I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 44. “Trust in the universe and it (or my partner) will provide”
Episode Date: May 24, 2022Today’s couple is actually on the same page when it comes to their Rich Life, but they’re not making much progress toward it. Alex brings in $70k from a full time job. Charlotte runs their joint b...usiness that isn’t making much money yet, but should be soon. They both know what they want, they just have different perspectives on how to get there. Despite their income recently doubling, they are living paycheck to paycheck—while outright ignoring over $200k in student loan debt. Charlotte believes the universe will take care of them … but when it doesn’t, Alex feels like he has to step in and fix everything. Charlotte is highly intuitive, but intuition alone won’t get you to a Rich Life—you also need to be able to analyze your situation. Hearing Charlotte and Alex work toward common ground may help you realize where you’re playing small in life by relying too much on one skill set while ignoring the other. 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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For me, the problem is Charlotte has many ideas as to why I've had to live a rich life.
I take the perspective of this is what we want.
How do we go from step A to step B to get it?
Her perspective is more.
This is what we want.
We'll do it and we'll figure it out afterwards.
When things don't work out, I have to come in and save the day, and that's happened many times.
In the heat of that trouble time enrichment, there definitely was talk of maybe we just need to go separate ways, and that was really, really hard to hear. I'm tired of us putting ourselves in this position
to pull ourselves out of something.
Like, it's this pattern that doesn't need to happen anymore.
Like, I don't want to do it anymore.
I don't want to have to pull us out of these situations.
Today, I'd like you to meet Alex and Charlotte.
Alex is 31 years old, and he brings in about $70,000 from his full-time job.
Charlotte is 29 and she's focused on building a business, which doesn't yet bring in a lot
of money.
Charlotte calls herself an intuitive.
She believes in letting the universe take care of her.
In today's conversation, you're going gonna hear her use words like manifesting.
Alex has had to play a different role.
He's had to step in to save the day
whenever this faith in manifesting has not been enough.
And as a result, they live month to month.
In fact, they both have a lot of debt
that is not being tackled. And this is a problem
because their income recently doubled. They need a plan for what to do with this money,
because so far, it just seems to be disappearing. I'm Ramit Saytee, welcome to I Will Teach You To Be
Rich. We decided that we wanted to a lope. and the first question that came to Alex's mind
was how are we going to pay for it?
And that's a valid question, but I don't think that's the first question we need to ask.
So basically, I went into thinking about that, and then I drew up a short budget, and
I'm not usually a budget writing person. So it was a very loose budget.
But after that, I said, OK, we need to manifest $5,000.
So I didn't look at it as what are we
going to dig out of our savings?
But how much money are we going to allow
to come into our reality?
Literally, days later, my dad handed me a check
for $5,000 that came from my grandparents who recently
passed away and they wanted every grand kid to have $5,000.
So that was just such confirmation for me and it felt like a blessing and it felt like
blessings for my grandparents.
And it was just like, okay, well, there it is, that's a relief.
This is a yes.
This is our wedding money and we're going to put it aside for that. Alex was going along
with that and then it really surprised me when he said, like, I know that you have an
idea for that money, but if we were to put all of that money towards our credit card debt, we would be able to save $500 from interest by June,
which is when we plan to have this ceremony.
So that was drawing for me,
because that is so not the vibe.
What does that mean to vibe?
I just felt kind of peaceful and blissful,
and I just had a lot of gratitude.
And his recommendation felt like a contrast to that word,
felt like cold and calculated and rigid and just a bummer to me.
I'm not really a big manifesting guy.
I don't use the word, but I don't mind it.
I can understand the idea that we need to make space
in our
lives for the things we want, that it's okay to say what we want. At its best, manifesting
can help us be intentional about the kind of lives we want to live. It can help us make
a plan to get there. But at its worst, manifesting can be a phrase that broke life coaches used to convince
other people to sign up for their coaching programs on Instagram.
Charlotte's use of the word manifesting is a major clue to how she thinks about money.
What do you notice so far?
I was raised Catholic and so there's a lot of interesting money kind of programming that
comes into play that I've been really working through a lot in the last few years.
Like what?
Like a rich man has better chance of getting into heaven than a camel passing the eye
of the needle.
So very much like renouncing any sort of wealth and abundance in the interest of being humble.
So as a kid and very impressionable, I was just like, okay, like let's go move into a
manger.
So let's give all our moods a god and just be, we'll be taking care of.
And growing up, I think that there are pieces of that that are valid.
I do think that God, the universe, whatever you want to call it, like really does provide
and I've experienced that.
I've experienced that, that example with the Czech, it's a perfect thing.
It's like, this is what I need from the universe and it did provide.
I don't think that money has to come from grinding and working really hard.
Of course, you have to work really hard, but I think it can come to you more naturally.
Charlotte is essentially saying that if you're a good person, you'll be taken care of.
I'm not loving it.
And of course, anytime something good happens, it's interpreted under this
lens. See, we made $5,000. God takes care of us.
Remember that poster that my mom has in her hallway.
It says, trust in God, but lock your car.
And on the back, there's a discount price tag from TJ Maxx.
