I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 65. “I make $200k/month. He makes $2k. Who pays for dates?” (Part 2)
Episode Date: October 18, 2022Connie and Wes have severe gender expectations. Connie desperately wants Wes to be the “man” in the relationship and pay for dinner. But when he tries, she scolds him to save for the future instea...d. This toxic dynamic is made worse by what we last heard in part 1… Connie’s net worth is—get this—over $6 million! Can someone who’s making over $200k a month ever feel in balance with a partner bringing home $2k? The answer, of course, is yes—but getting Connie there is one of the biggest challenges we’ve ever faced on the podcast. The canyons between their bank accounts and understanding of money are immense. Listen in as we bring them together with a shared vision of equity, respect, and joy. Connect with Ramit Download your free conscious spending plan Learn more about money coaching 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)
So you make 2.4 million a year income.
Yes.
Your investments total are worth how much?
A little over 6 million.
Okay.
And Wes, have you ever been in a relationship where at the time you were making 2,000 a month,
your partner was making 200,000 a month?
Sorry about that.
And so Connie, if you paid for dinner with the two of you, how would you feel about it?
I feel like I'm not getting what I want out of the relationship, and then I also feel
like it's irresponsible of me to let him take me out to dinner.
You want him to do exactly what you do with money?
Is that fair to say?
Yeah, that sounds horrible, but yes.
But he's not you.
Yep.
In the second part of my conversation with Connie and Wes, we're going to get into the
numbers.
They are 41 and 32.
They've been dating about a year, and their incomes are very, very different.
Connie brings in over $200,000 per month and is worth over $6 million.
Wes lives with his mom and just started investing this year.
And as part of starting a new business, he pays himself $2,000 a month.
In other words, Connie makes 100 times what Wes makes, but Connie believes that the man
should be the provider in a relationship.
And that is what we are going to talk about today, along with the help of their actual
numbers.
Now, Connie and Wes prepared by using a conscious spending plan, which you can download at iwt.com slash episode
65. This is the I will teach you to be rich podcast and I am Ramit, say T. Let's get back into it.
So you make 2.4 million a year income and then we take out taxes and all that stuff.
Yes, but the way it's only been the last few years.
And there's no.
Hold on, hold on.
Can we just take a second before you pivot us to some other weird caveat?
You make over $2 million a year.
What do you think about that number?
I think I'm very blessed and fortunate in life.
Yeah, that's cool.
Can we all get around to be a clause?
$2 million. take the win.
Have you ever stopped to really appreciate
how financially successful you are?
No, that's to no.
She's like,
I don't know.
I'm looking into the stars.
I'm going, you make $2.4 million a year.
That's pretty good. Well, I'll be getting on a podcast and sharing it with millions of people.
I don't, I don't really feel like it's appropriate to share that with people.
So no, I don't, I don't, I don't know how you get to share it. I don't mind a little flexing on
this show. I'm proud of myself. I am. I'm proud of you. Okay, fantastic. I'm proud of myself.
Type A people admittedly have a real problem
celebrating things.
I know because until I met my wife,
I also never celebrated anything.
I was like, what's next?
What's next?
Notice that even when I was pointing out
that Connie makes millions of dollars a year,
she started to pivot to downplaying it
and minimizing it.
I'm not about to have that on the show.
One of my philosophies is take the win
because if you can't celebrate something along the way,
you're not gonna celebrate it ever.
Connie has done an awesome job with her finances
and I think it's important that she recognizes it.
When did you both realize that you had
such a large differential in finances.
I imagine she knew it from the beginning.
She knew it from the beginning.
Yeah, I think I knew it before West did.
I certainly, yeah.
I remember sitting down, we were sitting down outside of a salad
plays bear day.
And she asked me, she even asked me, she said,
hey, is it a problem for you that she round about said,
is it a problem that you can't do?
You don't bring anything to the table financially.
Oh, gosh, I'm sure I didn't say it that directly.
No, I said round about.
Okay.
I've got to ask the question.
Hold on, hold on, I gotta know what is the round
about way to ask that question.
Connie, how would you say that?
I think maybe in West, you have a better memory than I do,
but I think I probably would have asked,
would you have a problem being in a relationship
if a female makes significantly more money?
So I was very hypothetical.
Hypothetical?
Did that sound hypothetical to anyone?
It'd be like me meeting my wife for the first time and going, would you have a problem
being in a relationship with an Indian guy who has absolutely amazing eyebrows?
There's literally nothing hypothetical about that at all.
That's interesting.
Can I just say, first of all, Wes, would you agree that that might have been how she said
it?
Well, I don't even actually think she got around to the question.
She danced around, she beat around the bush so much that I had to ask the question for her.
And then she finally agreed, yes, that's what I'm saying.
Isn't it interesting that there's the surface level question of how would you feel if a female
partner earned more than you?
And then there's the way you interpret it,
which is how would you feel if you did not add value
to this relationship?
