I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 67. “We spend $3,000/month on groceries for our 5 kids, and it’s ruining us”
Episode Date: November 1, 2022Jim and Kasey are 45 and 41 with 5 young kids. They’ve been married for 18 years. But they admit that they don’t even know how they’ve made it this long with the serious communication problems i...n their relationship—specifically as they relate to money. Kasey goes about her life avoiding money, mostly unaware that they’re dipping into their savings each month to get by—even though Jim got a big raise recently. On the other hand, Jim knows the truth in their numbers but bottles up his emotions. When he tries to talk with Kasey about money, he does it in a way that Kasey can’t—or refuses to—grasp. In a few months, they won’t have any savings left. There’s too much at stake for them to continue on this destructive path. Let’s see if we can get them on the same page. Connect with Ramit Conscious spending plan Get the follow up Website Instagram Twitter Facebook YouTube Linkedin If you and your partner have a money issue and you want my help, I occasionally select a couple to work with, free of charge. Apply for my help here. Produced by Crate Media.
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So basically he asked me on a date to go to dinner.
And I'm like, great, we get the kids to bed,
we leave a little later than we had planned.
So the place that he wanted to take me was closed.
So we leave the house,
doesn't even mention the fact that he invited me to dinner.
Just drives to the store.
I'm like, I thought we were going to dinner.
Well, the place I was gonna take you closed.
And the reason that he wanted to go to that place
was because we had a buy one, get one free,
and he had a gift card.
So he could take me to dinner and spend $0.
Once that option was off the table, dinner not a word.
We didn't even mention a print,
pretended like it wasn't even said.
And it's been almost 18 years since you've been married.
What's your advice for everyone listening
who wants to have a long marriage?
What would you tell them?
Not to ask. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I would you tell him? Not to ask us.
Good.
We're doing it all wrong, I don't know.
Do you believe that?
Yes.
Really why?
I feel like it's been 18 years of just hanging on.
Really?
Yeah.
So we're here, we did it, we're doing it, but.
Gosh, that's tough to hear.
If we continue on this path in a few short months,
we will get to the point where the money will be gone
and we won't have enough.
Wow, I've been married for four years
and I never want to just be hanging on.
Jim and Casey are 45 and 41 years old. They have five kids
and for the last 18 years of their marriage, they've mostly avoided talking about money.
But now they are dipping into their savings every single month to cover their expenses
and they are running out of money. Listen in as I talk to them to try to find out what's going on.
I'm Ramit Saiti and this is the I Will Teach You to Be Rich podcast.
Casey, can you remember a time in the last month where you were not on the same page with Jim
when it comes to money?
Today is an example.
I went to Costco and I bought snacks for kids' school lunches.
We have lots of kids that take school lunches.
They need the things to fill their lunch boxes.
So to me, I didn't buy extras, I didn't spend more than needed.
I just got the things and they might go through them quickly
which he thinks is unnecessary.
So I went and the whole time I'm thinking,
as he's helping me unload the groceries.
I'm thinking, he is thinking,
we don't need this.
These kids don't need this.
And did he say that to you?
Jim never really says anything.
He just quietly suffers.
Like, it's stressing him out greatly.
And he doesn't really ever share that.
We don't talk well about money,
so I think he's scared to bring it to the table.
So he'll be checking finance's daily
until he'll be freaking out,
and I have no idea.
He just quietly is annoyed until it boils over.
And it's this huge fight.
I said, fine, and this is on repeat, this conversation.
I say, fine, I won't spend the money anymore.
You spend the money.
You do the grocery shopping, because I don't think
he understands how expensive things are or how much it costs
to feed a family or just places that are financed as go.
What was the last time that it all boiled over?
What happened?
But the explosion came where he says,
I come home with groceries and he says,
just so you know, there's no money in the account.
And like, there's no money in the account.
And to me, I've gone to the point where I think he exaggerates.
So in my mind, that's not true.
So then, and then it just turns into fight, I say,
I knew you do the grocery shopping, you do the spending,
and he says, I don't want to do that.
I want to do this with you.
And then I say, fine, just give me a, give me a budget,
tell me what I need to stay with in and I will.
And that was the beginning of September.
And I've stuck to that and
So did that solve it?
I
Don't know he would have to tell me if there's more money in the account. I don't know
Okay, how much money do you think is in the account?
I have no idea like is it a thousand or a hundred thousand?
Definitely not a hundred thousand.
If I had to guess in my mind, I'm thinking there's like eight thousand spread across
some different accounts.
I don't know.
Do you want to know?
I don't know.
Yes, sometimes and sometimes no.
Jim makes enough money that we can live off and we do.
And this has been working for 18 years.
And he's been crying the same wolf since year one.
There's no money.
We have no money.
