I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 70. “My husband thinks savings for our kids’ education is a waste of money”
Episode Date: November 22, 2022Amy wants to put money away for their kids’ college funds. She’s shocked when her husband, Gaby, says no -- and that “the kids can figure it out themselves.” They’re in their mid 30s with a ...household income of $115,000 in the Miami area. In today’s episode, we cover money psychology, class, and creating a vision of a shared Rich Life. Connect with Ramit Get Money Coaching with Ramit Download the Conscious Spending Plan Other episodes Instagram Twitter YouTube 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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Discussion (0)
How do you feel about money in general?
I don't like to think about it. I don't care about it.
I don't really pay attention to where my money goes and
what she does with it and stuff.
I mean, it would be nice for him to take a little more initiative,
not initiative, but like a little more interest in the money.
Is there a question there?
Not really, because I know what the answer is.
Oh, but you do it so much better and I don't want to deal with it.
And you accept that?
It is what it is sort of thing.
What happens in 15, 20 years from now?
I get tired of making all the decisions, I get burnt out.
Amy and Gabby are in their mid-30s and they have two young children in the Miami area.
Gabby is the primary income for the family, but he is totally disconnected from money.
In this episode, we're going to touch on a topic that we have
danced around, but we haven't really explicitly confronted. And that is class. In America,
it's taboo to talk about class. We can buy fancy cars. We can post pictures of Bora Bora,
but it's considered off-limits to talk about how class affects us. In fact, many people consider
America post class. Now, one of the books that really guides some of this conversation
today is a book by Jesse Streib called The Power of the Past. And I want to read you
a quick excerpt. Jesse says, there are many myths about social class. One myth is that
class has nothing to do with love and marriage.
Subscribers to this belief assume that love is blind to class or that
Cupid's arrow falls randomly. They suppose that two unique individuals begin a
life together free from the contaminating force of social class. So in today's
episode, I want you to try to put on the lenses of social class, as well
as money, as well as psychology, and all the other things we talk about on this podcast.
And I love the title of that book, I referenced the power of the past because on every episode,
every couple of life spoken to, we realize that we are not simply logical,
rational people making decisions based on a spreadsheet, the power of the past affects
us all.
Today, we start our conversation with Amy wanting to put money aside for their children's
education, but Gabby disagrees.
I'm Ramith Saiti, and is, I will teach you to be rich.
What is your position when it comes to paying for the kids' education?
We pay for it. There are, there are responsibility. We should be able to do what we can.
For me, for my school, it was always known that I was going to college.
Like that was always a given. And I think my parents said to me at one point,
like, we'll pay for your four year.
Anything after four years is on you.
So I would like to be able to do that as well for our children.
Okay, got it.
Gabby, what is your understanding of paying for kids' education?
I went to a very expensive school.
So to me, it's like, it was a massive burden
because I essentially paid for my own school
through student loans.
And then it was a massive burden on me.
Like I can't imagine having to pay for like two of my kids.
Like, oh, no, man.
I already went through it myself.
Like, I feel like I have to go through it like two more times with them.
Like, it seems pretty rough on me.
I kind of want to enjoy now and then let them,
they can figure it out, I think, maybe.
And my thought is, let's work.
So it's not a burden for anyone by the time that they get to school.
I had no student loans.
And when I met Gabby, he was paying $900 a month towards student loans.
So that was a big, like, what?
You have to pay much.
I didn't compute, like, they just didn't compute to me.
And I'd prefer to let our children get settled
when they graduate instead of having this huge burden.
Do you believe you should pay for your kids' college?
Let me guess. Some of you instantly said,
of course, just like Amy. And some of you said,
no way. Kids need to work. If it's just given to them, they don't appreciate it.
Some of you might have rolled your eyes and said, pay with what? I'm just trying to get
my own money in order. I think your answer is actually quite revealing. If your instant
response was, of course, I would be willing to bet you were raised with educated parents
in an upper middle class
or wealthy household.
The idea that you pay for your children's college is of value that is closely held by
some of those groups.
By the way, if you're Indian, I already know the answer.
It is, of course, yes, because Indian parents will spend virtually anything on their children's
education. A few years ago, I visited the slum of Darvi, Asia's second largest slum, where many of
the poorest of India's poor live.
And I learned there that many parents send their children to the equivalent of private
schools.
I found it fascinating because you imagine that, if you don't have anything, you're simply
just taking every dollar you have and using it to live.
No, not the case.
