I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 40. “We’re worth $5 million but my wife nearly canceled our trip to save $200”
Episode Date: April 26, 2022By now, you know: living a Rich Life is more about mindset than money. Look at today’s couple, Jack and Rachel. Following the principles described in I Will Teach You to Be Rich, they’ve managed... to turn a $150k income into over $5 million in savings! Despite that, Rachel finds it difficult to actually spend the money—she doesn’t truly believe it’s there. She thinks that, with one wrong move, it could all be gone. This is the complicated nature of money psychology at work. They’ve built up the skill of saving but completely neglected the skill of spending. I’m going to see if I can help them connect the money they make to the Rich Life they want—and are able—to live, by getting Rachel to unpack the invisible scripts holding her back. 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 mean, this was a perfect opportunity.
We hadn't been to New York in a long time.
I wanted to go.
I didn't really care what it cost.
She was all for it.
She's been wanting to go to New York as well.
But then it just got into this whole planning thing,
mostly around finding the best airfares,
finding the cheapest hotel.
When I see something that I'm okay with,
I'm like, let's just do it.
But it seems like Rachel is never satisfied
until she's exhausted all pricing options.
So that always becomes a point of frustration.
When he showed me the rape for the Saturday night,
it was 397.
I was like, forget it, it's not worth going.
I can't do it.
So I ended up booking something else and we had to change rooms halfway through the trip.
Rachel, what is your net worth? Over $5 million.
Welcome to I Will Teach You Be Rich. I'm Remi Tse Te. I really love today's couple. Rachel and Jack are in their mid-50s and their household income is about
$150,000. But by following the same principles I describe in I will teach you be rich, they
have accumulated over $5 million, which is amazing. There's just one problem. Rachel doesn't actually believe that she has the money.
She can't bring herself to spend it, and she's got all kinds of invisible scripts around
money, like rich people are assholes.
She has actually done what so many of us do.
She saved and saved, but she never actually built the skills of spending. In today's episode,
you'll actually hear the torment in her voice as she describes how she wants to change.
But it's so hard. Let's start by listening into a recent trip that Jack was going to take to New York.
He invited Rachel to come along, but when Rachel found out how much the hotel would cost,
she almost canceled the trip.
Here's what happened.
...
...
...
...
We've been wanting Rachel to take advantage of being able
to join me on these trips,
and this was a perfect opportunity.
We hadn't been to New York in a long time.
I wanted to go. I... It didn't really care what it cost. She was all for it.
She's been wanting to go to New York as well. But then it just got into this whole planning
thing, mostly around finding the best airfares, finding the cheapest hotel, not cheap hotels, but low hotel rates.
While I agree to a certain extent on some of those things, when I see something that I'm
okay with, I'm like, let's just do it, but it seems like Rachel is never satisfied until
she's exhausted all pricing options, so that that always becomes a point of frustration.
The associate I was traveling with suggested a hotel that was a half a mile from where the meetings were going to be.
Which hotel, how much was it? The Moxie in East Village. The Saturday night was expensive,
but the Sunday night Monday night was not expensive at all. So, you know, rough and tumble,
I think the average cost per night was 200 to okay.
Okay.
How do you feel about that for Manhattan?
Oh my God.
That to me, I was shocked that prices were that low.
They got a nice lobby in that Moxie hotel.
It's pretty cool.
So you presented her the Moxie, which is a modestly priced hotel for New York.
And now I want to hear from Rachel. So, Rachel Jack comes to you. He says,
hey, let's take this work trip. Here's the hotel I have in mind. How did you respond to that?
Panic. When he showed me the rate for the Saturday night, it was 397. I was like, forget it. It's
not worth going. I can't do it. And then, you know, I kept saying,
well, with the, if we average in the next couple nights, it's fine. You know, it all comes down
to this amount and work as pain for one of the nights. But it was at 397 in my head that I couldn't do.
So I ended up booking something else and we had to change rooms halfway through the trip.
What else? Wait, hold on. Where did you end up booking?
Marriott town suites, town place, sweets or something.
Where?
In Chelsea.
Oh. It wasn't terrible.
I know that hotel.
It wasn't terrible.
It's not the Moxie.
No.
It's no.
I'm curious, Rachel.
You got to walk me through this process because I love hearing this.
So he showed you this hotel.
Did you care about the neighborhood or the hotel itself
or was it the rate that you cared about?
It was the rate.
Okay, 100%.
100%.
And it was one night's rate,
Saturday night that really got you.
Then what did you do?
Did you open up a website and start looking?
Oh, like a thousand browsers,
like all I could do was search for something
that would be better. And then Sunday we move to the maxi.
It sounds like a pleasant trip.
Picking up your two cases and moving cross town to save. How much did you end up saving?
Probably $200.
Rachel, what is your net worth? Over $5 million.
Can you say that a little louder for us?
No.
Say it, it's okay, it's your money.
Over $5 million.
Think about this.
You have millions of dollars
and you cannot bring yourself
to spend $200 on a Saturday night on a Manhattan hotel room.
Don't laugh!
Don't laugh! And don't roll your eyes. If you're listening to this, it's likely you will probably be in this situation someday.
Most of us know how to save, but we've never built the skills of spending money.
And you can see right in this example what happens when that is taken to absurd heights.
Now, early on in your career, when you have very little money, saving $200 at a hotel
can make a lot of sense.
I used to visit New York, and I would sleep on my friend's couch in Hell's Kitchen when
I went.
It was awesome. But now I don't need to save $200 and I don't want to sleep on a couch.
This is where it's tricky to recalibrate your spending. And many of us are frozen in time with
our expectations around spending from our early 20s. If any of you have a cheap dad who still tips 10%, you know
exactly what I'm talking about. It's not 1986 anymore. Or in Rachel's case, I don't
actually think she's cheap. I think she just has a mental bucket for what a hotel should
cost. And she's internalized saving money as part of her identity.
By the way, I'm also frozen in time, not with my money,
but with my music. I basically stopped listening to new music around the year 2000,
and now all my Pandora stations end up playing the same songs. Whitney Houston,
Drew Hill, 112, and new edition. Rachel claims she needs help.
In my experience, people who claim they need help spending money
are almost never serious about changing.
That's because deep down, they don't really believe
they have a problem.
We'll see.
Rachel, looking back, what do you think?
Ah, that's why we're talking to you.
I need to get over it.
Is that true?
Do you?
Yeah, I do.
Oh, absolutely.
I fully understand that I am way too uptight about this stuff.
In the end, we had a fabulous time, and I'm glad I went.
And probably in retrospect, it almost got to the point
where I said forget it. You know, it's not worth going. Just you go on the business trip,
I'll stay home. It doesn't matter. I feel like since I've stopped working between that
and COVID, you know, it's been a lot of home time and all of a sudden now the idea of spending money
is suddenly scarier than it used to be.
That's so interesting because most people, if they hadn't
spent money in two years and then they had the chance to
go to New York, they would jump at it.
But you were saying you almost called the whole thing off
because of one night's rate
at a hotel.
Yeah.
Why is that?
I'm not comfortable spending.
Yeah.
When you were out in New York, did you all eat out at different places?
Yeah.
Was it good?
Yeah.
It was fabulous.
Where did you guys eat?
A couple new restaurants.
Sweet briar.
Yeah.
Sweet briar.
That's a brand new.
Freeman's.
We went the famous Deli Barney green grass
after a run in Central Park.
It was, we had a great time.
Cool.
Now, those places you mentioned, at least a couple of them,
they're pricey when you looked at those menus.
And you saw, you know,
$16 bagel, which is very common. What did you do? Because the trip was sort of
an impetus to get my ass in gear with the way I'm thinking, I kind of did my best to let go.
What does that mean? To just say, you know what, we're going to, we're here to enjoy it
and I feel like we did. As you say that and you reflect on almost canceling your trip to New
York because of a $1 or $200 night, what does it make you think? I'm an idiot. Do you believe that?
Do you believe that? Sometimes, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, I know, I know it's so ridiculous.
I know that.
I don't think you're an idiot.
