I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 152. “The world is going to end. So why bother investing?”
Episode Date: April 16, 2024Fernando and Anushka, 30 and 31, live in San Diego and earn high incomes—matching $135,000 salaries, in fact. They have healthy investment and savings rates, send money to his family back home, and ...rent a nice apartment. They’re living their Rich Lives, or are they? This episode is brought to you by: Hatch | A million things don’t want you to sleep, Hatch does. Get $20 off a Hatch Restore and free shipping at https://hatch.co/ramit. Rocket Money | Stop throwing your money away. Cancel unwanted subscriptions – and manage your expenses the easy way – by going to https://rocketmoney.com/ramit. ZocDoc | Download the ZocDoc app for FREE at https://zocdoc.com/ramit then find and book a top-rated doctor today. Superhuman | Get a free month of lightning fast email at https://try.sprh.mn/ramitsethi. LMNT | Right now, LMNT is offering 8 single serving packets FREE with any LMNT order. This is a great way to try all 8 flavors. Get yours at https://drinklmnt.com/RAMIT. Links mentioned in this episode • “My parents keep expecting us to pay for them” #7 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)
A quick favor to ask, if you enjoy this podcast, do me a favor.
Please go to Apple or Spotify and click follow.
See, part of the reason that I started this podcast is that money is taboo.
And my dream is to be able to inspire millions of people just like you to build a healthier
relationship with money.
And so by clicking follow on Apple podcasts or Spotify, it really helps my team and it helps this podcast
Get in front of more couples who need it. Thank you again for being an IWT listener
It means a lot to my team and it means a lot to me
I find money it's cliche to say but like it's almost like the root of all evil
There's so much bad that can happen because of money.
Every time I try and have the conversation with him of,
okay, this is what you should be investing, he groans.
He rolls his eyes at me.
Investing, it feels like gambling.
Having lived in many other places, there's a lot of issues I have with
the way that America is set up financially for its citizens.
It's the whole thing that like my self-worth is tied to a number.
And if you don't max it out, that means?
I'm worthless. And I think part of that for me is my net worth and living the lifestyle that we live
and being able to shove it in my mom's face to be like, I told you I'd still make it.
I like to introduce you to Fernando and Anoushka.
They're both in their early thirties.
They're both Sri Lankan immigrants
who experienced some challenging childhoods
related to the mental health of
their parents.
They got married, they moved to San Diego, and in many ways they are living their rich
life.
But still, they can't seem to connect about money.
And when I ask them what's going on, I hear about some very peculiar behavioral issues
when it comes to their money from both sides.
Just a trigger warning for everyone listening and watching.
Today's episode covers religion,
American politics, generational trauma,
and we do touch on domestic and emotional abuse.
Fernando and Anushka's story is viscerally real.
And I'm so proud to be able to share it with you today.
We were in our office where I am right now, so proud to be able to share with you today.
We were in our office where I am right now. And I said, Hey, Fernando, can you take a
look at these numbers with me? I've created our combined budget. He was playing video
games at the time. So he was like, not right now. Give me a little bit. And I typically
get annoyed when he says that he can't look at the numbers right away. So
I think I probably started off a little annoyed. When it comes to finances, I just always think
it's the most important conversation. So he should be able to put everything else away
immediately and then have that conversation with me. But I know that that is not fair.
Did he eventually come by and start looking at the numbers?
Yeah, yes, he did.
He scooted over and took a look at my screen and we just started going down the list of
all of the expense categories that I created and looking at the numbers.
And I was explaining that these budgeted numbers are based on what we spent last year.
And this is actually the first year that we are combining finances but
trying to create a combined budget where we align on all of the numbers for all
of the different categories that I had made was very difficult. Where did the
problem come up? The problem came up when it got down to the actual numbers for
the budget that I had set for the specific categories.
Like what?
Give me an example category.
Our savings percentage and our investing percentage was too low for my comfort, which means we
have to change our expenses somehow.
He was on the same page.
He was like, okay, fine.
But where are we changing it and by how much?
And so that's when I went over and said, we're spending too much on groceries and expense
and eating out, we need to reduce that number.
And then he said, I actually kind of like our saving and investing percentage, why would
we need to increase it dramatically?
And why is it out of our grocery budget?
The fact that it got down to such a silly conversation about how much the carton of
just egg is, is where it
all went wrong, I think.
The reason it really got to me is because from my perspective, we spend way too much
money saving and just based on my experience, that money can evaporate. Something can go
wrong and you can potentially lose all of it. That's just based on my childhood and how the financial
crisis affected us.
So when it comes to setting 40% or whatever that number was of our income towards savings,
it's just like such a massive amount to, in my mind, throw away and potentially never
see the benefits of. On the other side of that, I'm not spending on video games already.
There are other things that I have kept out of this budget to try and make this realistic.
Why am I always losing was the view I had in that conversation.
How did this conversation get resolved?
Or did it?
It did get resolved, but it was over eight hours.
And then it started around noon, I think, and ended like at 8 p.m. with us compromising in her direction. But also her meeting me
and understanding like, hey, there are things that Fernando hasn't accounted for in the
budget by just holding out and not pursuing in his life, that she was able to also help
me place into our budget.
So now I do have a video game fund, which I've never had in my life
before where I can say like, hopefully, I can buy a $20 game every few months and not feel bad about
So problem solved?
The problem persists where every time I try and have a conversation with them,
okay, this is what you should be investing, like he grows. He rolls his eyes at me.
We have discussions about whether investing the money is really the way to get us generational
wealth, something that we had not even thought about before.
We talk about our plans for the next year once a year, but we look at our monthly numbers together.
And so I know for a fact we will have this argument again next year and I want to prevent
it.
I'm going to go out on a limb.
Just a wild guess and guess that he rarely gives you substantive feedback on the budget.
How did you know?
How did I know?
Actually, how do you think I knew that?
Because I'm the one who makes recommendations for us on the changes that I think we should
make and he just kind of goes along with it.
And Fernando, you were laughing.
That's so accurate.
She will be on me for a few days to be like, you need to check that and let me know.
So I'll look at the summary view.
You have little pie charts.
Looks pretty.
Finance has always been something that I'm really bad with in terms of long-term planning
in general.
So it just gets overwhelming.
I'm like, all right, if we're within the numbers, I'm good.
I can just keep pushing along. Fernando, when you get those monthly reports, what do you feel? Not what do you think, what
do you feel when you get...
Anxiety. Anxiety. Mad anxiety. Just childhood trauma related to money. Money is just the
scariest thing to me.
So do you feel that when you have to make a purchase decision?
Oh, yeah.
All the time.
How about when you hear people talking about investing or buying a house or even traveling,
you feel that same anxiety?
Generally, when it comes to taking a trip or something like that, I don't have that
kind of anxiety.
But I do have that anxiety when it comes to taking a trip or something like that, I don't have that kind of anxiety. But I do have that anxiety when it comes to something like gambling.
I don't gamble at all because in my mind, you're just a few steps away from losing everything.
And again, I understand it's like a moderation thing, but I don't want to cross that line.
I don't want to put myself and my family in that kind of situation.
And I think another reason that I have a lot of anxiety with money is because Anushka helps
me support my family in Michigan.
So that is a part of the budget.
A lot of my monthly income goes towards making sure that they're fine.
And just so I make sure I get this right, you mentioned you don't like gambling.
Is investing gambling to you?
In a sense, yes.
Okay.
Yeah, I do.
I do see it similarly.
That's where the major conflict comes in my mind in investing.
It's like, it feels like gambling.
I don't know if something's going to happen to the stock market and all of that's going
to go away.
That's interesting.
Anushka, what do you think?
Are you struck at all by the fact that Fernando feels anxiety every time you send over that
monthly report?
I was at first. Yeah, when he said that, I didn't think he was immediately anxious about it. that Fernando feels anxiety every time you send over that monthly report?
I was at first. Yeah, when he said that, I didn't think he was immediately anxious about
it. I just thought that he would feel like, okay, great, I can see the numbers. I mean,
saying it out loud now makes me feel stupid because I should have realized. But I thought
he would just feel like happy to see that
we were on the right track for the goals that we had set together.
Would it surprise you to know that he probably never even gets down to that level of analysis?
I guess it's obvious that he does not.
Let's ask because I don't want to put words in the name of it. Fernando, do you ever...
No, you're absolutely right. I look at it from a very high level. We are inside of the guidelines.
That's all I have.
But clicking on that thing beforehand is just like...
It feels like I do right now.
There's like a pit.
Just imagining clicking that causes a pit in my stomach.
And Anushka, just out of curiosity, when you're sitting there spending two or three hours
analyzing the credit card spend every month. What do you feel doing that?
Control and calm.
It's like your meditation for the month.
You're like, I don't need any spending on a massage therapist.
I have my spreadsheets.
Look at me analyze this, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's very true.
And what do you feel that moment where you tell him, take a look?
I feel accomplishment.
Right.
