I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 163. “I work & watch my infant FT b/c we can’t afford childcare”
Episode Date: July 2, 2024James and Nicole, 42 and 44, just had a second baby—but they weren’t prepared for the additional costs associated with a growing family. They spend 90% of what they make and struggle to afford chi...ldcare. Nicole’s maternity leave is ending – how will she balance work and raising an infant? This episode is brought to you by: Netsuite | Get visibility to everything in your business one one place. Sign up and defer payments, with no interest, for six months at https://iwt.com/netsuite. Superhuman | Get a free month of lightning fast email at https://try.sprh.mn/ramitsethi. Facet | Get affordable, accessible financial planning with a flat fee membership. For a limited time, the $250 enrollment fee will be waived when you sign up at https://facet.com/ramit. DeleteMe | If you want to get your personal information removed from the web, go to https://joindeleteme.com/ramit for 20% off. Trade | Right now, Trade is offering our audience a free bag of coffee with any subscription at https://drinktrade.com/ramit. 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.
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What is the plan once the baby gets here?
Daycare is obviously very expensive
and I know we can't afford that.
At this point in my life I should be
able to buy the expensive set of knives like you know I should be able to buy
the expensive furniture. I should be able to go on the trip that I want to go on.
And I think a lot of the decisions we make are like oh yeah we can afford that
we're the type of people who should have that kind of thing. Was that a
problem?
Not until I started having a family.
All the stuff that's surrounding us is what we actually did choose, but that's not like
what we really want.
Hold on, you went bankrupt?
Yes, three years ago I filed.
I see this cycle and this thing that I've been doing and I feel like we're heading that
way again.
It's a lot to change.
It's some radical changes, not only to our current situation, but our mindset.
It's hard to wrap my head around.
Today I'd like you to meet Nicole and James.
Nicole's 44, James is 42.
They recently had their second daughter and they tell themselves a lot of stories about
money.
Today, we're going to dive into those to try to understand why they can't change their
habit of overspending.
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Let's get into it and meet Nicole and James.
I was eight months pregnant in January.
I was like, Oh my God, I don't know how we're going to pay for our older child's school for next year. I don't know how we're gonna pay for
The new babies like childcare when I go back to work
How would you describe?
Where you were at that moment in a word or two?
Brantic I would say Brantic, I would say. Brantic.
And scared.
Scared of what?
Well, scared of basically what's going to happen, which is I'm going to go to work and
I'm going to have to also take care of the baby.
And I'm scared.
Okay.
How's the baby doing?
She's great.
She's 11 weeks and just growing perfectly and is a sweetheart.
I'm just going to have to, at least for the next few months, work and take care of her.
Not ideal, but once our oldest goes back to school, I think my mom will have some free
time and can watch her a few days a week until then it's just going to be a little sticky.
Yeah.
But still, like, I just know, I know how work is.
I know how I am with work and I know it's going to stress me out and I'm going to get
resentful towards James because I have to work and I have to
take care of the baby and he works because I work from home and he gets to go to the office and
have a kid-free experience. So I know how it's gonna go. A few months prior, he had tried to have a discussion of money and I was the
one that was like, no, it'll be fine. We'll figure it out. Like it'll all work out. I
know it will. What do you remember him saying, Nicole? What is the plan once the baby gets
here? Okay. Meaning like childcare. My idea was we'll just hire someone privately. It can't be that expensive.
I hadn't really looked into it.
Then I started looking into it and I realized, oh, this is a lot more money than I thought.
Daycare is obviously very expensive and I know we can't afford that.
And I started looking at our budget.
I think I did your conscious spending plan.
And I started looking at it and I was like, oh yeah, we don't have any money for this. We don't have any extra money and
When I said I would take care of it
He probably let it just like okay, she'll take care of it and didn't really think about it again
Okay, honestly money wasn't on my mind
Got it. Probably Probably to our detriment.
So I'm glad somebody had it on their mind.
Okay, good.
All right.
I will say also in March, I received a small bonus from work.
And so some of that money is going to help pay for our oldest her school up until 2025.
So we have her school from August until December kind of covered.
What happens after December?
We have no plan.
How many parents run the numbers before they have kids?
Truthfully, almost none.
It's the same as a house, which is the biggest purchase of people's lives.
Almost nobody runs even a basic calculation.
The fact is, most of the time it actually does work out.
See, most people don't pay attention to their money closely at all.
And they still have a place to live.
They can still eat out at an occasional restaurant.
They can still watch Netflix and have an iPhone.
But I want more for you than being okay.
I want you to live a rich life.
And there's no way to trip and fall accidentally into a rich life.
You have to be strategic.
You have to get proactive.
You have to go from playing defense to playing offense. And most of all, you have to make a plan. We'll make more money by then. Like, I'm going to get
a better job where I make you more money. You should get a better job where you're making more
money. And it'll all work out. Like, I think that was my plan. Neither of us have changed jobs.
I think that was my plan. Neither of us have changed jobs. I don't think I, in my mind, realized
how much time I would need for recovery and to actually raise a baby. And I didn't have as much time to do like other things like get a resume together and start putting out my resume and applying for jobs
like I thought I would so I've been kind of looking but not really looking and
He's fine where he's at I allowed her to
Push it off and let me put it back to the back of my mind
Filled out the application for this that really got my mind turning about money a lot more
of course knowing that this was coming.
Why?
Hold on, hold on.
Oh, when she filled out the application, did she tell you that she did?
Yes.
And what was your reaction to that?
I was with it.
I wasn't sure what it could do for us because I, we don't know exactly what our 100% problems
are. So, without knowing that it's hard for me to exactly what our 100% problems are.
So without knowing that, it's hard for me to know what what can be done.
If that makes sense.
I like to pretend I'm a great planner.
I'm not. I think about the plans, but then I
don't always have it completely locked in stone.
James, you said when you were speaking to my colleague about your situation, you said, I think we need to learn how to budget.
Tell me about that.
Well, I feel we have done a good job of being very open about our spending.
It's not always discussion before the money spent, but I think we do a good job of setting
things up.
But then we fail to really have a good grasp of our costs
when it comes to food and entertainment and the little things that weren't
planned, but are spur of the moment decisions throughout the month. Yeah,
let's do this. Oh, this came up because so and so called us that kind of thing.