I don't.
I mean, you can't be an idiot to accumulate $5 million.
I think there's probably some disconnect
between what's in your head and what's on paper
versus what you feel.
100%.
I don't think you're an idiot and I don't think it's ridiculous.
I think if we can take away those extreme words,
then we can start to say,
all right, let's just examine this like a scientist
and let's try to figure out what's going on.
Okay, I gotta know, how did you both make $5 million?
That's very impressive.
In very, very tiny, tiny little chunks.
You guys did it,
I will teach you to be rich way, it sounds like.
Absolutely.
When we first got married, Rachel decided to go back to school.
I was working two jobs, and I had gotten a new career job
where I had gotten a sign on bonus.
First thing out of Rachel's mouth was,
oh, we're gonna pay off your student loan
and my heart's sunk,
because I wanted to do something fun with it.
Of course, it was the right decision at the time
and we paid off my student loans.
But that was at the beginning
and we had a little bit left over
and we got involved in no-load mutual funds at that time.
And I think we were putting $25 a month in,
something like that.
Neither one of us comes from money,
both working class family backgrounds,
and we just kind of packed away at it.
But what we did do was set it auto.
And once we set it auto, we never looked back.
It's like, I didn't even look at it.
Rachel never even looked at it.
And I guess yeah, a little shocked that it's now
over $5 million as well.
As we got more money coming in from the salaries,
we increased what those monthly deposits were.
And then once I had the option of getting into a 401k, we started to love
that up to its extent. Yeah, it was a, it was much like running a marathon or climbing
a mountain and just little by little. Beautiful. Rachel, what was your experience?
I hate having debt. And when you talk about the,
I will teach you to be rich way.
It's like I initially thought, okay,
we have this money here.
You know, how can I make the most of it?
And I read as much as I could.
And, you know, I realized early on, luckily,
that I didn't want to put it with an advisor
or somebody with the fees that we're gonna eat away at it.
So we just literally just put it on set it and forget it.
And I'm shocked that it worked out.
Boom!
That's what happens when you follow the I Will Teach You
to Be Rich System.
They started investing $25 a month.
Now they have millions.
If you are listening, hit pause, go get my book
from Amazon or bookshop.org or audible. Set up your automatic system and let it ride.
If you already have six figures, if you already earn six figures or you have a six figure net
worth, go to iwt.com slash products
and get my advanced personal finance program. There are no secrets, no hacks, no gimmicks.
But if you follow these simple steps, that is how real consistent wealth is created. Now,
with Rachel and Jack, they did the money part, but they haven't mentally acknowledged
their success yet.
Do you two embrace that you have become multi-millionaires?
No.
Even I am disbelieving when I think of it like that.
I don't know where it places us, you know, and the whole scheme of income earners.
But when I see things about what families have saved,
what they've got put away for retirement,
it's like a dishwasher over me, realizations like,
wow, we're in a really good position compared
to most people, but yeah, we've never looked at ourselves
that way, for sure.
Rachel, does it strike you? Do you acknowledge that you're a multi-millionaire?
Nope. Talk more.
This probably sounds terrible. I tend to not, I don't value or I don't like people who brag about
having a lot of money, who have a very
ostentatious lifestyle.
So when I see that number, it freaks me out a little bit.
Because.
I don't want to be that.
Yeah.
Can I put it in different words?
Tell me if this sounds accurate.
Did you grow up not liking quote the rich? And now that you have become the rich, what does it mean?
I don't want to be an asshole. Yeah. In America, we love rich people. And we hate them too. We idolize the rich. We buy their books about how they
grew up on a dirt road and pulled themselves up through their hard work and finally made it.
Ah, the American Dream. We also love to follow the rich on Instagram where they're
sailing to a Greek island on a Wednesday and buying $2,000 wellness supplements and looking effortlessly beautiful
and cashmere.
We love the rich, but we also hate them.
We think they're selfish, greedy, evil.
If people are making money, fine.
But when we find out exactly how much we hate them. Buying a Tesla and posting about it, that's okay.
Buy a Ferrari, you're an asshole.
Say it in an interview that you like organic food, great, super relatable.
But if you actually share how much you spend on those organic eggs and almond butter,
suddenly you're out of touch. People are dying. In this
economy, etc. It's this puritanical dichotomy that defines America. Most of us don't even realize
we feel this way until it's pointed out to us. Interestingly, there is one group of rich people who we unapologetically love. You
know who it is? Rich people who act poor. Warren Buffett, oh wow, you live in a house
from 1969. That's so relatable. Let's just ignore the fact that you own a private jet.
Bill Gates, wow, you wear docker so relatable. Let's
just ignore your 66,000 square foot house. Or Oprah. Well, oh, that's all right. She's
Oprah. American's puritanical cultural script is spending money is bad. That's the script. We love this millionaire next door idea of this
relatable millionaire wearing jeans who skips the sushi plate and the tuna tartar and instead
goes directly for the sloppy jose. Fine, true in some cases, but many more millionaires spend profoundly differently than the average American.
They should. They can afford to. These deep invisible scripts permeate our culture and write the
rules of the game that you don't even realize you're playing. Years ago, I decided I wanted to change
this. I started sharing more of how I spend my money.
I showed you how I hired a personal trainer.
I show you some of the hotels I stay in.
I also show you that I wrote a $100,000 check
in the 2020 presidential election
to help people get free transportation to vote.
I want to show you that you can make money
and be a good person. I want to show you that you can make money and be a good person.
I want to show you that it's okay to spend money on the things you love. And you know
what? Sometimes they don't even have to provide you an ROI. You can simply buy them because
you want to. And sometimes I show you that eating tacos on the back of my car is also my rich life.
There's no honor in pretending not to be rich.
It does not make you a better person.
I actually think it's selfish for all the people who post on investment forums saying things
like, it's not like we're rich, we're comfortable.
We make $290,000 a year and we have a small portfolio of $2.3 million.
You're fucking rich.
First, you're playing small by not acknowledging your rich.
And second, it's incredibly insulting to people who don't have anywhere near what you do.
If you are rich, own it.
If you're wealthy, acknowledge it. If you're wealthy, acknowledge it.
I'm rich.
I worked hard, and I had a lot of help, and a lot of luck.
And I always said, once I make it, I'm bringing everyone with me.
And now I get to do that.
Listen now, as you hear Rachel,
explain where her views of money come from.
What was your view of the rich growing up? you hear Rachel explain where her views of money come from.
What was your view of the rich growing up?
I wasn't around those kind of people.
My dad, you know, we're older.
My dad grew up in the depression.
So I grew up always hearing, you know, say what you can and never to have an ostentatious lifestyle.
It just wasn't part of our lifestyle.
Where'd you go?
Southside of Chicago.
Gritty.
Yeah.
And so your dad, you remember him telling you,
save, save, save.
What else do you remember?
Again, he was a product of the depression. So I was,
you know, never spoiled. And it was always work for what you have.
It's a good lesson. Yeah. Did he buy a lot of stuff? Like, if he saw something on sale,
would he buy it extra? He wasn't a shopper at all. Okay, what do you do with his money?
Saved it.
Is he still alive?
No.
Okay, what happened with his money in the end?
There wasn't a lot there,
and my mom lived on for almost 20 years after him.
Did your mom do okay financially after your dad passed?
Mm-hmm. Okay, was that ever a concern? Yeah. years after him. Did your mom do okay financially after your dad passed?
Okay. Was that ever a concern? Yeah. She always wanted to give us something,
you know, for birthdays, anniversaries, Christmas, she would give us what we considered
large sums of money, $300 or something. Yeah. You know, and we never cashed one of the checks.
And it irked her till the day she died.
Because it screwed up for checking account.
And Rachel was like, no, I mean, you know,
she could ultimately need this, you know,
for long-term care, you know, for whatever.
So anytime she gave us a present like that,
it never actually left her account because
we never cashed any of it.
I really like you, too.
I like you, too, for so many reasons.
For some while, it's just fun to talk to you.
I love this story about going to New York.
