I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 17. “I think he should pay for everything because he’s the man”
Episode Date: November 9, 2021Monique is very open with what she wants in a relationship. “I always expected that fairytale love, the guy pays for everything, the guy opens the door, the guy waits to kiss me at the end of the ni...ght...” But her boyfriend, Pablo, disagrees. He feels taken advantage of. He shares the story of Monique ordering a $10 soup in a restaurant when he wasn’t even eating, then both of them staring at the bill to see who would pay for it. Their beliefs come from their upbringing and very specific personal experiences. For Monique, she believes Pablo should pay because of how she was raised. At one point, she says it’s his job to pursue her. Pablo wants to split things “fairly” down the middle, saying he wants a “partner.” Their opposing money lenses lead to awkward exchanges at restaurants when the check arrives. For Monique, him paying for a $10 soup is symbolic of being “taken care of.” Pablo doesn’t think it’s fair. He says he would prefer she did the “fake check dance” before he steps up to “be the gentleman.” How many invisible scripts can you spot? What does your reaction to the situation say about your relationship with money? I walked into this episode pretty confident about what would happen. I was wrong. Connect with Ramit Website Instagram Twitter Facebook YouTube Linkedin If you and your partner have a money issue and you want my help, I occasionally select a couple to work with, free of charge. Apply for my help here. Produced by Crate Media.
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I did expect him to pick up Bill when we sat there for like half an hour.
I was like, I'm not gonna pay for her.
I have a drop of her suit.
She should pay for it.
There have been many instances where we've wanted to break up and we have broken up
for days 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.
I thought if he could do more since he is older,
more money, more experienced.
Do you think that your worldview for your relationship
is compatible with hers?
No.
with hers? No.
Welcome to the I Will Teach You to Be Rich podcast.
I'm Rameet Saiti, and today I'm speaking to Pablo and Monique.
Today's episode has different incomes, different ages,
gender issues, cultural expectations, and big communication challenges.
This is the kind of stuff we all talk about behind closed doors, but we rarely get to hear
a real couple talk about it in detail until today.
Pablo is 33 years old and he makes $103,000 per year.
Monique is 23 and she makes $33,000 a year.
They've been dating for five years,
but they fundamentally disagree on money.
Monique believes Pablo should pay for everything.
As she puts it, he's older, he's more established,
and it's what she grew up seeing.
Pablo feels differently. He feels
taken advantage of and you're going to hear some unbelievable stories today,
like that soup story. Now I walked into this episode with a pretty good idea of
what was going on and all I can tell you is I was really, really wrong. Let's get
started. How would you describe your vision of money in a relationship?
I would just describe it as love and being taken care of. I don't look at it as the actual
monetary value. I look at it as more as like, oh, you're taking care of me. You're spending
money on me. So therefore, you must have made me take care of me.
Where did you come up with this message? Yeah, growing up, my family was very like that.
We never spoke about money.
We just always had it.
And if I ever needed something or wanted something,
it was never a question.
It was just like, okay, you need that
or you want that, here you go.
And yeah, just growing up, it was never something that
we lacked.
And it just seemed like, you know,
when I might not go out with my older brother,
like he would always just pay and like never expect to mean
or even think to expect for me to offer or pay or anything.
And did you grow up upper middle class, wealthy?
How would you describe your financial upbringing?
I believe upper middle class, for sure.
Yeah.
What about cultural background?
Do you come from any particular culture?
Yes, so we're half a spin and half Middle Eastern.
And so it's like, you're very taking care of them.
I'm the youngest of two matured debrothers and me.
So I'm the girl and I'm kind of like the little princess.
So they're always like, take care of me.
Can you count the clues?
I count at least four clues so far.
Before we go on, try to make a hypothesis.
What do you think is going on here?
And if you were me, what would you ask next?
I want you to treat these podcasts like practice
because you can use the same questions on yourself
and you can use the same questions in your discussions
with your partner.
All right, let's keep going.
Growing up, did they ever say no to you for money?
To be honest, no, but I was also never greedy
or I don't think I was ever spoiled.
It could be work really hard.
We own a family run restaurant, so we all work. So I think we all just reap the benefits of our hard work.
So I always just thought of like having like that fairy tale love of like going out and
having everything paid for and just having like the more traditional realm, you know,
relationship.
Traditional means what?
Like the guy pays for everything,
the guy opens the door, the guy pulls the chair out,
the guy waits to kiss you at the end of the day, you know?
The guy meets your parents at the beginning of the day,
just like very, yeah, traditional.
Holy shit.
What do you think about what Monique just said?
In fact, what do you feel when you heard her say that?
I want to encourage you to send that clip to a few of your friends.
