I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 38. “He owes his ex $70k/year and it’s straining our finances and our relationship”
Episode Date: April 12, 2022Rebecca and John are both attorneys and make good money. While John makes more, he’s legally obligated to pay around $70k annually in alimony and insurance tied to a past divorce settlement. On to...p of that, his income can vary widely, making the future difficult to plan for—and he has debt. He’s 61 but sees no way he can retire any time soon. They’re dealing with not only the very real financial problems they face but also the resentment caused by them. That resentment colors every interaction they have with money. When I start digging into where the rest of their income goes, they start to get a little dodgy. We’re going to shine a light on some of their spending habits and find a path that lets them live a Rich Life without the stress. 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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The careers themselves are stressful, like the nature of the work we do.
We're both litigators, it's inherently adversarial.
He's managing the firm as well as managing a case load, and he comes home and he's stressed.
And I feel like where's the financial reward in exchange for this level of stress that he's under.
And that pattern just repeats itself every day.
I would really like to be able to sleep a bit or better at night.
And you don't sleep well at night now because of what financial stress?
I feel really, really resentful of the situation.
He chose to marry me, even though it meant a complete financial destruction for him,
really.
I am resentful, and one part of it is that I
can be relieved of my obligations,
if my ex-wife remarries or enters into some sort
of cohabitation relationship.
The likelihood of that happening is very low
because of the money that I pay her every month.
In other words, she doesn't want to do it
because the cash would stop.
That's right.
Wow.
Meet John and Rebecca, both attorneys.
John is 61 and Rebecca is 44.
This is their second marriage.
To recap what you just heard,
John is paying about $70,000 a year in support
between his ex-wife support payments
and the life insurance that he's legally obligated
to maintain for her.
He's also paying an additional $600 a month
so that Rebecca is covered by life
insurance. Though they both earn good salaries, around $200,000 a year, he has a highly
variable income that makes it hard to save, especially when he owes about $70,000 a year
to his ex. Speaking of that, can you imagine having to pay $70,000 a year to an ex forever?
Imagine how it would make you feel about money. Think about commuting to work every day.
Think about every paycheck you made. Think about how you would even feel if you got a
raise. John and Rebecca have been living with this for years.
So what prompted them to reach out to me now? Let's listen.
I am divorced. Rebecca is my second wife. I pay my first wife $54,000 a year in maintenance, and that is a permanent obligation, meaning
I stop paying it when I'm no longer earning an income.
If I retire, then I no longer have to pay it.
But in addition to that, I have to secure it in the event that I die.
That's about $1,300 a month in life insurance. I have no child support
obligation because my children are all grown because of the length of my marriage, however,
but the court recognized that for my ex-wife to have been out of the workforce for as long
as she had, we had children that we were raising.
You know, the law presumes that if you're married
as certainly at the time, your obligation can be 10 years,
15 years, or forever.
And I fell into the forever bucket.
I have a lot of questions about this
because I've never heard of this.
And I know you're both lawyers,
so I'm sure this is all buttoned up.
I'm sure that you have ruminated
and commiserated over this for a long time.
So we don't need to do that.
But just so I understand the emotional tenor here, are you at peace with this?
Are you resentful?
How do you feel about this?
That's a great question.
I am resentful.
And one part of it is that I can be relieved of my obligations really in,
in a few scenarios. The first one is if I can be relieved of my obligations really in a few scenarios.
The first one is if I retire, and I cease earning any money.
And the second is if my ex-wife remarries
or enters into some sort of cohabitation relationship,
and the likelihood of that happening
is very low because of the money that I pay her every month. relationship and the likelihood of that happening is
very low because of the money that I pay her every month in other words
She doesn't want to do it because the cash would stop. That's right
We had spent some money on new windows for the condo and
some
new living room furniture which
seemed to me to be nothing crazy in Outreaders,
but I think I was in a particularly weak and fearful moment,
thinking about retirement and feeling like the year end
at the law firm this past year didn't go so well,
and I was feeling a little panicked
and looking for some additional
resources to help us. John and I work for the same law firm. I'm one type of partner. He's an
equity partner. It isn't until December 30th that he really knows what he's making for the year.
And we got those numbers and he made about $85,000 less than last year.
And that was kind of devastating because we had been spending as if he was going to earn at least
when he was earning the year before. And that put us in a bit of a bind.
I saw and I thought that there was some mistake. I thought that there was something that I didn't
understand. About a hundred thousand is what I expected
And the actual number turned out to be
32
That's in addition to your salary. Yes, I was quite honestly shocked because we had had a good year as a law firm
I at least on the revenue side
So I in my mind I had it all planned out how it was gonna go
and then we keep everything separate
but we split major household expenses,
vacations and entertainment.
And so I had sort of advanced my half of that
and he was going to reimburse me for his half
and those things once he got the year end distribution,
only there was no year-end distribution
to speak of. And it was small enough that he didn't even get to make a retirement contribution
for the year. What did you do about the cash flow issues? The fact that Rebecca had already put
in her part towards your joint expenses, but you couldn't come up with the money. As has happened in the past when there have been cash flow issues,
Rebecca has sort of advanced it and then I have caught up and paid her back.
You hear something in their discussion that you don't hear with a lot of other couples.
This matter of fact, almost transactional financial relationship. He says, she loans me the money and I pay it back.
This is actually typical of second marriages,
where people come into the marriage
with past obligations.
They're actually often much more open
about how they wanna set things up.
Often they'll keep money separate.
I don't mind it.
I don't mind how you set your money up at all
as long as you discuss
it and consciously choose a path together. Now, what's more important is that he has
a highly variable income. But together, they don't seem to have really discussed how
to plan for that. I'm thinking that might be the problem, but I'm curious what they
think the problem is. What is the problem you're trying to solve today?
I mean, generally, I think the problem is that his ex-wife is a greedy, you know what? But I think
he's also underpaid, but those two problems aren't going to be solved today. The problems are, how do we move forward and eliminate
the resentment that this causes?
Because I have my own resentment about it.
We're the ones working hard.
