I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 48. “My husband needs a better job, but he hates the idea of earning more”
Episode Date: June 21, 2022Kara and Sean make $150k annually, with $100k of that coming from Kara’s salary in healthcare. They have a baby daughter, and Kara would like to take a step back in her career in order to spend more... time with her. The problem is, Sean’s happily (and hopelessly) stuck in a dead-end job. What do you do when one partner is passive when it comes to money? It’s so easy to make things personal, to escalate and unravel, but I steer this conversation to the numbers—where it’s illustrated, plain as day, what Sean needs to do. But will he see it? And if he does, will he actually make any changes? Let’s see if I can get Sean to start dreaming bigger. Connect with Ramit Website Instagram Twitter Facebook YouTube Linkedin If you and your partner have a money issue and you want my help, I occasionally select a couple to work with, free of charge. Apply for my help here. Produced by Crate Media.
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I just kind of gave up and stopped believing in himself.
I have to be the one to always dream and keep that going.
I am on board with trying to make care of happy as much as I possibly can and admittedly
there are sometimes where I can probably take turns being leaders on certain decisions.
But a lot of people I ran into use money as a weapon and I didn't love that.
I'm a nurse and I work all time. I feel like I'm at the point where I am making the most money
and then it's just a really difficult profession. So I don't burn out. I want to like cut back an
hour and usually people's partners like will continue to rise and then they have a plan.
So I guess it would be nice if I could drop a little bit and have some pressure taken off
and have him kind of try and plan to move up or make changes.
But I feel like he's kind of stuck unless he makes a career change or I don't know, I get frustrated.
That's a lot of pressure on me like for the rest of our marriage.
I've tried to tell you that. I don't know.
Cara and Sean make $150,000 together.
She makes $100,000 and he makes $50,000.
They've been married for five years, their new parents, and they are frustrated with money.
Well, Karez, she's frustrated that Sean has been stuck at a job for the past five years
with no path to a promotion.
And when I ask Sean about it, he just sounds apathetic.
He's passive,
and he doesn't take ownership of his career.
In fact, when Cara tries to talk to him about it,
he avoids it.
Honestly, this was a frustrating episode for me.
I don't mind people who are in financial trouble,
and I know that very few of us learn this stuff as we were growing up. But the one thing I can't mind people who are in financial trouble, and I know that very few of us learn this stuff as we were growing up.
But the one thing I can't take is being passive with your life.
And if you come on my show to talk to me, I expect you to have questions.
I expect you to take ownership.
So today at one point, I actually lost it with both of them.
I really want to help Cara and Sean, but actually lost it with both of them.
I really want to help Cara and Sean, but I can't do it for them. I want you to listen in to hear what happens.
And of course, there will be a follow-up at the end.
By the way, when we start talking about their numbers,
you're going to hear where their income is going.
Before they came on the show, I had them fill out a conscious spending plan.
You can get a copy of that conscious spending plan
to fill out yourself at iwt.com slash episode 48.
I'm Ramit Saiti, and this is I will teach you to be rich.
Cara, what is the time in the last month or two where you did not feel on the same financial
pages, Sean?
This week actually, so we just bought a house in March and we finally moved all our stuff
over and we have a little bit of extra space and it's our front entry room is like,
probably the best part of the house,
the rest of the house is needs more.
So I wanna make it look really nice.
And I don't expect to go to West Elm
and buy a brand new couch,
but what I will do is look on Facebook Marketplace.
And so I found one that is in good condition,
that would look perfect in our living room.
It usually retails for $1,400.
And so I talked the person down to 700.
And Sean was kind of like, wow,
like that's a lot more money for a couch. Okay. All right. Sean, when you heard Cara suggesting getting a $700 couch, what was the
first thing you said to her? Probably like, do we need that right this minute? I think
the biggest difference between us is not that we both agree we want to couch. For Cara,
the excitement is all of the detail that she just gave you about the couch,
about how much she saved, about how it's bargained, about how she thinks it'll save us money
in the long term.
And I'm on board for all of that.
I just hear, oh, it's $700.
And we still have several other, in my opinion, more important things to pay for at this exact
moment.
How do you both usually make a decision like this?
What's the pattern that emerges?
Usually, I'm the one who finds it, and then I pitch it to him, and Sean usually actually
kind of goes with it.
I'm mostly the one doing the research and whatnot.
If we had to name these two characters,
what would you name them?
Cara's the spender, the one who, I don't know,
is more high maintenance and wants nicer things.
And Sean's the laid back guy who can like roll with anything, but well, I don't know.
Okay, interesting choice of words. Sean, what would you say if you're going to name the two characters involved?
Kara is definitely the one that wants to spend.
Yeah. Okay, and Kara's the spender. And what are you?
The saver, I guess, or the skimpy one.
You don't really save, though.
Fair. What does he do?
Status quo, I guess, is more mean.
He just, like, I don't know.
Your tech pretty much goes to like our mortgage
and you buy like coffee and beer and that's about
it. And then I kind of figure out the rest of it.
Okay, okay, hold on a second. We're going to get to that, but I want to stick to this.
So if care is the spender, then what are you?
I don't know, I'm not the final decision. The safety valve, I guess.
Mostly, we're going to agree. Mostly, her ideas are good, but every once in a while, there's and the safety valve, I guess.
Mostly we're gonna agree, mostly her ideas are good,
but every once in a while there's one
that we don't need to pursue, so.
Have you ever thought about the roles
that you and your partner play
when it comes to money decisions?
I hear this phrase a lot, for example.
I make day-to-day money decisions,
but my husband makes the big decisions.
Or, I'm the spender, she's the saver.
Or, we're both just pretty laid back.
By the way, when people say this,
they never actually are.
Each of these has its own issues.
For example, if one person makes the big money decisions,
what happens when that person dies?
Will the other partner know how to handle the complexity of money?
And I want you to think about this.
What roles in your relationship did you just passively accept?
Which roles mirror the roles your parents played?
And even what would it look like if you reversed those
roles? Have this discussion with your partner. And when you do, here's a suggestion, name
the roles. Maybe you are the spender, the saver, the cautionary person, the warrior, whatever
it is, name that be vivid. And then ask yourself, if we could change those roles,
what would they be?
Did you guys get that couch?
I'm still messaging with the girl.
Okay, so that's a no.
So can I just play this out again?
All right, see if this sounds right.
Kara comes up, she's like, we should get this thing
and it has all these cool features.