Get a text discussion going and then send me a screenshot of your text discussion.
I want to know what your friends and you think about that clip,
about what Monique just said.
And I think it's going to tell you a lot about yourself
and how you and your friends view money.
I think your response will actually
reveal a lot about you.
It'll reveal your educational background,
your cultural upbringing, your views on gender and work
and money.
And I also bet that if we analyze the answers by gender,
I think that they would be noticeably different. I don't think we should hide from these conversations.
There are expectations around money in every culture. Yet somehow in America, we take the
most uncomfortable ones and we pretend they don't exist. And then we romanticize money.
Oh, it should just work out.
My partner should know what's important to me.
Love is all that matters.
Maybe.
But I think it's a lot better to go deeper
and talk about what we truly believe.
You know, I've been in rooms where a group of women
asked one of their friends if the guy paid for the first date.
And when she said, no, he wanted to split it,
the group in unison said, you, that's real.
Think about how money is portrayed in movies, in music.
Think about the phrases that we use.
It's easy to scoff at someone else's beliefs,
but what are your beliefs about money?
Have you ever questioned them, even interrogated them deeply? Have you ever said them out loud?
Like Monique just did? We're going to find out. We're going to dig a lot deeper here.
Let's keep going because we haven't even scratched the surface yet.
We went to the zoo and he was nice enough to pay for the zoo entry.
And I was really grateful.
So I said, okay, since you got the zoo, I will take us out to eat after.
And so we go out to eat after.
And I think the zoo was like 50 bucks.
I don't really know.
And I think total or each.
I'm not sure.
I don't remember.
Okay, 50 bucks each.
And so I take us out to eat and we weren't that hungry.
So I was like, okay, let's just get some appetizers. It was hot outside. It's just like grab a little
snack, whatever. And I noticed that he was like ordering a lot of food and I was like, hey, like,
why are you ordering a bunch like we're not that hungry. I don't want to be like wasteful.
Like, let's just order what we're going to eat and like, let's go. And what I noticed was that I felt like he was trying to like, rack up the bill for it
to be equal, for it to be like, monetarily equal, like he spent $100 on the zoo entrance.
So he would want me to also spend $100 on food.
And I just felt very uncomfortable, like it was like a tip for tat type thing where he's
like, well, I spent this amount of money.
So you also have to spend this amount of money if not
it's not equal or it's not fair and I just felt like very uncomfortable like
whoa like I don't look at it that way I don't know I just felt really weird and
then what happened and then we fought and then he paid for the extra food that he
ordered and he took home and so then I felt bad that he paid for the extra food that he ordered and he took home.
And so then I felt bad that he paid for the food for his part of the food.
So then I ordered more food for him to go so you can have for later.
So it was just like a, like, it's like, oh shoot him.
I wrong.
It's he wrong.
Like, I'm uncomfortable, but he's uncomfortable.
Like, how, how do we do this?
Because I just felt like it was like a tip for top thing.
I spent $105.3, so you must also spend $105.3.
Let's hear from Pablo.
The entrances were $100, and so she was supposed to take me out to eat,
which makes perfect sense.
But we had order advertisers, and I thought, I don't think that's going to be enough.
And I actually saw a deal
that if you, like, for $25, you get like four or five courses more. So I was like, actually,
I think we're going to waste more money getting advertisers where if we actually get the deal, like, there's going to be more food. And so I think it's actually a better deal for everyone.
I disagree that I was trying to rack up the bill in the contrary. I was actually like,
trying to be more efficient with the bill. I was going to actually get more food for less money.
So I ordered the food, but then by the time the food came, our eyes were bigger than our
stomach, and so we didn't eat the majority of the food.
So I was like, okay, well, we'll just have food to go.
So then she saw it, I was like, well, I was going to pay for food, but only for the appetizers.
You went and took advantage of the fact that I was going to pay for it, and you just ordered more food, which was for the appetizers. You went and took advantage of the fact that I was going
to pay for it, and you just ordered more food, which was not the case. And so it was super
awkward, and we actually got in a fight where like, I was like, you know what, if it's
that big of a deal to you, like, I'll pay for the food they are ordered, and you can pay
for the appetizers. And so your whole idea of, I get one thing,
you get the other thing where I get the date,
you get the meal, the idea is ruined
when there's a certain cap on how much you're gonna spend
on the date.
And so then it becomes unequal,
where I can spend millions of dollars on the date,
but the food can be too much.
I've never met a couple that would have this argument
about money if it were not much deeper in the relationship.
Is that true?
It's very true.
There was actually a very early incident
in our relationship.
Monique was still in college
and she had just had like a very terrible week
with a bunch of midterms and papers and tests and all
like that.