I checked all the boxes.
Are you a project manager by chance?
He is a product manager, but I am a very type A individual.
What do you do as a type A individual for a job?
I am a business analyst.
Okay.
That tracks very well.
I noticed this dynamic a lot with couples.
One person, the chaser, prepares the financial discussion, crunches the numbers, sends it
over and rubs their hands together in satisfaction.
I did such a great job.
The other partner, who's usually an avoider, opens their email, looks at the subject line,
goes, ah, hell no.
Thus begins the pursuit.
The chaser chases, the avoider avoids.
The more they avoid, the more the other chases.
With Fernando and Anoushka, they are classic examples of this chaser-avoider couples dynamic.
Now, there are some interesting wrinkles.
Fernando references his childhood and the financial crisis in 2008 which has made him afraid to
invest because it feels like gambling.
They also support his parents.
I noticed that they spent eight hours on a money conversation which is way too long.
But personally I think the real issues go a lot deeper.
We'll be right back.
I'm here in New York to do an event.
I just had lunch with my team today and we were talking about what it's like to be back in the city.
And I was telling them I forgot how many sirens there are from when I used to live here.
And one of my coworkers was saying she's staying at hotel, and she told me it sounds like the trucks outside
are just driving into metal over and over again.
And then she said, I wish I had my hatch with me.
What is Hatch?
Hatch is today's podcast sponsor.
The Hatch Restore is this little device
that has a gentle sunrise alarm and soothing sounds
so you can create a nice nighttime routine,
screen free to go to sleep on time and wake up energized in the morning.
Now, maybe you don't live in New York with tons of sirens, but there are still lots of things trying
to get our attention. There's social media, there's TV, there's our busy email inbox.
A million things don't want you to sleep.
Hatch does. Right now Hatch is offering my listeners $20 off a Hatch Restore
which you can get at hatch.co. slash Ramit. Visit hatch.co. slash Ramit to get
free shipping and $20 off your Hatch Restore. That's hatch.co slash Ramit.
What's something you feel guilty paying for? I wanna share a story I just got
from one of my readers named Josie.
She said, I just logged into my Rocket Money account
and noticed I'm paying monthly for an app
that I did a free trial for in the new year,
but I haven't used in three months.
It's $42 a month.
That's over $500 a year. The funny thing is I really
wanted to get my nails done last week, but I always end up feeling too guilty and decide
to do them at home instead. With this savings, I could get my nails done two times a month.
Think of something you feel guilty spending money on. It could be nails, dinner, appetizers,
massage, whatever. It's very likely that you're
wasting that money on subscriptions you don't even realize you're paying for. And
with Rocket Money you can find those subscriptions and automatically cancel
them with just a few clicks. Rocket Money is a personal finance app that finds and
cancels unwanted subscriptions, monitors your spending, and helps you lower your
bills so
you can increase your savings and spend on the things you love.
Rocket Money has over 5 million members and has saved over $500 million in unwanted subscriptions,
saving an average of $740 per member when they use all of Rocket Money's features.
Stop wasting money on things you don't use.
Cancel your unwanted subscriptions
by going to rocketmoney.com slash Ramit. That's rocketmoney.com slash Ramit. Rocketmoney.com slash
Now back to the show. When we first started dating, I mean, we were in high school college.
We were in high school college. And I remember him going to the movies multiple times a year, maybe even twice a month.
I remember thinking, oh my gosh, that is so much money you're spending on something that
I could never even imagine.
A movie ticket back then was what, $10?
I immediately added that up in my head to the amount of money it was per month per year,
and I thought that was too much.
How did you know it was too much?
What would you base that on?
On what I spent.
And would you say that the two of you grew up similarly socioeconomically?
I was born in Sri Lanka, so we are immigrants, And you know, my family moved here when I was five.
We started off very poor.
My parents were scrubbing the bathrooms of the big boys.
They would often point that big boys out in Michigan when we drove past it.
And my parents did not have college educations back in Sri Lanka.
So you know, my mom now has some college degrees, but they both worked their
way up to middle class to comfortable middle class. But money was always discussed. As
we don't have enough to do certain things, and that you always have to be mindful of
money. I emulate my mom a lot in terms of financial control. She was the one who led our family. She was the one
who made sure we were saving. Yeah, she handled all of the money. And she was very smart.
She made sure that we had a beautiful house at the end of the day. She made sure that
we could go on vacations. But when I would ask for certain small things, it would always be, you know, we can't afford
it.
And I think very early on, I mean, I started working when I was 12, just so that I could
have control of myself.
For context, I think my mom was a bit of a narcissistic personality. And I became
typically in a narcissistic family structure. There's the scapegoat and the golden child.
And I have a younger sister who's nine years younger than me. She was a little bit of the
golden child and I was the scapegoat. So we had a very bad relationship, my mom and I.
From very early on, I realized that money was the only way that I could gain any sort
of control in my life.
Started working when I was 12, babysitting, then I was a lifeguard, then I did everything
possible to keep my bank account and keep some savings.
Because then I could spend all what I wanted and I couldn't have any judgment from anyone
else.
Mm hmm.
Yeah.
Did you go to a lot of therapy?
No, actually, I had a terrible experience with therapy when my mom forced us to go into
therapy because my parents were getting a divorce.
And she was not the therapist for
any of us. She made the situation a lot worse. And it just kind of scarred me and I've never
gone back.
Would you read books on narcissism?
Yeah, I've read books, articles, watched videos about people talking about all of this and
yeah, it describes us very
well.
Do you have a relationship with your mom today?
Not really.
I think she was just a very angry person.
And I think that's a direct cause of her having to take control of everything in the house.
Because she had to take control of money that caused her to become more angry?
Probably.
I don't think my dad helped her a lot in those cases and I'm sure she felt very alone.
And she ended up taking it out on me.
That's probably one of the areas she just didn't feel supported.
What similarities do you see with your mom's handling of money and your handling of it today?
Both pros and cons.
She taught me everything I know about making sure that I and my family are good.
And I thank her whenever I get the chance and I tell her,
you are the reason that I was able to
have a beautiful apartment in Detroit.
You are the reason I was able to move to San Diego
without the knowledge that you gave me.
I would have never gotten to where I am.
The part I don't tell her is that
the trauma she has caused me has made me very anxious, very scared that like, do
I have enough at all times? And my anxiety seeps through to the conversations that I
have with Fernando all the time.
I'm struck by the example that Anushka shares about how she thought Fernando was spending
too much on movies in high school.
When I ask, what's too much, she says,
too much compared to what I spent.
Think about it.
In high school, we're just scratching the surface
of how money works.
Hell, most adults I talk to don't realize that it's okay
if your rich life is different than mine.
But if you begin looking at the world by judging other people
for their spending, it is very, very hard to change. I know because that's exactly how
I started off my life. I also noticed how much these early memories shaped Anushka,
how much they affected her, and how that has affected Fernando and their relationship.
Similarly, my family, we were immigrants. We moved to the US in the fifth grade,
but we moved a ton. My dad's goal was to get us to the US. Around like the eighth grade or so,
my dad started losing his job and my dad suffers from a mental illness, which is undiagnosed. Also,
he doesn't see that he has it, which is not very helpful. Effectively, after that point, he was
losing his job almost yearly. And that was right around the time of the financial crisis.
So we were middle class at some point, we got up to middle class and lower class.
But then after that, it wasn't really stable.
So to me, money is something that can just be gone.
And just some of the roles that I had in my household, I was in charge of making sure
the bank accounts were balanced and things like that.
So to me, even looking at my bank account can be traumatic, regardless of the amount that we have in there.
So I had to remember the days when the mortgage was going to get taken out and make sure we
had the minimum in there for that and things like that.
I think that was like the seventh or eighth grade.
Wow.
It got hard every two weeks or monthly, depending on the paycheck was coming.
And yeah, I didn't like it.
I've told this to a few friends as well.
I very vividly remember when Reese's peanut butter cuts went from $0.55 to $0.75 when
we were growing up.
We didn't have much money.
And I remember thinking like, I'm not going to ask for that again.
Were you the oldest son?
Yeah, I'm the oldest.
Alright, so when you think about even looking at a checking account, that can be traumatic.
And you still feel that today?
Yeah, I like constantly live in fear of losing everything.
The way I've described to people is like I've been for like I'm not going back.
And I want to make sure like my family doesn't.
I just want to make sure we set ourselves up to not have that happen.
I've been poor and I'm not going back.
I often speak to people who grew up poor, really poor.
And one of the phrases that they say very frequently is, I've been poor once, I can
be poor again.
Doesn't scare me.
What do you think about that?
Scares the **** out of me.
To be completely frank, I apologize.
Like you mentioned, I'm the oldest son, but just like culturally, one of the things I've always taken is like, I will take care of my family.
That is my job.
That's my responsibility.
And I'm never going to let them experience that again.
And I will go through poverty.
That to be frank, that does not scare me.
