I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 54. “We grew up poor—but we could be millionaires” (Part 2)
Episode Date: August 2, 2022Last week, in part one of my conversation with Austin and Annie, we got deeply personal about their upbringings and the invisible scripts they picked up as kids. I learned that they were passing bad m...oney habits to their young daughter—continuing a cycle of generational poverty. Today, my goal is to move them out of that cycle by getting tactical with how they can turn things around. They’re young and make plenty of money to be comfortable—even multimillionaires—in their future. But we need to get the calculator out to make them believe it. Tune in as Austin and Annie see how it’s possible to go from generational poverty to generational wealth. 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you're in New York City or the tri-state area, listen up.
This year, I'm looking to coach couples live, in person, on this podcast.
So if you and your partner want to be personally coached on money and relationships,
this is your chance.
Now, whether you can't get on the same page with your spending,
maybe one of you has loads of debt,
maybe you're about to go through a huge life change,
like a baby, promotion, career change,
and you're just stuck on how to handle the financial
side of it, and you live in the tri-state area, I want to hear from you. Please apply at iwt.com
slash apply. If you've been enjoying this podcast where I speak to couples and share their real
numbers, their income, their net worth, their debt, all of it, then do me a favor, go over to
Apple Podcasts and please leave a written review. It really helps us grow the podcast. And it's also something that I can
share with my team who helps produce this amazing show every single week. So do me a favor, go over
to Apple Podcasts, leave a written review, and it will be a big favor for me and for my entire team.
Thanks for watching. Thanks for listening.
The two of you easily can become multimillionaires.
Do you believe that?
No, it's just not in the cards for me.
I don't have the skill set to do that.
It's overly ambitious to the point where it is unrealistic.
If it is truly as easy as the numbers make it seem, then why haven't we done
something prior? Why hasn't none of our influencers or our role models had anything like that to say. Why is it us?
Out of everybody else, why are we doing it?
Because you picked up the phone.
Because the two of you asked for help.
I'm afraid of failing. We could put ourselves in a worse position.
But if we keep it up, we stay the
way we are. Our kids are spoiled, flat out. I'm willing to hear anything and try anything.
Welcome to part two of my conversation with Austin and Annie. To recap, they make about
$130,000 a year living in Kansas. Last episode, we spent
all of our conversation focused on their daughter and how if they continue on the path that they're
on, they will be passing on another painful cycle of generational money issues down to their kids.
Now, they told me that their goal is to break the generational chain of poverty.
told me that their goal is to break the generational chain of poverty. And that's one of the reasons I wanted to talk to them. I also want to show them that they can dream bigger than just breaking the
chains. Austin and Annie can likely be multi-millionaires if they manage their money right.
But when I tell them that in today's episode, they flat out don't believe me. To many people raised without money, that's like telling them they can fly.
It just doesn't compute.
Listen in as we talk about what it will take to change the financial trajectory of their
family forever.
I'm Ramit Sethi, and this is I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
What are you two both here to accomplish?
What do you both want?
I want change, but I need to make that change myself.
So I think I'm looking for guidance
to pinpoint what my actual problems are
because what I thought my problems were,
you have shown me those are not necessarily it.
It's really these things instead. Financial freedom. I worry that the position that we are in now, we are happy.
We are comfortable. We have said it a few times already, our kids are spoiled.
And we can dial back on that.
However, if something big were to happen,
we wouldn't be able to afford to live.
Yeah, we're paid ahead on our apartment.
Our rent's paid ahead a couple months.
So we're doing good there.
We have a place to live for a couple months still,
but that puts everything on Annie if it's me or everything on me if it's Annie.
And the way we are set up within our finances, we aren't prepared for anything to happen.
And that does scare me because shit does happen.
Yeah.
Did you catch that?
Austin's comment that,
yeah, we're good.
We paid ahead on our apartment
a couple of months.
That is quite revealing.
To him, that is success,
to be able to pay ahead on an apartment
for a couple of months.
And I think that that's great
when you're starting out.
But he and his wife make $130,000. They live in a low cost of living area. At $130,000,
they can be playing much bigger. And that's what we get to talk about today. If they don't make
any changes, they'll go through life playing small, thinking that success is paying ahead
a couple of months on an apartment, never realizing that there's a much bigger game
out there being played around them that they could be playing too.
Well, if you keep the cycle up, I mean, what happens?
Because truthfully, you have a nice apartment, you have two kids, you have cars and tools
and law school.
So what?
