? Yeah. Elizabeth, what's this number right here? Your joint combined fixed cost. What is that?
Starting point is 00:14:11 100%. So you're spending every last dollar you make just on your fixed costs. Correct. We are not making enough to get by already. Well, I know we are. Groceries, number one, is ginormous Can we just zoom out? I don't I don't care about Grocery spend right now. I care about the fact that you are losing money every single month You are broke and if anything happens to either of you it's over you have zero dollars in savings So I don't really care for the jokes about groceries right now
Starting point is 00:14:44 Yeah Are you all ready to take this seriously? for sure, it's $10,000 in savings. So I don't really care for the jokes about groceries right now. Yeah. Are you all ready to take this seriously? For sure. It's deflecting, I guess. Yes. I know how bad we are. I know that we are one paycheck away from everything gone. Yeah. You're spending 100% of your take home income on fixed costs. Yeah. It's too much.
Starting point is 00:15:09 So let's take a look. First of all, your mortgage is $500. Wow, that's good. I know you bought this a while ago. We did. What did it cost when you bought it? $699. $70,000.
Starting point is 00:15:23 All right, great. Yeah. Well, all right, your debt payments are $1,2670,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000.
Starting point is 00:15:31 $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000.
Starting point is 00:15:39 $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. $60,970,000. trips we took to Walmart or Target. It was actually very eye opening for both of us how much that number was. Especially because you mentioned that your in-laws provide meat for you.
Starting point is 00:15:51 Yes. Things like that. That's a huge savings. Yeah. We overbuy. Yeah. Because we both came from families, you know, that you buy what you can when you can, when you have the money and that goes for food as well. I like our cupboards to be completely stocked at all times. Why?
Starting point is 00:16:10 Because I've come from not having. So I want them to be fully stocked so that I know where my next meal is coming from. I think that's pretty honest. And I understand that if you were raised food insecure, not knowing where things are going to come, it's a sense of comfort to open up a cupboard and see can after can or a fridge full of vegetables and meat. I get it. Can I just give you a slightly different perspective? Yeah. Sure. I like to open up my fridge and see some food in there. That's fine. I mostly
Starting point is 00:16:51 eat the same meals every day. I'm not saying you have to. I'm just sharing what I do. I don't really think about it. It's easy. And when you said you like to see your cupboard full, I thought to myself, I like to see my portfolio full. Yeah. I like to see my savings account full. Have you ever talked like that? No. No.
Starting point is 00:17:15 I would like that. Yes. You can like it. I think that would be awesome. I'm sharing my perspective just because I want to give you a different perspective. Yeah. If you want that to happen, you can make it happen. I think that would be awesome. I'm sharing my perspective just because I want to give you a different perspective. If you want that to happen, you can make it happen. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:31 Clothes are $350 a month? What? So that was based off of this last month. It's not every month that I spent $350. Just want to reiterate, you have $25,000 in credit card debt and you spent $350 in a month on quotes. Yeah, I should not be buying more clothes. I have plenty.
Starting point is 00:17:53 I'm not here to beat you up or berate you. That's not my job. That's not what I do. No. But it's honest. What I'm trying to do is to show you that you are not in alignment. If you say that you want to pay off your debt, we'll get to that. If you say that you would like to have more savings, if you say that you would like to
Starting point is 00:18:15 stop worrying, this is not in alignment with that. Right. It's not. So one of the things that I try to make sure of is I don't tell people, stop doing that. Because if I told you stop doing that, what's the first thing you would do? Especially you, Elizabeth. I would go out and do it. Your phone $250 a month.
Starting point is 00:18:38 What is that? That's more than I pay. We have payments on our phones and we have an iPad that we pay for service. What? For our daughter. I thought it was going to be a good deal. A way of getting her an iPad through a phone subscription service so that we were paying payments.
