I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 57. “I feel ashamed about having another child because we’re still renting”
Episode Date: August 23, 2022Rebecca and Joe have two young kids, and a third is on the way. They are renting at the moment and love the neighborhood they live in—but they both think they need more space to match their growing ...family. Should they keep renting? Buy a home? Move in with his parents? Their lease is up soon and the pressure is on (or so they think). To complicate things, we find out that their fixed costs, alone, make up for 105% of their take-home pay. As a refresher, I recommend spending no more than 60% on fixed costs. But they’re spending more than they make every month. Something’s got to give. They feel frustrated. They feel overwhelmed. They feel like failures as parents because they can't provide for their kids. There are many layers to this on both the financial side and the psychological side. Let’s dig in. 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)
This situation is not working.
You know, we have like a two-bedroom apartment
and we have a third baby on the way.
I can't deal with the constant, every day,
fire, 911 fire, phone calls or text when I'm at work,
about how insufferable our current living situation is.
When I get the phone calls or the text of how terrible it is.
Like, it's hard to turn off the part of my brain.
Do we have enough?
Do we not have enough?
Can we afford a house?
Can we not afford a house?
How much house could we afford?
It doesn't feel good.
I don't think it's healthy.
The walls are closing in, and we need...
the kids need something different than this.
I'm trapped. I'm a cage animal and I'm losing my mind basically.
By saying all that, what do you expect him to do?
I expect him to help me or do something.
I don't know what you want me to do. It's like I can't take it anymore. It's such a broken record.
My name is Rameet Saiti and I find it fascinating all the invisible scripts we have about money.
One of them goes like this. We're about to have kids, so now we need to move somewhere with a lot more space. Kind of makes sense on the surface. It's how most of us have been raised, and yet
it can cause all kinds of difficulties. Rebecca and Joe are 37 and 40 years old. They have
two kids and a third on the way. And Joe currently brings in the household income of $93,000, as Rebecca is a teacher
on extended maternity leave.
Well, the problem is, they love the area they live in,
but they believe they need more space.
And when I look at their finances,
they currently spend 105% of their income on fixed costs.
As a refresher, I recommend spending no more than 60%
of income on fixed costs.
They feel frustrated, they feel overwhelmed,
they feel like failures as parents
because they can't provide for their kids.
I want you to listen into the episode today
to hear both the financial side
as well as the
psychological side of what Rebecca and Joe talk about.
Make sure to listen to the end to hear the follow-up from Rebecca and Joe, which you can
get the full version of at iwt.com slash episode 57.
You'll also get other bonuses including my three-step guide to buying a house.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
Let's jump in.
You know, if you talk about potentially buying a house, how does that conversation go?
Not well.
We just have a lot of indecision.
Do we have enough?
Do we not have enough?
Can we afford a house?
Can we not afford a house? How much house could we afford? Usually I'll get a text message during the day about how
insufferable our current living situation is because we can't just open up a door and let our
children run outside. We live in like more of like an apartment building in a beach town.
Okay, so so Rebecca, you send a text to him and you're not happy about your living situation and then moment in moments
Yeah, I'll send him like a frustrating text like this is miserable. I can't do this. This is impossible
Almost like blaming him like you know, he should provide something better for me
because the walls are closing in and
We need the kids need something different than this.
This is not, I'm trapped, I'm a cage animal.
And I, yeah, I'm losing my mind, basically.
By saying all that, what do you expect him to do?
I expect him to help me or do something.
I don't know what you want me to do.
It's such a broken record.
It's like, I can't take it anymore.
I'm doing everything that I think I could do.
I'm not sure how much of our money could actually be allocated
towards putting a down payment on a house.
I feel like we have enough money.
I don't know if it's prudent to move money
from different accounts in our savings to put toward the house. I don't even know if
now is a great time to buy a house. I can't deal with the constant every day
fire 9-1-1 fire phone calls or text when I'm at work. I don't go out and buy a house and then we
move into it. It's kind of a group to sit. It's a partnership decision. So like there's got to be a little bit of ownership there.
I mean, I don't know if we want a house.
I don't know if that is going to bring us happiness.
I don't know if the grass is always greener.
But in those moments, it feels like this situation
is not working.
We have a two-bedroom apartment, and we have a third baby
on the way.
So are we not giving our kids like the space
in the room to grow?
Are we not giving our kids what they need?
Because we're scared.
So there's guilt involved, there's guilt involved in it.
When I get the phone calls or the text of how terrible it is,
like it's hard to turn off the part
of my brain that's like, I need to fix this situation immediately. We need to get a different situation.
Not even, you know, to make it so much better, but to just make sure that these phone calls don't
happen anymore because they're stress-inducing and it's like a little bit of a hopeless,
helpless situation to be and it doesn't feel good. I don't think it's like a little bit of a hopeless, helpless situation to be and it doesn't feel good.
I don't think it's healthy. And it hasn't moved us forward. I feel like we're at the point where
it's got a change. If it continues, if we're a year later in the same position, we've taken it too far.
Okay, got it. It's almost like if we get out of this right now and find the next situation, it's good. Then boom, we squeezed all the juice out of this lemon
and great. Let's, let's move on to like the next little chapter of our like family's
life. Already so many clues in just the first couple of minutes here from Rebecca and Joe,
you can hear that this is a repeated dynamic. That Rebecca gets frustrated and sends these texts and Joe just looks at his phone and
sighs and starts to ignore it.
It's no surprise that couples disagree on money.
That's totally normal.
Every couple does.
But it becomes a little bit more problematic when you have a pattern where one person is consistently taking
on the role of being frustrated and the other person is looking at their phone and ignoring
it. That's a problem. Let's keep digging in here.
I think really, yeah, you know, like a third party to know what we actually can afford and
moving forward on some big decisions as far as like a living situation,
potentially like buying a home and you know how much we can afford and what that looks like.
I have one foot out of here and one foot in here because I'm scared if we can afford a house,
well, our living style will be like what we have to give up to afford that house.
And is that going to make us happy?
We're at a decision point.
We've been in this place before last year.
We're in a very similar situation where our lease was going to end.
And we had to figure out where we wanted to go.
There was a lot of uncertainty.
We were preparing ourselves to part ways with where we live because we do love where we live. We love the lifestyle, but we're growing out of the space that we're in.
We're not on the same page.
I'm looking at different options and sometimes when I bring up some of those options with my wife, you know, it's the conversations don't always go very well.
What happens when you bring up topics like this with your wife?
I mean, she's pregnant, she's emotional, I love her for it,
but it also makes things challenging sometimes when it's,
I'm just looking to throw some ideas out on the table,
not necessarily like I'm trying to force an issue
where put her in a situation that she may not want to be in
or project some fear upon it being bad in the future.
It's not necessarily the owning of a home
or it's just shifting our situation
whether it could be a new really nice apartment or a condo. It doesn't necessarily have,
I don't need to own a home. I could rent a condo. It's just a different type of space.
So yeah. So-
Different type means bigger?
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, we've gone emails from our association like we hear kids screaming.
You know, we hear counting on the floors
which is true because like you know we keep a live underneath us so we kind of stick out like a
you know like a sore thumb here. Who's the one who says we need to buy house? I mean it's almost as
if we're living like we have to do this this is something but we don't necessarily have you know
if we didn't live like we needed to do that.
Who told you you need to buy a house?