Now, if you believe in God, that's great.
But you still need a conscious spending plan.
And now that I think about it, if Charlotte was right,
if the universe really took care of her,
why would she be on a call with me?
Were your parents wealthy?
Not really. My dad was in the military for a long time. So the first
portion of my life where he was in the military, we were really well-ticking care of. He was like
a commander in the Navy and we were good. we are traveling around Europe. Anything I ever wanted, like beautiful gifts from all around the world.
And it was just like a really secure, wonderful childhood. Then after my dad retired, my parents started
a little country store right at the beginning of their session and and and kind of lost it all. So
there were definitely times growing up where like we couldn't go somewhere because we couldn't
afford gas. We could only make one errand a day. We lived really far out in the country. So gas
was a really big deal and upstate New York is really expensive. So I remember things like that.
I remember feeling bad about asking
for lunch money. It was abundant at first but then it definitely turned more scarce.
What were the messages that you started receiving when things became scarce?
Honestly, it felt like my dad, he kind of turned it so that there is almost like a pride around it.
Like God will smile on us.
Our God will be like happy with us for living so humbly and frugally.
And there's so many more things that are this is this is keep.
There's so many more things that are important or more important than money like having a
home over your head, having family, having food, so many more things
are important than money, and which to focus on those. Do you agree with that? I think that it's true,
it's important to be grateful, but I think that when you have that mindset that you can really
block money from coming in, because if you say, well, I've a roof over my head, I have food on the
table, I guess I don't really need money, because's not as important where that's not true. I think
it's important to have money flowing and abundance is a wonderful thing. Alex, I want to come back to
the wedding check. So you had been talking about a loping and she comes to you and says like we should get married and your first question was what?
How will we pay for it?
Yeah, that my first response to such was I think we could we could use it to pay off debt like that. I could get that's probably it.
So when you said to her we could use this to pay off our debt
and then I'm sure you proudly showed her your calculation.
We can save this much in interest.
I've been that guy.
And how did that go over with her?
She said, we're not doing that.
This is important to me to use the money
that I got from my grandparents.
We passed away for something that is
enjoyable and not a cold calculated decision.
And how do you feel about that? I felt understanding. She had just lost her grandparents and I agreed that would be a good use of
$5,000 and
$5,000 wouldn't get us out of debt. So I understood that perspective. Okay.
So what's the issue here, Alex, as you see it,
what do you think is the real problem here?
For me, the problem is Charlotte has many ideas as to why
I've had to live a rich life.
I take the perspective of, this is what we want. How do we go from step
eight, a step B to get it? Her perspective is more, based on understanding of it. This
is what we want. We'll do it and we'll figure it out afterwards. So the, I would say the
biggest problem for me is when things don't work out, I have to come in and save the day. And that's happened
many times because I have the credit, well, I'm not anymore, but I did have the credit.
I usually it may be to come up with money by working.
Can you give me an example where you've had to save the day in the past?
Sure. We moved from Oregon where we met in graduate school to Richmond, Virginia.
Charlotte lived there for five or six years before she said,
I have an extensive network of healthcare professionals
that we can partner with.
I was super excited.
And I was like, great, we'll move there.
I had an internship in Richmond, just worked out perfectly.
And so I was down for it.
But we didn't, our business didn't take off at all.
In fact, where I was living off of this debt
and me saying in a day look like,
we have to figure this out.
So I had connections in North Carolina.
I got both of us jobs in North Carolina.
We ended up moving from there.
That's one instance in New York.
Same thing was we were at her dad's.
We had a plan to start a business,
which we did, but I realized it wasn't going to make enough money to support us moving from there.
So I applied for like 30 jobs. I got one great job, which is what I'm doing full-time now. And so
I saved that in a sense. So I was able to come up with like $8,000 of like a couple of months
and move us to this house we live in now. I'm an IDM machine and I am very intuitive with reaching out to you even. It's just like I have
this inclination and I go for it and he seems to trust me and go along with it. But I think it
doesn't always work out as planned. So it seems like when we get kind of
backed into a financial corner,
he always pulls this chick out of his sleeve
and he'll like find a job or something and we pivot.
How does that feel to you when he saves the day?
It definitely feels like a relief.
And but sometimes it's like,
I don't know, I almost feel bad or crazy or something for like
leading him down this wild goose chase, even though I think good things always come out
of it.
I don't think he appreciates my spontaneous nature.
Why would you feel bad if, as you said, good things always come from this?
I guess it's like a double-edged sword. I didn't like seeing him struggle so much in Richmond, like applying for like 20 jobs a day and just like not even getting a nibble because I really talked it up. I really talked
up my town and I believed it, but I just felt bad for putting him through that. But like
some good things came out of it because I was able to make like reconnect with a lot of
people, can solidate all of my belongings. Like some loosens needed to be tied up there.
So it felt and looking back like it was the right move, but maybe it could
have been done better.
Hmm. When you both get your backs against a corner, and he has to save the day, how do
you think he feels? I think probably the first time it happened, he probably felt like,
it's like, okay, we got this. I got out of it like we're good.