Starting point is 00:19:00 But... Elizabeth, this is a whole... This is that radical re-conceptualization. You may have found a great deal on something, but the truth is you probably shouldn't have been getting it in the first place. It allows her to call us when she goes to, you know, and then at grandma's house from her iPad, like FaceTime us. Would you be willing to get rid of that service? I
Starting point is 00:19:26 Want to say yes that we should get rid of the service But I like yes, I like her having it It's just like a safety feature for me and she takes it with her pretty much everywhere she goes. So I know I can always reach her if I need to. For me, that's kind of how I justify it in my head. Can I ask you a question? Yeah. Nothing against you wanting safety for your daughter. I totally respect that. And if you decide the two of you to keep it, that's your decision. It's your money. It's your daughter.
Starting point is 00:20:05 It's your call. But I know, I'm going to put this on screen right now. Speaking of safety, I noticed that the two of you with an eight-year-old daughter have exactly zero dollars in savings. How safe is she really? I noticed that you have $152,000 of debt and that combined the two of you make eighty eight thousand dollars How safe is she really? Yeah, not very and I noticed finally that the two of you spend
Starting point is 00:20:37 100% probably a little bit more of your take-home income on fixed costs Meaning you are spending more every month than you make. How safe is your daughter? Only for the next two weeks till the next paycheck. Honestly, I was getting a little frustrated here. They're literally losing money every single month and they're here buying a $500 hoverboard for their daughter, hundreds of dollars of clothes, and tons of random stuff at Target. It's one thing to do this if you're 24 years old and single, but this is a family with a young daughter and they have essentially no savings. Yes,
Starting point is 00:21:17 I understand they grew up in tough circumstances. Yes, I understand they have a low sense of agency and their communication patterns are not that healthy. But if they want to change, they have to actually recognize how bad the situation is and then decide to make a change. As of right now, it still feels like they basically hoped I would show up, sprinkle a few magic words over our conversation and everything would be okay. We'll be right back. I have two big problems in my life. The first one is people telling me that bland food is actually
Starting point is 00:21:52 spicy. And the second one is managing a ton of IT costs. I'm talking about software to manage HR, software to manage traffic acquisition, software to manage analytics. I don't want to deal with this anymore. When I first started my business, I didn't even use any software at all. I sold a $4.95 ebook. I had such low self-confidence that I actually thought nobody's going to buy this thing, so I'll just manually attach the PDF through email. Well, guess what? I quickly learned as my business grew, I needed to get different types of software and that
Starting point is 00:22:22 became very, very complicated. When you have different software doing different things, you have to get different types of software. And that became very, very complicated. When you have different software doing different things, you have to cobble them together. It becomes expensive. It becomes overwhelming. And you simply get stuck in your business. Well, there's a different way to look at unifying your business IT together. I want to introduce you to our sponsor NetSuite. NetSuite is the number one cloud financial system bringing accounting, financial management, inventory HR into one platform and one source of truth. With NetSuite, you can reduce IT costs because NetSuite lives in the clouds with no hardware required. You can cut the cost of maintaining multiple systems because you have one unified business management suite. And you improve
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Starting point is 00:23:40 I always wanted to study with the best. And when I saw that, I knew I had to do it. Well, not all of us can fly to Orlando and spend thousands of dollars on a class just out of pure curiosity. But I do think that we have a chance to learn from the best. Bob Iger, the CEO of Disney, actually has a class on masterclass.
Starting point is 00:23:58 And I watched that as well. He talks about taking big swings. He talks about managing your time and some of the psychology of understanding what your customers want. By the way, something you can apply to your own finances. I like it. Basically anything Disney does, I'm into studying. So how do you get that class and many more like it? Masterclass. Masterclass, one of our sponsors, they offer over 180 world-class instructors. So whether you want to master negotiation with Chris Voss,
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Starting point is 00:25:08 Now back to Elizabeth and John. Before we do work on some other reduction, I just want to look at the rest. Investments, you're at 8%. All right, so you're putting $400 a month away into retirement, which is why you have $38,000 invested. All right, fine. Yeah, that's the only reason we have anything invested. So what's the lesson?