And I think it's really cool that you almost seem unaware of what you've accomplished. You know, you have really
accomplished something quite amazing. You're quite young. Yeah, mid fifties. I know you mentioned
we're on the older side, but no, you're quite young, particularly for the amount that you've
accumulated. And I love that little tidbit you just threw in there. You know, she would
try to give us large amounts. And then Rachel Chimes in 300 bucks. Like, it's just so relatable. And I love all of that. It's just you're like a next-door neighbor.
You're like a friend, you know? But there's one big difference. You have over five million dollars.
you have over $5 million.
Can you be both?
Can you be the next door neighbor, the friend,
and have a multi million dollar network?
That's what I'm going to figure out.
So interesting that two different answers there.
Jack said absolutely.
And Rachel said, that's what we're going to figure out.
He's, he's much more confident of that than I am for sure. I guess because I know from whence we came, you know, we're the kind of people
that would do whatever was necessary to help a friend and I don't see that changing and if anything
I see, you know, it puts us in a position to actually do that even more readily.
So in some ways, the sum actually allows us to be even more of what we are or where we came from
or, you know, that sort of thing. We still won't ever be ostentatious. It will never be, you know, flying it in front of people purposefully beating
our chest and extolling our bank account to anybody. The money itself to me is not a
negative and shouldn't be perceived as a negative.
Rachel, what about you?
I hope so. I still have this unexplainable fear of it running out
that we haven't done enough that
because I'm not working, suddenly the stock market's
going down and all of a sudden it's gonna disappear
just as quickly as it appeared.
Like it'll disappear over 30 years?
Yeah, I mean, I hope we live that much longer.
I mean, I'm trying to make the point that it didn't, you didn't just make this money overnight.
Right.
But I still am not confident that without me still contributing that it will last.
There it is.
I was looking for the C word.
I was counting how many minutes until you said the seaword contribution.
It's always the lower earning member of a couple who is obsessed with the seaword.
Am I contributing enough?
And sometimes it might be a parent who's staying home with the kids.
They go, am I contributing?
This doesn't show up on the spreadsheet, but do we count my childcare and all the time
that I'm making the food and this and that?
And it's so interesting that in your mid fifties, you know, after a very successful long career,
investing and doing all that, you're still using the C word.
What would make you feel safe?
I don't know.
Try to guess.
I don't know.
I feel like I think part of the issue
is the way we accumulated the money.
You know, we do, I read a few Kiplingers and Personal Finance books and we just started
putting it away and it somehow got there.
So I'm not, I feel like I'm not an expert and we've never gone to an expert to like look at our finances and I feel like
I've missed something. So I'm trying to educate myself now. Well okay maybe you did miss something.
Maybe you missed out on some obscure tax advantage or some type of account. You missed the fifth
wrong of my wrong of personal finance, whatever.
Yeah, you missed it. And finish the sentence for me. What does that imply?
That it's going to collapse. Right. Right. Okay. So you built a house of cards,
but you think maybe you missed one little thing at the lowest foundation level, and it's all going
to collapse. Maybe. Okay. So that's interesting. It sounds like maybe you might feel safer
if somebody reviewed everything for you
and told you this is correct.
Maybe.
Yeah.
Fair enough, maybe.
What else would make you feel safe?
I don't know.
How much did you make at the job you left?
I was at 117.
Okay.
And you left that job and now you're working part-time.
And how many hours are you working and how much do you make?
It depends.
I'm making minimum wage.
It depends on the time of year, how much I'm working.
It's a good job for a good cause.
It's a farm, is that right? Yeah, it's an urban farm. That's cool.
We donate a lot of our proceeds to the food pantry and it's pretty cool.
That's awesome. It started as fully volunteer too. So it's just as they've seen what she can bring
to the organization and so they've actually started to compensate her
for the hours she's putting in as opposed to just doing it
free.
Great.
Okay, so this is something that is like a passion of yours
and you're contributing to it.
Fantastic.
And Jack, I understand that you still work.
And Jack, what's your income?
156.
Okay.
Do you both own your house?
Yes.
Where does the money go?
Probably most of it goes back into our accounts.
Investing and stuff.
Yep.
Maxing out on 401k, for sure.
Back to our Roth conversions.
And then we've got a series of accounts, again,
much like what you talk about in the book
with online banks that have cash in them.
So we have the access to it that every week and every month
it flows into an account that then disperses it
to the investment accounts.
Hey, you guys are very savvy.
You're doing everything right.
And it goes and goes and goes.
It's like a, it's like a loop at the level that you are at.
You have more money than you know what to do with.
It sounds weird to say, doesn't it?
Yeah, totally.
It's weird because almost everybody in America has a different problem than you have. Everyone, virtually everyone is, I don't have enough.
I need to save more.
But you're in the enviable position where you actually have more just sitting in investments
than you know what to do with.
And your income is basically just going right back
into that asset.
So you've got a whole different challenge.
It's a much better challenge,
but it is a challenge nonetheless.
Okay, good work.
I mean, a lifetime of this, I know it's Rachel,
you said it seemed surprising.
Jack, you even mentioned, it's hard to believe.
But if you start investing early, you even mentioned, it's hard to believe. But if you start investing early,
you invest consistently and you have relatively high incomes, it's just math. It's not magic,
it's just math. We are the poster children for your book,
for your method. Seriously, like, we've done nothing else but that and that's how we've gotten here. Yeah.
Five million dollars plus.
Yeah.
So what does somebody who has five million dollars do?
Let's start not with you, but with somebody else.
When you envision a multi-millionaire, what kind of lifestyle are they leading?
Drive and fan your cars.
Do you shoot, can I guess what you drive? Oh, I don't think they're gonna get mine.
Okay, is it a Subaru?
No, I want one though.
It is a Toyota that we inherited from Rachel's mom
when she passed.
2003.
I love you too. I love you. Oh my god.
Tell you what or what?
Emory. Oh, it's the top of the line. Camry for 2003. I know that model. I know that model
very well. You would have nailed it because we were actually looking at a Subaru at the Subaru. At the time, but then when we had the opportunity to take over Rachel's mom's car,
we're like, the car just runs too well. Yeah, it's too good of a car. I agree. It's too good of a car.
It's just it's going to run and run and run. And so we figured why take on a car payment when we've
got a perfectly good running car. Okay, so back to the multi-millionaires.
What else do multi-millionaires?
What kind of lifestyle?
They have a nicer car.
What else?
Well, just just what I did with New York, you know, a multi-millionaire is not going
to turn their nose up, it going and staying at the maxi.
Can we can we do a roleplay?
You be a multi-millionaire, hypothetically, and we're going to plan
a trip to New York.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay, Rachel, I'm excited.
We get to go to New York.
We've been talking about this for a long time.
So I was thinking that we would go, you know, mid-March and we'll go for like five days.
How does that sound?
It's a long time.
Or I'm being rich, not not me right? Yeah. Yes. You're being rich Rachel not real Rachel who's also rich fabulous
But rich Rachel we're going. Okay, great answer. And
Yeah, so I have a couple of ideas for hotels, but what are you thinking?
Whatever you want to do
Let's stay in the best area so we don't have to walk too far.
Oh, so I can just go ahead and just book it and you'll be good. Yeah. Okay. And in terms of eating,
you know, I have a couple of places I was thinking, what are you thinking? It's gotta be fancy.
Wow. Okay. Go ahead. Okay. Very nice. What else do you like to do? Do you want to see a show?
Yeah.
All right.
So Rachel, why don't you pick the show that we see?
What are you gonna pick?
You know what?
We didn't see Hamilton when it was here.
We'll go see Hamilton.
Okay.
That sounds good.
Hey, will you just let me know what seats you chose for Hamilton?
Yeah, they're gonna be down the front.
Wow.
Okay. So let's zoom out of this example. know what seats you chose for Hamilton? Yeah, they're going to be down the front. Wow.
Okay, so let's zoom out of this example.
What was the difference between rich Rachel and real Rachel?
Every single thing.
Talk me through it.
I would never say, oh, for five nights, I'd be like, well, do we have to say that long?
That's a long time.
