I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 16. “We’re worth $8 million but I comparison shop for strawberries”
Episode Date: November 2, 2021When Chris shops for food online, he compares the cost of almond milk and strawberries to save a few dollars. He spends hours agonizing over the most economical flight routes. He even stopped and pick...ed up a used stroller from someone’s driveway. Chris and his wife Amy have a net worth of $8 million. Their friends call them cheap. They prefer to identify as "money hackers” and have lots of reasons why they behave the way they do. But even with their explanations, they’re not happy with how they’re using money to live a Rich Life. Chris and Amy are optimizers. They optimize points and options, a normal part of the tech culture in which they work. There’s just one problem: It’s making them unhappy! Imagine a world where Chris and Amy didn't have to put price first. Imagine a scenario where they could start with the kind of magical experience they wanted to create -- and use money to make it happen. As you listen, it’s easy to roll your eyes at the amounts of money being discussed. Resist that temptation. Amy and Chris have given us a gift by being so open with their finances and their challenges. I love today's episode because it shows you that if you have money issues today, It's very likely you're going to have the exact same money issues later at a million dollars or 5 million or yes, $8 million. Connect with Ramit Website Instagram Twitter Facebook YouTube Linkedin If you and your partner have a money issue and you want my help, I occasionally select a couple to work with, free of charge. Apply for my help here. Produced by Crate Media.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I was getting some frozen organic strawberries that I remembered from Whole Foods are like
$7.99 and they're like $15. And I was just like, I can't do it. Because what? It's crazy.
Like that is $7. I can't bring myself to pay two times the price
for the exact same thing.
What is your net worth?
About $8 million.
Hi, my name is Ramit Saiti.
And my guests this week are Chris and Amy,
a young couple who work in tech
and have a net worth of $8 million. They have already won the game
of personal finance. And yet they behave in peculiar ways with their money. You're going
to hear more about that strawberry story. You're going to hear stories about strollers and traveling and very odd ways that they behave compared to the amount of money that they have.
Now before you go on, it would be easy for you to roll your eyes and send me a message about how
unrelatable this is.
Resist that temptation. I love today's episode because it shows you that if you have money issues today,
love today's episode because it shows you that if you have money issues today, it's very likely you're going to have the exact same money issues later at a million dollars or
five million or yes, eight million dollars. Those issues don't magically go away.
Chris and Amy, I think Chris and Amy are actually giving us a gift by talking to me today because
most wealthy people won't talk about their money issues publicly.
But Chris and Amy will.
They're giving you a crystal ball into your own future behavior.
If you continue doing what you're doing today, saving and investing and accumulating, you
can see one very real possibility of where you might end up.
And remember, you will not hear this kind of discussion anywhere else, except on this podcast and on my email newsletter.
I'm Ramit Saiti and this is I will teach you to be rich. Chris, can you think of the last time that you spent more than an hour making a financial decision?
Like this morning?
Like literally this morning.
What was it?
We're planning a trip and we're trying to book flights and we're optimizing to a degree
that many would think was crazy.
And we're thinking about which hotel do we stay at, which flight do we take, do we leave
early, do we change which island we want to go to because it's cheaper to fly to this
other one?
And I don't know, we probably combined spent
too long. Like you like five, six more hours in the last 24 hours? Five or six hours together in the last day. Yeah. Well, one thing I forgot to mention, Chris and Amy have a combined income of about $600,000
per year.
That's in addition to their net worth of $8 million.
Now, I'm sure I don't have to tell you that it is literally not worth their time to sweat
the small stuff like this.
And they know it, too, but money psychology runs deeper than basic logic.
All right. You got to explain it to me, Chris. Tell me what's going on here. But money psychology runs deeper than basic logic.
All right, you got to explain it to me, Chris.
Tell me what's going on here.
I love the feeling of like getting the best optimization
and you know, we've been fortunate
to rack up millions of miles and upgrade certificates
and like figured out how to play the system.
I proposed to Amy actually, I said,
hey, if we want to make this easy,
we could just buy flights in business class.
And she's like, how much is it?
I was like, how?
It's like $6,000 a person.
I barfed.
Absolutely not.
I'm sorry.
Having lived with Chris and understanding
that there are so many hacks out there in a way that you can
do it first class or business class without having to pay cash outright. Knowing that that exists
makes it really challenging to then turn around and say, I know I can get it somehow cheaper,
but I'm just going to pay straight cash. It's just, it doesn't, that's not a calculation in my world.