And we have gotten by for 18 years paying our mortgage every month paying our
cars whatever you know fill in the blank. Already I hear red flags from Casey she accuses her husband
of crying wolf which is really a devastating accusation in a relationship because if you can't
trust your partner you're gonna have a very difficult time
doing anything constructive.
I hear that she doesn't know how much money is in the account.
And when I ask if she wants to know her answer is,
she doesn't know.
Let's hear from Jim.
Jim, would you say that it's been working
for the last 18 years?
I think you'd have to define what working is. Like she said, he makes enough money to pay for
whatever we want to do. But I don't think it's ever really considered what that means.
So about a year ago, we had over $25,000 in savings.
And today, she's spot on. We have 8,000 left.
So month over month, I have to pull from savings
just to pay our monthly bills.
And that's not sustainable.
Like if we continue on this path,
in a few short months,
we will get to the point where the money will be gone
and we won't have enough.
Okay.
Casey, what do you think hearing about the savings account being depleted?
In my mind, I'm like, it works out.
I don't know how it works out, but it does.
So we have been here before.
It works out how? I don't know. We get it, we get a tax return,
or we get whatever it, and somehow it works out. So would you be comfortable at this point,
keeping things the way they are, keeping the spin? No. Okay. I mean, I would like a large
some saved up to fall back on.
I mean, how much?
I don't know, are we shooting bigger?
We shooting realistically.
You tell me.
I would like at least 50,000, just to begin that nested state,
just to fall back on.
I have to cut in here to highlight what's going on.
I often hear people saying, I want $25,000
in my checking account.
Now where they got that number is a mystery,
not just to me, but to themselves.
When I ask them, why'd you pick that number?
They have no idea.
People think that having some certain arbitrary number
will make them feel less safe, less worried,
but it won't.
And you can hear it in Casey's voice.
50,000, and what would happen if you had $50,000
in a bank account?
I don't know. I guess Jim would feel comfortable and I would feel comfortable. We would still
keep doing what we're doing. I don't think you reach a certain number and then you just
stop doing what you're doing. How do you feel about money today, Casey?
I just feel like it's something necessary to live and to use.
I don't feel like I need more money.
I don't feel like Jim needs to make more money.
I don't feel like I need a bigger house or a better car.
I feel like we live responsibly.
Like, we don't live beyond our means.
Well, you are depleting your savings every month.
Yeah.
Okay.
Sometimes I think people really love to fool themselves.
They just say things that aren't true and they really convince
themselves that it's true. Listen here, just two minutes ago, Jim said they're spending more than
they make. In fact, they went from $25,000 in savings to $8,000 and that they are spending money
unsustainably. Minutes later, Casey says,
we live responsibly, like we don't live beyond our means.
I'm sharing this because part of living a rich life
is being honest, honest with yourself
and honest with the people around you.
If Casey can't be honest,
and Casey and Jim can't listen to each other,
they're not gonna be able to make a change.
I feel like Jim, his number one priority, would be the money. And I feel like if we could tackle that
and get that under our belt, I feel like he kind of holds a lot of other things in their relationship hostage until we get that figured out.
I think that's probably an oversimplification, but sure, I can see how that would come across that.
I would love to be in a situation where our money was working for us. Because right now I spend a lot of time working for money.
At some point, I'd like to retire.
Okay.
So you want to invest more, have your money grow.
Yeah.
So that one day, you can retire.
But I don't want that to be our only focus.
We've got younger kids.
Be awesome to be able to make a yearly trip with them a priority
and something that's just, it's on the books and it happens, like we just, we make it happen.
How many children and what are the ages?
We have five.
Our oldest is 15, then 13, then 9, 7, and 5.
Okay.
Alright.
Five children, one income.
Yes, we agree before we got married,
that we would like to stay home while our kids were just
in the young stage.
And I think we both would agree we want to continue to do that.
And right now it sounds like money creates a rift in the relationship
for everything.
Costco,
his shoes. His shoes.
For sure. Is that fair?
For sure. I think though that that is somewhat one sided.
Because I, if she felt that way coming in today with that stuff, that's not never crossed my mind. Not one time. I have no problems at all.
So I don't. I have gone problems at all. So I know.
I have gone to the grocery store with him.
It's not pleasant.
He is like, do we really need that?
Are you sure?
And he's just like the looks.
And if he goes to the grocery store,
if you send somebody to the grocery store
and you tell them just to buy a gallon of milk,
how often does that person come back with just a gallon?
No. Very likely. I do. This guy does. This guy does. He is one focus. It's all about work. It's all about
there's not much play involved in there. And I feel like the throwing the candy bar in the car
is the joy in life. Like it's the unexpected. It's the it's the thrill of just I don't know, you know,
throwing the chocolate in there.
And there is no chocolate with him.
