I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 58. “If we want to retire, we’d have to live on $36k”
Episode Date: August 30, 2022This week’s conversation brings a slightly different perspective to the table. Michelle and Eric are in their fifties and are terrified that they’ve waited too long to invest for retirement. They�...��ve bickered about money for twenty-five years, narrowing their window of opportunity and adding a ton of personal baggage into the equation. Usually, part of the solution for most people is long-term investing. But with Michelle and Eric, time is not on their side. To complicate things, Michelle is defensive and triggered by even talking about money. She prefers to keep things focused on the math… but it’s much deeper than that. What would you do to overcome the very real hopelessness that many people of their age experience? Let’s see what happens. 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)
I don't feel safe and secure with my financial life.
We're both 50 and 52 years old.
I feel like we've kind of fucked up over the years.
Just the whole thing about money is triggering.
I was supposed to get married and have a husband who took care of me,
who took care of my finances, who invested for us.
I'm angry at him for not being responsible,
for not taking care of me.
My parents helping me didn't really help me.
I wanted this, mommy gave me money.
So it was a pattern and why not?
Mommy gave me money, I needed it, I wanted it. So I took it.
I don't think it helped me grow up or be responsible with money.
We live like we're 25 years old. We sat down with the guy from Fidelity and when we you know set up our accounts
What did you walk away remembering from that?
That we're fucked. No, I mean,
that we had, I mean, that we wouldn't be able to retire, Polly, till we're like in our 70s.
Michelle grew up wealthy, and to this day, she expects her husband to provide for her.
Eric makes $55,000 and feels like he can't provide the lifestyle she wants.
This dynamic has been causing conflict for the past 20 years, and now in their 50s, the
stakes are even higher. They both feel that they've missed their time to invest and retire
comfortably, and that they might have to keep working until they die. You can get a free copy of the conscious spending plan at iwt.com slash episode 58.
I'm Remi Tse T and this is I will teach you to be rich.
So, Eric and Michelle, you made a comment that I should have seen you as you were
filling out your conscious spending plan.
What happened when you were filling out your conscious spending plan before you got on
this call?
What always happens.
We always start bickering about stuff.
Yeah, we basically, I mean, it's almost comical.
If you ever saw a sign fell, that's like Georgia's parents, like the castans is going
back and forth,
like bickering like two little kids at each other.
Like no, we have, how much do you have in your Roth IRA?
I don't know, it might be 60, it might be 80.
Well, how much exactly is it?
I don't know, I think.
So it's always like, I think I feel maybe,
it's just, you know, so we go back and forth.
It was actually quite hilarious. It sounds like you guys enjoyed it. And we, well, you know, it's just, you know, so we go back and forth. It was actually quite hilarious.
It sounds like you guys enjoyed it.
And we, well, you know, it's hard.
I don't enjoy it.
It's, no, I mean, it's.
It's very triggering.
Yeah, it is triggering for both of us actually.
It's just like 25 years, 27 years of, you know,
we try to do something with our finances. And then I'm the one that basically
takes care of everything. And I know everything. And then when Eric starts to try to get involved,
it's like, no, I have a handle, but it might not be exactly the way he wants it handled. But he's
never been a part of it for 25 years.
So then I'm like, leave me alone.
I know what I'm doing.
Don't try to change my systems.
We're both 50 and 52 years old.
I feel like we've kind of fucked up over the years.
And we haven't really been, I mean,
at least I haven't been adult like about money
when it comes to money.
I don't feel safe and secure with my financial life.
I mean over the since COVID, we've actually started saving money
and we both put money in our IRA for two years in a row.
But like we should have been, we live like we're 25 years old.
But just the whole thing about money is triggering.
I was supposed to get married and have a husband who took care of me,
who took care of my finances, who invested for us.
I didn't think I'd be 52 years old with like very little savings,
living like 25 like when something happens.
Like, oh my God, how are we going to pay for that?
You know, where did that story come from?
That that was how it was supposed to be.
When did you start telling yourself that story?
My parents helping me didn't really help me.
Tell me more about that.
Yeah, so they always helped me.
Even when I moved away for a little bit,
I lived in North Carolina and I wanted to get a one bedroom apartment.
But my mom's like, nope, you need a two bedroom apartment. So she paid for the two bedroom apartment.
She just always like, you know, I wanted to go on a trip. Mommy gave me money. I wanted this. Mommy
gave me money. So it was a pattern and why not? Mommy gave me money. I needed it.
I wanted it.
So I took it.
And looking back, what lessons do you
think you took away from your parents always helping you?
Maybe gratitude and generosity help people
are generous with money and grateful for their financial
support.
Anything else?
I mean, I don't think it helped me grow up
or be responsible with money.
I never had to budget my whole life.
I mean, I never knew anything about money.
We never talked about it at my house either.
I mean, it was my upbringing.