I want us to spend $700.
Kara is the spender as you put it.
Do we agree?
Yes.
And then Sean's reaction is, I don't know about that.
What about the plumbing?
How would you describe that?
Bomber. Yes. Keep going. What about the plumbing? How would you describe that?
Bummer.
Yes.
Keep going.
Practical?
I don't know.
Don't give yourself undue credit.
That's not being practical.
Fair enough.
Listen to my tone.
I don't know.
You didn't offer an alternative, did you?
You didn't say, well, you know what, that's an interesting couch, but I really think that
I'm going to look into three other couches and find something at 50% off of that price. You didn't do that, did you? You didn't say, well, you know what, that's an interesting couch, but I really think that I'm going to look into three other couches and find something at
50% off of that price. You didn't do that, did you? Definitely not, no. Yeah, so you're
not practical. And it's not that. What is it? Cara, feel free to chime in here. He's in
the size set. I think it's just a wet blanket. You know, you guys know what that is? Oh yeah. Just, yeah.
Sort of some e-or type shit, you know.
I don't know.
I haven't just watched that e-or stuff in a long time,
but I imagine that's the sound e-or makes.
I don't mind if you disagree on the couch.
I don't mind that at all.
But we haven't even looked at your numbers to see if you can afford it.
Notice how patterns that appear in money also appear
in other parts of relationships. I've noticed that a lot of people try to compartmentalize their
feelings about money by saying, oh, well, that's just my finances. I just feel nervous around my
finances. But the way you treat money often seeps into other areas of your life. And this is why changing the
way you treat money can be really hard because it often cuts to the very core of who you
are and how you look at the world.
Cara, go ahead. Looks like you just had an idea.
I feel like I'm the leader, the one who creates the dreams, and then he kind of just goes with it and
has no input.
Describe that in a word.
Like, careless?
Careless, okay.
What does that mean?
For you or for me?
Like, I don't know, like you don't,
it doesn't really matter to you.
I don't know.
Is that fair?
That I, that nothing matters to me?
No, no, that's not fair.
What would you say instead if she's the leader?
What would you describe yourself as?
I'm definitely more of a one day to one week
at a time kind of person.
Just manage like one week's of worth of routine
or challenges at a time.
Happy go lucky is probably too generous, but content to, you know, live out one
week at a time.
And if there are dreams that Kara has, let's see if we can make them happen as
long as they make sense with everything else we're going on.
But I am definitely I am not good at long term things.
That is a growth area for me trying to get better at long term planning, which is something
we talk about, whether it's finances or anything else.
Hmm, okay.
That's perceptive.
Okay.
Do you know why I just spent so much time on this?
I.
Because it's not about the couch.
I bet you we could come up with five other examples
where this exact same dynamic played out.
I think that's fair for some of our further in the past interactions.
I think the recent vacation trip we took that you planned.
I was excited for that. You found great deals.
We jumped all over it. We made it happen.
That was still definitely you leading,
but it was less web-lengthity.
Yeah, but I still, I don't think it would have happened
if I didn't do it.
That's the thing.
I was the one who pitched it.
We were so connected on those trips.
And then like we come home and you go back to work
and you get in the zone
and I feel like our relationship goes off to the side.
I have to be the one to always dream and keep that going.
And I guess that's a lot of pressure on me
for the rest of our marriage.
So it would be nice, I don't know,
if those thoughts and dreams for our family,
it would make me feel like desired and special.
I've tried to tell you that.
I was actually kind of frustrated today.
We were supposed to go to a wedding for my friend.
She's unfortunately like sick.
It has to be canceled.
We had a babysitter and everything lined up.
So Sean calls me and is like, oh, do you want to go on a date?
And inside I'm like, oh my gosh, he's doing it.
Like, he's planning something like for us. And he's like, I my gosh, she's doing it. He's planning something for us.
And he's like, I want to go see Dr. Strange too.
And I was like, okay, that's definitely more of a him thing, but I like Marvel too.
But he's like, well, then we can make it home for bedtime.
And inside I got really upset.
That's all for him.
We're not even connecting when we go to the movie.
And I'm really easy to please.
I feel like I get, I like love most restaurants and stuff.
So I feel like it wasn't, it's not that hard to like, you know, step up.
It must be frustrating.
Yeah.
I'm having a little fun with them, but what I'm really trying to do is shake them
out of their patterns.
They've never even named their roles. They've never even thought about them actually. And when they do,
you notice that they come up with the same predictable answers that almost everybody else does. I'm practical.
No, actually you're not practical. If you were practical, you wouldn't be talking to me.
So what I'm doing here is I'm intentionally painting an exaggerating picture with this idea of EOR and his weird dying sound
also that it sticks in their head. And hopefully it's going to get them especially Sean thinking.
I am on board with trying to make care of happy as much as I possibly can. And admittedly, there are sometimes where I can probably step into more of a, you know,
take turns being leaders on certain decisions.
But why here?
I mean, why not a couple's therapists,
why not a group coaching part?
Why this?
We're talking about money.
The name of the podcast is I will teach you to be rich.
Why this?
We're trying to do a lot better with our investments,
with setting our daughter up for future success.
Once we had a kid, I think that changed
both of our perspectives a lot.
It's not just, can we have fun this month?
Can we stop renting a house?
Can we buy a house instead?
And now it's okay, well, we need to make sure
we can send her to college if it all possible.
If that's what she wants to do.
If, you know, how does your daughter?
10 months. Did you catch that?
That deep invisible script.
We had a kid.
So now we have to start thinking about buying a house and paying for her
college and not having fun anymore.
No wonder people hate money.
It just sounds like such a downer.
You've really helped me like identify identify what my rich life would be.
And I tried to have these conversations with Sean.
And I asked him,
and he couldn't come up with anything other than,
oh, well, I really like what I do for my job.
But I was like, but your rich life,
you're not with your family a lot.
I'm like, what is, what's going on?
Okay. And I can see that you're not with your family a lot. I'm like, what is, what's going on? Okay.
And I can see that you're wiping away tears.
Yeah.
Did you expect this call to be that emotional?
No.
It's okay that it is.
Okay.
It's totally normal.
Okay.
Here's what I think is going on so far.
Cara is well versed in the philosophy of I will teach you to be rich.
She uses phrases like Rich Life,
and she's the one, of course,
who asked to come on this podcast.
I think she realizes that money is just a symptom of larger problems.