The second or third time it happened, he's probably like, okay, this is a pattern that
I don't know if I can always pull this trick.
Do you want to ask him?
Alex, how do you feel when you have to save the day?
The first enrichment I felt like my life was over.
I have taken a huge risk and I didn't pay off, so I knew that this would be another one.
So when I didn't pay off again, I was depressed, anxious, like mental health spiraling.
That's how I felt to be honest.
I felt probably one of the worst times of my life living in Richmond.
That's a great city.
I loved it.
And that sense, what you do there, but mentally, emotionally,
I just felt exhausted and just almost hopeless at points.
I even thought about moving back home
and just not being together anymore.
Like that's honestly how I felt.
This is pretty extreme,
and Charlotte had never asked Alex about this before.
It can be common in a relationship dynamic
where you have a creative, amuse, a dreamer,
and on the other side, the rescuer.
There's often so much attention paid to the dreamer
and their passions and their problems
that nobody spends time on the rescuer.
If you're in a relationship where you are fixing things, you can take that burden on for
a long time.
If you see yourself as the fixer, you can bear a greater burden for longer than you can
possibly imagine.
But everybody breaks. And more importantly, when you stop to look around at what your life has become,
you might ask, is this what I really want?
I'm tired of us putting ourselves in this position to pull ourselves out of something.
Like it's this pattern that doesn't need to happen anymore.
Like, I don't want to do it anymore. I don't want to have to pull us out of these situations.
Charlotte, do you know that?
Yeah, actually, in the heat of that troubled time enrichment,
there definitely was talk of like maybe we just need to go separate ways and and that was really really hard to hear at the time and I'm
glad that we stuck it out.
But did you hear what he said about he talked about his mental health? He talked
about almost giving up moving back home those are really serious words.
Did you know that?
We definitely talked about it a lot.
And that's the main reason why
when he did find a job,
I find us both jobs actually.
In North Carolina, I didn't hesitate
because I was like, okay, I went,
it didn't work, let was like, okay, I went, I didn't work.
Let's do it your way because I just didn't want to see him
going on like that.
That's great to be able to respond to circumstances
and to acknowledge, hey, this route we took is not working.
We got to do something else.
That is very advanced.
Usually when I talk to people who are deep
down a hole, they just tried the same thing 20 times and they go, Rami, I think I'll just
try this another time. Surely it will work. I'm actually very happy to hear you say that.
The reason Charlotte that I pushed on that question was that I noticed you tend to pivot to the positive.
You know, yeah, we went to Richmond.
Oh, it was a disaster.
My partner's mental health totally deteriorated.
But anyway, I got to consolidate my belonging.
Meet some old friends.
Like, no, that's not to take away.
So I will say that not to make a joke of this, this is as serious as it gets.
You know, we're talking about mental health, we're talking about your relationship.
I am glad to hear that you acknowledge, you know, there are some costs of being spontaneous.
There are some serious costs of being intuitive.
Intuition can be great.
I think we should all learn to listen to our intuition
more, but it affects the people around you, especially a partner. They don't have that
same intuition, and if they're the ones especially having to save the day, that can be really,
really difficult. I've noticed that Charlotte is very good at pivoting to the positive. Even when she acknowledges
something negative at the end of her sentence, she spins it to look at the bright side.
Now that can be a good thing, but it can also prevent her from confronting reality.
After they'd moved to North Carolina, Charlotte proposed that they leave the jobs they'd gotten
and moved to upstate New York.
What's great about this is you see a silver lining
almost to a fault.
You're not talking about any of the possible negative things, right?
Well, guess what?
I love to look at the negative
things. So if you said that to me, how do you think I would respond?
Probably, that it's crazy to leave our jobs without a strong financial plan.
Bingo. I would say, what are we gonna do in Upstate New York?
Do we wanna live with your parents?
I don't know the situation there.
How do we know that this is gonna work out
when the last two things have not?
Like what is our plan?
Can we talk about that?
I wanna know some details, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
It's not necessarily negative.
It's just like, give me some facts here.
We got to have some information.
Alex, did you do that?
Yes.
To be fair to Charlotte, she's not the only one with the intuition.
Like, we just got to make the move.
I'm the same where I wouldn't have been along with it.
Oh, man.
But yes. Two intuitives. But yes, yeah, two two intuitives
This is like these company right now. We got two intuitives and then me. All right, let's get into this great
But I'm training myself to not do that because I before I met Charlotte
I was like I'm gonna quit my job and be a personal trainer. I make a hundred thousand a year and
No, I didn't I was. Like I could barely pay anything.
And I was like, this sucks.
Like, I'm not gonna do this again.
First of all, if you quit your job to become a personal trainer,
without checking how much any personal trainers actually make,
that is a good way to go broke.
I even told it, wait a second,
did you talk to any other trainers?
He goes, yeah.
I was like, what'd you say?
Hey, you're all trainers and you're all broke. Sounds great, sign me up. He's like, no, not really.
I didn't ask them how much they made. It seems a little of me like both of them are living in
Lala land. I also think both of them need skin in the game. Right now, it's mostly just Alex.
in the game. Right now, it's mostly just Alex.
