I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 37. “My love language is spending money I don’t have”
Episode Date: April 5, 2022Money can be a way of showing love, but what happens when you’re spending money you don’t have? Does spending any less mean you love the people in your life any less? It seems simple, sometimes ...it’s not. Meet Jessica and Javier. She’s tried to help him with his financial literacy, but Javier only knows how to show love through spending. Unfortunately, his love is bigger than his paycheck. Not only that, he’s admittedly ignorant of how credit works. He relies on magical money thinking and is unrealistic about what it’s going to take to pay it off. We’re going to get to the root of Javier’s relationship with money and show him what’s ultimately at stake here—everything. It’s one thing to realize you’re making bad financial decisions, it’s another to turn the page on everything you know to be true about yourself. Let’s get into it. 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 just feel sorry that I owe her so much because I've been away from her that we get separated.
And I owe her so much time that I try to buy things for her and I see that is a mistake.
I would say that this is a 10 out of 10 situation.
I don't know what else to say.
Jessica, if you want to break out with me right now and leave your life,
and then we'll talk about it because I don't have the capacity to say anything else.
I'm sorry.
Welcome to this week's episode of I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
Today, you're going to meet Jessica and Javier.
I'll talk to both of them, but Javier really is the focus of today's episode.
Jessica makes $80,000 a year.
Javier makes $33,000 a year.
Javier has 15K in savings and 175K invested.
Javier has zero.
Now, in the next six months, they plan to move back to Javier's home country
of Colombia in Bogota, but Javier's reckless spending is worrying Jessica. He's $21,000
in debt. That might not sound like a lot compared to some of the numbers you've heard on
this podcast, but Javier accrued $9,000 of that debt on a single trip to Colombia.
What happens when someone has no concept of credit as real money?
What happens when they can't see the consequences of their own spending?
Jessica has told me that she can't commit to the move unless Javier fixes his finances.
And if he can't do that, that might mean the end of this relationship.
I'm Ramit Saiti and this is I will teach you to be rich.
I made a promise to myself that I've been working incredibly hard for the past five years.
I'm a contract employee. I don't get holidays,
I don't get sick days, vacation days.
I work as much as physically possible.
I've made myself a really nice path
in terms of my investments and my financial situation.
And I think the stressor for me,
in addition to wondering how he's going to handle this debt,
is I'm trying to decide for myself.
I made a promise that I would not continue my current job
past this June when my contract ends,
and it's up for renewal.
I've done my time.
I've worked very hard.
I'm ready to switch.
Leading up to our Christmas vacation,
we did discuss budgets, and we had kind of set aside
a little bit of savings. We were planning to meet some credit card spending amounts so that we could get some bonus rewards.
And when we get on our trip, a lot more money was spent than we were expecting or that I was
expecting ahead of time. And it did cause a lot of issues because not only when we were there
And it did cause a lot of issues because not only when we were there was the spending almost sometimes at an uncomfortable level that it made me uncomfortable. It made
Havier's family a little bit uncomfortable in some situations, but it also is now having a long
lasting result because we are now home with these very large credit card bills that now need to be paid down.
We had set aside about $600 in our savings,
and then we were planning to meet about $3,000 or $4,000
on the credit card bonuses.
So in that range.
And Javier had put the majority of the expenses on his cards,
his cards, I believe, between the two of them are now at $9,000 from this trip.
And I had about a thousand on my cards because of the accommodations went on mine.
So about 10,000 total.
I think that when Javier is close with his family and when there's an opportunity to do something that's really exciting with them, especially living far away from them, he just wants to see that opportunity, which I can understand because he doesn't know, you know, the next time he'll see them.
And so if an opportunity presents itself, he just wants to go 100% into it, no matter what the cost is. One of the things that we went to is we wanted to spend the night in a fantasy hotel
and we wanted to invite his parents to come along as well.
And just for the logistics of it, the hotel was offering a New Year's Eve party for us
to attend.
That party ended up being $600 for us and his family to attend that Javier put on his credit card.
I find that a little bit excessive of a price, but I understand we were trying to create a nice
nice memory for everybody. Another thing is that when we were down there, there's a particular
whiskey that Javier and his father really like. And I said, oh, in the future, you can get a bottle
of that to celebrate once we're moving down here. And he happened to find a good sale on it compared to other stores.
So that was a $200 purchase that I was thinking would be in the future and it just got purchased
in the moment. So it's just a bunch of small things like that. If he sees the opportunity,
he takes it and it doesn't matter how it affects the finances so much.
What could be through this situation
where you sat down and you actually talked about
how much you had spent?
We were still down visiting his family,
and we brought up both of our credit card transactions
and went line by line to say, okay,
this was your personal expense versus this was a shared expense.
And this is something that we have never been able to do in the past.
This was actually a great improvement for us to be able to sit down and have a level-headed conversation.
And in the end, we were only about $50 off in, you know, what I had spent versus what he had spent for our joint expenses.
We settled that up and I came home.
He stayed down visiting for an extra week or so.
And when he got home, I happened to see
his bank account information
because I was handling a bill for him.
And I see this $9,000 combined bill
and that really freaked me out.
I brought it up to him and he said,
don't worry about it, I have a plan.
I'm gonna get all of this paid off
in the next three to four months.