We're just sitting home collecting a check.
We're the ones who are taking all the risk.
We're the ones who are making the sacrifices.
I want it to be less of a source of stress in our marriage.
I'm thinking that maybe having some ground rules will make it less of a stressful topic.
It's not manageable to do this forever.
There needs to be a retirement, at least from the fact as a law.
And we need a plan for that.
When does it get stressful besides December 30th?
Well, the careers themselves are stressful. Like the nature of the work we do. We're both litigators,
it's inherently adversarial. He's managing the firm as well as managing a case load and he comes home and he's stressed. And I feel like where's the financial reward,
you know, in exchange for this level of stress
that he's under.
And that pattern just repeats itself every day.
Okay, and what do you get out of curiosity?
Well, some years I do well financially.
But some years I do well financially. Means well.
We have $300,000 or so total comp.
I usually enjoy what it is I'm doing.
I like being one of the people steering the ship rather than one of the passengers of
the ship.
When I like a less stressful existence for sure.
That's surprising.
Don't you think?
Yeah, well, huh, really?
I mean, you say you would like a less stressful existence,
but you are de facto in not only one of the most stressful
roles, but in one of the most stressful industries in that role.
Would you ever consider taking a step backwards or taking a lateral step that may not
involve the same sort of stress? Nothing is off the table. Wow, that's good to hear.
All right. And Rebecca, what do you get?
All right, and Rebecca, what do you get?
I would say stability and security. I mean, even the low years are enough to pay the bills,
but is it the lifestyle that I want?
Sometimes, you know, and I help fund that, right?
You know, I typically get to, you know,
I believe in the importance of saving and all that, but I also believe
in having a rich life and enjoying life now.
And for the most part, I get to do that.
And I think that's largely a function of the careers we've invested in and the income
that we generally get, even when it's a low year, it just doesn't seem to be fruitful in terms of retirement in the future.
But on the day to day, if I'm not thinking about the future, I'm thinking, okay, this is pretty good.
This is a question that a lot of you need to ask yourself. The question is this, what do I get?
ask yourself. The question is this, what do I get? If I'm working this hard and saving money and investing, what do I get? I think almost nobody asks
themselves this question because the answer is too scary and sometimes depressing.
For example, if your honest answer is that after working hard and trying and staying late
and cutting back on lattes, what you get is to go shopping at Target for some worthless
knick-knacks, well, that's a pretty haunting answer.
It's easier to ignore it.
You know who really needs to ask this question most of all?
Entrepreneurs!
I know a ton of entrepreneurs, they work extremely hard
and a lot of them live for some future day
where they'll finally be able to live their rich life.
And if we talk about this stuff, I'll ask them,
hey, you work really hard, you take on a lot of stress
and responsibility, management.
What do you get?
Is it the ability to pick up your
daughter from school every day at 2 p.m.? Or do you get to buy a second house? What do
you get for all the work and time and effort that you put into what you do?
Here's my answer. I get to work from home. I get to work with people I like,
including my team and my students. I get to have fun at work. I get to work from home. I get to work with people I like, including my team and my students.
I get to have fun at work. I get to travel for six to eight weeks a year,
staying at my favorite hotels and sharing these magical experiences with my friends and family.
And I get to eat whatever I want without looking at the price.
The question to ask, for all the work you do, what do you get? Now, back
to John and Rebecca. Let me make sure I understand that. So it seems like you got a pretty nice
condo, did some renovations. I don't know the car situation, but you know, probably doing
fine and you can wear a nice sweater,
whatever it may be, is it the retirement
that's making you feel nervous?
For the most part, I just feel like there's no plan.
There's no concrete steps that we're taking,
it was just kind of hoping for the best
in surviving day to day.
Yeah, and you mentioned now plan, safety, security.
Would you say those are common things
that you look for that are important to you?
Not the only things that are important,
but yes, those are very important.
Okay, John, do you care about safety and security
in the same way Rebecca does?
Probably not.
I've had a plan too. My plan had been to work until I drop
and continue to make life insurance premium payments
to take care of my wife when I'm no longer able to take care of her.
It's not a happy plan, but it's been a plan
because I've historically enjoyed what I'm doing.
Is that a half joke or are you being totally serious?
I, up until COVID, when my day to day changes dramatically,
I never was able to even picture myself being retired. when my day to day changed dramatically,
I never was able to even picture myself being retired. Now I have friends that are beginning to retire
and the stress has ramped way up.
That had been my thought process.
I was gonna keep working and working and working.
And the other people in your profession,
what do they do?
I mean, are they rolling into the office
at 85 years old and doing the same thing?
Well, it's interesting.
Our firms have been around for over 40 years.
And the two founders are still active.
Although they also have homes in warm weather destinations
where they spend about 80% of the time. They don't grind, you know, they generate. They don't grind
So the culture of the firm, I guess is that people work until they
They choose they no longer can or or you know, helpwise. They no longer can't
And I would say that that's true for the legal industry generally who they no longer can or helpwise they no longer can.
And I would say that that's true for the legal industry generally,
many, many lawyers work until they're 80s, usually men,
but my mentor at my old law firm
worked until the day he died at 85.
And.
And is that celebrated?
Depends.
I started practicing 20 years ago.
And back then, it was looked at as sort of this.
Once you work for a couple of decades,
then you can coast and be revered and respected
and you could be in this position in the firm,
even financially, where you just continue
to reap the benefits, but work so much less.
Now, in a lot of firms, the newer guard is coming up
and they're saying, hey, wait a minute, you gotta earn your keep on other industries that have, they'll come up with a nice little
retirement package for you and force you to quit at 65.
That doesn't happen in the legal world.
If you're not saving yourself for retirement, it doesn't happen.
That's why I think a lot of lawyers stay on.
I mean, there could be financial reasons also. It's one of those
professions you don't need to be physically, you know, of a certain bigger, you know, your
mind is sharp. You can still, you can still practice a lot.