Um, no one, you know, but there's like this, this stipulation, but we get a lot of comments
like, oh, it's still in Asperg and a two-bedroom apartment with a third baby.
You know, we get a lot of that, a lot of that.
Who says that?
Friends, family, every barbecue, every family event.
Do you know people say that to me too? Do they say that to you?
They say that to me too.
Right, like it doesn't.
Just recently, you know, he was like,
we need to leave.
We need to leave.
And I feel bad because I feel like I need him.
I did this to him because I stressed him out so much
with two kids in the department.
You know, and now we just looked at like a winter rental and a town over for like six
months.
So we'd be leaving our apartment, paying more rent.
It'd be a house, but it would be for six months and transitioning to babies and a new
been an infant.
It doesn't sound like a good idea.
Making too many financial changes all at once is a big red flag.
To have another baby and to move and to pay way more in rent would not be a good idea.
It leaves no room for anything to go wrong, and that is how you get your backup against
a financial wall.
That is something I want you to avoid at all costs.
There is something, you know, I, and you could correct me if it's, I don't want to open a can of worms,
but it's come up that.
So our lease is ending, moving in with our, my in laws has come up.
You know, um, he would save, you know, that would take away the rent.
I mean, I'm sure we'd contribute in some ways with living with them.
We have like a little secret, the two of us,
like that we actually love our life here.
But it's almost like we can't love it
because it's not what everyone else is doing.
I guess as far as like friends and family are typical,
we have a community here that understands the way we live.
You know, but.
You love your life, but this is a 10 out of 10 financial crisis for you.
I don't know that I believe that.
I mean, I, you know, I, I feel both leaves because I, I don't like, I, I, I want something different, but I also.
Buying home and like maintaining a home and that and whatever comes along with that doesn't necessarily sound appealing to me like that doesn't
like
It doesn't make me feel alive. If you had a magic wand
What would you want specifically relating to housing?
You would have a house by the beach, you know or or in this general area, you know like right away or
Yeah, with access to outdoors for my kids or for our kids.
And yeah, but we love this area.
I would want a house one town over
with enough outdoor space that we can forward.
I want to stay by the beach.
The beach is magical for us.
It's just, I mean, in a lot of ways,
we are living our rich life,
but maybe we're not internally
always feeling it.
Did you catch that?
She's literally describing where they live now.
And she said, a lot of ways we are living our rich life, but maybe we're not internally
always feeling it.
This is a classic pattern of many couples I speak to on this podcast. The common
example is people who make a lot of money, but they still feel like they don't have enough.
As I always say, your feelings about money are highly uncorrelated with the amount you've
got in the bank. Feelings are real, but that doesn't mean they're true. You might feel something, and that feeling is real to you, but it might not necessarily
reflect reality.
And so with Rebecca, I want to unpack her idea of this rich life, and I want to understand
a little bit more about the living situation.
There's part of me that like, you know, I, yeah, like it's hard because like I'm just, I have mixed emotions. I love it and I hate it.
What do you love?
I love that we don't live in suburbia. I love that it's almost like a little mini city.
I recently met friends here like mom friends here and I love her school. school, but yeah, but there's really challenging things like like doing laundry is really
complicated and like stuff like that.
Like things that sound silly to talk about right now, but they can drive you insane.
I don't think this sounds silly.
I mean more support on what I do with our daughter all day and where we, you know, help with
finding her school.
I feel like they're entertainment
and their daily life is on me.
From 6 a.m. until, you know, 6 p.m. until he's home.
And that's a lot.
Like, I am their childhood right now.
And I'm not enough, you know, and they're safety.
You know, I can't take them both outside
and keep them safe sometimes.
You know, they're just, it's not a safe, you know,
it's busy streets and yeah, so a two and a four year old,
like done an elevator out until like streets that aren't,
you know, like there's no like controlled environment.
So it tends to be challenging in this situation
that we're in, like there's no outdoor space.
Okay.
Do you know what you want?
I don't know what, how does, do we,
does anyone know what they want until, you know, I,
Yes, I don't, yeah, I,
Not everybody knows everything about what they want, but a lot of people know
where they want to live or what type of car they want to drive or where they
want to eat out on Thursday night.
Yeah, well, I guess, you know, I, I want to you know, I want to live here.
I want to live by the beach where this area,
I have a lot of friends here, I'm happy here.
I love, but yeah, so I want to live here,
just not necessarily this apartment.
I'm fascinated that Rebecca sends panicky texts
about needing to move somewhere,
but when I ask a few questions,
she and Joe both reveal that they love where
they live. One big clue here is all the people around them telling them they need to move.
After a while, that gets you. That pressure to buy a house is real. But those same people
whispering in your ear rarely talk about the actual costs of buying a house and the myths
of buying a house. These myths of buying a house.
These are things that you need to know for the biggest financial purchase of your life.
So if you're curious, I put together a three-step guide for uncovering the common myths about
buying a house.
You can get it at iwt.com slash episode 57.
Part of the reason why we haven't bought a home is because I haven't felt like I had on the same day. I'm not going to be able to get a job.
I'm not going to be able to get a job.
I'm not going to be able to get a job.
I'm not going to be able to get a job.
I'm not going to be able to get a job.
I'm not going to be able to get a job.
I'm not going to be able to get a job.
I'm not going to be able to get a job.
I'm not going to be able to get a job.
I'm not going to be able to get a job.
I'm not going to be able to get a job. I'm not going to be able to get a job. Yeah, no, not, you know what I do feel that way.
Um, you know, gonna have a third kid.
It's cool for another year or two, but like past that, like I don't see that as being
a good father.
Why?
Because I loved growing up in a house with a basketball group in the driveway, and I lived outside riding my bike.
And, you know, climbing trees and getting in the dirt, and I know my kids are going to love that too. I just know it.
kids are gonna love that too. I just know it.
I would definitely feel like a failure.
Anything that is letting them down is a failure to me.
And to you, them not being able to be outside climb trees,
that would be a failure.
It means I'm doing enough to support.
It means I'm making enough, I'm working hard enough, I'm doing the right thing.
I can do this, I can handle it. You're a what provider? Yeah. What's a synonym for a provider in your mind? Who are the people who provide?
Fathers.
Yeah.
And if they don't provide, they are what?
Not a father.
Really?
I mean, I think you're a father one way or another.
No matter what.
Not enough, not doing enough, not cutting it. This idea about a real man, a real father, providing.
I want to understand what providing means to you.
So you want your children to be able to go outside, climb trees, be outdoorsy.
I get that.
It sounds great.
Where does ownership fit into that?
I'm flexible with that.
I really am because I'm not keeping up with the Jones' kind of guy.
I look at no judgment.
I look at people around me who are very concerned about our living situation, while they're living their own.
And I don't envy a damn thing about their lives.
And no competition.
I want everyone to have a great life.
My new thing, no, because I have a third, you know,
or pregnant with our third baby as you know.
And I immediately say to people,
oh, this is the last baby, this was an accident.
We didn't mean for this to happen.
And it hurts to say that.
Like I'm gonna cry because I'm pregnant emotional.
But like, you say that?
Because I don't, because I don't feel like
I have provided the right,
there's like a shame involved in it.
Why?
And you know, I did always want three kids.
The truth is, is that I'm one of three,
I always wanted three kids my whole life.
What's the shame? I don't understand. I guess the shame is just like how can you be pregnant again?