I'm Jewish, so you marry a doctor.
The doctor takes care of you.
My dad took care of my mom.
I mean, it's generational, I think, for us.
And when you were meeting Eric,
do you have those conversations?
No, I don't think so.
It was a lot of assumptions.
I don't think we ever talked about money.
I mean, I assumed we both grew up in the same town.
We both grew up, you know, upper middle class.
No, we never discussed money before we got married, ever.
And how does money come up in your relationship? It comes up with a lot of
feelings and anger. Oh, like what? Like anger. I'm angry at him for not being responsible, for not
taking care of me, for not talking about it, for not being involved in the savings or any bills.
All of that. Okay. Eric, when's the
last time you remember talking about
money with Michelle? It comes up
occasionally, but it's very surface.
We don't go deep. Not every time I
tried to do that with Michelle, she's
just pushes me away. She's like, I've
got this stop messing everything up.
That is so not true.
You never verbally said to me,
let's sit down and do this,
or else you do it for like 30 seconds one month
and then it doesn't come up for like three more years.
It's not true.
You never asked me to do that.
So you see what I'm dealing with now.
So when we first started, you mentioned that you are like a bickering old couple, the castanze's parents, I mean, look at
the fake, like you're laughing right now.
This is that immediately a smile comes to your face.
I can tell it's kind of funny, but it's less funny when the
two of you are pointing fingers and almost antagonizing each
other.
I think we're just comfortable bickering.
For me, this is where I'm coming, like, it makes me feel not as bad about what happened
in the past, maybe.
Or it makes me feel right.
I don't know.
Makes you feel right.
Okay.
Tell me more about that. So that's a good one. So for me, it's more like,
I want to do things differently because what we're doing isn't working. I mean, it's kind of gotten us
by up until the last two years and like, you know, the last two years have been great. But, I mean, it's the same thing. Like, I didn't grow up up our middle class. I grew up very middle, middle class.
We didn't, I mean, we didn't go on extravagant vacations like Michelle's parents took them on. We
didn't get expensive cars and we didn't go on extravagant vacations or ski trips out West.
Oh, I forgot about that. Yeah. What do you get out of the
bickering with each other? I don't know. Two of you curious about your own patterns? Yeah.
I've never really dealt with, I mean, like, I've never really dealt with this deep.
We're not even below the surface yet.
We're not.
No.
Oh, man.
How long?
We're in the kitty pool right now.
We haven't even gotten ready to get into the deep end.
Okay.
You know, like I feel like I'm getting just justification.
I'm getting acknowledgement.. I'm getting acknowledgement.
You're not getting acknowledgement, but you are getting justification, your own justification.
Uh-huh.
When you poke and prod and you might be right, you might be wrong. I don't know. It's
sort of irrelevant. Right.
Because it doesn't get you anywhere. It doesn't. In fact, if anything, it causes Michelle
to put up her defenses, which I would, if I were in her position, because
I don't want someone saying, you knew and just poking at me. And then Michelle turns around
and seems to say, other words, but with the same goal, you never do this. You always do this,
which allows Michelle allows you to affirm your story about what has happened
with your money.
I think he's just legitimately asking to like sit down and do it together, but he never
follows through with stuff like he'll start one thing and then change and then start
another thing.
It's like a pattern.
Notice that pivot.
Michelle immediately jumps into her grievance
without even letting the point settle,
the point that they both feel right
and justified when they bicker with each other.
Just so I understand your husband never follows through
with anything.
Is that what you're saying?
Not never ever, but when he starts something new,
it's very hard to be create a new habit with that. Okay. I think that's probably true for a
lot of us. It's hard for me to create a new habit. So sometimes when I ask, hey, will
you do this with me, I would like your help. Sometimes if I were to say that to my wife,
what do you think that I would
be hoping she would respond with? Sure, okay. Do you think that that might apply to your
relationship? Probably. But it's hard for you. Yeah, it's hard. Why? Because it's just never changes.
Nothing ever changes.
25 years later, nothing ever changes.
So it's frustrating.
So then why are you on the call today?
Because you asked me to be on the call and there's always hope.
There's something so sad and yet beautiful about what Michelle just said.
Sad because it doesn't actually sound like she believes anything can change.
And beautiful because that's what a loving spouse does.
She's saying, I don't really think this will work, but you asked me to be here, so I'll come because I love you.
There's a lifetime of work for a therapist to work through, but I'm not a therapist.
I want to shift our conversation to talk about money. So I ask them if they've ever worked with
anyone like me to talk about money before. We sat down with the guy from Fidelity and when we set up our accounts about,
what was about three years ago Michelle before and he basically, you know, did all this.
And what did you walk away remembering from that that were fucked? No, I mean, that we had,
I mean, that we wouldn't be able to retire, how I tiller like in our 70s, okay.