Those things add up. And once you have that emotion of going out and doing
something, I think we're too quick to throw some money around because now
we're in this nice fun situation that we didn't expect, you know, and we get
a little carried away with that thinking that we're doing a little better than we are.
Okay.
Would a budget solve those problems you just described?
I don't know.
Perhaps it's too psychological and I'd ignore the budget too.
And we still do the same thing.
Like if you had a budget right now, what would you do with it?
I'd try to follow it.
I'd like to put it in my phone and stare at it and do my best and probably get angry when
I still went over it.
But I'd try to follow it.
Wait a minute.
Even in this hypothetical, you already went over your budget.
It took two seconds.
What kind of budget is this?
Not a great one, I suppose.
Okay.
What do you think about this, Nicole?
The idea that James said, I think we need to learn how to budget and stick to a budget.
I would have thought the same thing.
Another story they tell themselves, we need to budget.
What's funny is how many couples come on here
thinking that some magical budget
will solve their problems.
Let's get real.
If a budget was going to solve your problem,
you would have been using one already.
The truth is budgets rarely work.
And more importantly, a spreadsheet is not going to solve
an emotional problem,
a psychological challenge, or an income deficit. We'll be right back after this short break.
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Now back to James and Nicole. will work out financially. Um, somehow, I don't know how I've had a few times where like, you know, I was in debt
and then something happened and then I got a little bit of money and I was able to take
care of that debt.
Did you grow up religious or poor?
Religious and poor.
So my mom was a single parent.
We were very poor.
She finally became a teacher.
She graduated from school.
She put herself through college with two young kids
and graduated in, I think, in 1988, became a teacher.
But we were still, you know, teachers don't get paid a lot.
My dad never paid child support.
He kind of didn't really have any money either.
So just didn't grew up with money.
I grew up though with very rich friends, very wealthy friends
and I was very aware of it.
So what do you remember about that?
Just like we had to shop at pick and save and my friends got to shop at Gap.
One thing that I remember my mom always telling my sister and I was that you have to be able
to take care of yourself because you can't depend on men or on a man. And I remember
I wanted to go into dance. I wanted to be a ballerina or, you know, continue that study.
But no, that's not dependable. You need something that you can make a career out of.
career out of. And so I went with that in mind.
And I actually do see it in our situation.
Like I'm just kind of taking control because you can't depend on a man, which I don't know
if I ever would have thought that's why I'm doing it.
But I think that's why I'm doing it.
Never made that connection until just now.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What does it mean to you?
Well, kind of annoying that I do that.
I really didn't want to be like my mom and there I am or there she is, you know, and
something like this because I do feel like I can depend on James.
I feel I trust him completely.
And I know that if he had to, he would handle things.
He just doesn't have to because I don't let him.
So you're saying you trust him with your family finances?
Yeah.
Okay.
What about before you two met?
He was managing his own finances.
Well, he didn't do a very good job at that, did he?
Yeah, it wasn't going particularly well.
Have you ever told him what your expectations are around money?
No.
Do you have any expectations?
I don't think I have any.
When I was able to get a credit card, I got a credit card and I got into a lot of debt
in my 20s.
And I was able to get out of it because I cashed in a 401k plan in my 20s thinking, oh, you know, I'll have plenty of time to
save later.
Like, let's just use this to get out of debt.
Then I get back into debt.
And then I was able to, I got a chunk of money from my mom that was supposed to be used to
put a down payment on health, but I used it to pay off debt. And then this latest time, my grandmother passed away and left my sister and I her house
and an account that she had.
And I was able to get out debt with that.
And the investments that we have, which you'll see when we talk about the CSP plan, that's
because of my grandmother.
It has nothing to do with me.
So I see this cycle and this thing that I've been doing,
and I feel like we're heading that way again.
Why do you do it?
Because I can't say no to myself.
I remember in my 30s like I was working really hard
80 hour week like I deserve this and
Also at that point I'm like
At this point in my life. I should be able to buy the expensive set of knives like, you know
I should be able to buy the expensive furniture. I should be able to go on the trip that I want to go on.
This is a phrase I hear especially from people who have an unhealthy relationship with money.
The phrase is, I deserve that.
See, I almost never hear it from people who are high earners investing 18% of gross income.
But I hear it all the time from people who are in credit card debt,
people who cash out their 401 are in credit card debt, people who cash
out their 401k to pay off debt, and people who save and invest almost nothing.
I think the phrase itself is fascinating because almost nobody ever says it out loud.
It's simply a private thought that people have, and they say it to themselves when they
want to buy something they like, like a dinner out or a new car or a beautiful bag.
I wish I could ban this phrase as it relates to money, but really it's just a symptom of
an unhealthy relationship with your finances.
Because if you truly know your numbers, you realize that you don't deserve anything.
You can spend on the things you love, and you don't have to justify those to anyone,
but you do need to be able to afford it.
I'm curious James how you grew up with money.
When you think back to childhood, do you grow up with both parents?
Yes.
Okay.
What are some phrases you remember your parents saying when you were young about money.
I don't remember them discussing it.
How come?
We never really wanted for anything that I can remember.
We knew we were middle class, but we were upper middle class and we got what we asked.
Well, no, we didn't ask for a ton, but we got what we needed as a family.
There was five kids.
So we were a big family.
So we knew we couldn't be wealthy wealthy.
But my dad made a lot of money.
How much?
I don't know exactly.
I know he made more than $100,000 in 1986 or something like that, which that's a lot
of money.
He's making good money.
So I wouldn't say like wealthy because as I learned 20 years later, he never saved anything
He wasn't even paying the IRS much
So
wealthy would
Would involve actual planning
But he had money coming in and he spent it on the kids and he spent it on his family
Where did you grow nice? I grew up in outside of New York City and then upstate New York and then Pennsylvania.
What did your dad do? What was his occupation generally?
He was a salesman. He sold tractor trailers, the big back end.
Okay. And what about your mom?
She was a stay at home mom up until her late 40s.
Your dad bad with money as well?
Yeah, to the exact, almost to the exact degree that I am, including the cost.
I think he didn't pay his taxes.
And I think by not by not paying his taxes, he had a lot of money.
And I think at a certain point in my childhood, I want to say probably my early teens, it
finally caught up with him.
He needed to start paying the tax bill.
We moved out of a bigger house into a smaller house.
That was the big sounding bill to the family.