But I will never put myself in a situation that my family, my wife will be poor like
that.
They will never do that.
That's not going to happen.
Okay.
That tracks a little bit more.
I understand that you send money back regularly.
I think is it every month?
Mm hmm.
We pay for certain portions of what's going on at home.
Can you walk me through how that relationship developed?
I think that really started with when my dad was initially hospitalized.
That was my freshman year of college.
It's just like, whatever expenses I can take off of their hands, I want to do so so they can live a little more free of a life.
How much do you think you send every year?
Honestly, Anushka's budget could tell us probably precisely, but thousands, probably tens of
thousands.
Per year?
Yes, at least. I was like, it didn't click at the time that I was doing that.
But when I'm there and I see a problem, I fix it.
I'll buy a kitchen sink or something.
Alright, so let's say about $1,000 a month.
Would that sound reasonable to you?
I think so.
On average, $1,300 a month, something like that.
Okay.
And how do you feel about sending that amount of money, Fernando?
What word comes
to mind about the feeling you have?
I wish I could do more. I want to get to a point where I can help out more so I can reduce
the amount of stress that's putting on my sister and my mom. I want them to live a simpler
life.
Unsatisfied?
Oh, yes. That does get me.
Yes.
Like unsatisfied, it motivates me to try and make more money.
Do you feel proud of the amount you're sending?
I used to, but I guess because it's tapered off, I don't as much anymore.
Do you feel proud that you send money at all?
Not really. I just find that
like I just have I should. Like it's just part of your expectation? Mm hmm. Okay. All
right. Anushka, what's your take? Did you ever have a discussion about the fact that
Fernando sends money, the amount that he sends? Has this ever been a topic? Oh, yeah, absolutely.
I always knew that he was going to be supporting his family.
That was kind of without question.
I want him to do that.
I want him to be able to do that.
It's very important to him.
It's very important to me that we support his family.
When Underscore was helping with my bank account, at one point I would have like four or $5,000
in my checking account and not putting it in the savings.
She'd ask like, why don't you put it in the savings?
I'm like, you never know.
I don't know if my family's going to need something.
So I always try and have it as liquid as possible just so I can use it if they need it or someone
needs it.
Okay.
Is there a number for you that feels good?
Not at all.
No.
Okay.
It's just more.
Right.
Okay.
One of the things that Underska helped me with was she had done my family's budget for
a small period of time as well.
And I had thought for many, many years since I was about 18.
I think this went on until I was about 28.
So by the decade, that I had to have $60,000 set aside in savings for my family to get
along for six months.
And when I finally mentioned it to her, because we were having another one of these arguments
over budgeting, within like 10 minutes, she took all those numbers, extrapolated them
and said, the number is $15,000. If no one in your house is working for six months, you'll
be fine. And she's like, you already have that saved. And I lay on the bed and I was
like, I'm going to throw up.
Why?
Because it felt like... I didn't realize it, but it felt like for the first time I could
breathe in a long time and I genuinely couldn't remember when that pressure came in.
It just felt like I was existing like that.
One of the reasons I love this podcast is that I get to bring you stories from cultures
that you might never ever otherwise encounter.
For example, when was the last time you heard of a son supporting his family?
In many cultures, that's the way it goes.
We also saw the same dynamic with Barry from episode 7, whose parents live in Pakistan.
What's notable to me isn't that he did this in seventh grade or that he still remembers
the price of Reese's peanut butter cups
or even that Anushka is supportive of him supporting his family. What's striking to me is
the moment where she showed him how much money he actually needs and he just lay on his bed and
almost threw up. For me, this is so relatable. It represents how so many of us just get on this raft of life and we
start letting the river carry us. We almost never stop to take stock of where
we came from and where we are. Do I even want to be going in this direction?
Should I feel good, bad, proud? We mostly just keep doing the same thing that we've
been doing for decades, which coincidentally is what our parents did,
which coincidentally is what their parents did.
That's the other thing I love in my conversations with people on this podcast.
That moment when they realize they can change the way they talk about money, behave with
money, even the way they feel about money.
Let's take a quick pause for a message from our sponsors.
Think of something you've been putting off for months or even years.
Like when I spoke to Charlie on episode 98 of this podcast.
He thought he had sleep apnea, but he had been putting off getting diagnosed and getting
treatment for over five years.
And I can kind of understand it.
You're not even sure which doctor to see, then you're not sure how to choose one, and
when you finally find one, it turns out they can't see you for two months.
That's why if you've been putting off finding a new doctor, I want to recommend today's
sponsor ZocDoc.
Let me tell you a few things about them.
ZocDoc is a free app and website where you can search and compare highly rated, in-network
doctors near you and
instantly book appointments with them online. Once you find the doctor you
want you can book them immediately, no more waiting on hold with a
receptionist. And all of these doctors have verified reviews from real patients.
We're talking about booking appointments with tens of thousands of top-rated
patient-reviewed, credible doctors and specialists.
You can filter specifically for doctors who take your insurance, are located near you,
and treat basically any condition that you are looking for.
The typical wait time to see a doctor booked on ZocDoc is between just 24 to 72 hours.
You can even score same-day appointments. Go to zocdoc.com slash Ramit and download the ZocDoc app for free. Then find and book
a top rated doctor today. That's ZocDoc, Z-O-C-D-O-C dot com slash Ramit, zocdoc.com slash Ramit.
Okay, I want to show you something.
If you are listening to this episode instead of watching it, just listen in.
Okay, I just read and resolved nine emails in just a few seconds.
I didn't use my mouse.
I didn't have to open up my calendar.
Everything happened in seconds without my fingers ever leaving the keyboard.
This is the power of Superhuman, an amazing tool that helps me get through my inbox lightning
fast.
And you can use it with your existing email service like Gmail or Outlook.
And I know it's good because I personally pay for Superhuman myself.
I honestly can't believe it when I see people using a standard email service.
It's like watching someone who's never used a cell phone trying to send a text message.
Superhuman saves me at least 10 hours a week. Here are a few things I love about it.
It splits your inbox into streams so all of your important emails show up in one place.
It's not cluttered with subscriptions, promos, none of it. Your inbox
becomes your to-do list and it is very, very fast.
Next, there's a keyboard shortcut for everything.
H, if I see something I don't have time to reply to now, but I want to get reminded of
it.
J or K to cycle through the emails rapidly.
V to add it to a specific folder.
I can go through 50 emails in minutes this way.
And another cool feature that they just released is their new AI feature.
It can summarize long emails at the top in just a few bullet points.
It can even draft emails for you top in just a few bullet points. It can
even draft emails for you and it's pretty good. So if you want to buy your time back,
Superhuman is a complete no brainer. Again, I spend my own money on it, so I recommend
it with my own wallet. Right now, IWT listeners get a free month of Superhuman and you can
get started at superhuman.com slash Ramit. That's superhuman.com slash Ramit.
Now back to Fernando and Anoushka.
Things like eating out.
How often did you eat out when you were a kid?
Very infrequently.
Yeah.
You guys probably didn't order appetizers.
No, we went to Subway.
Yeah. Subway, we went to Subway. Yeah.
Subway, like Tuesdays, get the special deal.
Yeah, okay.
All right.
Yeah.
I love that when I even throw out the word appetizers, both of you just laugh.
It's like so absurd that kids of immigrants would ever even consider appetizers.
Okay.
New country, family, I get that. Is there a point at which you get to feel comfortable about ordering appetizers?
Well, I think we're at that point.
I mean, actually, to be fair, I am at that point.
I don't think he is at that point.
We had a recent argument at a restaurant
about this actually. So to use your words, part of my rich life is being able to spend
money on appetizers and not think twice about it. And we do that now. We do that pretty
frequently now. But we were at a certain restaurant and it was right after we had that budget
conversation. We had a friend with us and I was like, okay, well, between the three of us, we're going
to order these two appetizers.
And he looks over at me and says, didn't you just say we need to cut down on our budget
for eating out?
We don't need appetizers.
And I got like, I don't know, this really mad because part of my rich life is being
able to afford
the appetizers that I could not as a child.
But to him, it's a small amount that's not necessary.
But I know that we can afford it.
It was I think more of just like a frustration of like all of the things I've held out on
getting for myself over the years. And for example, like video games or things that I do, where I've told myself,
you can't do that. And then understanding now that she's at a position and we're making our life
to be able to do to be able to order that appetizer, but not necessarily having had
structured it previously for me to gratify myself in
that same way by buying a video game or buying an Xbox or whatever it is.
You guys are married, right?
Yes.
How many years you've been married for?
Not that long.
Two years.
Where do you two live right now?
San Diego.
That's a pretty expensive area.
Very expensive.
Yeah. That's a pretty expensive area. Very expensive, yeah.
First of all, I deeply understand the visceral nature that appetizers can present for all
three of us in this room.
I also can understand, Fernando, that this feeling of how can you justify that when I
can't justify this?
Am I understanding both of your perspectives?