So then she, after running a paper, she turned it in and she's like, well, I'm really hungry.
Let's go out to eat.
But I had already eaten.
So we went to get Thai food and then she just gets a soup and then the bill is there.
And then we're just sitting there for maybe 20, 30 minutes, making time.
She was expecting me to pick up the bill.
I was expecting her to pick up the bill.
And then we got to this really awkward conversation
and I was like, let's go.
She's like, all right, well, let's go.
I was like, okay, well, are you gonna pay for it?
And then there's just like, whoa,
but the gentleman is supposed to pay.
And I was like, okay, that's fine,
but I didn't need anything.
And you're the one who wanted to get food.
So it only makes sense that if you're hungry
and you want to get food, you would pay for it.
What happened was I was sick.
And so I was like, oh, I really could
use some soup for my throat like all this stuff.
So in my mind, it was like, oh, paid for me,
like, whatever, like my servant, whatever.
It was like, hey, I'm sick.
So the fact that I couldn't pay for it while I was sick,
didn't make me feel like he was taking care of me while I was sick
Okay, notice the tiny clues that are starting to emerge
Monique mentions taking care of me a lot
It comes up in her upbringing and it comes up when she's sick
Pablo mentions fairness. He doesn't feel it's fair to pay for a meal
when he didn't even want to eat it.
These are two totally different perspectives on money.
And those perspectives, I call them money lenses,
are the ways that they view the world.
So they can be in the same restaurant,
sitting at the same table, eating the same meal,
and when the bill comes,
they're both looking at it and seeing completely different things.
It was like a $10 suit, but it was just not even the monetary value.
It was just like the feeling behind not being taken care of when you're sick.
So I like, I did expect him to pick up the bill when we sat there for like half an hour.
And if he picked up the bill, what did it mean to you?
That I would feel loved and taken care of, especially in a moment where I wasn't feeling well.
And if he didn't pick up the bill, what would that mean to you?
That he didn't care enough to take care of me.
Which means what?
He doesn't love me. I don't know.
Just like that.
From a $10 soup
to a feeling that my partner doesn't love me.
Do you see how short that link is?
Soup to love. Just one hop.
But do you also see how obscure that link is soup to love just one hop. But do you also see how obscure that link is?
You think Monique ever acknowledged that to her soup means love? I doubt it. In fact, I doubt she
even consciously admitted it to herself before today. Pablo just saw it as soup. Soup he didn't even eat. Why should he pay for it?
To him, that's not fair,
but her money lens is completely different.
Pablo, if you picked up the bill for her,
what would that mean to you?
That would make me feel that I'm being taken advantage of
or that I'm being used.
And this obviously comes from previous experience, where
I have gone on dates and felt used or just like, yeah, utilized to pay for someone's meal.
I was able to share an example. Yeah, just a couple of dates that I've been. So I used
to travel a lot for work. And when I was in the country, for example, for Mexico, it's very expected in Hispanic
culture, as Monique says, that the guy pays for everything.
And so I would go on dates, and I wouldn't be sure if the girl was actually interested
in me or just wanted me for my money, especially since I was American or the international man of mystery, that's not that I was showing
opulence or affluence, it was just, it was implied that since I
was an international man that I had money.
And so I became very defensive with my money.
And so whenever I would go on dates, I would be like, well,
I'm not going to take you out just because I have money.
I want to share this experience with you
and have it be a together experience.
Even before this fight, there was a lot of tensions
building up that maybe I didn't express the one week
where we would go out to dinner and she would not offer
to pay, not even do the check dance.
They'd be like, oh, let me try and be like, no, that's okay.
She would just sit there and I'll be like,
okay, are you not even gonna pretend to pay?
And so there was a lot of tension building up to that.
So by the time that the soup incident came,
what idea in your part taking the meal,
I was like, why am I gonna pay for this?
If it was not mine.
Okay, if she had done the check dance,
the fake offer, would you have appreciated that?
Absolutely.
What would that have made you feel?
That would have made me feel that I'm not being taken advantage.
Even if it was a fake check dance, I would have been like, oh, thank you for offering
a pay.
I really appreciate it, but don't worry.
Then that would, I would play the gentleman card of like, don't worry, I got you.
It's okay. I'll pay for it. But it's very interesting. Yeah. Why even if you knew
that she didn't intend to pay, you would have felt better about it. Yes. Why is that?
I'm just going to reiterate the point that I really do not like feeling being taken advantage of because it's happened so many times in the past. Oh my God. This is absolutely fascinating. Okay. Take a breath for me. Just calm down.
Okay. What do you notice? At first, Pablo mentioned fairness. Okay. Fine.