Those seem to be two different things to me.
I mean, I love your insight on that.
And I think in large part, it's my fault
the way that Wes has kind of rearranged that question because I think
I'm in huge part responsible for him sometimes feeling like, what am I bringing to the table?
So when it came to eating out, is that important to the two of you to do it once a month? So, I asked her if I could just even once a year take her out somewhere nice.
And that was a hard comment.
Once a year, Connie, why?
What are you too busy for that?
It's not a time thing.
I think if I knew that he had X-Mount that was going
to retirement savings every month, then with what's left over, I would be comfortable with
him taking me out. You didn't know your parents when they were dating. What do you think they
would have done in your situation where the two of you do not live together, your finances
are not joined? How do you think they would have handled it?
So I do know because my parents talk a lot about that part of their life and it's still how they are.
They didn't go on dates that cost money. They didn't go on vacations. They didn't, they didn't do things that cost money.
Wow. Times are certainly different, aren't they?
So you're all going out to eat that cost money.
How much of your meals cost when you go out to eat?
For me, we don't really do that.
Well, who's picking up these checks?
What checks are we talking about?
That's where the problem is.
Tell me.
And not to say we don't go out,
but I mean,
we had our first real dinner date in the last month.
What, how long have you two been together over a year?
Okay, so you went to that salad place the first time.
Okay, and then.
It was a nice place, we just only got salad
because I didn't think it was fair for me
to buy an actual meal.
So I just got an entree because I didn't, I feel like it's irresponsible for West to be spending money
cultivating this relationship when I think it's more responsible for money to be going into savings for him.
You feel that way about his finances?
Yeah, because I have control issues and I want to...
Yes.
Okay. And Wes, what do you feel about, for example, going out to dinner?
Well, so with what I grew up saying is my dad would take the family out occasionally, wants
every other Friday, like I said, and he would pick up the check.
And so when I have told Connie repeatedly that I would love to take her out to dinner,
let's go do that.
But when we do go to dinner, I would like to pick up the tab, but I get the, I'm not going to call it a scolding, but I get that a little bit of a lecture that's like,
hey, you shouldn't be paying for this.
So one, we shouldn't go out of dinner, and two, when we do go out of dinner,
she's going to pay for it not me.
And it's like, well, I really just want to
take you out, you order whatever you want on the menu and let me pick up a
tab.
And she thinks that's a bad financial decision.
What if she did pay?
What would happen?
She has.
She has before.
And I kind of feel, I feel like she was taking me out more than I was taking her out.
That's because she paid.
Because she paid.
If she's going to be paying for it, it's like, okay, well, then I don't want to choose,
you know, this expensive place with this excellent stake with these sides because I'm not paying
for it.
She is.
And she thinks it's a bad financial decision.
So it's like, okay, well, let's just go to this buffet or whatever. Connie, if you paid for dinner with the two of you, how would you feel about it?
I think it's something that I need to come to terms with.
That, right. Tell me how you would really feel. Then we can talk about what you should feel.
I feel like I'm not getting what I want out of the relationship. And then I also feel like
it's irresponsible of me
to let him take me out to dinner.
I just want to reiterate what's going on here. Connie makes 100 times more than West.
She has six million dollars at the age of 41 and she could stop working today.
Yet her gender beliefs are so strong. The idea that the man should pay and should be a provider,
that she has denied herself and west
the chance to even have dinner out
for virtually their entire relationship.
That is how strong gender roles are.
Tell me about you.
If you paid for dinner for the two of you,
what would you feel about that?
for dinner for the two of you, what would you feel about that?
Can I throw out some words and you tell me which one of these hits would you feel happy?
No.
Would you feel resentful?
I think resentful is a strong word,
but I would feel a little resentful.
What would make me feel a little bit more resentful is if we make the decision to not go out
to dinner because it's in the best interest of his finances, or if we go out to dinner
and if I pick up the tab, because I think that money should go into his savings.
And then, again, I love Wes's family,
but then when I know that Wes and his mom
went out to dinner or he took his nieces
and left you out to volunteer sushi
or went out for a big birthday celebration.
And then I'm like,
and I think resentful is a strong word,
but I'm like, why are we as a couple
making these decisions or probably why I'm I'm making these decisions if that money is going to be spent somewhere else as opposed to going into a retirement account?
You want him to do exactly what you do with money. Is that fair to say?
Yeah, that sounds horrible, but yes.
But he's not you.
Yep.
So instead of focusing on all the things that he doesn't do right with his money, let's
talk for a second about in your opinion, what does he do right?
I am so proud of where he's come in the last 18 months. But he took the risk of starting his own business.
And that's something that so many people talk about
and nobody actually takes that step.
And I'm so proud of him for doing that.
And for getting to where he's gotten is just,
it's mind-blowingly amazing.
Like he's beating odds.
Yeah.