Starting point is 00:25:29 If I can't see it go, then it's fine. If you want your money to go somewhere, you need to make it automatic. Whatever's left, you're going to spend it. Might as well just be humble about it and admit it. Look, I have my own weaknesses, right? You put chips and salsa in front of me, I'm eating that whole freaking thing. I know that. I'm only going to eat at a Mexican restaurant when I know it's going to be chips and salsa
Starting point is 00:25:55 all night for Ramit. I'm humble enough to know it. You got to be humble enough. It's not about trying. It's not about manually tracking in a notepad. None of that stuff matters. It's about automating your money to go where you want it to go. Simple as that.
Starting point is 00:26:12 We need to get this number down to roughly 50, maybe 60%. Like I said, we've tried to get out of debt many times and we never get out of debt ever. That's why it keeps accumulating. It just keeps getting worse. Eating out. What else? I would buy a lot of movies online. What?
Starting point is 00:26:37 I mean, like at $5 a pop, like digital movies. What? That was something else I like to buy. Wait, hold on. That's weird. You have $185 a month in subscriptions. I presume that's like Disney Plus, Netflix, all that stuff, right? Yes. So you're buying on top of those?
Starting point is 00:26:52 Yes, I am. Yep. I stopped. John made me stop, so I did stop. What did you say, John? Can we really afford that? You need to stop. It all adds up.
Starting point is 00:27:04 No. He told me to stop. He said I wasn't allowed to buy any more movies. Do you respond well to being treated like a child? I'm asking not insultingly. No. I get that. I don't know. Maybe yes. I like to be in control and to do what I want to do. But I also like somebody telling me what to do. So if he were to be more in it and say, hey, stop and don't do that, then I think I would listen a little more.
Starting point is 00:27:36 I see. Okay. So you're saying if my partner were more directive with me about what is inbounds and out of bounds, I would respond to that. Yes, I would. That is honest. I appreciate that. John, what are you hearing?
Starting point is 00:27:54 That I need to be firmer with her. Yes. Let's be careful because it's very easy to go from like directive to she's a child and I'm going to treat her like a child. I don't want that. That's not the intimate relationship you want. Trust me. No. What's a better way to balance this? I would like him to set boundaries period with the way that we spend our money. Right now there are no boundaries.
Starting point is 00:28:20 Okay, so he sets boundaries. So he says no more whatever, eating out or only eating out twice a week or something like that. Yes, I feel like I would stick to it more if I had somebody that would. Somebody that's making decisions, not for me, but with me. Because right now I'm making all the decisions myself. I agree with that. Yeah. John, you hearing that?
Starting point is 00:28:50 Would you be willing to set some boundaries? Yes. Okay. Love that he's like, yes, set me free. I'll do it. He pulls out a list. It's 350 pages long. Probably.
Starting point is 00:29:00 He's like, not all day. How much tape you got? We're about to roll this thing for the next two days. Okay, fine. I can sense the excitement. Elizabeth, you asked him to set some boundaries. I respect that. He sounds like he's down for it.
Starting point is 00:29:11 I would like you to set some boundaries for yourself. Yeah. Do you want to pick one right now? No more clothes for... Well, I see I'm trying to quantify it. No, you're trying to qualify it. Qualify it. You're trying to squirrel out of it, right? I am.
Starting point is 00:29:37 Why are you trying to do that? Because I want the clothes. I don't need them. I want to give into that feeling that endorphin rush of going shopping. I love doing that. I want to give into that. You have your email open right now? Yes. Read me the top 10 to 15 emails in your inbox? Shoe carnival, Sezzle, GameStop, Bloom Chick. Yeah, their clothes and shoes. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:16 Look at me now. What have you done by signing up for all those emails that come into you every single day at all hours? What have you done? Given myself permission to look at it and go after what I want. You have basically told every company out there, I give you permission to flood me with highly engineered material to get me to buy stuff. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:48 Do you see how you have set yourself up to fail? Yeah, I do. So what are you going to do about those emails? Unsubscribe all of them. If you have a spending problem, I can almost guarantee you are subscribed to a bunch of retailers like Bed Bath & Beyond and Target right now in your email inbox. I can also guarantee you follow a bunch of brands and random influencers who encourage you to buy a bunch of on Instagram. Unsubscribe.