And I'm freaking out because according to math,
I don't see that there's physically any way for him
to be able to pay this bill in the next three to four months.
And we're planning on moving six months from now.
It really just made me reflect on how do we move forward with our
plans and how do we overcome because this is a pattern that's repeated for the past seven and
half years in terms of not agreeing on how money is spent. Have you share your perspective on that
same trip? One of the things that I told Jessica before
is that I just got a approval for the first time
for a $5,000 credit card with miles.
So I told her I said I wanna, I got her some mileage
so I can travel in the future and I felt proud.
Let me step in right here.
Just in these few lines, I hear lots of red flags.
Now first, I want to acknowledge that on a past episode,
I used the phrase unsophisticated with money.
And I read a lot of your comments.
Some of you really did not like that phrase.
And some of you were okay with the phrase unsophisticated with money.
But when I called someone unsophisticated,
you really didn't like that.
So I decided I wanted to hear more from you.
I asked a lot of you to share your opinions with me
and I read thousands of your comments.
And you know what?
You are right.
I apologize.
I can do a better job focusing on helping people with their money psychology
without using the phrase
unsophisticated with money. I
Think there are lots of better things I can say to help people become more effective with money. So thanks for all your feedback
And doing this podcast. I'm learning as much from my guests as they are from me
Let's talk about Javier learning as much from my guests as they are from me.
Let's talk about Javier.
It's a huge tip off that someone isn't effective with money when they're in debt and they're talking about credit card points.
Guys, these programs are designed to hook you.
You should never spend on something simply to get the points.
That is the tail wagging the dog.
You can hear him talking about being proud of getting a credit card with a $5,000 limit,
almost as if it's a prize.
This is a big tip off of someone who hasn't been educated about money and especially how
credit cards really work.
Listen as Javier continues. freaking out because now I owe you all this money and blah blah blah about the whiskey that I got
for my fire with the blue label Johnny Walker she was with me and she said it was a really elegant
box and she said to me why wait if you could if you if you want to buy right now or you shouldn't wait
until we move here you just buy it and drink it in New Year's with your dad. I said, oh, well, yeah, I was thinking I'm like, well, she's, she's actually, you need
the, I was like, why not?
I'm like, I'm always like that.
I leave the present and I say, yeah, why not?
Yes, I'm not going to say no.
Why not?
This is such an interesting concept.
In many ways, more of us should adopt this life philosophy.
Why not?
Why not try that new dish?
Why not take a risk and go out on that date?
Why not spend on something that's really meaningful?
You can see how we can create a rich tapestry of life by saying yes to more opportunities.
But what happens if you say yes too much? Or if you say yes to the wrong
things? Well, you can end up in debt. And there's another even more subtle problem. If you
say yes and you end up in debt, it's very difficult to mentally turn the page and realize that you have to change the
way you behave.
This happens to a lot of people.
They make decision after decision, then end up with bad consequences.
But for some reason, they can't make the connection between their attitudes and where
they've ended up.
Let's look at it here.
Javier loves his family.
He wants to buy something nice.
Also, notice that Jessica encouraged him to get that bottle.
He takes that as permission.
In the end, he spends a lot, now he's in debt
and he's facing a very tough conversation with Jessica.
So that was the motivation.
Of course, I'm not blaming Jessica about
this at all. No, it was my my my gift for me and for my dad. And I don't regret it. But the situation
with all in the $9,000 in my head, I make about $4,000 a month. And in four months, or in three months,
I can make $12,000 and leave $3,000 for other expenses
and kind of pay that amount of money, not to be sure on anything.
It's also because since the COVID started, I was away for one year.
I usually go four times a year to visit my family.
My sister has a special condition, special needs.
And she's my my only sister.
So I love to consider it very important. And Jessica knows this 100% and she supports me.
So that's clear. But with since the COVID study, I went the first year, the first Christmas
and I spent a lot of money buying gifts. I was inside. I got one. I'm going to see my
family again. This is the time I had some money saved and I spend them on gifts for my family.
Okay, so you had $600 saved up.
Fine.
How did you go from $600 to $10,000 on this trip?
In my credit cards.
She's some, I didn't know the expenses of my credit cards, with the hotels, with the
gifts.
Let me ask you a couple of questions about those, Hopier. all my expenses for my credit cards, with the hotels, with the gifts.
Let me ask you a couple of questions about those hop-year.
When you spend money on your credit cards,
do you count that as spending money?
Yes.
I'm curious because you mentioned your credit cards
as almost a separate category several times.
Why is that?
I think that's a mistake that I have in my head,
which to me is a money that is like a gift,
which is not a gift is alone,
and they're gonna charge me a lot of credit,
and I do know that I have that problem.
You write the moment I don't care about,
how I gonna pay it, so yeah, your question makes me think
that I don't really see that as a money that I'm
going to have to pay even though I know it.
Do you know how I knew that?
How?
Want me to give you a hint?
How much credit card debt do you have right now?
9,000, 10,000.
Yeah.
You have $10,000 in credit card debt and you're over here talking about getting a mileage
card and spending
enough to get to the mile limit on your card. Those two things don't add up.
You should not be using a credit card to accumulate a bunch of miles when you have credit card debt
of almost $10,000. I already did that to make it up to it. So that's part of the $10,000 debt.
You're just proving my point.