If we keep it up, we stay the way we are.
Our kids are spoiled, flat out.
But me and Annie, we spoil ourselves and we spoil each other.
But it would be a...
We could still have a happy and content life.
But I know that the lifestyle I want for our kids,
we don't want them just to succeed. We want them to succeed, have fun, be good kids. We want so
much better for them. And we do want to take vacations. We do want to go out and see more
of the country, see parts of the world and do things with each other. But if we continue the way we are, we're not going to be able to reach
the more free lifestyle that we want.
Like a lot of people,
Austin and Annie have simple dreams for their lives.
They want their kids to succeed, have fun, be good.
It's like saying we want puppies and apple pie.
Fine, sure, pretty much everybody does.
But in order to get there,
it actually requires changing their entire set of money lenses
or the way they look at money, talk about money,
behave with money, even how they think about money.
And if they do, I know that they can actually live a richer life
than they even realize is possible.
If they don't, they're going to pass on their
money messages to their kids. And Austin tells me he already has. He doesn't talk to his daughter
about money because he believes he's protecting her. That's because he sees money as something
bad, something to shield children from. I see money differently. I see it as something joyful,
something fun, something to talk about and bond over. When I suggested that he could talk to his
daughter about money, he was speechless. When I asked you, how might you talk to your daughter
about money? You and Austin were both completely stumped. Stumped. And here I am a non-parent role-playing. And what it really told me was that you have never seen a model of how to treat money as a couple or certainly as a parent.
treat money as a couple or certainly as a parent?
Does that strike either of you
as correct?
Am I out on a limb here?
No.
No, you're correct.
You're correct.
And it's
difficult to hear.
I put it into words.
It's relieving to hear that there's words for it. But it's difficult to hear to put it into words it's relieving to hear that there's words for it
but it's difficult to hear that
here you put it
in that sort of perspective
because that's never how I looked at it before
why is it difficult to hear?
it's not how I
I looked at it
it's difficult because you're right
it's
there has not been a role model for money looked at it, it's difficult because you're right.
There has not been a role model for money
in our lives.
Even to this day, there's still not
really
role models that we
talk to or that are
in our lives that
would be something to
work towards or somebody to learn from.
Well, here I am. So if the two of you are super depressed about money and like,
oh, that's my Eeyore voice. Eeyore. It kind of sucks. I don't know. How do you think your
daughter is going to pick up on that? She'll keep the same attitude.
She's going to feed off of our negative energy.
Exactly.
Teaching kids about money doesn't only have to be lecturing them, but it's a teachable
moment and we have to get them excited.
Sometimes it's just getting them involved and making them understand they have a role
in the family.
And I'm going to add on as a third temporary co-parent in this example, I need her help
in plain English because I don't want her to grow up spoiled.
That's my fucking nightmare to raise a spoiled kid.
I don't even have kids.
So I can't be the one coming up with the examples. What I can do
with both of you is to help you connect what you are doing with your daughter being spoiled.
It is about you not seeing your daughter as part of your family unit because you two don't even have a financial unit together yourselves.
I'm going to ask Austin what he thinks the real issue is here. Remember, they make $130,000 and
they live in a low cost of living city, yet they have basically no savings and $68,000 of debt,
and they've admitted that they're raising a spoiled daughter.
If you had to guess right now with what we've talked about so far,
Austin, what do you think is going on here?
I think that we spend the money we have in convenience aspects instead of it's easier and more convenient for us to spend 50 60 bucks real quick on dinner because
i got home late from work annie's with the kids i think in general the convenience aspects of
things like um instead of i'm a mechanic by trade i can work i can fix our vehicles instead of
spending time trying to fix our stuff and just send it into the shop real quick because it's
faster for them to do it we need our vehicle i could be doing that better um if we are getting
groceries and we pay to have our groceries delivered because I'm an hour away
at work and she's working, we can't go and pick up our groceries. Let me pause you right there.
So you're making $130,000 a year and it's very possible that convenience is what's going on here.
But I just want to read back what you just said to me. And you tell me if this sounds realistic.
here, but I just want to read back what you just said to me. And you tell me if this sounds realistic. Question is what's going on here. The money you make seems like it's just getting spent.
And you told me it's convenience, specifically eating out, getting your cars repaired in the shop
and, uh, delivery fees for groceries.
Does that sound realistic?
No, not at all.
So what?
Okay.
Okay, that's good.
I agree with you.
I mean, sure, you'd probably spend some money on grocery delivery fees,
but you make $130,000 living in Kansas.