And just to be clear, I think,
I don't know if Amy was ever willing to pay for business class.
That definitely never happened.
That's fair.
I think it was, didn't know there was a cheaper way
to get things, and if that person never learned it,
maybe would have made enough money to be able to pay
for business fast or a nice luxury hotel or fill in the blank.
Well, you do make enough to pay for a nice luxury hotel, right?
Yeah.
Do you?
I don't want to tell you, you tell me.
Well, yes, we do.
Just a quick reminder for everybody listening to these $2,000 hotels being thrown around left
and right, I can seem unrelated, extravagant, out of touch, but put it into context.
Somebody who makes $600,000 a year of joint income with an $8 million net worth, a $2,000
dollar a night hotel is the equivalent of a low-end motel.
It's important to remember that very, very important because our job is not to judge
somebody based on our values or our income or net worth.
It's to take into account their values, their net worth, their money dials and rich life.
So that is why I'm really pulling out all the details here,
all the juicy details, so we can understand what they want to spend their money on.
Let's find an example where this is not functioning correctly.
Maybe it's grocery shopping.
What is it where you are spending too much time to save a few dollars and we
can take a totally different approach to it?
Grocery shopping is a great example. He will pull up multiple different delivery sites
and he will actually compare the cost of almond milk from one site to another.
And he will actually order off of two different orders
from two different delivery services
to get the cheapest groceries that we need
from multiple sites.
As I was just saying, here's our grocery delivery site,
we will go through, we will get what we need,
put it in the cart, check out, off you go.
In the most recent example, I was like,
I'm pretty happy with Amazon Fresh, right?
And then I was getting some frozen organic strawberries
that I remembered from Whole Foods are like $7.99
and they're like $15.
And I was just like, I can't do it.
I cannot pay $15.
It's crazy.
That is $7. Like if I just got the, I don't even know. It's just like, I can't bring myself to pay two times the price for
the exact same thing. You know what I love about this example is that we're all kind of laughing.
But I actually think it's the perfect training wheels example.
I think it's perfect because here we are.
We could sit here and talk about it.
$2,000 a night hotel room.
But going from where you are today to that is a big, big jump.
You are right, Chris.
$15 for strawberries is crazy.
I agree with you. And yet, you should probably order
them. What do you think I'm telling you that? If I were talking to a clone of myself, I'd
probably tell them the same thing. What? I could give you the financial reason that the
cost to open up another card and paying
other delivery fee, it probably doesn't even make it worth it.
But let's assume for a second that it was worth it, it's just not worth the time.
But it's hard to, at least for me, to inherently value your time as much as you're like salary divided
by your hours worked justifies.
Yeah, you're exactly right.
That is academic language.
It sounds correct.
It's technically correct, but it never changed anybody's behavior.
The correct answer is to say, what kind of person and couple do I want to be? I will never, ever,
again, be the type of person who's comparison shopping for XYZ. It's not in my identity anymore.
Part of your identity is optimizing for $7. What if you could just change that? What would it
you could just change that? What would it be like to rewrite that part of your identity?
Maybe you're too important to be looking at the price of strawberries.
This is a big, big point. So much of what we do in our lives is driven by our identity.
What's your identity? Here's mine. I'm a good husband.
I'm a good son.
I'm Indian.
I graduated from Stanford.
I'm a CEO and author.
I like hot sauce.
I'm happy to pay my taxes and on and on.
If your identity is I would never fly business class, then just imagine what happens if you end up with lots of money.
You are still going to be bound by that identity.
The problem is that identity might not be serving you anymore.
And that's what's happening with Chris here.
Paul Graham had a great essay where he talked about keeping your identity small
because once you publicly proclaim something, it becomes harder, almost impossible to change
it.
This is one of the reasons you hear about these anti-vaxxers who refuse to take a vaccine.
It's not that they're carefully reviewing CDC data and having intellectual debates
about randomized control trials.
No.
Many of them have troubled deciphering a menu from all of garden, much less reading
CDC data.
No, what's really happening is they posted on Facebook about how the government is trying
to force something down their throats and now they can't change their identity from it.
Even though their own friends and family members have died from COVID, they're now essentially locked into an identity that they created for themselves.
To admit that they were wrong would mean social death from their entire network.