Yeah.
That here, let me give you an example.
Here, give me $10,000 and I'll give you $150 back.
Does that sound like a good deal?
No.
No, but that's exactly what you've done with your credit card debt.
In fact, give me $25,000 because that's how much your credit card debt is actually going
to cost you, because you're going to pay it off really slowly, so with interest rates
of probably 15%, it's going to cost you 20 grand, and I'll give you $450 in free flights.
How does that sound?
No.
That's a shit deal.
You and I both know we would never take that deal. So why do you think
you took it with the credit cards? By being ignorant, just thinking that, you know, not thinking.
That's actually a pretty good answer. That's a very good answer, okay? I appreciate that. Being ignorant,
very honest. Now, I'm not going to it to get anybody for not knowing the intricacies
of how credit works, but I appreciate your honesty. That's great. If you're honest, at least
we can work with that. You said you have a plan and you got upset because you had talked
about the plan. So what is the plan? I need to understand this plan a little bit. So walk
me through it. Work a lot, make the at least $4,000 a month and in
three months have 12,000 out of the 12,000 I would pay now 9,000 to a credit card and 3000 would be
for $1,000 per month for the expenses here in the house and utilities. That's the plan.
How rigorous of a plan does that sound like? It's got to have to work a lot. In the past, how much do you usually earn per month?
About 3, 4000. Okay, so you're picking a number that is reasonable. It's in the realm of
possibility. Yeah. And then what about the expenses that you contribute towards joint expenses, housing, or food, or things
like that?
How much do you normally contribute?
1,000.
OK.
So your plan is basically do what you've been doing
and take the money you make and pay off the debt.
Correct.
OK.
Fine.
I'm with you so far.
What have you been doing in the past with the $4,000 a month that you earn?
I go to Colombia like five times a year.
I travel that.
I travel saves money.
How much do you have in savings?
Right now we don't have anything.
So is this not where your plan kind of falls apart?
Yeah, I mean, yeah, I don't have any savings.
I had some savings and a year and a half ago,
I spent it, spent them in Colombia.
So do you see how this is what I call magical thinking?
You have this plan, which is, I'm gonna work really hard.
Okay, I'm with you, you've done that in the past.
You're gonna make $4,000 a month. I'm with you. You've done that in the past.
You're going to make $4,000 a month.
I'm with you.
You've done that in the past.
You're going to contribute $1,000 towards expenses.
You've done that in the past.
And you're going to take the money you make and save it or pay off your debt.
But you've never done that in the past.
So it's magical thinking.
It's like this plan is totally different than anything
you've ever done. I mean in three months, yeah, I mean, I have to like sacrifice a lot of things,
not traveling, not going anywhere, try to minimize costs as much as possible to try to come up with
this. But yeah, in the past, I have not done any strategic plan like that to cut off everything.
Every little thing that I have to spend.
If I told you that my plan was to become an NFL football player, I mean, look at me.
How likely does that seem?
Do you have to train the land.
Yeah, and I've never played football since I was in seventh grade.
How likely do you think that is?
It ain't gonna happen.
So then now translate that to your plan.
How likely is it?
There's a chance that I could make $1,000 more to make it better, but it's probably gonna
take more than three months, probably
like five months.
Okay, I'm with you.
I think you could do it, but I think it'll take longer than you think.
And by the way, what's the interest rate on your credit card?
I have to check.
I don't know.
For everyone listening, you can't see this big smile on Havier's face.
What's that smile about?
I don't know.
I don't check those things.
You don't check it.
Okay, so that number is not going to stay at $9,000.
It's going up fast.
Let me give you a quick example of how credit cards work.
Let's say you buy an iPhone for $1,000 on your credit card
and you only make the minimum payments.
Guess how long it'll take you to pay that
off? The answer is nine years and two months. And during that time, your thousand dollar
iPhone will actually cost you more than $700 in interest. You basically paid twice the
price for that phone. This is from page 33 of my
book, I will teach you to be rich, where you can learn how credit cards really work, including
how to pay off debt, how to automate your bills, and some of the secret perks that your
credit card offers you. With Javier, if he doesn't understand this, there's no way his plan will actually succeed. He's already lost the
game and he doesn't even know. Do you see why Jessica might be uncomfortable with the plan that you
suggested? Yes, totally. Tell her. I understand Jessica why the point of view that you know I don't I don't look at something so simple yet so important like the interest. I don't I get in it because my plan for the $9,000
is no $9,000.
It's going to be a lot more money.
So it's going to be probably three times that time.
If it's, or if it's doubled, if it's $18,000,
it's going to take me now, not three months or four, eight months.
Yeah, right?
And the sun.
Okay.
Thank you.
I never, I never really analyzed this aspect.
As I said, something so simple as the interest rate.
Yeah.
Okay.
I appreciate that.
Jessica, what do you think about what Javier just said?
I think he's starting to realize a little bit of what's going on in my head
and what's making me panic. I also think still his plan is not very practical and that
he is not taking into account that his $4,000 a month is pre-tax. He is self-employed.
So he's not accounting for his 2021 taxes that he still owes, his
2022 taxes that he's currently incurring, and several other personal debts that he has
to pay off.
So he does not have $3,000 a month to put towards this credit card.
Yeah, that's probably true.
So we could probably take that number down by half just to be safe, Javier.