How much can those fees cost you?
It's not that much, but... not that much. Good. I agree.
So is there a missing element from this? Absolutely. What is it?
I think it's irresponsible spending the little things, adding up all the little things here and there. So what do you want to do about that?
Accountability. Need to at least write down what it is that we're spending. We're not building a budget, but maybe write down what it is we're spending on. Like, okay, I went to the gas station,
I spent $4.50 on two drinks. And writing it down because it's going somewhere and we're
not understanding where it's going somewhere and we're not understanding
where it's going. So we need to pay better attention to figure that out.
Okay. I think you've done that right in the past. Did it work?
I don't know if we did it right, but when we did it in the past, it didn't seem to work.
So do you think there might be another way of doing it? Do you think that I write down how much I spend at a gas station?
No.
Why?
I don't have an answer for that.
It's the only thing I know.
I don't know how to do much else.
I love this process.
It's where I get to ask Austin a bunch of questions
and let him give me his first answer.
And then I get to gently press on him.
And you can tell that he's engaged
because he instantly realizes
that what he said just seconds ago
actually doesn't make sense.
You're not in debt on $130,000 of income
because of some convenience purchases.
And if it was as easy as paying more attention, you probably would have already done that.
There's got to be something else.
You two have $68,000 of debt.
What is that debt from?
Okay.
I know his problem area is or was tools.
So a very good example he will his biggest thing that he always says is if i die i'm afraid you'll sell my tools for what i told you i paid for them
austin how come you've been quiet the whole time and we only discover this
weird morbid fear of your tools being sold off after your death what in the hell i've never
heard of this.
Obviously, I turned wrenches for a living. So before I had children, before I had met Annie,
I had started buying all of my tools and I had racked up a very large, very, very large amount of debt in strictly tools to do my job. And that was trying to get them paid off. That's been my
biggest handicap in our finances is my tool payments. I know that. If you take what I was
paying eight months ago, 10 months ago, almost a year ago, what I was paying per month just for
my tools, it was more than our mortgage was when we lived in Iowa.
What? It was about $1,800 or no, no, it was about $2,000, $2,500.
A month? It was about $1,500 is what I was paying per month. Yes.
Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. So when you say you were paying that much,
how much have you spent on tools? I can't even, I honestly, if I
gave you a number, I'd be lying to you. I can't. Is it a thousand, 10,000, 50,000? What are we
talking about? A year ago, I was 36,000 in debt with strictly tools. And to give you an idea,
I've never paid more than the most amount I've ever bought a car for was $3,000.
So my toolbox itself costs more than any vehicle I've ever purchased did.
Whoa.
The toolbox was almost 20 grand by itself. And that's the big one that he's talking about.
It is a professional toolbox. Yes. That is my career.
And you use this for work?
Yes. Every day.
Okay. Got it. So you spent a lot. Annie, you were pointing your finger up towards the heavens as I asked Austin how much he spent on tools. Do you think that there's a different number
I need to know about in terms of tool purchases? When he proposed to me and he got serious about,
okay, we're having children, whatever, I really then started to understand how much he had purchased. And so he disclosed over
time when just the box was 20 grand and I thought his tool debt was 20 grand, it was just the box.
He's got more tools that fit in that box than the additional three to four other boxes he has.
Almost all of them are name brand tools, which he needs to do his job.
But it's like me buying an Hermes or a Jeep on Shea versus a Target brand first,
if I continue to multiply that. So he was upwards of 50,000 to what I understand,
60,000 total somewhere in there. But even I don't know the full number because he doesn't
look at the numbers. He won't do his statements, none of that. He just makes a payment of like $700 a month just
to the one account. And then the other one was like $500 a month and he would just know the
amounts and make the payments. And that was it. Okay. You might be wondering what I think of someone who's in debt for tens of thousands of dollars
because of tools. First, let me remind you of my philosophy on a rich life, which is that your rich
life is yours. Not your parents, not your friends, not even mine. You choose what your rich life is.
But there's a second part of my philosophy that a lot of people don't talk about,
which is you have to be able to
afford your rich life. You're not allowed to just point at a private jet and twirl around three
times and chant, rich life, rich life, rich life, and then go buy a $50 million plane.