And we'd look at the restaurants,
we'd have to look at the hotels for sure.
When you say we, you mean you?
Yeah, basically.
Okay, what else?
I'd worry about eating three meals out every day.
Why?
Because that adds up.
Okay.
And I'd be at the last minute ticket booth
if we were gonna go to a show.
No, Rachel, oh my God.
Yeah.
You're not allowed to go to the last minute ticket booth
in Times Square.
In front, that's for sure.
No, it would not be, it would not be even happening,
but Rachel, it's making me laugh so much
that you would be at the last minute ticket.
I would. She talked be at the last weekend.
She talked about that this past weekend.
If you don't know, there's a ticket booth in Times Square that sells last minute tickets
to Broadway shows for really cheap prices.
Basically the line starts super early in the morning and people, mostly tourists, will
spend hours hoping to get a discounted ticket.
What did she say about we all I should go and see the day that I had my meeting. She's like, I'm going to go and go last minute ticket booth and see if we can get into something tonight.
Okay, Rachel, I mean, there's so many funny things about this, but can I just say,
maybe this will reach you because I know me telling you you have enough money
is not going to reach you.
But when you stand in that last minute ticket booth line
and you take that Hamilton ticket,
you know there's some mom or dad
from the South side of Chicago who brought their kid there
for the first time and now they can never see Hamilton
because of you.
That would make me change my mind.
Yeah.
Everybody stop and clap for me right now.
I just weaponized the Indian mom guilt trip
and turned it against Rachel.
This moment should go down in history books
as one of the most effective money psychology strategies
ever employed.
Rachel doesn't care about her millions of dollars.
She doesn't care about wasting hours of her limited time
in New York City.
But when I mentioned some poor hypothetical family
that she's taking tickets away from, I think I got her.
You know, many things in America are catered
towards people who need to save money because they do, right?
So if you imagine in a way, when you do certain things,
you're actually subsidizing other people
to be able to afford things, right?
That's why I'm so happy to pay my taxes.
I don't have kids in this school district,
but there are people who can't afford what I can, and so they
get to send their kids to a great public school.
So think about all the ways that you subsidize others who are not as fortunate as youth.
So much of Rachel's thinking around money is based around scarcity.
This is one of the reasons that frugality can be a great skill,
but at a certain level, it can become destructive.
It can become selfish.
If you're so focused on cutting back and saving money,
you forget that you have obligations as a wealthy person.
Yes, I said it.
If you're wealthy, you have obligations.
That moxie hotel that Rachel was so afraid of, guess who works there?
Front desk staff, door men, bar tenders, housekeeping.
All those people could have benefited from Rachel's money and tips.
But to save that $100 that she absolutely does not need to save, she skipped it.
Now, what I'm doing here is nudging Rachel out of her own head and showing her that she's
earned the right to be able to think beyond $100.
In fact, I would argue it's her obligation.
This is nothing new. The wealthy subsidizing others has happened for generations, for hundreds of years, and rightfully so.
In ancient Greece, arts, for example, were funded by the wealthy.
Today, I pay taxes that fund neighborhood schools, even though I don't have children.
Good! I can afford it!
Like a beginning musician, Rachel currently has a single note with money that she can play.
Note the notice.
Save.
Save, save, save.
I need to expand her repertoire to show her that there are other notes out there.
And when you play them together, it could truly sound beautiful.
In fact, at her level, it's her obligation to start playing these new notes.
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What's the opposite of fear? Generosity. Nice. So can you just quickly play out how
would fear manifest if you were going on a trip to New York versus generosity?
Well fear is what I do now. I think everything through to the point where we don't enjoy it. And if I'm being generous, even to ourselves, I would allow myself and Jack to go out and
enjoy ourselves without guilt, without fear.
That's generous to us. But I also don't wanna be selfish with it,
generous to others as well.
If our friends are there, I'd love to,
you buy the next round of drinks, it feels great.
Love that.
You can be generous.
I love that you're generous to yourself.
That's a great insight.
And generous to Jack, Jack came to you,
he wanted to take a trip,
and he actually had his work covering part of it. Very generous of him to say, let's turn this into a nice leisure trip as well.
Your response, what tool did you pull out of your tool belt when he came to you with generosity?
Fair.
Yeah.
So, if you had met him with generosity, what might you have said to him?
Yeah, let's do it. had met him with generosity, what might you have said to him?
Yeah, let's do it. Mm-hmm.
And push that even forward.
Be even more generous than he was generous towards you.
I can't do that.
Yeah, I think, well, first of all, I'd have to scrape
them up off the ground.
It's a good thing.
You've been married for so long.
Good to keep it fresh.
Yeah.
Okay.
So you scrape them off the ground.
I said, he says to you, I found a hotel.
It's going to be relatively modest, moxie in the East Village.
And then you say,
back, we're going big.
Keep going.
We're staying. I don't know the names of the fancy ones,
but the Ritz, I don't know.
Okay, the Ritz, great.
Not my style.
Conred.
Conred.
Yeah, there you go.
This man knows his New York hotels, very good.
Okay, how do you think he would react to that?
Dund silence.
I wouldn't be totally stunned. There have been rare occasions where she says, yeah, you know what, let's just, we've
got this opportunity and let's do it.
I don't know how the stars align or where the planets were at that time.
And usually it surrounds food and restaurants.
And that's the one
thing we have been generous to ourselves is is we will go to a restaurant because we want to have
really good restaurant you know dining experience and we always tip extremely well you know we
always like to take care of our servers in those situations because we know how hard those jobs are
to take care of our servers in those situations because we know how hard those jobs are.
So there's always been that kind of spark in her
with regards to that.
So I feel like when you see that spark.
Oh, it's awesome.
Because I know, I know once it's, what's it's there?
It's like, it turns out how the trip to New York
worked out, which is fabulous.
You know, we went to the bar, we had a drink at the bar, sat at our table, had a wonderful meal.
It was great.
It's funny hearing how grateful you both are.
I love it.
I really like hearing how grateful you are for the simple things of being able to have
a drink at a bar.
I'm not hearing the two of you say anything like, you know, I want to buy
three different Ferraris. Not even in the same universe. It's, I want to be able to go to a hotel.
Maybe the same hotel, not have to switch hotels on a three day trip. I want to be able to get a drink
at a bar, have some nice food. Tip well. It's a very nice, achievable goal. I mean, to be candid, somebody who has
a 20th of what you have as net worth could do that. In other words, you have 20 times
the wealth. So, to be so focused on these $ dollar questions about a hotel room and a modest hotel
room, or, you know, should we take this flight or that, it almost feels like a tragedy to
me, a tragedy to live a smaller life than you have to. Rachel, I know you mentioned not wanting to get older and
just realize you saved all this money and you didn't do anything with it. Has that been
on your mind? Absolutely. 100%. When it's on your mind, do you change anything or does it
just make you feel worse? Both. I feel worse and then I try to change.
What do you change?
Well, again, I'm trying to educate myself to, I need to understand that it is enough.
And just here, you say that 20 times, okay, will it last us another 30 years?
I need to understand that really solidly.
But yeah, I mean, I'm trying to do both,
technology and change.
Okay.
Would you like me to talk to you a little bit about
how long the money's going to last?
Yeah.
Okay.
So currently with the income of roughly 150K, that's more than you actually spend.
It sounds like you're taking that money, you're putting it back into your investments.
So you could theoretically live on less than 150.
Would you agree with that, Rachel?
Yes.
Okay. This $5 million you have. What does that number
mean to you? Absolutely nothing. Yeah, that's right. That's right. So, to other people listening,
they go, 5, this lady is the market. He's an idiot. Yeah, exactly. And you say that to yourself. I know.
But I understand that 5 million does not hold meaning to you.
And that is the crux of it.
Any concept.
It's just a number with a lot of zeros.
You know, I had this same discussion with my wife early on.
We were talking about large amounts. When I see
five million, I see something totally different than what you see. It's like if you see someone
who runs, I don't know, a two hour, I don't know how long it takes to run a marathon, but
some number marathon. And I go, oh, is that long or were they driving a car? Like, I have no clue.