It is all just milk.
Got it.
Okay.
And it's been almost, what, 18 years since you've been married.
Congratulations.
What's your advice for everyone listening who wants to have a long marriage?
What would you tell them? Not to ask us.
We're doing it all wrong, I don't know.
Do you believe that?
Yes.
Really why?
I feel like it's been 18 years of just hanging on.
Really?
Yeah.
So we're here.
We did it.
We're doing it.
But.
Gosh, that's tough to hear
I've been married
four years and
Thank you, and I don't want to just hang on
So if I can help today
Then I would consider it a gift because 18 years five children
I don't want you to just hang on I would like it a gift because 18 years five children,
I don't want you to just hang on. I would like for you to thrive and have some fun.
And I do think money is an important part of it.
It's clearly causing some issues.
So I like to be able to help a little bit.
Damn, five kids, and that's how she describes their relationship.
You know, we've all heard these jokes about the old ball and chain.
I hate those jokes, but this is beyond joking.
It really shows that there's a lack of trust in the relationship and a lack of security.
I want to hear from Jim now. All right, Jim, are you an extreme
frugalista?
Tell the truth.
In my definition of that, no.
Well, extreme frugalistas never
admit it.
They always say stuff like this.
I'm just selective with how I
spend.
I don't really need to waste a lot
of money. I'm content with just a little bit.
And then meanwhile, their partners over here,
like, we've been married 18 years.
Oh.
That was a good impression of Casey, by the way.
Thank you.
Are you an extreme frugalista?
Probably.
Can I get an example that might help you see?
Oh, suddenly.
Suddenly, we got the examples coming up. Go ahead,
Casey. He asked me to go get something to eat. So basically he asked me on a date to go to dinner,
right? And I'm like, great. Then we get the kids to bed. We leave a little later than we had planned.
So the place that he wanted to take me was closed. So we leave the house. We are going to run an
errand. Doesn't even mention the fact that he invited me to dinner,
just drives to the store.
I'm not tell how we are going to dinner.
Well, the place I was gonna take you closed
and the reason that he wanted to go to that place
was because we had a buy-win get-on-free
and he had a gift card.
So he could take me to dinner and spend $0.
Once that option was off the table, dinner not a word.
We didn't even mention a print,
pretended like it wasn't even said.
Jim.
Guilty.
What?
That's actually what happened?
Well,
sure, I can't justify any of it.
Okay.
Are you extremely frugal?
No, I just don't spend any money.
Not create still on me,
because when you say like we're in financial ruin
and Jim spends no money,
then obviously the ruiner and the problem here is me, right?
Because you have somebody that spends absolutely no money.
So when we're in financial
ruin, it's all my fault. Because I do do all the spending, but it's because he doesn't buy
it. Or they give nothing. I buy all his families, but they give his parents. I do all of the spending.
You know, one thing that I noticed with couples who are not on the same financial page is they
The thing that I notice with couples who are not on the same financial page is they almost never have a joint vision, a joint vision of where they want their money to go.
And because they lack that, they inevitably point fingers at each other.
Or in this case, Casey, you're actually pointing fingers at yourself.
I really am trying to do my best. I feel like I'm not, I'm not being crazy. And I like,
yeah, I see so many people that are out there just like spending and spending. And I go with friends
and we go on out to dinner and I'm trying to be conscious and I am trying. I believe you.
But I do know I can do better.
You can hear the frustration in Casey's voice.
But you can also hear the assumption that it's her grocery spending that's gotten them
to this place.
I doubt that.
And of course, it doesn't help that Jim has these odd behaviors with money.
We haven't always been here
because we managed to accrue a pretty significant amount
of savings just by contributing every month
to putting the money in these bank accounts.
So that was pretty cool.
And I don't know what's happened.
Gas sort of costing $5.
Ains sort of costing seven dollars for 18.
And I just feel like he's not accounting for for some of that.
Have you all talked about that?
I try and that's why I say maybe you should do
the grocery shopping because that's not really talking about it.
That's just shifting the burden to someone else.
Why don't we just talk about it right now?
How about that?
We don't need to talk about it because I'm aware enough
to know that everything's more expensive. But you say, I don't know what happened. You're like, I don't need to talk about it because I'm aware enough to know that everything's more expensive.
But you say, I don't know what happened. You're like, I don't know what happened. And I'm trying to tell you our kids got older.
Like, their sports got more expensive or whatever.
And gas got more expensive. I do a lot of running around, a lot of running around driving our kids to and from school, from activities.
So we spend a lot of gas and that's just a small obviously area of where maybe some of that's going. But- So I guess that the disconnect is if I have to transfer $4,000 out of our savings
account to pay the credit card bill this month? Is that all because of
the increasing gas prices and groceries? So I don't have a view into that. So I literally don't know.
