I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 35. “If we can’t stop fighting about money, we’re going to break up”
Episode Date: March 22, 2022Ashley and Josh have come to a stark conclusion: That if they can’t manage to find some common ground in their financial struggles, their relationship has no future. They both earn roughly the same ...amount of money. Besides this huge roadblock, they see a path to marriage and children. But they can’t come to an agreement about who pays for date night. Even worse, individually, neither of them has a solid plan for tackling their own debt. Josh drives a, you guessed it, truck he can’t afford. Ashley leases a Mercedes. Both acknowledge the massive strain that having debt places on them and their relationship, and yet they do nothing about it. Are they willing to make the lifestyle changes necessary to turn their financial future around? Let’s find out. Connect with Ramit Website Instagram Twitter Facebook YouTube Linkedin If you and your partner have a money issue and you want my help, I occasionally select a couple to work with, free of charge. Apply for my help here. Produced by Crate Media.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Just tell me what is going to happen, whether it's tomorrow or 20 years from now, if you keep
this lifestyle up.
Things will break up and no longer be together.
You're going to break up.
Correct.
Ashley.
Yeah, if we keep going like this, we're going to continue to fight about money, not get
to our realistic goals and break up.
Well, in the last episode, you heard Ashley and Josh talk about what they consider to be a 10 out of 10 problem.
Ashley expects Josh to pay for all of their date nights, but Josh is frustrated.
He wants a financial partner. Last episode,
we started digging in to where Ashley came up with her belief that Josh should pay for everything.
Her answer was, he's the man. In today's episode part two, we're going to talk to Josh.
I want to understand more about their financial situation.
It's interesting that they both earn roughly the same amount of money, around 150K each.
Remember, they haven't been together for long, just about a year or so, but they've started
to talk about their future, moving in, getting married, potentially having children, but they cannot seem to agree on
the date night issue, as well as how they see money together.
Now, let's talk about the debt really quick.
Ashley has $18,000 of debt.
Josh has $70,000 of debt.
So I wanted to dig in to Josh's finances a little bit more.
And what I discovered today is quite revealing.
As you listen to this episode, please remember that at the end,
I have a follow up from both of them.
Let's listen in.
This is, I will teach you to be rich. [♪ Music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing It got ran up on a single credit card approximately five years ago for a business that I had started.
There was other financial backing on it, but that was my personal part that kind of in the
end ended up stuck with.
So it kind of just sits there.
I make the minimum $490 a month payment and it goes down by 50 bucks. And because it's, you know, I don't know what to do with it.
And what do you, what do you mean, what to do?
What do you take it to bed with you and cuddle it?
Even what to do with it.
Well, I kind of resent it because it represents something that failed and as far as the business
goes wise.
And I feel like it's such a big number.
I haven't really been sure how to attack it.
As far as what are your options?
There's a lot of options out there for that. There's making large or monthly payments.
There's getting a debt consolidation loan.
There's getting a personal loan from one of those places that give you
$25,000, $30,000 loans at 3 or 4%.
So you've been thinking about this for how many years?
Four years. Four years and the amount has just been sitting there.
This is, I say, a little bit down. Yeah, pretty much it sits there.
Okay, that's a critical mistake. This is a classic analysis paralysis and you're just paying
shitloads in interest and unnecessary anxiety for you. How come you seem so calm the home call,
the whole call, and suddenly we go, wait a minute, there's $30,000 of credit card debt.
You're very calm about this.
What's up?
It's just been put away kind of on the back burner.
And, you know, while these conversations with Ashley again, head or bring in this stuff
out and kind of, I need to address it and figure out a, why I'm avoiding it.
Yes.
That's the problem and be what I need to really do, you know, to change my current habits towards it.
Okay.
So why are you avoiding it?
You tell me.
I don't say it doesn't.
It feels just like you said, it feels a little insurmountable.
And you mentioned paralysis of not taking action because I'm not sure which direction to go
other than pay a little more.
But hold on a second, you make
what, like, over 12 grand a month, okay?
That's a lot of money.
30K of credit card debt.
Pay that thing off pretty quick.
When you meet a nice girl,
you know, that requires a little bit extra, sometimes the money
that you were putting towards that debt, stalking and putting it towards that debt.
Aha.
We spent so much of that last episode focused on Ashley's expectation that Josh should
pay for date nights.
I know, I know a lot of people said, Rameet, why do you focus on her so much?
What about him? And not surprisingly, Josh has his own money issues. He's been sitting
on tens of thousands of credit card debt for years. And I love how he says, I'm not sure
what to do except pay more. Yeah. Actually, I need to tell you how this drives me crazy.
Do you know how many people write me and they go, Hey, Rameet, do you have any advice
for me?
Here's my situation.
It's a little unusual.
And then they proceed to tell me a totally normal situation that literally millions of other
people have.
I go, have you read my book?
And then they go, I'm not looking for the usual advice.
What kind of advanced techniques do you recommend for me?
I'm looking at a picture of this guy.
He's wearing an ill-fitting boot cut pair of jeans
and those striped button-down shirts I used to wear
when I was going out in 2006.
And he's asking me for advanced techniques.
No, my friend, who's DMing me in Instagram asking for these
advanced techniques, you don't need them.