Starting point is 00:31:18 Do it right now. You buying random items that some marketing manager fed you is not your rich life Let's cut this and even if you actually love bed bath and beyond and even if it's incredibly meaningful to you And you sketched out your rich life and you put bed bath and beyond as one of your top three things You can't afford it if you're spending more than a hundred percent of your take-home income on fixed costs Just because something is part of your rich life does not mean you can afford it on fixed costs. Just because something is part of your rich life does not mean you can afford it. You are playing small. Now you can tell that there are some people who simply want clear black and white boundaries. Fine, I'll give it to them. But along with those boundaries, I'm going to try to show Elizabeth and John why I'm giving them those specific
Starting point is 00:32:02 recommendations. What are some other parts of life where you have set yourself up to fail? Having shopping apps on my phone where I see them. Get that off immediately. Yeah. Well, I have a shopping a shopping app like what? Like for the stores that I like to shop from, I have their apps on my phone. Uh-uh. Bye-bye. Okay, those are gone. Again, you're actually just setting yourself up to fail.
Starting point is 00:32:30 If you put a basket of chips and salsa in front of me again, and I was like, I should try to be better. I'm so bad. Give me 15 minutes. I'm going to eat that thing. Yeah. Part of it is like, okay, could I have had stronger willpower? Sure, I could have. But let's not even play that game at all. Let's just not have the chips in the house.
Starting point is 00:32:48 Right. I'm humble enough to know that there's certain things I'm just going to do. Okay, apps, you nailed it. Email, you nailed it. What else? Give me one more. Yes. Not going to Target.
Starting point is 00:32:59 Yeah. Period. Yeah. Send John. Yeah, I agree. That's an easy fix. Sure. Right.
Starting point is 00:33:07 Elizabeth, as you start to get some more wins under your belt, I don't want you, like a child, to be told you can't go in there. I would like you to learn the discipline, like going into a restaurant and knowing how to order food or how much dessert to get. You need to learn that stuff. You need to make some mistakes. It's okay. It's not going to kill you.
Starting point is 00:33:26 After you get some wins under your belt, I would love it if three months, six months down the line, you go in with a small list, five items. You go into Target and you tell yourself before you go in, you go, how am I going to show up on this Target trip? Oh, I'm going to do exactly what's on this list. No less, no more. I trust you. You need to trust yourself more.
Starting point is 00:33:48 Yeah. Let's just go back and work through some of the numbers right now because right now, we've got to fix something. Yeah. So, your fixed costs need to come down from 99% to 60%. Let me tell you what doesn't work. Sitting here for the next three hours and talking about, oh, can we shave off $10 on gas?
Starting point is 00:34:09 No, it's never going to work. All right. A better approach is simply to say if we had a blank page, what would we be doing with our money? Saving. Okay. Invest. Investing.
Starting point is 00:34:21 Okay. You want to, you would start with saving, investing. What else? Go on a vacation, a honeymoon. Nice. Okay. Yeah. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 00:34:33 Anything else? I mean, save for Rosie's college if she wants to. Not on the list is credit card debt. Oh, okay, nice. Agreed. Not on the list is a $500 pony. Oh, OK. Nice. Agreed. Not on the list is a $500 pony. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:49 What else? You want to save money? Fine. How much you want to save per month? Give me a number. I'd like to at least be able to save $1,000. That's my first goal. All right.
Starting point is 00:35:01 But you could save $1,000. It doesn't have to have to happen in one month. No, I want to save at least $100. All right, but you could save $1,000. It doesn't have to have to happen in one month. No, I want to save at least $100. All right. $100 is 2%. I like that. Let's go a little bit higher. 200? Yeah, 200. I can say 300. 300. Okay, fine. All right. That's at 6%. That's nice. I always say like 5 to 10%. Of
Starting point is 00:35:23 course, I'd love to see that number higher, but this is a good place to get started. Investments. Ah, you're at 8 percent. I don't mind that. Well, we got a problem here because right now your guilt-free spending is negative 13 percent, which means you cannot afford to do any eating out, etc. And of course, you just ignore that. You just eat out anyway, which just adds to your credit card debt. That's not effective.