And Michelle, you mentioned that you
track the family's finances, but you also mentioned that you're frustrated with the family's
finances. I'm curious about that. Um, I track them. I try to save money. And then there's always
like a emergency that comes up. So the saving stuff that I
have in savings never really goes to savings, it goes to like the emergency. And how do you think
that other families do that? I have no idea. So it's been 25 years. I'm sure you've thought like, ah, it feels like one step forward, two steps back.
Over 25 years, have you asked other people, have you looked into how others manage their money?
No.
What do you think about that now that you're talking about it?
I think I grew up in a house where you didn't talk about money, so I don't feel like comfortable
going up to someone and asking them about how they talk about money.
I mean, I do think it's something between the husband and wife, and they, I don't know,
I just never asked anybody.
What might be the other ways to learn about how to manage money?
Programs, online.
What else?
Reading articles, I don't know.
Books, events, financial advisor,
there's a million different things.
I don't mind that you haven't done it.
We all start from some place.
Okay, there are a lot of things I should have been doing 20 years ago.
Fine, I wish I had.
But all I can do is deal with where I am today.
What I want to understand is your frustration around money because Michelle, you are frustrated
with money.
I can hear you told me.
But you're also the one who has been managing
the family finances for 25 years. So help me understand that.
Well, I think it started because I was doing it alone, right? And then I don't know. It's just
frustrated. I don't want to have to do it. I didn't grow up in a house where they budgeted.
They just had magical amount of money and spent it on whatever.
It's a lot of work and a lot of mindset shifts.
They have to budget every month.
Yeah, I can see that.
I don't like budgeting myself. Did you know that?
I don't know much about you you so I didn't know that.
Okay. What do you expect coming into this call? I'm curious. What do you expect me to tell you on
today's call? I don't know. Eric asked me to be on this call with you. I agreed and here I am. I
have no expectations. Okay. Well, you're playing along, which I appreciate.
The way for this to go well is both partners have to be engaged.
And I'm happy to see that both of you are doing it.
Even though Michelle, some of the questions I'm asking you
might seem a little tough.
I appreciate that you are playing ball.
My antenna are going up right now.
You can hear that Michelle is getting defensive about some of my questions.
So when I ask her what she expected, she tells me she doesn't know much about me and that
she doesn't really have any expectations.
Now, that can be okay.
I don't mind talking to someone with no expectations.
But you can also understand why Michelle might be caught off guard by some of what I'm asking her.
She shows up to have a conversation about money, and suddenly she's getting questions about why
she's been managing money that way for 25 years. I don't mean to ambush her. I'm just trying to
understand the situation here. The one Eric called me about, and Michelle agreed to talk about.
The one Eric called me about and Michelle agreed to talk about. Again, I can understand their defensiveness, but with that said, it's not giving me a lot to work with.
When we start honing in on something, Michelle turns the attention right back to Eric.
There has been a lot of baggage with money and on Eric's part.
So you can ask him about that and why I'm so
angry about it. I had a lot of credit card debt that I racked out which I knocked out over
the last five years. How much debt? Like 60. 60,000? 50 to 60, yeah. What was the, what'd you spend
it on? Just like off like business programs,
business development, things, equipment for the office,
medical equipment, things like that.
Okay.
And you, so you wrecked up 50, 60 K of debt,
you paid it off.
Yes.
All right.
Michelle, how did you feel when you saw him paying that debt off?
Well, it's his business, so I don't know how much you didn't know about
it. Not really. I mean, I did. I knew about the debt. I didn't know how much it was. And
I didn't know how he's working on paying it off. Eric?
Yeah, I mean, there's been a lot of, I've made a lot of business mistakes over the years
and it caused bankruptcy in 2008,
2009 when the economy went down. I mean, there was a lot of stuff in the past, but like,
my philosophy right now is we don't, like, why go back there and why still be angry about
it? Like, get over it. Let's move forward and be a team. Like, Michelle has every right to be, you know, to have had be angry what happened in the past. But that was, you know, situation that happened 20 years ago and another one that happened about 12 years ago.
And it's like she still hasn't gotten over that. And it it's affecting her, you know, where we're going. That's why ever, you know, like she says says always never. I mean, to me, that gets me so
frustrated because I'm not, I never do this. You always do that. And so for me, that doesn't work.
And it gets us, that's why we go into that spiral and just get frustrated.
Eric, I mean, if you declared bankruptcy, which you've never mentioned in any of the documents you sent over,
I can understand why she would be upset.
That's a serious thing, right?
And that doesn't just heal over time.
That doesn't even heal over 12 years later.
It takes talking and it takes changing the way you deal with money.
The more I try to understand Michelle and Eric, the more I get lost in their history of
resentments.
Each of them has valid reasons to be angry and defensive, but nobody can solve this on
a single call.
That's not what I'm here for either.
I'm going to try to zoom up and recalibrate.
What do you think is the real problem here?
Us.
Communication.