What you need to do is do the basics and fucking do them right.
Too many of you believe that you're too advanced for the fundamentals.
Guess what?
You earn the right to be advanced once you have mastered the fundamentals.
Josh makes over $12,000 a month.
He could easily pay off his credit card debt.
And when I pushed him, did you catch what he said?
Well, when a pretty girl comes around, translation, he's blaming her.
And I don't believe him because Josh was in debt
before he met Ashley.
He didn't pay off his debt then.
He didn't pay off his debt once he met her.
I think Josh needs a wake up call.
So Ashley demanded that you pay for these nice dinners
and therefore you can't pay off your credit card debt.
That's not her fault,
but that was the part of my budget
that is now going to things
that were maybe not part of my budget.
I see.
And hence, when it comes to these dinners,
these uncomfortable conversations,
deep down are what?
That now I'm not able to put money towards my savings or my debt. I'm not taking on new debt because I've been made that very clear since we started dating. I don't
want to make that mistake, but I'm also not making headway. That was a really logical answer.
There's just one problem. I don't believe it. Because you've had this debt for over four
years and you just met her one year ago. Correct. What's up with this car loan? What kind
of car are we talking about?
That's a truck. Regular vehicle.
Fuck. Okay, we got to do this again. A truck. A fucking truck. What is it?
That's the black GMC pickup truck. Right. Right. And where do you use this truck? Josh.
We're into a lot of outdoor type stuff. So I use it for camping, off-roading.
You're going to love it. I have a boat. That's fun. Oh, that's fun.
You use the truck to fill the boat. Yeah, of course. Of course. And how much is gas, by the way, out of curiosity per month?
More than it was a few years ago.
How much?
I don't go anywhere.
200 bucks.
So this truck,
fucking hate trucks.
You bought it at 50K, is that right?
53.
Okay, 53.
And you have $40,000 loan on this truck.
What's your interest rate?
23% super low.
So I'm gonna tell you two things about trucks.
First of all, I fucking hate trucks.
Okay, virtually every single person I meet
who's in financial trouble has a truck.
Okay, that's number one.
And number two, whenever I ask him,
why do you have a truck?
Okay, I try to be nice because maybe there's a reason.
You know what they do?
They always give me this logical reason first.
Well, you know, I needed to go up this winter hill.
I go, oh really, you can't get up that road
in a four-door sedan like grandma.
And then they go, well, I use it to tow my boat.
They either have a $70,000 trailer or a fucking boat.
And then I go, let's put the boat to the side.
We'll get into that in a minute.
And then it turns out when I unpie why,
why, why do you have a truck?
They just have a truck because all their friends have a truck
and it's a total status play.
And so while they make fun of their girlfriends and wives for having their Louis Vuitton bags
and Chanel, whatever, they themselves have a $50,000 status piece that they classify as
logical.
Is any of this resonating with you, Josh?
Yes.
You cannot afford to truck. I'm just gonna point blank, tell you.
They sink all their money into it,
and then one day they wake up,
oh, why do I pay over $1,200 a month
on my automotive expenses?
Well, because you made a decision
two and a half years ago.
So, Josh, man, I understand the anxiety you have.
Okay, I understand why you would be upset
about going out to dinner.
I get it, Ashley, do you get a little bit more
of his anxiety now?
I understood it from day one
that when he told me about his debt,
I didn't know about the car loan.
I thought he was like, I have a lease.
I just paid monthly payments.
Oh, you have a lease, of course.
What kind of car is that for?
Mercedes.
Oh, fucking Mercedes.
This is the best.
Ashley thought she was making a good point,
but then she accidentally revealed
that she's leasing a Mercedes.
So now I gotta go hunting for info.
I truly have the greatest job in the world.
Okay, so this is great.
How much is that per month by the way?
I think it's 430.
430, nice.
And how much did you put down?
Oh, I don't remember.
Right, some X thousands of dollars.
So I'll just tell both of you,
first of all, you both have more expensive cars than I do.
Okay, I don't mind if you have more expensive cars than I do, okay?
I don't mind if you have certain things
that are nicer than me,
everyone has their own money dials, right?
I'm not gonna judge for that,
but you know what I am gonna judge for?
You can't afford them.
All right?
Sorry.
You know, a lot of you asked me to speak to people
who are not just multi-millionaires
on this podcast, but have more modest incomes, more relatable scenarios.
And I've been doing that.
I've been speaking to a lot of people, diverse.
I speak to them through my email newsletter.
I speak to them on Instagram and social media, and I speak to them on the podcast.
And the more I talk to people who are in financial trouble,
the more I truly hate the way we think about money in America.
The stuff that's talked about in the media is such bullshit.
Cut back on lattes, reuse your saran wrap.
Why don't you disable the oven light
because over the course of an entire year,
that saves you 16 cents.
And if you save that until you're 80 years old, maybe just maybe you can take a vacation to Las Vegas road trip. Of course,
why would we spend money on flying there? That's just a waste. My favorite part is that
the experts who tell you this stuff are on TV wearing $1,000 dresses as they share this
helpful advice. The advice that they themselves would never follow.
And then we have the way that Americans actually spend their money.
Yes, there are structural reasons that things have gotten more expensive, like housing.
I'm a huge fan of building more housing.