And it really opened my eyes to how people choose to spend their money at all different
levels of income.
Now, if you grew up poor and nobody in your family went to college,
it's likely this wasn't even a question that your family ever considered.
It would be like rewinding 30 years ago and asking my parents if they prefer staying at a
Ritz Carlton or a four seasons hotel. They would just laugh. What? We're just trying to get by
four seasons. So when I ask you, if you think you will pay for your kids' college, this
is about more than money. It's more than just a financial decision because your financial
decisions often reveal who you are. Let me give you an excerpt from the power of the past, again by Jesse Strabbe.
Quote, in general, those who were born into professional white collar families had
sensibilities that I call managerial.
They preferred to plan, deliberate, mull over, and organize their resources, their children,
and their daily lives.
Their partners with blue collar roots typically had different sensibilities.
Those I call laissez-faire.
They preferred to feel free from self-constrained. Rather than wanting to analyze plan or meticulously organize their lives, they preferred to go with the flow and live in the moment.
My point is that we often think our decisions about money are logical and rational and based on
numbers. When in reality, you and I are deeply influenced by the culture we grew up in, the class we
were raised in, and the politics we absorbed.
Think about the last 24 hours of your life.
How you tip, where you live, where you might be going on vacation, even what's in your
living room.
These are determined not just by how much
is in your bank account, but the way that you grew up. So, will you pay for your children's
education? Your answer to that, I think, is quite revealing. And if you keep probing, you might
discover other surprises about your money beliefs. Yeah, I mean, what was it like graduating from this university you went to? How much was your debt?
A little over a hundred and twenty thousand. Okay, is what I took out. Okay, 120k. Did you know how much you
were taking out when you took it out? Yes. And my school didn't educate me too well,
and I took out more than I needed.
So I kind of used that to live off of,
pay rent, food, and what on.
So you were paying 900 bucks a month.
How long did it take you to pay it off?
I wanna say it took about a little over 10 years,
maybe 11 years is how long it took.
It doesn't sound like that much.
Well, because I went aggressive with paying it off
the last two years. You're both 36 years old? Yes. This is sound like, does that feel like a long time
to pay off debt basically 14 years? When I didn't have any, yeah. I didn't have, I walked away from school without any debt. So to me,
it's like, I don't like debt. We paid off our cars. We're driving our cars. Like, I
don't want to add another payment in. I wanted to get rid of the student loans. We got rid
of the student loans. We worked through it, and it took time. But to me, that's one more
check that I don't need to write, essentially.
What do you make it now, Gabby?
I make about 105K a year.
All right.
And then the same question for you, Amy,
when you graduated from college, what were you earning?
I was probably earning around 40.
And then I probably got up to about 50.
And then when we were having my son about five years ago,
I decided to step away.
I didn't think the job's stress was worth the money.
And I had no plans of being a stayed-home aunt.
But that's kind of where we are right now and we're
comfortable, so that's kind of what we've been doing.
I'm guessing you sat down and talked about paying for their education, et cetera.
And what was that conversation like?
Was it heated?
Was it cool?
Did you pull out spreadsheets?
What was it like?
I honestly don't remember, but I remember not being heated just like,
oh, that's crazy talk. Of course, our kids going to go to college and we're
going to cover, we're going to cover what we can.
Notice that. That's a huge clue. Amy said, Oh, that's crazy talk.
Like the idea of not paying for their kids' college was inconceivable to her.
Because to her, in her family structure, that was inconceivable.
This is how cultural traditions and rituals and beliefs are handed down.
And in a way, I think it's a beautiful thing to see.
We can actually see how a family culture is transmitted.
She says, of course, kids are gonna go to college,
and we're gonna cover it.
Gabby, however, does not see it that way.
And Gabby, what do you remember?
I just remember.
Exactly what you said.
Exactly what you said to me.
I wanna hear it from Gabby.
Okay.
Another clue. Did you catch that? File it away. Exactly what you said to me. I want to hear from Gabby. Okay.
Another clue.
Did you catch that?
File it away.
Now back to Gabby.
I remember it just being like something so stressful.
Like, I don't want to deal with that now.
Like, I don't want to have to pay for that.
It's something so far and long down the road.
You know, I feel like our kids could maybe not go to college
or choose another career path or something.
I don't know if it's worth the investment so soon.
There's so many unknowns.
Okay, and when you said that,
what do you remember Amy's reaction being?