Like we don't live in a very kid-friendly apartment building. It doesn't feel that way. You know, people
don't. And it doesn't. Yeah, I guess like we don't have that. We don't we don't have the big SUV yet.
Well, that all the moms of three have and you know, Rebecca, do you see how deep this goes?
I do. Yeah. The fact that it does go deep and I want to say to people like, yeah, I'm pregnant
with our third kid and I've always wanted three kids and we're excited. Can we? I haven't said that
one time. Can we do it right now? I mean, yeah, I'm excited because like this is,
my dream is to actually have a third kid.
Like I actually can't believe I got to point my life
where I this evening was possible.
Think of the layers of how deep it goes.
Yeah.
You told me that you are happy.
You're one of three.
You always wanted three.
The two of you look very joyful when you talk about
your children.
It's sad that you feel you describe words like shame because you don't have some certain
physical thing that probably doesn't even fit into your lifestyle right now.
In the same breath, Rebecca tells me that having a third kid is her dream, but she's
ashamed because they don't have the SUV that all the other moms have.
What?
Keep listening.
Rebecca, what would you say?
When do you talk about the numbers?
I, we don't, you know, I mean,
we did have a therapy session and he did,
he did have a book and he had it all right now,
but I didn't, I didn't look at it.
And then, I just didn't look at it. I just didn't look at it.
Any reason why?
I just makes me scared.
I guess there's something about change or just knowing.
I don't know.
There's something like a, I don't know why I didn't look at it.
I just, maybe I don't want to know.
Because what?
Because I would probably shift how I have to live, you know.
And if you had to shift that, what would that mean?
I don't know.
I mean, you know, talking to you now, I'm like, oh, you know, maybe I see it as I saw it as negative.
Like, I'm not willing to give these things up or, you know, who says you have to give anything up?
Well, no one, but, you know, sometimes when you actually see what you have, you know,
right now I just have a credit card. I'm not actually looking at a bank account. I'm not looking at it coming out.
When you can see things sometimes you see where you need to shift it, but if you're not looking then you can just keep doing what you're doing.
So how much money do you think that you have?
I don't know. I honestly don't know. I have no idea. It would literally be making up a number. I have no idea.
So you have a four-year-old, a two- two year old, and a baby on the way. You feel stressed
out and overwhelmed. And you have no, essentially no help. I mean, you don't have somebody coming
over cleaning, helping daily basis. Yeah. Yeah. And you never looked at the numbers
of how much of it looks at the numbers. Does it sound weird saying how loud?
It sounds so weird.
I've never actually, just recently I said to him,
like, can I get an online?
Because like with my old debit card,
I would look at this, you know, I'd look at it online,
like, oh, Swapier, and you can see, like,
oh, wow, I spent a lot of money there.
And when you see it, but just recently I did ask him,
like, can I get the mobile to, you know,
can I get it on my phone too,
so I can actually see what's coming out of the card.
There's not like a major fear with me,
but I do think that there is a reason why I kept it separate.
And like, I,
what is the reason?
because I didn't want him to see all the little things
because he wouldn't probably make comments
because now, now he'll make comments here and there.
Like, oh, I see you what are I got a
charge from this place you know. Like what? Like old baby or like how much would
you say you spend per month on supplements? Okay at least 250. Okay. These 250 maybe three. Are you nervous telling me that number?
No, I mean, you know, I, it's scary because I do believe in them, you know, so I'm like,
it's like a crack head, you know, you don't want to, you're someone to take your crack, you know, or tell you,
you know, you, you, you, well, I don't know if fish oils the same as crack.
I'll be honest, I lied the other, I didn't lie, but I added something on for for my sister too because I get them discounted and she vendors me you know I'll
I'll dance around the fact that you know or I'll say oh that's gonna last
that's like six months I you know I ordered a bunch so I could you know but
do you like? Yeah I guess you yeah, I guess you can go.
I mean, I have ordered stuff for my sister.
So I altered the truth.
But yeah, I guess.
I just want to point out for everyone listening that Joe has been literally covering his mouth
in laughter for the last two minutes.
He's now covering his eyes with, he's like almost crying.
He's got a vein popping out on his forehead.
He's been dying to speak up. He cannot wait. Joe, please. What do you have to say?
I'm fascinated by this. I'm absolutely fascinated. Um, I'm not even mad, but part of me feels like I should be because I, I mean, a lie is a lie. Yeah.
It's just not a good idea. It's not healthy. I don't want you to feel like
you have to lie to me. That's crazy. Yeah. I don't, I feel like you're perfect me like I'm a scary
monster. I don't want you having those feelings. I want you to know that I'm not that kind of guy
that's like, that's like that. I feel like you know that, but, but they're, I don't know. Yeah.
I mean, it basically, I guess there's a there's guilt involved in the fact that I
mean, at what I mean, like 65,000 years, something and now I don't and now I haven't altered the spending.
I haven't changed. I haven't spent less. Probably more because we have kids now. So
I just I worry that you know, we now we're out that income and there's no shift in
the spending.
It's the same for me, you know, so come before to, yeah.
Do you remember what he just said?
Um, that he's lenient and that he doesn't like he not really.
I mean, basically that he was lenient
and that he feels bad that I have anxiety about it.
And what was your answer?
I think my answer was that I haven't changed anything
in the past.
I haven't. How in the past. I haven't.
How did those two connect?
Because that's why I hide things I guess, right?
I don't feel like I'm being honest.
And I feel, I guess that's why I feel like,
I don't shy away from him for a lie
because I'm scared of him because he's mean about it.
It's because I, it's my own internal struggle with,
you know, am I gonna get us into debt?
Or am I, you know, not providing, you know,
am I being selfish?
Do you see why you have been reluctant
to even ask the question, how much do we have?
I think it's just fear based of knowing,
or maybe fear of change, fear of no change.
Fear of being responsible or having to do anything differently.
Yeah, yeah.
Mm-hmm.
Think about that.
That's very profound.
The idea that if you engage with these numbers,
if you even know how much you have, then what is the implication?
Responsibility. Yeah.
That because, and I put that on him because I'm like, no, exactly.
I think Rebecca talks a lot to escape her own contradictions.
Because it's easier to talk and to deflect the problem than to take a very quiet candid
look inside.
She texts Joe about needing to move, but she loves their neighborhood.
She asks about getting access to their money, but when she has it, she doesn't look at it.
And she lies about purchases. All of this, of course, keeps Joe off base.
Can you imagine if Joe was the one hiding purchases and sending angry texts and demanding things,
but they're not looking at them? How would you perceive this conversation differently?
Something to think about.
For now, I want to understand where Rebecca learned about money.
What happened with you and money when you were younger?
Like, you know, my parents just...
We didn't, it was, it was a scarcity thing.
Like we didn't have a knob, it was always stress, it was, you know,
my mom worked at like, he might wear a little, like,
I mean, she eventually got a better job,
but, you know, just, yeah, money was very stressful.
I was raised with a lot of guilt around money.
Money was always guilt.
It was like, you didn't, you just,
it was, you just felt guilty, money was a guilt.
It was like a combination of that.
I took a lot of the blame my whole life,
like for my family and everything that went wrong.
So I guess I give it all to him now,
like I don't want it.
I've been there.