Gosh, I feel like you two are so close, but you're also on repeat.
Each of you just repeating your own lines. If you only knew, like I said, those exact
words, like we're so close, like there's just one thing that we just can't like, yeah, we can't
get past that thing. And if we could, like, I'm going to go out on a limb here because I know you both
sent over a conscious spending plan before we got on the call. Casey, I'm gonna guess you had nothing to do with preparing that document.
No.
No.
No.
Do you see the problem?
Yes, but I also see the problem that like
we literally cannot work together.
Like, well, why do you think I'm here?
Yes, exactly.
But I have to come beforehand.
All of that planning had to come
beforehand. And it's just, it's insurmountable of fills between the two of us. Okay. Jim, the
conscious spending plan is made to be done by both partners. Question for you. Did you
go to Casey and ask her to help you put it together.
Directly, no. I alluded to it and said, hey, we gotta do this stuff,
but I never asked her to deal with me.
Why?
Cause I don't wanna deal with the fight.
Yeah.
You both don't wanna talk about the price of eggs
because you'll be a fight.
You don't want to talk about how much you spend at Costco because the kids are older because
of cause of fight.
You don't want to do a conscious spending plan before you talk to me.
This is a big deal.
Millions of people listen to this and you have a chance to have somebody come and help
you.
18 years of as you put it holding on and you don't want to have that conversation
either. It's not that I don't want to have the conversation but to your point already like we're
on repeat it's the same conversation over and over again. And I actually think that you both do
yourselves a disservice by retreating into your corners and playing this who-who game. You guys are going
bankrupt pretty soon. What does it get you? Casey, what does it get you to go and repeat?
Let's get you something. I don't know. When you asked that question, I was like, seriously,
it's me nothing. But maybe if I'm digging, things stay the same.
And if they stay the same, what does that mean?
That means I don't have to do a budget.
I don't have to, I don't know, cut out the kids piano.
I don't know.
Yeah. And did you catch what you said earlier that
things always work out?
So maybe I don't need to change
because they always seem to work out.
Yeah.
Yeah, I can see where we're coming from.
Yeah.
Think about, even when you were 20 years old
and you were about, you had gone to college
and then you were getting a house or an apartment and a car.
And things kind of worked out, didn't they? How did they work out?
I don't know. I paid for your wedding.
My parents who paid who helped pay for the car.
My parents. I wasn't entitled. I wasn't. I wasn't spoiled.
I don't think you were entitled. I just want to say that I wasn't entitled. I wasn't, I wasn't spoiled. I don't think you were entitled.
I just want to say that.
I did have help.
Yeah.
You did have help.
A lot of people have helped fair enough.
Doesn't mean you're a bad person.
When was the last time you engaged with the numbers
when it came to money?
Like the beginning of the month when Jim gave me the paper
that had all of the numbers on it.
Well, that's, I don't know if I would call that engaging, that is reading a piece of paper
somebody gave to you. How about before then? I mean, we've tried to do this other times where
it was the same situation. It's just him giving me a printout or like a graph. He likes to give me graphs and do the graphs meet anything to you?
The graphs are colored and they show me like this is where we spend at Walmart. Does it need you emotionally?
Does it change anything does it make you feel anything?
No, okay, so why don't we just stop doing that?
No. Okay. So why don't we just stop doing that? For everybody listening, if you give your partner a 300 page document full of charts and they use it to like the fireplace that night, that might be a coup that a different way. But Casey, I hope you're also hearing that, you have not engaged with the numbers.
Would you agree?
Totally.
I think I'm scared to engage in the numbers
because I feel like we've all short.
Like we have this life where our kids are in these things.
And I feel like if I'm involved in the numbers, then I see like some
or all of this has to go.
And I just, I don't, I don't feel like I'm ready to face that, I guess.
Thank you for being honest.
This is a moment of honesty. I hear this all the time.
From men and women that they just do not engage with money.
They don't know how.
They're afraid for some reason.
Whatever it is.
Now, Jim and Casey both shared with me that they grew up middle class, that their families
were modest spenders, but they didn't really talk about money around the house.
So let's take a look at those numbers.
Before coming on this call, I had Jim in case you fill out a conscious spending plan.
This is a simple document that breaks your spending into four major categories.
Fix costs, saving, investing, and guilt-free spending.
You can find a link in the show notes and get your own copy of the CSP.
This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. On this podcast, you've heard me recommend therapy to a lot of couples. Some of the couples are already seeing therapists, which I love.
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Okay, why don't we look at the numbers? How about that?
It's great.
There's only one problem. Kasey has no idea what these numbers are. Kasey, you gotta open
the dock.
I can't get to her.
I have to print it out.
Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh my god, she's literally holding up a clipboard.
Yeah.