You and I both know how absurd that is. And yet, how is it that so many of us spend tens of
thousands of dollars we can't afford on houses and trucks and
boats and tools. We don't even run the numbers on these purchases. Listen to the stories we tell
ourselves. Austin says, I need these tools for work. Okay, I'm sure you need some tools, but a
$20,000 toolbox? No. Part of a rich life is being honest. If you're making a hundred and
thirty thousand dollars together, you cannot afford a hundred thousand dollars worth of tools.
This is one of the actual issues holding Austin and Annie back, not how much they spend on grocery
delivery. How much do you owe Austin for the tools?
Everything is paid off except for I owe just under $9,000.
$9,000 for tools and the rest is school loans.
Is that right, Annie?
No, school is probably about $35,000 and then the rest would be installment loans.
So at that point my car was not paid off.
So there's like car loan.
Then we've got his credit cards.
He has medical debt from my surgery. Yeah.
And like other types of bills,
other types of debt on there.
I don't have as big of a credit mix.
And how do you both think about this debt in terms of your finances?
It's crippling.
Frightening. think about this debt in terms of your finances it's crippling it's frightening how how is it still there why is it not gone or why does it not seem to why can't we seem to chunk
it away faster it does move but it just seems to move so slow that it's frightening that, okay,
now we're starting to build medical debt onto it. Are we ever going to get out from under it?
Seems to me maybe I could help with giving you a few different new ways of looking at your money.
Maybe that would help. Okay. Okay. What do you think?
I'm willing to hear anything and try anything.
I'm going to show Austin and Annie how to take a bird's eye view of their money.
I suspect this is the first time they will have ever looked at their money like this.
We're going to use the conscious spending plan.
You can get a copy of that and follow along at iwt.com slash episode 54.
Plug your numbers in and let's do it together.
What I'm going to ask you to both do
is to open up that conscious spending plan
that you sent me.
Let me see, I think so.
The two of you make about $130,000 a year.
You have $68,000 of debt.
You have zero in savings
and about $2 thousand dollars in investments.
Is that accurate? Roughly, yes. Great. So let me tell you why I do this, because what you told me
of how you make all this money and you cannot figure out where it's going, that's really common.
That's actually what most Americans experience.
They make money and then they have no idea where it goes. So what do you think happens
over time as they make money, they spend it and they have no idea where it goes?
What do you think happens? They don't learn from it and it continues to go where it shouldn't be.
And then what?
They don't learn from their mistakes.
You guys are in your 20s.
Pretend you're 50 years old and you have the same money behaviors.
What happens?
We'll never be retired. There will be no retirement.
You've never been a show for it.
Yeah. You worked your whole life. You have very little in savings.
You've shrunk your dreams down from being able to go to New Zealand to maybe we can go for a
weekend somewhere on a trip in the next state.
And then a lot of people go on Twitter and complain about taxes and stuff like that.
And then they go to Florida and they die.
That's what happens.
That's very common.
I don't know.
It doesn't sound like the kind of life that the two of you want.
No.
I think we need to know how to manage it appropriately.
I'm very confident that you can do it because a lot of this, you can automate it.
The other key skill you're going to have to learn is changing the way you think about money.
The fact is you're making $130,000 living in Kansas and probably more in the future, a lot more. So let's start there. This is the nuts and bolts.
I'm going to walk you through it. And if you have more questions, we can talk about them now.
I'll recommend my book for you. It goes into this in a more structured way,
but let's just kind of go through the basics. I'm looking at your numbers.
more structured way, but let's just go through the basics. I'm looking at your numbers.
And right now, it seems like you're basically spending money on your fixed costs,
which are things like your rent, your car, gas, groceries, things like that.
And you're not really investing money. Correct? Correct. Okay. Correct. So at $130,000, you have an amazing opportunity to be saving and investing money, especially at your age and especially in a low cost of living
area. Now it might seem impossible. You're like this crazy Indian guys over here telling us we
should be investing. We can't even figure out where all this money's going. Well, we're about to do a little detective work and I'll help you figure it out.
But I just want to start by saying that if you two have bigger dreams than you have right now,
the way to achieve those is to start saving and investing.
Just from hearing their income, age, and the state they lived in, I knew they could be
multimillionaires if they wanted to. But when I tell people this, especially people who grew up
without money, they simply do not believe me. It doesn't matter that I show them the math.
It's like telling someone you can grow eight arms. It is not a factor of their reality.
But with Austin and Annie, I'm intentionally starting here because I want to show them how much of their money beliefs they have to unlearn.
Listen to what happens.
The two of you easily, easily can become multimillionaires.
Do you believe that?
No.
Tell me why.
It's just not in the cards for me.