I'm so proud that West, I love you. When we met
the only his only savings was in crypto. And wait, I like to beat up on crypto people as much as
possible, but this is supposed to be you complimenting yes. Just just hold on a second. I'm asking Connie, what do you think he does right?
And we're somehow on how he did all this weird shit with crypto.
Let's just rewind.
Connie, try it again.
Try it again.
What is he doing right with money?
Because to me, it seems like there's a lot going on positively here.
Yeah, so in the last year, he's gotten insurance.
He set up a Roth. I don't, did you max it out or did you just put 5,000 in the last year, he's gotten insurance. He set up a Roth.
I don't, did you max it out or did you just put 5,000 in it?
Yeah, it's not maxed out yet.
Okay, so but he opened up a Roth and I know he's been thinking
about opening up a 401k and in my world,
because I'm such an action person,
I'm like, just don't think about it,
don't read about it, just do it.
Really?
Like just going to the gym every Saturday and Sunday like that?
Oh, we can put it that way.
It's interesting, Connie, because you almost direct this search light over to Wes and
it's blinding in a relationship, we should reframe this entire metaphor.
I don't want one person to have a search light on the other.
What I want is for the two of you to have a joint vision.
It's almost like a series of candles that you light together.
And you decide at some parts of our life,
all of the candles are going to be lit.
And at some parts of our life, some of that is going to be dark because we have other things we need to focus on. But I would
much rather that the two of you create that type of lighting between the two of you rather
than shining a light in the other's eyes.
And that is something that Wes is so much better at than I am and something that he brings
to the relationship and it's
going to make me a better person and it's going to make a relationship stronger because
he does that and I need to work on doing that.
All right, cool.
So what would it look like if the two of you said we are going to go out to eat once
a month.
Would it be possible?
A lot of silence on this call.
Got really quiet.
So it would be possible.
Mm-hmm.
What's your caveat?
Go ahead.
So it kind of goes back to the trust of finances.
And so for example, what and I went out to Vegas,
I had a business meeting out there,
and then West and I were going on vacation for two or three days.
And what was it?
It was a $300 credit that we had at the dinner place.
Yes.
So we had a $300 credit for, it was a nice dinner place.
So we went, I had drinks with my business partner
ahead of time and I knew that we were getting close
to that $300 mark.
And I love the thought of West just kind of being the man
and just making decisions.
I love the theoretical thought of that.
And I had a glass of wine and the waiter asked
if we wanted the whole bottle.
And again, I love the notion of West just taking charge, but I was more on the,
I'm just going to have a glass of wine and West said, let's get the whole bottle.
So next thing you know, dinner cost $400 instead of $300.
And we didn't drink the bottle of wine. And $100 is such a minuscule rounding error.
It doesn't count anywhere in regards to my net worth, but it was the trust issue of
I have to pick up that extra $100.
Jumping in here again to remind you that Connie is worth $6 million.
If I calculate how much $100 is worth to her, it's the equivalent.
Who cares?
I'm not going to do this God for Sagan math.
What would it look like if the two of you were totally aligned on money right now?
When there was super something that was fun and exciting that I wanted to go to, we would
just go do it.
And wouldn't price wouldn't be an issue.
Who would pay?
I would.
Wes, what would it look like if you were aligned about money right now?
Well, that's a pretty difficult question to answer because I feel like that's so not
where we are.
I don't even know what a lining.
I guess perhaps, you know, she's usually traveling.
I also enjoy traveling, but a lining financially. I know perhaps having a place together
and planning out of being able to plan out,
future vacations are not worried about
what the price of the food is
when it brings your store of energy by organic,
which is a little more expensive,
did you get it on sale?
Because it's buy one, get one free,
yeah, things like that.
Aligning financially,
I don't even have a clear,
super clear vision of what that might look like
with us, beyond.
Yeah, yeah, I can hear that.
And so you remain in the weeds.
I ask this question all the time on this podcast.
And almost everyone eventually gives me
a really creative, amazing answer.
But Wes's response is actually the first real sad note
among the three of us.
He has no idea what an aligned life might look like.
That is a pretty honest and stark admission
and one that I hope Connie is hearing.
Obviously there's something a lot deeper
than the $100 going on here because this is not about $100.
It's about setting up trust in your
relationship and it's about creating some rules so the two of you know how the game is played.
Right now there's the game is being played very differently. Connie expects Wes to
live a financial life just like Connie.
That's not possible.
Connie, you have a lifetime of implicit knowledge.
At the same time, there are certain things
that you want in a partner.
Wes, you have this narrative of wanting to be the man
and the man is a provider.
The fact is your partner makes hundreds of times
more than you do.
I can see why it's such a challenge in this relationship.
I'm just going to say that up front.
You know, people tend to be in relationships with people who were raised similarly to them.
The gap between the two of you in terms of just pure finances is vast. The gap in knowledge is vast.