Starting point is 00:35:46 That's a structural problem. You've set yourself up to fail. So that is not going to work. That means we need to go up here to fix costs. That is where the crux of the problem is. If you need to make big changes, this is how you do it. You simply start a new page and you say if we had to start all over again, what would we do?
Starting point is 00:36:04 When you do that, most people immediately prioritize saving and investing. That's literally what we mean when we say, paying yourself first. Most people also conveniently leave off a bunch of the random meaningless purchases that they are wasting their money on. They do, on the other hand, add meaningful things
Starting point is 00:36:23 like vacations. You can see that when you give people the chance to design on a blank slate, whether it's with food, whether it's with their rich life, whether it's with their time, they are quite intentional. The problem is that we typically cobble together our life based on what's in front of us. Oh, I got an email with a sale for this thing for 15% off, click. And suddenly you wake up one day, you look around your house,
Starting point is 00:36:49 it's full of stuff you don't care about. You look at where you're spending your money, it's full of stuff you don't care about. And then you go, why can't I live a rich life? Well, you've done everything but. And one of my goals is to be able to disentangle all that stuff, cut through the cobwebs and say, what is your rich life?
Starting point is 00:37:04 So they did exactly what most people do. They took a blank slate. They made very intentional decisions. I like it. Now we have to see if they can actually change their existing spending to get aligned with the life that they want. We'll be back after these messages.
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Starting point is 00:38:21 the thousands of parents who trust Fabric to protect their family. Apply today in just minutes at meetfabric.com slash Ramit. That's meetfabric.com slash Ramit. M-E-E-T fabric.com slash Ramit. Policies issued by Western Southern Life Assurance Company not available in certain states. Prices subject to underwriting and health questions. Let's get back to the show. I started working through their CSP with them. Remember, we're aiming for 50 to 60% in fixed costs. They're currently at 99%. That's down from 100% after we cut cell service on their 8-year-old daughter's iPad. So here's what we did.
Starting point is 00:38:58 We removed $520 a month from groceries. We cut way back on clothing. We traded in and canceled service on their Apple watches, cut $90 gym membership they can work out at home, went down to one streaming subscription. All those decisions got them down to 77% fixed cost. Good, moving in the right direction. But it's also clear that numbers are not the most important part of this conversation.
Starting point is 00:39:25 It's amazing when you actually cut down on all this stuff and you have a mission, not just cutting down for the sake of cutting down, but you have a mission, you have a vision of why you're doing this. It's amazing how much you realize you did not need all this stuff. Apple Watches, iPad connectivity. I don't even have this stuff. I have a mission though. And you don't need it either. You don't need have this stuff. I have a mission though. And you don't need it either. You don't need it. Nobody needs it. You want it and I want
Starting point is 00:39:50 you to get to the place where you can easily afford it. There's a vision to get there but it's not today. John, anything from your perspective? I think we could get groceries down to 400. How are you gonna get from 962 to 400. How are you going to get from 962 to 400? We can meal plan better? We have, we just get out of it. We don't keep the habit. How long does it last for? Usually a couple weeks.
Starting point is 00:40:17 And then we get, I don't want to say, yeah, we get bored with it. Bored with whatever we had picked, I guess. We don't plan ahead. Why? Because the future is scary at this point because we don't know where our next... If we're going to make it past the next two weeks. It's a horrible way to live. Yeah, it has.
Starting point is 00:40:39 It's not been great. That's the honest truth. That resistance, that reactance again. Yeah. Yeah. See how it shows up in so many different parts of your life? It does. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:52 If somebody tells me this is the plan, I'm going to resist it. Even if the plan would have helped me and my resistance harms me. Yeah. Until you fix that, none of this is going to work. Yeah. That takes working with a therapist. Yeah. Because this is a plan we're creating right now.