Man, the legal industry is so weird. I'm like, this industry makes no sense whatsoever
to anyone on the outside, but all the people on the inside are like, oh yeah, that's totally how it works
I'm like why and they have no good answer, but they're just like that's how it works
Back and do it over I could
Okay, well we can't change the legal industry today. We can maybe change a little bit of your situation
So I asked you what you both get
situation. So I asked you what you both get. I'm not sure I know the answer except that you have a pretty nice life day-to-day. It sounds like the
retirement part is somewhat unclear. In fact, the path for many lawyers is just to
work until they die. What else day-to-day are you getting where you're using
your money? How are you spending your money right now?
I don't spend a lot of money because I don't have a lot of money to spend available.
I would like to further invest myself into some hobbies that I have.
I would like to take more vacations, although I don't have that burning need, perhaps because
I don't see it as being
completely possible right now.
But I would really like to be able to sleep better at night.
And you don't sleep well at night now because of what?
It's cyclical, but it has to do with financial stress.
Sure.
Yeah.
I can understand that. You have feast or famine. You have this obligation hanging over your head at all times and the uncertainty of knowing what's going to be given to you.
At the end of the year, you've got to wait 12 months, makes it very difficult to think beyond a year. And so I'm guessing Rebecca, when you come around
talking about what's the plan, what's the plan, and it's very difficult to actually come up with
anything beyond, well, we got to see what the bonus ends up being this year. Does that sound familiar?
Yes. I just feel like I... there's so much uncertainty. Well, let's just talk about the day to day.
The need for a plan is very common.
Everybody wants to know some sense of certainty.
Even if you can put a box around some of the uncertainty
and create like a good, better, best scenario,
I think that would probably help everybody sleep
a little better at night.
But right now it's just like, oh shit, how much is going to come down from heaven on
December 30th?
And by the way, we already paid for the new door.
So now we're just playing catch up for the entire next year.
That's not a good way to live.
Rebecca's income last year was roughly $190,000.
As a reminder, she's 44 years old. Rebecca has $18,000 saved and $549,000
in retirement accounts. She also has a $600,000 mortgage with $180,000 in equity. John's income was $225,000 last year. He's 61.
And he has less saved $120,000 in retirement
and considerable debt that includes a $65,000 personal loan
from a friend, which I want you to pay attention to
because that's gonna come up later.
How do you feel about those numbers?
Well, if you look at the typical rule of thumb, I've always read about 28% of your
growth income, don't spend more than that on housing. Even considering his
support obligations, we felt we fall well within that. So we're not, I don't
feel like we're over spending in our house. I feel that the savings could be more, I think.
But I don't know how he saves more.
I feel like I'm already maxing out my 401k.
I'm saving an additional 10% a month
into a vacation slash house fund that gets spent down.
But I feel like I'm doing okay on saving.
I've got my money invested,
someone who I trust managing that.
I'm happy with the performance in my accounts.
Hate to think of the worst case scenario,
but that's kind of what the life insurance is for.
We're not able to save the way we want to save.
And so if I get life insurance benefit
that will make up for that.
But on the day to day,
I've done my calculations, you know, I have about after taxes and housing expense, you know, I basically
have $4,000 left every month to put toward discretionary expenses, food entertainment,
travel, et cetera. I feel like it's enough.
Somehow we're still stressed out about money
and don't feel like there's ever enough
for the important things like John's retirement.
It's kind of funny, you two talk about life insurance a lot.
We needed to have a discussion about that.
There's not a common topic, by the way,
especially for high earners like the two of you.
Rebecca, you mentioned
it doesn't feel like you have a lot. Now, Josh, how do you feel about your numbers?
Horrible. Horrible. You know, once in a while, I go on the website of the company that manages a 401k and one of these things they tell
you is how you're doing in terms of your retirement savings.
I always have the stormy clouds and the thunderbolts.
I worked in this profession for 34 years.
Due to choices that I've made, if this is the end of the day right now,
I don't have a whole lot asset-wise to show for it.
I want to understand putting your ex-wife's payments aside.
You've made pretty good money over the course of your career.
Where has it gone?
Well, I lost a lot of it in trying to maintain a household that I was not living in at the
time when we were going through the divorce.
And I had to take care of myself as well.
That put me in a huge hole. A lot of it went to saving for my children's, you know,
college education, contributing to things like life insurance. I'm not a big spender.
I don't remember if I was 20 years ago. I don't think that I was. We had a nice home,
but it shouldn't be a difficult question, but I'm having difficulty with it because I
know what I don't do every month and I don't spend much money.
What is the $54,000 a year I pay?
Get us?
Well, I guess we have a nice tax deduction for that money because that's all deductible,
but other than that, it gets us resentment.
Yeah.
And when you think about earning more money
and you think, okay, for every $100,000 I earn,
basically over half of it is going right out the door
to this resentful situation that I have no control over.
Right.
Do you think that that affects your behavior with money?
Of course.
I mean, I have to make sure that I'm able to do two things at the beginning of every month.
Pay Irbeca, what I over for my half of the expenses every month, and make
sure that I have the cash to make my maintenance payment and my life insurance payment. After that,
I guess it's all me, but you could do them after yourself, right? Well, if I can just interject
when John talks about paying me, it's a bit different because it's the house he enjoys,
the lifestyle he enjoys, the things we do together.
You know, he is spending on himself.
It's just coming in a form of a check to me
because I'm the one who manages the credit card bills
and it's the mortgages in my name, the title,
the condos in my name, the title of the condos in my
name, we jointly decide to take certain trips or go out to dinner at this restaurant or
do this or do that.
I didn't intend to make it sound like these are all obligations.
What I meant to say was, I have to make sure that I have enough at the beginning of every month to do everything.
I get it. I wonder if you had to describe the balance of how much time the two of you spend looking backward at all the ex-wife payments and how much time the two of you spend saying, wow, we get to live in this
cool condo and we get to go out to this great dinner and maybe take this trip, how would
you describe the breakdown of how much time you spend on each of those categories?
I spend far greater amount of time appreciating what we have and what we do,
then feeling resentful for what I have to do.
Far greater time. And I truly appreciate this nice life that we've made.