And it would mean a cascading failure of assumptions that they took to be completely and self-evidently true.
That's too hard to bear.
So they go on posting on Facebook,
putting themselves and others at risk.
I don't agree with them. I think they're morons.
But you can understand the mechanics of what's going on here.
Now, back to Chris and Amy.
One of the ways to get at identity is to ask people what others
think about them.
And there's no better way to do this than the cheap test.
Do your friends think you're cheap?
Listen.
I mean, I have to assume yes, but it's not like a common, like, yeah, I have to assume in more
just in ways, but I think people know that we have a nice, like, you know,
it's like, I'm not sewing my own clothes and buying them at the thrift store.
And, and, you know, I don't think you have to be a sewing your own clothes to
be called chic.
I would say our friends have enough class to approach it as, you are like the master
hacker.
Very cleverly, like smart people do, they found a way to put a positive spin on their behavior.
We're not cheap.
We're master hackers.
We're expert deal hunters.
And now that defines whether or not they're willing to spend money on things.
Like it or not, you have an identity around money.
It may be what you think of when you think of yourself and money.
It certainly involves what other people think of when they think of you and money.
But for me, the beautiful thing is you can change your identity if you want to.
Amy, I heard you saying no way.
I'm really curious now about where that instant no came from.
I guess to your point, it feels frivolous to me.
It feels like I am I actually getting the value for paying that.
And what else could I do with that?
I mean, we have a 10 month old home. So I'm always thinking, well, you know, that could buy her
ex years of swim class or months of swim class. I could buy her a new, you know, running
stroller, which it would be great as we get into running. I don't know, right? Like it's like all
of these things. I actually do that. Probably not. I just have to say, the running stroller example,
that seemed like it came out of left field.
Well, we were biking down the street
and we saw someone had a running stroller
at the end of their driveway with little free sign on it.
And so I was like, oh my gosh,
we don't have a running stroller.
I kind of like to run.
And so I drove back and I picked it up.
I brought it home and I was like, well,
it's got a flat tire and the strap that holds,
the buckles in place holds the child in this stroller,
which is probably really important for a running stroller
was not there.
So now I'm like shopping for replacement straps
on the internet and like trying to see if someone on eBay
has like an
old version of the stroller that's totally broken, but we could get the fabric seat and
thinking about cleaning it off.
I love Chris and Amy.
I love how honest they are about their spending issues.
Yeah, we're multi-millionaires.
And he saw a broken stroller on the side of the road and stopped and had to have it.
Like, what other couple would come on here and be that honest?
Chris and Amy make over $1 million per year if you factor in their income and the growth
from their $8 million portfolio.
Okay?
Approximately real estate blah, blah, blah.
Yet he is chasing broken strollers.
Don't roll your eyes.
It's easy to say,
ha, ha, how stupid, but almost all of us do this
on a smaller level.
We develop an identity for ourselves.
And when we make money,
we don't adjust our mental model of what normal is.
So you end up with these martyrs who complain about how little time they have, don't adjust our mental model of what normal is.
So you end up with these martyrs who complain about how little time they have,
but when you suggest spending 20 bucks
to get their groceries delivered,
or maybe hiring someone to clean their place,
they go, oh my God, no way,
why would I pay someone?
I can do that myself.
Yes, you could, but you probably shouldn't.
As Jim Rohn said, the more successful I became, the less I was able to afford.
He means that he couldn't afford to mow his lawn because his time was better spent
with his family.
Here's another rule that's very relevant for Chris. And that is the more money you make, it becomes more and more okay to waste some of it.
What do I mean by that?
I mean that in Chris's case, it's probably a good idea to just set a blanket rule that
he's always going to get his groceries from one place. And if occasionally that place has
berries that are expensive, even $15, just get him. Yeah, he's going to waste $7. But he's
got to move up and focus on more important things versus being constantly in the weeds
on literally $7 or $8 questions. You can't simply tell someone these concepts about money and identity, though.
It just sounds like academic jargon.
You have to get them to feel it themselves.
So I'm going to gently probe Chris on what his behavior is costing him and then what it's
getting him.
Listen to his responses.
I see Chris do the st shoulder thing, which to me,
that's a hard line that I'm like,
you are going too far.
This is bananas.
It's like beyond sanity.
Please stop and let's just go take it
back to the lovely yard it came from
and leave it there.