We can't say that I care about money in the way that Alex cares about it, but I am trying to, I'm trying to get a little bit more invested, put a little bit more
skin in the game because Alex half jokingly calls me an outlaw because I really am like allergic to anything financial,
paperwork, DMV, like I've been really irresponsible and I try to avoid that kind of stuff.
Like I said, I would just be happy just living off the land, but I've come to realize that
if I want to live in that
way, like I need to get things in order. Like you can't buy a house if you don't have a
credit history. That stuff started and I catch up with me and I realize that I need to
become more proactive and more responsible.
It sounds very intellectual. Do you really care about this?
In my heart, not really.
I care about Alex.
I care about our future and I care about our safety and security.
And I know intellectually, I guess, like how money plays a part in all of that. But thinking about finances and saving and investing
and all of those important things
don't really invoke any sort of strong feeling in me.
Okay, I appreciate the honesty.
I'm not here to beat you up for how you feel.
I actually love that you're telling me the truth.
A lot of people come here, they apply,
do all the stuff that you did,
and then they come here and lie to my face.
I go, why are you wasting my time?
Don't lie to me.
You're telling me the truth.
What you're saying is, intellectually, I know I need to go to the DMV
and get my driver's license so that I can get XYZ.
Fine, it's all logistics.
But do I feel excitement around setting up an investment plan?
No.
Would I even feel, in fact, would you even feel excitement if you saw $10,000 in your savings account?
I would feel like relief, I guess.
What would be more exciting to you?
Building a plan to invest your money or manifesting some amount of money and it just gets sent to you as a check.
Manifesting.
Yeah.
Why?
I feel like it makes me feel, I'm a very spiritual person and it makes me feel like connected and supported and it's
validating.
There's a lot of strong, like emotional connections to, to manifesting, to have a check arrive
in the mail that's down to the dollar amount that you're looking that you need for some random thing. Like that feels like you're a part of a mysterious
amazing universe. What was an example where besides the wedding, what was an example of something
that you have manifested specifically financially and you received it? it. I have like a journal page where I wrote down a bunch of little things but one
phenomena on this spot is this is this really imprinted on me in a young age so my sister
is adopted from China and when I was little, we are trying to figure out
a way where my sibling would come in. And I mean, we don't really like to talk about it, I guess,
but there's a lot of money that goes into the adoption process and travel and fees and paperwork and all the things.
And so we really wanted to,
or my family really wanted to adopt,
but we weren't sure how the money was gonna come in.
And out of the blue,
we get a letter from a family that was renting
our house in Virginia.
So we are living in Germany,
but we had my parents own to house in Virginia. So we were living in Germany, but we had my parents own
to house in Virginia. They were renting out. The family renting had a garage sale and a person came
to the garage sale and said, I love this house. I'd like to buy it in cash. And the renters reached
out to us. This is the amount that they want to put down. It was the exact amount, exact amount that they needed to go forward with the adoption.
So that just struck a chord in me forever.
And then I've seen that kind of play out in smaller ways.
That's amazing.
I've never heard a story like that.
What do you take away from that story? That God provides.
The universe provides.
My dad would probably say like if you were faithful, then you'll get rewarded.
I don't know if I see it that way, but I guess that is something that's imprinted to me is like really believing.
I want to say I've not been let down by that.
But like I said, we've definitely got into some rocky situations.
Yeah, I mean, you have over $110,000 of debt.
Yeah.
If it was just...
Yeah, if it was just about manifesting, don't you just manifest a hundred ten thousand dollars?
Well, that's a good question. I think okay with a hundred and ten thousand
So we have two different like pools of debt. We've got like our credit card debt and the student loans
I have a hundred and ten card debt and the student loans.
I have 110,000 in student loans.
And like I said, money doesn't invoke a strong emotional
response for me.
I feel so disconnected to that debt.
It's all student debt.
And I honestly feel like that was the hopes of the
century. I wouldn't like take back my college education. But what I
paid for what I got and what the job, like with my career outlook
looked like after college. I mean, I could talk forever about that.
And I, and I'll spare you. But honestly, I feel disconnected from
it. I don't feel like it's mine. It wasn't me swiping a credit card for years to accrue this.
It's not something that I see.
It's not like a fancy car in the driveway.
It's not a fancy wardrobe.
It's not a big house.
So many people feel resentful about their student debt.
You can just hear it dripping off their voices
when they talk about it.
And some of them just ignore it.
I'm talking about ignoring $100,000 plus in debt.
When I talk to them, it simply does not exist to them.
They think they can't ignore it, but they can't.
For example, in episode number 36, called We Make $145,000 a year,
but have $828,000 in debt.
I spoke to two physical therapists who were stuck with student debt that they felt tricked
into taking on.
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When you think about that debt, what word comes to mind?
I don't want the intellectual word.
What word do you feel when you think about that debt?
Injustice.
Yeah.
Why?
Because, like I said, it felt like a hoax.