Yeah.
Lack of having a plan.
Trust.
Trust.
You don't trust each other?
Yes.
Keep going.
You're nailing all these.
What else?
Expectations.
Yes.
Anything else?
Strategy.
Know how.
What am I doing here?
You're actually quite savvy at knowing the problems here,
but putting them all together eludes you.
Well, fixing that eludes us.
Yeah, in part because I'm not sure you actually want to fix them.
I think you actually enjoy the bickering.
I think it gets you to feel a temporary sugar high
where you go, I'm right, you're wrong you go, I'm right, you're wrong.
No, I'm right, you're wrong.
And what about that thing that happened two years ago, two months ago, ten years ago?
And then you get back into this comfortable relationship and then you both get mad and
come back the next day and pretend it didn't happen until the next time.
That's true.
I feel like we have the daily spending under control.
I think we need more money to generate more income so we can invest more and no investment
strategies because neither of us know how to do anything like that.
Okay.
Okay.
Now we're talking.
So you need a higher income.
You want to invest more.
I'm with you so far.
And what else?
Yeah, those two things.
Strategy, know how, what to do, how to invest.
So let's say that we accomplish that and you start investing $25,000 a year.
Okay, great.
What then?
Just growing, I guess.
I don't know.
And then what? I don't know. I don't know. I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know. I personally want to have real health insurance and long-term care insurance because
we had a tragedy in our family and it scares the BGBs out of me that if I had to go to a
group home like how would that get paid for, you know, I don't want to burden my family
or my kids. So I need that security to know that I'll be safe. Like really for me, it's all about
security and not burdening my kids. Like I really don't have these crazy dreams of things I want.
I mean, I'll travel. I love to travel and I want a house of North. But besides that, I'm pretty simple.
of North, but besides that, I'm pretty simple.
Michelle, one of the reasons that people don't enjoy managing their money and they don't aggressively save and invest is that they never take the time to create a vision of what their
rich life is. So of course, you want insurance. Okay, great. You should definitely get insurance,
but I'm not excited by hearing you talk about long-term care insurance.
Are you?
Either was Eric.
Are you really?
Yes, I really am.
You wake up in the morning and you go, yes, long-term care insurance.
No, it's to me it's like, okay, you're being a responsible adult.
The problem is that the idea of being a responsible adult is not inspiring.
Nobody wakes up and says, yes, I want to change my entire way of thinking about money
and managing money because I want to be a responsible adult.
It never happens.
And if it would have worked, they would have been doing it for the last 25 years.
So my opinion is, if it hasn't worked your way,
why don't we try it my way?
My way involves starting with a vision of a rich life.
It involves being honest about what excites you with money.
And if you can't find that excitement,
that's okay, some people have lost it over the decades.
Let's go through my process.
And I wanna watch both Michelle and Eric
build this vision together. Unfortunately, many of us have lost the ability to dream.
So we go back to these seemingly logical things we want. When I talk to people and ask
them, what's your rich life? And there's a very small minority of people who say, I want
health insurance. I want to make sure that I can take care of myself. I know two things.
Number one, there's probably something that happened in their family that makes them
prioritize that above everything else.
And number two, they have no real vision of a rich life.
Because wanting health insurance is not a rich life.
It's something you should have, but it's not going to inspire you to change the way you
treat money. And that,
among other reasons, is why Michelle has not made a change in the last 25 years.
What I want for my rich life is to have a cottage of North,
three bedroom cottage on a lake or near the lake. I want to have the ability to travel and go away
for, let's say, two weeks, twice a year, or one week, four times a year, to really cool places and
be able to see amazing things and eat great restaurants and to be able to like take our kids with us if they want to come with us.
I want to leave them a legacy so that you know that and teach them strategies as far as
so they can live their rich life and not fight with their spouses so that they can have
great times with their families too. Like to be able able to afford, mean though, cars aren't that important.
I wanna be able to drive a car that I feel proud of.
I mean, my car's fine, it gets me from A to B,
but it's a 12 year old SUV.
Like I'd like to have a newer car that's reliable.
2012, 2017 Ford Explorer, I'd be happy with that.
But, you know, like, it doesn't have to be fancy,
but like a good reliable newer car.
So, those are just some of the things off the top of my head.
I know all that, so I don't know.
I'm like very worked up right now.
I know those things.
He's told me those things before.
Wow.
So how do you think he feels when he just opened up about the things he wants and your
answer is, yeah, I already know those things.
I'm sure not good.
So do you want to change it or do you want to just repeat the same pattern for the last
25 years?
I do want to change it.
When you talk to your partner about money, it is inevitable that you're going to have
disagreements.
Remember, most of us are not even confident about money with ourselves, much less having
a conversation with our partner.
There's baggage, there's history, there's invisible scripts in the way that we grew up with
money.
So here are a few suggestions.
Start with curiosity.