Starting point is 00:41:15 If we walk away, even though it's your plan, the minute I leave, if you go, ah, this plan, this guy made me do, it's over. Yeah. I definitely need to work on it. This plan, this guy made me do, it's over. Yeah. I definitely need to work on it. I need to be there for you. Thank you. Alright, well, let's talk about your debt.
Starting point is 00:41:38 You pay $1,265 a month. Now, what is this debt consolidation thing you did? They basically contact the credit card companies for us to consolidate or to negotiate deals on our behalf. And we stopped paying all credit cards while they're doing the negotiations and we just pay the money towards to them. How do you find them? I, this is embarrassing. I've gone through them before or one like it before. When I got out of college, I was in a lot of debt. Probably five to 10,000 in credit card debt when I got out of college before I got married.
Starting point is 00:42:27 And I went through them to get that down. So I knew it was out there. I knew it was an option. And when we got to this point, it was I was overwhelmed and I knew that was an option. So I went for it. I don't love these services. I don't know the exact one you're using, but I'll tell you, usually what they do is some of them, they have you stop paying on all of your debts. That what they had you do? Yes, they did. Yeah. Okay. So they have you stop paying. Meanwhile, you're just putting money aside somewhere. And then when it looks like you're basically going to default, they will swoop in and try to negotiate. And they'll get a settlement. Sometimes not every company will
Starting point is 00:43:11 settle. But they'll charge you these really hefty fees and your credit will be ruined. And like all kinds of other effects will happen. This is it, right? This is what they're doing. Yes, this is exactly what they're doing. Yeah Yeah, I knew going into it that our credit was going to be ruined, but I didn't really see any other Options it was already getting ruined because we were late couldn't make the minimum so For me, it was kind of a wash. It was already going to be bad. So why not let somebody else? You know solve the problem for us. We got in the cycle of, I would make a payment to the credit card. So we would have like a $200 credit on the card, and then we would use the card for that $200. And then we would pay it and then we would use it and pay it, use it. So we were constantly maxed out on all of our credit cards.
Starting point is 00:44:09 Why have you created a life where you have to do this? I don't know. Tell me. You know, the only two people who can know are you two right here. Why have you created a life where you have to do all this? It's all we knew growing up. No. Well, that's true.
Starting point is 00:44:31 You guys are almost 40 years old. That is also true. Is there an answer? Not a good answer. Well, I don't care if it's good or bad. I just like the truth. Why have you created a life where you have to do this? Probably because we didn't value ourselves enough to
Starting point is 00:44:53 Create something Good we created something bad because that's what we thought we deserved Wow, you think you deserve a bad life? Some days. Not all days. Thank you for being so candid. One of the reasons that I feel very fortunate to speak to both of you is like, I just got to know you. I didn't know you before today. Right? I just got to know you. I didn't know you before today. Just hearing the way that you both grew up in your childhood. So many differences in the way that the two of you grew up and the way that I grew up.
Starting point is 00:45:34 Sometimes I think that's a beautiful thing. I didn't grow up on a farm and I get to hear how you grew up and I didn't grow up with a highly religious restrictive background like you did. And I'm't grow up with a highly religious, restrictive background like you did. And I'm learning from you. But I can also see the effects of all these different types of upbringings and what they have. And you know, Elizabeth, this is very heartbreaking for me to hear that, you know, sometimes you think you deserve bad things.
Starting point is 00:46:01 I don't think you deserve it. John, I would bet you don't think No. That she deserves it. No. So Elizabeth, I think that is incredibly savvy of you to admit that. Incredibly courageous. Put all these numbers aside until you're able to heal that part and to acknowledge where you came from and what happened and chart a path forward. And that can only happen between the two of you and your therapist. These numbers are just irrelevant.