This was something I signed on the dotted line when I was like 18 years old and I specifically remember
counselors telling me yes it's expensive but within five years you'll be able to pay
it all off because you'll get such a great job. And then like I don't know I got a bachelor's
degree in biology from a liberal arts school and I ended up having to pursue more education to see if I could do something with that.
It just does not turn out at all like it was portrayed to me when I was a teenager.
And this is something that it feels like it's going to follow me around forever.
Yeah.
Well, at the current state of affairs, it will.
I don't want that. It's frustrating hearing from
people who feel injustice about loans. The schools don't do a great job of informing you about
reality. No 17-year-old kid understands what interest rates are. Everybody's told you since you were a little kid,
gotta go to college.
You have to just sign, you got in.
And so they don't do a great job in forming.
Some of them actually openly lie
about their graduation rates.
They hide information.
And then at the same time, you know, young people
are not stupid.
They do know that taking out tens of thousands of dollars of debt is probably not great, especially
for certain majors.
But I'm not here to play the blame game.
I feel for you because I can see how resentful you are about that debt.
And I see that what you've chosen to do is basically just put it aside and just ignore it.
But can I come back to that question I asked you,
if manifesting alone would work,
watch just manifest yourself out of this debt?
My mindset around money and my methods
isn't quite cutting it.
And I think Alex who has a very analytical perspective, that around money and my methods isn't quite cutting it.
And I think Alex, who has a very analytical perspective,
might be a very important missing element.
In other words, you need help.
Yeah, I can learn, I can learn from him.
Love that, okay, that's great.
Now Alex, you also have debt.
In fact, you have over $150,000
of debt. $138,000 of that is student loans. And then you've got $20,000 of credit card debt.
What's the story behind that? You know, same thing. I was like top 5% of my class. I make sense. I'm gonna go to school. I
Didn't have any education around finances at that point. So like the first
40 or $50,000. I just didn't think about it.
So that was undergrad and then after undergrad I
Did kind of a major that it was like biomedical science, it doesn't really train you to do anything specifically.
And then I, I said, if I had an MCAD, I didn't do that well
and I just realized it wasn't for me.
And then I was working for years
and then I realized that wasn't going anywhere.
So I decided to go back to school
to get a master's degree and then apply to medical school.
Again, and then while I was in school,
I remember it,
oh yeah, I don't really wanna do another four years
of school and all this training.
And at the same time, I met Charlotte
and I had the same vision as me.
So that explains that part of the dead.
I was just like, I'll become a doctor,
I'll pay it off, it will be that hard.
And then the credit card that came through
the more recent events of moving Dubstate New York
without having a real plan
of how to grow our business.
There's a lot of impulsive decisions from Alex here.
It's interesting, sometimes people cover up their
impulsive decisions with positive words like intuitive.
That's what Charlotte does.
But Alex actually does the same thing.
He just doesn't call himself intuitive.
Listen, your intuition might be a good guideline
for deciding whether to get pasta or Thai food tonight.
But it's not enough for deciding on your career or your money.
You can't intuit the power of compound interest.
You need to read a book.
Now, some of us are more intuitive.
Some of us are more data-driven.
But the magic comes from acknowledging where you are
and then supplementing your natural strengths by getting help.
If you're creative and intuitive, read a book!
If you're super analytical, listen to this podcast.
Learn how to talk to your partner about money.
I joke around a lot on this podcast.
I want you to know that money is fun,
but building a rich life is also serious.
It's your life.
I want you to take it serious.
I think that you use intuition to play small.
Intuition can be amazing. It can be a tool and a tool belt that so many
people do not take advantage of. I'm only recently learning how to use intuition in my life.
My wife has been very helpful in helping me open my eyes to that. I love analysis. That's
where I come from. But if you use intuition only,
you might find yourself playing a very small life.
Like think about it.
How big of a deal was it when you started thinking
about your wedding?
You know, this elotement that you wanted to have,
one to 10.
That's a 10.
That's a 10.
I notice you're not talking about anything bigger.
I notice you're not really talking about the house that you want to get.
I notice you're certainly not talking about paying off this debt and being debt-free.
I notice you haven't once, either of you mentioned traveling.
You're playing small and you're using intuition to obscure that fact.
I never thought of it that way. That's really true.
It really brings me back to my childhood
where it's like we're living within these means
within, we're living by the grace of God.
And this is what we have.
And even planning a salotement,
like it is going to be beautiful and luxurious
and Catalina Island,
and it's gonna be an incredible thing.
But I'm still only dreaming
within the parameters of this $5,000 check.
Totally.
The check that was given to you,
you didn't make a plan to earn $5,000.
You're literally playing within the bounds of something that just came to you.
I find in my experience that you will never trip and fall your way into a rich life.
Never happen. Nobody wakes up living their rich life and says, I accidentally got here.
It is engineered. It is designed thoughtfully.
It takes work and absolutely it takes intuition as well.
In my life, my rich life, being able to travel
for months every year with my wife, sometimes bring our family and others.
That takes planning, takes investing, saving, earning.
All that is very logistical.
I got my spreadsheet, I reviewed every month, I love it.
But it also takes an intuition to say,
you know what, this year I think we should do this.
Or what do you feel?