So as they're talking about that frustrating date night,
it seems like she realizes the enormity of the challenge they're facing.
It's not really a simple budget change that they need here.
What's interesting to me is that people really cling to the idea of numbers.
People hate numbers and they usually don't know their numbers,
but funny enough, they believe the magical solution
to their financial problems is found somewhere in the numbers.
If somebody like me would just show them
how to calculate things right,
I'm gonna start with their finances now,
but you and I both know the answer
probably isn't in the numbers.
It's in the two of them.
What is your household income combined?
About 150,000.
Okay, yeah, around there.
And how do you feel about the money that you make?
Pretty good.
I know it's not, I mean, in this market, we're probably pretty average, but
we, I don't know. So you feel pretty good, okay, you don't worry about money? I do, actually.
I get frustrated. I'm a nurse and I work all time. I feel like I'm at the point where I am making the most money and then
it's just a really difficult profession. So I don't burn out. I want to like cut back an hour and
usually normally people's partners like will continue to rise and then they have like a plan and
so I guess it would be nice
if I could drop a little bit
and have some pressure taken off
and like have him kind of try and plan
to move up or make changes.
But I feel like he's kind of stuck
unless he makes a career change or I don't know.
What's the breakdown in incomes out of 150? makes a career change or I don't know.
What's the breakdown in incomes out of 150? Who makes what?
I make about $100,000.
And he makes...
A little over 50.
Okay, great.
Sean, how do you feel about your financial situation?
about your financial situation?
Now that we have a mortgage kicking in and a little less comfortable,
but for the most part,
it's never bothered me that care was,
you know, a bigger earner than I was.
I don't get any sort of masculine pride out of that
or not.
With my particular role, you know, eight, nine years
that I've been doing it, I am getting to a kind of a burnout
point as well, kind of like Karras described.
And so I have quietly applied for other positions
pretty much annually, sometimes semi-annually,
depending on what comes up.
And I just haven't gotten anything else.
So those are all applications to similar roles
at just different places that would pay a little bit more.
So she's right, sort of a total career shift.
Unless some of those jobs start calling me back,
I don't have a huge potential for salary increase.
So kind of budding up against a glass ceiling
and that is kind of, actually, I guess what I thought
we might talk about a little bit today is just like,
okay, well, me it's gonna tell me I need to change jobs
and get my shit together and move on.
But if I told you that, would it actually mean anything to you?
I think so, yeah, because I mean,
it means something to me when Cara says it too.
Like I have been looking for goals.
I have applied to larger companies for similar positions,
which I mean, even if it's a lateral move, it's still more salary.
Carrie, you just rolled your eyes.
I'm the one who's looking at for these jobs for him, which makes me sound like a crazy
person, like a crazy wife, but I'm just so desperate to kind of know that there's something
more waiting for us and that I can
finally like relax and like I don't know. Sean, you were shaking your head now. I don't agree with that totally.
I, she has been great about being proactive and sharing things that she finds on
the little glass door, you know, recommendations or whatever, but I have my own alerts set up and I apply for those too. It's just I think probably
time for me to decide whether I want to commit to shifting careers entirely or, um, you know.
Yeah, but I feel like I have to be the force to do it.
Because if you don't, then what happens?
Or stagnant.
We're stuck.
Like there's no moving upward.
He was making like the federal minimum,
but he was working like 60 hours for like the small university
and I didn't even give him a 401k.
And I, you know, we were like 24 or 25 and I was like,
babe, like that's kind of important.
He's like, well, but my boss says that we can go to his,
like, cabin and big bear.
And I'm like, okay, let's talk about that 401k cabin example.
I can understand the frustration of Kara.
She goes, hey, like, that's kind of important. He responds
with the cabin example, which is really code for, I don't want to think about that right
now because deep down, I know you're probably right. And it makes me feel embarrassed not
to know this. Now, the wrong way to handle this is to point a finger and say, hey, a 401K is really important,
seriously.
I find that if you have to say the word seriously, you've already lost.
And this is where a rich life vision can be very helpful.
Instead of starting by talking about what the other person should do,
you start by designing a vision of your rich lives together.
You get crystal clear on it.
You get excited about it.
Then, and only then,
do you start using the puzzle pieces of your money
to match up with your rich life vision.
Years later, you can look back and laugh about that 401k conversation.
And you can smile about the conversations you had that were worth hundreds of thousands of dollars,
and you'll never have to fight over a $700 couch again.
This is the crux of how you use money to create a rich life.
I'll be talking more about this in my upcoming programs,
so be sure that you're following me on social media and my newsletter.
Now back to Sean.
I wanted to know where his apathy of money comes from.
He tells me that he grew up poor in the rural Midwest,
and then he moved to Southern California at the age of 10.
What things surprised you about money culture in Southern California versus the Midwest?
It's a lot more talked about. It's way more in your face. It's a status symbol.
Like what? Well, I mean, like growing up for my first, you know, decade and a half,
I could really matter. Like, as long as you're happy for my first, you know, decade and a half, I could really matter.
Like, as long as you're happy and content with what you got, like, no one's really comparing
too much.
But you get to SoCal at that time, maybe it's just the kids, maybe it's, maybe it is a
coastal elitism thing, I don't know, but I guess at the time I did not see a way to catch
up and rather than feel sad or depressed about that, I just said, you know, I did not see a way to catch up and rather than feel sad or depressed about
that, I just said, you know, I'm not going to be disappointed, but I also going to just
lower my expectations for now.
Thank you for that.
Another way that I would look at it is I knew that I was never going to be able to catch
up.
So I opted out of the game altogether.
Yeah, that's a good one.
Would that be fair?
Yeah.
Okay.
Kara, what do you think about this?
Yeah, I feel like you just kind of gave up
and stopped believing in himself.
He thought I think to have his himself less
than other people.
In social psychology, there's a concept called cognitive dissonance.
If you hold two different ideas, like I'm a hard worker, but I can't ever catch up to
these rich Southern California kids, you have to find a way to reduce the dissonance.
You could double down and work hard, studying harder to get into college with the belief that
your hard work will eventually enable you to make more.
Or you could opt out of the game altogether and say, I can never catch up and I don't
want to play that game anyway.
To make that easier to swallow, you could add on a nice cherry on top, saying something
like, those people who drive nice cars are actually deeply unhappy inside anyway.