To you, it means something. To me, it means nothing. Right. And so I love that you're going, hey,
I'm trying to get educated about this.
I want you to be educated about what that number actually
means to you.
So should we talk about that?
Yeah.
OK.
Yes, please.
All right.
So I'm going to ask a couple of questions
just to understand your level of knowledge here.
And then I'll tell you my thoughts on it.
When you see 5 million, how do you feel about it?
My 5 million or somebody else's?
Yours.
It doesn't exist.
I literally don't feel anything about it.
You feel nothing?
No, no. I don't feel like I can spend it.
I don't feel like I can enjoy it.
I don't feel like it's there.
Why is that?
Because of the way it was accumulated.
Just plugging that away and never looking at it.
How often did you review your numbers?
Never.
Like once a year or really never?
Oh God, no. No. Like once a year or really never?
Oh God no.
No.
Like for a long time, never.
Check for either one in charge.
Oh no.
What?
Who did this?
Rachel.
I give 100% credit to her.
She was the one who got us into this track of, of, of, of,
of set it and forget it savings.
Um, but
up until, you know, a couple of years ago,
we probably
rarely looked at it.
You guys are the best.
I mean,
everything you're saying is so funny,
but it's funny to me, you know,
the finance guy because
you know, all these crypto nerds online,
trading, doing all this bullshit,
losing all their money, but they don't even realize it,
or all these people who try to flip houses
and they think they're making all this profit,
but they're not.
And meanwhile, here's the two of you.
You literally don't even check your accounts
for years at a time.
And then you're like, ah, babe, where's that password?
Oh shit, we have
like $4.9 million today. Oh well, let's check it in a couple more years. And you just
could not care less. I find this so hilarious. And for all these crypto loser traders out
there who think you're making money, now you can meet a real couple and learn how multi
millionaires actually make their money. The way that you two have made your money
is way more common than most people believe.
Way more common.
You just plugged away.
You were consistent.
You didn't win the lottery.
You didn't hit some tech IPO.
You just saved and invested.
You had low fees.
You understand things like allocation.
You use your tax advantage accounts like a 401k,
and that's it.
It's just time.
Yeah.
I'll just talk math.
Okay.
When I look at your $5 million,
I see that you, I'm gonna assume that you two
are getting roughly a 7% return rate.
That's, I think conservative,
I don't know what your allocations
like, but I'll just say seven percent. Would you say that that's a fair assumption generally?
Jack, what do you think? I think so, yeah. Okay. So, Rachel, did you know that answer,
by the way? Roughly. Very, very roughly. Okay. But seven percent. If I had said, like,
70 percent, what would you say? No, no, no good. Okay
So you're very knowledgeable. That's very impressive. So today you have 5 million
If you do nothing if you stop contributing right now
And you take all that money jacks making and all that money ratio you're making from the farm and you just spend it all
Every last cent by the time you're 60 how the farm and you just spend it all. Every last cent.
By the time you're 60, how much do you think you have in your accounts?
So we're not contributing anything.
Correct.
Spending all of it in the markets are still going down.
Well, we don't know what happens, but we're just going to assume 7% on average.
7%
Some years ago, it was up to 7%
I don't know, 6 million?
7 million. And by the time
you're 65, how much would you have? Seven million. Nope. Ten million. What's that look on your face,
Rachel? Shock. This belief. Yeah. Rachel, how long did your parents live to? How old were they?
How old were they? My dad was 80. My mom was 89. Wow. Your mom was 89. Yeah. What's the number you think you might live to? It's a weird question, but let's just ballpark it. I'm going for it. I'm high 90s.
She's going for three digits for sure. Yeah. Okay, I love that answer.
I did not expect that.
So, what do you want to say?
95?
Yeah.
All right, how much you can have then?
If you contribute not a cent more from today onwards.
Oh, I got to start living on that at some point.
Yeah, I'm sure you're going to be in real trouble with how much you need to live on.
Rachel, how come? Oh, my God. Oh, no. Your first inclination was to talk about how much you need to live on. Rachel, how come?
Oh my God.
No.
Your first inclination was to talk about how much you need to live on.
Rachel, you own your house.
You have like a 50 year old car.
It's not like you two are traveling that extravagantly.
I mean, you're debating over the moxie.
Come on.
Forget about how much you need to spend.
How much are you going to have in that investment account by the age of 95?
Too much.
We need to spend it down, right?
Yes, but how much? How much?
I don't know. 15. No. No, that's too much.
That's not. It's not.
Let her do a job. I don't know. I don't know.
At the age of 95, 15, 15 million?
Yeah.
Try 76 million.
No.
And listen, Rachel, if you make it to 100, you got $107 million. And listen, Rachel, if you make it to a hundred, you got $107 million.
But don't kick the bucket, all right?
So what is this?
Look at that lab.
What does it make you think as you hear these numbers?
That you're slightly crazy.
Well, I'm not crazy.
I'm just doing math.
Seriously?
Yeah, I'm serious.
I'm not even adding in the amounts that Jack is
contributing, which is tens of thousands of dollars a year. I'm not adding in any of that. Of course,
I'm not taking out what you two would take out to use. That is true. You will start extracting money
from this, but at your current state, it's so modest. The point is, these numbers are almost comically large.
Well, that's why I laugh in.
Yeah. It's almost unfathomable, right?
100% unfathomable.
Like, the same way as we got to five,
it doesn't even seem like that's crazy talk what you're saying.
It accelerates faster the more you have.
This is what's counterintuitive.
It took your whole lives to get to five
and then it will take you such a short amount of time
to get to 10 and 20.
20 million dollars.
That's going to happen in your lifetime.
No.
Yes.
Are you prepared for that?
No.
No.
If you do not use your current financial state as training wheels to learn how to think
about and spend money, then you will be stuck at this level forever while your portfolio
grows to ungodly amounts.
That was fun to do, but it won't actually change anything for Rachel.
That's because if she can't think about how large 5 million dollars is, she definitely
can't think about what 76 million dollars means.
Hearing the number 5 million scares her.
So if I just told her the $76 million number, you know what it does?
It just causes her to burrow deeper and to avoid this.
But I'm not just telling her numbers.
In fact, we've been talking about everything but numbers for this entire episode.
This is where I'm starting to lay the groundwork
for her to realize that her fears aren't just unfounded. They're actually absurd.
So now that I've pegged these huge numbers in the tens of millions of dollars,
we can start by dealing with the relatively modest number of five million dollars.
Watch how simple this starts off.
You like coffee?
Yeah.
Can I tell you what I do with coffee?
Yeah.
So I like coffee.
I have a spreadsheet of different types of coffee
that I want to try.
And every week or two, I will order one coffee
being delivery that I know I like and I'll order four new
ones.
Okay?
And most of them, I don't particularly like, I take my little notes, but every month or
so, I discover a new coffee that I love.
And it's just like this cool adventure for me. What does it cost me?
$50, $80 a month. Some number that's relatively modest for me. But it gives me this feeling of
adventure. And I'm supporting all these local coffee being places all around the country.
And if I don't like it, that's fine. I give the beans away or whatever.
What do you notice about that example? That feels fine. I give the beans away or whatever. What do you notice about that example?
That feels nice.
What else?
Well, you know, my morning coffee, that's like the best time of the day.
And bring it to you. We have coffee and bed. Yeah, I'd love to step up that game.
Yeah, you see how you can add a little bit of magic to your day.
It's not that expensive, but it's actually not about the money.
If it costed you a thousand dollars a month, it would still be worth it.
Because it's, you have a simple life.
Yes, I agree.
You do.
I'm not trying to get you to go out and, you know, party in the meatpacking.
That's not what I'm trying to get.
But you love coffee.
How do we turn that money dial up?
That's exactly where I'm struggling.
And I know you're looking for specificity, but it's like, I haven't given it a second
thought.
In decades.
Yeah, yeah.
So your entire money lens has been cost to the exclusion of excitement, novelty, generosity.
And so we're pulling up these rusty instruments from the closet.