I'm talking to my wife, what do you think, babe?
Should we do this?
You know what, we haven't seen these friends
in a long time, let's invite them with us.
Intuitive.
Or I feel like we should go really big this year.
Or let's shrink it and spend some money elsewhere.
That's intuitive.
We can marry the two.
But if we were just intuitive,
what do you think it would look like for our rich lives?
Right now, day to day, you have a fine life.
You know, your household income is what,
70 or so, between 70 to $90,000.
That's more money than I think you've ever made.
Your debt is accruing, but you don't really care.
You're not logging into it.
And you know, day to day, it's okay.
You got your TV.
You could probably take a trip a couple times a year,
see your family.
So I'm not asking rhetorical question.
I'm really asking you, do you want to change?
Because if you do, it will be really hard. We're talking about
decades of rewriting your invisible scripts. What do you think? Yes, I think there is more than I
want. And I, that doesn't mean that I don't feel grateful and blessed for what I have right now, but
Like you said, I don't want to
Continue to live small. Yeah, it's funny out of everything we've talked about today
That was the thing that I saw really reached you
When I said that and you just your eyes went wide
I
Think that tells me intuitively you know you have been playing small
Alex do you want to change? Yes, I feel I'm a lot more anxious and stressed out and I want to be.
I want to change to just feel confident in my lifestyle.
We have a rich life.
It's incredible.
I mean, we've lived in Oregon.
We went to Vancouver way first, man.
We've been to India and Mexico.
Like, we've done like a lot of things
that not everyone know has done.
So it's like, we figured it out.
But now I want to get to this point where it's like,
when if my family needs help or, you know,
we want to have a home set, we can buy it.
And it's not like a big deal
We just have to put it in the work to end. I know the tools are there. I just have to learn them
So that's the change that I'm making now in my life learn about finances understand the the next steps
I have to take to really live this rich life and be able to share it with this many people's I can beautiful
So you both want to change. Okay, Charlotte. Let's let's stick with this
So you are now making double what you used to make, but it seems like you're still living paycheck to paycheck, okay, Charlotte, let's stick with this. So you are now making double what you
used to make, but it seems like you're still living paycheck to paycheck, right? Yeah,
what do you think's happening?
I've had a lot of beliefs about money that haven't been serving me.
Yeah, I agree. Can you think of a woman you admire who's good with money? It does not have
to be somebody in your life. It could be a celebrity, a movie character,
even a fictional book character.
Yeah, I'm a big, almost 30 fans.
So, Crystal Williams from almost 30,
she's got this comfortable about talking about money
that I really admire.
Love it, great.
I've been on that show, Love talking about money with them.
So what is the difference between you and her?
Well, theoretically, there's not.
There's no reason that I can be where she is financially.
But one thing that comes up just from what she shared
from her story is from a young age she just loved working and bringing in money and she
just, she associated it with independence and freedom from an earlier age.
Wow. And you associated it with?
Problems and burden.
Yeah.
So she has a reverse attitude.
OK, can you think of any specific behaviors
she does that are different than you?
From what I can tell, she takes action and she makes plans.
Let me ask a couple questions.
You tell me yes or no.
Has she read a book on money?
Yes.
Mm-hmm.
Does she talk about money with other women around her?
Yes.
When she talks about what she wants to do this year,
does she factor in how much it's going to cost? Yes. Yeah, I think so. What are you taking away
from this example? You have to be a participant in your financial life. You can't just let go and let go.
Sometimes that works.
I mean, it seems to work for the bare minimum
and the basic means,
but I want more than that.
That's right.
And if I want more than that,
I have to take action and look at money
and play with it and interact with it.
That's right.
It's about behaviors.
Attitudes matter, of course, the way you think about money.
Well, here's another attitude.
Trust in God, but lock your car, right?
Trust is great, but take some precautions as well.
Make a plan.
And what I really want to emphasize is that anybody you admire with money has very specific
behaviors that they do.
These are tangible things that I could sit in the room and watch them doing.
This is something that a lot of us miss.
We think it's just about how people think.
When I say what behaviors do you need to change?
I'm talking about if I were sitting in your house and I could sit there and watch you, I would be able to say, wow, she's making a spending plan or she's
discussing money with her partner, things like that. She's reading a book. What money behaviors
do you think you need to change? I need to ask Alex more questions because just the way that
I need to ask Alex more questions because just the way that our relationship is, he earns most of the money and he's, I've been very keen to just let him take control of that.
And even with our business, our shared business, he takes all the money in and then disperses
them to me and I'm just like, thanks and I don't ask any questions, but I need to know
what's going on behind that curtain.
Okay.
How will you know what questions to ask?
By doing some research.
Where?
Read a book.
Let's decide right now which book you're going to read.
Well, you'll appreciate this.
I found your book in a thrift store the day after I heard back about being
on the podcast, that felt like an interesting thing.
Hold on, hold on, hold on. That is interesting, but let me just ask a couple questions now.
Which color cover was it? The orange one or the black one?
Orange. Oh my God. I think it was like neon colors.
Yeah, yeah, neon.