Like, okay, times aren't as good as they were.
Did you go to college?
Uh, for two years.
Didn't graduate.
Okay.
Who paid for that?
Nobody.
I did eventually.
Oh, that's a fun story.
Tell me like it.
Uh, so I went to university of Pittsburgh because actually that's a good, good
thing to talk about because that was the first time I was told there was not enough money.
I was accepted to University of Colorado in college. But when I presented the acceptance letter to my parents, that's when I was finally told, oh, you know what, at a state school, we can't afford to send you to an out of state school.
state school. My dad just said, I will get you alone. I said, okay, get me along. Great. The second year came up and they were looking for money for me to continue going to school
because I had two years of unpaid bills, essentially. University of Pittsburgh was saying, you know,
you owe us for this dormitory bill, you owe us for this tuition. My dad had not actually
gotten the loans. I don't know the exact ins and outs because I don't really
want to get in a fight with him over an hour of these years later. Basically I
owed these loans or owed money on to the school and paid it for a good seven or
eight years afterwards. Just paying for those two years of school that I then
ended up, because I was 20 and mad about it, I Dropped out. I gave up on college
Kind of walked away from it all. Hmm. I did not learn I needed to pay for them until
About two years later when my wages began being garnished when I was a bank teller in Colorado
That was when it really came out that my dad had used my social on the forms for the loans and stuff
But hadn't told me and then had not started paying or anything like that after I had left school
What about your dad as it relates to his?
finances
during this time period 2001 or so honestly for my dad this was the time of his life when he
Was forced to figure it out. He ended up getting a reckoning with the IRS.
He had to live with his brother for a while after he left the family.
He had to go through some lean times during these years, making up for overspending, I
think, on the family the 15 years before.
What lessons do you take away from that story as it relates to your personal finances?
I think I do a lot of the same things my dad does.
I think I spend at a level I think I should be at as opposed to what I truly am.
And I think a lot of the decisions we make are like, oh, yeah, we can afford that.
We're the type of people who should have that kind of thing.
Not really thinking about whether we actually have the money for that kind of thing. Not really thinking about whether we actually have the money
for that kind of thing. And I know that's the way he operated and I know
that's the way me and Nicole operate. And I think it's tough for me to
break that mindset because it's just so ingrained.
What other lessons did you take away from the family history? Oh. To me, the primary lesson is that nothing changed until your dad was forced to change.
Yes.
And I think that's exactly the situation with you.
Oh.
Like, obvious one would be like, pay your taxes.
Yeah, you know, like, yeah, pay your taxes.
Great.
We owe the IRS about what is it?
Do we finally get them paid off or do we still own like $1,500?
We are like $2,000.
I believed it was discharged in bankruptcy, but despite that, it's still appearing on some kind of...
Hold on. You went bankrupt?
Yes. Three years ago I filed. Was that a top-of-the-top replication deal?
No. I don't think I saw that.
Okay. Well, hey, let's roll write the parties. Sorry to toss that on you
Tell me what happened with the bankruptcy. I
had been living on my own in Denver for 17 years and
Just overextended myself
Through all the same kind of things we do today
Entertainment and food and I I lived alone and
entertainment and food and I I lived alone and
Lived like I had more money than I did. Um, like what specifically would you spend money on cars?
not at many at once, but I liked to upgrade my car more often than I should and
Tell me what specifically when you say more often how often?
About every year. Okay, you you bought a new car and then traded it in that kind of thing. Yeah, what kind of cars?
Honda's what nice home nothing fancy. I'm hold on you're talking to mr. Honda over here What's what nice Honda are we talking about? Well, I my first Honda I've owned
Four different Honda Civics and Accord an s 2000 and a CRV. He had a
an accord and s 2000 and a CRV he had
How come you didn't mention that well, I don't know I didn't get to that one yet that was after all the Hondas Wow, that's so in the last one. That was the straw that broke the camel's back and after the 9-eleven I've been
Yeah, all right. What else I know electronics, you know the new iPhones
iPads stuff like that computers once in a while.
Like nothing.
There was never any one giant.
Oh, I spent 20 grand on this.
It was just a lot of small items living beyond my means.
What do you mean? There was no 20 grand.
You bought a Porsche 911.
Well, I never bought it and paid cash.
It was a loan I had that I suddenly was paying more on and got myself way too monthly
over extended. OK.
How much were you making at the time? Anywhere between 40 and 60 depending on the job. At one point I had two jobs so I
was making a little more but...
Why do you think you got into that situation over spending?
I think I spend emotionally. I think when I feel bad I spend money and I
probably felt bad because I was single for a while and had been lonely.
I don't know.
All right.
When did you know that you were in financial trouble?
It was when I didn't do my bankruptcy.
That was obviously trouble.
Post that.
Wait, wait, wait, wait.
Did you know you were in trouble before you went bankrupt?
Yeah.
I mean, I always knew I was in a bit of trouble, but to be honest, if you want
to ask when I knew I was in trouble, like I've always known I've been not great with
money, you know, it's been my whole life.
Why I've never had I've never been able to accumulate it.
I've always just kind of spent what I had.
And was that a problem?
Not until I started having a family.
What did you think when you had to declare bankruptcy?
That I would try to do better next time.
Did you really believe it deep down?
No, because I know how I am.
Nicole, did that concern you when you were early on in the relationship?
Not really. I also am not that great with money. Notice how
these money messages are transmitted from generation to generation. Dad was
bad with money and now James is bad with money. Then you see it in intimate
relationships as Nicole admits she isn't good with money either. And one clue I
want you to notice here is how James constantly minimizes his financial behavior. He literally says, it's not like
I spent 20 grand on any one thing while describing how he bought a Porsche 911
while making around $50,000 a year. And he does this a lot. In fact, you'll hear
him keep doing it over the next few minutes.
We'll open up the conscious spending plan after this.
I have this hilarious slash sad thing that happens to me almost every single week in
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Somebody will write me, they go, hey, I'm paying 1.25% AUM to my financial advisor.
I know you've talked about not paying a percentage to a financial advisor. I just
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Listen, the person writing me this exact question will probably spend over $100,000 in lifetime
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Now, listen, I don't mind if they join my program or not.
That's not the point.
The point is, isn't it fascinating that people would rather pay a percentage and not even
know how much they're paying than to write a small check
That is how so many financial advisors charge by percentage and it costs you way more than you realize
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Let's get back to the show.