You can even create simple rules for yourself, like each person has to ask at least one probing
question.
Oh, you want to travel more?
Wow, that sounds interesting.
Where would you want to go if we could travel anywhere? Another rule, you don't have to solve the
how today. What is the goal of your first conversation with money? It's literally just
to get excited about money. That's it. And finally, another rule, there's something
new to learn, always.
Here we have a couple that's been together over 20 years, and I think they still have
more to learn about each other.
I find that exciting.
Recently on the show, you heard me speak to Jennifer and Andrew.
They were struggling to pay off their credit card debt, and they had a bunch of subscriptions
that they didn't even know about.
Look, if you love having all these subscriptions
and you can afford it, I'm all for it.
But a lot of times when people actually see
all the subscriptions they've signed up for months
or years ago, they realized they need to make a change
because they can redirect where that money is going
much more towards their rich life.
If you are wondering where all your money is going, much more towards their rich life. If you are wondering where all your money is going, I want you to check out this episode's
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This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp.
On this podcast, you've heard me recommend therapy to a lot of couples.
Some of the couples are already seeing therapists, which I love.
But if you wanted to get therapy, if you wanted to have a space where you and your partner
could talk about money and any other topic, would you know where to go right now?
No.
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We'd find a bunch of options, but how do we know
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way of seeing and talking about money.
But this is just one conversation.
A lot of us need a lot more conversations in order to lock in change.
That's why I think therapy is really important for a lot of us.
My wife and I saw a therapist to help us deal with our early money conversations. And therapy gave us a place and a time to talk about how we felt.
Discover your potential with better help. Visit betterhelp.com slash
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R-A-M-I-T.
How savvy would you say you are with money?
Scale of one to ten.
Three to five.
Not especially savvy, I'm guessing.
Is that fair? Yeah
Okay, so I can understand why it must be stressful to talk about this not only is it the money part of it
It's the fact that you're in your fifties
It's the fact that he asked you to be here and you've got a history with bankruptcy, and debt, and earning, and expectation, and
parents. Are all those fair?
Sure.
Yes.
So, all of those can be true.
I'm not going to change all of that today on one call.
You know that and I know that.
You can do a lot more with your money.
But yeah, I'll show you some investment stuff you can do, and
yeah, I'll show you how to allocate your money. I'll talk about that. But if the two of you
can't have a conversation where one of you is sharing his rich life and your answer is,
okay, yeah, I already know that. Then none of the numbers are going to matter at all.
I heard a lot of pride from both of you over what you have accomplished financially in the last two years.
We had someone in the house staying with, you know, who, you know, gave us whatever, $600 a month and we just put that right into savings.
And he was with us for about a year. So there was that.
about a year. So there was that. You know, we don't really, we're not like extravagant. Like I love Michelle, because she's not, like she doesn't want jewelry, she doesn't want
a fancy car. She just wants security. Like her, one of her things was like, I want long-term
care insurance, because I want to make sure that, you know, God forbid something happens
that our kids are in burdened by us. So, you know, but like the last years, we didn't go
out for, you know, quite a long period of time when we saved
a lot of that money and we just kept it really lean and mean.
Michelle, what's your perspective on the last two years?
Well, I got excited when I saw that the money kept building up and then I sat kind of
goals like, all right, by the end of this year, I want to have this much money.
I want to, you know, so. Tell me the numbers. I want to hear them. How much we'd save? Yeah, how much have you
saved? We went from zero to zero to 42,000 in two years. Great. And what was the goal by the end of
the year? Well, the goal by the end of this year is 50. Okay. And what does that mean to you?
If you were to have $50,000 in savings, what
does that mean to you? I don't know. It's just a little like, okay, I can do this. I can
do it. And if you were to get to 50, what would you do next? Make a higher goal for the next
year. Like what? Maybe 70.
Okay. So I could see you incrementally move that number up.
70 soon 100, maybe 120.
Okay. All great.
And when would you get to feel good about money, Michelle?
When would I get to feel good?
Well, I'm starting to feel good about it.
Now I want to feel good now about it.
I don't want to wait.
Okay.
I like that.
So can we just flip a switch and you start feeling good about money today?
Sure.
Really?
Yeah.
I don't know if I believe that.
I mean, it's the first time I've seen you smile on our entire call.
I love it.
What is that?
It seems like you felt bad about money for a very long time.
I have.
I have.
Yep.
So it feels good to be responsible about it.
I mean, it didn't feel good for 30-something years to be given everything, even though I
took it.
And then, it feels good to, like, create your own money.
Yes, it does.
Thank you for saying that.
I think that's very powerful.
You said, it doesn't feel good to have been given everything,
even though I took it.
Being given everything, you're referring to your parents?
Yes.
When did they stop giving you money?
Probably when they, I mean, they still buy things for my kids, but they don't give
me money monthly anymore.
I mean, a birthday of present.