Once Sean realized he would never be able to catch up to the Southern California kids with
their fancy cars and designer clothes, he decided to just opt out of the game altogether.
And instead, he focused on
sports. It's not surprising, then, what he chose to do for a living later in life. Listen
as he describes the field of work that he chose. And what do we know about the field
that you chose to work in? This college athletics field, what do we know about this field
as it relates to money?
The people that know the right people
and are the best at networking,
even if they're not the best at the job,
they advance and kind of break through the glass ceiling.
And everyone else,
there's plenty of other people that are willing to do the job,
right, is kind of the opinion of higher ups, it seems like.
So there's a steady workforce of people from behind who are happy to take my job if I burn out or opt out.
So you kind of eat shit for as long as you can and hope that you meet the right people and
climb the ladder a little bit. And I guess part of it for me is I've done that for almost a decade.
I know it's a sunk cost fallacy in some
ways. I put it all this time. I don't want to give up now, but I don't. I really like what I do.
It feels rewarding, and I feel like I've been in that long enough that I should hopefully be
getting a couple of rungs up on the ladder soon enough. Okay. Okay. And have you got promoted in the last couple of years? My specific position, there's not really a promotion, you're kind of your director, but there's
no like director of the directors, right? You're just, you get admin status and you're there.
It seems to me that there's kind of a clear connection between your moving to California
and your choosing this job. Do you see a connection?
Kara, you were nodding very quickly. Go ahead, tell me.
Yeah, I think that parallels really well. You're talking about your profession like a similar way.
Like only the top, top people, like the lucky people,
make it to the top.
And then I just kind of hang out here and hope, you know?
But it's like, what are you actually, I don't know.
Let me stop you right there.
Because you're about to not do yourself any favors
throughout your going down. Carol was about to not do yourself any favors throughout you're going down.
Kara was about to start relitigating her problems with Sean and I just don't want it.
I don't need it.
This doesn't mean Kara's a bad person.
It's just a groove she's gotten in when she talks about Sean and his career, but this
is not the time.
Sean is being super open, so I want to encourage him, and I want to hear more.
The connection that I see is, when you move to California, you felt you could not catch
up, you know, as you put it, and you chose a safe industry where you had some personal
passion, yes, but you wouldn't have to compete.
And it's safe.
You're probably not going to be fired from your job, I'm guessing.
It's safe, it's fine.
It may not have the highest potential for advancement,
but you like it, and it's a nice, good job.
Do you care about making more money?
In the sense that it will give care a peace of mind and provide for our family long-term
yes.
In the sense that it gives me any extra happy feeling at the end of the day with a certain
number attached to my name, no.
Yeah.
I care more about providing for others than I do about like, I have this next
to my name at the pay stub. So you said, if it makes Kara happy, but Kara told us point blank,
she wants you to advance and she's frustrated that you've been at this job. So you're not making
her happy by staying at this job. Yes. Yeah, we've, if we have that conversation.
So then make the connection for me because you said, I don't care about it for myself.
I don't care about the status, but I want to provide and I'll do if it makes care happy.
But Kara does not feel provided for and she's not happy. I mean, a lot of implied questions in the end of that sentence for you.
Yeah.
Talk to me.
Talk to me, honestly.
I'm not here to tell you you're right or wrong.
I just want to understand what's going on.
Fair enough.
Kerry is currently not as happy as she could be with this role.
I guess I've decided to kind of make peace with being in it while I am still applying for
other things and the fact that I do get some emotional satisfaction or personal satisfaction
from the kind of work that it is probably does.
I guess cut down on the urgency a little bit as much as anything else.
So you like the job you're well respected.
It's a good job for you, right?
Yeah, just the paycheck isn't.
And the return on hours, you know, put in.
What is the return on hours if you break it out?
Hold on, before you go on, I just want to describe what just happened.
I said, what is the return on hours?
And you look to the side and you laughed.
So I'm very much looking forward to what you're about to tell me.
I had an employee complain to me, student worker.
They make minimum wage in the state that we live.
And they were complaining kind of jokingly that they had put in long hours over the weekend.
We had a couple of things we had going on and they're like, I deserve a raise after
this.
I was like, buddy, you divide my actual salary by the hours I put in, you still make
more than I do.
So you make less than minimum wage?
If you do salary divided by the actual hours, the job requires, yeah, probably.
And how do you feel about that?
Not thrilled.
I've been trying to.
I actually have a meeting set up with my current supervisor about
an application I have out just to see if, even if I'm not picked for the job,
can I use this as leverage to get a little bit more where I'm currently at?
Because.
And let's say say it goes well,
how much would you go from,
you're making roughly 50K,
how much you think that you might get an increase of?
I think realistically the most I could probably expect
for an annual bump would probably be 10.
So 10, 50 to 60.
Okay, that's not bad.
60K. Okay.
Okay.
It's not a thing. Kera's like itching to say something here. Kera, go Nothing. It's not. Kera?
Kera's like itching to say something here.
Kera, go ahead.
She wants more.
I mean, I, oh, I mean, yeah, I found a crystal ball.
I just know that I'll feel, I just, I don't want to drop like where we're at.
And so I won't drop my, cut my hours back.
And I'll, I'll pick up overtime and all these things to like make sure like the three of us have this like,
you know, good life.
I think in some ways just because I'm trying to juggle
a bunch of other things that make our family happy
and comfortable.
There are other jobs that I see posted around the country
that would be better opportunities for our family.
But the place that we currently live,
aside from my paycheck and my take home,
is a really happy compromise of family around in the area,
a climate that we enjoy, friends that we can lean on,
a certain amount of free childcare that we can expect,
depending on who we're asking. And so, okay, so that's a very logical answer.
There's other places I could take us to, but then,
Cara's standard of treatment as a nurse might change, you know, like where we are at,
nursing is a very well-respected profession and it's well-compensated.
We could go somewhere where I become very well-respected and well-compensated.
Then, really, we just flip and now we're not in your family and now we're not in your friends.
We're not happier that way either. I don't think it's just that we've traded roles at that point.
Anytime there's anything that would even be like a two-hour commute, if it's a bump
for me, I apply for it, but our options feel limited, I guess, by trying to balance as
much of that as possible.
All of that was just words, just conjecture.
It sounded logical, but I think really it was just fear disguised as thoughtful concern.
This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp.
On this podcast you've heard me recommend therapy to a lot of couples.
Some of the couples are already seeing therapists, which I love.