We kind of like lightheartedly
engage and challenge each other a bit, but at the end of the day,
we still have the stroller and it's still sitting on our garage and I'm pretty sure Chris is still looking for the missing parts.
Chris is that true?
I found the missing parts for $100, but now I'm convinced that there's actually a way to do it for like $40.
Okay. One of these days, I'm gonna see you out both running.
There's gonna be a wheel falling off
and you'll say, no, no, no, it's fine.
I've got another one on order on eBay.
So what I love hearing is there's a lightheartedness
about this and that's good.
What is this kind of behavior costing both of you?
Definitely time.
It's a massive time suck.
If I'm being completely honest,
maybe a little bit of happiness,
just because we're not spending our time
the way we want, right?
We talked about what it's costing you.
I'm curious what your behavior is getting.
What does it get you?
More money.
What else?
I mean, there's like a real,
probably messed up satisfaction of being like,
I know I spent so long, but I got this thing
that everyone else has to pay for,
and I got it for less.
Now we're starting to get there.
It's relatively easy for people to admit what their behavior is costing them.
Amy and Chris know that it's wasting time and it's causing them stress.
Fine, easy.
It's much harder for people to understand what their behavior is really getting them.
Why are they doing it?
What's it getting you? It's harder for people
to admit this because deep down, sometimes the truth is uncomfortable. Some of us behave
in peculiar ways because we're lonely. We want attention. We want to feel superior to others,
or maybe we want to distract ourselves from a painful reality inside. That doesn't feel good to say.
So we paper over these uncomfortable truths
with a lot of apologizing.
I know I shouldn't do this and we use academic jargon.
Like I should quantify that.
And it's clearly not an ROI positive use of time.
The truth is often much less logical and much, much deeper.
Amy said it right when I think like, therefore we won. We got the like amazing thing and we
didn't have to pay for it. Yeah. And what about the person who stayed at that original hotel
and paid $2,000 a night? They did not win. What did they do then?
Well, I've never thought about it like this, but they also won because they are saying at an amazing hotel and they're getting the exact experience
they want and they did not spend a significant time trying to find an alternative because time is So I guess we both win in a different regard, but I would argue we lose in that we spend
more time than the feeling of the win is worth to me.
But when I think about the win, I'm like, well, you know, if we'd gone on to that hotel
and we went on a week-long trip, there's $14,000.
And if we really optimized it and used all the deals and points and everything, we'd have a
similar experience and spend $3,000. When do you get to have the exact experience that you want?
You have $8 million of necklace.
I laugh about this, but like there's a harsh reality here,
which is we are so caught up in playing the game now
that I just don't, I don't see an end in sight.
I don't know how it ends.
When do you get to choose what you want
without price being a consideration?
That one seems like a never
One of my favorite things to do is to read forums where ultra high net worth people share their fucking delusional
philosophies on money. I'm obsessed with this one mommy forum. It's called DC urban mom and there's a discussion thread where someone who has
It's called DC Urban Mom. And there's a discussion thread where someone who has $30 million says they can't afford to
fly private, not even once.
They said, maybe when we have $100 million, it's $25,000 to fly private.
I don't even care if you fly private, but you do not need $100 million to spend $25,000.
The same forum has other threads
where someone making $250,000 a year
says they can't go on vacation.
What world am I living in?
By the way, please don't write me saying,
for me, 250K actually isn't a lot of money
if you live in one of these,
I lived in all those cities.
I know what you can do with $250,000.
I have zero problem if you don't wanna go on vacation,
but I have a real problem when people use money
as an excuse for not doing things
that they can easily afford.
Things that they claim they actually want to do.
I asked Chris, when do you get to make decisions
without price being a consideration? His response, never.
He has a net worth of $8 million.
What is happening right now?
You can see why I say people's feelings about how they are doing financially are highly
uncorrelated with their actual financial status. Chris and Amy could have another $20 million,
but they will feel exactly the same way,
unless they make it a priority
to change their relationship with money.
What are my favorite things to talk about
is this concept of money dials,
the areas where you love to spend money.
The most common one is food, the next most common one is travel, and the third most common
one, a top money dial, is health and wellness.
Now I get it.
I spend a lot on certain areas of my life.
For me, I love hotels that falls under luxury, I love convenience that falls under having
my food delivered, etc.