We're going, dust this thing off.
I still think you have generosity inside of you and adventures, adventures, adventure,
whatever the word is.
But it takes a little polishing to get it back up to speed.
Would you agree?
Yeah.
Okay.
So it's now 6.30 a.m. and we've already had a magical experience through these coffee
beans.
Beautiful.
What's next?
Yes.
I have some top notch running gear.
Beautiful.
Do you currently have that?
No.
Okay. Now we're talking. What is a good guy. I'm a good guy. I'm a good guy. I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy.
I'm a good guy. I'm a good guy. I'm a good guy. I'm that. It's meaningful to you. Yeah. That makes you happy.
Beautiful.
Your rich life, when you truly turn the dial on the things that matter, it should almost
be incomprehensible to someone from the outside.
So I remember I have a friend of mine who runs a lot.
She and her husband are avid runners.
One time I went over to their house and they have a shoe rack in front of their front
door and I was like, oh, who's over here?
And they were like, what do you mean?
And I walked in, I expected there was a party there.
No, it's just two of them
because they have like 10 different pairs of shoes.
Incomprehensible to me, but runners, of course,
they get it.
They go, this is for that and that's for that.
So for you, it should be incomprehensible to me.
Okay, great.
So you wake up, you put on the best gear,
you've got the shoes and the shirt and whatever type of watch.
Okay, you go for your run.
Are you running alone?
Jack.
Okay, good.
And are the two of you running for fun, for performance?
Tell me about that.
If we're really doing this, we are training for
one of the marathons that we can't get into
because if you go through marathon tours,
it can pay to get into one.
Now, well, I mean, you can obviously afford it,
but I think it's even more meaningful to earn it.
How would the two of you train in a really effective way?
With a coach.
That's right.
What happens at lunch?
Easy at home, healthy.
Cool, whole foods?
Yeah, recovery food.
Great.
What's the rest of the day?
I still see, Jack, I mean, he's still enjoying
what he's doing.
I still see him working.
I'm at the farm. I don't see giving up that part yet.
Great. And then in the evening?
Easy dinner.
Who cooked that?
Mostly me.
Okay. Same thing. Whole foods.
Yeah.
Do you love food?
Yeah.
Remember how I said I love coffee?
And what did I do to make it special for me? Do you love food? Yeah. Remember how I said I love coffee?
And what did I do to make it special for me?
Ordering all sorts of new stuff.
Yeah.
And you also mentioned you love food,
and you mentioned you want to be generous.
Can you put those two together for me and tell me
how you might make dinner magical for you?
Have friends over?
Love that.
Would you cook? Yeah, be a little
intimidated, but yeah. Okay. She's a great cook, but you would worry about cooking for others.
Would you feel comfortable having somebody else cook for you? I don't know. In the house. Yeah.
It would depend on who it was. Can I just tell you, you know, when you have the kind of money you have, all these problems
can disappear.
If you want them to cook in your house, they'll cook in your house.
If you want them to prep somewhere else and then just bring it over, they'll bring it
over.
If you don't like the person, you can hire somebody else.
These are all easily solved problems.
You know, I just want to remind you, you're not 20 years old with no money.
You're rich.
You're really rich.
Yeah, then maybe they prep it and bring it in.
I get it.
It's a little bit more modest if you can have the food instead of a chef in his way.
Yeah.
I get that.
It might be a little bit too much.
Yeah.
Fine.
Okay, let's just stop right here at the end
of this day. I want to summarize what you told me and then I'd like to know how it feels.
You wake up in the morning. Jack brings you coffee and he goes, babe, look at this. This one is
from Arkansas. They have a really cool coffee farm there and this has, it's from South America and
I really like to tell me what you think.
You go for a run, you put on the perfect shoes, you meet your coach. He or she is outside. You got the gear, you go for a run, go to work for a little bit. And then in the evening, the chef
comes over, you want it to be home style, simple, nothing showy, healthy. He comes over, he puts it out, plates it maybe for you,
but leaves the final stuff for you, leaves.
And your friends come over, you got music playing
and you serve dinner and everybody has a nice time.
How does that day feel to you?
That feels great and not extravagant.
It's not extravagant.
It's okay if it's extravagant though.
What do you think the most expensive part of that day was?
My running shoes.
Yeah. Wait, how much does running shoes cost?
Some of them are like 275.
Okay, okay.
You know that running shoe in the conversation we've had today,
you made that amount in interest.
Did you know that?
No.
Let me say it again.
I want to see your reaction.
During our conversation, you have made enough money to pay for those running shoes.
Maybe times five in interest.
You believe me? Yeah, because you're the expert. It doesn't seem real, but yeah.
That's how money works. The more money you have, the more it makes. And at a certain point, it makes so
much that you cannot spend it fast enough. Did you know that right now, each year,
how much your investments are generating for you?
Just assuming 7%, your investments will generate $358,000
for you.
How many years of income is that, Rachel?
Three years.
And in a few years, by the time you're 58, it will generate $409,000.
And by the time you are $60,469,000, by the time you're 70,923,000 per year, it goes up.
By the time you're 80, because I know you're going in for the long haul, $1.8 million a year. That's a 7% return rate. We can cut that down as you get older, you will
become less aggressive. There's certain things called a safe withdrawal rate. These are all more
technical. I'm sure you've read about it or we could talk about it later, but even at half the return,
you have enough money to last you for the rest of your life and beyond.
Can you say it?
We have enough.
Yeah.
You have enough to not just survive, but to thrive.
Enough that shoes are the equivalent of a pack of gum for you.
Can you internalize that?
You remember how we felt when we were 20?
And we saw a pack of gum in the grocery store check out line?
We're just like, oh, that sounds good, whatever.
It's nothing.
That is your $275 shoes to you now.
That doesn't seem real. That's nothing. That is your $275 shoes to you now.
That doesn't seem real.
That's awesome.
I love you too, the difference is so good.
You know, Rachel, I want you to feel that it's real. I do. It's going to take you time. It's going to take you a lot of work. Yeah. But whether or not you feel it's real, it it's real. I do. It's gonna take you time. It's gonna take you a lot of work.
Yeah. But whether or not you feel it's real, it is still real.
And every day, you treat it like it's not real. What happens?
The wall between me and the acceptance of it gets higher. Yes.
And that's why I made myself go to New York. I know that that
you know, every time I say no,
it's another brick in the wall.
That's right.
And also what happens to the amount of money?
It keeps going up.
It keeps going up to a point where.
And it's gonna get harder.
That's right.
And so one day, imagine in the future,
you're 75, you go, okay, fine, I'll spend it.
And at that time, you know, to you, like,
$1,000 is a big expense.
Meanwhile, you made $1,000 in 10 minutes in interest,
and you spent your entire life feeling okay
to spend $1,000, but you were actually
playing the tiniest game in your life.
And that's exactly what I don't want to do.
Here's a couple who's playing small, and they are wealthy.
For them, a $300 pair of running shoes is like a pack of gum.
But they don't realize.
See, they made their money, but they haven't yet adjusted their money's psychology. You know, every so often I get a message from someone who writes me, and they say,
I've been following you for seven years.
Today's post finally convinced me to get your book.
Let's go!
And I'm happy!
I'm happy to hear that they're getting my book.
But these type of messages actually make me really sad.
Think about it.
This person read my email newsletter
or they followed me on social for years.
I'm sure they've seen me mention my book,
my earnable business program, my dream job program,
lots of other things.
I'm sure they've also seen me take these exotic trips
to a tiger safari or six week trip to Japan and India and Kenya.
Those are my most popular posts of all.
So finally, after all of that, they got up the courage to do something, to take some action.
And they bought my book.
Again, I'm happy they did it.
That's a great place to start.
And I know that all of us goes on our own journey. And
we only take that journey when we are ready. But the reason I'm sad is that in all that
time, there were people who grew their incomes by $100,000. People who started businesses
that have generated millions, people who have invested automatically for years and years. And this person who wrote me, they built up this crescendo,
all to buy a $10 book.