We have to be honest about that. This is a huge financial difference. Now I'm going to ask that
question again, do you think there's a way for the two of you to come up with a joint vision
for your rich life? I do. Okay, Wes? Yes. Wes, let's start with you and your finances. Tell me about what you
want to do in terms of how much you invest every single year. Okay, so this over the past six months,
I have invested more than half of my entire life. Yes, that's awesome. You have a ramp up that is quite dramatic.
You've started to make more money, you've started to become a lot savier.
It's no surprise to me that you've invested more in the last six months than in your entire
life.
I have no problem with that at all.
Warren Buffett made more after the age of like 80 than he did in his entire previous
80 years.
That's how it works, compound interest.
So, okay, but you do invest, would you agree?
Yes.
Okay, what percentage of your income would you like to invest?
Do you think like that?
Not until I filled out the spreadsheet.
So that's right, that's called a conscious spending plan
for everyone listening.
Download it on the episode guide. It's great. So you take home $2,000 a month, right?
You're roughly. What is it? Less than that or more than that? Yeah, I don't pay myself very often.
I pay myself on any to eat. Yeah, that's not a very savvy way of looking at money. Can we talk about that for a second?
I'm serious.
You are artificially paying yourself too little.
So as an entrepreneur,
every entrepreneur does that in the beginning.
They're like, I don't wanna pay myself too much.
I'm gonna put it all back in the business.
That's great.
But eventually they have to pay themselves market rate
because that is a real business.
Otherwise, it's like you're faking
the success of your business at your own expense.
So I don't mind if you pay yourself 2000 right now,
but there's gotta be a path to you paying yourself
3000, 4000 a month, et cetera.
Sure.
How do you feel about that?
I feel like it is definitely going to happen sometime
in the near future.
Great.
OK.
So at 2000 a month, you would invest roughly $400 a month.
Oh, yeah.
Fantastic.
How does that feel, Connie, to hear West say that? So West and I, the other day looked at how much he wanted to get to when he retired and
the amount of money that he would need to start saving on a monthly basis now in order
to get to that point.
Okay.
That number is very different than $400 a month.
Connie, Connie, he already said he's going to invest 20% a month.
That's awesome.
That's awesome.
I'm excited.
Are we creating more problems than we need to create?
I feel like life is hard enough.
We don't need to create more problems.
He agreed.
Let's take the win. Perfect.
Okay.
Wes, I think that is wonderful that you're going to start saving 20% a month. That's huge.
All right, great. So every month, you're now paying yourself a minimum of 2,000 a month,
every month, not just sporadically. That's not how it works anymore. Every month, and every month,
you are going to be taking out a percentage of that automatically investing it.
month and every month you are going to be taking out a percentage of that automatically investing it.
Correct? Yes. Okay. That's already worth like hundreds of thousands of dollars. Fantastic.
All right. Rule number one, set. Here's the principle I'm employing. In your finances,
fight for consistency. What that means is if you have an irregular income, you want to simulate having a consistent income.
You can use the system in chapter five
of my book to do that.
If you have unexpected expenses
that always seem to come up,
sit down and map them all out.
Map them out for the next 12 months,
gifts, cars probably gonna going to break down.
We might have an unexpected leak and on and on and then set money aside for it.
If you randomly invest money here or there, stop it.
Invest a percentage of your income and set it up to happen automatically.
The point is you do not want to be fiddling around with the mechanics of your financial
system. You want to elevate.
And in order to elevate, you need to have as much consistency as possible.
Now, let's watch Connie and Wes create a money rule together.
All right, next up would be something fun.
So, dinner out or drinks or whatever.
What's the rule you all want to create around this?
Wes, I make so many of the decisions in regards to what we do
you're in charge of this one.
I would love to be able to either take her out on a fun night out,
maybe or us to go do a fun activity like recently would zip lining as the matter of fact great something like that
Maybe you know once a month. I think it would be really great for it. Great once a month
What's the ballpark that you're gonna allocate for this in other words? How much are you gonna spend on this thing?
anywhere between
75 to 300 dollars So no bottles of wine anywhere between $75 to $300.
So no bottles of wine.
There we go.
Please, there we go.
What just happened?
I reverted back to my old ways,
because that's really easy for me to do.
What we're trying to do is we're trying to meet each other in a place that allows you
to both co-create these rules.
And if you are consciously or unconsciously saying things that are going to drive back
to where you used to be, then this is one step forward, two steps back, and you're never
going to get where you want to go.
I agree.
Okay.
And honestly, making snarky comments about $100
when you have $6 million is a little distasteful. So let's try that again. How much will be spent
west on this monthly outing? An average of $150.
Okay, great, great, who pays?
So Wes, I'm okay with the average of $75 to $300.
And we've talked about things that Wes wants
in his rich life and part of that involves nice dinners I
Thought West was planning this thing. Oh, isn't West planning it?