My whole life was, it can't be on me, it can't
be out because it was on, it felt like it was on me, even as a kid, you know. My dad was
like a state worker and my mom was a severitary, you know, so they, yeah, they just lived very,
they were very minimal, they lived very minimal. My mom also had, you know, she's very like,
we don't spend money, you know, we, very frugal, you know, and I guess there's
like that too, you know, like she's in me, you know, like you don't pay for childcare,
like you don't, you know, see if these whispers sound familiar. You don't pay for childcare.
Yes, she didn't, but, yeah, you don't stay in an apartment when you have three kids.
Yeah.
What else do they whisper?
You need everything that they have for.
Mm-hmm.
The pool, you know, like.
You gotta get your kids in exactly what we got our kids in.
They gotta get your kids have to be in dance now that, you know?
Yeah. Oh, it's endless. got to get your kids have to be in dance now that, you know, yeah.
It's endless.
You got to get the kids doing this, you got to get the kids doing that.
It's crazy.
I mean, yeah, and we're not, we're pretty good at not buying into a lot of that stuff.
You know, we're pretty solid on that.
I don't think so.
No.
Have I, have I the only one who's been here for the last hour and a half of this conversation?
I need it.
What are you talking about? You're conversation? What are you talking about?
You're right.
The house.
No, you're right.
What are you talking about?
Rebecca, this is a story you tell yourself.
Are you hearing yourself?
All right, you're right.
You're right.
Yeah, okay.
You are driven by what people around you are telling you.
Yeah.
The mom guilt thing is affecting you in so many ways
that is not even apparent.
And the whole point of my conversation with you
is I want you to decide what you want.
Rebecca and Joe tell themselves stories.
Rebecca and Joe are experts
at telling themselves stories about themselves.
Oh, we don't really get influenced by other people.
Literally, everything they have said so far is based on what other people expect of them.
You need to be doing this.
You can't do that.
You should be doing this.
And if you allow yourself to be surrounded by that and to believe that and to be surrounded by that, and to believe that, and to be influenced by that,
then it can be a very dissonant experience for you
if you want something different.
Anyone who's grown up in a deeply religious household
knows what I'm talking about.
Anyone who's grown up with parents who are deeply frugal
and you don't wanna live that kind of life
knows what I'm talking about.
And that is exactly what we are seeing here
from Rebecca and Joe.
And rather than realize,
this is what's going on, they deflect,
they point at other things.
Well, Joe's not doing this
and I don't have access to that.
And they even tell themselves stories,
such as, well, I'm not really influenced
by the people around us. These are all stories. What you should take away from this is to ask
yourself, what stories do I tell myself about money? Write them all down. If you get stuck,
you can create one called a positive list of stories and a negative list of stories. What
are the positive ones? Oh, if I work hard a negative list of stories. What are the positive ones?
If I work hard, I can make more.
What are the negative ones?
Well, I'm not really good with money.
I'm not good at math.
I can't earn more.
I don't know how to invest, et cetera.
And then go to sleep, wake up the next morning, have a little perspective and say, which
of these are factually true and which of these are just stories I tell myself?
You might be surprised.
I mean, I always, you know, this is like my shit
because I think that I can overcome everything, you know?
What are you the hero?
You know, it's how I was raised.
It's just how I was raised.
That was the model I had and I really respected that model.
Tell me about that. I mean, my dad did whatever he had to do and he made it look really good.
It didn't mean it was the most healthy thing for him. It didn't mean it was the most healthy
thing for his partner. There's a lot of enabling that happens there, but like when shit's got to get done,
you know, my inclination is not necessarily to rally the troops all the time. It's like,
I just, if no one's, if no one wants to come, then I'm going on my own. Okay, got it.
Not, and I'll do what I got to do. Joe, what was it like? What do you remember about money as a kid?
Um, very conservative. I grew up more religious family. Mom stayed at home, uh, dad worked
for the government. So we had needs, but not wants. Um, but we also had a big family. So
we were, you know, we had a lot of people that, you know, contributed. But my dad always, he just always made it work.
He's been playing whatever game he's needed to play to make it work.
My mom was the striver, the pusher, the, we're gonna get, you know, she, she would get her way.
And he would just go along with it and do whatever he needed to do to make it work. That's how it
was. We always knew that was an issue. We always kind of like sympathized with my dad and
we didn't always agree with how my mom spent money. Like what? Just like very frivolous, very frivolous.
Like, just didn't agree with it.
Anything you remember, any example?
I can provide one, but fine.
It's always the spouse that knows the other person's family
better.
Rebecca's like, I got one.
She's just itching to get.
Yeah, just way me it.
Just way me energy Rebecca, go ahead.
Go ahead.
What's your example?
These parents are in like their later 60s, 70s
and they're I still think they owe money on their house
and they're putting in like a, an in-ground pool,
like a very fancy in-ground pool.
Because his mom, you know,
has a vision of like the grandkids to me and the bull.
Joe, was your dad a short-term thinker with money
or a long-term thinker with money?
Now, he is, he's in all every time thinker about everything.
That's how he, that's, that's his brain.
What does that mean?
He's an engineer who ran hospitals.
So you're dreaming up everything that could go wrong
and then planning for it.
Okay, but then how come he ended up still owing money
in his 60s or 70s?
He would have to ask him that he made peace with it.
He still has a plan.
They're moving in the right direction.
I would say, like there's been some major breakers,
but they took 60 years to happen.
And as far as at this point in their life,
they can pretty much have the right
to do whatever the hell that they want.
What lessons do you think you took away from your parents when it came to money?
In a lot of ways, I learned how not to be, but then I also may have overcompensated a
little bit.
Like I've gotten real tight, not tight with money, but like, I think it's smart.
Like I think my dad is smart.
Like don't buy things you don't need.
I never bought things I don't need.
I'm not like, if things don't appeal to me.
But I also, you know, my mom made a really nice home too.
You know, it's so, what's the part where you learn not to do?
Mostly like the spending aspects of it,
not to live outside your means. Like, I think
when you're going to give, you should have it to give. If you don't have it to give, then
unless you see, you know, it's a, you know, a one off, like, there's a compelling reason
where you just put your hand in your pocket. Um, you know, I believe that, you know, if you don't got it, then maybe, maybe get
yourself in a different position. I totally agree. I think that's smart. But you also
mentioned spending that, you know, we should, you intimated that you should keep track of
spending. Sometimes you got to part with money. And maybe we, you know,
I don't give myself permission to make purchases sometimes too. Like the more money in the bank,
the better I feel. I always want more money in the bank. I don't necessarily want to buy anything
with it. And what are you going to feel good about the money you have in the bank?
When someone convinces me, I should feel good about it.
Well, who's going to do that?
With something you would a little bit.
What is financially prudent to have enough saving?
We got an emergency fund.
I'm lucky to have a job where there's so much forced savings for...
There's a pension, there's forced savings,
in an annuity, there's forced savings for emergencies,
and then I, on top of that, forced myself to save.
But we're not also not moving forward.
I'm just the mom who's running around,
going to preschool, that's what I'm doing.
And the crazy part is that I'm capable. I'm not a clueless person.
I'm a very calculated person with things, but for some reason, the most important thing
in my life, I'm missing.
All right. So you filled out a conscious spending plan.
How was that, by the way, to fill that out together?
Uh, he did it. spending plan. How was that, by the way, to fill that out together?
He did it. I filled it out. I had to do it at work.
Okay, it was flag number one. I think that we're at a point now where we used to be saving more and now we're kind of like just at like status quo. Okay. So have you seen these numbers, Rebecca?