Awesome. That's great. I'm pleasantly surprised to hear that. Rebecca, would you agree?
It feels like the feelings of resentment are so much stronger. And they're obviously of a much greater percentage than I want to spend in my life.
I want to think about them 0%.
Why do you think that your feelings of resentment are greater than John's?
I think, well, number one, I think it's a function of age.
He is older, so he's, I think, has a better appreciation of just enjoying life and being grateful.
I think having those 17 years on me is one factor. I think I am of a personality where I tend to focus more.
I tend to run more anxious, so I focus more on
just what's not there or what's going wrong
versus what's going right.
I've always been like that.
And I feel really, really resentful of the situation.
And like when John described what happened
within the COVID year, I came last.
And so he's prioritized me in the day-to-day life
in our marriage, obviously.
And he chose to marry me, even though it meant the complete financial
destruction for him really.
When you made a lot of money, what did you do with the money?
Last year, the first 25,000 of it went to my entire mid-contribution.
The next 10 or $11,000 went to pay my two partners for their shares.
The next 9,000 or so went to repaid.
We're back with the money that I owed her.
And then I paid down a lot of bills that I had
and made sure that I
socked a little of it away to make sure that I wasn't going
to run into any issues with the life insurance premiums that I had to pay.
And as I sit here, I can't tell you exactly what else I did with it.
This is a big clue.
I find that people stop paying attention to the nuts and bolts of their spending around
$150,000. At that level of income, you're earning enough that you don't necessarily need
to track every tiny expense. But if you live in a high cost of living city, or you have financial
obligations, $150,000 isn't enough to spend on everything you want.
That's a tricky number.
By the way, in chapter 4 and 5 of my book, I will teach you to be rich.
I show you how to set up a system so you don't have to track every little expense.
You set up your system and you spend less than an hour a month on it.
I don't think John and Rebecca use my system though. What's the difference between a year where you make 235 versus a year where you make 305?
Retirement contribution for one. That's the big one really. It's hard to say what I cut back on because like again,
Rebecca may disagree with me but I don't believe that I spend very much money.
Certainly, the taxes are greater
the year that I make more money.
Rebecca?
You had the exact question that I had
for the last 10 years, which is, where does the money go?
And I asked him that, and it comes across as accusatory
or that he's lying.
I mean, there has been some dishonestie
in our past about some debt that he's had, but we've worked through that. We're in a much better place about it, and I truly
don't believe he's spending money somewhere, but we'll have to both cut back. We'll have to take
a different kind of trip or take fewer trips or go out to eat less or... Hold on, what does that mean a different kind of trip? So my thing is travel and luxury travel.
And I like to speak in my language.
Hold on, you got to get into this.
What are your hotels?
Oh, four seasons.
You know, to give me a destination, I'll tell you where I will stay.
Okay, good answer.
Okay.
So this year, the hotel that used to be $700 a night
is now $2,100 a night.
And it's ridiculous.
And I was willing to sort of do that during one year,
but it doesn't seem like that trend is changing.
So now I'm thinking we need to make an adjustment to,
we're not gonna stay somewhere.
It's $2100 a night for more than two nights.
But last year, you know, when it was a good year,
we did spend more on trips
and we stayed at the post-ranging and big serve,
which is bucket list hotel for me.
I wanted to go there for 20 years.
The one night we stayed there, it was for his birthday.
It was $2100 a night. To me, it was worth every birthday. It was $2,100 a night.
To me, it was worth every penny.
But, and I've already planned out the trips.
Oh, very good.
So you have the number, you know how much you're gonna spend
and how many times you're gonna travel this year.
The trips are planned.
Yes.
Wow, okay.
I'm pleasantly surprised.
That's really sophisticated.
Very good.
This still brings us back to the question of of where does the money go in good times?
Probably more to travel. Yes. What else?
What say we would eat out more?
I mean, I'm sure you guys are eating at a nice restaurant, you know,
whatever, a couple times a week. Is that a good ballpark assumption or is it more?
No, that's that's the max we need out. I've been cooking a lot
more since COVID. Okay, 70K. Where does it go? It's really 30K with taxes, maybe 40K, let's say,
where else? That's a great question. I mean, I really don't know.
I've had some significant medical expenses the last few years, so that's another about five or six grand a year.
And I had paid down a significant amount of debt.
I had cleaned the slate, really I had.
And that was something that I was, you know, very happy and very proud to do.
It's hard for me to even explain how badly I stepped in a pile, right?
While all this was going on now, 10 years ago, you know, I had issues with the government.
I had issues with credit card companies.
I had issues with keeping up with my court ordered obligations,
although Rebecca is right, I've never actually missed any of those.
But yeah, it goes.
It goes.
You've contributed to your 401K more when you have more money.
That's awesome.
Do you feel good when you do that or not?
I felt fantastic last year when I was able to do that.
Yeah. Really? Yeah.
And how did you express that? Like did the two of you talk about it or how did that come to be?
We did talk about it and I felt a great sense of relief and I had this mindset that this was
something I was going to be able to do every single year. That didn't happen. I similarly felt a huge sense of relief last year.
Thinking that now this was going to be the new pattern going forward and I thought,
okay, maybe things aren't so bleak.
You know, there is the debt, there has historically been a lot of money stress.
I thought, okay, finally, this is the light at the end of the tunnel.
So this past year is a huge step back.
Well, okay, I will say I'm pleasantly surprised
to hear that both of you celebrated it.
This is surprising to me because a lot of people
don't celebrate when something good happens.
When you're down in a dark hole,
one good thing happens, you go, yeah,
but I'm still down in this dark hole.
And I'm actually pleasantly surprised to hear
that both of you recognized it was an amazing opportunity
and an amazing thing that John, you were able to contribute more in 401k. That's awesome.
However, this idea that suddenly we've turned the corner and it's all going to be positive,
I think is setting you both up for negative feelings.
Oh, this was a huge gut punch. Yeah, this year, I agree. I think is setting you both up for negative feelings.
Oh, this was a huge gut punch.
Yeah, this year, I agree.