That's the 2009 edition.
I should have checked on the date.
I'm not blaming you.
You know, get the new book, get it from the library if you like.
The point is, trust me, I'm not doing this to make 80 cents from the book.
It's about really taking this seriously.
This serious, a rich life is really serious.
You know, I love joking around with you, but I don't want you to go another 20 years and still have debt and
still be playing small. So whether it is spending money or in your case, more likely spending
time, I want you to take this seriously. Okay, so you're going to read a book and you're
going to come up with some
questions to ask Alex. Now I want to understand what your rich life is. Why do I want to do this?
Because right now we're fighting against decades of both of your invisible scripts.
There's not a lot of emotional connection, Charlotte, from you and money. You've even told me, you feel indifferent about it, you feel disconnected by it.
And in fact, you have these deep down beliefs that were told to you that if you have money,
you become a bad person.
That's one of the reasons that I love doing what I do, because I can show people, you
can actually make a lot of money money and you can be incredibly generous.
You can be politically active.
You can tip huge when you go out for coffee or to eat at a restaurant.
You can do all these things and you can enjoy your rich life, whether it's luxury or food
or whatever.
That's why I love doing what I do.
So, Charlotte, let's start with you.
What is your rich life?
My rich life, there's no compromising health. I lived a long time with a lot of health issues,
and that's just not something I wanted to deal with. Great. So good food, what else?
Travel has always been important to me as an military kid. It's in my bones. I always do a solo trip every year and I'd like
to have a more extended trip once a year. That's like me and Alex. And then I also want to have
the freedom of visiting my sister and friends without it being a really big deal.
How many times a year? Maybe like four times a year. Okay. Great. So that sounds like
two international trips and maybe two domestic
trips. Would that be fair? Yeah. Great. What else? Homestead? Yes, homestead. Living as
holistically as possible. Regenerative agriculture. So growing off of our own food, preserving things.
So what does that cost? So what is that cost?
Ask them the wrong person. You know, that was so interesting right there.
I intentionally interrupt you not to be rude,
but I could see your vision really spinning up.
I could see the dream.
In fact, you didn't even see the picture
you were painting for me.
And so when I interrupted you to say,
how much does that cost? Do that remind you
of when Alex asked you about the wedding money? Yeah, it did. And then, exactly. And how
did you respond to that? So you're asking the wrong person. Yes, but I'm not asking the
wrong person. I'm asking the person who's rich life. It is. So notice what did you just do there when you said you're asking the wrong person?
I deflected.
Yes.
And why did you do that?
It makes me uncomfortable.
And ashamed because I don't have that answer.
And if it's so important to me to live my life that way you would think that's a question
that I would find the answer to.
Yeah, I could almost see you shrugging off my question.
It's like I tossed you a ball and you just
threw the ball away and hit it to someone else.
You didn't want the weight of that responsibility.
Even in a purely hypothetical answer,
I have no idea what a homestead costs.
I literally don't even know how many zeros are on it.
You could have said anything,
but instead you said, you're asking the wrong person.
What I am loving here beyond the entertainment
of watching you squirm,
I'm loving that you are engaging with money.
You tried to shrug it off, you tried to deflect me, that didn't work. I don't mind if your answers are totally wrong. You are engaging with money.
You tried to shrug it off, you tried to deflect me, that didn't work.
I don't mind if your answers are totally wrong.
In fact, I'm certain they are, but that's not the point.
The point is just to get you feeling comfortable talking about this because you said you're
asking the wrong person, but I believe I'm asking exactly the right person.
I believe you know a lot more than you have allowed yourself to know. Okay, keep going.
All right. Livestock. I know we actually did price out for a cow that might be in our
future, and that's going to cost a thousand dollars. So if had 20 cows that would be 20 thousand dollars.
How much does it cost total with the livestock and everything?
Let's say 700 thousand dollars.
Okay great. Let's do a reality check and just ask Alex.
How am I doing?
I think it's possible actually. All of them are not an expert. I mean it could be
close to like a million dollars.
Do you really want to build it out?
It's like floating and like everything like that.
I think we'd probably be close for like a million dollars.
But if you don't want to-
Let me pause right there.
I think you're going off for way too long.
She's not really asking you, is my number precisely correct?
Which is what you thought she was asking?
What is she really asking you, Alex?
Do you want to engage in this conversation and actually, like, look into this and not just put it aside? Yes. She's saying, can you validate me that I am taking the first step?
And so she's not actually looking for you to give her it depends. First of all,
stop saying it depends. I fucking hate that answer.
Everything depends.
People go, what's your end question?
It depends.
Never say that.
It's like saying, you like to breathe oxygen.
I know that.
Tell me something I don't know.
So when she asks you, am I on the right track, Alex,
give her the response that deep down she's looking for.
I very much appreciate that you're having this conversation with me. It actually
almost makes me want to cry that we're actually doing this. I'm talking about it and not just saying,
we want to have this. I'm like, yeah, I want to have a flip tank. We want to have all these things.
But now we're actually doing it. I'm very moved. Emotionally. Yeah. That's awesome. What a way to connect.