No. Okay. Do you have seen these numbers, Rebecca? No.
Okay.
Do you have the document in front of you?
There's a thing here.
No.
And Joe, you pick up on that and you take on the role
of the hero.
Yeah.
So she's avoided and you go, oh yeah, yeah, I'll do it.
In fact, I'll fill out this conscious spending plan
because I don't want you to have to worry about it. I'll do it. In fact, I'll fill out this conscious spending plan, because I don't want you to have to
worry about it.
I'll fill it out.
Right.
Can I be honest about that?
Yeah.
It's not that I was taking it off her plate.
The truth is, I knew she wouldn't have anything to do with it, and I just had to do it.
It wasn't like, I'm not the hero guy.
Joe, that's exactly what being a hero is. If you didn't get this conscious
spending plan, first of all, the whole point of this is to do it together. That's the whole
entire point. If she refused to do it, we wouldn't have had this call. So there was actually
consequences. Right. And instead of letting her face those and not just being punitive, but say, hey, we have
this opportunity together, you did what?
I took care of it.
Yeah.
And I'll be honest, I did almost sabotage the meeting.
Like before it, I, there was a lot of, you know, almost sabotaging this experience.
So it's interesting now that I'm like connecting it all.
Like it wasn't because I need the day horrible.
I was hungry.
I had to drive the kids his parents house.
He inconvenienced me.
He should have waited till a better day to schedule this.
And he wasn't focused on my needs and all that, you
know, or, but I think the truth is that I don't want to be responsible.
This is something I've ran from for years, you know, so I think that, you know, I knew
tonight would probably change something.
This is quite a moment, don't you think?
As Rebecca saying that she's realizing that she does not even have access to her own
motivations.
In other words, she behaves in certain ways that she's not even fully aware of.
Well, we all do, some extent, maybe not as egregiously as Rebecca here, but we all do this. I personally think it's pretty amazing to hear Rebecca realize that live in front of
all of us.
This is the beginning of change, to be able to make those connections and realizing why
she behaved in a certain way.
And then of course, it takes a lifetime to be able to unpack those and likely to work
with a therapist and other professionals to understand how to connect your emotions with
your behavior.
But for now, this is quite a major revelation.
I want to shift gears now and talk more about their finances.
You guys want to look at some numbers?
How about that?
Yeah.
Go ahead and open that up.
I'd like for you to read off row seven
it says total net worth in the conscious spending plan.
351,000.
I don't even know how we have that much, but.
What's going through your head right now?
What's going through your head right now? Um, that I'm living, I'm just, because I'm avoiding this, I don't actually realize, I'm
actually don't realize what we actually can have. I think I'm getting more by hiding from it,
but I'm actually getting less.
Well said, that's powerful.
Right there, another amazing moment.
Rebecca finally opens up the conscious spending plan,
looks at it and realizes they have more than she even realized.
For years, she's been panicking about money.
And now she finally sees the amount they have.
Of course, we all know that won't change the way she feels about money today.
But at least she can realize that there's a disconnect between how she feels
and what they have in the bank. Now, I want to summarize their numbers for you.
They make 7,800 a month for a total of $93,600 a year, recall again that Rebecca's on
maternity leave.
They spend 105% of their income on fixed costs.
So I want to zoom in on that home expense because that is the key driver here.
And again, if you want to learn more about housing expenses, should you buy a house?
What are the myths around them?
How much can you afford?
Get the guy that I put together for you.
It's free, iwt.com slash episode 57.
This episode is sponsored by Babel.
Travel is one of the top three money dials.
And when it comes to traveling,
a lot of people wish that they could connect
with locals. Eat like the locals. Speak like the locals. I remember going to Mexico many
years ago, I had taken Spanish in high school. I was okay. I'd forgotten a lot of it, but
we found ourselves in an area where there was no native English speakers. And I had to
make my way and speak in my broken Spanish and figure out which direction to go
and where do we get a bathroom and food.
And it actually worked.
It wasn't great, it wasn't even good,
but I could communicate and that felt amazing.
To be able to connect with someone in a language,
showing you've taken the time to learn the basics,
there's something very bonding about that.
Now, thanks to Babel, the language learning app
that sold more than 10 million subscriptions,
there's an addictively fun and easy way
to learn a new language.
Whether you'll be traveling abroad,
connecting in a deeper way with your family,
or you just have some free time,
Babel teaches bite-sized language lessons that you'll actually use in the real world.
Babble's 15-minute lessons make it the perfect way
to learn a new language on the go,
and you can choose from 14 different languages,
including Spanish, French, Italian, and German.
Plus, Babble helps you work on improving your pronunciation
and accent.
I love hearing from our listeners when they use our sponsors.
So if you've recently signed up for Babel after listening to this podcast, send me a DM.
Tell me how it's going for you.
There's so many ways that you can use Babel.
They've got podcasts organized by different skill levels, so you can listen in, try to figure
out clues, and all the while you're getting better at speaking Italian or Spanish or German or French.
In addition to the lessons and podcasts, their games, videos, stories and classes.
Plus, it comes with a 20-day money back guarantee.
Right now when you purchase a three-month subscription to Babel, you'll get an additional three months
free.
That's six months for the price of three. Here's how you can take advantage of this offer. First,
sign up by going to IWT.com slash Babel. Remember that mobile app will not allow you to redeem
this code. Next, at IWT.com slash Babel, sign up for an account. When you get to the purchase page, enter the code,
Rameath, R-A-M-I-T to redeem your offer.
So remember, go to I-W-T dot com slash Babel,
sign up for an account, and use promo code, Rameath.
That's I-W-T dot com slash B-A-B-B-E-L code, Rameath, R-A-M-I-T. There are a couple things that drive me insane.
One, when I post a picture eating Mexican food in L.A., and 7,500 people help me tell me
that their favorite hot sauce is topatillo.
And second, is getting spam calls or spam texts on my phone.
I mean, how many times a day do you get a call
from some unknown number?
Or better yet a text from X, F, three, five, four, Z,
telling you that there's a problem with your electric bill.
I'm busy, I wanna focus on my day,
I do not wanna deal with spam phone calls.
That's why I wanna let you know about this episode sponsor,
Nomo Robo Max. Every single unwanted call is stopped dead in its tracks.
Calls from people you know, still get through just like normal.
And for those unknown numbers that might be legit, like clients or delivery
people, NOMO Robo's call screener will jump in and let you know exactly who's
calling and what they want.
Then you get to decide if you want to take the call.
It even protects against spam and scam text messages.
And the people over at NOMO Robo take your privacy very seriously.
There's no ads, no tracking.
The best part is, it's affordable.
You can protect your whole family for less than $7 per month. So if you want to protect yourself and your family from phone scams, go to nomorobo.com
slash remit for a 14-day free trial.
That's n-o-m-o-r-o-b-o dot com slash remit R-a-m-i-t. So I am adding your rent plus your utilities.
And I am dividing it by your gross monthly income to see that you're at 33%.
So that's pretty much the high end of what you can afford for housing. So
remember how you were all talking about going and buying this mansion and all
that stuff? Yeah. Well if you can find one for less than 2350 a month, great.
Right. You think that's gonna happen? No, not right now. Exactly. So sometimes our
decisions are made for us.
You know, you can talk about it all you want, but the numbers say you can't afford it,
not with the current income, one income that you've got.