I mean, your finances to some extent
are out of your control, at least the end of your part.
And so to only count on it being up is not realistic,
right, and you saw that last year.
So what if instead of assuming it's always gonna be
the highest case,
we make a little bit more of a conservative assumption.
Start to live on that amount,
start to plan for that amount,
and therefore, if you happen to get paid a whole bunch more,
it's icing on the cake.
You're willing to talk about it. To me, that is the most positive thing that could indicate
there's a light at the end of the time. Lots going on here. There are the emotions around money,
plus the actual numbers and the system they use to manage their money. And all of them need work.
I don't blame them for feeling stressed out about money. If I were in their shoes, I'd be stressed too.
Sometimes they earn this much, sometimes they earn way more. How are you supposed to plan for that?
I will say I was surprised to hear that they celebrate money. That's actually pretty rare, and it's a very good sign that they can understand the joy
of money, not just the stress.
What I find interesting is that they seem to set themselves up for failure.
They plan based on these windfall years, but that's just not reality.
Some years aren't like that. And when that happens,
they feel like they failed. A lot of people plan month to month. They never stop and zoom
out and think on an annual basis. And then a lot of people only think on an annual basis.
They never zoom out and think about a five-year basis. I want
you to zoom out of your weekly or monthly or depending on what level you're at, even
your annual thinking.
Think at a bigger scale. If you assume an average income of, let's just say, $100,000 for
easy math. That means some years will be $125,000. But some years will be $75,000. That's how math
works. Some years are better, some years are worse. I've had years where I made way more,
some years where I've made way less. If I didn't have a North Star, some bigger vision than how much money I made that year.
I would be sad and stressed too.
Here's what I want to do with them.
I still don't understand where he's spending his money.
So I'm going to do some calculations with him to figure it out.
As you listen, you'll hear how easy it is to mindlessly spend way more money than you thought.
This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp.
On this podcast, you've heard me recommend therapy to a lot of couples.
Some of the couples are already seeing therapists, which I love.
But if you wanted to get therapy, if you wanted to have a space where you and your partner
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When we did the first calculation, we were left with 55,000 minus 8,000 for disability
and medical minus 25,000 for 401k full contribution minus 8,000 dollar alone.
You still have 14,000 dollars left.
Are you surprised by that number?
Yes.
Okay. Rebecca.
Because what's not included in that,
in the numbers we gave about the household expenses,
our food, entertainment, things like that.
So the $2,500 number was just housing taxes.
Okay.
HOA.
I got it.
That. How much is that stuff per month? His share. About 2000 a month.
That takes you into the red. See? Okay. So here we go. Fine. Fine. We can work with this.
All right. I love it. We finally got to the answer. Okay, very good. And you know, you didn't include renovating
your door, your French doors.
That stuff is not in there either.
Did you notice that?
Correct.
And I didn't catch the Las Ventanas or all that.
Nice hotels that at least you were back
I loved to go to.
Did you guys notice that?
Correct.
Yes.
So now we see how it's possible to make quite a bit of money,
but it sort of just comes in and goes out
and you don't feel like you're getting ahead anyway.
Right.
There's no vision.
There's no vision.
First of all, there's no accounting
of where the money actually could go.
But second, there's no vision of where it should go.
Now that we've got this on paper,
we can start to rejigger things
and we can make a rule of thumb.
If I make 235,000,
this is what I'm gonna do with the money.
When I make more,
this is what I'm gonna do with that money.
And so you don't have to achieve
all this stuff every single year,
but at least you know what to do in the base case
and what to do in a really good case as well. That's going to feel so much better than just like,
oh shit, what do I do with this money? It's just coming in and going out. Question, $2,000 that
you just mentioned was what your food and entertainment? Yes, so I kind of roughly estimated
entertainment? Yes, so I kind of roughly estimated about food, entertainment, target runs, that kind of thing. Yeah, for just him. Per month? Yep. It's a lot.
And espresso coffee, eating out, dental insurance. No, come on, dental insurance and dinners
out, do not count as the same thing. Don't
bullshit me. What is it? That's a lot of, I don't mind that you guys are spending. You make a lot
of money, but what is it? Two thousand for him and two thousand for you. That's quite a bit. What
is it? Is it delivery? Is it food? What is it? I mean, once in a while, we'll have a random
expense in there. Like, for example, two months ago, we bought a Dyson air purifier, humidifier. That was $900
right there. Do you have a fund for this, like a petty cash or midterm saving school for this?
For my plan, for my half, is I put 10% of my paychecks into this slush fund for
into this sort of slush fund for household, like more major household expenses and travel.
And then I draw from that,
if there's not enough to pay my half of the joint card,
then I have my personal expenses.
Okay, hold on, John, I'm gonna guess you don't have
the equivalent 10% slush fund for your money, is that correct?
Well, yeah, that's correct.
One of the key distinctions between the rich and everyone else is that the rich save
before they need to.
Notice that Rebecca proactively puts 10% away for these sorts of things.
When the time comes, she's not scrambling for the funds.
She's not wondering if she has enough.
This is a great way to think about predictable expenses like travel and birthday
gifts. In fact, you can even create a fund for unexpected expenses like parking tickets
or home repair. Plan ahead. It makes all the difference.
16,000 is probably accurate for our joint trips.
Okay. Good. So we're in the red now, which is okay. I mean, we don't want to be in the red,
but at least we can see everything. And I am guessing we're probably 10 to 15% off in some direction.
John, what do you want to do? Well, obviously, I'm going to have to cut, or I'm going to have to earn
money. Those are the two options right now, right? Yep. Well, I can only cut those things that are considered discretionary. So that would
be the travel, the eating out. I've got a payment of taxes. I want to make my 401K contribution.
Although it does not have to be the entire $25,000, but I would sure it's like it to be.
Well, I want John to pay himself first.
I want John to max out his retirement.
So whatever I need to sacrifice, that's fine.
I'll figure out a fund that trips separately, but what's also not included in these numbers
is my portion of the life insurance.
So that's another 10.