Starting point is 00:46:36 These numbers are simply physical manifestations of how you feel, John, how you feel and how the two of you are connected or disconnected about money. That's why the iPad spending, that's why the Apple Watch, that's why the $962 on groceries and eating out and getting bored of pre-planned meals. It's all traced back to that. So while I can't tell you what to do, it's not my place, from my perspective, as somebody you invited here to give some feedback, I would say,
Starting point is 00:47:19 if I were in your position, Elizabeth, this would be my number one priority. I would clear heaven and earth to be able to say, I need to work on this because everything else in this family depends on that. Yeah, it does. It does. I've always put myself last, as far as I want things for my daughter, for my husband. So I've started the journey this last year to put myself first and start to get help, speaking with my doctor, medications,
Starting point is 00:48:06 things like that, to help start the journey in the right direction. Therapy is the next step that needs to happen, but we've always been so strapped for catch and therapy is expensive. So that's not always something that I would prioritize because we were always behind. What are the things that you could deprioritize so that you could prioritize therapy? We've already talked about groceries and all that stuff. Go beyond that. All of the trinkets and all of the silly things that we spend our money on, eating out all the time, um, entertaining
Starting point is 00:48:46 ourselves, distracting ourselves from what our life really is. Which is what? The reality that, that we're a hundred and whatever it was thousand $1,000 in debt. We're just distracting ourselves with the entertainment, going places, spending money, distracting ourselves from the reality of our life. You can tell that all of the spending, the toys, the clothes, the exorbitant grocery bill, and the random purchases.
Starting point is 00:49:25 Those are all symptoms of a lot of pain. And in the past, they have tried to treat the symptoms. They even went through a debt consolidation service. And guess what? They're right back in the same situation. This is exactly why I suggested that Elizabeth prioritize therapy, because without working on the root cause, the symptoms will just persist and they will morph. And the fact is, even if they magically change their relationship with money, with each other, it still won't fix their finances. That's
Starting point is 00:50:01 why I wanted to talk to them about their income. Let's talk a little bit more about what you can do. Yes, please. There's just not enough money. No, there's not. Can we talk about the income? Yeah. So, it's going to be very tough for you to get ahead with the incomes you're on.
Starting point is 00:50:27 Yes. That's, yeah. What's the possibility of increasing your income? Mine's a very good possibility. I'm up for promotion. So I do know that hopefully will be happening soon within the next two months. John, what about you? Um, the, I mean, I've gotten a steady, uh, three to 4% raise each year.
Starting point is 00:51:02 That's that's usually what they stick to. I don't foresee his going up very much anytime soon. Why are you all making yourself passive in this journey of your income? Watch this. John, how long you've been working at your job? How many years? 12. 12 years and you've got 3% raises the whole time? Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:27 John. Yeah. This passivity is costing you literally tens of thousands of dollars. The economy is booming. Are you aware of that? It's familiar. Exactly. So it's familiar to you, so you stick with it, even though you're probably being drastically
Starting point is 00:51:49 underpaid. Elizabeth, overspending on random trinkets is familiar to you, so you keep doing it even though it's taking you further and further away from where you really want to go. Right. What I tell you at the beginning of this call, I can't make you both change. Right. John, what do you think about the income part? You could probably be making a lot more money getting a different job.
Starting point is 00:52:10 Yeah. I should look into it. Okay. I'm going to. Okay. I like that. I think I've been saying it for a while that he needs a different job. He loves where he works, but he doesn't make enough.
Starting point is 00:52:26 And I think he has more potential to make more, I feel, than I do if I were to change my job. Isn't this something like a team would talk about together? It's hard. All of this is hard. All of this is hard. That's the position you've put yourself in. It is. By not working together and by not setting boundaries, you have now put yourself in a
Starting point is 00:52:55 position where you have to make all hard decisions. That's reality. No. No. I don't know. I think your daughter actually could benefit as an educational experience. We have a roof over our head. Everybody's going to be okay. But we're going to be making some changes.
Starting point is 00:53:13 First of all, mommy and daddy are going to be getting rid of our watches. And we're going to be making some changes around the house. Here's what it means. I'm going to need your help on this, this, this. Making her a part of it. She doesn't have to know every last detail. Right. Paint the picture for me.
Starting point is 00:53:30 What would she say in the best case scenario? I'll start it off. When I was around the age of 10, my parents were in a ton of debt. I didn't really know how much but I knew they were always worried about money. And then... They changed everything. They changed our lifestyle. They changed our spending habits.