And I also love the ability to spend on health and wellness, like a personal trainer or
selecting where I stay by how close the gym is.
Health and wellness is a top money dial for most of my audience.
That's why I'm excited to partner with Ness, who I want to tell you about today.
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This could be things like a Chipotle burrito,
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Now, in my own personal life,
I love spending money on health and wellness.
I have a personal trainer.
I get a weekly beard trim.
I buy protein powder, and when I travel,
I make sure to prioritize where I'm staying by
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Right now, Ness is offering a 50,000 point bonus to members who spend $6,000 in the first
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Everything you talk about in terms of value is focused around functionality.
Do you know that you both have so much money you don't have to justify purchasing anything to anyone ever?
Except each other.
Yeah, right.
Exactly.
And there's still that's the problem.
That's the challenge.
Yes.
But I hear the language used and it's words like value, which is a good word, but I wonder if
there's something in your life for each of you that you buy just because you want.
That cost more than $500.
cost more than $500. So I surprisingly did make a purchase that was over $500.
And I love fashion.
I love shoes.
There are certain things that I can just justify paying money on because they bring me real
happiness. There were a pair of shoes, a pair of sneakers I was like, you know,
and Chris, I told him because we have this rule that if either of us want to go and spend
what is over $200, we have to check in and just make sure like, it's good. So I take
this to Chris and I say, hey, I really love these shoes. I like to buy them. And he was like, Are you serious? He's like, it's for shoes. That's one last long. And I said, yeah. Okay. He's
like, Can you get him for sale somewhere? And I said, Look, boy, I've tried everything I can.
They don't go on sale. And no, you're not going to find it discount codes. So I think I let
them sit. And we had this back and forth
for the better part of almost a year.
My breaking point was, so they're easy on and off shoes.
My breaking point was, I was super pregnant.
I was having a bend over and tie my stupid shoes
and I was like, I'm not doing this anymore.
Their shoes I want, they go with everything, they're super functional, they're super versatile,
they're really cute.
And I'm not doing this anymore, Chris.
So guess what?
Mama just went and bought the shoes.
And I felt really happy and I wear them all this time.
I love that example.
I also love that you kind of offhandedly through in a couple of functional
things such as lip on shoes and how long are they going to last? Yeah, okay, fine. But ultimately,
bottom line, you just wanted them. Yeah. And you got them. And by the way, the X $100 you spend
on these shoes, will it change your life in any way whatsoever?
No. It will, as a zero percent change in your life. Two years from now, if you look at your finances,
you will never, ever, ever be able to find that number, ever. It won't even be a decimal place.
Correct. Okay. A frequent thing that I hear is, don't get me so excited about something.
And then we have to have the conversation again. So like, come back when like, there's a thing that I can get excited about that we also will do. And that doesn't mean that you're comfortable
spending on. That means like, come back to me when we have like the optimized version of this that
I know we'll both say yes to.
Well, I'm like, hey, Italy was so amazing.
We should do this.
For 95% of people listening, you're like, what the hell is Chris talking about?
An optimized version, what are we talking about here?
And I wanted to show you this because different types of people have different types of language.
I remember one of my friends and I used to host a dinner series in New York.
In every month or two, we would have six people out for dinner and we would invite a lot
of diverse groups of people.
I remember one night for whatever reason we had a self-development table, lots of people
from coaching, etc.
And they were using these words and phrases like,
hold the space.
And at one point I kind of mentioned,
most people don't know what that means.
Hold the space.
Live your truth.
That's not common parlance.
And the table went completely silent.
They looked at me like I was absolutely nuts.
What do you mean people don't know what a hold the spaces?
I go, this is not a phrase that normal people use.
And they were a little bit insulted.
Okay, what do you mean normal people?
Why?
Because everyone in their world had that worldview.
They used the same language, the same concepts, frameworks. Chris in tech uses words and worldviews that other people in tech use.
So does Amy.
That's the world that they are living in.
And so they're reinforcing each other with these phrases and these frameworks and worldviews.
One of those worldviews is that we need to optimize.
This is super, super tech. Tech people love to optimize.
Sometimes I just wanna say, please shut up.
I don't wanna hear anything about optimizing
anything anymore, just stop.
Sometimes you can over optimize.
Sometimes you don't need to optimize at all.
Do you optimize when you give your mom or dad a hug?
No, sometimes you just do something because it's good.
It's the right thing to do.