I think you get that right on like nail on the head.
As a married couple, the most critical thing when it comes to your money is to have a shared
rich life vision. And in your cases, if you were both making $50,000 together, you'd be having to make
a lot of trade-offs.
I want to do this, but we can't.
I want to do that.
Well, we can't.
But the fact is you both make a lot more than that.
Like to have a high savings rate and to order appetizers, you could do both. So we know it's not the numbers.
Something else.
You know what? That's a good question. I want to save less so I can send more.
And what would that change for your family?
I think that would give my sister a lot of freedom. It would allow her to, if she do
whatever she wants to move out
or maybe get a better car, like whatever it is.
You don't know?
Not 100%. But I know that I know for a fact that she spends at least as much as I do.
That annoys me that I can't help her more with that.
She worked too?
Yes. She's very successful. She's smart.
She makes a lot of money? Yeah, she's very successful. She's smart. Oh, she makes a lot of money?
Yeah, relatively she does.
Oh, is she asking you for you to pay more?
No, I don't think she's ever done that.
But like I don't want to even make her feel that she needs to be in that type of position where she needs to ask for help.
Okay. And what about with your relationship here?
Your marriage?
When she's like, I want to go play sports and do this thing or I want and pay whatever
the fee is or go out to eat.
I'm like, do it.
I want to get new clothes.
I'm like, do it.
Absolutely spend.
Even if it takes away from something that I'd budget for myself, like my technology
budget or anything like that, I don't care. I would rather you live life and experience it than me putting myself
over your head.
When it comes to going out and eating, again, we don't go to very expensive restaurants.
We'll go to a Thai food place that we love. But similarly to me, spending $30 on that,
totally justifiable. That's your thing. But $10 on a video game,
I get anxiety written. I can't do that. Regardless of if I'm going to pay that for
hundreds of hours. It just seems like a superfluous cost.
When do you get to come into this? I hear you putting your parents first. I hear you putting
your sister first, even though she hasn't asked for it and she herself makes a lot of money.
I hear you saying, Anushka, do whatever you want, even if it takes away from my technology
budget.
When do you get to say what you want?
Psychologically, it hurts me a lot to try and do that.
It hurts you to spend because?
I just feel like I am completely wasting that money.
As soon as that return period is over, I'm screwed.
Wow.
That's so funny because when I buy something, I literally do not think about the return
period.
Really?
No.
He has always been the one to tell me, yes, spend it.
And I have always been the one that has questioned the spending.
So it's sad to hear that he has so much anxiety over things like that.
I knew it to be true, but it's sad to hear it like that.
Usually when we see people who struggle to spend on themselves, but openly spend on others,
it's women, specifically moms. I'm really glad to be
able to talk to Fernando today because this is quite an atypical example. What I
notice and what connects with me personally is the struggle to express
what he really wants. I find that to be true in my own life and sometimes in my
own relationship. I was never really taught how to connect with my emotions,
how to ask for what I want.
And I think that's true for a lot of men.
Personally, when it comes to money, I don't love people who are only selfless with their
money.
That's because it's easy to only play one note with money.
This is what you see when you have hyperfrugalistas who save and save and are totally unable to
spend. They actually consider it a virtue.
Here we have Fernando who can give all his money to others, but he struggles to spend
it on himself.
He also struggles to understand how money and investing actually work, neither of which
are part of a healthy relationship with money.
And I do it.
I try and encourage him and tell him like, logically, we have the money.
You don't need to feel that way.
Even this year, you know, he was saying, Oh, I'm going to be spending whatever $2,000 on
a new monitor for his computer.
He's very into computers.
That's one of his biggest passions.
I try and help him logically think about, okay, well, it's yes, it's $2,000,
but it's actually this much money over this many months.
And also you're going to use it for this period.
Like we have the money, you can spend it.
I know that he doesn't think of it that way.
Do you think that he's confused about the numbers?
No. It's like the fact that he remembered that the
Change of Reese's price of when he was 10 like whatever it that is shocking to me
That he remembered when it went from 50 cents to 75 cents
It's the same thing. I think he still has his arbitrary number in his head that he can't go over, but we make so much money, so much more than his family made when he was 10.
You were roughly in seventh or eighth grade, you had to help start taking over with the
family finances, Fernando. But you said something so interesting. You said I wanted to extricate myself from the family or relieve them of having to pay for me.
Fernando, that sounds like you considered yourself a burden to your family.
Yeah, I mean, from a financial perspective, I did.
Coming from a legend like Sri Lanka, Kuwait, Canada, countries where college is pretty
much paid for or like there's certain safety
nets for you.
When I finally got to junior year and I'm applying to colleges, I'm like, so dad, how
much money do you have saved?
It was literally one conversation.
He's like, we mean, I was like, how much like, how am I going to get it?
He's like, you need to get a full ride.
And I was like, sick.
If you grew up with immigrant parents, you just get it.
You get what Fernando is saying.
The immigrant experience is something that cannot be replicated unless you just get it. You get what Fernando is saying. The immigrant experience is something
that cannot be replicated unless you went through it. Children of immigrants are told
to work hard, harder than anyone else. I personally spent hours practicing from a bright yellow
spelling bee book. My Indian friend used to read a book called Rapid Math Tricks, a book
he even brought to college with him.
This is the experience of many children of immigrants who know that they have to work
incredibly hard to make it in a culture that their parents moved to and did not fully understand.
I'm not even mentioning language barriers, cultural differences, how kids at school will
complain your family's food smells bad or make fun of your name or skin color.
Those are part of the immigrant experience in America too.
I simply want to share that if you did not grow up as a child of immigrants, you might not realize that an entire world exists right around you.
But it's real. And Fernando knows it's real and Anoushka knows it's real because Dave lived it. And so have I.
I mean, in my mind, every time I go there, even when I go back to visit, I'm a burden
because my mom has to buy extra food for me.
And so when you go back, look at Anushka's face. She's seeing something. We'll come to
you in a second, Anushka. So now when you go back, none of those purchase decisions are subject to the same level of
scrutiny that you make for yourself at home.
Not one.
Right.
Why?
Because you are still paying back your family.
I don't know.
I pretty much always thought that of myself.
Like I've been...
I've understood that I was... In my mind, I've been a burden and I didn't
want to be. So I want to ensure that I can do whatever I can to ensure my mom and sister
are happy.
Can I say something really fast about this? So both him and his sister feel similarly
about being a burden. And I think it's specifically because they feel that they are the ones that
locked their mom into the life that she has as a victim of domestic violence,
as a stay at home mom,
as now a divorcee that is working a minimum wage job.
I think that they both feel that they are the ones that did that to her and that they
will spend the rest of their lives making it up to her.
Well, the first thing I'll say Fernando is I'm really sorry.
I mean, I'm sorry you had to grow up like that.
I'm sorry that you had that unstable parental structure.
It's hard enough to grow up as a kid no matter where you're grown up.
It's doubly hard to grow up as kid of immigrant parents to add on all the additional things
with your mom, your dad, domestic violence, mental illness.
I'm really sorry you had to go through that.
It happens.
It's life.
You chose something as so rare, which is you said, I'm going to become the provider for
this family.
Not for one year, not for five years, for the
rest of my life. And you've told me I'll give them anything they ever need. I can be in
the poorhouse, but they never will.
So I'm almost speechless because I hardly ever see something like this. I'm moved because it's incredibly generous.
And still, I want to help you live your rich life.
I suspect that's what brings us here today.
Yeah, Absolutely.
This is all a lot to take on for any one person,
especially to take on alone.
I wanted to mention that in most immigrant cultures,
the idea of therapy is not really a concept,
certainly not as popular as it is in the West.
I mentioned to Fernando that I hope he will see a therapist,
and I genuinely hope he does.
Now if we're looking at it from a 30,000 foot view, how would you describe this relationship
you both have with money?
The fact that Fernando and I were able to move out by ourselves in our 20s and live
in a gorgeous apartment in Detroit, the fact that we were able to still
spend money on his family while we were doing that.
And then on top of that,
we moved to one of the highest cost of living cities
in the US.
We have the best apartment you could possibly think,
I could possibly think of for our age.
I am quite proud of all of these things
that we have accomplished.
I think that in many ways we are living our rich life. When we discuss how we want to
live, and I'm talking day to day, I think we are already doing that. So in my mind,
that's the freedom part that comes into it, what we've been able to actually accomplish
with our money. But then we take the 10 steps back whenever
we discuss what we need to improve on. And then we have these conversations about how
much are we actually spending month to month on groceries or whatever it is.
You've accomplished a lot. Pride, pride in helping family, pride in where you live, pride
in the way you live, all that pride Pride in just doing well. And you should be
proud. But when you're doing this well, oftentimes I just want it to be a little bit easier.
Right? Look at the looks on both your faces. Like, yes. It was just a little easier. If
we could just save a little bit more easily, if we could be just a little bit more generous with family.
If we could have better conversations just a little bit more easily.