I want affordability to go up.
I want you, everybody listening to be able to afford housing.
But when I talk to people
in financial trouble, they are almost always overpaying not just for their house, but for their
car. They overspend. They finance them. They don't understand how compound interest works,
especially for their credit card debt. Have you heard the patterns in some of the last episodes?
credit card debt. Have you heard the patterns in some of the last episodes? Many of the people in financial trouble buy things because they see them and they want them. It's as simple
as that, but they never actually read a single book about personal finance to learn how
money works. They are so stuck chasing that shiny thing that they saw that they never stopped to zoom out for
just a second and say, what is my rich life? Do I want to buy this car, which is certainly a nice car,
but it's going to trap me at this socioeconomic level for the rest of my life?
Or do I want to spend a weekend reading a book? Do I want to aggressively pay off my debt? Because
Do I want to spend a weekend reading a book?
Do I want to aggressively pay off my debt?
Because life is about more than just buying a car or a shirt.
There's something bigger in this world that I'm destined for.
There's got to be.
Otherwise, what am I going to work every single day and stressing out for?
This is my wish for everybody listening.
Is that you don't simply settle for what has been sold to you as a rich life in America. A fucking suburban house, you have to drive an hour to get anywhere.
Okay, if you want it fine, but ask yourself, do I want that?
Is that the type of life I want?
Do you want a huge truck?
Is target your rich life?
No!
Those are things that have been fed to
you. What do you want? Do you want to go on a running tour? Because you love running.
You want the best running shoes? Great. That's meaningful. Do you want to go to all these
cool restaurants and sit in auntie's house and learn how to cook Indonesian food or Indian
food? That's meaningful. That doesn't even cost that much.
The point is, I want you to deeply,
deeply understand what your rich life is.
And when I talk to people in financial trouble,
I almost never hear good answers to that.
I simply hear consumerism and buying what is shiny
and in front of them.
I'm not going to be able to do that.
Tell me what will happen if you keep going on.
Don't give me the bad stuff.
I know you guys will fight more and all that stuff.
Realistically, would you still be able to eat out
if you guys continued on the way you're going?
Of course, but it just adds to the exact,
all of what we're dealing with adds to the anxiety
about saving and securing our financial future.
Okay.
What else though?
What else would be fine if you kept going the way you're going?
Would you still be able to have a car, you know, nice leather seats and the boat and all
that stuff?
Yeah.
Live a slightly above average lifestyle on the surface.
Exactly.
Yes, totally. And, yes, like totally.
And you know, you take a vacation every so often
and go for a friend's wedding.
Yes, you could do all of those things, okay?
What's the cost if you keep doing this style of spending?
Josh, it's never gonna go away
and not gonna achieve, you to achieve any financial freedom.
It's going to be strapped and feel the pressure that I feel now.
Because you minimize it, because what?
Out of sight, out of mind.
Do you both see that neither of you have truly grappled with the consequences of the
decision you've made?
Yeah.
The irony is that both of you called me and said, this is a 10 out of 10 and this is the consequences of the decisions you've made. Yeah.
The irony is that both of you called me and said,
this is a 10 out of 10 and this is make or break
for our relationship.
It's like a feeling right now.
I'm talking about it, you know, just, yeah.
I'm comfortable about it.
It's uncomfortable, but your reaction to the discomfort
is head in the sand.
That's why your boat and RV and truck are going to be so difficult to
let go of. We haven't even talked about the truck, but I'm just going to fast forward
because you're going to sell that thing too. And anyone listening, just sell your truck
before you even ever call into me. I don't want to talk to anybody with a truck anymore.
Love it. Love it. Okay. The reason it's going to be difficult is these are not just things to you.
What are they? They represent a few things, you know, value, status, makes me feel good in the
moment and forget about the debts sitting on that stuff because, you know, when you're doing those
things, you don't feel it. It's out of sight, out of mind. Totally. And that's a great example.
When you're camping or when you're out on the water,
you feel great.
You're not sitting there thinking about your death.
You're like, oh, I made it.
You know, I spoke to a woman,
I believe she was from Costa Rica.
And when she grew up, she grew up very poor.
And for her, if her dad brought home Coca-Cola,
it meant he had a good month at work.
That's how poorly worked. When she moved to the US,
she was enthralled to be able to go to Walmart and buy stuff. And she would tell me, I just buy all
the stuff. I said, what'd you buy? It's just all this junk, you know, charge keys, all this stuff.
And I said, how to make you feel she said it made me feel amazing that she could do it.
feel amazing that she could do it. This was episode number 14 called I hide my spending from my husband. And that's where I spoke to a couple Chuck and Mary. I
highly encourage you to listen to it. Mary will help you understand why so many
people buy things and these things seem confusing to outsiders, but they are
very meaningful to them.
Again, I highly recommend you listen to it.
It's episode number 14 of the I Will Teach You To Be Rich podcast,
called I Hide My Spending From My Husband.
You are that.
Just on a much bigger and more expensive level.
And we're going to talk about how you can still feel good.
I want you to use money to feel good.
I'm not trying to be Mr. Restrictive over here.
We'll talk about how to do that.
I use money to feel good.
I want you to do the same.
I want you to jointly do that.