We'll do your thing too. Don't worry Connie. I want to hear what you want to do for every month
We'll get to that. I'm just asking who's paying for this outing
I am you are
Yes, so I know West isn't charged, but I'm okay paying for it. If Wes can do number the first role, I would love to take care of the date for the second role.
You guys discuss I'd love to hear how you come to this decision. This is really important one. So talk about it.
So talk about it. Well, sweetheart, you tell me that you want me to pick up the check.
And so I'm trying to pick up the check.
What is it you want to have at?
I think the idea of you putting, of you automating a certain amount going into savings
that you're not going to touch,'s retirement savings on a monthly basis.
That gets me so excited about our potential financial future that I would love to be able to
give you what is your version of a rich life date.
And I would love to just give you my credit card
and you just take care of it.
And I just know that it's going to be between $75
and $300 and I'm just going to trust you with that.
And so you're still taking care of it.
You're doing the chivalrous, manly thing.
You're planning it.
You're coming up with the idea.
You're taking me out.
It's just a minor detail that you have my credit card,
and I'm just going to trust you with that.
It still fulfills everything I'm looking for.
But does it take away?
Less is more, Connie.
Just stop right there.
Wes?
Well, as compromising as that sounds, it's a little, it contradicts itself a little bit
for what we've talked about a couple of times with.
I want you to pick up the tab and that's the worst thing for a man to do.
So I, you know, I don't really know how to feel about that.
I think more than I want you to pick up the tab, I just want to.
Know that we have a financial future together. And just like when my parents used to go out to dinner and my dad would always pick up the tab, I just want to know that we have a financial future
together.
And just like when my parents used to go out to dinner and my dad would always pick up
the bill, but it was with their joint money.
To me is the same thing.
Like you're doing the manly thing and you're taking care of me and you're planning the date that you would love to have.
And when that bill comes, you're going to reach for it and you're just going to give
them the credit card that's in with you, then I'm okay with that.
And I feel like it's a good first step and we just trusting, like that we have these
boundaries that it's $75 to $300 and it's the beginning of a good trust situation.
Okay.
Does that take away,
you feeling like you're not providing?
Well, it's more supposed to be a fun evening for us to just enjoy time with each other than
it is, you know, me strictly providing.
So if you feel like me putting X percent into savings every month is more of providing
than, you know, really, the one evening a month is really just supposed to be having fun and enjoying each other's company.
Can I step in for a second? Sure.
There's so many stories at play here. There's the gender issues of a man needs to be providing. And both of you use that story.
Just to be very candid, when Connie has $6 million
and makes $2.4 million a year, it will be very hard for any man
to financially provide.
There are lots of different ways to provide
in a relationship.
Lots.
What did we say about a partner who just had children and she's staying
home? Is she not providing at all? Of course not. She's providing. What might we say about
a man who got laid off and is taking three months, staying home with the children and helping
them read every day? Right? Or we're doing whatever. Other things around the house
are providing emotional intimacy,
taking the lead on housework.
Is he providing?
I think so.
It's just not part of our culture, is it?
Wes provides in me in so many ways.
You guys want to let these dumb stories about gender roles,
dictate you being able to go out to one dinner per month?
It seems crazy to me.
And the fact is we can choose our roles.
Do you realize how lucky we all are?
To be able to choose the role that we have?
Do you know 50 years ago this couldn't have happened?
And do you know that in your parent, or certainly your mom or grandmother's time, some of them
couldn't get bank accounts or credit cards without their husbands?
And yet we get the chance to choose our roles.
If you let these stories you were taught, if you believe them, then you are depriving yourself of even one
dinner per month. Is that really what you want to do?
If you were just looking at their incomes alone, this entire conversation would seem silly,
but it's not silly. It's real.
These gender roles are frustrating and aggravating, and they're also real.
Gender roles and other parts of culture are never written down as a formal set of rules,
but they are nonetheless real.
So real that they persist for generations.
They're passed down in the stories we read,
the movies we watch, even the rituals we participate in,
like who reaches for the check.
But if you're fortunate enough to recognize your culture
and you have the freedom to choose,
then you're in the enviable position
of being able to decide what kind of life
you want to create for yourself.
Don't take this for granted. Do you really want to let a story you were told dictate your
ability to spend time with each other?
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So West plans dinner for the 15th of the month, let's say.
And you know, it's a surprise, and he plans this thing.
When, by the way, for everyone, Connie's clapping right now. She's like so excited.
That's cool. West, that's a big
tell, isn't it? Yeah. All right.
And what's this idea? West is smiling too.
I love this idea.
Okay. This is great. So when does West get your credit card, Connie?
Is it any anytime?
Okay. West, when would you get it?
when would you get it? Probably, or when I picked it up from a house.
So you pick it up and then tell me what you're going to say.
See what I'm getting into this right now?
Because this credit card handover is very symbolic for the two of you, isn't it?
Yeah. It's all what, what is it symbolize? Connie?