That's it.
That's all I want.
How about you?
Absolutely.
Okay.
I guess I just always felt that my like leading us in the ways I have in the past, in terms
of creating a budget, sticking to our savings goals, I am the reason or a lot of the reason
that we are able to live the life that we lead now.
I've said Fernando is so generous with everything that he does, and he very rarely tells me
no. But he doesn't
plan for the long term, whereas I do. So I feel like, why would I stop doing it? I don't
know.
If it's working, and you're both happy with how it's working.
That's the part.
Oh, yeah, that part. Let's say you had just produced destruction. Then it would be easy for me.
I'd be like, look, is it working?
You're like, no, this sucks.
I'd be like, cool, let's fix it.
But in this case, what you've done has actually been very helpful, but it's also not quite
serving you in the way that you want it to.
Yeah, that's super fair.
Okay.
And if we fast forward 15, 20, 30 years.
I've seen it play out and I think Fernando has as well.
I think I wrote in the application specifically that I am very afraid of becoming my mother
in controlling everything and driving my partner away.
And I am very scared of Fernando becoming his mother and letting me do whatever I think is necessary.
Then at the end of the day, we don't agree and it's a huge mess of a divorce, just like what happened
to our parents. Fernando, what do you think? I think that actually is very enlightening to me because I didn't see myself going down
that path.
But that's the first time I saw it from that perspective.
We have one person that really wants to control the budget and make sure everything's going
well and another person is very afraid to spend and is constantly checking to make sure
that any purchasing decisions make sense.
From a long-term planning perspective,
it's definitely something I'd let go of. At work, I can do that. But when I come home,
I turn it off. And it's just like, I just want to play video games or hang out or whatever else.
Because I feel like I did that work and it caused me so much stress. But hearing you read that
statement, it opened
my eyes in just the most devastating way. I did not realize that is what my future could
hold. That really, really surprised me.
I think the two of you fit together well when you were 17, 18 years old when you got together.
And I think that probably there was some discussions you both had about your family structure and
things like that.
But you're not the same 18 year olds you were back then.
I mean, can you imagine going back and telling your 18 year old selves where you're living
right now?
Absolutely not.
I talk about that all the time. It's ridiculous. I am eternally grateful for
where we have ended up through sheer luck and like...
And what else? Not just luck.
And work.
Exactly. So both of those things. By the way, thank you for saying that. Luck played a huge role.
Yes.
Absolutely.
And hard work played a huge role.
played a huge role. Yes, absolutely. And hard work played a huge role. And that's that pride.
I love seeing that. That I was talking about that I see in the two of you. But I don't think those puzzle pieces are the same today. They may have fit together at 18. Shared family trauma, immigrants
into the country, all that. Okay. Not only do you both change, meaning those puzzle pieces are changing shape, but the
way you two fit together changes.
In so many relationships I talked to, they got married, and then one partner decided
to embark on some type of self-development journey.
Could be losing weight, fixing finances,
traveling more, whatever.
The other one, understandably, might not be interested.
And as one partner goes down their journey,
the other becomes increasingly disconnected.
And in fact, one person may see the other
actively trying to prevent them from improving.
Personally, one of the key things I was looking for in a partner was someone who liked self-development,
who was into improving themselves.
Not only is it my business, I think that self-development allows for partners to grow and to change,
which is a natural part of life.
I'm thankful that my wife, Cassandra, loves self-development.
We'll be right back.
You know, we take the sponsors on this show very seriously.
We're selective.
I'm always asking our community what you think about the sponsors that we have selected for
you.
I heard some feedback about one of our partners, Element, which is an electrolyte drink with
zero sugars.
Let me read you a couple of the messages that I got. Kara said, it's the best electrolyte drink with zero sugars. Let me read you a couple of the messages that I got.
Kara said it's the best electrolyte drink mix out there.
My kids even like it.
H said I love it.
I drink a packet pretty much every single day
spread across a couple glasses of water.
I've tried raspberry, citrus and watermelon.
I enjoy them all.
Keep the feedback coming.
I love hearing it.
And for our sponsor today, Element,
they can help prevent and eliminate headaches,
muscle cramps, fatigue, sleeplessness, or other common symptoms of electrolyte deficiency.
If you sweat a lot, like me, or you feel dehydrated, you want to replace your electrolytes,
consider Element. Element is offering IWT listeners eight single serving packets free
with any Element order. This is a
great way to try all eight flavors. You can get yours at drinkelement.com slash Ramit. Try it
totally risk-free. If you don't like it, they'll give you your money back. The deal is only available
through my link at drink l m n t dot com slash Ramit. Again, drinkelement.com slash. Now back to the show.
For Fernando and Anushka, what brought them together might not be the most important parts
of their lives anymore.
In fact, where they are today is vastly different than where they are at age 18.
I'm not just talking about geographically or financially.
I'm talking about where they are, who they are.
My question is have they taken the time
to turn the page on their story?
Have they actually sat down and surveyed how far they've come
and decided what they want the next chapter of their life to be?
Almost certainly no.
Almost none of us do this. Now, to help me understand where they are today,
I pulled up their numbers.
Here's what they added to their conscious spending plan,
or CSP.
By the way, as a reminder,
you can download the CSP template for free at iwt.com
slash CSP.
Their assets, $10,000.
Investments, $253,000.
Savings, $100,000. Investments, $253,000.
Savings, $100,000.
Zero debt for a total net worth of $364,000.
What do you both think about that number?
It's crazy.
Sounds imaginary.
Crazy what?
Crazy good, crazy bad?
It's crazy good and it feels like it's not real.
That's so much money, more money than I ever thought we would ever be able to have.
Do you believe that this is real?
Yes.
Do you believe that you have access to this money?
Yeah.
Does it make you feel good to see it?
Not the investments, which is the problem.
For me, it's like it's in a 401k that we can get tech when or Roth or whatever else
that I can access when I retire.
And in my mind, I'm like, I'm probably going to die before then.
That's useless to where it's an emergency that I need to be able to access or use.
When do you think you're going to die?
Probably like 55 or something.
Maybe in my mind, I think it was by 55, I will have had to take care of my mom and my
sister and make sure they're all good.
And at that point, my mom doesn't really mean anything to me anymore.
And with Anushka, now that she's in my life, I've put myself in a position of ensuring
that she's able to also be successful and live healthily till that point.
And I don't have any wants beyond that.
I honestly think 55 is the age that he thinks that his mom might not be around any longer.
And I think to him, that means the burden is lifted. And he doesn't need to, I don't
know, be alive anymore. He doesn't need to provide for someone anymore.
So, he's good.
He's done.
This is like a very traditional...
You see this in old Indian movies.
It's like a Sri Lankan thing too.
You're simply here to provide for everyone else and you're not here for...
This is a thing, right?
Yeah.
There's like a word for it.
I don't know the word that's coming to mind, but it's like my
body is not important. I'm simply here.
Well, we are Buddhist.
There we go.
And I mean, we're atheists, but we are culturally Buddhist. So that is very much a part of how we
were raised.
But it's one thing if you lived in Sri Lanka and you were saying this.
I could get that.
But you live in San Diego.
You're literally surrounded by the most Western of West beliefs.
And you still believe this, right?
Yeah.
And okay, I'm not making fun of you.
No, no, I totally get it. Yeah. I'm simply expressing my surprise at these beliefs, which
are very different than I would encounter in 99 out of 100 people on the street. Okay.
All right. Let's continue working down the numbers. Anushka, can you read your combined gross monthly income please?
Yes. Combined gross monthly income is $22,500.
Alright. So you make $270,000 a year household income.
Yes.
What do you think of that?
I think it's good. It could be better.
You two are like 31 years old, right?
Yeah. 30, 31. Yep. That's pretty good. How come you like 31 years old, right? Yeah, 30, 31. Yep.
That's pretty good. How come you two have exactly the same income?
That's what I want to know.
In the past couple years, so when we were in Detroit and the pandemic hit, I realized,
oh, I can work from home.
And so I had asked my old job if I could continue working from home and they had said no.
So then I transitioned to a new job as soon as we moved to San Diego, pretty much.
And then a year after that, I got a new job.
And so I was just able to keep upping my salary in that way in a very short period of time.
And I used his salary to motivate me and now we make the exact same.
Very impressive.
All right. Great.
So you two are making $2 270k gross living in San Diego.
Hey, will you do me a favor?
I get a lot of people online who they say things like, if you make anything less than
half a million dollars in California, you're broke, bro.
Can you please tell everyone listening and watching?
How's life in California on $270,000 a year?
Is it good?
Oh, it's great.
It is fantastic.
So many online losers do this thing where they post 15 comments about how it's impossible
to get by in New York or LA or any big city making less than $500,000.
I'm like, are you aware that literally millions of people make less than $500,000. I'm like, are you aware that literally millions of people
make less than $500,000 in these cities?
Do you even know how much it costs to live in these places?