Assets, $547,000. Savings, $12,870.
Debt, $269,300 net worth $444,758 fixed costs 90%.
Cole, what's that look on your face?
Terrible.
What's it supposed to?
Let's not pass a value judgment.
Let's try to be, let's just analyze the numbers.
What should this number be?
It should be 50 to 60%.
Yeah. Yeah. So it's 90 percent. So it's
way above recommended parameters. Our fixed costs are really, really high and I think that is why
we're feeling the stress of just not being able to have enough. We've talked about fixed costs quite a bit and I guess we keep bumping up against
them short of you know selling the house and downsizing in the mortgage. I don't really feel
like we found a way to to change the situation though right? No. Okay. And that's the problem
other than making more money which is also not a quick solution
so I see where all the spending is and I see like
We're not in the red or anything we have just enough for right now
Obviously now I have to think about or we have to think about
You know some big expenses, childcare,
school after December of next year, and where is that going to come from?
And I don't have a plan for that.
At the same time, I just thought we had a handle on what money was coming in and where
we were going to allocate it.
Can you give me an example where, as James mentioned, you got carried away with spending?
This could be directed to either of you.
Even this weekend we went to, where do we go, to that little bar, just a little brewery
around the corner that has a nice little kids area.
Went out there and spent 60 some dollars on drinks and then another 30 some dollars
on food and you know, that's a hundred dollars and it's not an insane amount of money, but
it's a hundred dollars we hadn't thought about spending until we suddenly went out that day.
Walk me through how you got to that point of spending a hundred bucks.
I don't mind if it's a hundred.
I don't yet know if that's a lot or a little.
I don't know.
Were you walking past a brewery and you decided or was it planned a month ahead of time?
Give me a sense of that.
I was an invitation from her friend to go out and meet for a drink on Saturday.
When that friend invited you, did you factor in finances at all?
Or was it like, hey, our friends invited us, we're free, let's go.
We'll make it work.
There's no discussion of money. It's, let's go. And then when the, when the check comes to be paid, one of us just pays it.
We generally kind of split it, alternate. It's not so formalized that we look at, okay, we spent $400 this month and let's make sure we each split too.
Okay. It's more just I bought that last week.
You get this this week.
Does it work? It seems to.
However, we're in this situation.
So no.
Wait, what? It seems to.
However, no, it seems it seems to to us.
We keep doing it.
But clearly it's brought us to where we are.
Let me ask that question again.
Give me yes or no answer. Does it work?
No.
Do you see what I mean?
There's a lot of double talk, circling around, admitting a problem, but then immediately
saying, it's not like it's that bad.
And there's a lot of, I'll make it work.
But with 90% fixed costs, which is way too high. You have to admit that something is very wrong.
Nicole, what do you got?
I did a photo shoot with my daughter over the summer.
It was a fairy photo shoot.
The photo shoot itself was like $25.
Well then it was a few weeks after that.
They have a zoom call and you have to like
they go over all the pictures and then it was the cost. And I swear like the cheapest
package was like $3,000.
They show you the unveiling of the beautiful photo you and your daughter. Everybody looks
beautiful. And then they're like, this will be a heritage piece.
You can put it above your mantle place, pass it down.
Yes, and your daughter will put it up in her house.
Yes, I love it.
Peace, motor.
Yes.
I've seen it before.
Okay.
Going into it, I had in my mind the top of my budget.
I think I was like, I will spend, we have five,
I can spend we have five. I can spend five hundred dollars.
I ended up spending five thousand dollars because I cannot say no to salespeople. I am like every salesperson dream.
I have a hard time saying no.
Let's do a little knowledge transfer because I have no problem saying no.
In fact, I relish it. Let's do a little knowledge transfer because I have no problem saying no.
In fact, I relish it.
I love it.
Tell me why do you have trouble saying no to a salesperson?
I feel bad.
I feel like they've spent all this time talking to me and I feel guilty.
I feel this is why I will never go to a timeshare presentation because I know if I go,
I'll end up with a timeshare.
It's a weakness of mine.
I know it.
I have a hard time saying no.
People pleaser.
I am very much a people pleaser.
Yes.
I worked on it.
I'm not as much as I used to be. Mm-hmm. You ever buy a car on your own?
Yes, not didn't go well, huh? No, no
They got me in a used
Nissan Maxima V6 and I was like
25 years old
But I remember driving that car
to go visit a friend and like the gas was insane.
And I drove it back and I went to my parents
and I was crying.
I was like, I can't afford this car.
My stepdad actually drove me back to the dealership
and he was like, drop the keys off. You're not leaving.
We're not taking this car.
And.
And what did you learn from that?
Not to go to a car dealership by myself.
OK, OK, all right.
Did you tell James about the price of this photo shoot and how did that conversation go?
No, I should have had him on the call.
So they we would have done it together, but I didn't.
I instantly regretted it.
And I sent them an email and said, Hey, I need to cancel this.
And they wouldn't let me cancel.
I tried to dispute it with my credit card because I was like, I don't want this.
Um, I was like, I have a baby on the way.
If we can't afford this, it didn't get approved.
So we ended up with the pictures and I just threw them in a closet.
It was about a month after that.
Um, I pulled them out and I was like, this is what this is.
And I told them how much I spent.
And he was like, Oh my God, you spent what?
And I was like, yeah.
And he was like, why didn't you tell me or why didn't we talk about this first?
And I'm like, I know.
And I felt really terrible that I made this huge decision without him.
But then I was like, don't worry, I'm gonna pay for it.
You know, I'll make it work, which I feel like I say a lot.
Did you work it out?
No, it's part of our debt.
James, does this make you nervous?
I mean, a guy who's been through bankruptcy before?
It does, but not to the extent for some reason, as if I'd done
it, if that makes sense. If I had been the one to do this, I
would have more concern about that money.
You think she's better at money than you are?
I think we both have some serious flaws. I think they're
different, which might be how we kind of piece it together, but I think
she's better at the day to day.
I'm better at reining in some of our worst impulses when it comes to bigger medium term
spending like vacations, things like that, where it's like, you know, we can't afford
to do that.
I think I do a decent job of keeping us from going really out of our minds with
That kind of thing. Give me an example. How does that go?