So instead of making $3,000 a month worth of payments,
you could probably practically make $1,500 a month worth of payments.
Meanwhile, you're not just paying off $9,000.
You're paying off $9,000 that's compounding very quickly.
So you're paying less towards more.
Do you see how, it's like giving money to one of those bad guys.
And every week you owe more and more and more and more.
And if you don't, they're going to break your kneecap.
In this case, it's the credit card company.
Well, I'm shocked.
I mean, I didn't even think about the tax part.
When I got the credit card, especially last one,
it's metal, it's heavy, it's like metal.
Oh my God.
It's like, I'm like a little kid, you know,
so I was like, it's my credit card.
I'm gonna spend it the way I want it.
I know, I can hear you, the way you talk about it, you know.
The credit card gives you that limit.
Do you know why they give you that limit?
What?
Look at the situation you're in now.
You're probably gonna end up paying them over $25,000.
They gave you the rope so that you can hang yourself.
And you know what you said?
Thanks for the rope.
Can I have a little bit more?
That's how it works.
Now I hate that most of us don't understand
how credit works.
And I appreciate you saying, hey, ignorance, okay?
We're gonna quickly learn about how this works.
Okay, I'm not here to judge you.
I want you to understand what's going on
and then decide if you wanna make some changes changes because you can get out of this situation.
It's absolutely possible.
100% suggests you don't need to be playing the mileage game.
This mileage game is going to cost you tens of thousands of dollars to get a few airline
tickets.
It's not worth it.
This whole idea of we need to spend to hit our minimum,
stop that. If you cannot afford to pay it off that month and don't buy it, it's really as
simple as that. I hate that credit cards take advantage of people who don't know any better.
I hate that they engineer their marketing to take advantage of people who are ignorant about it.
But I also think you gotta take responsibility.
Deep down, you knew, you're gonna have to pay this off.
You knew it.
And you mentally put it in a different bucket
and you use all these clever techniques.
Have you noticed?
I wanted Jessica to have a great time.
Okay, Jessica would have had probably just as nice
of a time at a hotel that was half the price.
If you said to her, you know what, I have a plan.
We're going to have an amazing time this time.
And next time when we come back with even more money, we're going to stay at an even nicer
place.
Jessica, I love you.
How do you think she would have felt if you'd said that?
That's safer, a little better.
So it's the credit cards taking advantage of you, the ignorant, but it's also you who want the benefit
that the credit card is offering you,
which seems like free money in the short term,
but it is truly too good to be true.
I think I'm a little bit shocked
because I have been working with him
for the past seven and a half years
to get his finances and control
and to try to teach him some financial responsibility. He has made significant improvements to the point that I thought with him getting this
travel card right before this trip that he would be responsible with it. We don't discuss
interest rates because I pay off my entire bill every single month so I never have to worry about
interest. We had that discussion ahead of time. That's why before the trip
we talked about okay, we want to meet the spending limit and in my mind that's all you're spending and then it would have been a reasonable
to split that amount and have and pay it off. I
never even imagined that his his concept of it is just to spend to the max of the card. So I'm learning a lot and
I'm a little sad that what we've talked about in the past
hasn't sunk in more, but it's also very eye-opening to hear his perspective and to see where he is at.
I think we're actually very involved with the financial and appendence community here in
Cincinnati. We go to a lot of meetings, a lot of conferences, we have a lot of friends through this, and he attends them with me.
And so I feel like he's on that same path
and wanting to be in a really strong financial position
to have more flexibility with our future.
And then just behaviors like this
or experiences like this and to realize that,
he might say that he agrees with me or he might, you know, agree to a spinning plan that we have and then do the complete
opposite. You know, it's surprising, but it is what it is. It helps explain it a lot more
so that I understand why he has been spending the way he has.
We're going to flip that dynamic and I want you to start being skeptical of what you hear.
So when you get a credit card off from the mail before, how did you use to act?
Yeah, exactly. Yeah, I'm going to get this. This is so cool. And now, now I want you to be skeptical.
Why would I get this credit card?
Why do I need this?
What's the gimmick?
How are they going to get me?
Rip this thing up.
I don't need a new credit card.
I believe that I, because I had so much like my grade was really bad.
I had, but I applied for bankruptcy like five years ago,
and I've been so good to try to get my score,
my grade score higher and higher.
And when I got the first grade car, the silver one,
I started looking at it and trying to pay it everything time.
And it went up so good that it tricked me when I saw the blue car because I was like,
I'm being awarded for being so good.
And that's where I tricked my head
because I took it like an award.
And it was a big mistake.
Nobody in the financial industry
wants to give you an award.
They want to take your money and bleed you dry.
Your money habits need to radically change.
This is a good requires of real work.
So I want you to start getting skeptical. They're not your friend.
I have to make a change right now. Otherwise, I can lose Jessica.
I feel that, you know, I'm slowing her down on her finance and I don't want to do it
to anyone as much as I love you, Jessica. I need to make a change and I'm sorry about my ignorance.
It's bad and I understand and I need to make a change because it makes me feel like when
there's a good soccer team and all the players are good and you have the guy that sucks the
defense and you can get scores like that.