I'm pretty sure she would never take my financial advice
Why is that? because I
I've scraped by you know after college. You know, I did fine after right after college, but then like there was some years where I just kind of scraped by, you know, after college. You know, I did fine after right after college, but then like, there was some years
where I just kind of scraped by.
And I would say I was definitely irresponsible
when I, you know, taken out tons of debt
in student loan debt, like, you know,
my tuition was like 70K, but I ended up with like 120K,
you know, I wasn't really that responsible.
I was just kind of taking advantage of the situation.
So taking advantage or taking advantage.
Oh, I would say, I would definitely say the school
just went bankrupt and no longer exists.
What school was this?
Can you tell me?
Yes, the Art Institute of Fort Laudale.
Didn't you say this was some elite school?
I thought it was.
The Art Institute is a fairly known university,
and they're very well school, like good schools,
and good artists go there.
But they also scam their students to take out massive loans.
All right, so you had this conversation.
Did you agree on anything when you were talking about whether to pay for your
newborns college education or not?
I had come into some money from an inheritance and I wanted to put some of it aside for our kid. I don't know if I was pregnant at the time or we knew that
that was the next step. So I think that that's probably what sparked it.
I was like, I have five grand.
I want to put it towards our kid, most likely for their college, and that's it.
And he said, essentially what he said, but also they can join the military and they can
figure it out.
And I was like, no, that's not what I want to do.
So.
So Gabby, is that the thought that they can join the military
rather than pay for college?
That option was given to me.
I took that option.
I was in the military.
You know, there's alternate routes.
I'm just scared they're gonna get sucked into a trap
like I did and I saw my other friends in school.
Like Amy News and my college friends,
you want to the artist to as well
and they don't do as well as me.
So I don't want them to get sucked into
some kind of trap like I did.
This is a little concerning to me. I'm not sure Gabby is taking the right lessons away from his
college experience. And I'm not sure he's really thought this through. I sense a lot of vibes. My
college was a ripoff. Some of my friends didn't even get good jobs. Therefore, college is a waste of money.
And I don't want to pay for our kids.
When people get into this random vibe-based reasoning,
it is absolutely pointless to go deeper.
People feel strongly about something.
They're not going to change their mind
when confronted directly.
So I'm going to loop back and go why.
I ask Gabby a simple question,
how do you feel about money in general?
I don't like to think about it or care about it. I don't really pay attention to where
my money goes and what she does with it and stuff.
I want to say, he's good with money. It's not the sense that he's like overspending.
I think it was, he fell into that,
how do I pay for college?
This is what I wanna do.
This is a dream of mine.
This is what I wanna do.
This is how I do it.
I need to pay for it so I'm gonna get out loans.
He just decides, when I worked,
when I started to stay at home,
I kind of took over all of our finances
and I handled everything, so he's very much taken a step back.
But when we were... Amy, why'd you do that?
Because I had the time.
Uh-huh.
When we got married, it was a given that we were putting our money together. I, we joke around now, but I gave him like six grand
for his car when we were engaged.
And some people were like, you're not even married yet,
but it was just kind of a given that my money is his money.
And it's not that he had nothing.
He had some.
I definitely had more, but it was ours, no matter what.
He used to stress about the next job,
the next payment, when I'm gonna get money for this
and that constant hunt for work.
And then when I finally cut this job,
not having to worry about all of that was so nice.
And then the fact that she's then has all this extra time
and then she's taking over everything. I'm like, oh man, this is great. I don't have to, I don't even think about it anymore.
You like money? Not really. Tell me more. Uh, I feel like it gets in the way a lot of people
making decisions and people enjoy themselves.
First of all, if you're in the fire community or if you've read more than five personal
finance books, I'm pretty sure your jaw is on the floor right now.
To hear someone actually doesn't like money, you're like, what?
Why?
And I can already see you gearing up to give your big lecture.
Do you understand how important money is? It's all about compounding.
If you start now and you invest 15%, you also increase that number 1% every year,
plus factor in raises, and of course we already know inflation is covered by assuming 7% of shares.
You can actually have millions of dollars. Seriously, plus you can layer on surpassing.
Ah, shut the fuck up, please! Please shut up!
Some people just do not care about money.
I love Gabby admitting it because he's being honest about it.
But I will say, I think there's a twist.
I actually think people do care about money if you can reach them in the right way.
Probably won't be with a lecture on compound interest though. What I
wanted to do was zoom in on an offhand comment Gabby made. He said, I don't have
to worry about money. Notice that assumption that if you pay attention to money
you're worried about it. Do you think that I worry about my money? I would assume so, yeah.