She's holding up a clipboard with the printed out conscious spending plan.
It's all sitting here waiting for me on the couch.
Okay, I have to say,
I do admire the logistics of printing out a spreadsheet.
I have to say that is a little weird, but I admire it.
This is really weird.
And you just know that Jim printed it out for Casey.
She's never looked at these numbers.
I can guarantee you that.
And I can also guarantee you that they mean nothing to her. But I want to work through it with both of them.
I'll take even the smallest win right now. Casey, I see you looking at these numbers.
Have you ever looked at these numbers before? Yes. Like I said, he's given me these papers before.
Yes. Like I said, he's given me these papers before.
Yeah.
And to me, it just, it doesn't add up.
So then I'm like, I go into panic mode.
So then now both of us are freaking out.
Let's not panic.
And there's no way to bring the panic in.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, but that's why I'm here.
Today I'm your anti-panic guy, okay? All the panic comes up in the room
and I'm gonna absorb it for you
and I'm gonna help redirect us somewhere constructive.
That sounds great.
So without looking at that Casey,
just look at me please.
How much money do you have?
How much money do we have?
Yeah.
In the bank?
I don't know, total.
I have no idea.
Okay, start with what you know.
8,000.
That would be like in our savings account.
I don't know that we have any money
in our checking account.
And your assets are indicated as 655,000.
Jim, what is that from besides the house at $550,000?
Just the vehicles we have.
Okay. Got it. Your investment's total are $7,000 and your savings is about $8,000.
Casey, looking at this, do you have enough to retire?
No.
How do you know?
to retire. No.
How do you know?
Because it's all accounted for.
So there's no extra to build a retirement
that we could live off of.
OK, and how much would you need to retire?
I have no idea.
Exactly.
All right.
So to me, this is a red alert right here.
The fact that you only have $7,000 of investments
means that you will not have enough in retirement.
It's a problem.
And we can even extrapolate the numbers.
Did you say you're 45?
Yeah.
Okay, how much are you putting away
every year now in your investments?
I think it's set at $200 a month, so not very much.
So let's take a look.
So if you went on that current path just so you know by the time you're 65 Jim,
you would have $132,000 in that investment account.
Now again, what does that mean?
People go, I don't know, is that a lot?
Is that a little, I don't know?
What's your first reaction to that?
We're short by a couple million.
Yeah.
For the life I would like to live.
Okay.
It means that essentially if we use something
called the 4% rule, that the two of you would have
$5,000 per year to live on.
Can you live on $5,000 per year to live on. Can you live on $5,000 per year?
I don't wanna find out.
No, the answer is no.
You can't.
Casey, you look, you're not blinking.
What's going on?
It's scary.
It doesn't have context. Right now, we need to have a common language of finance.
Just the way that the two of you are good co-parents,
and you have a certain language and communication,
we're going to apply that same thing to money.
Okay, now Jim, I want to hear your perspective on these numbers
because I heard a lot about Casey's perspective.
What do the numbers tell you?
Our fixed cost are too high.
And so that eats into, you know, that, I forgot what your word is, guilt free spending.
Guilt free spending.
So that eats into that area a lot.
And that includes things like going to dinner, going on a trip to Hawaii, because we don't have a real plan to direct the money that we have to those to those things.
That's right. That is right. But you may know that. But Casey doesn't know that. Right.
doesn't know that. I love this phrase you used before co-parenting. Co, co. If one of you just said, here, take the baby and like, do something. Here's an instruction manual. Go
ahead. It's just not how parenting is done, right? You have to talk. It's critical. But
with money, there's a lack of that in your relationship. Even this document, while it only took you a few minutes, the real purpose of the conscious
spending plan was for the two of you to sit down and talk about it together.
I actually don't care if you got these numbers right or wrong by 5% or 10%.
That's not the point.
The point is for the two of you to sit down and do it together.
So we missed an opportunity then.
Yes, but luckily we have the opportunity to talk about it together right now.
And talk about it in a way that connects both of you.
No judgment.
Nobody's wrong for spending too much or too little. None of that.
Just let's take a perspective.
Let's take a scientific view on where the money's going today.
And then let's decide where we want it to go tomorrow.
How about that?
Jim, would you be down to do that?
Yep.
OK.
Casey, would you be down to do that?
Yeah.
OK, let's do it.
This reminds me of interviewing for jobs in college.
They'd ask these case questions, like, how many gas stations are in the United States?
And they don't really care about your answer, but they want to see how you think.
Can you take a big problem and break it down?
Can you use logic?
Can you make assumptions and use basic arithmetic?
I don't mind if people get their conscious spending plan numbers wrong.
What I really want to see is how they think about their numbers.
So your gross income is 12,500 per month.
It's 150,000 a year income.
Is that right?