Then suddenly we find out he's had a history of feeling taken advantage of because of his
money.
Now I'm starting to get it.
That soup isn't just a $10 soup to Pablo, either.
It represents something a lot deeper.
The most fascinating thing he said was that he would have loved to see the fake check
dance.
Did you catch that?
First of all, the fact that everyone knows what the fake check dance. Did you catch that? First of all, the fact that everyone knows
what the fake check dance is,
that's when somebody pretends to offer to pay,
but they don't really plan to, that is telling,
because it's a real thing.
It means that to Pablo symbolism matters.
I actually think symbolism matters to all of us.
A lot of us are utilitarian with our money.
We, and I'm overwhelmingly talking about men with this point,
describe the things we buy in terms of functional use.
Well, in this, I bought that iPhone
because of the superior storage and the 16,000 megapixel camera.
And I bought this car because it has
over-the-air tech updates.
Maybe.
Or you might have just bought it
because guys you admire also bought it.
It's no surprise that if you ask guys
who their style role model is,
over 90% of them will give you the same answer.
You know who it is?
James Bond.
You think that's functional or practical?
You don't even wear a fucking suit.
Symbolism matters and Pablo is acknowledging that.
If Monique had offered to fake paying for the meal,
he says he would have been happy.
In fact, as he puts it, he would have, quote,
been the gentleman.
Notice how that identity creeps in,
and he would have happily paid.
Monique wants to be taken care of.
Pablo says he wants fairness,
but I think what he really wants is a lot deeper.
It should be equally expensive
and as well as equally productive towards each other.
What does that mean equally?
Equal could be in 50-50.
It could be 66-33.
What is equal to you, Pablo?
Yes, I do make a lot more on paper.
However, in terms of cost of living,
it comes down very equal
or even more beneficial to Monique.
Cause as I told you earlier,
I live in LA,
I pay rent in LA, pay for food, pay for student loans,
car insurance, gas, all these things.
So my high salary, at the end of the month,
I come out with like two to three hundred dollars
at land, like I'm up to here.
I don't love the idea of factoring in your expenses when it comes to
the contributions. Those expenses are your expenses, right? You chose to go to college,
you chose to get a car that's $35,000 plus, et cetera, et cetera. Your expenses candidly
they're yours. And so your income is definitely, you know, you should talk about that proportionately, and you should figure out what works, Morning, and I, even though we've been dating
for almost five years now, we've never really had a concrete discussion about finances.
Well, you guys certainly have fought a lot over soup.
Right.
That's true.
Those are discussions.
They might not be productive, but you've had a lot of discussions.
Right.
But I never really known her income, and she's never really known mine.
So I've never known until now until until three days ago when we started feeling out the
financial worksheet. Well, this is this is blowing my mind. So both of you put down your numbers
on paper. Did it surprise you Pablo to learn what Monique makes. Yes, and no.
Yes, because I thought she was making more,
and no, because I know that she's focusing
on her singing career,
so she's not really working,
she works at her pranks restaurants,
I'm like, okay, well that makes sense.
Okay, and Monique, did it surprise you
when you saw the numbers with Pablo?
No, because I could kind of just estimate, but he's always been very secretive.
And I never appreciated that.
Secretive about his finances, like when we first started dating, like he wouldn't be open
about it. Whereas like I would be happily open about finances and how much my parents make
and all that stuff, but he never, uh was always very protective of that information. So I felt like, okay,
I guess I should protect that information of myself as well.
If you'd heard this at the beginning of the episode, you might just think Pablo
was weird, but now knowing his history of feeling taken advantage of, we can all
start to understand his behavior.
Understanding doesn't mean you agree with it. It just means you start to understand it.
I remember being in a social psychology class at Stanford, where we were talking about human behavior and persuasion.
And as you study this stuff, you realize that behavior is actually a lot different than most of us think. You also start to realize what they call the power of this situation, which is a profound
concept in social psychology.
It means that most of us believe we do things for very rational reasons.
I was hungry, so I bought the burrito.
I was tired, so I decided to lie down.
Or I'm a generous person, so I donated to that homeless person.
What social psychologists know is that we can
create conditions that dramatically change your behavior. We can create conditions that make you
less generous, like the famous Good Samaritan experiment, or we can create conditions that make you
administer electric shocks to people. We can even create conditions that make you more compassionate.
In short, the situation around you has a profound effect on what you're doing.
And guess what?
Most people have no idea.
When you point it out, hey, we ran an experiment and you did X because of Y, we isolated the
variables, they deny it.
In fact, they get mad.
Why?
Because we desperately want to be in control of our own behavior.
But we're not.