But right now, you're in red alert mode.
So the boat, it sounds like you're going to do what with that?
He's looking to sell that here this year.
Not looking to.
Correct.
It's hard to admit, and I don't want to lie.
It might slightly, here's the deal I feel about that,
since it's a liquid, so there's certain things
I'm more attached to than others.
So you're attached to the boat.
OK.
What about the RV?
RV is gone.
RV is gone.
Great.
That's.
You have a considerable amount of money
when you sell these things, you resent this debt.
I know you mentioned it to me.
You know, the best thing to do with something you resent
is put it in the dirt.
Pay it off so you never have to think about it again.
How do you feel about that?
Feel scary, but I know it would feel great after it's all done.
Great.
So sitting here listening to you guys talk about that.
I was already trying to make a smarter financial decision
with my car.
I wouldn't be leasing a luxury car again.
What were you going to do before we talked?
I was going to look at a Jeep.
Jeep, okay.
The Jeep. How much is a Jeep these days?
Unfortunately, it's close to the same payments I'm paying now because I got a good deal on my car.
So that's very interesting, by the way. Notice what you would have done.
You would have told yourself, good job, Ashley, pet myself on the back.
I downgraded from a Mercedes to a Jeep,
but in reality, what would have happened?
I'd probably be paying the same monthly payments. Yeah. You see how people get in trouble? They pat themselves on the back, but they didn't
actually do the one thing that matters, which is to run the numbers. I'll just speak personally.
This is one of those times where if you can cut any big expenses, that's
amazing because every extra 100, 200, 300 bucks a month, you put towards that, it goes
down really fast.
Like you will be shocked how fast you can pay that thing off.
Okay, but you also mentioned you have some other things you could change in order to pay
this debt off faster.
What would those be? It would be more lifestyle changes of no shopping or shopping less.
Tell me the specifics. Take it from the clouds to the street.
Oh wow. I love to shop. You know, now that I've again been working, I've been buying a little bit
more, but I've always had a problem with shopping
and spending money like that always.
Can you rephrase this?
You've always had a problem when you say that,
what are you telling yourself?
That's an issue.
That you can never change.
Yeah.
How about this, what could you rephrase that to be?
This has been a problem for me in the past, but I no longer want it to be a problem moving
forward.
Love that. Beautiful.
Too big take away so far. For Josh, he's been sitting on a gold mine, but he's been
too paralyzed to take action. By getting aggressive with selling his RV and hopefully some other
things, he can immediately
pay off that debt and start looking towards the future.
Remember, it's hard to think about the future when you have one foot stuck in the past.
And for Ashley, she was about to make yet another mistake with her car.
And the worst part is, she would have thought that she made a good decision.
This is like people who buy those shitty bags of chips at the grocery store. You know
the ones I'm talking about, they say low carb on the front. And the person goes, wow,
it says no GMO. This is really healthy. It's like, dude, you bought a bag of chips. This
isn't celery. If you want the chips, just get the chips. Just say you want chips and own it,
but don't lie to yourself into thinking
that a bag of chips is healthy.
In the same way, Ashley was going to downgrade to a Jeep,
but keep the exact same payments as her Mercedes.
You can imagine what would happen two years from now.
She's gonna look around, feel trapped with her finances,
and then get frustrated. She'll say, I did everything right. I cut
back on my car. This finance stuff doesn't work. Remedes sucks. All of this without ever
running the numbers once. Remember to become confident with your money, you have to become
competent. Pick up a copy of I will teach you to be rich, and
I conservatively estimate that it will make you over $1 million in your lifetime. Now,
for Ashley and Josh, earlier, we talked about how they haven't faced any real consequences
for their financial behavior. And I wanted to understand where this came from. And when
Ashley started talking about how she was raised,
started to make a lot more sense.
I had a credit card at a very young age
that I would go with Mola.
Oh, really?
Oh, really?
Yeah.
How surprising.
And they gave that to you.
Why?
Why did they do that?
For emergencies.
Uh-huh.
And then that first time you brought the bill home
and it was like all this money, how did they respond? Um, you mean when the bill came in the mail and they opened it, took the credit card away.
And then what happened?
They gave it back to me.
Uh-huh.
And then what happened when you did it again?
And then I did it again.
And nothing happened, right?
No consequences of any real impact.
Um, well then they would start to highlight the charges.
And...
That's not a consequence of yellow highlighter.
What are we talking about?
And then when I was old enough,
they would be like, you have to pay this back.
Did you end up paying that credit card,
the one that you charged to your parents?
Did you ever pay that off? I'm sure I gave the money along the way, but...
Was that a yes?
No, not fully.
Yeah, no consequences.
Not really.
So you two have to create your own consequences.
Now the natural consequences, if you don't change anything, you'll probably break up.
You've both told me that.
Okay? And I hate that that is even on the table.
I don't want you to break up.
We don't either at all.
Especially because of money, especially earning $300,000 combined, that just mathematically,
it doesn't make any sense to me.
However, you both have a long deep history that needs to be dramatically explored and changed.
And it's not just one-on-one, it's together.
It's really hard.
You have a hard road ahead of you.
Now, going back to this credit card spending, what's your rule of thumb about eating out?
I think we've been better, but I think it should be, I mean, I would love it to be one
nice dinner a month.