Me trusting him. Yeah. You're literally handing over trust. And West, what is it symbolize to you
when you ask for their credit card or you receive the credit card?
Am I allowed to jump in? No.
What is that about me that I am willing to
let her pay for it and not to guilt about that or shame.
Yeah.
You are rewriting your own identity as a man.
You choose.
That's tough because something like...
Here.
Go ahead, Keep talking. I have never been in a relationship where I have asked
my significant other for their part. Have you ever been in a relationship where you
were making $2,000 a month? Oh, and have you ever been in a relationship
where at the time you were making $2,000 a month,
your partner was making $200,000 a month?
Sorry.
So Wes, how do you get the credit card from Connie?
Seems to me like you don't wanna ask for it.
Am I right?
I love my, I'm a real bad hesitant. Yes.
Yeah.
Okay.
I can understand that.
So let's find another way.
Let's make our own symbols.
Connie, any ideas here so that Wes really does not want to have to ask for it.
Do you know why he doesn't want to have to ask for it?
It's not manly.
Doesn't fit into that story.
Yeah.
So, this is an easy one to just short cut.
So, what do you want to do to make it easy?
I, he shows up, he knocks at the door.
I give him a big hug and a kiss and I just hand it to him and I don't, I don't say anything.
Okay.
Wes?
Sure.
It's going to take an adjustment.
Try it the first time.
Maybe it works.
Maybe it's awkward.
But the two of you, be able to have a conversation.
And can you imagine a conversation where Wes goes, you know, I have to say, it felt
a little weird to me.
I wonder if there's something else we could do.
You know, could we call ahead? Could we leave the credit card on the dining table?
Is there something else because it just feels awkward to me?
And I want this to feel really good for both of us.
Connie, would you be open to having that conversation?
Yes.
Wes, if you feel like it's a little weird to you,
would you be willing to have that conversation and bring it up?
Sure. Okay, great. There we to have that conversation and bring it up?
Sure. Okay, great. There we go. And you know what's funny?
You might be surprised. Maybe your parents had exactly this conversation 30 years ago, 40 years ago.
Who knows? We never know what happens behind closed doors. Well, except on this podcast, it's called the I Will Teach You To Be Rich Podcasts, real stories from behind closed doors. Well, except on this podcast, it's called, I will teach you to be rich podcasts,
real stories from behind closed doors. Who plugs their own show on their own show? What is wrong
with me? Oh my God. I got to go back to marketing 101. All right. So, you know, what I love about
this is you to get to create your own rules. And I love getting into the details of where does the credit card happen, when the check
comes, who takes, but now you've created a set of rules for yourself.
Listen, I'm going to promote my own podcast on my own podcast until you go and leave me
a review on Apple podcasts.
So if you enjoy the show, please go rate and review it. As for Connie and Wes, that was awesome to watch them create a rule together.
Let's make another rule. This time, tied to Wes's growing income.
And this is part of making his finances more consistent and predictable.
Now, let's create another rule.
Because eventually, I have a lot of confidence that Wes' business is gonna grow.
So Wes, talk to me about when you start paying yourself more.
Let's just say you go from 2000 a month to,
what would be the next level you start paying yourself?
35?
3500 a month.
Sure.
Okay, great.
What changes for you when you pay yourself from 2,000 a month
to 3,500 a month? I know I need to buy nice clothes to take
her out because that's been a conversation. Can I give some guidance here?
Sure, yes, please, please save me.
One of the things that differentiates the rich from everybody else is the rich plan
for things before they need it.
So let's take a second right now and actually plan what you're going to do with the money. Because if you don't, it'll just get invisibly absorbed into your life.
Okay, you want to spend a little bit more on clothes? Fantastic. That would be easily done
with you paying yourself $1,500 more per month. What else? Maybe something regarding
Connie, something about how you've wanted to do some fun stuff and maybe
pay for it completely on your own.
What might that be?
Certainly, if we could do some fun activity, or if we were to go along vacation because
she enjoys traveling, if there's a particular excursion or something that I wanted to go
on, that I wanted us to go on and say, hey, you know, we're out, let's go to the excursion. something that I wanted to go on and I wanted us to go on and say, maybe I need, you know, we're out.
Let's go to the excursion.
Let's go to the spot.
How much per month?
No idea.
Ballpark it.
Well,
yeah,
when we were doing the conscious spending plan,
Wes was putting in some of his numbers
and I was like, that doesn't.
Yeah, I said 500 a month and he was like what vacation are we going to go off
500 a month and I was like, well, why is that too high or too low?
It's incredibly too low.
Is it?
Connie, you look like she's like trying to bite her tongue right now.
Connie, is that too low or too high?
I'm confused.
Just spit it out.
I thought a lot of his numbers were a little bit on the low side.
Can I just tell you, people when they do their first conscious spending plan,
it's a disaster.
They don't know anything.
They don't even know how much they make.
I'm not joking.