Why?
I don't have the skill set to do that.
I don't have anything substantial enough to bring to the table to allow myself to get to that level.
So what level can you get to in your life?
Owning a home, able to take a vacation, like a normal vacation once or twice a year.
How do you feel about that?
Be able to,
it,
I mean,
I want more,
obviously I'm,
I want more,
but I don't,
I'm at a loss for any sort of way to achieve more.
And when I look at it, if I want more, I need to find a different career.
I need to start making these drastic changes like that.
I don't see in the position that I'm in how I can do better.
Yeah. And Austin, what kind of people are multi-millionaires?
Not people who work with
their hands.
They're not
blue collar.
They're not
they don't do what I do.
Notice how Austin
feels about money.
It's not based on numbers,
compound interest, benchmarks.
It's based on identity.
His identity as a blue collar worker.
When you think about that school that you went to
and all the other families and kids who were around,
how would you describe those people?
Those are the people that you could see being a multi-million dollar and a financial profile.
That's who I would see that.
And what did they do for a living?
The parents, when you went to school and you saw those big houses, what did the people
living in there do?
saw those big houses what did the people living in there do they 90 of them were doctors and lawyers and very high-end um people throughout like the john deere and alcoa and numerous large companies
like that they were very prominent people they were their name was associated in the community
everywhere like you saw them whether they were in a position of power
or a
influencer, something
to do. They had some sort of
they made a name
for themselves. But guess what, Austin?
You and Annie
are making a name for yourself right now.
You two
make $129,000 in your 20s. That number's going up. You may not think you
belong like those people just because of the type of house they lived in or what type of job they
have, but you belong in whatever class you want to be in
just as much as anyone else.
It doesn't matter to me that you use your hands.
I think that's cool.
I have no idea how to do what you do.
And so I would never denigrate someone to say, oh my God, he's blue collar.
He doesn't deserve to eat at that restaurant or have that
much money. Bullshit. You deserve it just as much as anyone else. I want to show you how.
But we can't get there until you internally say to yourself, hey, I belong. I belong here.
I belong here. I've built the skills. I make $75,000 a year. I'm married. My wife makes $54,000 a year. Together, we've raised two beautiful kids. Sure, we need to learn some
skills when it comes to money, but we can do this. We could live a bigger, richer life than we even possibly imagined.
That's how I think about it.
What does that sound like to you?
It sounds like that's a lot of change.
It sounds like there's a bunch that is
being done wrong and a bunch
of change that needs to happen.
And
it's going
to be even more
of a struggle than what we've already been in.
So,
yeah.
Is there an end to that sentence is it so it's worth it or so i don't know if i want to go
through this i i want to i can tell you i want to um but i'm it is It is nerve-wracking. It is frightening.
How much am I actually doing wrong?
How much are we actually doing wrong together?
How much needs to change?
What is this change going to look like?
What are...
How do we do it?
And how do we know if we're even doing it right?
I'm going to show you how to do it.
But the reason I'm spending time talking about this is that I find people who were raised
without a lot of money and without good role models, they simply refuse to believe that they could ever have $50,000, $500,000, $5 million, whatever the
numbers, they refuse to believe it.
I'm going to show you the math.
What's it feel like to you when I say you can be a multimillionaire along with Austin?
Unrealistic.
Ambitious.
Well, which one is it?
Unrealistic or ambitious?
Like overly ambitious
to the point where it is unrealistic.
Why does that seem unrealistic to you?
I know with my current habits,
I'm not equipped to...
That's just not something that's doable for me I know with my current habits, I'm not equipped to...
That's just not something that's doable for me because I'm sabotaging myself right now.
But I don't think it has anything to do with the type of person I am
or I view myself.
My issue is different from his.
So yours is habits.
And you think Austin's is what?
How he views himself.
He limits himself.
Austin, would you agree with that?
I have habits as well.
I have definitely bad habits in spending.
I have been able to kick one of them. I
was a smoker for a very, very long time and I finally was able to put that down beginning of
the year. So it's been nice. It's definitely a lot of money wasted with it. However, it's been, it's definitely a lot of money wasted with it. However, it's seen now. Okay. I'm,
I'm very happy that I put it down. Um, but everybody talks about how you save so much
more money. You'll have this much leftover. Like you say this much, I don't see it.
And you go, where's the money going? Right. I don't see it.
Okay. Well, I'm going to help you with that.
So one of the key characteristics of people who do not manage their money well is that
they do not have a bird's eye view on their money.