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My wife and I saw a therapist to help us deal with our early money conversations.
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That's BetterHelpHELP.com slash RemiTH, R-A-M-I-T. One of my favorite things to talk about is this concept of money dials.
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Now I get it, I spend a lot on certain areas of my life. For
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This could be things like a Chipotle burrito,
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Now, in my own personal life,
I love spending money on health and wellness.
I have a personal trainer. I get a weekly beard trim.
I buy protein powder and when I travel, I make sure to prioritize where I'm staying by how close it is to a good gym.
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They have a special offer for our I will teach you to be rich listeners.
An extra 5,000 point bonus when you apply for the Ness card
and get approved using the link nesswell.com slash remit. That's n-e-s-s-w-e-l-l.com slash r-a-m-i-t. Here's my question for you. How do you know that I'm right?
Yeah.
I don't.
Well, it seems pretty important to me.
You guys decided to come on this podcast and share everything.
It seems like it would be a pretty interesting answer to find the answer to.
Don't you think?
Yes, yeah, it would.
I mean, you came up with this long pre-rehearsed answer.
Well, we got the childcare and the well-respected nurse
and done it, and go, maybe,
or maybe you're just bullshitting yourself.
How do you know you can't get a different job?
How do you know you can't find a remote job?
How do you know you can't move?
How do you know?
Sean, how do you know?
I don't know that we can't move.
I just know that Carol would prefer not to.
I feel like I only have so many moves that could make him a chess board that would end
with everyone feeling successful and happy and satisfied.
I know I'm mixing metaphors here, but I'm trying to thread the needle of like, okay,
well, you're bingo and now everyone wins.
Okay, and how do you think that she's perceiving your internal chess game.
Did she see you making all these moves in your head?
I am not a great shareer.
So probably I'm shocked.
Yeah, I'm shocked.
Can I just tell you what she thinks and then I'll just confirm if I'm right.
She doesn't see you making any movement at all.
Sometimes horrible chess players, this I'm getting on my mixed metaphor now because you may be talking about chess. This doesn't even make sense, but
I'm going with it. Sometimes chess players can play themselves into a circle. All right,
well, I could do this, but then I can't do that. And if I did that, then she'd be mad.
And then this and then no child care, I'm just going to do exactly what I've been doing
for the last five years. That's not playing chess, that's just being stuck.
Yeah, that's really accurate.
We'll get to a breaking point where I'm like,
I'm so frustrated, I feel like you're not listening to me because he's not communicating with me.
I've found that people are very, very willing to financially support their partners, to emotionally support
their partners, if they see their partners proactively making moves.
Now, a lot of us think we only need to move upward in order for our partners to be happy.
And we get so overwhelmed, we get so focused on perfection that we get paralyzed.
But life doesn't only go up.
Life goes down.
Things happen.
You get laid off.
You have a sick child or a ill parent or something happens.
In reality, you do not only have to be making upward moves. Instead taking a small step,
even if you get it wrong,
is often better than staying stuck.
Momentum really matters.
It seems like the two of you have different visions
on what your life is.
Would that be fair to say?
Yes, I remember actually like describing, so my aunt and uncle, they are probably like upper
middle class and he's like
upper middle class.
Okay.
No, I mean, this is just to just to describe what just happened.
She goes, they're up in middle class and Sean goes, he rolls his eyes and he
smile upper middle class.
Okay. So Sean, I'm guessing that eyes and he smiles upper middle class. Okay. So Sean,
I'm guessing that they are more than upper middle class, according to you. Yeah, they're straight
at just upper class. There's no, there's no middle as part of it. Um, they've got a couple
million dollars on the floor. What a shock. Oh, wow. What's the point you're trying to make, Kara?
He, I was like, well, I kind of like their house.
And he was like, whoa, whoa, whoa.
He's like, don't have basically telling me not to ever have those expectations in life.
And it made me feel kind of like selfish for like even wanting that.
Yeah.
Can I tell you something?
Yeah.
I hate how that conversation went.
The one between you two.
Sean, do you see why I don't like how that went?
I mean, I don't think for me on my end, that's probably too limiting and negative myself
any credit or room to grow. And then on carousel and I do still feel like that was, you know, big home run swing.
But, um, but what about how your response made Cara feel?
How do you know that's not positive.
So there's no reason to be that what blanket,
wet blanket, that's exactly what you were.
And that's why from the first couple of minutes, I want to just
point this tendency out that I'm sure manifests in a million different ways. Cara coming to you and
saying, I'm excited about something. And what is she really saying when she talks to you about the
couch or this couple? What is she really saying to you beneath it all? I think this is a good idea. I think this is fun dream. Let's do it together. Yes, it's not even that she wants that couch. It's
not that. It's that she wants to engage with you. She's basically crying out for
some type of engagement. Talk to me. Engage with me, get excited with me.
And your response instead is what?
Usually practical, which is not fun.
It's worse than practical.
What did you tell her when she said that I like that couple?
They're really nice.
I'd like to live like that.
What was your response?
I think we should lower our that. What was your response?
I think we should lower our expectations. Literally, it's the most toxic answer you could give.
Not only are you saying,
I don't wanna engage with you,
you're actually telling her your dreams are foolish.
The worst thing a partner wants to feel is embarrassed
or ashamed around.
The one person in life they're supposed to be able
to talk to, honestly.
I'm not here to berate you.
I want to show you a different way of thinking about money
between the two of you, even if you don't see it the same way.
So Sean, how do you think you could do things differently
than how you've done it in the past,
the wet blanket approach?
It's always a work in progress, is all.
So sometimes I'm better at catching it and sometimes
anything that we that is deeply part of us probably take the rest of our lives to work on.
Yeah, the fact that I picked up on it in the first two minutes is a problem. It's a real problem.
That's just the candid outside opinion. It's affecting your relationship the way you talk about
your career is like someone just hoping that they're going to win the lottery. It's affecting your relationship the way you talk about your career is like someone just hoping that they're going to win the lottery.
It's like, I hope my boss is going to give me a raise because I really deserve it.
You're playing by the wrong rules and you don't even know it.
And I think that's what Kera's frustration is about.
You can learn the rules.
You're a savvy guy. but you have to want to.
You have to have a reason to. Right now, it just doesn't, I don't hear the reason for the two of
you to change. Both of you need to start making some decisions now if you want things to change by
the time your daughter's four or five and 10. We're really got it rationalizing. Oh, you know, like, then we end up in the same
spot. What do you think this whole conversation's been about? Yeah, that. You two are also
good at admitting the problems, less so it actually wanting to make a change. Yeah. It's
really hard for people to make a change with their money if there's not a pressing reason.