Well, most recently we went to
Morocco for our belated honeymoon we ended up going about two years after we were married
Spent about
What do you think overall dear?
twelve grand on that trip between all the all the
Merchandise and everything too. Yeah, I
Mean it was our honeymoon so to my on my one hand. I'm like great
It was amazing like lifetime experience, but 12 grand was a lot for a new family
Isn't this a story about you reining in her spending? Where's that part?
Sorry that one that went the wrong way, um, oops
No, I love that story. That wasn't the right story. That wasn't the right story
By the way, what merch did you get in Morocco? What do you got in your now the overall trip?
I don't remember how much of it the big merch was a rug. We do have a nice how much we purchased
I think it was about much of it. The big merch was a rug. We do have a nice- How much? That we purchased.
I think it was about $4,000.
All right.
So, in this example of you raining in, I heard zero raining in.
You got another example for us?
Sorry.
I was talking about raining in on vacations in medium term stuff.
And I think maybe I'm not as good as I thought.
I don't know.
Maybe. I try to be.
He does not rain.
I went to Iceland and that's not happening anymore.
I try to be.
I try to flap my wings, but I just can't fly.
So what other stories do you think you tell yourselves about money?
I mean that I can make it work.
That I can.
The money will come out of nowhere.
We'll find some money. We out of nowhere. We'll we'll find some money.
We work so hard.
We deserve we deserve to go to a brewery and have some drinks with my friends.
Like we deserve this.
James, how about you?
What stories do you tell yourself about money
that will keep making more and more without putting the work in to really make
that happen? That's one.
What else? That
just grabbing little things throughout the month doesn't add up. I don't really
look at the cost of things. Okay good. And what about your daughters? What
stories do you tell yourselves when it comes to money as it relates to your
daughters? That it doesn't matter as much if it's for them, that they're worth overspending for.
When there's not really a plan to make that happen.
They're worth overspending for.
There are daughters.
I want them to have the experiences that I never had.
One of the most common stories of parents in America. Mm-hmm.
What else?
That I'll do better than my dad did with me.
I want that to be the case so badly, but I have no idea how to
do that. I fall into the same traps he has.
I'm 44. I should be way further.
And I should be able to afford a brewery once a week.
I should be able to go out and have some beers and some drinks with friends and not have to think
about it. The truth is, no, we do have to think about it. We don't have just an expendable income.
Yeah, I just I think we have an idea in our minds of what we should be doing as far as our money and how we should be living.
And I think it's just, I don't think it's insane.
I think it's just a notch or two more than we can handle.
No numbers based in that, right?
Just like a feeling.
No, yeah, totally a feeling.
And can I ask one more thing?
Has it ever really affected you?
I mean, think about it.
No.
Got into debt.
Yeah.
Paid it off. Got into debt. Money not into debt. Yeah. Paid it off.
Got into debt.
Money floats down from the sky.
Paid it off again.
And it probably five to seven times.
Right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So no, um, no, until now, now I'm like, oh my God, I'm 44.
How are we going to retire when we want to retire?
And I don't want my girls to be in this cycle because it's not a good cycle. It's not healthy.
Why not? You've made it this far. 44 traveling, brewery. Why not?
Why not? Uh.
Because it's not real.
It's not like, it's like a fake.
It's like a fake.
What's not real?
You have a $4,000 Moroccan rug in your house.
Two cars.
What's not real about it?
It's a house of cards. You can tell that James and Nicole are not real about it? It's a house of cards.
You can tell that James and Nicole are not honest about money.
They're not honest with each other.
They're not honest with themselves.
In fact, I'm not sure they've ever been as honest as that last thing they just said,
where they both admitted they've built a house of cards.
Listen to some of the stories they tell themselves about money.
I can make it work. We work so hard we deserve to go blank blank blank.
We'll keep making more.
Grabbing small things throughout the month doesn't really matter.
It's all for our daughter.
I want them to have the experiences I didn't have.
I'll do better than my dad, but I have no idea how to do that.
Honestly, they need to get real.
Even admitting they have a house of cards is just words. But I have no idea how to do that. Honestly, they need to get real.
Even admitting they have a house of cards is just words.
See, I've told you before, one of the things people with problems love to do
is talk about their problems.
But going from problem orientation to solution orientation is a huge journey.
And one of the reasons they've never really gotten real is that someone else has always
taken the burden away from them.
So I decided to give them the responsibility.
I urged them to take this more seriously.
I urged them to come up with real solutions and to think of drastic changes they could
make to get out from under their current situation.
Hold that thought. We'll be right back.
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You see where we've been with money? Where do you think we
should go? Like how do you think we should handle our money
moving forward?
I haven't thought about it, to be honest. Because it hasn't
been in my hands. I don't know exactly where
But I would move somewhere besides here and I would downsize us a little bit as far as the mortgage we have as far
As how we're living as best I can how about like the day-to-day expenses. How would you?
Manage those
Probably not well because of all the things I've talked about.
I don't know how to really get a better handle on that short of like taking
control out of my hands entirely and making the operate on like cash, you
know, getting an allowance of some kind and saying, here's your, here's your
$15 for the day, the little boy.
Good luck.
Because as long as there's emotions and I worry that my spending will continue to occasionally,
you know, end up getting dumb stuff.
So I don't know how to, I don't have a solution for that part of it.
I really don't.
So he wants me to basically handle it.
Give him an allowance.
So analyze that dynamic.
You asked him how would you handle the day today and what did he do in his response? I
Felt like he gave it back to me exactly you tossed the ball to him
And he just boom right now like a volleyball player just sent it right back to you. Are you going to accept that ball?
No, I try to come up with a budget because that's what I know
That's what I've been told is the thing to do my whole life
and so I try to budget out gas and food and
entertainment which means toys for the kids or whatever and
formula and diapers and I sit and try to think all that through and add it up and
Probably miss some things and and I don't know.
I don't know the answer to that question because I don't have a great solution because the
only way I know is the way we've been doing it.
The way she's been doing it.
I'm going to jump in here for a second.
James, I'm assuming you didn't know what to do with a little baby.
No.
Right.
Scary. Now, what if you had said to Nicole? I don't know
So you're you're better at this than I am go ahead take it over and I'm good over here
How do you think Nicole would have responded to that? I?
Think she'd tell you I probably did do some of that, but obviously not well. She's not gonna accept that really how come
Cuz it's all on her.
We're supposed to be in a partnership.