People go, I don't know how much I make.
I go, what?
Do you not get a paycheck? They literally do not know the basic numbers, but that's okay. The
first time they do it, like none of the numbers add up, you know, like one of the spreadsheets,
it's supposed to have a dollar value in it. It says like Mars. I'm like, what in the hell
is happening right now? But that's fine. It would be like the first time I try to weld something.
I don't even know which direction to point this, whatever it's called. That's fine. We learn, we adapt it, and we go, okay, second version, third version.
Each time gets a little easier.
Don't worry, no one ever does their conscious spending plan right the first time.
It takes time to get it right. It takes multiple versions. It's no big deal.
If you want help filling out your CSP, just join the community in our coaching program
and you can see how other people have done it too.
All right, back to Connie and Wes.
Wes, let's say you want to do something for Connie.
You want to go out to a lunch or you two go out and have a glass of wine once a month,
how much would it cost?
Let's be conservative.
Brass, just go to lunch.
Yeah.
What do you, $45?
$50?
Great.
Let's say a hundred bucks,
because it's two of you and maybe you get a drink
or something.
A hundred bucks a month,
this gives you both a chance to go out a second time
per month. You've got that first dinner, which Wes is planning, Connie is paying, although Wes is
physically handing over the credit card.
Great.
We've got a second opportunity to go out, and this time Wes is planning and paying for
it, 100 bucks. How do you feel, Wes?
Yeah, sure. So I mean, I would love to any extra time would be, would be great. I think it's not
so much about, it's not so much about the money for me is that it is, you know, just spend
it time with each other and enjoying each other's company and having experience. So I haven't been
out to, I haven't really been out to really nice
places. Connie, she stayed at like bridge crawltops. She's been on private jets. She's done some
incredible things. And I've, the nicest place I've been, I've been a hall-straw
house where they have like a $70 stake. And I'm like, oh, wow, what a tree this is. I've been there once in my life. Does it feel intimidating to go to the nicer places?
Not necessarily intimidating,
it's just as it's quite the opposite.
It's like, wow, what a fantastic tree this is.
This is excellent.
And, but that's something she does for work
on a regular basis.
Like the nicest place in town
probably knows her when she walks in.
And so what does that feel like to you?
But it would still be an awesome experience for me
because I would love it, but it's a little...
I'm almost like, well, I think I would enjoy it more
than she would, but like I say, it's more for the experience for me because it's
something that I am not accustomed to. And so that is an experience that's like, wow,
this is nice. This is, I feel like a king walking through here.
You know, Wes, I don't mind you seeing it as a new experience. I think that's really
cool. And I bet you Connie would enjoy seeing that as well
I remember the first time that my wife and I went to a really nice hotel together
Just to see her reactions and her experiencing that for the first time it felt incredible
And so even though Connie may have gone to that restaurant for work many times
It's a totally different experience with an intimate partner.
And I bet it just be fun to see you enjoying it.
I think that would be amazing.
Connie, what do you think about that?
I fully agree with what you're saying.
I think going out to a nice dinner
is much more of Wes's rich life than my rich life,
but I'm really excited,
because we haven't,
except for the one time in Vegas,
like in our hometown, we've never been to a nice dinner.
And I'm excited to share that with you.
How do I become more comfortable feeling like there still may not be enough going into monthly
savings for West and not feeling like I'm doing
something that's irresponsible for both of us by allowing him to pay.
How much more would West need to be contributing in order for you to feel good? Contributing
to his investment accounts.
3000 a month.
No, West, you already knew that number off the top of your head. Obviously, you
two have talked about that. We recently ran some numbers and in order for him to get to where
he wanted at the time he wanted to retire, he would need to invest 3,000 a month, assuming 8%.
Compound interest. Have you two of you talked about getting married at some point?
There's it too early. We have not. Okay. I would love to make a long term commitment.
Okay.
So, Wes.
Are you about to have this conversation right now?
I said real stories. Okay, it's real. That's amazing. Okay. So you believe Connie that if he invested
$3,000 a month, that he would have enough for his future retirement goals. And how would you feel if he's doing that?
I would have full confidence that he's completely financially independent
and I would fully trust him in making money decisions
and I would know that we can combine our finances and...
You think you would start feeling, do you really think you would feel differently
if he was contributing 3,000 a month? Do you think you would start feeling, do you really think you would feel differently if
he was contributing 3,000 a month?
Because I'm not so sure.
And actually I think I would.
And then I think about the most recent podcast I listened to that you did of a lady that
just had a double lung transplant.
And even though she has a defined amount of time left, she still has the exact same money beliefs.
So maybe, maybe I'm completely wrong and I wouldn't.
Yeah, you wouldn't.
Okay.
You think you would, but you wouldn't.
I appreciate that.
Yeah.
Here's the thing, the way you feel about money
is highly uncorrelated with the amount in the bank.
In this case, it's also uncorrelated
with how much West is investing.