This is what we're driving towards.
We need clear, simple money rules.
Yeah.
Like even diapers, because diapers are part of groceries.
It's like, how much are we spending on diapers a month, and can it be cheaper?
Because I'm buying them randomly.
So I think if we just bulk bought them,
like it's insane how much I actually
is that on diapers.
But yeah, so.
Joe, do you see what's happening right here?
What do you notice this is happening right here?
She's thinking of more frugal ways and other ways to save money.
Yeah, she's taken ownership. Rebecca, it's awesome to watch you do this. There's something very
powerful happening here. I want to make sure that I call it out. Rebecca has been the one
who's been frustrated about finances, sending these panicked text messages, asking for access
to the money. But when she actually gets it,
she doesn't look at it. So something is not quite clicking here. But what we also learn
is that Joe is playing a part. Whenever there's a financial issue, what does he do? He takes
charge. Even for this episode, for the conscious spending plan, they were supposed to both do
it together.
She didn't want to do it.
She caused some issues that day.
And so what did he do?
He said, I'll take this off your plate.
So you can see that in this case, it definitely takes two to tango.
But what we just saw is Rebecca actually engaging with money.
Joe's not trying to save anything.
He's not trying to do it for her.
She is stepping up. This is a magical moment. When you look at these numbers,
and you think about where you spend your time and your energy, where you are frustrated.
Do you see anything that surprises you?
That we have the money for childcare. Because that's what is, I mean, that's my 10. It's not the house.
It's how are my children spending their life?
And does it have to be the best moment every second of their life?
No, but, you know, like we can afford to get them more care, you know,
and me. And I think that that would also just transform the relationship because I wouldn't be so
uptight, you know, and stressed. I'd have a personality again, you know, and stressed. I have a personality again, you know,
because I don't have one right now.
I have one, but I've been living,
so underliving for so long now
that I don't even have a concept of that.
What would it take for you to get that personality back?
I think an extra set of hands,
it doesn't really take much, you know,
just two, my kids need a one-on-one.
So just someone else to come.
This is one of my favorite things to do,
is to use money to provide immediate relief.
We all know what it's like to be overwhelmed.
It could be at work with tons of emails
and you just don't have time to be
able to think creatively, certainly as a parent being overwhelmed with two kids in another
on the way. It's very difficult to think creatively or to be able to have any time for
yourself. And so to be able to buy some of that time back would be one of the most rewarding
things that Rebecca and Joe can do with their money.
So Rebecca, you say you cannot afford a babysitter?
I never actually allowed myself to do the math.
You have a four year old, four years you've gone without doing that back of the napkin
calculation.
Well, let's say we got one for $20 an hour
and I used there for like three hours.
So that's $60 with $6 and all five days.
So what's 60 times five?
Is that $300?
It's not that much money.
I've never actually said that out loud.
Yeah, I've never actually said the number out loud of what it would cost. Yeah. Why do you think that is?
It's the same way that I won't look at the sheet that he wrote out or yes, I won't look at, you know, I don't have the app. Maybe by myself. I need to pay someone else to help to do that with me.
Don't give me one.
We definitely have help from in-laws and parents and stuff.
But yeah, as far as I think I'm angry and frustrated with him
because I can't do it.
And I'm angry at him for it.
But I also haven't owned it and said, you know, so there's a level of just
like being passive aggressive with the whole situation.
Well, Rebecca, you were about to convince him to buy a house when it turns out that a
$20 an hour assistant for five days a week.
Is yeah, I mean, the difference in spend is like a million dollars.
I know.
I never actually, I know.
It's true.
So, do you see how you can go through life?
I'm talking decades.
I'm talking millions and millions of dollars.
And never have these really simple conversations.
Yeah. We can do it. There's nothing stopping us from. And never have these really simple conversations.
Yeah.
We can do it.
There's nothing stopping us from, I feel like a nanny is the solution.
I don't want to talk about it in terms of like, here's the problem.
This is a solution.
But I feel like we're on the right, we're getting on the same page,
or what is the actual prop?
It's not necessarily where we live.
What I'm trying to do with this exercise with Rebecca and Joe is to elevate them above the
day-to-day frustrating emotions of money. It's easy to be frustrated at things. Why did you buy
that? Why are diapers so expensive? Why can't we get a house? And on and on and on. Every single one
of us has had some sort of disagreement about money and some sort of
frustration.
That's normal.
But if you stay there, you could blink your eyes and it's 40 years later and you are
still arguing over the same $3 questions.
It's one thing to feel frustrated.
But isn't it almost unbelievable that Rebecca has never
run a back of the napkin calculation? That is because it's often magnetic. It's often hard
to escape these feelings that are so frustrating and almost toxic. They pull you back. This
way you see a lot of people who are addicted to hate because it gives them something.
It gives them a feeling of indignation, a feeling of meaning, a feeling of righteousness.
And so they can spend their whole lives there.
And I'm just talking about financially, it could be politically, et cetera.
But my job is to help elevate that and to help them realize, okay, you can feel that way.
I'm not arguing that you feel frustrated, but let's also take a look at the numbers.
Maybe there's a solution that works. Now, those solutions aren't always present. If somebody goes,
I feel I want to buy two private planes, and I'm looking at their numbers, they make $10,000 a year.
You're not going to buy two private planes. I'm sorry. That's reality. But a lot of the time,
we might be able to solve some of these feelings of frustration
or other very hot emotions by doing a little bit of analysis.
And that is where money and psychology can work hand in hand.
No, my mind never went there because it was more and like, get out of the crazy situation.
Do you know why you immediately go to that?
Because that's what made me feel like we need to move on more than anything is the
discomfort and the way that she's expressed it to me repeatedly over such a
long period of time and with the
emotions that end the words on a screen that she has, has impacted me.
Yeah.
And who else in your life was the fixer, the problem solver?
Oh, my dad.
Is that, yeah.
And what was the role of your mom?
What was she doing when your dad had to fix the problems?
I mean, I can't say she didn't get her hands dirty herself
because she absolutely did.
She didn't just bark orders.
She ripped up carpets and whatever else she wanted done to
and got her hands dirty.
But she was the one, I don't think my dad's
ever even had a want or a desire other than just
please my mother.
Right.
And what did you say earlier about money, about what you spend it on?
Like, my money is our money.
You know, I spend money on gas, tolls, food, necessities, and that's it.
Joe, do you see any similarities here between...
Of course.
The beautiful part is you have the chance to write your own story.
Both of you together.
Yeah.
And I heard it.
The one thing I heard consistently is that both of you love your lifestyle.
Yeah.
You live in a great area, you love the beach.
I think you described it as magic.
Yeah. I know what that's like. I'm very particular about the beach, I think you described it as magic. Yeah.
I know what that's like.
I'm very particular about the neighborhoods that I live in, like down to the intersection,
because I know the energy and what I want and I know that I don't want to walk free
blocks for that.
I know what you're talking about.
But I hear you both being guided by a lot of frustration, a lot of overwhelm.
Yeah.
And I hear a lot of contradictions.
Yeah.
We don't keep up with the Joneses, but we're probably being affected by our friends and family.
It's a 10 out of 10.
It's actually not that big of a deal.
It's okay.
Lots of contradictions. Right. Now, the good news is that we all
have contradictions with money. Otherwise, we just be robots. The beauty is in the contradictions.