Any relation to money?
Yes, there should be.
I've allowed her to take the lead on money and have never offered to help or voiced any
displeasure with how she handled it.
And what did that easy decision cost you?
I don't know, because I've never seen the money. I'm not talking about the financial cost.
Oh, oh, well.
I an understanding of where we are.
I, you know, I have to rely on secondhand, third and thirdhand information about what what our situation looks like.
I trust her. I don't think she's misleading.
Maybe I didn't by any means, but at the same time, what's being missed or
what am I not understanding? But you never asked, right? No, I haven't asked.
I've felt like we've been blessed and we've done, despite our failings or not
failings, but limitations, we've've done okay we have a nice home we
have our kids we're able to create a nice life together so I didn't feel like
we were falling apart necessarily do you care really I do care I don't want to go in this cycle anymore.
Why?
Because it's exhausting.
It gets to be stressful.
I want to be able to enjoy my life with my girls and my husband.
I want us to be able to enjoy our life and not have to worry about,
Oh, can we really afford this?
Um, I like what you're saying.
I'm just not sure you to actually worry about affordability at all.
We're failing, but the stakes haven't gotten so high to where it's like, oh, this is a very serious, serious,
serious thing.
It's, it's, it's still kind of like, we could skate along for a little bit.
You can go a long time.
Yeah.
Feeling uncomfortable, having assorted disagreements, charging up random charges, things like that.
People can go decades.
The reason I'm pushing on this is not to make either of you feel bad.
That's never my intention.
The reason I'm pushing is to understand if you have a real reason to change.
I'm not so sure you do.
I think the reason should be our daughters and wanting to provide something to them other than
debt because we're um we're older parents you know our our girls are both under five and we're over
40. When I think about what they're going to be left with both both in actual money and also like
like Nicole was saying just the cycle of the
way they look at money I don't want to saddle them with that and I don't want
to saddle them with nothing you know I I'm expecting no inheritance from my
parents and that's fine why isn't it fine for your daughters too? Because I want to do better than my parents.
I, I do.
I want to try.
I haven't done it so far.
My reason is my girls, I don't want to try.
I want to do better.
I have to do better.
I don't want them to get, be in a cycle like this.
What is doing better look like for your daughters?
It's showing them I
Don't know what doing better looks like if I'm going to be honest, thank you. I just know I don't
It's not what we're doing. I know that
Like I grew up we didn, we couldn't have anything.
And I don't want my daughters, I want my daughters to have everything.
That's not good.
If we're going into debt over it.
Because you're not going into debt.
You've been in debt.
We're in debt over it.
Thank you.
Yeah.
What's that side, Nicole? We're in debt. We're in debt over it. Thank you.
Yeah. What's that side, Nicole? Just. Just.
Like, I still want my life, I still want to go to the farmers market,
I still want to go to breweries, I still want to do this.
But we can't. But we can't. I think we just can't.
Do you think you spoil your three year old?
No.
Nicole, do you think you do?
Yes.
Okay.
That's pretty interesting. Nearly 100 percent of the parents I have met who have credit card debt.
Have.
A very, very difficult time saying no to their children.
Both of you are nodding your heads like instantly.
That's the emotion, the the when I was talking about the emotional spending, there's no stronger emotion than,
Oh my God, I need to take care of my kid. I better get them.
Wait, what is an emotion? Explain it to me like I'm a guy who looks like me and I don't have a lot of emotions.
When you say that's the emotion, what do you mean? I was I feel like our a lot of my problem is emotional spending and I even though I
Do think I say no a lot
The desire to give my girls the experiences we talked about
Means I'm gonna ignore the financial side of it if it means we can
Take her to Disney World last year
Take her out to the zoo more often this summer,
even though I may not be able to afford that.
My desire to give them things
is gonna supersede my desire to be frugal.
James and Nicole could make a million dollars a year
and they would still overspend.
One of the most striking things that I notice
is how unspecific they are.
They'll say things like,
I wanna do better than my parents did,
but when I ask what doing better looks like,
they really have no idea. Because in many ways, they've never thought deeply about money. Why?
Because they never really had to. This is what happens to people who are subsidized or coddled or protected from true consequences.
They simply never have to face reality. So you as the
partner or the observer can get frustrated at them, you can yell at them,
you can shake them all you want, but until they face actual consequences they
will not change. In fact sometimes even when they do face consequences they
still won't change. This happens with money, it happens with health, which is
why people even with life or death conditions, often don't take their medication. They're gonna die.
But that's human nature. You can accept it or you can go through life forever frustrated.
Now let's see what their numbers tell us. Let's just go down the list. We'll get the other other categories. Investments are zero. OK, savings are.
2%
All right.
Guilt-free spending is $516, which we all know is not true because the photos alone cost 10 times that.
So we know that's not true.
Yeah, it's not true.
It's not true. So your mortgage is twenty three forty six.
Your car payments and gas.
Right. That's all factored in here.
Yes. Is one thousand two hundred dollars a month.
Yes. Two car payments.
She's got a Volkswagen Tiguan.
We pay three sixty a month on.
I've got a.
Volkswagen. Oh, it's right there in front. It's a Tiguan and an atlas both Volkswagen SUV
True SUVs
That's well, you got two kids you need
SUVs, right you need it. Hold on. Absolutely
America told us that once you have kids, you drop everything. You need
a house with a huge backyard and you need two tank size SUVs. Is that correct? Parents?
I've got the tank size one. So yeah, that's correct. Check. And the house? Need that too,
right? Absolutely. Have to buy a house. America told me.
Alright.
$1,200 a month on car payments.
Let's look at your debt payments.
$400 a month and I know you're not paying that off too aggressively.
No.
Was this the minimum?
So I have a line of credit.
Uh oh.
It's like a 10% interest line of credit that I put, like I used that to pay off the fairy
photos.
And when will your debt be paid off?
I actually do not know.
Okay.
All right.
Groceries are $1,000 a month.
All right. Who does the grocery shopping? I
Do what why do you say it like that? Let me show you what your face just did I do
James hates grocery shopping
In fact when I try to send him to do grocery shopping
Inevitably, he cannot find a very
basic item.
Jesus Christ, are you all still putting up with this?
Do you need me to spell out what's really going on when a guy says he cannot find the
celery at the grocery store?
He's just saying that so you do it.