And then I look at their profile photo,
and it's a picture of a turnip,
and you realize this person lives in the middle of nowhere,
they've never been to a big city,
and they're basically just repeating
the same old anti-big city fear-mongering
that all the people around them say,
ooh, big city, so full of crime so scary. But also you need $500,000 to live there.
How am I a multimillionaire more in touch with people's incomes than these online turnips?
Anushka, what's this number here your fixed costs?
53%.
All right. Very good. What do you all think about that number? It's pretty good.
Bernanda, why are you smiling?
It's solid, but in Anushka's mind, it should be lower so we can have a higher savings rate.
Oh, well, we'll get to that.
All right.
22% on your housing.
Fine.
I have no comments.
That's a high cost of living area.
All right.
You're renting.
Great.
Car payment is $430.
Fine. Debt, zero. Great. Groceries, you're renting. Great. Car payment is $430. Fine. Debt zero. Great. Groceries.
What do I care? I don't care about any. It's great. I have no comments. If you're at 53%,
I have no notes. Savings. What do you say Anushka? What number is this?
15%.
Yes, actually, let me rephrase and say I think our investments are too high.
Okay, fine.
Your investments too.
Because you think that investing is like gambling.
And you think that if you invest, you don't really have access to the money because it's
in a retirement account and you're going to be dead anyway.
Right?
Precisely.
Okay.
All right.
And then let's go down to your guilt-free spending.
The last category here.
What do we see here, Fernando?
10%.
Is this number accurate? $16.66 per month? Anoushka?
Yeah, I would say so. Okay. I love the confidence. That's good. I believe you. I actually believe
you. I hardly ever believe anyone when they come on here. It's okay. I'm not expecting total
precision. In this case, I believe every last number on this CSP. Well done. So small. Let's take the win.
Well done.
I don't see it too often.
Good job.
Anushka, what is your reaction here?
I don't know.
I feel like I just like got that A on the test that I was waiting for.
If you were looking for my approval, you have it.
But I think the most important thing that you're going to realize is that your rich
life is not about my approval.
Your rich life is not even about your approval Anushka.
It is about the two of you coming up with a vision together and then implementing it
together.
So if you had to critique the CSP,
because we know the things that are great about it, almost everything,
what's not working?
I think from the car payment perspective, like I would like to get a car at some point.
Currently, the car payments actually go towards car maintenance.
It's really just within the year, I expect to spend several thousand on fixing up my car and keeping it in the best shape because I very much value my car. I always
looked at it as something I could sell if I needed to make sure my family was good.
That was the entire reason I purchased it.
What? What? What? Why are we talking about having a car as a backup asset? No. Fernando, you realize you're not 14 years old with debating on a 65 cent Reese's Pieces.
That's how I've always looked at it.
Do you want to keep doing that?
No.
Okay.
Because I'm sitting here looking at a total net worth for my young couple of $364,000.
And I just spent five minutes telling you all
the things that are amazing. It's one of the best CSPs I've seen in any of my conversations
on this podcast. And I asked, what would you do to change it? And your first comment was,
I want to maintain my car because if I need to, I could sell it.
Do you see what you're doing here?
I'm still looking at everything from a perspective where I...
Like a money scarcity perspective.
Yes.
You're playing defense and you're going to play defense the rest of your life.
You make $11,250 a month.
We're operating at a different level here. Vacation currently is $500 a month. That's $6,000 a month. We're operating at a different level here.
Vacation currently is $500 a month.
That's $6,000 a year.
Are you taking $6,000 a year of vacations?
We are currently not.
Two young, successful people making $270,000 a year.
Yeah, you can't take a vacation right now, guys.
No.
Maybe one day you'll be financially successful enough to take a vacation.
What do you say?
Hopefully.
I think that's what I really need to better understand about myself.
I'm like, get is that doing some things that...
Or spending towards larger spending goals that I always aspire to get.
For example, I've always loved driving.
And having a dream car has always been something I wanted to do.
But as I've gotten older, it's become harder and harder for me to rationalize it.
What's the car you want to get one day?
I told Anushka before, I was like, we can either move to San Diego or I could get a
CT5 Blackwing, which is like a $105,000 car.
What brand is that?
CT5. Cadillac. like $105,000 car. What brand is that? CT5.
Cadillac.
Yeah.
All right.
So fine.
And then she said, well, we can actually get it.
We just need to plan for it.
And your reaction was?
No, thanks.
Exactly.
Because that would be $105,000 that could go to your family, right?
Right.
Okay.
So this zero sum perspective.
You've heard about this phrase, zero sum?
Yes.
All right. So like if I get this somebody else loses.
Okay. You could go through life with that perspective.
It's actually very convenient for Anushka because she goes,
well it makes zero base budgeting really easy for me.
Fantastic. I know where the 105k goes. Beautiful.
Anushka, what is your critique?
I'm going to put this up on screen here.
What would you critique if you had to?
She's like, critique?
This is my f***ing masterpiece.
What are you talking about?
Oh no.
I know where she's going to go.
She looks so confused. What does this talking about? Oh no. I know where she's going to go. She looks so confused.
What does this word mean?
How can you critique this?
Fernando doesn't have a company-sponsored 401k plan, which is why I want him to do the
post-tax retirement savings and stocks a little bit more than I do because I get to contribute
to my 401k, employer sponsored
401k. So I would want him to invest more money.
Yeah. What each of you told me you would change here probably won't actually make you feel
better or bring you closer together. Anushka, you look surprised. Yeah, it might make me feel better for a little bit, but then we'd get into more arguments.
Yeah.
Do you know why you'd get into more arguments?
Because that's not really a compromise.
That's just me getting my way.
Which is common.
Right?
I saw that in your screening interview.
You both debate this or that and then oftentimes you get your way.
Right?
Fair?
Yeah.
Fair.
More importantly, when you invest more money, I know you see it with compound interest and
rule of 72 and SWR and all kinds of these terms. I get that.
But he doesn't see it that way. In fact, do you know how Fernando would see you taking
an extra $25,000 and investing money? How would he see that? Describe it in a word.
Apparently it's gambling.
Gambling is one. Loss. Just that money is being taken away from you.
Right, Fernando?
100%.
I could have been driving my dream car years ago, but instead it's going into my retirement.
Hopefully I live that long.
You put quotes around retirement as if it's not a real word.
That's a real word.
Retirement is real.
Yes. Yes,irement is real.
Yes. Yes, it is real. I find it. I find money in a sense to be like,
it's cliche to say, but like it's almost like the root of all evil. There's so much bad that can happen because of money. And there is so much waste because of money. I don't want to be that
guy in a mad car when I'm old because
there's poor people. I don't like that type of overspending. That's one of the things
I fight with.
Coming from where I have lived in many other places, there's a lot of issues I have with
the way that America is set up financially for its citizens. We don't provide enough
in terms of safety nets for old people.
It breaks my heart every time I go to a store and I see someone like 70 years old or working
like an old grandma.
I'm like, ma'am, you should not be here.
You need to be living your life outside.
I agree with you.
But if you get something you believe it means someone else cannot.
And you don't want to live in a world where you have something that somebody else does
not.
Is that fair?
Yeah.
That's not like that's not what I was brought up on.
Meanwhile, Anushka is saying like, I don't want to end up having to work at Walmart at
age 78. And that is why I want you to end up having to work at Walmart at age 78.
And that is why I want you to open up an IRA and I want to fund it.
Right Anoushka?
Absolutely.
Two ways of looking at money.
You brought it up in such an interesting way, especially looking at this and realizing that
we're both hitting the exact same thing from completely different angles of me saying,
well, I would take away from investments.
And from Anoushka's perspective, she's like, well, I want to add
to investments. And the amount we would be adding or subtracting is some of my dream.
That could be the car payment that I could be having if I wanted to live that type of
life. It is completely funded by taking away from that specific category.
Here's what I see happening here.
Fernando and Anoushka have vastly different perspectives on money.
I'm talking completely different.
She wants to invest aggressively.
She has a need for control.
She wants more.
He thinks investing is gambling.
He should give all of his money to his family.
He's going to die at 55. Oh, and also he wants $105,000 Cadillac. It's not a very coherent viewpoint,
but guess what? Most of us have incoherent viewpoints about money, so I don't mind. The
question that faces us now is what would they change with their CSP? Asking a couple to
critique their own spending, not CSP, but
spending, is basically pointless because they'll all say the same thing. Well, we
should try to eat out less. The average person has no idea where they're
spending money. They have no idea how their spending is related to their
savings rate, which is related to their investments, which if you calculate based
on a 7% return, you see what I mean. Asking the average person to critique
their own spending is like askingking the average person to critique their own spending
is like asking a golden retriever to critique their exercise regimen. It's just pointless.
But here we have a couple that has a CSP and at least one partner deeply understands the
numbers. They could invest more. They could invest less in their critique. They could
put more towards a vacation.
There's so many things they could do. But when I asked the question, I'm getting nowhere.