What if I told you I didn't?
That's nice.
I'm assuming you probably have some kind of process or systems in place that you've
been comfortable with that you manage that kind of put all the pieces together for you
so you don't have to worry about it.
Yeah.
I assume Amy's the one that's doing that for me.
Ah, that's interesting.
You assume you don't know, but maybe she is, maybe not.
Oh, I don't.
I think that I'm rich is the word that I see it.
So that's why I don't worry about it because I always tell Amy that I feel like I am rich because what?
Because I feel like I've hit a milestone where I remember growing up, I was in like middle class
family. And I remember once like my dad hit like 100k, I remember like my mom thinking it was like
the biggest thing in the world. And like, I was a teenager. I was like, 17, 18 years old. I was like, oh wow. I was like, that's what it's like. Like when
you get that much money, that's when you're like, well, off or something, I guess I had to. So I
remember once I had hit that, I was just like, I hit it. Jackpot, baby. Let me translate.
I hit it jackpot baby. Let me translate.
In our family, we worried about money.
My parents made $100,000 finally and told me that's rich.
So I believed it.
Do you think it matters to Gabby that $100,000 was 20 plus years ago?
Or that they likely had different family dynamics than Amy and Gabby?
Not really.
This is an example of how we take simple,
easily understandable concepts for topics
that we don't really engage with,
and we simply believe them.
What I want to know is what was Gabby's family like?
Human beings are meaning makers.
If we walk past a restaurant we've never been inside,
and our friend next to us crinkles their nose and says, ugh, only snobs eat there, it's
actually very likely that we start to believe it. Now imagine that type of meaning-making
happening over 50 years with thousands and thousands of examples totally unconsciously.
That's basically how we go through the world. We see things and our mind tries to make years, with thousands and thousands of examples, totally unconsciously.
That's basically how we go through the world.
We see things and our mind tries to make meaning of it.
And most of the time it actually works fine.
We know to stop it across walk.
We know if we see some wild animal, stay back.
Fine.
In this case, Gabby was told with a, quote, big announcement that they made $100,000 and
now that means they're okay.
And guess what he did?
As a 16 year old, he accepted it.
You think he understood concepts like cost of living, inflation, investments, kids
of occasional funds, investment returns?
Of course not.
He didn't need to at 16. It was a simple answer and he accepted it.
And that kind of blind acceptance often works until it doesn't. Keep listening.
I'm just a little curious about your family growing up. So what was it like? What do you remember about money when you were young?
Nothing like I like my dad made money.
My mom was stayed at home.
She was a housewife.
Um, I had no clue how much money my parents made or how did you figure that out at 16?
That because like that's I remember it was a big thing because my mom had like she was excited like like wow and
like she made like a big announcement about it. I was just like oh wow like you know something
like that has never happened because they don't talk about that in front of us.
Okay. So that's why it really sticks out.
Family, small family. Oh, we big family, yeah. How big?
I'm one of four.
But it gets bigger beyond that.
Gotcha.
And what was your dad's relationship with money?
I wanna say probably similar to how I am with it.
Like, I remember my mom's the one that would go to the bank and she helped me open my bank account
and taught me how to balance a checkbook.
She was the one that wrote the checks and paid the bills.
She had a desk and an office with paperwork, a lure,
and she had Excel docs and all kinds of stuff.
She's obsessive in that kind of field.
And your dad?
Oh, I'm sure he was just as brain-dome as I am with my finances.
Do you think you're dumb with finances?
Oh, yeah, yeah. Why? I think I... I don't really think about this stuff. I just kind of buy what I want.
If I want this, I'll go buy it and do what I please and stuff. Let me translate.
Money isn't for guys like me. I don't want to worry about it. I don't
even really like it. I'm actually pretty dumb with money. I just feel like if I see something
I want, I buy it. I find this self-handicapping fascinating. This idea that he's dumb with
money. The idea that if he tried to focus on money, excuse me, what did he actually
say? Worry about money as he puts it. He couldn't even do it. And really, what's the point?
He already makes six figures, so he's rich. So what does it matter? It's like he's created
this cobweb of identities to preserve his comfort. And you have to acknowledge that he was
raised in this scenario. But you can also
see why Amy is so shocked at his reaction to paying for their kids' education, because
deep down his reaction goes way beyond a college fund. It's the way he sees money at a
core level. And if you go even deeper, the way he sees himself. I want to show you what I mean. Listen to Amy and Gabby,
answer the same questions side by side. Tell me what you notice.