Usually it's one of about 10 reasons.
We get married, we have a baby, we bought a house,
et cetera.
In this case with Kara and Sean,
it doesn't seem like they really have a reason
to make a change.
And so they have it.
In many ways, it's as simple as that.
I decided that the route I was going on was a dead end. So I wanted to move on to their conscious
spending plan. And candidly, I don't have a lot of confidence right now because without a reason
to change, this is just a bunch of random numbers. But who knows, let's see where this takes us.
I asked them to pull out the conscious spending plan
that they'd filled out before the call.
You can get your own copy at iwt.com slash episode 48.
Listen to what happens.
All right, let's look at the numbers.
So how do you feel about your spending?
A little bit of shame.
Well, I feel like I'll kind of go back and forth
where I'm like, I'll get really excited about something
and then buy it.
And then I feel like shame.
Like, oh, I kind of went too hard
and treated myself or us.
And then I'll just ruminate on numbers
and when am I actually gonna get to a place
where I can do this and not feel stress.
And what is the answer to that?
I paid off my car and like I paid off like a good amount of student loans and I would like
log in every day and I'd love seeing like the progress and it made me feel really good.
So I now have just $22,000 of student loans versus like 100K.
But yeah.
Hold on, why you said I'll depressed.
It's like pretty amazing.
Did you ever celebrate that?
No, because I haven't finished.
So.
So what?
Hold on a second.
How old is your daughter again?
Eight months?
Yeah.
And when she turns one, you probably
shouldn't have a birthday celebration because she's not dead yet. What kind of logic is that?
You know what? I'm going to celebrate for you and we're all going to do it right now. Okay,
you paid off what? $80,000, 78,000 of debt. Round of applause. Please, can we give her a round of applause? Yes, that's awesome.
Take the win.
Okay.
Yay.
Listen, one of my philosophies is to take the win.
The fact that you've paid off $78,000
and you haven't even taken a breath
and given yourself a pat on the back,
tells me it's not actually about the numbers
on this spreadsheet.
It's about you.
It's about how you feel about money.
For most of us, money is a source of guilt
and shame and insecurity.
And even when we're winning,
we still operate with the mentality that we're losing.
And do you know what we tell ourselves?
When I finally do X, then I'll feel better about money. The truth is, the way you feel about money is highly uncorrelated with how much you have in the bank. You've heard Millionaires on this podcast
who still agonize over a $300 hotel stay.
And now here you hear Cara, she's done an amazing job paying off $78,000.
And she feels ashamed.
Personally, I think she's done an awesome job.
So I want you to get in the habit of taking the win.
Money should feel good along the way.
Otherwise, it won't feel good at the end.
With the market like climbing,
I was like, we need to do something.
So we...
Well, what was your conclusion?
A lot of house.
And what made you decide to buy?
Looking at other properties that we would have liked to rent
and recognizing that those
were going to be pretty close to what a mortgage would be based on what we're hoping to continue
renting, not wanting to downsize back to like a one bedroom apartment.
And your mortgage is how much?
3200.
3200.
Okay.
Plus you got your 400 bucks of utilities, insurance, et cetera, et cetera,
et cetera. Okay. How do you feel about the amount that you spend on your fixed costs?
Stressed. It was good before and now it's not. Yeah. So just so everybody knows we're looking at their
conscious spending plan. You
guys did the conscious spending
plan before and in this conscious
spending plan, I have some
recommendations on general
parameters. How much you should
be spending? And in general,
speaking generally here, 50 to
60% of your take home pay would be
a good amount for fixed costs. That would be
things like your housing, cars, groceries, things like that. What's your number? 78. Yeah, that's
pretty high. The conscious spending plan has my specific recommendations for how much you should be spending in each of the four major categories, including guilt-free spending.
You'll quickly learn that most people get into trouble because their fixed costs are too
high.
Instead of the 2836 rule, which is 28% for housing, a 36% for total debt, you're more like
3242.
That starts to feel really tight, doesn't it? Yeah. 28% for housing, a 36% for total debt. You're more like 32, 42.
That starts to feel really tight, doesn't it? Yeah.
We've been sitting down with an investment advisor
through a local church that we started to work with
and then trying to get more into what we're going on.
How much does this kind of charge you?
Please don't tell me a percentage.
God, look at the look on their faces.
What is it, 1%, maybe even 1.5%, tell me.
I think there's a ladder based on performance
of the actual accounts.
No, it's not on performance.
I can tell you that.
They don't like to get measured on performance
because they fucking suck.
But there is a ladder I'm sure based
on the number of assets you have.
That's one of the reasons I started what I do.
I don't think everyday people should have to become
financial experts to avoid getting ripped off.
And I wish you didn't have to go through this.
But you did.
Luckily, we counted early.
We can make some changes.
So this investment advisor sat you both down and let me guess their first question.
What are your financial goals?
Yes.
Yeah, that's on the right.
I'm going to assume that your advisor is charging you 1%.
That's a typical
scammy amount that an investment advisor would charge you. So let me ask you this, Sean.
Does 1% sound like a lot to you?
I mean that's a fair you know.
That's a great answer. So how come when you were mowing lawns, you didn't charge
Mr. Johnson down the road, one percent of his net worth to mo his lawns every week. Oh, I mean, at the time,
because no concept of 1% of Mr. Johnson's worth.
But would he have paid you that?
No.
It was something that Sean and I felt like,
it was seamlessly like we were on the same page.
Like, yes, do we want to feel secure about our finances
and have like this
Little I don't necessarily for a daughter whatever like if something were to happen to us
It's kind of sweet the way you both you know the the way you put it like it was something we did together
I like that
Unfortunately, you made the wrong decision
But the intention was good.
That part was good.
So why don't we just take the intention and make a better decision?
Okay.
That's good to me.
I like the intention of the two of you talking about money.
You know what I like even better?
What?
Is the two of you keeping tens of thousands or hundreds of thousand dollars for yourself?
How about that?
Okay.
Look, they got scammed by some church advisor. Fine, it happens. You're going to make mistakes with your money.