I don't think that is realistic for what we're trying to achieve.
I think maybe one nice dinner every two or three months.
We're talking about, for me and my credit card are us together.
Give me both.
I like hearing it.
Okay.
So, that was for us together. For me, I think I shouldn't be,
if it's over $20, I shouldn't be actually, no, once a month.
Once a month of what? Say the sentence. I think I should be spending money going out to eat.
I think I should be spending money going out to eat. Must be realistic twice a month.
Okay.
That sounds good to me.
I like the way you laid it out.
Hey, the first time you might go three times a month.
That's okay.
The world doesn't end.
What we don't wanna do is, oh my God,
I went out three times a month.
All the month is ruined.
I'm just gonna go out for the rest of the month.
We don't want that.
And we also don't wanna cut ourselves slack
so that we are not honoring our own rules of thumb.
These are your rules, they're not mine.
I want you to respect them.
Start off with two, that sounds good.
And if you need to adjust it, you can.
I think having a budget is beneficial in a way
because what is two times a month mean?
Is two times a month mean two bowls of Chipotle?
Or does that mean two steak dinners, you know?
Yeah.
So a good point.
You know, so I think budget is almost more important
and then we decide if how that is
and that also maybe teach us.
No, anyways.
Good, actually, what do you think about that?
Oh, you agree, okay, great.
And great, I love it. It's a little bit more complicated that? Oh, you agree. Okay, great. Then great.
I love it.
It's a little bit more complicated because the two of you are going to have to have these
conversations.
Like, one person is going to go, I'm really craving, you know, yakitori.
Any other person goes, well, hey, if we go there, like, that's our entire months spending.
So you know, you might have to have some uncomfortable conversations.
But I love that the two of you are going, we're ready. We want to do that, right? And then, a month you might go, like,
I just feel like Chipotle. Let's just do that. It's good. I think that's awesome.
What you don't want is to get to the restaurant, and one partner has to become the nag to the other.
That's a terrible dynamic. So, best thing to do would be you're going to have a weekly conversation or monthly
conversation about your money. I prefer monthly and you make your plan for when you're going to go
out. You don't decide when you're hungry. You make it. You make the reservation ahead of time.
And ideally in these early stages, you might even look at the menu ahead of time. You're trying to
make these decisions at your best instead of when you see this beautiful shrimp platter and you go,
Oh my God, we should just get it. Come on. It's like not big deal. You don't want that because now you're you're basically compromising your integrity together.
Doesn't that sort of take I mean, I already like to read menus beforehand because I love knowing what's on the menu.
Yeah, just for fun, but doesn't that kind of take the fun out of it? If we're like, okay, let's decide exactly what we're going to get
before we get to the restaurant.
I understand talking about alcohol and things like that and limiting
that because that adds up.
But picking out the entire dinner before we get there is fun out of it.
Okay, I love what you're saying.
I love that you're pushing back.
This is so great.
It shows me that you're really engaged with this because
this is going to be your life after we end today. And I want you to push back on stuff
that doesn't seem right to you. So does it seem a bit unromantic to talk about some
of these things at a time? Yeah. Yeah. It kind of does. Do you have to? No, you don't
have to. You decide, But you've already seen what
happens if you don't discuss things, right? Lots of surprises come up. That tip on your meal,
that's already 40 bucks. It's not as romantic to sit and plan this stuff ahead of time,
but we are doing it because we're working towards a rich life together.
we are doing it because we're working towards a rich life together.
You have to reframe it.
Maybe another way to look at it is to say, you know what?
What's romantic is being able to spend time with you and to eat this food that we can't make on our own and to be able to dress up and have quality time
together. That's romantic.
And so that will take some work with the two of you.
You'll have to figure out how you want to talk about that, how you want to make those
decisions.
Okay, here's where I would like you to be Ashley with your debt.
I would like you to first, actually, you can do this in the next couple days, you can
look up a debt payoff calculator.
You can just search for that on Google.
And I'd like you to plug in your debt.
The amount of debt you have, your interest rate,
if you don't know it, you can find it
from logging into your credit card.
And you plug it in, and you will see how long it's
going to take you to pay it off.
OK, it's going to be a daunting number.
Don't worry.
Then you can add on an extra 100 bucks a month and you can see how fast that will decrease
your duration.
Suddenly, you're going to realize, oh my God, this is actually pretty doable.
And a few hundred extra bucks a month makes a big difference.
When you see that, when you feel like, oh my god,
I only have X months or X years until freedom. Now, when you go to Josh and you go listen,
I know we talked about the car thing. I know you're uncomfortable with it. Let me tell you why,
like, here's what I'm trying to do. I'm trying to pay this debt off in X months or Y years.
I've done this work. I went through a meat book.
Here's what I've committed to.
I created these rules of thumb around shopping
and eating out and I'm gonna do XYZ.
How do you think Josh is gonna react to that
so far, by the way?
Positively.
Gonna love it.
Josh, what are you gonna say when you hear that?
Mm-hmm.
Proud of her.
You know?
Amazing.
I'm a new woman.
Yeah, it's awesome.
You're taking control of your future.. How many women? Yeah, it's awesome.
You're taking control of your future.
Just individually, that's just, that is very romantic.