And just as you have never faced financial consequences in your lives, he's never faced
consequences for his inability to find the Chobani yogurt.
I guarantee if James was a bachelor, he would figure out how to go grocery shopping.
He would figure it out.
And of course, you're setting an example of no boundaries for your daughters who will
grow up doing exactly the same thing that they observe their parents doing.
I can't spend any more time on this because I'm just going to get too mad.
Phone is at 275.
Why are you spending 275 bucks a month on phones?
It does include.
Two phones, the lines, there's the watch.
You have a watch.
Of course I do. I knew it.
So hold on, hold that up to screen.
I watch whatever.
Yeah. Yeah. Oh, too. Hold it up. Get that. that up to screen. I watch whatever. Yes. Yeah
Oh-ho-to hold it up. Get that get it on screen. Both of you, please hold it up to the camera. Wow
How come I'm the only person in this call with no watch can anyone explain that to me? I like to have fancy technology for probably no good reason other than I'm a American male
Nicole Fancy technology for probably no good reason other than I'm an American male. Nicole.
Well, I told myself that I needed this watch for teaching yoga.
Oh, I need it because if they have to reach me when I'm in the Himalayas, then
this provides a SOS through the satellite.
Yours is yoga. What's the logical reason there?
Break it down.
Well, I just need to if when I'm teaching the class, I need to keep track of the time
and the iPad with the cellular connectivity.
I like to have it for road trips for the daughter on the car.
If people have kids, 100% of the time, they will tell me one of those things is because of their son or daughter.
These all fit the constellation of behaviors.
Like, there's no mystery here.
Sure.
None.
No.
Not to me.
Is there to you?
I think there is.
I don't feel like there is a ton of mystery.
I think it's pretty clear.
What is the bad the bad decisions that are being made, I guess.
I don't know. Why are they being made?
I don't know why, but it's clear they're being made.
OK, I agree that that I think is part of my problem is I know we're not
making good calls, but I don't know why and I don't add a stop.
Do you want to ask someone on this call who does not own
an Apple Watch, an iPad with cellular connections, or a Porsche
911, do you want to ask that person on this call any questions about their
spending? Notice what I'm doing here. James and Nicole are perfectly
comfortable talking about their own spending, even saying things like, I know
we're making bad decisions, but the one thing they are not doing is showing any initiative.
They have zero curiosity as to how to fix it.
They're basically sitting back, passively answering my questions,
much the same way they've gone through their financial lives.
And what I'm doing here is I'm gently inviting them to get in the driver's seat
by asking me some questions.
How do you not buy those things like that everybody else has?
Because that's the thing.
It's like everybody has this.
How are you like, well, I don't care that everybody has that.
I don't want it.
How do you how do you do that?
One of the best questions I've been asked on this podcast. How do you not do you do that? One of the best questions I've been asked on this podcast.
How do you not want a big house?
Yeah.
How do you not want that watch or that car?
First of all, I like nice things.
Let me start there.
I think we all like something nice, whatever it may be.
Ever since I was a kid, I always loved studying the best, like people who had the best or
were the best in the world at something.
I was always fascinated with it.
So I knew that eventually when I started to buy things, I would eventually want to buy
the best.
And to me, part of the joy is understanding what the best even means. I don't find a lot of joy in just buying something that everybody else has.
I don't have an emotional connection to a lot of things like a watch.
I don't need it.
On the other hand, I travel and there are a few things I love to buy.
I don't need those either, but I love being able to go on a trip and not have to look at the price.
Or being able to go to a restaurant and not have to worry about appetizers, which came from my childhood.
I think the big answer to your question is,
because I have a really strong vision of my rich life I
spend extravagantly on those things like travel, health, all convenience and then I
cut cost mercilessly on the things that are not a part of that vision but I have
a vision. Do you both have a vision of your rich life
If I can go on a little tangent
I've never known what the hell I wanted in life never never had a clue what I wanted to do
I have no strong career direction. I met Nicole in my late 30s fell in love and
Never looked back but until then I've never really known what I wanted
So it's tough even now for me to say I want this I want this I want this these are the
things that are most important to me those things are the things that I feel
like are what is best for my family which I've decided in my life is the
most important thing yeah I want a kind of a nice car but I don't want to fill
my house with a bunch of expensive tech anymore.
I've done that in my 20s and 30s.
So I'm trying to change my mindset of what's important.
But if you tell me all these things like I want to provide for my daughters, well, let's
be honest, how much money have you put aside for your daughters in the last three years?
None.
So do you really want it?
Apparently not.
I think we're getting closer to what the real problem is.
But when you understand the real problem, then you start to be able to actually create
a solution that works.
The first solution that you came up with was a budget.
A budget doesn't solve an emotional challenge.
Absolutely.
I'm starting to figure that out.
Okay. Nicole, what about for you?
What's your rich life? I would want James and I to be able to take a year off of work so that we
could travel in a van around the country with our daughters. Okay, beautiful. I have all the rich life plan. I want us to have a house in Italy,
just traveling, eating good food.
Again, my first thought is those are great dreams,
but I don't know how we get there with two girls
in the day-to-day of raising a couple of kids.
I love the ideas, they sound awesome. They both sound unrealistic.
Well James, you're spending 90% of your income on fixed costs. That's unrealistic. Yeah. Yeah. So
what are we doing here? If we're talking unrealistic, what I'm seeing in front of my
eyes is unrealistic. If you wanted to do one of those things that Nicole said about her rich life, how would you get there?
We'd sell the house. Okay, what else?
I guess the cars too. Mm-hmm. I don't think we have much else to sell I guess at that point we have to buy a van
You don't have anything else to sell. What are those things on your wrist? What are the things on the floor? Oh, oh, well
Okay, we could we can liquidate a bunch of assets Yeah You don't have anything else to sell? What are those things on your wrist? What are the things on the floor? Oh, oh, well, okay.
We could we can liquidate a bunch of assets.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, if we really chose to, we got a nice rug.
What was that phrase you just said?
If we really chose to, it was chill.
And that's the difference between how you've been living life and what a rich life is.
You didn't really choose any of this, except you just slipped into it.
Let's go to the brewery.
Let's get these photos that someone else told us to.
Let's get this rug that a salesperson told us to.
Let's get this. Let's get that.
But when I ask you, what's your rich life?
It's actually none of the things that you've built around yourselves.