And as you start to learn this material,
it radically reshapes the way that you understand other people.
I remember having these revelations about human nature as I was taking these classes.
And that's why 20 years later, I am still obsessed with human behavior.
It's why I'm doing this podcast.
The reason I shared all of this is a phrase that one of my professors told me, which is
you don't have to agree with his behavior, but at least now you understand it.
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Let's say you go to a restaurant and the bill is $100.
And you both pull out your credit card, and you you tell the server can you split a 50-50?
What would be going through your mind at that moment?
It just feels like a business meeting or just like, you know, just not someone that like I'm in love with or I don't know, it just doesn't seem nice to me.
I don't know, sorry to describe.
But keep going.
I don't, it just not the way I was raised
or what I saw growing up or even with my friends
like their parents would just be like,
oh, I'm paying for you guys.
Like it go have, Lana was like,
we would never split anything.
We would always just say each time. Did you ever see your mom splitting something with your dad?
Never ever. Yeah. Okay so let's fast forward you know let's assume you to work
this out and you continue your relationship and perhaps get married perhaps
not whatever the case. And one day in the future you're sitting down for dinner, yet a nice dinner you got dessert.
And the bill comes, Monique, in your ideal world, who's the one who pulls out the credit card?
To be honest, and at that point, I wouldn't mind playing at the card because I know we would have a joint account.
And I would know, you know, I'd be confident in knowing like what the tip and how the server did and all these things.
So at that point, I wouldn't mind because it's our money.
And what's different about that future versus where you are today?
Because it's not a joint account and I think he's older, he makes more money,
he has more experience.
So I feel like that's his role.
Why is it his role?
Because he's pursuing me to be,
hopefully the mother of his children
one day, like his partner, so like he should invest
in that future by like taking me out and like he should invest in that future
by like taking me out and like building our relationship and all these things.
Cause like, like he says 50-50,
but I don't think it is 50-50.
Cause like in the future, like if I have our kids
and all those things, like, that's not equal.
Like I'm gonna have to like carry a baby
and like push it out on my body
and like all these things like he's not doing that. I just feel like already by his age and his experience and the money
he's making and him being a man, it's not 50-50. I don't think I should be expected to
pay 50-50. I disagree completely with that philosophy.
Tell us.
Okay.
So, like, I'm older and I've had more relationships and I've had the three types of relationships.
The one where I actually don't pay for anything because the girl is making more money than
I am and I wasn't employed at that time.
And I know that that, or at least for me, that didn't work.
There's a lot of money tensions and I also didn't like feeling like I was being supported
or like lifted up.
I felt just incorrect.
I've had relationships where it's been 50-50
and those have been the best relationships in my opinion
because money was never an issue, like at all.
As I said, we were both partners.
We did experiences, dinners, dates, everything,
and everything flowed very smoothly.
We never even spoke of harmony.
Even if the girls had more money than I did,
which they did actually, everything was 50-50.
And then I have this relationship where like,
I'm expected to pay for everything.
And there are some keywords that Monique threw in there
that I've actually have had fights with her mom about me being older, me not being a man enough because like I can't take care of
her, I don't have enough money, I don't have a house.
Her mom said these things to you?
Yes.
How'd that come up?
Before we go on, I just want to say, I fucking know the answer to this question.
I was raised by Indian parents and an Indian community.
All right, let me just break this down for you.
The family's meet, this is before there's an engagement.
And the families are deciding whether to have an engagement
at all.
Yes, I said families, not just the two individuals.
There are lots of delicate questions in this first meeting.
Like, oh, where were you raised?
And if you were just an observer sitting on the couch watching,
you would say, oh, how nice. They're just getting to know each other.
In reality, both families are asking a highly detailed set of questions to determine the
answers to things like, do they come from a good family? Are both of our families going
to be able to get along? Do both of the kids have the same values? You see, for lots of
cultures, when two people get married,
the families are getting married, not just the two individuals. And the social consequences
of divorce are much, much more severe. You have to remember that until recently, what
we thought of as love marriages were not nearly as common. You can read more about this
in a book called Marriage, a History, How Love
Concord Marriage by Stephanie Coots. It's absolutely fascinating. And this is a great reminder for all
of us that in money culture matters. I was living in the Middle East and I figured, it's Ramadan,
so I have a week break, we can meet each other. But her parents are more traditional
and more conservative, so we would really not
like for you guys to travel together
unless there's like a bigger commitment.
And so I was like, well, what do you mean
a bigger commitment?
Like I'm totally devoted to your daughter
and like I want to be with her.
And that's where I was like, yes, but I worry
that like if anything happens on
if you're gonna be able to support her, you're like,
already 30, you don't have a house.