So I feel like that guy right now and I need to train to become better
Because he's either is affecting me a lot right now. Listen, I appreciate you
being so honest honest with me honest with yourself. I love that you acknowledge. I don't want to be the
person in this relationship
Holding us back. I also appreciate that you use that the
relationship holding us back. I also appreciate that you use that the soccer metaphor
and said, hey, right now I may not be the best,
but I need to train harder so that I can be
as good as everybody else on the field.
I think that there are definitely ways
to transform this situation into something positive.
I have seen it many times.
Havier's approach is very emotional.
He talks about love and excitement and happiness and guilt.
There's nothing wrong with emotions, but you can't build a rich life purely based on
what you feel.
You have to pair that with knowledge, with some real analysis to see if what you want
is possible.
Sometimes people are too focused on spreadsheets, but I don't
think Havier has looked at a spreadsheet in a long time. Let me see if I can find out
why he treats his money this way. What do you remember about money when you were young?
I didn't have to worry about it, but I think my dad was a president of a company. I studied private school. I had school bus full kitchen.
I lived like, no, not as a rich kid,
but my school was like very expensive.
And my family's middle class, we had a house made.
He was not until I moved to the USA when I was 18
that I had to prepare my own breakfast,
do my laundry, stuff like that.
So I work when I set it here.
So I didn't have any financial education at all.
Even like that never sat down with me and said, hey, you know, what are you going to do
in the future?
Javier moved to his aunt and uncle's house in Florida before moving out and becoming a
valet.
Sounds like it was a pretty nice house.
Huge, huge.
Huge.
Jessica's that pretty nice house?
She's nodding her head and showing me the money sign.
Yeah, they're millionaires.
Okay, so you go from this millionaire house to being a valet parker.
How much were you making when you were doing valet have you?
$6 an hour.
Okay, great. And so what was that change like?
It was hard. The thing is that my dad lost his job because of the situation with the fork,
with the guerrillas. This is in the early 2000s. So he left everything and came back at that moment
and asked for asylum, political asylum. So we moved and it was very impacting for me. We rented a room and
my dad came from being a president of this company in our house to live with me in this trailer home.
We both worked at the Valeparcan, me seeing my dad running parking cars when he used to go to the club and get his car.
You know, it was very, very, but it gave me also a lot of effort, a lot of love to work to see
my dad doing that because he's warrior and we both made it. Then we finally, after six months,
we rented an apartment, but that change was really hard. It was really, really hard.
And all the money I made in that moment was to get an apartment.
I remember saving it, saving it.
The first time I made $300 in cash, I went to like a best buy
and buy a TV with a VHS incorporated.
And when my dad came home, I was proud. I bought a TV because I wanted us to have a TV in this small room
between a single bed and each bed. And all the money I did was for them.
So it's probably I never, never made money for thinking about me.
Did the two of you live in the same room? Yes. Yeah for a year
Almost yeah, I appreciate you sharing your story that cannot have been easy for your dad to have been
President of a company going to a club
Valleying his car now. He's the valet and the two of you grown men
Living in a room.
I don't think a lot of Americans who were born here
can fathom that.
It's not the same way that most people in America grew up.
Whether you're at the upper end or the lower end
of the socioeconomic spectrum.
In America, it's expected that at a certain point you're going to have your
own place, and even if you're living with your parents, you're not living in their bedroom.
That is almost unheard of, right? And out of necessity, it's a huge difference. So,
that leaves scars. What happened after a year? Then we've got this apartment
And then we got this apartment close, just for us.
And then we were expecting my mother and my sister because the asylum, they were in Colombia, so they flew.
I was not gonna, we were not gonna have them
move to a room, so we had an apartment.
This is in South Florida, in Lentana.
So then we got the apartment, they came in, we kept
working, working, they couldn't work
because my sister when she was a
baby, she's 42 when she was a baby,
the house made, house made,
led the stroller fall and she had a
concussion on her head because of
paralysis, so she has, she cannot
run or walk. It's like Down syndrome
but she doesn't, she was born, okay,
which is another something, well,
but my mom and her, they move here,
or Floria, and then the government didn't give the paperwork
to my sister.
They start denying her because they say,
anybody older than 18,
they have to fill out their own paperwork, and sign, and where is her, and we're because they say, anybody older than 18, they have to fill out their own paperwork and sign,
and worry, and we're like, okay,
so we send the doctor's letters explaining
that she depends 100% of my parents
and the government sent back a article number
about glasses and the same thing.
So we hire a lawyer and the lawyer said,
look, the government is not gonna issue the paperwork for her because her condition. She's already 30. So we appealed and they
denied again. So my mom went back to Colombia with my sister because she they were here in
the apartment doing nothing. And my sister, my mom, she renounced to her paperwork because
her citizenship. Her citizenship because she wasn't going to leave my sister
alone. So when we send her to Colombia, my mom and my sister,
you broke my heart. And you have no idea how much I love my sister.
Is your dad still in the US?
No, he's in Colombia here at the time.
He worked here for 14 years.
He said, I don't want to be here alone.
So I'm going back with my daughter.
And that's one of the reasons that we want to move to Bogotá.
Jessica loves Bogotá.
She's in love with that city.
But I also want to be closer to my sister,
because she cannot talk every time that I go and I come back.
I cried for days,
and it really hurts me.
So we've been talking about this for years.
We were gonna do it right before COVID.