Now, do I think that West should invest more?
Yeah, over time, absolutely. But the fact that he's already
put $5,000 into a Roth IRA is very impressive. The fact that he
has willingly committed to a percentage of income going to
investments, very impressive.
And as, Wes, as you pay yourself more, you keep that percentage of where it is.
It's going to be great for you.
Great. And you sure you could even put more in, right?
Do a 401k if your company decides to offer it or taxable account.
There's lots of options you have.
But that's not really going to change the way you feel, Connie.
Something I need to work on. Connie, I would just flip it and say, you know, think of some of your friends, for example,
what if the husband was earning $2, $3 million a year, or let's say the guy, and in his,
in this relationship, the girlfriend was not earning that much. And, you know, before they got married, he said, well, I really want her to be, like,
get on top of her finances.
So his girlfriend paid off her debt.
She started investing.
Of course, she's never going to catch up to how much he has, but that's not the point.
And they got married.
How do you think that relationship would play out?
Just fine. Just fine.
Just fine.
So many relationships have played out in the past.
But now we have a lot of situations
where young women are earning more than young men
in urban areas in their 20s.
And women are getting more college degrees.
This is gonna be much more common than it is now.
So you're really encountering something that you may not have a lot of
people to talk about with, but it's happening more and more.
I just need to let go of that control.
Okay. Here are some of the rules that I've heard for you to create for each other.
The first is that Wes is automatically investing a certain percentage of his income.
His income is $2,000 a month at least, and he's just taken a percentage.
We talked about 20.
You're going to go through the conscious spending plan and adjust it to make sure that that makes sense.
Sure. you're going to go through the conscious spending plan and and adjust it to make sure that that makes sense.
Second thing I heard was an agreement that once a month you're going to go out to dinner,
the amount that you've agreed on is between 75 to is it $300 a month?
Correct. Yeah. Why don't we just say up to $300?
All right. Great. And you have an agreement about how that credit card is going to be handled,
two of you will do it. And if it doesn't work the first time, it feels weird. Fix it, right? It's just like the conscious spending plan. The first time's probably going to be weird. And then
you just talk about it and change it. No big deal. And the third agreement was as Wes starts to pay
himself more, Wes, you're going to go from 2,000 a month to at some point 3,500 a month,
you're going to take 30 bucks of that every month and spend it on clothes on average, and you're going to take 100 bucks a month
and spend it on some outing with Connie, whatever it may be, lunch, drink, whatever, and it's totally
yours.
How do you feel about that?
Both of you.
I think it's great.
Okay, I like this.
I like seeing, coming to some agreements, I liked it, it's personalized for the two of
you.
Like, pretty much, very few people in the world have ever had an agreement like the two of you.
This is the amount we're gonna go out this much.
We even have like a secret ritual
of the credit card handoff.
Like, that's just the two of you.
I kind of love it.
A rich life should be personalized.
It should fit you like a handmade glove.
And the more and more you dial that rich life in,
the more and more it should be
personal, be spoke. It should even be bewildering to other people. But we're not concerned
with other people. We're not concerned with society's definition of a man and a woman.
I'm just concerned with the two of you creating and co-creating your rich life.
I love it. rich life. I really enjoyed speaking with Connie and Wes. They have a unique
situation. He earns $2,000 a month. She earns $200,000 a month. Have you ever met a
couple like that? And can you imagine if you were in that situation, how you and your
partner would relate to money?
What I did notice is that they care about each other and they're trying to figure out a way to make this relationship work
And they were brave enough to ask for help. I appreciate that
If you are looking for a way to improve your finances, you have a lot of options
You can get my books from Amazon or any independent bookstore or library.
You can get the free, conscious spending plan at iwt.com slash episode 65, or you can go
to the next level.
If you don't want to do it alone and you want help and get your questions answered directly
from me, you can sign up for my money coaching program.
You'll get live monthly coaching sessions hosted
by me and we'll be covering topics like, do you need to worry about inflation or gas prices?
And also, how do you find an extra $100, $500 or $1000 a month? You'll get access to the
Rich Life community and you will be able to meet other people like you.
You can sign up at iwt.com slash money coaching.
Thanks for listening to the podcast.
Tune in next week to hear a very different conversation about love and money with Beth
and John, who are discussing pre-nubs right before're wedding. Is this tough to talk about? Because I can't. I didn't want to be a burden.
Is this tough to talk about?
Yeah, avoidance is a huge tactic for me, and has been a previous financial tactic for me for a while.
John did try.
Like, we would talk about finances.
I just didn't have the ability to comprehend.
A lot of times it also felt really overwhelming to be coming from a place of
former scarcity to now feeling like I have to learn a bunch of new rules.
You do.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich. I'm Remiith Saiti.
Please follow the show on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
If you haven't read, I will teach you to be rich.
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for how to build the I will teach you to be rich system into your personal finances.