You have all this in a loan debt, like, I don't think you have
enough to support her. And so I withheld my desire to go in a
trip with my girlfriend just to keep the peace. However, there
was a seed planted in my mind of, I'm not enough, I need to
make more money. And so when she says that Pablo needs to be pursuing me
because he's a man and that he should get me because I'm the prize. I'm just like, that's where the
philosophy is clash because I'm like, well, I don't want to pursue you because you're the prize.
I want to pursue you because I want to be partners in this thing. In my old job, I was very, very high income.
In the worst month, I would have 4,000 net.
I was in here between like 4,000 to 15,000 in a good month.
And I actually gave that up once I made Monique
because I really wanted to be with her.
And so for two years, I was basically unemployed
and living on savings alone.
And so with student loans and all these things,
so like my savings were depleted,
depleted, depleted, depleted, depleted, depleted.
And Monique never saw this.
She was just like, oh, well, he's gone to my house for free.
It's like, well, I am coming to your house,
eating for free, but I'm also not making any money
to be with you.
So I got to a point where I was like,
I literally have $34 in my bank account.
Like I need to go do another project.
That actually was a snowball effect
because that I think that's what led to
the discussion of her mom being like,
well, how are you 30?
Have like $30 in your bank account.
You can't provide for my daughter and all these things,
but like they didn't see the whole two years beforehand
where I was like not making any money, ensuring that Monique graduated with the highest marks and like helping her
with her homework and with tutoring her and stuff like that and her helping her with her music career.
So like I sacrificed a lot of my income to be with her, and so I didn't feel a compensation of like,
yes, you do feel me, but I should pay for everything else.
But also to be fair, her parents didn't know that backstory because you didn't tell them that.
Absolutely. Yep. Okay, so there's a lot of missed communication here. A lot of things that
each of you are bottling up without the other person knowing and then expecting for them
to magically see a your way. Absolutely's the list. Starting to unfold now.
I was frustrated because I was like,
okay guys, I'm not ready to get married soon anyway.
So it's like, if he's not up to your standard
or whatever, like stopping so hard on him,
I mean, I understand where they're coming from
and I respect them and I appreciate their concern. But I also understand where
Pablo's coming from, that like, you know, life is hard. Like he has student loan debt.
Like I shouldn't be expecting him to just like, pay for everything and just like, be a bank
for me. And that's not what I expect. Like I don't want you to get the wrong, you know, opinion.
And that's not what I expect. Like, I don't want you to get the wrong, you know, opinion.
But I just, I don't know.
I just felt that like since he was older, he had more experience.
He had more time working where I was like literally a freshman in college when I met him.
I just expected for him to do more since he had more experience, time, age, money, all
these things.
And maybe I'm wrong for thinking
that I'm not. And that's not.
You think you're wrong?
Well, I don't know. Like, from all the pushback from him, it's got me thinking of like,
okay, am I wrong? Like, I thought I was in my right to think he could do more since he
is more older, more money, more experience.
Keep going. Now that you've started to question what is coming to your mind?
That even though he may have more, more, I also recognize that like I've lived a very comfortable life
and I haven't had to work as hard as he has. And I, like I recognize that.
So that's why I'm definitely happy now,
paying more things and like,
I would think he would agree that like I have been paying
things and like, buying things a lot more than I did before.
And I just try to be generous
because I think I am a very generous person, and I would
never want it for him to be 100% giving me and me just accepting everything and not giving
anything back in return. One of the things I hear from you, Monique, is that you have made a lot
of changes intellectually to respect what Pablo does, how much he earns, how hard he works, and even his expenses.
I hear that, and I hear Pablo appreciating that.
But I also, you using words like weird,
and not what I expected.
And I hear that you may be reckoning with this intellectually,
but emotionally, it's still difficult for you to accept
paying for certain things like meals.
Am I getting that right?
Exactly.
Yeah.
So, like mentally, I'm on board, I get it.
I respect him.
I understand.
But emotionally, I'm just like, ah, I don't know.
Keep going.
I'm just like, okay, he should take me out.
Like, we should just do what they do in the movies or like what I've grown up with.
Like, this is just what I've known
and expected my whole life.
And fast forward that movie for me.
So here you are and you eventually get married
and you know, what happens throughout the rest of your life
with this script that you're working with.
Yeah, well, hopefully like when I'm older and have my own business and do all these things,
I'll obviously make a lot more and own property and have different sources of income.
And I think with building a family, it should be 50-50, but I still think that certain things
aren't 50-50, but I still think that certain things aren't 50-50.