And I think that's one of the main things
over the reasons that I wanna be done there with her.
What a journey for Javier, going from wealthy in Colombia to wealthy in Florida to suddenly
becoming a valet and then living in the same room with his dad who also became a valet,
that journey is incomprehensible to most of us, including me.
Here's what I notice, Javier loves his family. When he talks
about spending, it's not really on extravagant things for himself. It's for his family,
it's for his sister. He shows love by spending. I also noticed that his spending isn't financially
responsible. It's unsustainable. And if he keeps spending on his family to show his
love, he'll probably lose Jessica. I suspect Javier has never really faced any consequences for his
spending in the past. Sure, he's run out of money, but he could just borrow more if he really needs it.
But he could just borrow more if he really needs it. If he loses Jessica, that'll be the first time his spending has ever actually cost
him something that he truly cares about.
And thankfully, he's starting to realize that this isn't just theoretical.
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He's got a good heart. It's just not logical for his current financial situation to spend like that.
I think I need to take a step back and I need to see him take a step forward and really
put in the effort on his part to make the changes that need to happen.
Yeah, I'm going to try to do my best.
Oh, no, try.
I'm going to my best to, again,
the only thing that I can think about right now
is minimise expenses, put the credit cards away
and try to talk about every time I get my check
how I'm going to spend it.
And if I cannot come up with a solution in the next five
or six months and everything is going the same.
I don't know what else to say, then work my butt off and bring him as much as money as he can.
You already do. Yeah, but I already then were done. They were done.
All this talk about making a plan got me curious. I know Jessica gave him a copy of my book.
Did he read it?
Uh, a little bit.
That's a no. I asked him why.
Because sometimes I, I mean, I go to work and I don't have that much free time. It's next year's I could come home and sit down, but I'm not into it's
hard for me to try to read finance books. She gave me different ones. I tried and hold
on hold on. I'm not. Did you give him? Did you give him rich debt for that? Did you
give him these shitty books? What do you give him? I did not. He actually showed that book
to me. And I said, this, this is not the book that you
need to be using as a model.
Because if you start someone on Rich Dad Board, Ed, it's no surprise. After they lose all
their money, they're going to go, oh, these personal finance books are terrible.
Yes, some of them are. So start with a good one. You know, have your... First of all, it
doesn't matter to me if you read my book or somebody else's book. And I understand some people don't like to read fine. I'm not going to force you to read a book.
But did you know there's audiobooks? Did you know there's podcasts? There's a solution,
and she's not going to deliver it to you.
Usually I don't get into the financial weeds on this podcast. We don't calculate interest rates because
to the financial weeds on this podcast. We don't calculate interest rates because,
well, I can't think of a more boring audio experience
than listening to me sitting here typing on a calculator.
But Javier doesn't understand his numbers,
not even the basics, and I wanna help him.
We all have someone in our lives who asks for help.
And then when you try to help them, they ignore your advice.
And three months later, they're back asking you
for more help.
It can be exhausting.
I don't know the answer to that situation,
but I have learned a few things
in the last 20 years of my business.
I've learned that if someone asks you for help
and you wanna help them,
you might have to show them in a way
that feels
frustrating to you.
After all, why don't they just trust you?
Why don't they just do what you say?
Well the answer is that when someone is starting out, they have all kinds of fears and objections
and barriers that hold them back.
You've already gone through them.
You know what it's like on the other side of that, but they don't
So I want to help obvious and as a result, I'm gonna work through some of these calculations with him
But there's just one twist. I'm gonna make him do the calculations so that he has skin in the game
If I make four thousand dollars a month
We're three in three months that's $12,000. Right?
Out of that, $3,000 have to go to expenses, so that leaves me with $9,000.
Out of the $9,000, I have to get half for taxes. So they'll leave me with only $5,000 and four months.
So, in order to make $10,000 free to make that those credit cards go away,
it's going to take me seven months.
How much is the interest going to be?
I have to check how much is the interest and the great country. Okay.
That's the interest rate.
2399.
And what do you think about that number?
Hi, it's really high.
So you know those tickets that you got?
You got.
We're about to find out exactly how much it is.
Okay.
For every $5,000, I have to pay $1,200 in interest.
Okay.
How'd you get that?
9,000 times 24%.
No. It doesn't work like that.
Let me explain how it works.
It's worse than you think.
So you remember when you've gone to these financial independence meetups and you hear about
compound interest, you know, you invest $100 today and it grows like that.
You remember all those charts and stuff you've seen?
Have you ever seen something like that?
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
It's the same thing with your debt. So, if you have a hundred dollars worth of debt every month,
you're accumulating interest, more money on that debt,
and it compounds every month and every year.
So, it compounds meaning that debt is growing.
Not only do you have to pay off the amount, you owe,
you have to pay off the interest as well, and that interest is growing.
You're running a race against your own debt.
Okay?
So at 24%, that is a really high interest rate.
You have to pay a huge amount of money in order to make a debt in that debt, otherwise
it will continue going up.
Okay? debt in that debt, otherwise it will continue going up. Okay.
So it's not simply $9,000 times 24.
There's a different calculation.
It's too complicated really to do on your own.
All right, what do you see?
You estimated monthly payments,
month to pay off, 19 months total principal paid,
9,000 total interest paid
1860 cents 62. What does that mean to you?