Yeah, that's awesome. What a way to connect.
And the two of you, I love seeing that just now. Charlotte, did you notice that you were able to connect deeply with him, even though you made up most of those numbers?
That was cool.
That's really cool. Yeah. You can get to the point where you can actually project these numbers. That's a whole
another skill. It involves doing research and talking to other homesteaders, etc. But like,
hey, we just got 50% of the way there by you just actually thinking about it and saying some numbers
out loud. Talk about setting an intention. This is going from talking about a thousand dollar expense and agonizing over it.
To this is the kind of life we want to live.
Seven hundred thousand dollars.
That's a big goal.
That's a rich life.
Now, how are we going to get there?
You are so good at being intuitive.
That's never going to leave you. You will so good at being intuitive, that's never going to leave you.
You will always be guided by your intuition. I'm not taking that away from you at all.
What I'm saying is, let's add another guide. Instead of one guide, you now have two,
and they can work in harmony. Your intuitive guide will always be dominant for you. That's okay.
My guide is analytical.
I can't turn it off,
but I've learned that I need to tap into the other guide.
And sometimes I need to let them fight it out a little,
and I need to notice what's happening, verbalize it,
maybe even change it.
You probably need to add on this analytical guide. Because right now
it's about 100% intuitive and 0% analytical. I like to see that number slightly more balanced.
It probably won't ever be 50-50. That's okay. What number do you think maybe it should be ultimately?
At least 70, 30.
70, intuitive, 30.
Antelidically, yeah, I think that's great.
See, doesn't that feel good?
It's nobody's telling you you have to change and become a hardcore Excel analyst.
That's not going to happen.
I don't even want that to happen for you.
It's just not you.
But you get to add on this entirely new skill set.
I would like for you and Alex to set up a weekly time to talk about money. Get the new version
of the book. In fact, get two copies, so you each have one for yourselves. Each week go through one chapter of the book.
This is going to give you a front-to-back financial education. And it has action items at the end
of everyone. So it's going to play more on the analytical side. Of course, there's a lot of
intuition in that book. Talk about money psychology. Talk about what do you actually love? All of that is in there. But it's going to be uncomfortable
for you because you're going to write down your expenses and you're going to calculate
your debt payoff date. But when you do that, suddenly things are going to start to crystallize
from just this sort of cloudy vision to something where you go, oh my God.
Now I see a path.
That path might be really difficult.
It might say in the math that it takes us 60 years to get there, but now I also know how
I can get there a lot faster.
Suddenly, the debt is going to become something that's not just this blob in the corner that
you both ignore, but it's something that you go, we have to go through this debt in
order to get to our rich life.
We have to confront a head-on.
So, we're going to make a plan.
We're going to automatically pay it off every single month.
And we know what's going to come on the other side of that. Oh, it's going to be
amazing. Not just because we're going to be deaf-free because we did it together. That's a beautiful thing.
I feel like I have a new perspective. I'm happy that it doesn't mean I have to like really change
you right now. I just need to like add on some new skills and that it's okay if
I if I don't know what I'm doing at first. I'll explain it out like where
masters of physical wellness and we didn't start out that way and our clients don't start out that way.
We need to learn these skills to have the financial wellness is just kind of the next step for us.
Absolutely beautiful analogy. You started off from a baseline, you learned along the way,
you get more and more sophisticated, it's the same thing with money. Yes, I love that you said that,
I love that you connected it to your work.
You understand what the path to mastery looks like.
I really like talking to Alex and Charlotte.
When I was working with them,
my coworker Sydney pointed out that Charlotte
is unapologetically herself,
and we both loved that about her.
I actually love that Charlotte is tapped into her intuition.
One of the things I pointed out today is that many of us believe if we change,
we'll lose the essence of who we are. Charlotte was afraid of this.
But in my experience, you're never going to lose your essence. Charlotte has spent decades developing an identity as an intuitive, carving deep grooves
every single day.
She even connects manifestation with joy.
What I tried to show them here was that you can also add an extra note.
Charlotte, you'll always be intuitive, but you can also add being more analytical.
And I received a follow-up from Charlotte and Alex after I spoke with them.
You can get the full follow-up at iwt.com slash follow-ups.
But let me give you a quick excerpt.
Charlotte wrote,
My biggest takeaway was that relying on manifestation and intuition alone may have helped me meet my
basic needs, but it prevented me from dreaming big. When living by the grace of God, I was giving up
my power and playing small. Why focus on manifesting $5,000 when I can cultivate the capacity to bring in $500,000. If I sit in the driver's seat
of my financial well-being, I will no longer have to stress over the thousand dollar questions.
In order to do this, I have to actually engage with my finances. This is amazing. I want you to read the full letter and you can get it at iwt.com slash follow ups.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
I'm Remiith Saiti.
Please follow the show on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts.
If you haven't read I Will Teach You To Be Rich, my book, pick up a copy.
You can get it at any bookstore or any library and it will show you to be rich, my book. Pick up a copy. You can get it at any bookstore
or any library, and it will show you the specific tactics for how to build the I will teach you
to be rich system into your personal finances.
you