It's very attractive to see a partner just owning their future.
But it also says something so great about the future of your relationship.
But then, Ashley, you can also ask for help.
You know, you can go to him and say, look, this is what I would like from you.
For example, for our joint expenses, you know, you make a little bit more than me,
would you feel comfortable talking about contributing proportionally?
That would relieve a little bit of stress on me.
And then, of course, Josh is free to say whatever he wants.
And two of you can have a very healthy discussion.
How do you think that would go?
I think hopefully good for the most part.
One thing I wanted to break up which ties this is, you know, the top of the budget is basically
what he's paying now, split and half.
Everything we would talk about is being split 50, 50.
You know, if he does start making significantly more money than me, what does that look like? I
don't know, Josh, I mean, how would you feel like that conversation could go based off of,
they just said? I'm going to have a positive response to seeing that you're making, you know,
changes to your spending habits and to looking at this a different way, I feel like I'm going to respond positively
to all of that.
Do that answer your question?
No.
I don't even know what your question was, Ashley.
My question was, is, you know, if I come to you to, and I ask you, you know, the...
Can you just ask him instead of saying, if I came to you?
Josh, if I come to you and I,
nope, nope, ask him what you want to ask him.
Can I, what kind of response can I receive from you if?
Ashley, how many layers of this question
are there going to be?
This is like one of those sandwiches you ordered at a deli where they take two pieces of bread
and then inexplicably throw in 500 pieces of turkey so you can't even get your mouth
around the sandwich.
Attention deli owners, why the hell do you do this?
We're not impressed.
Nobody needs enough turkey to go from here to the moon in a sandwich.
I just want to be able to eat this damn thing and leave.
I don't want to have to get a shovel and a dump truck to be able to fit this sandwich in
my mouth.
In the last episode, Ashley physically could not bring herself to say what she really wanted
from Josh.
And here we see that pattern pop up again.
Instead of asking her exact question, she's saying, if I asked you, what kind
of response would I possibly maybe somehow hypothetically receive?
One of my wishes for everybody listening to this podcast is for you to go from the clouds
to the street, from theory to reality, from hypotheticals to specifics.
From the stuff you've concocted in your imagination,
to running the numbers and having real conversations
about what you want, what you can afford, and what your rich life is.
In my experience, it's actually more fun to live in a reality you control than to
simply exist in the clouds and talk about what you want to do someday.
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Why don't you just skip to the part where you ask him, like, actually have the conversation. Okay. Will you help offset some of the budget if I need you to?
What? What does that mean?
Listen, I've been writing about money for about 20 years
and even I don't understand that question.
I don't know. I don't know.
Can you say it in plain English for someone like a dunce like me?
What are you saying?
If, no.
Will you help me with my budget?
No, I don't even know what I'm trying to ask.
Okay, so take me.
Exactly.
No, no, no, no, no.
This is good. This is great. Take the time and articulate your
question instead of starting out by just talking. That's what leads both of you into trouble.
Think about what you really want to ask him. Will you be okay? Contributing more if you
make more money than me.
Boom!
This is the real question!
I'm so proud of Ashley for getting to it.
If you go and rewind for the last 60 seconds, you'll notice something really fascinating.
In the earlier questions that I asked to Ashley, when she answered, she didn't pause at all.
She just jumped right into asking
her questions almost breathlessly without even thinking about what she was really asking.
That's how she ended up with all these vague questions. It was only when she paused and took a deep
breath and really thought about what she wanted to know that she finally asked Josh the real question.
And this is a key lesson for many of you.
In my dream job program, I call it the STHU technique.
That's short for Shut the Hell Up.
If you aren't sure what you're really asking or if you keep getting bad answers to your
questions, it might be time to take a deep breath,
shut the hell up and write down your real question. Good job, Ashley.
I think that's a fair question. I would need more context for that. Under our current situation of
me making more than you currently, I feel like it needs to be currently still a,
you know, more of a 50-50 situation
because we're both trying to make moves proportionately
on our debt.
But long-term, yes, if down the road,
if my career continues to evolve,
and I do make, you know, significantly more,
and we have conversations about it,
yes, I would be comfortable with that
Ashley, how do you feel about that answer a lot better than the past conversations we've had about it. Why is that?
When I've brought it up
You've got or Josh has been more
He hasn't been as receptive to it. Okay. My question, listening to Josh's answers, when?
When do we go from 50-50 to proportional?
You said in the future, when?
That was the hesitancy you heard in my answer
was I don't know what that time frame looks like
or what, who makes more, like, if I make,
is there a threshold where I make this ex a dollar?
Is that the moment that it kicks in
that you pay?
Well, do you want to just tell you?
Yeah.
Okay.
Usually couples pay proportionally.
That's good.
So I'll give you an example.
First of all, it's pretty interesting.
You guys basically make the same amount of money.
One of you makes 160 and one of you makes 140.
It's basically the same.
Okay. Now, you could factor
in a whole bunch of these variables. Josh is paying more debt, but Josh also paid for the last year,
for Ashley. Blah, blah, blah, blah. But how do you factor all that shit in? It's just too confusing.