That's got to take me forever to pay 19 months 19 more than a year and a half and I'm going to pay $2,000 on top. So I would need to pay way more than
that month. Okay, go ahead. Okay, if I make a payment, I can pay the payment of $1500 a month,
I can pay that pay it off in seven months and I would only be paying $778
of interest. Okay, so the goal is going to be if I do a $2,000 payment a month.
Is that reasonable? That's 50% of your paycheck.
You're not considering living expenses or either yours taxes that you need to be setting aside.
I know what you're trying to say.
And I would have to get a second job, I guess.
Hold on, you're doing great, Javier.
Let's take a step by step.
Is it realistic that you work 16 hours a day
and then you get a second job?
No, of course not.
Your inability to be realistic
is what has gotten you into this situation.
The real underlying issue is the magical thinking. We'll do this, we'll do that, and it will work itself out somehow.
But now here you are for maybe the first time facing real consequence. That magical thinking stops working.
So what do you want to do?
I mean, the only thing I can offer really is to be proactive and try to analyze and plan ahead about how am I going to pay these I know that I said this before. I don't know what else to say. I'm being honest.
I'm Jessica, if you want to break out with me right now and leave your life, and then we'll talk
about it because I really, I don't have the capacity to say anything else. I'm sorry. How do you do?
I don't know. I don't know what else to say. So what's the common pattern? When do things go bad?
So what's the common pattern? When do things go bad?
You they went bad when they spend those savings. Okay, so when you go when it's with your family,
you spend way more than you can afford. That'd be fair to say. Yeah.
Is that not the crux of this whole thing? So what do we want to do about it?
Don't spend more than I can afford. Okay, that's easy to say.
Is that realistic?
If you went home tomorrow, what would you do?
Tell the truth.
Probably what I do when I get there
is we plan to go out,
going out of the city for a couple of days with my parents,
and we share expenses, tell my dad,
can you cover the trip for the family? I with my parents and we share expenses. Tell my dad, can you
cover the trip for the family? I'm going to come. But, you know, if I was by myself without
knowing anything tomorrow, I would probably take them to dinner to lunch. Yes, I know. I don't
think you know. I know you would take all your money and spend it. I think you're just saying
words, but you're not actually hearing yourself.
You're six months away from not being in a relationship
because your partner is making some very honest,
fair demands and expectations.
And you're just kinda going with the flow.
Yeah, I would go home and I would probably take my family
out to dinner.
What is the crux of the issue here?
How do you see money when it comes to your family?
If I have it and I want to have the detail or the vegetation with them, then I want to
do it.
If I have money, the way I show love is by spending it on them. Try that one on. Yeah, 100%.
If I see my family and I don't lavish them with gifts and trips, then it means finish the sentence for me.
It means that I don't love them.
Yeah.
Do you really believe that?
Deep down.
No.
But your behavior says it.
When was the last time you went to see your family and you just stayed at home with them
and you were just there?
No trips, no expensive orthopedic gifts, just
you spending time with them.
Five months ago, October.
Did you spend any money?
My father had a surgery so I just went to take him to a hospital and I didn't really
go anywhere. No?
It wasn't good.
It was great.
Did they love you?
They didn't go anywhere.
Yeah, of course. I mean, they don't love me.
If I don't have one penny, I know that.
How about Jessica?
Would she love you if you kept on going the way you've been going?
They think so.
I think she would love you.
Would you two be together?
I hope so.
I know this is becoming to an end.
If I continue doing this, I know I know I'm very
worried. Okay. Before six months. So if you went home and you didn't
lavish your family with gifts and trips, would they still love you? Yes. Okay. What is
all this spending on them really about?
When I go out, I look for the nice hotel
that has the best pool possible for my sister.
So, only for her, not for me.
I don't care if I say much shitty hotel,
I don't care, but I find the best for my sister
because I want to have her.
I want her to have a good time.
My parents are not together as a couple.
So they don't really share time.
Turn.
It's okay.
Take your time.
I want to hear what's going on in your head.
I'm taking more, more responsibility than I should because my father exists.
And my sister is not my daughter.
I just feel I'm sorry that I owe her so much because I've been away from her.
We get separated and I owe her so much time that I try to buy things for her.
And I see that is a mistake because I'm ruining Jessica's relationship to what's fair in
life.
May it go with your family and sacrifice your love or just don't mind.
I'm with you on every step of what you just said except for that last sentence.
I'm with you. You are spending money because of
the guilt of not being able to be there with your sister. You love her, you want the best
for her. I can tell. You don't need to live in the fanciest place. You lived in an apartment
with your dad. I know you don't need it. But there's one thing you said at that last moment that reveals everything.
You said, so what is it?
Spend money on my family and ruin what I have with Jessica or what's the alternative?
Or be limited, little none.
You basically said or just give up. Right now, you're spending all of your money,
and even money you don't have for your family.
Striving a wedge in your own relationship here.
What is the alternative?
Not to spend money on my family.
Really not to spend any money at all?
No, no, no, just like maybe 30% of what I usually plan to do
and have my dad pay for most of the trade
because at the end is his responsibility,
which he does.
He's always, you know, we don't have any issues,
but he probably should lead those expenses.
Could you make that happen? Yeah.
Well, I can tell you have a very supportive family.