I'm willing to sort of consider as part of this that maybe we don't need to do that anymore,
but I'll tell you why it's been important to me aside from the practical reasons.
To me, it avoids resentment. If he's providing for his ex-wife on his death,
but not providing for me, and I sometimes come second, now, that's sort of a way to ameliorate it.
And again, to practically, to account for,
our inability to save as much as we'd want to.
That's, yeah.
So, for example, I pay $1,300 a month for $2 million
worth of universal life insurance.
Of that, Rebecca probably...
Who sold you that? Who sold you that?
Who sold you that?
You'll laugh.
No, I'm the same friend that let me be.
No, I'm not laughing because I already knew the answer.
Yeah, yeah.
You guys, this guy's not your friend.
Universal life insurance is a fucking horrible.
Oh, it's horrible.
It's horrible.
And you know who it enriches the sales person.
So once you've been paying it, I assume for a long time, you're like, oh my God,
some cost. What should I do? How much are you paying 1300 a month?
Yep.
Shit. And how long have you been paying that for?
Since January 1, 2016, I want to ring this, guys.
since January 1, 2016. I want to ring this, guys, neck. Attention, podcast listeners. I'm going to give you a quick tutorial on how to
know if you're getting ripped off. If you have a guy for your money, you are
probably getting ripped off. If your guy sells insurance and annuities,
you're getting ripped off.
And if you text them right now and ask them,
hey, out of curiosity, can you tell me your fee structure?
How much do you charge me?
And what is the fee structure?
And they send you back an oddly emotional response.
Like, how could you ask that?
We've worked together for so long.
I thought you trusted me.
You're definitely getting ripped off.
And also, send me screenshots.
Guys, universal life insurance almost never makes sense.
If you want insurance, start with term life insurance.
Remember this, insurance is not an investment,
no matter what your guy tells you.
Insurance is insurance and universal insurance only enriches the salesperson.
By the way, for all the insurance sales people listening, don't bother writing into me,
okay, I'll see you in hell. This is the reason I'm getting mad, it's not at you, it's that
I don't think you should have to be financial experts to not get ripped off.
that I don't think you should have to be financial experts to not get ripped off. I shouldn't have to be a lawyer to not get ripped off when I go buy something from a store and you shouldn't have to be
financial experts. Okay, I can't tell you on this call alone whether you should cancel your policy
or whatever. Here's what I can tell you. Universal life insurance is almost never good.
Term life insurance is much better.
If I were you, I would encourage you to look up
the price of term.
I would also say,
Rebecca, you graciously offered to say to John,
hey, maybe I'm willing for you to pay yourself first, maybe I don't need this payment.
Personally, I think there are a lot better ways for John, you, to be providing for Rebecca,
given your age. I would not be taking my money and putting it in universal life insurance
because you're just having fees siphoned out of
it. A much better approach would be for you to either contribute more to your 401k and or another
type of retirement vehicle and IRA, whatever else you're eligible for with your income. And then
presumably if you were to pass away, that would be passed to her. Is that how you've set up your accounts?
Yes.
Okay, then there's no reason for you to be putting money into this black box where a ton of percentage
of it is being taken out and given to the sales guy.
Right, I was looking for a term policy because prior to my 10 year term expiring in 2016, I was
paying pennies for $4 million worth of insurance.
So I was told it wasn't available and it wasn't available and affordable because of certain
health issues and other things.
Okay.
This is tough.
You're really kind of backed into a corner here.
Well, I'll encourage you to see what else is out there,
take another look, maybe things have changed.
If it were me, I'll speak for myself,
and I were in the exact same situation,
I would simply take the money
that I would be paying towards this universal.
I would put it in retirement accounts,
and I would just tell my partner, hey, let me explain
why I'm doing this because I'd rather have 100% of this money go to you in the case that
I die rather than X% minus the fee that's being siphoned off right now.
Understandably there's some complexity, health issues, some costs, etc. So that's something
you probably need to work through.
Yep. All right. I'm still showing that you have 11,375 left.
Anybody else wondering about this? Well, I, you know, I do spend some money on myself for some clothing, I eat lunch, I get a haircut, I bought a bottle, you know. I want you to, good.
Yeah, okay, I mean that's, that stuff can certainly be close to a thousand dollars a month
at the end of the day.
Okay.
So what do you think from looking over this, we've basically zeroed it out, we've taken
235,000 and we've basically brought it to zero.
What do you think?
Like I said, I think that either they need to make more money
or spend less money.
And obviously the part of it that I can control right now
is the spend.
OK.
But not all of it, because like I said,
I don't have control over the largest portions of it. Agreed.
So, I eat fewer meals out, you know, buy things for myself.
I can't envision where else I can make these cuts right now, and that is the issue.
Okay.
Rebecca, what do you think?
Well, I think the two biggest things are whatever put the math aside, whatever John thinks he's able to do,
not able to do, it's clearly possible to prioritize his 401k contribution.
And he's got to find a way to make that first.
And it's clearly doable.
And then I think the second thing is,
we'll talk about revisiting the life insurance issue
because that is a big chunk of money that goes out the door.
I know he looked at some things and we talked about it,
and I don't know if it's possible to reduce the policy
to what he has to maintain under court order
to eliminate my piece of it,
but we're gonna talk about it and put pen to paper
because we've never really done that.
And I think starting to do this, with these bigger ticket items, hopefully we'll give John some inertia and hope that, you know,
he's to just let's sit down and it doesn't have to be the most detailed spreadsheet, but I would
like to put it in black and white and and have a visual see, you know, maybe what is left over
and what we can spend and what we can't. And I'll have to figure out a piece, but the travel piece.
I guess I'll take that on.
That's my priority.
Well, let's talk about that.
So the travel part, let's talk about this.
And I happen to understand this because I like to stay
in nicer places than my wife does.
I'm like, whoa, this is the place.
Trust me, I know the exact room.
I know every detail. Okay, so how do you currently
handle that? Yeah, I mean, I basically research all the hotels and travel and I plan it all.
I have a bucket list of hotels I want to go to and I say this is what we're doing.