Starting point is 00:53:51 They changed their meal habits. We changed... They changed themselves. Yeah, they changed themselves. Why were they doing it? Tell me what she will say. Hopefully she'll say that to make a better future for her. Yeah, they did it for me.
Starting point is 00:54:11 Yeah. We actually went on for hours on our conversation. John and Elizabeth have put themselves in a very difficult situation. They do have a path out, but it will take radically reconceptualizing their relationship with money, with their daughter, with each other, and even with themselves. In the best case, that is really hard, but it's much, much harder if you've never done it before.
Starting point is 00:54:38 The good news is I don't need them to be perfect. I just need them to start moving in the right direction, ideally together. One other thing, they signed up for this debt consolidation service, which I suspect is pretty scammy. I asked them to send over all their documents and I sent those over to our partners at FASED. I asked the financial advisors at FASED, who work on a flat fee model, not a percentage of income, to take a look and help Elizabeth and John figure out what would be the right steps to get out of this
Starting point is 00:55:11 debt consolidation trap that they find themselves in. Our partners at FASET actually looked over everything for Elizabeth and Jonathan, and within a couple of days, they sent me a summary of what they found. They said, yes, this is legit. The company does help you negotiate and settle your debts. If they do settle an amount, they will charge them 25% of the amount that is forgiven. But there are two issues.
Starting point is 00:55:35 Number one, most debt that is forgiven can result in the amount being reported as taxable income. That means you may owe income taxes on this amount as well. And number two, settlements can really damage your credit for the next seven years. You're essentially locking in a lower credit score for about seven years before this activity can be removed from your credit report. I sent FASET's full report and findings over to Elizabeth and Jonathan as a courtesy to help them make an educated decision. But the big point here is they can
Starting point is 00:56:03 get out of this if they choose to. If you want help with your financial plan, check out our partners at facet where you can get your own CFP for a flat fee membership. Remember, it's never a percentage based fee. Check them out and the special deal they have for IWT listeners at facet.com slash Ramit. That's F-A-C-E-T, facet.com slash Ramit. Now I'm really looking forward to hearing the follow ups from Elizabeth and John. Let's start with John. The biggest surprises from our conversation for me was where all of our money was actually going and how far in debt we really were.
Starting point is 00:56:42 I had no idea that it was that bad. So thank you again for taking the time to sit with us. The big takeaways that I got from it was that I need to be more supportive of Elizabeth in our finances and I need to be more vocal about our financial decisions. I learned that there are places in our finances that we can make big changes to really help us meet our vision of the future for trips and retirement. And I just want to say thanks again for sitting down with us and going over all of it. It has been very enlightening. And now Elizabeth's follow-up.
Starting point is 00:57:43 I am so thankful that we were able to really dig into the bigger issue of why we're having so much financial struggles. I was pleasantly surprised to learn a lot more about myself and that I definitely am not worrying mentally and how much that is really really affecting our financial situation. I knew it did but not to the extent that we really dove into and I'm so thankful that we were able to talk about and with John the struggles that I've been having and for him to see how greatly it affects both of us and that he is now wanting to take a more active role in our finances. So thank you very much for that. We are actively looking into getting rid of a lot of unnecessary things and really trim down our finances so that we can get a
Starting point is 00:58:46 great start on this new year and getting our finances back up to scratch. So thank you so much. I want to thank Elizabeth and Jonathan for having the courage to ask for help and for coming here and sharing a lot with me. In hearing these follow ups for the first time, here's what I noticed. I love that they are energized. They feel connected more so than when we first started our conversation. And that's exactly what I wanted them to feel. Connection and a small sense of control.
Starting point is 00:59:17 That is why I took the conversation in the direction that I did. But I also noticed that I've heard very few specifics about the changes they want to make. And when you're in a situation like this where you need to make huge changes, success is all about the specifics. So Elizabeth and Jonathan, thank you again for coming on, being so courageous and asking for help. Please keep me updated. Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich. I'm Ramit Sethi.
Starting point is 00:59:50 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.

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