You know what one of my rules of thumb is when it comes to my money? Simplicity.
my money? Simplicity. My financial world has gotten very complicated. All accounts and businesses and blah, blah, blah. I insist on simplicity. Very small number of credit cards, very small number
of accounts, investments, et cetera. I would encourage you to do the same thing. So if I were you, this is just my own personal observation, not advice,
I would do it proportionately. I would basically acknowledge that Josh was very generous for last
year and paid for a lot of stuff. And Josh, if I were you, I'd probably say, you know what? I would like for you to become more financially generous with me.
Josh, you didn't say that,
but I have a feeling that that's one of the things you want.
And I think if you were to articulate that to Ashley,
assuming that I'm right about this assumption,
Ashley would be like, oh wow, that connects with me.
I understand that.
And now I know what he's looking for. Next, I would put
aside the other thing, which is Josh is paying more in debt. Well, that's Josh's issue. Josh
incurred that debt. That's his responsibility. The two of you make basically the same amount of money.
I would just do it proportionately. It's almost 50,50 anyway. And then as one of your incomes increases or whatever
happens, it's all percentage-based. It's proportionally. You do not need to do all these weird calculations.
What do you think about that?
Totally agree.
I think it's logical and I agree mostly. I need to let it sink in a little bit more,
but I definitely agree with the math.
Makes sense. Any hesitation?
Not necessarily.
Not the as-r I was expecting 100% so I just need to.
Here's a trap you might run into.
This happened when my wife and I got together and we paid proportionately,
but my standard of living was a lot higher than she was used to
paying for, even when we were paying proportionately.
So just to give you an example, let's say that when we got married, she moved into the
apartment that I had been in.
Well, even though I was paying proportionately, the amount she had to contribute to rent
was like way higher than she used to contribute.
So that was a trap. We had to figure out how to deal with that. Another example is, you know,
when we would travel, I want to stay at nicer hotels. She's like less interested in these fancy
hotels that I love. So we made a rule of thumb, which is basically, this is the type of hotel we'll stay at.
And then if I want an upgrade or some nicer room or suite or whatever, I'll pay the difference.
I noticed the two of you are smiling.
I hate that answer.
That is exactly how you hit the nail on the head there.
That's a lot of the underlying issue is that we want
to do things like you mentioned in proportion,
but whose lifestyle are we splitting, 50, 50?
So the vacation thing was a perfect example.
I said the same thing.
It's like, hey, if our vacation start,
where your budgets, at least early in the relationship, right?
Early, if your budget's $200 a room a night and my budget's $200, whoever's lowest common
denominator, like that's our budget for the room. Now, if the room together, we can pay $300.
Now, boom, I surprise you and I take up the rest of the room and take it all the way to 500,
that's my choice. But our baseline is what we can do together
and it's up to the other partner elevated.
And Ashley, I'm going to guess that you did not
find that particularly romantic.
No, because in this, yes, in this sense,
because you're the man doing it for your wife,
but this is role reversal for us because I'm the one that really likes
nicer hotels and rooms and things like that, but I don't want to be the one
to pay the difference. Yeah.
Like, I don't, I don't even want to split vacations 50, 50.
Ashley, let me ask you a question.
What if you did?
To which part? What if you did split vacations?
What if you did even pay more sometimes for certain things? We have split some vacations, not all
because of last year's not working. Here's my thing. I think it's not enough people talk. Not that people
have to talk about their finances. I don't think enough people talk about what
they do. So what I am assuming is normal might not be normal. Why do you think I
started my podcast? I assumed that with your success, you pay for all
the vacations and stuff for you and your life. No, let me tell you how it worked and let me tell
you how it works now because it's changed and I'll expect that it will change for you too. So you
assumed that because I made more money that I paid for everything. Okay, right? And that means vacations, dinners, all that stuff.
Now, I'm very happy to be generous and splurge on my wife and my family. I love to do it.
But can you imagine what message that communicates to a partner
communicates to a partner when you pay for everything. What message does that communicate if I were to do that with my wife? Yeah, I think it would
communicate that I'm generous. But what else would it communicate? It would
communicate that you're the man of the house. I understand in your view of
masculinity, he should pay for everything.
I get that.
I'm not arguing with your view.
It's your view.
I get it.
I would say that it would not define us as partners.
Partners don't have to be contributing the same amount, but they do have to put some
skin in the game.
It would make things a lot less fun for us
because part of the joy of talking about these vacations
is that we get to sit there
and look at these different hotels
and what kind of food tour are we gonna go on.
And both of us are engaged.
We have skin in the game.
It would also send a message that I am always going to be here
to take care of you. And while that is a great
message and it's very lovely, I'm going to be dead one day. And how would it be if I leave my wife
with no financial skills whatsoever, not knowing how to spend money, who's ripping her off,
which investment advisor, all this stuff, and she's left helpless and I'm gone.
What kind of message would that send?
I don't want to simply take care of someone by doing everything for them.
I'm happy to spend and splurge, yes, but I want to partner.
You see the difference in perspective? No.
And now that she started to earn considerably more with the success of her business, here's
what's amazing.
Our finances have changed because of her business growing.
This is what I hope for you too as well.
We are not arguing over $20 here and there.
That's beneath what we call our worry free number.
What we do is at the end of every year,
we plan out our next year.
What trips are we gonna take?
Who are we gonna take with us?