If I'm pregnant, for instance, and I can't work, is he going to second me to pay for half the
mortgage and things like that? I would hope he would think to take care of that for me because like,
I'm doing something
That he couldn't do worse, you know, I don't know. Does that make sense?
Yeah, make sense Let me parse that a little bit. So you want to become an entrepreneur at a certain point
Do you expect your income to go up from 33,000 a year?
Yes, of course. Okay. Any sense of what income you think you'll make, you know,
in the next five years or so, you can ballpark it for me. I mean, hopefully I'll take over the
family business. I have like one third of that. So I don't know, probably like 200, 200, I don't,
I really don't know. Okay. That's fine. Let's say 150 just for conversation sake. So at 150, if you were making 150,
and at that point, let's say that Pablo's making 150 as well,
what do you think happens when you go out to a restaurant to eat? How is that getting paid for?
To be honest, I would still appreciate it if he picked up up the bill even if I'm making even
the same as him. Yeah, it's not a number for you. It doesn't matter if you're even
making more than Pablo, you still expect him and want him to pick up the check.
Is that right? Exactly. I'll go back to my original thesis that I was still
wanting to be a partnership where if we both make 150,
we all dump that into the joint account.
And then at that point,
I feel like it doesn't matter.
Like I'll put out the credit card
and it'll be the same,
it'll come from the same source
or if Monique pulls out the credit card,
I'll come from the same source.
So I think at that point is a bit of a mood point
when we're both aiming at the same thing.
And so I'm not entirely in agreement with like if she's praying and I would never make her pay for half
the mortgage because that doesn't really make sense if we're both paying for the mortgage at the same
time with our joint account. Okay, let me ask a question today. Let's say that the two of you took
your money and you put it into a joint account today. Pablo, you me ask a question today. Let's say that the two of you took your
money and you put it into a joint account today. Pablo, you put $103,000 into that. Monique, you put
$33,000 into it. Okay, and you go out to eat at a nice restaurant and cost you 150 bucks.
Are you both comfortable pulling out the joint credit card and paying for that dinner?
comfortable pulling out the joint credit card and paying for that dinner.
Absolutely. Yes.
Well, that's easy. I mean, we can end this conversation right now.
Is that all it takes having a joint account and pulling out one joint credit card? Is that all it takes for you both to feel good about money in your relationship?
I don't think he'd be comfortable.
I think he would be upset that I'm putting 33
and he's putting 103.
I would be much more happy.
I would see tangible efforts that are not
with some sort of like poison behind it
or like some sort of like sting behind it
if the joint account is used,
that makes much more sense.
I feel like there's a skin in the game on both on both ends.
Wow.
What the hell is going on right now?
I didn't think that a joint account would magically solve all their problems.
I actually still don't really believe
that it will, but hey, I'm going to lock in the win and take it if I can. All right? Notice,
by the way, that if I had suggested a joint account at the very beginning of our call,
it would have totally failed. We had to go through this process so that they could both acknowledge
all the things that they're feeling before we could get to some solutions.
So I'm going to give them a little bit of advice about the joint account, but really, I don't
trust that this is the end of it.
I think there's something more going on.
I think you guys could start off by picking a number that's comfortable for both of you.
Like it literally could be a hundred bucks and a hundred and thirty bucks or whatever the proportions
work out to. It could be small, but at least you both feel good. You do that for a month or two.
You go, you know what? After the third month, let's adjust the numbers. But for now, let's just start
off really small and comfortable. We'll go out to a couple of desserts. We'll feel good. We'll
develop new rituals of who's going to pull out the credit card, but it's
not really about the dollar amount, is it?
What is it about instead, Monique?
Just feeling appreciated and loved and it feeling fair.
Yeah.
Good, feeling fair.
Thank you for saying that.
Great word.
So you two are basically creating like a whole new ritual.
And this takes deep, it's deep. It cuts deep because both of you have these expectations and
these invisible scripts. But now we're starting off just like with almost play money,
just a small amount of money. We're saying, okay, in the past, you used to sit here and look at
this Thai soup getting cold. and both of you are just
like getting so mad.
And now you're going to have to rewrite that into something different.
And both of you are going to have to play a part in doing this.
You're in this together as partners.
Okay, how would that feel to you, Pablo?
You hit the word you just said right there.
Feel as partners literally like
Excuse me butterflies in the stomach
Yeah, Monique what do you think about when you hear Pablo say that?
Yeah, I'm definitely happy and I feel relieved that we can come to an agreement where we both feel
seen
Okay, love that now the second part a little which is much harder is that emotional part of expectations
Monique you have expressed multiple times today that you
see
money as being taken care of
that you see it as love and
Down to if he doesn't pay for a certain date night that deep down that
means he doesn't love you.