I appreciate everyone who reads it,
but these messages about taking years to make a decision,
make me sad, because I want people to stop playing small.
Making a $10 decision should not take years. In fact, I have a rule called
Remeads bookbying rule. If you see a book you like, just buy it. Don't
deliberate, don't equivocate, don't agonize, just buy it because a single
insight can change your life. I want you to spend that kind of time on the big
decisions in life.
Buying a house, you think about doing that?
Yes, you should take years running the numbers, saving up, planning for every contingency.
That's worth it.
But to buy a $10 book?
Sadly, most of us spend more time deciding where we're going to order from postmates on
Friday than we do understanding our finances.
And one of my friends once said, get impatient with yourself.
You would never let a good friend sit around and complain about a situation for
seven years.
So why would you do it yourself?
You want to make more money?
Get earnable.
Want to find a new job?
Take dream job.
You and your partner can't seem to resolve something you constantly find about.
Go see a therapist. Get aggressive, get impatient, and above all, stop thinking small.
Can you tell me about your perfect month?
If it's really perfect, I'd love one of those weekends to be something where we get
away somewhere.
Where?
I like kind of outdoorsy trips, you know, a cab in somewhere where there's cool things
to do outside.
Oh God, you're not speaking my language at all.
I'm sure I'm not.
I'm sure I'm not.
Okay.
What is the place that folks in your community
talk about that's like a really cool place to go?
Well, I love the Pacific Northwest
and doing all sorts of stuff like that.
So you go there, what do you get a cabin?
Yeah.
Yeah, tell me more rock cabin.
But yeah, we would find a nice place. Night, you're gonna go glamping. A remote place. Yeah, Okay. Tell me about rock heaven. But, yeah, we would find a nice place.
Night you're going to go glamping.
A remote place.
Yeah.
Okay.
Great.
And how long is this trip?
Just a couple nights.
So it would be like once a month, it would be great to go and do something like that.
And so what happens during this trip?
Lots of outdoor stuff, lots of running, chilling, you know, hopefully if you're
in the Pacific Northwest, there's all sorts of other stuff to do. Go down to Willamette Valley,
wine tasting. Nice. Cool. Okay. Go to the good river. How do you make a trip like that magical?
you make a trip like that magical? By saying yes. Wow, great answer. But that's a given. I already expect you're going to say yes from now on. Okay. Do you accept that that
you will say yes? I think as you indicated earlier, I have a lot of work that I have to
do, but I'm hoping I get there. You will get there.
I want you to notice what just happened in that dynamic.
That was really interesting.
So I said, how do you make it magical thinking that we would talk about some very memorable
thing that you could weave into the trip?
And maybe you'd find out that Jack's been wanting to do X and you would arrange it secretly.
And what was your answer?
Just going for it.
Yeah. Just going along with it. This is exactly what I was talking about a few minutes ago. When people DM me
saying, I've been reading a free stuff for years, I finally decided to buy your book. Here, Rachel's
idea of magical is just saying yes. That's how small she's been playing. That to her saying yes. That's how small she's been playing, that to her saying yes is magical. No, if you have
five million dollars, you can do so much than simply say yes. I'm glad that she's accepting she
can do it, but I want to show her what a rich life can be, especially at her level. I asked her again, what would make it magical?
Having some of the planning done,
he takes care of finding a great restaurant
or a good winery.
I know it's not your style,
but maybe we're signed up for a race while we're out there.
Nice.
Keep going.
Just taking care of some of those details
that I tend to say no to and just doing it.
Okay, you want to ask Jack what would make it magical for him?
Yeah.
It's always on me.
What would you want to do?
I had want to go and stay somewhere that was
super nice. Super nice.
Super nice.
Just gorgeous location, remote, food that's brought to you, you know, a place where you
don't even have to think about it. All of the outdoor activities for sure, because that I love nothing
more than starting the day with a good 10 mile run, you know, come back, but then to
come back to some place that's in a gorgeous location where we don't have to worry about
anything, even deciding that sometimes I don't even want to decide about restaurants.
I'd like to go to a place I hate to throw it all
inclusive for the connotations that that brings,
but there are places and we've looked at them, you know,
remote places in Canada that they specialize and just
gourmet cuisine, pristine conditions,
remote outside nature, and that would be magical
for me.
How do you feel hearing that Rachel?
It will never be able to afford it.
Really?
Yeah.
But you can afford it right now.
I know.
I know. I'm working on it. No, no, no, no. I'm saying you literally can afford it right now.
That's stunning.
Remember what I always say.
People with problems love to talk about their problems.
And here Rachel does it in a subtle way. She goes, yeah, I'm working on it.
Here Rachel does it in a subtle way. She goes, yeah, I'm working on it.
This is her way of saying, I don't really want to change.
I'll just keep repeating that I'm working on it.
But the answer is directly in front of her face.
I'm here right now showing her the numbers,
telling her she's going to have tens of millions of dollars
in her lifetime.
Yet she refuses to truly internalize this.
And what does she say instead?
Yeah, I'm working on this.
It is true.
It takes time to change a lifetime of scarcity.
But what you want to see is a little bit of acceptance of these numbers.
I will say this might seem frustrating to you, but it's actually one of my favorite moments
because it shows how hard it really is to change.
And this is why I do what I do.
I can have all the facts.
I can spend hours talking to you, talking about your childhood, working through your
rich life with you, but it is so hard to really accept
when you've made it.
I find it frustrating and fascinating and joyful to talk to people about this, and some
of them may be one in ten will truly, truly change.
That's enough for me.
I decided now to talk about their investments to really hone in on this with Rachel.
You both contribute $75 to $100K per year to your investments.
Which is awesome.
You paid off your house.
Your expenses are very low.
What if I told you this?
What if I said there is no need to contribute
to your investments anymore and you have to spend that money?
That almost makes it easier. Why? I guess because we've been in the it mode for so long, I think dialing that back makes more sense than just saying, you have
all this money. Now what are you going to do with it?
And is that because right now you see your investments locked up over here and your income
is more fluid, it's more real?
Yeah. Okay. Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay. Jack, how would you feel about that?
Excited, frankly.
Looking at some of those dollars and just picking up and going to London to see a friend
would be awesome.
Okay.
I think we just had a big breakthrough. Did you both catch it?
What was it, Rachel?
We've been...
That whole heads-down approach,
even the money we've earned has never felt like ours.
We've never spent it.
And...
We've also never turned it off, the automatic investments.
And I don't feel like I have a great understanding that if we dialed it back, how that would affect things,
but when you look at the way people live, you know, they get paid, they use the money.
We don't.
And never have.
So that's why it's really hard for me to answer like, what would you do with it?
I don't know.
We just send it away.
It goes.
So I think maybe making an intermediate stop for it that we actually use seems more practical than looking
at this big amount.
I love that it seems novel to you that, hey, maybe we should actually spend some of this
money that we make.
Meanwhile, virtually everyone else in America is like, let me just spend everything I
make.
So you two made an amazing choice decades ago
when you said we're gonna aggressively save and invest.
You did it and you won.
But now we, you know, what we've been talking about today
and what I've been kind of hunting around
is how do I get through to you that you can actually spend?
And I think I love your honesty.
You just said, that doesn't feel real to me.
And no matter how many times I tell you it's real,
it's not gonna feel real until you can start to see a change
in your immediate rich life.
Like when you wake up and you have the best shoes
and you put them on,
and I know you're gonna be grateful, you're gonna go,
I am so glad that I can put these shoes on
and when they feel so good.
And that's just one little step you need to go, whoa, we did this.
We used our money and it gave me joy for the things I have.
Another example that you yourself gave me.
I tipped my, uh, the barista $20 because I can't.
And the smile on their face made me feel so good that I'm going to do that all the time.
Just a beautiful example of how you can use money to create your rich life.
So here's my suggestion to you. I think that the two of you should talk about some amount that's effective immediately
you should begin spending.
Now, if you are contributing $100,000 a year, you know, you roughly have about $8,000
a month, I'm not saying you have to do all of that at once.