Better to make them early on and fix them now, rather than to wait later in life, when those
thousand dollar mistakes will be much more costly. I don't mind money mistakes. Life happens.
much more costly. I don't mind money mistakes. Life happens. Just trust yourself to notice them and to fix them. And so because you're spending all this money on your fixed costs,
what are you not able to do? On things. On shift. Tell me like what? What are you not
able to do? Think about yourself and think about yourself as a couple.
Um, I mean, together at the midst, how often we can see my family because they're pretty
far removed from us and they're in an area where there's now no direct flight at all.
So, um, then your option is like three-day road trip or nothing.
Um, uh, it kind of affects how generous we can be for holidays or weddings or anything then your option is like three day road trip or nothing.
It kind of affects how generous we can be for holidays or weddings or anything else.
You kind of have to start counting
depending on your little bit more.
What about the future for the two of you?
Do you both wanna be doing the same thing
you're doing 10 years from now?
No.
Your daughter will be about 10 years old?
Absolutely not.
No, wow, that was a resounding no.
Tell me more Sean.
Just wanna point out that is the first time
I heard Sean speak up that authoritatively
on this entire call.
Well, I mean, she's only gonna wanna do more and more things
like I wanna be able to put her in when she wants.
Like she wants to do validation, so I T-Ball,
she wants to go to summer camp, whatever,
like, you know, I mean, I can start taking
broader sandwiches for lunch.
It's only gonna save us so much money.
So, there's gotta be some changes.
So, what are those changes?
There's things that we can trim down.
Some subscriptions that we don't need.
For example, there's probably,
there's, I mean, that we were paying for YouTube TV, but I was like, $65.
No, it's $65. It's like $60 a month. $60 a month for YouTube TV.
All right, I'm out of touch. Who the hell would pay $60 a month for YouTube TV?
YouTube is going to kill me if they hear this, I don't, whatever.
$60 is not gonna change your life, honestly.
It's not really, yes, you should probably cancel
a $60 a month thing, because I don't know
what the hell you get for that, but that's not gonna
change your life.
Yeah.
They're spending nearly 80% of their take home
on fixed costs, but Sean's first response
is about some YouTube subscription.
I have to tell you guys, I lost it here.
They're both playing small.
And what's worse, they're both being passive, especially Sean.
Have you noticed that they've barely asked me a single thing?
Seems like they're just waiting for me to magically solve their problems, but when I ask them
what they can do,
the answer I get back is about a $60 subscription.
I've tried talking about the numbers. I've tried talking about their childhood. I've tried talking about their relationship.
I've even tried talking about the couch.
And this is where I got pissed off.
There's no vision here.
Yeah, we need a vision.
Do you guys want to help creating a vision?
Yeah, you know how to ask for help.
Can you help us?
No, you don't.
Sean, tell me about that.
I'm terrible at asking for help.
I've been wondering for the last two hours, what am I doing here?
Am I going to get asked any questions at all?
You know that this is your time, right?
Like, if I were you, how would I have come on this call?
If I were in your position and I had the chance to talk to somebody, what would I have done
specifically?
Um, honestly, you strike me as a kind of person who would have like four or five bullet points
of, you know, an action plan, how can we put it together, deliverables, how do we get
out of this?
I would have come in surgical.
I would have been like, this guy,
I hardly ever get the chance to talk to somebody like this.
I'm gonna milk him for every last thing he can tell me
until he finally says, hey man, enough free questions.
It's confusing to me.
We're about to, I mean, we're over time,
I don't mind, I'll stay as long as we need to stay,
but my goal is to, I mean, we're over time. I don't mind. I'll stay as long as we need to stay. But my goal is to help you guys.
But I can't help you too if you don't want to be helped.
And right now, it seems like both of you just want to be led along some path.
And that's not the way this works.
That's the entire theme of this conversation is, do you have enough pain to want to make
a change?
It's still unclear to me. I think we need to fundamentally
reconceptualize this dynamic right now.
Okay. Right. Okay. You tell me what you need and I will assist you.
Okay. All right. I got pretty mad at them.
This was also me taking the burden of solving their problems and handing it back to them.
Well, I guess I basically threw it back at them.
What I really wanted to tell them was, Kara and Sean, your problems are yours to solve.
I truly hope you solve them and I'll be here to help.
But I'm not going to do it for you.
Take ownership or not. It's up to
you. Tell that I think about it. I wish I had said it that way. You know what else I wish?
I wish you could have seen their body language. After I lit them up, they literally sat
up straighter. Sean finally leaned forward. And finally, they started being honest with me.
We have spent a large part of our relationship trying to realize some of
Cara's dreams. Like we really wanted to get all that debt paid down. We thought,
okay, like, well, surely if we pay off all this debt, we'll have, you know, we'll
have all this extra money later for different things.
When it comes to our finances, the biggest hurdle for us has been that I don't know what I don't know.
I can't even start the learning process because I don't really know what questions I should be asking.
I'm hoping that some of this conversation can not help me figure out what to act or
supposed to do instead of like, okay, well, that was clearly not the right answer or not a right answer. Okay, I appreciate that. So you're looking for help.
Yeah. Sean, you're 30 years old. You mentioned five years ago, you probably should have
started investing. Yeah, probably you should have, but you didn't. That's fine. We're here.
But five years from now, your daughter's going to be five years old, almost six.
What's going to be different?
going to be five years old, almost six. What's going to be different? I will definitely have a different job by then. I don't know what it is yet, but it will
not be this. What's going to be different about the job? Tell me about the income.
I mean, I'd like to see myself in like at least a 30 to 40% increase on what I've got because I have the tools.
How much you can be making?
I would love to see myself between 75 and 90.
Okay.
Took a lot to get you to say that number.
What is that?
I don't, I don't know, growing up with a family that made nowhere near that and still seemed happy, I guess.
This is a big moment.
Sean is designing his own rich life right in front of us.
Nobody can get him to do it.
Cara couldn't, I couldn't. It has to be Sean.
A lot of those people that I ran into,
not that all Angelina was in this way,
but a lot of people I ran into use money as a weapon.
And I didn't love that.
Okay.
I don't want you to think that if you make more money,
that you're gonna weaponize it or turn into an asshole.
One of the reasons that I talk about money and I share real numbers and other couples
is I want people to see that you can make a lot of money and you can be incredibly generous.
Sean is working off of a common invisible script that rich people are evil. So if I make a lot of money, I'll be evil
and probably an asshole too. Deep down, this is one of the things that I think has been
holding Sean back from taking ownership over his career. It's not the only thing, but
it's a big one. So Cara, you're deeply affected by your anxiety around money and you want somebody to give
you permission to know that you are making the right decision.