They are constantly living in the weeds and they are constantly making hundreds of money
decisions. Should I go to Target? Should I
get this picture frame? Should I drive extra because of the gas? Should I write these candy
bars down? And on and on and on and on. And it's exhausting. And it actually does not get you
anywhere. Any of that sound familiar? Yes. All of it.
Yeah. Because you're living at this level. For everybody
listening, my hands are towards the bottom of the screen. You're operating at what I call
the $3 question level. We're asking $3 questions. Should I buy this coffee? Can we get the extra
cheesecake, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. Where I want you to eventually end up is at the $30,000 question level, or even $300,000
question level.
That'll take us a while to get there.
Because right now you're at three.
Why don't we just get it up to 50?
How about that?
That will be good.
But as an example, when I think about my money, I'm not focusing on gas station purchases.
It's not a question.
I don't ask $3 questions.
I'm focusing on things like how much am I saving every single month?
How much am I investing?
Automatically, I'm not trying it manually.
I just set a number once a year and it happens.
Are my investments properly set up or allocated? I'm not trying it manually. I just set a number once a year and it happens.
Are my investments properly set up or allocated?
Those are big questions.
Now, just to show you what I mean, when was the last time the two of you talked about any of those questions?
I don't know how to invest.
I can't think of anything.
Exactly.
So we will get there.
I want to show you how it is possible that you two could have $100,000 saved up or $500,000 or a million or even more than that.
And I just want to show you this so you start to understand a little bit of the
numbers behind it. And then we're going to go right back to your spending. Where's the money
going? But I'm going to show you this because I want you to see what it looks like to operate
at that $50,000 level or 500,000 foot level. I'm slowly trying to get Austin and Annie to realize they've been focused on tiny
questions. And the real way to create a rich life is to focus on the bigger questions and to nail
those. I'm going to focus on investing with them. To do this, I opened up an investment calculator
and I showed them that if they just invested the $2,000 sitting in their savings account, it would turn into $15,000.
I get tons of email every single day, and I want to give you a behind-the-scenes look
at how I manage emails from my team, from my family, and from you.
I use a piece of software called Superhuman, and this is an email software that I actually
pay for out of my own pocket.
It works with your existing email service
like Gmail or Outlook
and let me share how it saves me over 10 hours a week.
So here are a few things I love about it.
First off, it splits my inbox into different streams
so my important emails come into one place.
It's not cluttered with a bunch of subscriptions everywhere.
Next, I use keyboard shortcuts unlike you barbarians who literally click and peck through every single email.
U to mark it unread, S to star it, J or K to cycle through messages. I use keystrokes to schedule
messages, like when I want to ask one of my coworkers a question, but I don't want to send
them an email on a Saturday. Now, I can work through dozens of emails in minutes using
this. And Superhuman just introduced an AI feature, which allows you to take a huge email
with all these people chiming in and automatically summarize what's going on in a few bullet points.
It'll even draft emails for you. So if you want to buy back your time, Superhuman is a no-brainer to me.
It's something I spend my own money on and I love it.
Right now, all IWT listeners will get a free month of Superhuman.
You can get started at superhuman.com slash Ramit.
That's superhuman.com slash Ramit.
R-A-M-I-T.
Today's episode is sponsored by Element, a very tasty electrolyte drink mix.
And I want to read you a response that I got from one of our readers who started using Element recently.
His name, D, he wrote, you convinced me to try Element and I'm pleasantly surprised by
how much I enjoy it.
The magnesium is really helpful for managing headaches
and getting quality sleep,
but it tastes so much better than I was expecting
given the salt factor.
This will be my new go-to for workout recovery
and the blistering Florida summer heat.
Well, first off, I love hearing about your experiences
with our sponsors on the podcast.
I wanna pick the very best sponsors for you,
so keep your feedback coming and thank you.
Element can help prevent and eliminate headaches,
muscle cramps, fatigue, sleeplessness,
and other common symptoms of electrolyte deficiency.
If you're sweating or feel dehydrated
and you want to replace your electrolytes,
consider Element.
They have eight great flavors,
like citrus salt, watermelon salt, raspberry salt, and even lemon habanero. Right now,
Element is offering eight single serving packets free with any Element order. This is a great way
to try all eight flavors. Get yours at drinkelement.com slash Ramit. Try it totally risk-free. And if you don't like it, they'll
give you your money back, no questions asked. You have nothing to lose. This deal is only
available through my link. Let me give it to you again, drinkelement.com slash R-A-M-I-T.