So one of the things that I can do when I work with people is to kind of gently nudge
them out of this worldview that they think everybody else sees.
For example, with Chris naming, maybe we don't need to optimize all the time.
Maybe we can just get a pair of shoes because we want it. Yeah, I mean, he pitched me on Italy and he got me so excited about it.
And then he came back and said, Greece is supposed to be very comparable to the weather
slightly better.
And by the way, it's much cheaper.
And so suddenly we pivoted to Greece, which I fully support, but now I've gone so deep
down the Italy train that I have to like reorient myself around Greece, which I haven't
done as much research around.
And I just don't have the same elements to get super excited about in me yet. So the two of you are optimizers and you get into an optimization loop where
each of you optimizes and then we'll come back and let me know about this, but what you
don't truly internalize is that this optimization is not making you happy. What kind of couple do the two of you want to be?
How would you describe in a few words
what kind of couple the two of you want to be?
Honestly, I love us.
I love our relationship.
I love the couple we are.
I think we have a good banter.
I think we make each other laugh.
We're both very responsible and respectful
and receptive to each other's needs.
So I personally feel really happy.
I think the financial bit though is a challenge
in that financially we are, I would say we are doing well
and we don't have the burden of having to stress
about how we pay for things, how do we cover bills, how do we, but we are completely irrational
in trying to find a deal.
And for me, what I would like to see different moving forward is us still being ultra responsible with how we spend, but in a way that actually drives
happiness and meaning as opposed to everything having to be like a win because it was a better
deal for us. So if we can remove that bit. In a few words. I don't know, I just have a very sad. No, I mean, I think I
think we're like a fun goofy couple that
loves to travel and explore the world and do
fun stuff. Like I want to maximize the
experience of life. Yeah. I love that.
Yeah, me too. You want to maximize the
experience of life. What does that mean, Chris?
It's just when you're like in every opportunity to do something, make it the most. And that doesn't
always mean go to a place and do everything there, right? The experience of life could be letting
yourself unwind and go nowhere. We might just go to the hotel for two days and do nothing.
And like for that part of time, that's maximum. But the next day, we might go on a food tour. We might
make sure we meet a local and go around and see things. I love the vision. And I can tell it
excites both of you. I also think that we all can agree that the way you are treating your money
is not honoring that vision.
Is that fair to say?
If you assume that we want to continue this vision forever,
obviously, for as long as we live,
and you were rationally assume that we may,
like we could spend all of our money and run out,
like then you could assume,
like I think that's what always goes through my head.
It's like, well, if I'm with you, you cannot run out of money. I don I think that's what like always goes through my head. It's like, well, if I'm you cannot run out of money.
I don't think that's true. Yeah, it's true.
Compounding interests. You are so far down the frugality border, not borderline,
cheap world, that it is impossible for you to run out of money. Not to mention that your
money continues to compound and just in a few years you'll have close to 40 million dollars
and more and more and more. At that point it actually becomes almost financially impossible
to spend it all. So yes, if you were a very irresponsible and new athlete with this kind
of money, of course you could go bankrupt
But the two of you do you think either of you will ever let that happen?
I don't think we'd let it happen, but I think I think we pride ourselves on
Not having played the keep it up with the Joneses game and so maybe there's some hidden fear that like oh well
You know you buy one pair of $500 shoes.
Now you have 50 pairs.
And now it's not a hidden fear.
It's out of the open.
Yeah.
Oh, it's hidden.
You're in.
It's not hidden at all.
You took a stroller.
You took a stroller out of somebody's driveway.
And now you're going to go put it back.
It's not hidden.
So let's kind of reorient the way I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go, I'm going to go what I would love to see is you mentally turning the page on your relationship from chapter one to chapter two of your lives.
Chapter one was about safety and emergency funds and accumulation and worrying about risk
and all these calculators that you do all the time. But then you won. And you won really
early in life. and you worked hard.
It's not like it was just given to you.
You both worked hard.
And so you get the privilege, but also the burden of the opportunity of turning the page
to chapter 2 and saying, oh my gosh, we want.
Now what do we do with the rest of our lives?
And this is really hard because it means
you have to relook at everything. You know, I asked my trainer a long time ago, I was kind of stuck
on doing pull ups. And I said, how do I do more pull ups? Like, what's the alternative? Any thought
for a second? You know what he said? He said, if you want to do more pull-ups, do more pull-ups.