That's one of the reasons you ask Sean, can we get this couch?
I'm going to try to convince you because deep down you're putting yourself in the position
of needing somebody's blessing or needing somebody's permission.
Even though you don't really need it. In fact, you're the higher earner in this relationship.
Okay, that's number one. And number two, Sean, you're playing a different game, which is learn helplessness.
I don't know. I listen to the thing a little bit, but like, I don't know. And that's it. Now,
I will commend the two of you for getting together and getting that
advisor, even though the advisor was not the right decision, luckily we caught it and
the two of you came together today. That's awesome too. I commend you for that. So, I suggest
that you consider making a few changes. The last thing you want to do is to squelch the other
partner's dreams. If anything, the answer is to first engage
with them. Tell me about that. Oh my God, tell me about this couch. So where did you find
it? Okay. And you clear up, put your phone away, visibly set yourself up to be an engaged
partner. Tell me about this. But I don't know. If we spill, you know, our daughter's going
to spill stuff on it. What do you think about that? Not our daughter's gonna spill stuff, it'll suck.
No, our daughter's gonna spill. She's a clutz. So what are we gonna do when she spills that
milk on the couch? And then of course, Kara's, look at that smile.
Kara's smiling right now, left, she's grinning.
Kara, how would you react if he said something like that?
It won't be a problem because it's stain resistant.
Exactly. She's like, she pulls out like a papyrus scroll.
She's ready to break down all the features.
And it's white, so of course the no-core shell.
There you go. Look at this.
Okay, see, we can make it fun.
Now, I'm not saying you have to get the couch.
I am saying there's a way to talk about these things so that you two are partners.
Not adversaries and not one person dragging the other by their teeth.
Sean, are you on board with this so far?
Yeah.
Yeah. And I hope Sean it's lighting a fire under you to start making more money.
And I hope Sean it's lighting a fire under you to start making more money
because if you make a lot more that's going to automatically make this 74% go down.
Right. Because your denominator will be bigger. Yeah right you're diluting it. Yeah I get that. What are you going to do with that money? I personally it sounds like it would be a better idea to socket away for long-term investment.
Agreed.
Okay.
I'm going to share something on my screen.
I'm going to calculate out something for you here.
So this is how much you currently have.
You have $52,000 invested.
That's what you told me.
Yeah.
Okay.
Right now, you're going to add $400 a month. That's like your baseline for investments, correct?
All right. So I'm adding $4800 a year. I'm going to give you 35 years to grow it just to show you
what would happen by the time you approximately retire. And I'm going to assume a 7% interest rate.
I know you don't understand what that comes from. Chapter 7 of my book will tell you. Chapter 6 and 7.
Okay. So if you just do that, you have $1.2 million.
Where's the calculator? What's that face you just made, Cara? She looked like I just
put some hemlock in her coffee. What was that look on your face?
This belief. Why is that?
I don't know.
That's crazy how it can just sit there
and then grow that much.
I know it's compounding and that's what we're trying
to understand.
I like that.
I would like to make that even higher.
So you would.
Well, really. Well, wow.
Look at this.
He's just clapping right now, OK?
What do you notice about the dynamic between the two of you
right now?
Both smiling.
So that's good.
I'm still having dreaming.
Yeah, it's like you guys are a team.
I have to say it's funny.
Most of the time, by the time we're in this,
it's like very nuts and bolts,
but I actually love watching the two.
Look at these smiles.
And the two of you are really collaborating together.
I really admire it.
I was loving their teamwork at this point in the call.
You could see it in their smiles,
you could see it in their body language,
you could hear it in their voices.
This is how money should sound when you talk about it.
Of course, to get to this point, you have to understand the fundamentals of money, and
you have to have some basic numbers in place.
If you don't have that, it's no surprise that people fight for their entire lives over
$3 questions.
Ultimately, I wanted Kara and Sean to realize that they have to
find their solution. There's no magic trick I can pull out to fix this. The answer isn't
changing the way they both treat money, especially Sean. Between the two of you, you can tweak
a couple things. The changes you made actually already made you a million dollars. It's just going
to take you a long time to have it. But I don't think you want to wait until you're 65 years old to have
money. In your application, Cara, you said like, I want to live. I want to travel. Ultimately,
the biggest driver here is your income. And that is exactly what I wanted us to get to.
If I came in here and I tell you, Sean, you got to make more money. You're like basically fuck off. I know
but I like my job and my coworkers are nice. But if you have a vision that you
created together, then it becomes very clear what to do. How do you both feel right now? At least like we're pointed in the right direction.
Yeah.
Hopefully that this momentum will continue and that will be united and I just I feel the urgency
and I want him to feel that with me. I found three layers to Cara and Shawn's problems.
First, the mechanical answer is that they're spending too much
on their fixed costs.
Second, the more detailed answer is that Shawn needs
to get a better paying job.
And third, the real answer is that they both have to change
the way they treat money.
And Shawn has to take on the bigger part of this.
Now they have a lot of work to do,
but they realize they have to do it together.
After speaking to Sean and Cara,
I asked them to follow up with me in a few days
with what had surprised them
and what specific actions they were taking based on our call.
Cara did exactly that. She'd already gotten rid of their expensive financial advisor, them and what specific actions they were taking based on our call.
Cara did exactly that.
She had already gotten rid of their expensive financial advisor and she had reinvested
their money using my system.
To read the rest of the changes that Cara made, you can go to iwt.com slash follow-ups.
But I want to tell you what I heard from Sean.
Now, in these follow-ups, I often get hages of details.
I got a lot of details from Kara, but Sean didn't follow up with me in a few days like
I asked.
My team actually had to reach out to him and ask him to follow up.
He replied with the following single sentence.
I think the biggest takeaways for me were the importance of
communicating more frequently so Kara feels like we're on the same page and
it just further underscored a need for a career shift on my part. What do you
think? What do you think happens over five or ten or fifteen years when in a
relationship one person, the leader,
becomes increasingly frustrated that the other person is not being proactive,
is not making changes?
If you go to idwt.com slash follow ups,
you'll be able to see future updates from Sean and Kara and my other podcast guests.
from Sean and Kara and my other podcast guests.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich. I'm Remete 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 the specific tactics
for how to build the I will teach you to be rich system
into your personal finances.