I do think eventually you should just start spending your money because
it's actually growing faster than you could spend it right now. But let's start with a number
you're comfortable with. Is there a number that the two of you would like to commit that you have
to spend each month? This number would come directly from Jack's salary.
Half to spend? Half to spend. Each? No, together.
500. No. That's... No, I'm not even... You're not getting at a bed for 500 bucks.
You made 500 bucks in the last 15 minutes. I'm 100 a week. Oh, a week.
2000 a month. No, no, no, never mind. Why are we getting pick a number per month
that the two of you have to spend? 500's not enough? No.
Per month. 1000. Don't ask as if you're looking for my approval. I want you to think about the type of life you want.
Oh my God.
A thousand is more than I want.
No, that's not true.
You want the shoes, you want the coffee beans, the monthly trip, and you heard Jack.
He doesn't just want to go to the cabin.
He wants amazing cuisine. So a1,000 a month is not
enough. All right, your turn. Mm-hmm. I want to hear from Rachel. That's way too much money.
That's right. Now, flip it. Do it again. You should enjoy it now. Okay, that sounded like you're
passing the salt. Can you try one more time? You should enjoy it now. There you go. What did Jack say about what he wants for his rich life?
Don't you care about what he wants? Yeah. Yeah. What did you say he wants at this glamping place?
Oh, he wants he's way more extravagant than I am. Yeah. Well, he is compared to you, but what he
said sounds super reasonable to me who has accumulated millions of dollars.
He wants someone to plan it for him.
Both of you want that.
And he wants really good food so he doesn't have to think about it.
It doesn't sound like too much to ask for for a multi-millionaire.
What do you want on this trip that might include your desires as well as Jax?
We want... We want to stay in a nice place. The kind of place we haven't had to think twice
about moving and eat well. That's it. You look like you're physically in pain.
Why is that?
I've never thought about things like this.
I've never planned a trip without second guessing every single thing.
Well, we're just being hypothetical right now,
but you're gonna do it for real too.
Trust me.
I know, and I'm gonna have the same thing.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
You're not a prisoner to your impulses.
You're not a prisoner.
Your money does not control you.
I haven't heard you say one thing
that literally one thing that made me go wow that's really
That's way out there. Yeah, like I'm begging you. I know. Yeah, please say something that makes me go that's too crazy
Please tell me a restaurant you want to go to that I go wow that is really extravagant
That's beyond your means you could stop thinking about practicality
for the next year and
you wouldn't even be
close to becoming at risk of being too extravagant.
You have no risk right now of being too extravagant.
And if you do get close to that line, Jack's here.
Jack's going to work with you.
He's your partner.
So if anything, you are overdeveloped on
practicality. Yeah. Yeah. So back to the number here, what's the number that Rachel, you think that the two of you should spend each month on a rich life? 2000. 2000? Okay. That's better than 500.
Well, that's 500 per week. Okay. so we're back to the same number. Yeah.
Uh-huh.
So all that did not change your number.
Okay, Jack, what number do you have?
If I'm being honest, the first number that popped
in my head was 5,000.
To do an extended weekend, I mean, that right there
could easily be a couple of,
it would be more than a couple of thousand.
So the one weekend alone would take the lion's share of that would be more than a couple thousand. So the one weekend alone would take the lion share of that. So that's how I kind of came up with five.
Good. And the coffee, that's basically nothing. That's a rounding error, you know,
50 bucks a week or something is irrelevant to you. And the dinner, once a week,
once every two weeks with friends or family, how much would that cost?
A couple hundred.
Could be Rachel, what do you think?
Yeah, a couple hundred and the weekends, what's making it expensive, everything else seems doable.
Well, it's all doable. I mean, you're...
None of this is, I mean, you can do this without even spending part of Jack's salary.
Much less touching is you mungus asset you have over here.
Okay, fine.
That's fine.
Personally, I think if you're having a chef cook once every two weeks, it should cost more
than 200 bucks, because you're going to have a chef prepare all the food and maybe even
do clean up, you know, 500 bucks, a thousand bucks depending on number of guests.
But whatever, start at 200.
Okay.
Be my guest.
Do it with just a two of you.
I don't know.
And then you go, wow, we really like that.
It would be fun to have some other friends over.
Let's do it again.
I get it.
The chef thing can be hard for people to wrap their heads around because it is just so extravagant in this country.
So let me use a more relatable example for Rachel. Back to that hotel. But this time, we're going to use the money lens of generosity.
You're staying at a place where you're paying three or four hundred bucks a night.
Who's opening the door for you?
The guy I'm tipping.
How much you tipping him?
A lot.
Like how much?
20 bucks.
Nice.
Nice.
Love it.
And the lady at the reception desk, how much does she make?
I don't know.
Not enough.
I know more than Minnowage.
Yeah, but she lives in New York.
And then the guy who's cleaning the hallways,
he doesn't make enough.
The bartender.
I mean, all these folks, right?
And you and Jack have saved you one.
You won the game.
And now you actually get the chance to be incredibly generous.
This is a different way to look at your spending.
This isn't going to change everything overnight. You two have the ability to be
extremely generous and use your money as force multipliers. I can't wait to hear how your future
discussions go with your rich life, but you know, if I had to sum it all up, you have enough.
You too have done an amazing job with your finances.
You are the poster children for successful investing in America.
And now you have a huge rich life ahead of you.
It's not about scarcity, it's about turning the page and saying, we did it.
We won the race.
What do we get to do now?
How exciting is that?
You might be surprised to know that even though Rachel and Jack
are multi-millionaires, they have something in common
with virtually every American.
They have never connected their money to their rich life.
Most people think of money as a leash around their neck.
It's restriction.
It's the reason they can't buy a car or eat out or afford a house.
Money is frustration.
Money is guilt.
Money is scarcity.
And it's shame.
A smaller number of people think of money as numbers in some spreadsheet, but almost nobody
can truly connect their money to their rich life vision.
How could they?
They don't even know what their rich life is.
A true I will teach you to be rich reader knows how much they earn, how much they're investing
each month, and exactly when they will be debt-free, or when they'll have $500,000 or a million
dollars.
They also know that if they make this choice over here, they can take that rich life trip
to Italy and drink wine watching the sunset in Rome in exactly two years.
You see, they understand how money is connected to their rich life.
This can be challenging. Take me a guy who doesn't really cook. If you gave me an exact
recipe to make a risotto, I might be able to follow it. But if I said, how do I make it thicker?
I'd be able to follow it. But if I said, how do I make it thicker?
I would have no idea how the amount of water
relates to the thickness of the risotto.
I don't even know if this stupid example makes any sense.
Chefs of the world do not write me.
It's just an example.
Rachel and Jack have millions,
but they have never turned the page
on their money psychology.
In fact, money didn't actually seem real to Rachel.
That's because she had never used it
to fuel her rich life.
That she had never even thought
about what her rich life was.
Guys, saving and investing is great.
But if you wait until later in life
to learn the skills of spending,
it is very difficult for most
people impossible.
I hope you appreciate them sharing their story because it's almost unheard of to hear
multi-millionaires talk this open.
You will only hear it on this podcast.
I did receive a follow-up letter from Rachel and Jack. You can go to iwt.com slash follow-ups to read the full letter, but let me excerpt a little
of what Rachel wrote me.
She said,
You were probably able to tell that I'm not a huge shopper, but I am excited about some
of the small changes we are making. We both love coffee, and our first purchase is going to be good quality coffee maker to
replace our current garbage.
We will be buying coffee from a local shop that donates 100% of their net profits to great
causes.
I can get behind spending $15 a pound on coffee as I believe they're doing good things with their money.
I'm going to get a new iPhone. I still have a 6s. Please stop laughing.
I feel like I am ready to flip the switch and start enjoying the fact that we have managed
to get ourselves to this place. So again, thank you. You can go to iwt.com slash follow-ups to read the full
letter. And do me a favor. Please leave a written review on Apple podcasts. It helps me a
lot. Thanks for listening. I'm Ramit Saiti and this is I will teach you to be rich. I will
see you next week. Thanks for listening to I will teach you next week.
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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