And so sometimes the way to change the way you feel
is to start by changing your behavior.
So if you were to change your behavior
with these groceries, Chris, well, that looked like.
It would just be committing in advance.
I am just going to go to this place
and buy everything and not look anywhere else.
I agree.
You have to get out of these $3 questions.
And in your case, get into the $300,000 questions.
For Chris and Amy, because of their considerable net worth and their annual income,
a $2,000 a night hotel is a $3 question.
That's not something they should really be thinking about.
Instead, they should be asking $300,000 questions,
or even questions that aren't even about money itself.
They should be saying, what kind of trip do we want to take?
What kind of experience do we want to create for our family?
What kind of memories?
And so when you listen to this,
I know it can be tempting,
hearing some of these big numbers, $2,000 a night,
must be nice.
I wish I could spend that kind of money,
other people are starving.
But I'm intentionally showing you this episode
because I want you to know
that at every different level of personal finance,
we all have three dollar questions that we obsess over. It might be buying
pre-cut vegetables for you that literally costs three dollars or you might have such a high net worth
that buying a car is a three dollar question to you. The principal stands regardless of the exact
numbers. Now let's get back to how Chris and Amy should be approaching their travel.
I foresee a future where you simply write an email and delegate it to your luxury travel
advisor who simply makes it happen.
And you will not be involved in the mechanics at all.
At your net worth, and certainly at your net worth in about X number of years, you should
not be looking at united.com. So let's do a couple of things that are
very tactical for you right now. First of all, I usually do something called the $100
Rich Life Challenge, but the two of you are too successful to do a $100 challenge. So
we're actually going to up the stakes. Okay, the way that it works is I give them a challenge to spend
$100 on something that they love and it's not for their kids and it's not for their dog. It's got to be for you.
Now, I want to ask you since I tell the average person to do the $100 challenge, what should the number be
for the two of you individually?
Has to be over $200 because that's our threshold where it's like spend it without even talking
about it.
I was thinking the $500,000,000, of course, is probably wanting to throw up right now as
I say that.
No. Let's let's really
biking. Hold on, let's rewrite that habit that
both of you have, which is to anticipate that the
other person is going to be averse to it.
You've done this multiple times, both of you, let's
rewrite that out of existence today.
Okay, just like Chris did, make your pitch for your
number and create some magic
here.
Well, I think we should target a thousand dollars. I'm trying to position it in a way that
it doesn't play defensive and I find myself catching, catching myself going that direction.
I think a thousand dollars is unique in that it opens up a variety of new purchasing opportunities that we typically
wouldn't necessarily assess on a whim.
And it allows us to be very creative and adventurous around how you can use that money.
What kind of experience could you get for a thousand dollars?
Is it material?
Is it a class?
Is it like a full experience?
Is it like the photographs that come with it?
What could you get for a thousand dollars?
Okay, thank you Amy.
Yeah, so in my mind, I was thinking of raising,
you know, I see your thousand and I raise you to 5,000.
I'm expected, but I like it. Okay. It's a challenge now because there are so many things that you
can buy for more than a hundred dollars. You know, I'm sure there are so many things you can buy
for more than five thousand dollars, but I have no idea what they would be. You should know, Chris,
this level, You should know
You should not know the price of organic strawberries at two different grocery stores. I'm gonna tell you that right now
Okay, Amy he said $5,000 are you comfortable with that?
I Am comfortable with that I
My response when I heard him say 5K was actually pleasantly surprised.
Why?
I just, I wasn't expecting it.
I'm still stuck on like, what am I going to spend this money on?
So that's a great question.
Chris, how would you find out the answer to that?
We would talk about it.
No, it was you spending 5,000 yourself and she's going to spend 5,000 herself.
Oh, I thought we were spending this together.
You have to listen, boy.
Oh, man.
I think Chris is like, I just make it back.
No, I'm not on board anymore.
I'm back in Amy.
I was like, wow.
Okay.
I thought we got to spend it together.
Oh, man.
My bombs are sweating, you know?
I'm like, I don't want to spend $5,000.
I don't need anything.
You don't, of course you don't need anything.
This isn't about the thing you're going to buy.
What is it really about? Letting go of like retraining and rewiring our brains to be comfortable.
Building that skills and the habits of knowing how to buy something, not optimizing for it.