Pablo, you have expressed the word fair and equal and partners to her those words seem transactional
and cold.
To you, it's logical and you definitely do not want to be taken advantage of.
Do you think that your worldview for your relationship is compatible with hers?
No.
And this has been in the back of my mind many of times, and we have had plenty of fights
about this.
We're compatible in a lot of things,
interests, family backgrounds and stuff like that.
But in terms of philosophies towards life,
we are incompatible in a lot of things.
Finance is being one of the major ones.
So what do you want to do?
I keep, we keep having discussions on them.
We keep working at it. Five years is a lot.
And so we keep growing a lot. And I keep, I keep working with her.
Pablo, one thing that I didn't hear you say to Monique was, I would love for you to
be more generous.
What would that feel like for you?
It would relieve a lot of stress and resentment that I fear towards relationship.
She is generous in her own way,
so I will give her that.
She is quite generous.
However, I think there is a misunderstanding
of what I would appreciate as being generous to what
her she thinks that she's being generous in.
So just say it, Pablo, be specific.
Yeah.
Manik, I love everything that you do in terms of giving me food and writing me letters
and doing all these little tiny cute gifts.
And I definitely appreciate them.
But to be honest, some of the generosity would be better felt
if it was more on the financial department when we're doing dates or activities together.
It would make me feel much more appreciated and I would look you in such a strong light,
an even better light than I already do. I mean, I appreciate that.
And I definitely take that to heart and I would definitely, you know,
I mean, it's hard because like you said, I am very generous
in many different ways.
So I thought I was good, you know, I thought I was doing a great job.
So, but he's never actually have said those exact words.
So it's hard for me.
I always tell him, like, I can't read your mind.
Like, you need to tell me things,
because I don't know what's wrong.
And I think it's because we've never really had
a serious money discussion until now.
So we've never been able to address those issues straight on.
Five years into this relationship,
and they're starting to admit to each other and to themselves
what they really need to feel loved.
Now watch what happens.
Are there any questions that I can answer for you today?
There is an upcoming trip.
We do have our first official trip after five years coming together.
And we're going to Mexico City and it actually is time perfectly because I bought tickets
to go see the Formula One and I think it's going to be a great experience.
I was a big fan and Monique is getting into it.
And then she has her award show in Mexico City.
So the tickets to be frank, there were $2,000 or like $1,000 each.
I would say it would be completely fair that I covered the tickets and then she would
pay for housing and food in Mexico, which would make it equivalent or probably even less.
It would probably be like, I spent two grand, she spends one grand.
We actually haven't even begun discussing this, but I already know that it's going to be
an issue.
Well, first of all, I had no idea those tickets were, so it's two grand per person or how
much? No, a thousand dollars per person. Okay. Okay, I had no idea that it was that expensive.
I thought it was two grand for your whole family because I bought these, you bought tickets
for your whole family, right? They were five grand. Okay. For total. Yeah.
But this thing is I didn't know you were buying tickets or that we raven going to that.
Of course, and I wanted to surprise you.
And so, like, you don't have to worry about the cost of the tickets because
as I've done every time I've taken you to a concert of the bands that I like that you don't like
or that you don't know of, I always cover the tickets because I'm bringing you to my experience.
But then the shared experience, which is Mexico City,
like I feel like we can share that. Yeah, share it 50-50, but not that I pay for all the food and
all the housing.
Well, it's okay. It's going to be less than $2,000. It's gonna be less than $1,000 for sure.
Okay, and that's fine,
but you went ahead and bought the tickets
without me knowing about it
and without knowing the price
and you're already expecting me to pay for
all of the housing and all the food,
which I had no idea about.
What is going on right now?
Two minutes ago, everybody was hugging,
and we were singing around a campfire,
and then we started talking about this trip.
And did you notice they both went right back to their corners?
All the good feelings, all the understanding they developed went away,
and they went right back to their old style of fighting about
money.
This is totally normal.
Everybody feels really good.
You know, oh, I realized something about myself and my partner.
Oh, my gosh, I love him.
I love her.
But when it comes to applying it for a real world situation, we go right back to our old
patterns. So we're going to pick this up and you're
going to discover even more beneath the surface when we continue on next week, on the
continuation of this episode of I Will Teach You To Be Rich. Thanks for listening.
It's just like a weird feeling to have you buy something for me but then turn around and be like,
okay, since I bought this, I'm going to make you pay for all the food and all the housing.
So it's like you're not inviting me, you're making me pay you back in a different way.
And that seems transactional and cold.
I feel like once again, the commitment to partnership is not there.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
I'm Ramit Saiti.
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.
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and it will show you the specific tactics
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you