When did it stop?
Um, maybe five years ago.
So in your mid 40s?
Maybe 40s, 10 years ago, maybe?
40 years old.
Okay.
Do you see how you ended up frustrated with money
in part because it was being given to you
and you weren't taking your own responsibility?
Yep.
And the minute you started really taking responsibility with Eric during COVID, what happened?
It grew.
We like have, yeah, we have money in our account.
And how do you both feel about money from those last two years. Do you know like an adult now? More, you know, like we're actually like
acting our age, not like we're 25 years old, they're 20 years old again. Yeah.
So what does it tell you about the next 10 years? You two did it for two years. What does it tell you
for the next 10 years? Yeah, that we just got to stay on the plan.
Yeah.
Well, also, you don't even really have a plan.
Right.
You accumulated $42,000,
and not even knowing what you're doing.
Just think if we actually had some strategy for me
or I mean, yeah.
Holy shit.
I mean, it's like you got in a car and you just started driving
and you finally put on cruise control and you're like,
oh my God, we drove 1500 miles.
And now we're actually going to look at a map and we're going to go the right direction.
Imagine where we could be in another two years, much less than years.
I don't know, does it get either of you excited about where you could be in 10 years?
Yeah.
Okay. That's what I'm talking about.
This money has all been sitting in savings.
It wasn't even invested.
So imagine if you could start to really grow your money,
if you could start to do it together,
and if you could be on the same page
and not fight about money.
This is a win, but I think it's just a start.
That money right now is
just sitting there. And this is where I invited them to open up their conscious spending
plan and lay the groundwork for their numbers. Unfortunately, it just turned into more
bickering. But if you want to do this for yourself, you can get the CSP at iwt.com slash episode 58.
Now I'm looking at the conscious spending plan, which is very helpful to get a bird's eye view on how you're spending stacks up.
I recommend fixed cost be 50 to 60% of take home yours are 62% right in that
parameter. So that part, I would say generally well done.
Okay. Your investments should be roughly 10% of take home, roughly.
How much do you each invest per month?
500.
Okay.
It says that you are each, that you're a thousand dollars a month on guilt-free spending.
Is that true?
I don't think so.
I mean, that includes like dining out, right?
Close.
That's.
That's tough.
Travel.
Traveling.
Right.
Right now Michelle is shaking her head vigorously saying no. That's, that's, that's stuff. Travel, traveling.
Right now Michelle is shaking her head vigorously, saying no. Michelle, do you think that number's too lower, too high?
I honestly don't know the answer to that.
It's like, I do all the bills and I know when they come out,
but I don't know the answer to that other question
without looking at it.
I never added it up.
It was really enlightening for me to like pull up the last three months of their credit cards
and actually look at like what we actually spend. What did tell you? A lot. I mean, I didn't realize,
you know, we spend more than I anticipated on traveling and going out. I mean, we don't
got for extravagant dinners, but like, you know, we do go out and
you know, buy clothes for the kids gets, you know, we give our son 600 bucks a month for you know college like, you know, spending money for him to buy food and stuff.
So I mean, it adds up quickly.
That's good. Yeah, that's what most people find out when they actually track their spending for one
month.
They discover that they were dramatically overspending compared to what they thought.
And they also forget to include all those things they do only once or twice a year.
Oh, we went to Disneyland.
Oh, we went for this holiday trip.
We did this quick vacation.
They forget you actually have to spread that expense out over the entire year.
Michelle, what do you think?
So I don't understand how conscious spending plan is not the same as a budget.
I mean, in my mind, it's exactly the same thing.
This is a common question I get from people on the internet. Let me explain.
With a budget, you track every last line item.
How much do we spend eating out?
How much do we spend on Airbnb?
How much do we spend on Netflix and Kiwis at the grocery store, everything?
And then at the end of the month, you go, okay, I have all this information.
What am I supposed to do with it?
A conscious spending plan is different.
It looks forward.
It says, of the money we make next month,
how do we want to allocate it?
Some of it should go to our fixed costs.
Some of it should go to our savings automatically.
Some of it should automatically go to our investments
and the rest should be left for us to spend guilt-free.
You know what this reminds me of? We did a MAGO relationship therapy, which is really like about
kind of like what you're saying. It's like let's move forward. Like we're not going to talk about all the shit from the past. Like we're going to talk about moving forward and develop a new strategy
of communication. It's like having a new language. A CSP is definitely a new language, a conscious spending plan. I do think that the way that
the two of you communicate, I'm glad you took some therapy sessions and I would encourage
you to do more. I think it's amazing. I'm not making a joke. It's not. I know.
No, I completely agree. I try to destigmatize therapy for everybody. And there's only so much that I can do on one call.
And a therapist has other tools and skills that they can bring.
I don't need to tell you that.
I think it would be very helpful.
But few therapists can talk about money,
like we are talking about right now.