That's pretty good.
That just happened with the month ago. Oh really? Congratulations. What was it before? I got a $15,000 raise per year. Very good.
Question. Where is the 15,000 going? Yeah, it's going. It's going.
So everyone, he just did a like, like, it vanished into thin air.
This is very common.
People will get a raise substantial like you and they'll go,
I don't know where it is.
It just vanished.
Or they were paying $600 a month towards their debt.
They finally finished paying it off and they go,
I'm supposed to have $600 more per month.
Where is it?
So you two have done a great job keeping your housing
costs and low.
Awesome, awesome work.
Now let's talk about this other thing I see here.
Car payment slash transportation.
Can someone explain how you're spending more on your car payment and transportation than you are on a house that holds seven people.
And then send me you added the gas to that.
I did. So I put like, I think $400 a month for gas and just maintenance.
Because I really have $800 in payments for the cars that we're paying for.
You say that you only have $800 a month in payments.
So we have $600 for one and $200 for the other.
What's the $600 car?
It's the family hauler. It's a U-car. So it's a big family car. I want to get rid of the car.
Jam does not because we're probably upside down in it
and says we can't afford to get rid of it.
Well, we would have to replace it
because it's the only vehicle
that we have that our entire family fits in.
Uh-huh.
So, you know, I see it as the lesser of two evils.
Why'd you all buy this car in the first place?
How did you decide how much you could afford?
Jim said.
Got real quiet in here.
Jim?
I said, Jim said, Jim research day, he made a spreadsheet.
That's, and.
Jim, what do you say? What happened? He made a spreadsheet. That's... And...
Jim, what do you say? What happened?
Yeah, like I went through, I knew it was a car that she really liked and really wanted.
And...
I just, I made it work.
Jim.
How can you say you made it work if you're losing money every single month? Is this a guy thing where every decision you make you say I did it to make my wife happy?
I don't love this. I don't love the idea of tossing the ball from one person to another just to deflect on responsibility.
And again, let's be honest. Jim says I made it work, but their financial situation is not working.
Groceries are $2,000 a month. What do you all think about that?
I don't know because just the beginning of September is when he gave me this number and I was like,
okay, I'm going to stay within it. I think I've done pretty good, but I would have to go back
and count on my numbers.
I've tried to keep track.
Okay.
So, okay.
Do you feel confident that you're under that number?
I do.
Okay, great.
Was it hard to stay under 2000?
Nobody feel like some ones are harder than others. So we've picked a
baseline of 2000. Fine. Sounds like you're tracking it. That's great. You sound
confident that you're under it. Here's my question for you. Casey, if you had to
get a little bit more aggressive about how much you spend on that. In other words, if you had to cut back, how much could you take that number down to?
I don't know.
Comfortably, I would say 15.
Really?
But I would have to be very, very, very careful.
Well, I think could you do that?
Sure. Don't sound that confident.
I don't because I just, I don't know exactly what I spent this month because I felt like I was careful.
And I would have to add my numbers up before I said yes, I'm totally confident I can do 15.
Well, can we just do that right now, Casey? Because honestly this is one of those things that we need to know the answer to.
No. Why?
Because there are receipts that I have
that I didn't get a chance to put in my phone.
So what?
I'll wait.
I don't care.
I'll take all the time I need.
I want to help you too.
You know what I don't want to do?
Is create more homework for the two of you
and let you off on your own and then be stuck
for another 18 years.
If it costs me an extra 20 minutes, I will do it.
So this is where I get hung up.
So there are like some places that I have like receipts
and I can, I come home and I put them in.
Other places are just like grocery online,
you know, that you pick up or like,
so that makes sense.
So I feel like they're coming from all different directions
and it's been a little harder for me to keep track of.
So can I make a couple suggestions?
Yes.
Okay.
Do you buy everything in terms of groceries
on a credit card?
Yes. Same credit card?
Yes. Staying credit card?
Yes.
Great.
Well, that's the hard part right there.
So just pulling up the credit?
Yes.
Yeah.
Just download that.
In fact, you can even look at it on their website
and it will show you exactly how much you spent this month.
So can we do it right now, please?
Yes, Jim would have to do that for us.
Oh, no, Jim's not gonna do it.
It's gonna be Casey doing it.
I do not have access to that.
You do now.
No, I literally can't get into the account.
It's all his passwords, it's all his,
so I, what a surprise.
Okay, so.
Hold on, before I get totally run over by the bus.
No, he has tried to set me up on this before.
Yes. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. I already know what you're both going to say. So just save it. How about this?
You get a chance to start co-parenting, but this time with money.
Casey is going to have access to the credit card and how she's going to use the transactions
to download it. So she's not doing all this weird receipt tracking
and stuff like that.
Casey, I don't wanna just make this a fake conversation.