That's drinkelement.com slash Ramit. won't believe. I'm going to show you what I mean right now. So first of all, what do you take away
from this example? 2,000 bucks, the money you have in your account right now, if you do nothing,
is going to roughly turn into $15,000. What do you take away from that?
Me to be adding annual additions.
What else?
Starting anywhere makes a difference rather than not starting at all.
Correct. A huge difference. What else do you take away? Is this good? Everybody sounds so
depressed right now. You just found out you have 15,000 bucks. It just takes a little time to cook.
Anybody happy about this? Yes.
Okay. I think it's fucking awesome. I love compound interest. I could talk about it all day,
but I need you to start picking up on what's really going on in this conversation.
It's about the attitude. It's intimidating.
Exactly. It is. We're breaking it down step by step. We started with doing nothing,
literally taking the money you have. And we discovered, oh my God,
$15,000. Remember I told you that metaphor of the snowball? The snowball is now so huge that it is
picking up more and more and more snow, and it just keeps going faster and faster.
You're about to hear a bunch of percentages and numbers. So let me tell you what we're
talking about here. I'm working with them on their conscious spending plan. We've zoomed in to the investment section,
and we're doing some investment calculations. I'm asking them what percentage of their income
they believe they can invest every year and how much that will add up to over time.
First off, what do you think would change in this current scenario that we're contributing $12,000 or roughly 10% of gross? What would change?
The contribution amount.
How much is it?
20.
Okay. Why'd you say 20?
because realistically speaking, if we make the proper changes and we follow your methods,
we should be able to do that because we've survived on way less.
So we wouldn't notice that money gone if we were doing what we're supposed to
be to begin with.
Okay.
What do you think Austin?
Probably about 20%.
So 12.9,
24,
probably 16,000.
Well, 20% would be, did I get this right?
129.
That'd be 26,000 a year.
Right.
The 16,000 is like roughly 15%.
Yep.
But here's the kicker that the two of you have not factored in.
You're in your twenties, right?
You think your income is going to stay at 129,000 for the rest of your life?
No.
Hell no.
It better not.
Otherwise you two really messed up somewhere.
Aren't you going to be a lawyer, Annie?
Hopefully.
Okay.
You are.
And you're young, Austin. Annie, you're young.
So this is something that people always forget to do. They forget to factor in that incomes go up,
especially when you're in your 20s. So what is the average income that the two of you are going to make between now and when you retire in your 60s?
I think 200, 250 at the high end.
Can we say 200? I always like to be conservative.
Okay.
200 it is. So at 200, how much do we want to be contributing?
I would say 35.
You know what? Let's be a little conservative because you two have some things to untangle.
You have debt.
You have some skills to learn.
Certainly, there's going to be some times where maybe you make a mistake.
Let's factor that all in.
Let's make it $25,000 a year instead of $30,000 a year.
Now we're being really conservative.
I'm not trying to blow anybody up and make you see unrealistic numbers.
Anybody care to guess what we're about to see right now?
Here's the number.
$2.5 million.
I got zero response from them.
I should have paused here and checked in with them.
Unfortunately, I was on a roll.
I got too excited talking about compound interest,
which was a mistake.
Sorry, Austin and Annie.
I really should have slowed down and checked in with you,
but I got carried away.
By the way, if we just change this to 35,
I just want to show you something.
If we change it to 30 years to 35 years,
that turns into $3.7 million.
And at 40 years, $5.3 million.
That's throwing off hundreds of thousands of dollars a year in interest alone.
We're talking serious wealth.
What do you both think?
It's almost like a slap to the face like we could have been doing this we well i mean
we should have been but it's still overwhelming those numbers like there's obviously there's a
lot of characters in those numbers um but it's it looks great on paper. Looks wonderful there. Like you said, we play
defense with our money. I round up on my totals for a reason. It makes me nervous looking at those
numbers. Well, it makes me nervous looking at those numbers.
Well, it makes you nervous because 10 minutes ago, you didn't even believe you could have a million dollars in your life.
Yeah.
Do you see how far you've come in 10 minutes?
It's quite remarkable.
So I will show you how to make this a reality.
I will give you the tools to do it.
The whole reason I did that was so that
you believe it is possible. You two are on track to be at the very least a millionaire.
And honestly, these numbers are so conservative that you could have much, much more than that.
Now, will you ever achieve that? I don't know.