So I decided to take a different approach. And when I did, suddenly I stumbled into something
fascinating from Fernando.
I think it's more of a mental shift I need to have because I know I don't have a healthy
and realistic perspective on investments in America.
How much of it do you think your perspective on investing in America is based around fear?
100%.
I've been hearing this since I started my site in 2004.
I would get commenters, particularly around 2008, 2009, saying investing is dead.
It's never going to last.
Things are different now.
If you basically started investing the day my book came out, March 2009, you would have
had hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of thousands of dollars.
You'd be doing extremely well.
They didn't understand how investments work.
They didn't understand the literature.
They didn't understand that 7% returns have persisted through wars and recessions and
inflation.
They simply felt this fear viscerally.
And they decided not to invest and it cost them probably millions of dollars over their
lifetime. Funny, because you saying that actually,
I think helped it click in my mind in a way that Anoushka's saying it to me
over the last decade has not in that, like...
I do have that visceral fear, and in my mind,
the future is uncertain.
I don't know what's going to happen in this election, I don't know what's going to happen in this election. I don't
know what's going to happen, etc.
What I was telling her, and she's very well educated on this, it is more on like, I'm
listening to like NPR politics or whatever else. And they're like, hey, we're coming
close to the fiscal cliff every like few months now, right? A few years ago, the US's credit
rating was downgraded for the first time ever. And
that increased our interest on bonds and things like that.
We don't know what's happening in the political system. And things could get shaky. I don't
know what that means in terms of investing. But what I know is I'm putting money into
a system that could potentially be screwing me in the future. And I'd rather use that
money now to live and do things than put it into the system
that I don't know what's going to happen tomorrow.
But to your point, and I think you made it really well, if someone had invested that
money in 2009, when I was getting traumatized by the financial market, it would be a completely
different lifestyle.
But when I tell him that investing in our market will still get us returns, and that
has been proven over the long term, he brings up the point that some of the things that
we are facing today, we've never experienced before.
Oh, that's like code for this time it's different.
I don't know.
I want someone else to talk to him about this because I don't
listen to the news every single day. So maybe I don't know what I'm talking about.
Okay, let's talk about it. So what is your alternative, Fernando, if you genuinely believe
that there's going to be some type of fiscal cliff or something's going to go wrong? What
is your alternative?
Genuinely, it would be spending it now and living more life for the lack of a better
term than saving for an arbitrary future.
If we have money, we better spend it fast because we don't know what's coming around
tomorrow.
Yeah, exactly.
Look at Anushka's face.
Yeah, both.
Okay.
Yeah.
Well, guess what?
Good news.
If you want to spend a little bit more money today, you can.
That's not a problem.
You want to live a more opulent life?
Guilt-free spending is 10%.
So if you want to live a little bit more opulent, we can make that happen.
No problem.
What I'm really hearing you say is, I don't fundamentally believe in this investment
stuff.
I want to spend it without having to think or send it to my family or whatever.
Because sooner rather than later, this whole game is over.
And none of this stuff really matters.
Yeah, I think a bit.
I'm like really, I mean, to be frank, watching what happened during January 6 scared the
crap out of me as an immigrant. We stopped that day working. I pulled her off her meeting
and we sat there. And then as an immigrant, I remember thinking, we left. Our parents
struggled to get here. And I'm watching it burn.
And now people are covering up what happened and they're like, it wasn't that bad. And I'm like, this is how it starts.
This is how it happens.
I watched it happen everywhere else.
Yeah.
And so in my mind, I'm like, we are steps away.
We are steps away from it happening again.
And if that does happen and we do lose everything, what do I have at the end of the day?
What do you have?
The few dollars in my savings account.
Well, let's just play that out.
You get on the next plane to somewhere.
What do you have?
It's not a few dollars in your savings account.
What I currently see is you have $364,000 of net worth.
That's liquid cash.
That's a lot of money.
I guess in my mind, I think that's fundamentally a misunderstanding of what does it mean to
have something in like an investment account versus savings.
For example, like a Roth or 401k that's invested in the stock market, if that goes down similar
to 2008, it would be a 20%, 30% reduction.
Maybe it wasn't that large.
I apologize.
Whatever percentage reduction in value. And really, that large. I apologize. Whatever percentage reduction
in value. And really, the only thing I'd quickly take out would be my savings.
Why? You can sell your stocks that day. How much of this do you really know?
Very little. Investments very little, admittedly.
While I'm not trying to dismiss your fears, if you have a belief something's going to
happen, I think you should get educated about it. I think you should have a plan for it. Yes, I'm all for that.
But you just said two things that are factual things you can check in like two minutes.
Yeah, this is actually very true.
Is it possible that you are using what is going on politically as yet another way to
avoid money?
I think so. I think that's a really good point.
And phrasing it as like, you know, you could get very quickly educated on these things.
I'm like, yeah, you're not wrong.
This is something I can very quickly just like read up on and understand.
But every time it comes up, I'm like, break it down for me.
And I feel like, what does this mean?
Because I don't want to even spend the 15 minutes to do it.
Why?
Because it feels scary.
It still really feels like really nerve wracking to think of putting my head back in that space.
I don't know.
Fernando's agreeing with me just a little too easily.
What I'm saying should theoretically rock him at his core because it directly contradicts an entire narrative that he's created and
held for decades.
The narrative that money is evil, that geopolitics mean the end of our economy, that he should
just spend all of his money.
And with one sentence, I point out the logical flaw and suddenly he goes, I think that's
a really good point.
I'm just not buying.
Nobody changes an entire
logical apparatus that fast. What I can tell is that Fernando has created a story to make
sense of a world that's not in his control. He doesn't really have any proof. In fact,
Anoushka has actually tried to show him proof of just the opposite. But as humans, we love our stories.
And stories trump proof almost every day.
The problem here, of course,
is that his story is costing him.
It's costing him satisfaction in his relationship.
It's costing him a financial future.
It's even costing him the ability to spend more money today.
It's helping me confront my understanding that I was
struggling with thinking I could be back in that place that eighth grade and looking at money
and being like, we don't have enough. But looking at it, looking at this plan with you,
and honestly, you say like, this is an amazing plan is wild to me, right? We came from almost
nothing, the two of us, to realize like I've
done so little to help her is kind of, and like I love learning. That's like, the fact
that I'm friggin like read up on how these things work, when it would take seconds is
kind of shocking to me.
Do you think your mom would want you to feel bad about money for your whole life?
Absolutely not. That's something she tells me all the time.
Providers inevitably want to smooth over things for everyone around them.
They often want to provide reassurance instead of clarity.
It's going to be okay.
You've been doing that since you were what?
Five years old?
Older, older, but yeah.
All right. Pretty young. Long time ago. How come you don't do that for your wife when
it comes to money?
She takes care of me in that sense.
Like her mom?
He takes care of me in every other way. We've talked about how he's generous.
When he said that he doesn't feel like he's helping me in this, I don't fault him in any
way.
This is the role that I've also stepped up to do because he does so much else in our
lives.
I mean, I don't step foot in the kitchen because he does all of that and he's great at it and
he loves doing that for us and he provides a lot of mental stability that I need and I didn't have at
home.
He's so generous in every way, not just financially.
The reason that this is so important is that if the two of you cannot come to a shared vision on money, including investments, saving,
spending, family, the big stuff, if you can't come to an agreement on that, you will constantly
be perpetuating the pattern that you currently have.
Do you see how the way that you have both entrenched your views of money make it very
difficult for the two of you to come together?
Yeah.
Okay.
That's a good point.
I think realizing now that I have the ability to take control of that aspect of my life,
which previously I thought, well, every time you plan something, someone else is going
to change it. You have no control. Now I realize, no, I thought, well, every time you plan something, someone else is going to change it.
You have no control.
Now I realize, no, I do.
Anushka, by you taking over the finances, you're doing two things.
Number one, you are fulfilling the same role that your mom did.
And number two, you have set the expectation that you are the money person and he is what?
He's the avoider and he's also the worrier.
So he worries and worries and has all these thoughts that are in the clouds about what's
happening in politics and will we be able to access our money?
But he avoids talking about it, learning about it, engaging with money.
And you, who have helpfully co-created this dynamic, it's always two, it's never just
one, you say, oh, sounds good, I will prepare the documents for next month.
And that pattern actually works.
It works enough that, yeah, you get minor arguments here and there. It works except for the end of the year when you get in fights.
And what else?
When does it not work?
Look at this amount that you're investing every month.
What does it say Anushka?
$3,625.
Yeah.
And so right now you have $253,000 invested.
You're going to have tens of thousands of dollars being invested every single year. And so right now you have $253,000 invested.
You're going to have tens of thousands of dollars being invested every single year.
That number is going to be 500,000 soon.
600, 700, 800, a million, 2 million, 5 million.
What do you think is going to happen when you have $3 million in the bank and you're
arguing over had time for $15 at the time place.