I literally want you to do it right now, please.
She's at the computer and he can give me access right now.
I think there's confusion.
Are you just asking us, you want him to give me access
right now? I'm gonna get down. I you want him to give me access right now? Yes.
I literally want you to tell me how much you spent on groceries
this month, right now, Casey.
Perfect.
You want her to tell you.
Yes, I don't want you, Gem.
I know you can do it, but that's not the point.
Hasey is going to own the grocery spending
from now on.
Therefore, she needs access.
Yes.
So we could do that through an app on your phone.
Oh, he's coming out here to do it for me. He's taking my phone. No, you handed your phone to him. Hold up. What is him? Jim?
Hey, Jim, you want to come back?
Once you go ahead and hand that phone right back to her.
Why was just going to get to you, app on her?
I'm sure you were. I'm sure she can also do that herself.
This is not the first time we've had this conversation.
So he's telling her chase is the app.
It's probably in the app store right now.
Have it on my phone already, actually.
He's now giving you the password.
Yes, there was no like at hotmail or at Yahoo.
So I just was wondering.
So it's sending request code to Jim's phone. Jim's passwords
are all 50 letters, exclamation points. You're adding up each transaction? Yes, is that what you
want me to do? Online it does show you like categorically. I don't know. Now that I'm adding these all up,
Catechorically. I don't know now that I'm adding these all up.
I'm worried. Why? I don't know. I don't know if I can stay under the 15 or the two. How much are you at so far?
I'm still writing.
Jim is back in the room with Casey pointing out something on the phone. You showing me how to pull up the graph from the credit card company.
Okay.
Casey, try that and we can always do the chart thing later.
Okay.
I am just adding it up.
But I'm not confident that it's going to be under 2000 like I thought.
Which I guess is a good eye opener, right?
Okay. So I'm about 1300.
So.
The whole month?
Yes.
You can hear the anxiety in Casey's voice even as she's going through this.
That comes from not knowing the basics of their personal finances.
And it's normal to feel nervous. So what I'm doing is going step by step with her so she can overcome
that fear and start to engage with their money. This is really important. That's why I'm spending
the time with them to do it. I like that. Great job. First of all, round of applause, awesome work, all of you.
That took a lot for you to get to that. That's amazing.
That was stressful.
So I want to point out my observations of what just happened.
Before I do, what do you think my observations are going to be?
Your observation is going to be the gym I to step in and show me how to do it
that like, yeah, that this is being driven by Jim, that Jim just takes care of it type of
situation. One more reason to say I'm out of the loop that I'm not connected to the money.
Okay, Jim.
This is definitely not a team thing that we're doing together.
There's no co-in what we're doing.
You both like it that way. Have you noticed that?
I think you get in your comfort zone and you just do your thing.
Then, yeah.
It's easier to just keep staying
in our lane and to try to make it work different. I would rather be teammates for sure.
Love that. Teamates it is. This is not a parental relationship. It's an intimate partnership. But I think that realization of we've been negatively reinforcing these roles that neither
one of us want to play, become, became painfully obvious to me as you forced us to go through
that experience.
So I can do my part to stop that on my end. Yeah. This is why I say
that most people would rather keep doing what they're doing even if they are
failing at it than try to make a change where they might potentially fail at it. The two of you are slowly depleting all the money you have.
You will go under if you don't change a thing.
But you would rather keep doing that than to make a change which might be harder.
Let me reflect on what's happened so far.
Casey does the grocery shopping for their family, but has no access to the spending data.
She actually has the financial app on her phone, but she doesn't log in.
Jim has the password.
When I asked Casey to open up the app, Jim walks into the room and Casey hands him the phone,
then she looks at me and says he
took the phone.
And of course, he starts to helpfully give her tips on how to download all the data, etc.
And she starts to have her eyes glaze over.
She's not engaging with the money, she starts to worry.
But what happens in the end?
In the end, she does it.
And they can operate as teammates, but they will have to radically
reconceptualize their relationship with money and likely their entire relationship dynamic.
I wanted them to have an actual conversation about money together with me just observing.
Listen to what happens.
Casey, do you have a computer in front of you? Yes. together with me just observing. Listen to what happens.
Casey, do you have a computer in front of you?
Yes. Okay, please open it up and get that conscious spending plan on screen.
I would like for both of you to have this document open. There's a lot of
laughter going on all of a sudden. Casey, why are you laughing?
I never sent a tour.
Of course not.
But that's about to change.
Why it's two of you have a conversation and I'd like to see how the two of you make this decision.
To me to take 250 and put to just retirement.
And then I would really like to focus on, But what does that mean when you say into retirement? What does that mean?
So right now we have a Roth IRA that I've been contributing to.
We have a water room to continue to add more to that before we hit the limits.