So you both tell me a number that works for both of you. It's your number. It's not mine.
What's the timeframe for buying this thing?
48 hours.
You guys should know that this back and forth went on for about 15 to 20 minutes. This discussion about is it 500?
Is it a thousand?
blah blah blah on and on and on. Again,
exemplifying the point that Chris and Amy are focused on three dollar questions, not 30,000
or 300,000, also a lot of meta talking about the process.
Some couples love to talk about talking, talk about the process. And sometimes one of the best things you can do is simply stop talking and shift to becoming
more decisive.
Sometimes decisions are just not that important.
Make it, if something goes wrong, it's reversible, no big deal.
For big things, you know, should we have children?
That kind of thing.
Yeah, you should be very, very deliberate. But sometimes for a little decision, just make it and move on.
I'm still waiting for the number. Disciose.
2500. I'm going to go back to a thousand. Here's a suggestion. When the two of you differ on a number, whether for traveling,
diapers, car, what if you decided to go with the higher one? What if that was just a
basic rule, totally opposite of every other couple, but in your case, it would be a
simple rule that would help change the dynamics of your conversations.
What is the number, a target or a ceiling or a minimum?
Is it like, I don't know.
Yeah.
The point is not to find the technicality,
the point is to change your behavior.
I mean, here's the thing.
We're going through this for a reason.
We know we want to change.
And so to repeat point,
we're going to have to feel discomfort and order for that to become more comfortable over time.
And fortunately for us,
we have an incredible trick coming up.
So you could think about what kind of experience do you want?
Could you want to commit to a specific experience, a rental of some sort,
something during the trip that is going to give you an experience
that you otherwise wouldn't have?
I think there's ample opportunities here.
In the here and now, is that we wouldn't have, if we didn't have this trip coming up,
if it wasn't in the midst of summer, we didn't have a newer house that we recently moved into.
Like, there's a lot of options. I hear you. I'm just struggling. I like you don't need to know how to do it yet. You just need to pick a number.
Then let's we'll go with Amy's 2500.
All right. Great. Amy, do you agree? Yes. You can afford almost anything.
Have you internalized that? There's always another level to something that I don't feel like would fit
into our life plan. Like private jet, okay, we're not going to jump there, fine. But what's
the level up or more meaningful from what you currently lives. We don't have a chef every night of the week,
come to the house and cook for us
instead of cooking meals.
Great, okay, great example.
And the chef, by the way, could go anywhere
from delivering once a week to my thing, by the way,
I'm gonna spend $25 on someone to cook for us.
Love it, love it.
Look, it can go from everywhere from once a week
delivery to live in chef.
There are so many layers in that one example.
Just remember that a year from now this number will be completely irrelevant to you.
So write me back in a couple of days and tell me in fact what you spent on.
I'd love to see it.
I think we've added at least one word to your repertoire today. What word was that?
High-fib? Yeah, decisive. Knowing that you have the money, you will have more money and that
your job is not to optimize for cost, but rather to optimize for magic. And magic can sometimes be
expensive. Sometimes it's an extra $2.
Maybe sometimes it's cheaper.
Who cares?
But that's where we start.
For me, the greatest tragedy is seeing somebody live a life smaller than they have to.
And I really want you to be living a bigger life, really being intentional about it.
That to me is truly a rich life.
That's amazing. I think that resonates very deeply
and I feel very inspired right now.
A couple of nights later, I received a message from Chris.
This is all it said, salads,
eat your green salad with chickpea,
croutons, and green goddess dressing with avocado and lime dressing.
Soups, roasted curry, cauliflower, mains, salmon with chimicherry, pork tenderloin,
I said, what is this?
And he wrote,
Meals for next week from the chef that's cooking for the week.
Well done to Chris and Amy. Thanks for
being so candid.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You to Be Rich. I'm Remi Tseati. 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
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on the I will teach To Be Rich podcast.
I thought I was in my right to think he could do more since he is more older, more money
more experienced.
But instead I was like, who does she think she is?
Like, I'm not gonna pay for her.
I have a drop of her suit.
She should pay for it.
I did expect him to pick up the bill
when we sat there for like half an hour. There have been many instances where we've wanted to
break up and we have broken up for days or whatever because of the incompatibilities and tensions,
but our attraction and willingness to try to fight for each other and be with each other has always
brought us back.
with each other has always brought us back.