I basically say this is how much it's going to cost. Is this doable to you? And he'll usually say
yes. John, do you really know when you're answering if it is possible for you?
Oh, I know if it's possible. I always also know that it's going to be cutting things very,
very close. Yeah, okay.
So we would put it on the joint car where we earn our airline miles. And that's important to me too,
because I accumulate miles for other trips,
and we accumulate miles for our trips.
And then at the end of whenever the bill is due,
I'll say this is the half what the travel costs,
and he'll include that in the monthly check he writes to me.
John, do you care about hotels like Rebecca does?
Absolutely not.
Yeah.
I already knew the answer.
I just had to ask it because I like to see it
in another couple just like my own.
Can I make a suggestion?
I'll tell you how we have handled this
because when you're working with these really expensive
hotels, it can really quickly add up.
That's number one.
And then number two, you've got a finite amount of money here.
So like two or $3,000 can actually swing things
quite a bit for you, John.
And so when I hear this feeling of like,
oh, is it ever gonna end?
And I think by making a few key decisions correctly,
a lot of the stress becomes alleviated.
Good.
So here's how we handle it.
First off, we make a plan at the end of each year,
very similar to how you have it seems.
We're going to go on this many trips
and we know that each trip is on average going to be,
let's just say, $3,000. When I pick that number $3,000 and my wife and I talk about it,
what I would say is we would pick a mid-level place that would be okay for both of us. I'm not talking about motel six, but I'm not talking about Amon. I'm talking about something that we would both be okay with.
Now, if I go, we need to stay in this hotel
with a pavilion pool or whatever,
and that's gonna be an extra 5,000, 10,000, whatever,
then we were gonna have a conversation.
And in some cases, we would say,
like, this is for both of us.
Let's do this because it's special
or it's within our plan.
If it's just something I want,
because I'm weird and I want it,
and then which I can sense is the case here, then.
I can tell, really?
Yes, then I would be like, listen,
this trip, the baseline of this trip is, let's say, 5,000.
I want a room that's gonna cost X,000, 4,000 more.
I will pick up the 4,000, okay4,000 more, I will pick up the $4,000, okay?
Personally.
And so, we have this conversation.
And sometimes I'll make the case and she will say, you know, we should do that joint
or not.
And I'm perfectly fine if I really want something.
And also, I can afford it.
Rebecca, you can afford it from your own plan.
Now, what does this mean for the two of you? Actually, think it brings you closer together. First off, sometimes
you're going to be like, all right, Rebecca, you're going to go, all right, I don't want
to pay $5,000 out of my pocket. This baseline hotel is perfectly good. We're going to spend
some time eating good food. Great. Other times, Rebecca, you're going to be like, nope,
this is post-ranching. This is what I think is great for us. I want to pay for it.
And then finally, John, as you become more comfortable
with your financial situation, I know that it's gonna be
the case where you're gonna go, you know what?
This should be both of us.
And maybe even one day, I'm picking up X because I had
an amazing year and an amazing bonus.
This one's on me.
So it allows you just this selection of control
and the two of you get to talk about it,
but you're starting from a baseline that's fair for both.
It's not fair to expect John to be able to afford
the places that you wanna go to Rebecca, right?
How do you both feel about that?
I think that's a great plan.
John?
I don't know, call me old school, right?
You know what I'm going to say.
I have a hard time with the concept of not sharing these expenses equally, although these
hotels don't mean as much to me as they do to Rebecca, I enjoy her being happy.
You know?
I get it.
Yeah.
Rebecca?
I know that's how John feels and I appreciate that. But I think for me, like you said,
there are going to be certain times where I know it's worth it to me.
I don't want him to be stressed.
So I appreciate that he wants to treat me and to share,
even if it's just a shared 50-50,
it's not worth it to me that it's at the expense of his comfort level and stress
and his retirement.
You know, that can't be the situation anymore.
No post-ranging is worth your retirement, John.
I don't care how nice it is.
That's a nice hotel.
But no, what I want for both of you is John, I want you to be able to sleep better at
night.
And I can see a path.
I know you can't see yet because you're still embroiled in like, oh my God, obligations. But I can see a path. I know you can't see it yet because you're still embroiled in like, oh my God, obligations.
But I can see a path with your numbers.
And we are using a conservative assumption.
We haven't even talked about what happens
when you get the big bonus.
Rebecca, I know that you've mentioned that you want safety,
you want a plan.
And so, listen, I understand the old school mentality
as you put it, John, but I think that if the two of you
have this discussion, it will be great.
I also think that the difference between the way
that you are currently traveling, John, you mentioned,
like this is the only way we were able to do it.
The difference between that and this plan
is this plan is proactive.
The two of you are reactive to money.
Imagine December 30th, you open the spreadsheet, you go, oh, shit.
And then the entire rest of the year, you're playing ketchup.
It's no way to live, right?
You're playing ketchup from last year's taxes, last year's debts, last year's French
stores, all of it.
It just sucks.
You never get ahead.
The only time you get ahead is if somebody bestows you with this gigantic bonus, which then just gets eaten
up. We got to end that pattern right now. So part of it is what we have just done, we've
changed the dynamic around travel. That's just one example. You can extrapolate that to
many. Let's pick a number. Hotels in travel go from 625 a month to what? What number? Make it up.
300 a month. Great. Okay, you cut it in half. Is that realistic?
I think so. I think, you know, if I'm contributing more of it, even that's realistic per
John's share. Okay, great. Perfect. So right there, we just earned an extra $3,000. Now here is the key. What are you doing with that
money, John?
What are you getting into my retirement? Good. Good. And if you've already maxed out your
401k, what are you doing with it? Paying down debt. Which debt?
Pay my friend.
Some love it. Yeah, love it.
All right.
That's awesome.
Now we're coming up with a plan.
So you know what to do with this extra money.
See, this is the best part.
There's a lot of fat in everybody's spending,
especially at higher income levels.
Right? Nobody sees it. But you go through it. You go, yeah, we cut this, we can cut that.