So I think we just put it into that IRA and I have.
She had to look at her face. What do you think she's registering right now?
Nothing. So why are you saying that? So let's connect. Yeah. Talk to her.
What was the question she asked you?
What does that look like? Okay. What is the question she asked you? What does that look like?
What is the investment?
So we put it into an investment that I've been making, a Roth IRA.
Describe what I'm seeing.
So at first, you asked this question, which was a very valid question, Casey.
What is this investment?
Where is it going?
And Jim started off on his going way down in the weeds
with all these different accounts.
And Casey was checked out, just totally checked out.
And Jim wasn't even looking at the screen.
So this is often what happens.
The person who's living in the spreadsheet,
and particularly people who are like really they love numbers.
They just talk, talk, talk, but they're not connecting with their partner.
Casey, I'm going to go out on a limb and guess that you're asking what is this investment?
How do we know we're not going to lose it all?
Is it going to make us money? How do we know?
Are those the kind of questions that you really want to know the answer to?
Yeah, like what is it? Is like what does that mean? You know what I mean?
Yeah, yes, so
Jim when you go it's a Roth IRA, but I haven't maxed it out and we have a $5600 max and
It's like describing quantum physics. Let's meet her where she is and
once Kasey gets interested and engaged,
then you could definitely get into the technicalities,
and this is like months from now.
But right now it's just addressing her where she is.
She's concerned, what is this money?
What is it? What is an investment?
So this investment would be put into
something called a Roth IRA.
It's pretty low risk.
And we just hope to build that over time
to get to a point where it can be part of our retirement.
So you can take from it anytime you want?
Like you put it in, you can take it out.
No, not easily.
There are some penalties with how it
works. So we can access the money, but there are some financial penalties that we would incur.
What is the benefit of doing that over something else? What else would you have in mind?
Like another account or another investment.
Yeah, so putting and I think this is what we're meeting with saying if we had $20,000 in a savings account, there's not a real return interest wise on those. So they're not considered
investments because it's just money sitting there. So to really invest our money,
we have to put it somewhere where there is risk
anytime we do that.
But with that risk,
there's a greater rate of return.
And so our money can start to work for us more
than just putting it into an account.
But I do like the idea of having that emergency fund
where we have cash that's available to us
in the case that we need it.
So I think yeah I think with the conscious bending plan that we put to
that I put together and that I need to go through with you those things have been accounted for.
Sounds good I feel better than about doing half instead of all of it into the investment.
Yeah. Cool. That was really nice. I love the way that two of you had it back and forth,
and I love the clarifying questions. Whenever I hear clarifying questions like what you just said
Casey, he was like, well, what's the advantage? Ah, it makes me smile so much
because that shows me you're engaging with this material.
And I love Jim that you communicated and explained this
at a level that met Casey where she was.
And that was all that you needed to do.
So I'm gonna take the win on that.
Big win, let's give each other a high five, please.
Because that was awesome.
You two have just committed to saving thousands of dollars a year.
And investing thousands of dollars a year.
That's amazing.
Sounds an awful lot like a plan.
And I think that's really what what I was looking for from today is to be able to
to get to a place where we can both agree where we're at and you know stare down the barrel like
this is the truth of the matter and come up with a plan as a team good to change.
Casey.
It just sounds like a meeting point,
a place to start to work together.
We continued to go line by line in their spending
to look for areas where they could shift money
to an aggressive investment strategy.
And we realized a few options.
They could replace their $600 car payment with one that was half that expensive.
They had about $15,000 worth of toys and other things in their garage that they could sell.
And instead of buying these motorbikes and owning them, when they decided they wanted
to go out and ride an ATV, they could go and rent them.
And finally, they had to accept the reality that they can't save for their kids' weddings or college
funds. They just can't. They do not have enough money invested for themselves.
After sharing all of this with them, I received a follow-up message from Jim and Casey.
Jim wrote, I was impressed with how simply saying some things out loud made it crystal
clear to me that what I've been doing with my money and some of my attitudes towards
it have not been good.
Rather destructive, in fact, but with the insights I gained from our time with you, I can
start to do things differently.
I have a pretty clear picture of what my rich life will look like.
I'm setting the goal that within five years,
we will have a million dollar portfolio
and we will be debt-free.
Time to get to work.
Casey also followed up and said,
the thing I learned is that it's never too late
to make financial changes just by being aware. I have a lot to contribute to our financial situation, even though I'm
not currently bringing in any money. You can read the full follow-up letters from Jim
and Casey at iwt.com slash follow-ups. For all the links mentioned in this episode, check
the show notes.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich. I'm Remed 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,
pick up a copy. You can get it at any bookstore or any library and it will show you the specific tactics for how to build the I will teach you to be rich system into your personal finances.