That's up to you. It's not that hard. The math is straightforward. What is hard is changing the way
that the two of you manage your money and the way that you think about your money.
Now, having gone through that, do you believe that the two of you can acquire some amount of wealth, $1 million or higher?
I do.
Austin?
Yes.
Okay.
Feels pretty amazing to hear you both say that.
Has it sunk in?
not believing in yourself or not trusting it.
I come back to that side of it again.
Yeah.
If it is,
if it is truly as easy as the numbers make it seem,
then why, why haven't we done something prior?
Why haven't,
why has it not been,
why has none of our influencers or our role models had anything like that to
say?
Why,
why is it us out of everybody else?
Why are we,
why are we doing it?
Like,
why, how are we just now learning about it if it is like it looks?
Austin, can I tell you?
Yeah.
Because you picked up the phone.
Because the two of you asked for help.
I'm afraid of failing.
First of all, if you completely fail and you revert back,
then you're just where you are right now.
But we could put ourselves in a
worse position.
We're comfortable right now
per se.
Obviously, it's not the most ideal.
We are not in the position we want to be in.
But we are in a lot better position than a lot of people are in.
So we've got to be grateful for that.
I'm afraid to step out of that comfort zone to start making all of these changes.
And then we fail.
And then if we fail, how bad did we fail now we just reverted back and
now we're even worse than we are now we've what issues did we just push on to the kids well like
what did they just learn from us that oh okay well we just we tried but uh then we just got
knocked back down 15 spots. You're assuming.
Yes.
We didn't come here to be comfortable.
We came here to be smart, and we don't have the ability to do it, so we need help.
So we're asking for help.
So let him teach us how to be smart.
We can have time to be afraid later.
We've been fucking being afraid for, I don't know, what, five years now?
Might as well try something new.
What we're doing is not working.
now might as well try something new. What we're doing is not working.
Austin and Annie are grappling with the idea of whether they even believe this is possible.
Notice that they're not even at the point of asking me how to invest or what they should be doing differently with their money. They are still wondering if this is even real.
I suspect that we are interpreting this call very differently. The way I see it is I'm
here telling them, yeah, you have a lot of work to do to change your attitudes and behaviors about
money, but it is extremely possible for you to solve your money problems, become millionaires,
and change the way your daughter sees money. That's what I'm saying. I bet you they are hearing what I'm saying totally differently.
I bet you they're interpreting this call
as someone essentially floating down to their house
and telling them, you know what?
Forget about all your money problems.
You can be a millionaire.
It almost seems too good to be true.
And I suspect that is why you hear the reluctance in their voice.
This concept of somebody coming in and saying,
I know you've been worrying about money your entire life,
but you could actually change that and have millions of dollars in the bank.
And I look at it from an outside perspective.
You have $68,000 of debt and a spoiled six-year-old.
This is scary. And I get that after playing defense with money for virtually your entire life,
it's difficult to fully change and buy into a whole new way of thinking about money.
After one conversation, it'd be like someone coming to me and saying, Ramit, you can actually fly. Just flap your wings in this way and jump off this cliff. You could do
it. Yeah. Feels a little like that, right? Yes. Do you believe it's theoretically possible when
it comes to your money, when it becomes personal, not hypothetical? It's like, well, wait a second.
What about this? What about this? What about this? I get all this. Here's what I can tell you. Millions of other people have done it.
If they can do it, you can do it. So is it going to be easy? but am i expecting you to jump off a cliff and fly also no
what i'm expecting you to do and what i'm asking you to do is to try following a system that
millions of others have done there's no gimmicks here it's things like let's decide where we want
the money to go let's make some tough choices about where we are spending our money.
Let's start investing.
And before you invest a single cent, I'm going to give you a lot of material to read
so you fully understand it and you feel comfortable.
I don't know what will happen to Austin and Andy.
One of the reasons I wanted to talk to them
was to help them navigate
changing their generational understanding of money.
Now, I really hope that they decide
to take the steps to change their financial future.
Because I know for a fact
that they can pay off their debt,
they can invest aggressively,
they can change their relationship with money
and their daughter's relationship with it. In my experience, some people can make the change. Some don't. Sometimes
they don't believe it's possible. Sometimes they don't have the skills to do it. A lot of times,
they just don't have a real reason to make a change. But I'm pulling for it. Austin and Annie,
make a change. But I'm pulling for it. Austin and Annie, thank you very much for coming on the podcast, sharing your stories, and I hope that this was helpful for you.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich. I'm Ramit Sethi. 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.