But the thing that nobody does is they never actually make a plan for what to do with the
newfound money.
They just go, oh yeah, like I'll do something, but money gets absorbed.
One of my friends told me, he said, when you become a parent, your kids will suck all the
energy out of the relationship if
you let them.
And so you have to fight for the two of you to have time together.
I thought that was really wise.
I found the same thing with money.
Money will go if you don't prioritize and fight for it to go to the right place, especially
when you live in a city, in a nice place, etc.
All right, no judgment.
I like to eat out sometimes, too,
but I got to make sure I prioritize the things that matter.
Okay, we did that.
What about this 2,000 on food and entertainment?
I feel like there's an opportunity there.
There's some wiggle room.
Find it.
It's okay if it takes a few months.
The point is not that I need you to start cutting
everything tomorrow.
That's not the point.
It's got to be sustainable.
But I'm willing to bet just from looking at these numbers.
There's a way for John to reduce about 300 to 500 a month
with a little thoughtfulness, a little creativity.
Again, that's 4,000 bucks plus per year.
We're starting to talk about some serious cashier.
And some suggestions I might make would be,
John, you've mentioned you want to build up your savings account. I think that would be really smart.
It would give you a sense of security. It would also do the same for you, Rebecca.
So, yes, of course, you're going to max out your 401k. That should happen.
But what else? You have other retirement options. It could be investing or it could simply be savings. And that would start to feel really good when you see 5,000, 10,000, 15,000,
certainary liquid. Make you sleep a lot better at night.
What are you both thinking as you hear this conversation right now?
conversation right now.
Well, I'm thinking that it's a conversation we should have had a long time ago.
And it's certainly possible to accomplish what we need to accomplish.
Rebecca.
I'm feeling a lot more hopeful.
And I see a tremendous change in John, in terms of his openness,
before money was a topic he couldn't talk about much less, literally go down and make
a list of what we're spending and how to maybe cut.
So I think this is tremendous progress already.
This is awesome.
Well, I will say you both came to play ball.
Right.
And that is what I appreciate most.
We can be in whatever financial strengths,
but the fact that you both are open
about the very complex financial situation you have
is absolutely amazing.
I have been very impressed that you two have talked
about so many of these things.
Yeah, maybe you haven't talked about it
in the perfect way and sure there's some avoidance and certain things. Yeah, maybe you haven't talked about it in the perfect way and sure,
there's some avoidance and certain things.
Okay, the fact that we can sit here
and take some assumptions about how much you're gonna make,
which until now has paralyzed the two of you.
Well, the answer is just pick a number
and I'll be conservative.
So we picked it, we have some stuff.
I think there's probably some wiggle room in this
stood on the order of like 10,000 maybe even more per year, which is a lot of money. And finally,
something that will be a joyful discussion for the two of you is what do we do if I get a bigger
bonus? That's a great conversation to have. I'll leave that for the two of you to have.
That's a great conversation to have. I'll leave that for the two of you to have.
The elephant in the room for John and Rebecca was the nearly $70,000 in annual obligations
that John has to pay to his ex-wife every year.
Did you notice that it dwarfed almost anything else we talked about at the beginning of the
call?
But did you also notice that by the end, we weren't really talking about that at all.
Here's why.
Sometimes the thing that consumes you is not really the major problem at all.
It's simply the step you have to get over to confront the real issue.
The fact of the matter is, John owes nearly $70,000 a year.
Nothing he can really do about it.
He's a lawyer, I'm sure he's looked into it, let's move on.
Once he accepted that, then we got to tackle the real issues.
One of the real issues was he doesn't know how to plan on an irregular income.
He can make $235,000. He can make $305,000. So what's he supposed to do?
Well the answer is, just plan around $235,000. Just plan around it.
Once you make a plan on how to live at $235,000, which is his conservative estimate,
then the rest of it becomes a joyful exercise of what do I
get to do with all this extra money. And some years, like last year where he didn't get paid a
whole bunch more, that's okay. You can't get paid a huge bonus every single year. He got paid,
roughly his base case assumption, he's already planned for how to live on that?
It's no big deal.
Sometimes we're so paralyzed by uncertainty that we go years without making a decision.
It would be much better if he simply said, you know what, I'm just going to pick the worst
case scenario, 235,000.
Let me plan around that.
Once he did that, it was very freeing.
He could start to look at his expenses, which had candidly gotten a little bit out of control.
I can understand why, that doesn't justify it, but I can understand why.
Once he started to get disciplined about that, then he started to realize, oh my gosh, I
can pick up $4,000 here, $5,000 there.
I can tighten up $4,000 here, $5,000 there. I can tighten up certain things.
That's a lot of extra money that can go towards his retirement.
It's a very meaningful, especially at age 61.
And then, of course, he had to talk to Rebecca.
They have some assumptions in their relationship, you know.
He wants to be 50-50 in certain expenses.
That will be for him and Rebecca to discuss.
They also have differences of opinion on how they're going to spend on things like travel.
In the grand scheme of things, those are minor issues and I actually think that they're probably
pretty reasonable about that. The larger issue is having a North Star. In their case, the North Star
might be, I want to be financially responsible. Even though I'm obligated to pay nearly $70,000,
I still want to save and contribute to the household. And I want to provide for you, Rebecca,
in case something happens to me. That's a great nor start that allows him to have a very good quality of life, to acknowledge
reality, and then to make a plan.
That's one of my goals with this podcast.
So thank you for listening, and by the way, I've received follow-up letters from Rebecca
and John.
You can read the full follow-up letters from both of them at iwt.com slash follow-ups,
but here's a little excerpt of what they wrote.
Quote, we are too reactive regarding money, and we have no plan.
Also there's too much left-up chance regarding John's year end.
Having a plan based on John's worst case scenario
will alleviate anxiety regarding waiting for year-end info.
Any extra money will be icing on the cake.
That's exactly what I wanted to hear.
To read the full letters, go to iwt.com slash follow-ups
and enter your email address.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
I'm Ramit Saiti.
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You can find some of my best advice on money,
psychology, business, and careers at iwt.com.
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