I think you both tell yourself a story.
I've heard both of you say it that you're not fancy, you don't need fancy things, you're
not spending on a lot of stuff.
But actually, you are spending on a lot of stuff, and you're not saving or investing nearly
as aggressively as you need to.
How does that strike you? Well, I don't think we're spending
on a lot of stuff. I mean, I buy the dogs don't, I mean, I don't
think we're spending on a lot of stuff. But I do think we need
to be more aggressive. You too, in your 50s, with not as much investments as you could have had, are spending $1300
a month on your son's college expenses and other services for your children, not to mention
car repairs, et cetera for them.
This has been on the contention attention for me and I'm not really
express to it but I really feel that our kids need to have more skin in the game.
Again, it's like that pattern of like buying them everything, paying for everything and
Michelle goes to me like why are you so selfish?
Like why you know, don't you want to like support your kids?
I'm like absolutely I want to support them but I want them to learn. I want them to have
skin in the game. I don't want them ending up like this.
Do you see any connection between how your parents treated you with money and how you treat your
children? A little, but when I was growing up, if I wanted to go on an extravagant trip, I was always
like given a check.
I want to be generous, but I'm not overly generous because we don't have the money to be overly
generous.
I'm not here to tell you how to raise your kids or what to spend on them.
That's up to the two of you.
It's your rich life.
It's your rich life, it's your money. I will say, right now,
you don't have enough to invest and save at the rate you need to. For 25 years, you've been managing
the money, making sure the bills get paid, and that's amazing. That needs to happen. That's table
stakes. But we also now need to add on a way to grow your money.
That's investments. That's automatic saving.
That's where real wealth is created.
You've got $200,000 invested.
Okay. How much are you contributing total per year to your investments?
13.5.
Great. Okay. And what age do we want to do this
until? You want to see what happens in 10 years? 65. 65. Okay, great. 15 years.
And what interest rate should we assume that you're going to get on your investments? I don't know. You told us. I don't know. And Michelle, what do you guess?
Eight. Okay. At least you're in the ballpark. Some people say 8,000. I go, oh, shit.
I use 7% because I like to be conservative. There's a whole section in my book
talking about where does this number come from and how do you derive it and all that stuff. But let's just say
seven to be conservative. Okay, maybe you get a great. So by the age of 65, you've
turned that into nine hundred and fourteen thousand dollars. Okay, here's my
question for you. Does this number mean anything to you?
I don't think that seems like enough money. It's just a number and it doesn't feel like enough. That's most people. Eric, what does this number mean to you?
I always thought like, okay, I want to be like, you know, like, I don't know why that
number is so like significant, but like a million dollars just seems like
significant to me.
First of all, if you have $914,000, you are millionaires
because you have $75,000 in savings.
Big whoop-de-doo, it's just a number.
It doesn't mean anything.
I'm gonna show you an example of how to figure out
what to do with it.
There is a simple rule called the 4% rule.
Some people can debate it, whether it's
3% or whatever, we're going to use 4% for this calculation. And what this means is you
can safely withdraw 4% of that amount every year for 30 years. There's more complexity
to the 4% rule, which you can research online. But it's a really beautiful back-of-the-nap calculation you can make that tells you how much
income you can eventually get from your investments.
So if you live from 65 to 95, you could safely take 4% of that.
So why don't we figure out what that is? 4% means you could withdraw $36,000 per year.
What do you think of that?
That sucks.
Correct.
Yeah.
That's a number that you can more easily grasp because you can compare it to your current
income, which is what?
100.
This is a very stark moment for people, especially people in their 40s and especially 50s and 60s.
For many people in this situation, they suddenly realize that the money they've saved is not
enough.
And now the dreams they have of their future life, their retired life, might not be possible.
Now, Eric and Michelle still have a chance to make a
change, but I want them to understand how serious this is. I asked if they wanted to go from a
hundred thousand dollars in income to thirty six thousand dollars in income. In our culture,
it is excruciating to imagine taking a forced downward socioeconomic step.
Yeah.
So you want to go from 100k to 36,000?
No.
How do we trip all that?
Okay, so what do you want to do?
Now we have some decisions to make.
What are your levers here?
Well, the annual addition. decisions to make. What are your levers here?
But the annual edition, what number would you like to change it to?
25,
25. Okay. So from 13,500 to 25,000 and just give me a sense, where would that money come from?
More earnings.
More earnings is one way.
What else?
I mean, like you said, we're, you know, 1300 a month
for like kids stuff.
I think we just cut the kids off.
Okay.
Cutting kids off.
Always going to be one of my favorite levers to pull.
Don't come from me, parents.
I don't need to hear from you right
now. Just save it. Send your emails to Remi. We'll never read this at I will teach
you rwitch.com. But in all actuality, they do need to take a very conscious look at their
expenses. And this is a lot of money that they're spending on their children. I do recognize
that making big decisions about expenses, especially family expenses takes
time.