So I don't mind it at all. Yeah. My job is to try to help you cut through all these stories
that you tell each other and you tell yourself and get to the story that is most meaningful
to you right now.
With this lease coming up, we can just, we don't even have to sign a year lease.
So you can just keep going monthly. We pay our rent, you know, there's no major deadline here.
Maybe nothing needs to change in this instant just because the lease is up and just because we
have another baby on the way. I mean, the baby sleeps in the room is up and just because we have another baby on the way.
I mean, the baby sleeps in the room with us anyway,
whether we have an extra room or not
for the first eight months.
So it's not like we need a bed,
our kids share a room and they love it.
We can be okay right now.
It doesn't have to change right now.
It doesn't, there are other things that we can change, I think.
It doesn't necessarily have to be buying house.
What else can you change?
How can we get our kids outside?
What can we put them into?
What can we invest in differently?
So if we're going to hold off on the house,
let's invest in getting our son on a basketball team
or I mean, he's too, but he's whatever.
Or a school for our daughter.
So she's busy all day.
So I'm at home in this apartment with them.
It doesn't necessarily have to be a laundry service.
Maybe we can invest in a laundry service.
So this way we can not worry about bringing
those laundry to my parents' house.
Great.
My immediate vision is I still want to stay by the beach.
I want to, I think we put too much pressure on ourselves
and made this being that there was a deadline coming up.
We really, we succumbed to the pressure
or succumbed to the pressure.
How did you do that?
Just because rather than consciously making a decision
at any point of what we wanted to do or could do,
we were letting the deadline be the decision-maker slash driver for us. So rather than being proactive,
we're being reactive. We're not taking total responsibility. I feel like if we focus on me and you
being good and me and you being good with what we're doing for
the kids and focus our attention and resources on that, then I think the rest is going to
be the bit.
I think that the rest will take care of itself.
I know there's still like decision making that'll need to be made along the line because
that's all we do is make decisions all day long.
But if we could get rid of the crap, I think it would make
space for us to be honest and open with one another. I don't want the fear conversations.
I don't want, you know, any lies, you know, have to be afraid of me. I don't want to have
to be afraid of you. I don't want to be so reactive to your emotional bounce of frustration.
Yeah, great.
I love that you are now getting creative
about how you can get to your rich life.
You both have a rich life vision.
I'm starting to hear some of it come into focus.
A lot of it is very aligned, which that's good.
The more you design your rich life to be different
for what you want and what's right
for your family, the more it's going to become confusing, even ridiculous to the outside world.
That's okay. Yeah. It's not their rich life. It's yours. Oh, that's, I appreciate that very much.
I've never thought of it. I've actually never thought of it like that. You know, like there was
something as a mother I needed to give my kids, but it doesn't
have to be like a fence and backyard.
It could be a program.
You know, it doesn't have to be what, you know.
It's up to you.
It might be more important for you to take a huge one month long trip every year with your
family or to send them to tennis camp or to have your laundry done every single day
and have somebody come over to help you clean the house.
That's up to you.
Right.
But what I kind of love, as I start to really think about this,
and I talk about it with my wife, and the two of you talk about it,
oh my god, it suddenly feels like we are free from the shackles
of society's expectations.
Right.
I, yeah, I feel, yeah.
What would the two of you do if you were totally free of society's expectations?
I think I would actually make this a home, like I put up pictures and that's me, you know, he's he's pushed for that, you know,
and I've always been like, no, I had one foot in and one foot out because we need to go do whatever
else is doing, but and this all doesn't mean that this that this is the home for us right now,
you know, anything can change tomorrow, but for this moment and for, you know, tomorrow, it's
moment and for tomorrow, it's, but yeah. So I think just probably, you know, investing a little bit more in the actual environment that we are in.
This sounds really nice. Yeah, just making it, you know.
Joe, what about for you? It's up. I mean, I'm happy to see a more relaxed look on my wife's face.
Do you like it here?
Could you see yourself?
The truth is, and you'll probably attest to this,
when I change my mind, I change my mind,
I can change it back with the mind state
that I change my mind into to be able to make this happen.
And I'm not saying it's a successful strategy
was no, we're out of here.
We're gonna get out of here.
And that's it.
That was my mind frame
until even being posed this question.
Can I, you know, if things changed around here and we made it a little bit nicer and we
made it a little bit more organized, we do it the way that we should have done it for
the past couple of years, then yeah, I would feel a lot better living here without sacrificing
or giving up the life that we do have.
And honestly, like our kids love it here too. Like, my daughter is like, I mean, she says,
this is my home, I don't want to leave my home. And there's something to the things that she says,
not that we're going to, you know, base all our decisions on our four year old Oracle, but like, you know, her first two, and she's got good sense. And, you know,
if we make it better here for us, it will be better for them. They don't care. They don't know the
difference. They don't need anything other than like us being more calm.
And, you know, to do the things that we do.
And living here forces us to get outside.
I think a lot more than people that do live in houses.
Like we live outside because we're forced to get outside.
It's in a way it's like a forced healthy scenario.
I believe that 100%.
But where I think the disconnect is, you know, maybe investing in some help for you
to be able to get the kids out in a way that's like an extra set of hands with the kids and extra, you know, heart to like love on them
and play with them and then you're not by yourself having to do it all along.
I think that that would be money well spent is fine in like a nanny or like a mom
helper and like legitimately pulling a trigger on that. I think it's really beautiful to hear you both
look at your living situation
with a totally different lens.
We've purchased, I purchased, agonized over things,
spent way too much energy and emotions on stuff
that should have never happened.
And if we can align on this and just know what our spending plan is and stay
within it, I think it'll be like taking that level of control over our finances. We're
full. We can find out what it is that we can actually afford. I feel like it's not even you.
I feel like whatever is preventing you from hearing and listening to me is not, it's not a choice. I feel like there's
just something, some program that's running, some defense mechanism, some something, but what I said
before was that I don't want to live in a world of blame or fault or anything. It's just like
like two little, two like detectives like, huh,
why, you know, what's going on right now, calming ourselves down to talk about it,
to get to the bottom of it.
And whenever we feel blame,
or words come out that are describing blame,
or some dynamic like that,
like that's the trigger, like, oh wait, that old
things happening again, like, let's calm down and just get out of the blame fault thing
because the blame fault thing is a huge barrier to like freedom and everything. And I don't know if I can, I want to be able to do my part as like a husband
and a partner and a friend. That's what we should be investing our money in is helping
with or seeking the right help with with those kinds with specifically blame. I've thought
of that like it's come up like a bunch of times in this conversation and it's not new to me
It's not like this is something I've never thought of before, but I'm seeing how it comes up in everything and it is such a block
It's like I just don't it's like you just don't want to be blamed somehow. You just don't want to feel like it's your fault
and I don't and I think that's that's like trauma to be honest with you. And I want to help
you with it. I don't want to enable it. I don't know specifically what to do or how to do it.
But you want her to get help. It may or may not be you helping her. You may want to support her.
It may or may not be you helping her. You may want to support her, but you want to encourage her to get help, right?
Yeah, that's different.
Just before we ended the call, Rebecca took ownership in a powerful way.
She asked me about how moving in with the parents might impact their numbers.
And the answer was surprising. And it might have solved their financial problem. So how would you simulate living with your in-laws in this conscious spending plan?
I don't know what that means.
So what do you mean?
How would it help?
Nope.