I remember always being comfortable. My mother was the breadwinner of the family, but my dad
still worked from home, he had his own little business. Okay, well, sounds like the exact opposite, doesn't it?
What about travel?
Vacations, where would you go?
Same place every year.
It was like a beach condo in an island
on the west coast of Florida.
So we would go to that beach condo for like a week
every year for, they're still doing it.
We traveled a lot. I think when I was younger, it was mostly road trips. We went to
Maine, we went to New York, we went to Cal, we had family in California, we did the
national parks. So I mean we went, I would say once a year, we went someplace. And my grandparents
usually came with us, or we would meet friends. Ever taken international trip growing up?
I think the first international trip was, well, we did Alaska. So we went on an Alaska cruise when I was probably in middle school, so we
went to Canada to get to Alaska.
But like a real international trip was my graduation present from high school.
We went to Italy, my mom and I went to Italy.
Okay.
And Gabby, I didn't get a chance to ask you that.
Did you ever do an international trip while you were growing up?
Oh, never.
Those are just a couple of differences.
Now imagine the accumulation of those differences over 25 or 30 years.
It starts to make sense how they are taking a singular decision of college funds and seeing
it totally differently.
Again, let me give you a quote from the book The Power of the Past.
Quote, other blue-collar origin respondents learn from their parents precarious financial
situations that a small amount in their savings account was normal. They learned that there
was little reason to worry about limited savings as they had gotten by on shoestring budgets in the past.
And the book goes on to describe a couple specifically Vicki in that couple who is frustrated
by her partner, quote, like retirement and savings saving for college, just all those things
that I know are so important.
For him, that's just not important.
He doesn't think twice about
saving. He thought even less about it when we first met. He just goes, they could get student
loans. We had student loans. I go, no, no, they can't get student loans. He has an answer for
everything. Like, you don't have to plan for retirement because everyone's going to have
to work until they die. That's just how the economy is.
I love this quote because it essentially mirrors Amy and Gabby. And in this book, it explores
the class differences and the differences from the past, how all come to bear for questions like
who pays for the kids' college.
So with Amy and Gabby, I decided to go deeper
on their experience with education.
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But I really wanted to pursue my art.
But like my parents never really pushed my art stuff.
They always pushed me to do more, more, I would say like boring stuff.
Like I was really good at math, so they wanted me to push on that and.
So how did you decide to go to college and choose that college and take out loans?
How'd that happen? So I did, I did two sem to go to college and choose that college and take out loans? How'd that happen?
So I did, I did two semesters of community college.
I hated that.
And then, then I decided on my own to join the military.
So that kind of took my parents by surprise, but they were happy about that choice.
So then I did, I did the military thing,
hated that as well.
And I wanted to get out and I wanted to go to school
like right away, right out of the military.
Like I was done with it, I wanted to pursue my art stuff
and I wanted to go to the school
and I was like, hell, Benz, I didn't care what was gonna stop me.
So I got out of the military, I was like, hell, Benz, I didn't care what was going to stop me. So I got out of the military.
I was like, take out loans.
I was like, hell, yes.
I don't care how big.
Sign me up.
We had two different experiences with college.
Like he said, he didn't.
It wasn't a given or it wasn't, you know, to me, at least from
what I understood. It wasn't like, they were pushed to go to school, not to say that I was pushed,
but it was, it was always, you do good in school, you go to college, you get a job. And I think with
his family, it was more,
you go to college if you want or you know, you should,
but I'm not going to push you to do it.
And then you go to work.
Did you agree with that?
Oh, yeah, that's definitely how they're very easy going like that.
It had applied to college on my own,
but it wasn't like they're over my shoulder pushing me.
I just remember like community college, if you could fill out your name, you could get into community own, but it wasn't like they're over my shoulder pushing me. I just remember like community college.
You just, if you could fill out your name,
you could get into community college and all it's just like,
ooh, yeah, I did it.
For me, like I said, education,
like it was always a given that after high school,
you go to college.
Well, that's a given.
Yeah, it was.
How do you remember that being presented?
You go to elementary school, you go to middle school, you go to high school, and then
you go to college.
Amy, I'm curious, what kind of family values do you remember about your family?
Education was always important.
And then I come from a small family, but we're close to our my cousins who live across the country.