Crazy.
What is that, Nicole? Tell me.
That's just crazy that, yeah, like all the stuff that's surrounding us is what we actually did choose, but that's not like what we really want.
Yeah. What are you recognizing as you're hearing yourself say this out loud? Just I'm like, like I, I don't know that I've dug myself into this.
That I don't know.
It's okay.
Take a second.
I want to hear you keep going.
Feel free to use the word we.
We we've created this life that we currently have.
We've created the situation that we're in.
We we've talked about the future.
We've talked about, oh yeah, it would be nice if we did this. But I don't think we ever really talked about it as like, it's more like a pie in the sky, instead of like, no, what is it that we really need to do to get this? This is what we really, really want.
Do you know why you never had a conversation like that?
I don't know.
Ask James.
Why haven't we had this conversation?
I don't know either.
I guess we haven't been ready to really consider those kind of changes.
Yeah, I think it's scary.
I think it's scary to like really dream that big.
Do you two think you genuinely have agency or control over your lives?
If we want to do something, we can make it happen.
Really, realistically.
I've never really believed in that, to be honest.
I have always struggled with that.
How about you, Nicole?
I feel like, yeah.
Like if I want something, I will make it happen.
Okay. It's pretty interesting.
What did the two of you think about that?
It's quite a difference, right?
That is.
We know that we're different in that way very much.
If you don't believe you have agency or control, why would you even bother dreaming?
What's the point of all this just pie in the sky?
James, sound familiar?
Yeah, I think about it every day.
Then the conclusion is we're not going to dream about all this stuff over here.
Instead we are going to what?
Just going to focus on what's in front of me.
I mean, how long you've been doing that for?
Probably my whole life.
Has it gotten you where you want to go? No. Has it gotten you where you want to go?
No.
Do you even know where you want to go?
As I said, I struggle with that.
Part of the reason that you feel bogged down is you are.
Most people live day to day.
The furthest they can think is the end of the month.
That's literally people will say to me, we had a bad month.
I go, month?
Why are we talking about a month? We need to be talking about at least a year
But when was the last time you two mapped out what the next 12 months are gonna look like?
financially speaking
Maybe never have yeah most have not yeah
It's hard
To know what's 30 miles down the road when you're only focused on
know what's 30 miles down the road when you're only focused on driving in thick fog with visibility of 20 feet ahead of you.
What do you notice, Nicole?
Well, I kind of go back to that whole opportunity cost with the fairy picture and whatever we
choose to spend our money on, it better be worth it because otherwise it's
Just wasting taking away from something else. That's more important. That's how I feel
Yeah floated along the river of life and you let life take you wherever it was gonna take you
Yeah, just like look I'm sitting in the raft look. Ah
What's happening today? Ah
Whereas someone else who has agency, they're rowing, I'm going there.
That's where I want to go.
That's totally different.
Until you to see yourselves as the driver of your own life, you will be carried wherever
America wants to take you.
And where does America want to take you?
What is the river of life in America?
Frickin house with a picket fence and yep.
Keep going.
What else?
SUVs and SUVs.
Yep.
And then where do you end up?
iPhone.
iPhones, watches, then move to Florida and die.
Well, you're halfway there.
Yeah, we're already in the right spot. It's the difference between sitting back in the rowboat versus picking up the oars.
I can't make you do it.
That's not my job.
My job is to simply show you the different options you have.
If you wanted to, you could be millionaires or even multimillionaires.
It's totally doable. You'd have to be
totally dialed in. I don't know. I it definitely it's a lot to change. It's
some radical changes not only to our current situation but our mindset. It's
hard to wrap my head around. It would have been a waste of time to go line by line through their CSP.
So instead, I simply cleared all their expenses and together with them, we rebuilt their CSP
from ground zero. By zeroing out the entire CSP and starting over, we got to 58% on their fixed
costs, but it was very strict. No more watches, selling their
house, one SUV, but I did the exercise step by step with them to illustrate how
they might design their lives around their shared vision. I can't tell them
what to do. It's their life, it's their money, but I wanted to show them that
it's actually possible. And the truth is, I don't know if they will change.
Even if they have the desire to make a major change, they might lack the skills to do it.
In addition, their relationship dynamic is locked in. It will be very hard to recalibrate
all of these things all at once. Now let's listen to their follow ups to see what they did.
The conversation was really enlightening for me, just showing how unintentional we've been
living.
I mean, our whole life's really just the necessary agency we're going to need if we want to get
out of this situation and make some real changes.
The changes we are going to make, we're going to be combining banking accounts this weekend
and working on getting all of our finances into that one account to come out of so that
we can both have a really clear picture of where our spending is.
We're looking at possibly selling our house and downsizing.
We're going to run the numbers to see what will work best for us, either paying cash
for another house or renting and investing that money.
We're going to look at getting rid of one of our cars, go into a single car family,
using that money to pay off debt and just really tackle the debt that we have and go
from there.
And now the follow-up from James.
Number one thing I think I learned was that
I don't have the idea that I thought I did of my finances.
Not on top of them the way I thought I was
and we're not in the situation I thought we were.
It's far more concerning than I was.
We have to communicate differently.
I need to change the way I
Talk to Nicole about our money and the way I think about it on a daily basis
That was a lot to learn and a lot to take in and I think some of the tool you've given us will
Get us there. The most surprising thing was me. It really the things I've allowed
Nicole to take on without thinking about it the things I've let her kind of struggle with
And really get to the point there at without really knowing I was doing it that was sobering to say the least
It's a little humbling to see what I've allowed to slip plan on in the short term doing those things and I
Think we're gonna sell the home. We're gonna make some changes in the way
We handle our money combine accounts and things like that.
So the CSP is going on the fridge right away and we're going to stare at it and I'm going
to use it as my North Star.
So thank you again.
I really hope this will be the thing that will get us in better shape and we're going
to live by those new rules and live our rich lives.
And thank you again for all of it.
Okay, in some ways I'm impressed. I will say I noticed that Nicole took on a lot of the burden of change and
James still seems passive what I'm hoping is that they both commit to changing and they both work on
Recalibrating their relationships to be teammates working towards a powerful shared vision
James and Nicole, thank you for sharing your story with me
and all of the podcast listeners,
and I wish you the best.
Please keep me updated.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
I'm Ramit Sethi.
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or wherever you listen to podcasts.
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