I feel like I wouldn't be we wouldn't have as much to worry about. We wouldn't. I don't
know. We'd have more to fall back on.
This is that one part in all of the discussions that I've watched where like, when you say
this and I'm watching it, I'm like, of course, like, come on, guys, how you not seen this,
but I just realized like, oh, that's awesome.
Finish the sentence. What do you see?
I've always thought like, your first million is easy. 10 million is hard, right? Like making
those investments, getting to those points. And I don't see us stopping at that point.
I don't think we'd ever feel comfortable buying appetizers, regardless of us having 10 million
investments or whatever else because it feels like such a...
It doesn't feel real to say that we have that much money because of this whole perspective
we've had up until now of looking at this cash and be like, no, this is not...
We don't have enough and it's never going to feel enough.
And I think that's what this has helped me realize.
So when I say we need to invest more
because I want us to live a bigger life
and I want us to save more
because I want us to be able to afford,
I don't know, the beautiful bigger apartment
or the beautiful house someday.
And I want us to be able to donate more money than we are.
And in reality, our goals align
because I know he also wants to live a bigger life in the future. But it's like, I don't know, it's the day to day when we say that
53% of fixed costs is too little in my head. Like it doesn't make sense. Still, I'm trying
to get there.
Let's talk about it. I don't think your goals are aligned. I think that this is something
that every couple tells me. Let me just read what you wrote on your application. I'm not sure I have many years left to have the same
conversations over and over again.
I wrote that on a very low point.
Is it accurate?
At that point it was. I mean, at my lowest, yes, it's accurate.
What do you think the real problem is here?
It's not a percentage problem.
That's a math problem.
That's easy.
Fernanda, what's the real problem here?
I think actually it is a percentage problem in the cleanest sense in that she has a number
that she thinks we have to hit to be like saving the correct amount.
And then that leads to us as we gain more and more monthly income shoving way more into
savings and way more into investing.
Why does she think that she needs to save and invest a certain amount?
Have you ever asked her?
I think I have and correct me if I'm wrong here.
And I feel like my understanding is that's what the stock template of saving percentages should be to your income.
It is in terms of like, okay, we stick to a range of percentages for saving investing,
but it's more of like, I'm... I don't know, I guess I kind of realized this about myself
a couple days ago.
Like I am trying to...
Both of our parents wanted us to go to med school.
Obviously, we're brown.
Brown.
And we were both on that track.
And we both, because of our own reasons, fell away from that.
And since then, my parents have never thought I was successful. And I want to prove it to everybody and myself that I will be successful and more successful
than anyone ever thought.
I want to prove everybody wrong.
And I think part of that for me is my net worth and living the lifestyle that we live, and being able to shove it in my mom's face to be like,
I told you I'd still make it.
Now that's honest.
I appreciate the candor, Anoushka, I really do.
I never realized that. That was so enlightening.
Like, I'm not even kidding.
Like, I genuinely didn't realize wanting to be perceived by your family as
being successful was such a driver to her. And that helps me understand so much why she's
rigid on investing as I am rigid on sending money back to my family, which she supports
to be clear.
You have to. The reason we had that large argument is because my investment percentage, I think, was 15%.
It was like, you're just taking my money where you want to put it.
But now I have an understanding of, okay, this is like something that was core to her
and her view image of herself.
And that helps me understand why those arguments got so heated.
Anushka, you just shared something pretty candid.
Did you realize it before today?
I started to think about it before this conversation,
to be quite honest.
Why am I so driven by the numbers, the percentages?
I was just trying to figure that out by myself.
Why it meant so much to me that when he didn't agree that our investments had to be at 25%,
why it made me so mad.
That same anger you felt when he questioned you wanting to get an appetizer.
It's not about the appetizer.
It's about what it represents. So now that you've
articulated it out loud, maybe for the first time, I want to invest a lot of money so that...
I look successful to my parents. That sounds so ridiculous.
Well sometimes the biggest truths do. But that doesn't change the fact that they feel real to us.
So can I ask you a couple questions about success?
Are you successful?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm going to ask it again.
Are you successful?
I know that I am, but I have a long way to go.
Well I would feel successful if I was doing something that I truly enjoyed and I was making
good money from it.
Okay.
What's going through your head right now?
Yikes.
Calling me out like that.
That's what's going through my head. I guess it's the whole thing that my self-worth is tied to a number.
And if you don't max it out, that means?
I'm worthless.
Okay.
So, your feelings would just change overnight one day when you had a different job or a
business or something like that.
And if I had a million dollars in the bank, yes.
You want to model it out right now?
Yeah, kind of.
Okay.
All right, let's do it.
Let's pick some basic numbers here.
And I'm going to ask you Anushka to give me what numbers we should use.
So I know you have these at your fingertips.
So it should not be a problem.
But let's take a look here.
All right.
So your current principle of investment is what?
Like 250,000 bucks?
How much are you currently adding?
43, something like that.
43,500.
Okay.
And let's say you're going to let it grow for 35 more years.
Fair?
Yeah.
Alright.
And at 7%.
So right now, this is like what you currently have if you never got a raise, even though
you're at the beginning of your career.
Read that number out please, Anushka.
$9,103,380.80.
Wow. I'm not sure that's going to be enough to get the mango with sticky rice when we're
at the Thai restaurant.
What do you guys think?
$10 million before you can get a dessert?
How much you need?
So we'll have $9,000,030.
That's what we said.
Correct. I guess I want to be living a bigger life before then.
This is where I stepped in to make a quick suggestion.
See, they've already accumulated a lot of money.
They continue to invest aggressively.
What if they kept investing, but they cut their investment contributions by half.
What would happen?
And what I really want to know is what would they do with the extra tens of thousands of
dollars that they could spend now?
Let's say instead of $43,500, we cut that by half.
Jesus Christ.
Whoa, everybody freaking out here.
21,750 a year.
Yeah.
All right.
Here we go.
Instead of 9.1 million.
Oh my gosh.
It's only going to be 5.88 million.
I think it's good.
I think it's good.
I think it's good is probably the understatement of the century. In the long run, it was beneficial to have taken it out and $20,000 more a year,
potentially, in what we could be doing now is I could not even imagine.
I really enjoyed speaking to Fernando and Anushka.
You don't hear stories like this very often.
And I really love that they were so candid
in sharing their childhood, their finances,
how they feel about money,
sometimes even when it may seem irrational.
We're all irrational.
Let's see what Fernando had to say in his followup.
Honestly, it's wild to say this,
but I had not realized how successful the two of us
had become over the last few years
and how much that's impacted both our savings as well as our lifestyle and the financial scarcity perspective
that I had in my head. I think that also goes to the point that you identified about therapy.
So it was extremely interesting to hear you say that the CSP that really Anushka has set up for
us through her budgeting and planning
has been one of the best that you've seen
and that we could cut our retirement in half
and still be in a great place.
That's really crazy.
We are going to be taking $1,000
out of our retirement account monthly
to now allocate more towards my family,
$300 more towards a dream car
and some more money for us to do activities
and live life here in San Diego and be happy now as you're saying like living your rich life today and prioritizing that.
The other thing is the fact that I need therapy.
She needs therapy like we need therapy and how much that's really affected how we're living our life day to day where we're putting our money and where we are thinking what we need to do to be happy.
And beyond that really, like the fact that I'm not financially educated and it's really
holding back my relationship with my partner and causing her undue stress.
I will be looking to get better at up on that, better understanding of financial responsibilities,
personal finance, retirements, savings, all of that, so that
I can be more of a partner when it comes to planning our next five and 10 years again
together.
And now Anushka's follow up.
One of my biggest takeaways from our conversation was that I truly thought we were doing the
bare minimum when it came to saving and investing.
And you kind of showed me how that was not the truth and that
I was actually over saving and over investing and it was directly leading to my partner's anxiety
and fear of not having enough money and that I really need to work on cutting back in those
areas. One of the biggest surprises was that I really thought I was logical when it came to money talks and turns out I'm just as emotional as any other human being. I
want to work on that in therapy for sure. I want to be more logical when it comes
to my saving and investing goals. I'm also getting a raise and a bonus coming
up shortly. I know we didn't really discuss that, but I want to put at least
75% of that towards our guilt-free spending as well, so that's a big goal of mine. And then in the long
term, when we continue getting raises and bonuses, I want to kind of try to hit that 75% mark of putting
most of that towards our guilt free spending as well because
I know that we are saving and investing a perfectly good amount right now that will set us up for the
future. So therapy will help me feel more secure and help redefine what I call success. So thank
you so much again. Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich. I'm you so much again.
Thanks for listening to I will teach you to be rich. I'm Ramit Sethi.
Please follow the show on Apple, Spotify,
or wherever you listen to podcasts. If you haven't read,
I will teach you to be rich. My book, pick up a copy.
You can get it at any bookstore or any library,
and it will show you the specific tactics for how to build the I Will Teach You To Be Rich system into your personal finances.