And I can tell there's a lot of love between you and your family and vice versa.
That's fantastic.
It just seems like some of the patterns that you have fallen into are not serving you.
You know, you go, you buy all these expensive things.
Some of them really, you can't
afford them. You just plain cannot afford them. Some of them, they come from the heart, but
you know, there's lots of ways to show your love. If you are not in a good financial position,
your family wants the best for you. They don't want you to take every penny you've got and go into
debt so they can go stay at a nice hotel.
Save your money, invest it, and one day soon you'll have more money than you know what to
do with.
Then you can take them and treat them to the nice hotel.
But until then, just be there.
Put yourself in Javier's shoes.
He deeply loves his family. He lives in a different country.
On the rare occasions where he sees them,
he wants to show him how much he loves them.
And by coincidence, he just got a credit card
that gives him free miles and a $5,000 credit limit.
Interest payments? Sure, he'll think about all that stuff later.
For now, it's time to spend time and show his love interest, payments, sure, he'll think about all that stuff later.
For now, it's time to spend time and show his love for his family.
You don't have to agree with Javier to understand why he acts this way with his money.
This is one of the most common sticking points for people who spend more than they make. They often use money to represent something else in their lives, like love.
Love!
Love's a great thing.
Who can argue with love?
Nobody.
So when they conflate money with love, you can see how hard it is to unwind that connection.
The truth is, Javier can still love his family
without spending thousands of dollars on them.
Okay, now, let's talk about Jessica.
Do you believe that if you don't pay off this debt
in six months exactly, that Jessica will break up with you.
No. Okay. What do you believe? I believe that if I show her my intentions,
organizations and even that if it's going to take me one month or two, she'll be
you click on and say, okay, don't worry, we'll do it in seven months or eight or whatever.
Okay, I have to show her and show her we in the first two months that actually I'm doing the plan.
Okay, Jessica, is that true? That is absolutely true. I just want to see that he's taking the steps and he's making progress. It does not have to be six months on the dot.
I wish everyone could see me because I'm cheering right now.
I'm cheering. I love it. I knew.
Yes, the six months is kind of important.
Jessica has her metrics. She has her own vision.
But I also can tell with the two of you,
there's a lot of love. And it's not that there's a hard line at six months. In fact,
Jessica has said repeatedly today, hey, our income disparity is not an issue. It's that I want
him to make a plan, take responsibility to step up.
That's awesome.
That's the light we've been looking for.
So if you need a couple of extra months because of math, fine.
I don't think Jessica, I had a hunch, Jessica would not penalize you.
And I'm glad to see that smile on Jessica's face that, you know, yeah, she can be flexible.
But have a year, this is where we really need to get into it. What does Jessica really want from you?
Change. She wants me to take a leadership on the payments. She wants me to like
broadly, and just give her a whole explanation of how much interest I'm paying, that we should know that I'm there paying attention
and executing the plan, you know, ruled by rule with precision. Yes! Well, this is great.
I make me very happy and very hopeful that we'll be able to follow our dreams sooner rather than later.
That's beautiful, that's what I want to hear. I'd never say it's money, so realizing this
isn't I opening for me, it's also it touched my heart because I know that I don't have any
necessity to show off in front of my family with money or trips like that and my
Father can help me and I will do that. It's a big thing that is going to help me with 50% of my or more
of the expenses that I have when I go down there. I think that I'm acting like my sister's father
taking that responsibility that I don't have because they don't have any necessities of transport,
of their good, that has a card, they're good. So they don't need, even if I was to die tomorrow,
they're financially fine, they don't need anything for me, so I don't think, I think that's what impacted me most,
that I act like they're that, they're father.
And I'm so happy to hear you say that.
Everything.
To be able to trace back your behavior to the past.
And you had some things happen to you.
And to be able to really connect that is really hard.
But it's so obvious, it's screaming to be as you talk. You came
from a situation which was very wealthy and then not wealthy, you know, living in a million
dollar house and then being a valet. That's a radical shift and to never have been taught
how money works. And I can hear it. I'll never blame anybody for being ignorant about something.
Never, because we all know more about something
and less about another thing.
What I'm really happy to hear is you want to take responsibility.
I don't know what'll happen with Jessica and Javier.
I was personally surprised by a lot in this conversation.
I was surprised when Jessica realized the extent of Javier's understanding and she almost
looked sick.
She'd mentioned that they've talked about this a lot.
They even regularly attend financial independence events, but only in this conversation did she
realize how much Javier actually understands about money?
And although that can be painful to hear, I also think it gives them an honest opportunity to recalibrate and to get on the same page. As I always say, a rich life involves being honest
with yourself and honest with the people around you. One big lesson for everyone listening.
One big lesson for everyone listening. When you're creating your rich life, emotions matter, but you can't only rely on them.
To become confident with your money, you have to become competent.
For Javier, I suspected there was something deeper to his overspending than just being
irresponsible.
And when he told me about his family history,
it was eye-opening. Suddenly, a lot of what he was doing with money started to make sense.
At the end of our call, I stayed on the line and I worked with them to develop a plan.
I gave them some homework to create a simple financial plan for Javier's debt,
and I also asked Jessica to write down her
expectations for what she expects from Javier. I'm hopeful for them, and I thank them for coming on
the podcast. 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.