Nobody decides on a call like this.
We're not going to spend any more money on our kids.
But my job here is to simply raise the question for them so that they can start thinking about
all their options.
I also want to pull on another lever here. Time. Let's just
even see if this is exciting. So we're raising it from $13,500 a year
investments to $25,000 a year. And suddenly instead of $914,000, you have 1.2
million. If we take 4% of that, 48,000 a year. How do you feel about that?
I think it's better, but it still doesn't seem like a lot. Okay. What else?
May more years to grow. Okay. So instead of 65, what number would you like to put?
Okay, so instead of 65, what number would you like to put?
70. So 20 years. Okay, now we're talking. Instead of 1.2 million,
we have 1.87 million. Well, that's a big jump. What does that tell you?
I'm pounding it. I mean, it just the more I
Like my first thought was like we should have started doing this 10 years ago, but like that extra five years that grows significantly. Yes, and now you have 74,000 almost $75,000 a year.
That's impressive.
I think we could do that. I am loving this.
Suddenly I'm showing them different scenarios with their money and they're starting to connect
what they do today with what they will have tomorrow.
Honestly, this is pretty advanced for most people.
Most of us cannot make the connection between what we spend on our rent or mortgage today
and what our income is going to be at retirement.
But there's a direct connection.
This is how tools like my conscious spending plan can help you.
That is why I mention it so often on the podcast.
Buying a truck can directly affect how much you have later.
How much you spend on maintenance for your house can directly affect how much you have
later and on and on and on. Now, I want to direct them to the money sitting in their savings account.
You got the 42,000 that sitting in savings. You're in a great position having that, but
we might be able to put 20,000 of that to work. Let's just take a look.
200, instead of 200,000, 220,000, we'll turn that into 1.9 million, so that money would
grow, grow, grow.
But you have, you know where one of your biggest levers is?
It's really this number.
It's the annual edition, and it's your time. Earlier you start investing the
better, you're 50 years old. You don't have time to wait. Even one year costs you dearly.
And the second thing is the amount that you contribute every single month. What do
you take away from those examples that I just gave you? Michelle.
Let's do it. So tell me how. Where do I put the money?
Okay.
And then.
You seem like very motivated right now. Tell me about that.
Well, I think I can see the numbers and I can see what we have to do.
So having like the math, it take, take the emotion out of it and just math.
Wow.
But are emotions bad?
Of course, they're not bad, but if you had just had the numbers, then Eric and I follow
the numbers and don't get involved with the emotions.
I'm very confused by Michelle right now. She's been defensive for most of the call,
but suddenly she's lit up and she's saying, okay, I mean, tell me what to do. I don't know
if I buy it. I honestly think this call would go a lot better if I just shared some basic investing
tips and gave them some handy rules to follow and sent them on their way.
But that's not really what I do.
And if that's what they really wanted, why haven't they just read my book or anyone's
book?
I think money psychology and emotions are the thing in this relationship.
Their investing situation is not that complicated. But why they haven't talked about money and invested money and been aligned for 25 years,
that is incredibly complicated.
I guess my perspective would be that I'm going to show you how to do this.
I will show you, you will walk away with a plan.
I will also suggest to you that emotions,
expectations, communication are part of the reason
you didn't do this 25 years ago.
To see that number, from 1.2 up to 1.9 mill,
just by increasing the amount that we're putting away
and adding five years to it, it's just, to me, that's amazing.
And I wish we would have done this 25 years ago.
Everybody wishes they would have done a 20-figures.
The only thing they can do is do it today
and do it aggressively.
The two of you rowing in the same direction
will get you there.
You cannot achieve this with how short your timeframe is
if one of you is not on board.
That is the bottom line. The only way the two of you get to have enough for retirement is by investing aggressive.
That's the truth. And I mean aggressive. Now how aggressive you want to be is up to you.
But that's just a matter.
There's a lot left unsaid in today's call.
First, Eric and Michelle realized it is possible for them
to change the way they treat their money.
Once we focus specifically on their conscious spending plan
and on their investments, they really took to it.
They seem on board making these changes.
But what I think is missing is a deeper analysis
of why they haven't been able to connect about money
for 25 years.
I don't expect to be able to get to everyone
in one phone call, but when it doesn't happen,
I am frustrated.
And I know this is just one call.
Can't change everything overnight, but I wish we had been able to go a little deeper.
I hope Eric and Michelle continue to focus on aggressive investments.
They're 50 and 52 years old. They do not have time.
And I also hope that they find other tools and resources whether it be a
therapist, a coach, or whoever so that they can connect more deeply and talk
about money regularly. To understand what your numbers really mean you can
plug them into my free conscious spending plan template. You can download that
at iwt.com slash episode 58.
IWT.com slash episode 58. Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
I'm Remete Saytee.
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.
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