What kind of gifts are we gonna send?
We put the money aside, and we already have a few rules of thumb.
We're gonna do it proportionally, you know,
this and that, bonus, etc.
And we don't think about the minutia on a day-to-day basis. That took us a long time to get to.
It's quite a sophisticated system. But what does it feel like to her and me? That's what I want
to tell you about. To me, it feels like because we are combining our incomes, we can roll in the same direction
and get to our destinations faster than we ever thought.
That's amazing.
Second, I'm here watching my wife develop her financial skills and go from the early
days where it was scarcity-based.
Now she's totally abundant and she goes, hey, if we want to do this amazing trip, we can do it.
Here's what we need to do.
She's become highly sophisticated in that way.
That's partnership.
We're each making each other better.
What do you think about that?
I think that sounds good.
I feel like I've made some of my views
like a little bit antiquated. And I was I feel like I've made some of my views like a little bit antiquated and
I was just assuming like I assumed your situation because I do want a partnership. I don't want
a man to hold finances over my head and use it as any sort of device or tool or whatever.
I want a partnership with him. I just like because I feel like nobody talks about this kind of stuff.
I always am under the assumption that
while everyone's husband, boyfriend, whatever is paying
for their girlfriend, wife, because nobody talks about it.
I'm so glad that you're saying this because you're right.
Nobody does talk about it.
That's one of the reasons on the podcast I call it real conversations with real couples
from behind closed doors.
Nobody talks about this.
You go out to dinner with your friends and somebody I'm guessing in your friends case,
the husband or the man puts the credit card down.
But you have no idea.
Is it his card?
Is it their joint card?
How do they reconcile this at the end of the month?
Nobody talks about it.
And so I do think your views, Antiquated
is an interesting word.
It's somewhat judgmental word.
I'm trying very hard to tell you.
I'm not judging your views,
but I am trying to show you some different perspectives.
In the days where it was very common for husbands to work and wives to not, you know, in many
ways it was simpler, but there were some serious costs you would have not had financial control.
In those days, if your husband left you were really in trouble.
You also would not have had a say in as much as you can today, especially earning $140,000
in your 30s.
You're a powerful woman.
You can choose if you decide, you know what?
I've contributed to our joint account.
Maybe we're married now.
And I've decided that as part of my monthly personal spending,
I'm gonna do this really nice thing that I love.
And it's guilt-free.
You don't have to answer to anybody on that.
That could not have happened in the past.
So I hope that me sharing how my wife
and I think about money is eye-opening to you
because it's not as you thought.
Absolutely.
I'm, thank you for sharing that because I want that partnership with Josh and
I want to contribute. I want to be financially independent and and all of that.
You're right. Nobody knows what goes on behind closed doors. Nobody knows about the conversations
they have. What you just see is the facade that people put up.
And while those conversations might not be sexy or romantic or whatever, they are necessary.
And hopefully we can come to a place where we establish enough of these, these rules of them in the beginning that it just becomes second nature to us that these conversations don't
already need to happen. And the sexiness and the romance of that stuff,
it's at the forefront again.
You will get there.
From what you just told me,
gives me confidence in your ability.
When I had fights about money,
it was very hard to imagine that there would be
a light at the end of the tunnel,
where we would be actually happy talking about money.
If someone had told me that, I wouldn't have believed in that time.
Because we had our equivalent of YouTube fighting about dinner, we figured out our systems,
our rules of thumb, we focused on simplicity, we have a monthly standing meeting where we
talk about the nuts and bolts.
We have goals, like a rich life vision, we know this is where we talk about the nuts and bolts. We have goals like a rich life vision.
We know this is where we're traveling. We even know the hotel room we are staying in. And we talk
about every month. It's exciting to us, right? We're working towards something together. We're
building it together. That elevates us beyond talking about, are we getting the chicken or the fish?
motivates us beyond talking about, are we getting the chicken or the fish?
That's such a tragedy to live a life smaller than you have to.
And so, you know, my wish for you is that you elevate yourself to the rich life vision
as you pay this debt off, you're going to start to discover, oh my gosh, when you think
about this, how much are we going to save?
And by the time you both get to zero, which could happen quite quickly,
you're gonna have some amazing new financial habits.
Go.
I received a follow-up letter from Ashley and Josh.
Here's what Ashley wrote.
Remiith, there were so many key takeaways
that I'm going to bullet point out below.
Josh and I talk a lot at each other, but not necessarily to each other, and not in a concise
manner.
I never thought about the fact that I'm not facing any real consequences from my debt.
My expectations are based off of thoughts and not reality. I was
constantly assuming that a couple married or not and especially a couple with
money had the man always paying for vacations, dinners, etc. That was a real
wake-up call that life isn't a fairy tale and my assumptions are clearly
wrong.
Now I've put the full letters from both Ashley and Josh on my website.
And to read them, you go to iwt.com slash follow-ups.
Just enter your email address there and you'll get instant access to the full letter from
Ashley and Josh.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich. I'm Remi Tseati.
Please follow the show on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
If you haven't read, I will teach you to be rich, my book. Pick up a copy.
You can get it at any bookstore or any library,
and it will show you the specific tactics
for how to build the I will teach you to be rich system
into your personal finances.
you