How would you model this out or how would you plug that decision that you're going to live with your
in-laws for a while into the conscious spending plan. I mean, we would just take it out of the
fixed spending of rent, right? So we'd have, I mean, technically right now we're spending,
I don't know if this is what section this is in, but we're spending $2,500 over a month.
Yep.
So we took that away.
And what would it turn into?
Nothing.
I mean, you know, whatever, we could throw in here and there for them, but they're not
going to make us.
Just give me the number.
What would it turn into?
Zero.
Correct.
Zero.
Joe, do you notice what I'm doing here?
Yeah, it's hard to stay quiet.
Joe was literally covering his mouth, like he was putting his own muzzle on himself.
I kind of love it.
I know, but then it's also not my original life,
so I don't know, I mean, I don't.
I want you to see it for yourself.
I don't want you to be afraid of this spreadsheet.
So Rebecca, you're doing awesome. Can you be my guest, please, and plug in that number
into the conscious spending plan and tell me what changes?
Well, it gets us out of the...
literally plug it in.
Okay, I mean, then I'm going to have to go to my pen because just out of the... Literally plug it in.
Okay, I mean, then I'm gonna have to go to my pen
because...
Well, what, we were spending...
So the...
I don't know, so...
Okay, take your time.
Do you have the spreadsheet open?
I just did, but now I lost.
Okay, open it up.
Notice, by the way, I think unconsciously Rebecca,
what you're doing right now is
you're trying to find a way to avoid typing these numbers in.
So you're talking.
Do you notice that?
Yeah.
Okay, wait, am I on the right one current spending plan?
Go to conscious spending.
Here's tabs at the bottom.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, okay, I got it.
Okay, so now Here's tabs at the bottom. Yeah, yeah, yeah, okay. I got it.
Okay.
So now that monthly income is $5200.
So just subtracts $20, $2200 from that.
Look at row seven.
What do you got row seven?
Oh, right.
Mortgage. Okay. Right. Mort do you say? Okay. Oh, right. Oh, right. Mortgage. Okay. Rent mortgage, right?
My now, my question for you, Rebecca, is how would you simulate going to live with
your in-laws in this conscious spending plan?
I don't understand the question.
Like, how would I, how would I, how would that factor in?
Like, what would be safe?
How would that factor in?
I mean, we would, it would take not looking for talking.
I'm looking for you to make the change on the conscious spending plan.
This reminds me of when I went to interview at Microsoft.
And when you go to interview at one of these tech companies, you go through an
entire day of interviews.
Now, if they like you by lunch, they will fill up the rest of your afternoon schedule
with even more interviews. So you might end up talking to seven or 10 people. If they
don't like you, they'll treat you to lunch and then they'll say, thank you so much. We'd
like to take you back to your hotel. That means you didn't get the job. So one time I went
up to interview at Microsoft when I was in college and they really whine and dine you.
They treat you very well. And I finally got to the very senior person. He was like a senior VP. And he looked at my
resume and then he turned it over and he goes, resumes are made for writing on. And he started
to ask me all these really technical questions. I totally bombed that interview. I tried
to talk my way out of it just like Rebecca is doing right now, but I couldn't. He wanted the math and I couldn't
give it to him. That is exactly what Rebecca is doing here. It would take it to, well, is that
as that the total on the bottom the fixed cost total is, no, remember that's just adding up all
these numbers. Okay, row 17 is just adding up all these numbers.
So you change the numbers that are in brown.
That's what you can change.
So which number do you want to change if you went to live with your in-laws?
Meaning like where else can we put the money?
Nope.
What would change on this if you went to live with your in-laws?
The rent, the rent mortgage.
Okay, so change it.
So now zero. Yeah, make the change.
Tell me what you notice happens. Edit with the sheet app. No things. Okay. Well, I don't
know. I don't want to take up. No, no, no, this is all, this is the whole point of our conversation.
Okay, so I need to figure out how to edit this. Okay, I'm going to skip a bunch of logistics and moving rooms.
The computer didn't work and the spreadsheet app because I stuck with them.
I wanted Rebecca to see how she can take control of the numbers and she can type these numbers
in and start to understand how her money affects their living situation. Here's what happened. So what do you notice changed?
I'm going to think about this because I'm really really not going with the numbers.
I see the fixed cost 50 to 60% of take home. So now it's 53%.
And what percent of your fixed costs are you currently spending?
Oh my god, 105. yeah, you're spending more money
Every month then on just this category then you even make right so watch change it to zero
Okay, watch what happens no, it's basically half
What's the number now 53% yeah?
So from 105 to 53 what does that tell you?
I mean, part of me which I had nasty question
because I don't want to move in with my in laws
as much as I appreciate I'm offering,
but when you look at the numbers, it makes sense.
I love it because you're taking ownership.
Anytime you talk about money, I'm leaning in and listening.
And it excites me because you're engaged. You're grappling with it. I'm getting it. Yeah.
I'm like 101, but I love it. Honestly, it's my greatest joy is to see someone just seeing the
importance of how money affects their life, what they can accomplish, and then I don't care if they're beginners
or they're multi-millionaire and super-advanced, I don't care,
but I love that you're engaging and asking questions.
So many fascinating things in this episode with Rebecca and Joe.
First, the idea that if you don't truly know yourself,
it can be very tempting to make
decisions you think will make you happy, but actually won't.
For example, Rebecca would send these frantic texts to Joe saying, we have to move, we have
to move.
But in the end, what we discovered is she needs a little more time for herself.
And that's completely understandable.
But without untangling this web of,
how come you haven't looked at the numbers?
Why are you nervous about typing into this spreadsheet?
Why does Joe step up and try to solve Rebecca's problems for her
instead of both of them engaging as a team?
It's very convoluted.
And sometimes you just need somebody on the outside
to help you do it.
It could be somebody like me, it could be a therapist which would make a lot of sense
for a more long-term engagement.
There's a lot of different places to go.
But with this podcast, I want to show you and destigmatize the idea of asking for help,
because it would be very difficult for Rebecca and Joe to have come to these realizations
on their own.
I received follow-up letters from both Rebecca and Joe.
They are interesting, and they're lengthy, so I'm going to excerpt some of the salient parts for you.
And for the full letters you can access them at iwt.com slash episode 57.
Rebecca wrote,
Thank you so much for this life-changing experience. What surprised
me about the call was how passive Joe came across in regards to all topics. In my experience,
his personality is typically more aggressive and loud. He appeared shockingly understanding
as I revealed a lot of myself that I've hidden for years. I am also shocked at how much we are spending
versus what we make and have.
Most importantly, how scared I have been of Excel
for so long and how powerful it was to input a number.
Joe wrote, I was surprised by how committed you were
to truly helping my wife.
Your persistence and patience was so genuine
when frustrating
challenges arose and words cannot express how grateful I am for that. You making her
delete and input numbers into the cell was very symbolic to me and a major lesson for
myself. I can be very quick to jump in and take care of anything and everything that pops
up in our lives and it's not always helpful. There's a price we both pay for that.
Number one, she doesn't get the opportunity to learn or grow or step up.
Number two, I spite myself and the relationship because little resentments build.
This dynamic can get way out of control, and quite honestly, I think it has.
Thank you for highlighting my role in that dynamic.
To read the full letters and get all the bonuses mentioned
in this episode, including the three-step guide
to buying a house, go to iwt.com slash episode 57.
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.
personal finances.