Like family was always important.
I would go to my grandparents all the time.
And that's a tough one. I don't know.
My, I would say my parents weren't really once just like, talk to us a lot.
And I, and you know, they had us a lot. And I had like a lot of kids, so I kind of fell in the middle, so I didn't get, and I
was like the black sheep.
So why were you the black sheep?
Oh, I would cause a ruckus and all kinds of trouble all the time.
Oh, you're a bad kid.
Oh yeah.
Definitely. Are you still a bad kid. Oh, yeah. Okay. Definitely.
Are you still a bad kid?
No.
You might be the favorite now.
Wow.
Oh, wow.
That's cool.
All right.
I might have helped with that.
I would say something that was really important.
My family was like safety and security.
That's very good.
Okay.
Great. So, okay? Great.
So, okay, so what'd you guys like buy safe cars,
live in a safe area, that kind of thing?
I just, I remember a weird thing about my house,
I didn't notice, till I got a little bit older,
is that my house had bars on the windows?
Well, your dad was in law enforcement, right?
Yeah.
Okay, so that probably has something to do with it.
Amy went to Italy
for a graduation present and Gabby grew up with bars on his windows. How did the two of you
meet? Online. Okay. And when you first started talking, when you started talking about your
families and how you grew up and things like that. What occurred to each of you?
I noticed she's definitely closer with her family
than I am with like mine, like especially like her, her mom and her grandmother.
They're like the three of them are interconnected and joined.
And you talk to one, you talk to all. And that's what like really
stuck out that was like that relationship. Like I didn't have a relationship like that.
So that is that's really something that stuck out to me.
Cool. That's great. Great insight. Amy, what about you?
When we first met, it was like pulling teeth to get information from him and I
It seemed like a very different family than mine. How so I'm Jewish
He went to Catholic school
I'm like it's just me and my parents and him was
He
Him and his siblings, but then he also would mention that he has like 60
80 I don't remember the final count
cousins that are all mostly in Miami. Wow. Oh, that's not like I had cousins that ended up moving
but it was kind of
Just me and my parents and my grandparents.
Hold on, this is crazy. You have 60 cousins.
I don't know the exact number, but Catholic Hispanics, they make a lot of babies.
So one thing that I notice about the way that both of you describe your upbringing,
is it seems like your family values were quite different.
Oh yeah, I grew up a bunch with around a bunch of
like Hispanics people like to be 100% honest.
Like by the time I met Amy,
she was probably like the second Jew I ever met.
Going to Catholic school and church and all that. And then like her nod and
like having all these different holidays and stuff, it was just like, so I knew that right there,
I knew it was definitely completely different. And what was I like for you because if she was the
second Jewish person you'd ever met, you must have been quite a different experience, different
holidays, different food, different
rituals, just different ways of communicating around the dinner table. Did you welcome that
or was it like uncomfortable for you? Yeah, I definitely welcomed it. When I met Amy, like, I had always
you know, change and something different was always exciting.
And I was like, always open to it.
Like, sure, I don't care.
Hanika, yeah, what is this?
I'll do it.
Lock us.
Lock us.
I love them.
They're great.
Amy, was that your experience too?
With him, yeah, I mean, he was open to it.
Or not very religious, but we do celebrate the holidays.
And he was always like, oh, what do we learn this time?
What's going on here?
So he was always open to it and never saying anything bad or like, oh, we're doing this again.
There was never any of that.
That's cool.
I like that.
And Amy, what about for you meeting his family who must have
been different from your family? What was that like? So his family, as we went over, didn't do like
big family reunions, but Thanksgiving, that was like the big what the heck is going on? Because
it was 90 of them at my mother-in-law's house. And I was just like, oh, Thanksgiving for us is like six people.
We have a turkey, and this was like a full Cuban spread,
turkey, rice and beans, everything.
And I'm like, oh my goodness, this is a lot of people
and you're related to everyone.
It was an adjustment with that, but I mean,
his family was always very welcoming to me.
So I didn't have any issues with anything.
Well, you know, what I love hearing these two examples is you two are blending and creating your own
family, your own culture, your own family values. I love that. And I bet it's just naturally
happening. I bet if I shadowed you for a couple
of days, I would discover a bunch of values that you have, you don't even realize it. I think
what excites me about getting the chance to talk to you is that you can be more intentional
with your values. So you can choose whether it be education, whether it be cooking together, family, reunions, whatever, you can
choose. But with money, it seems like you are mostly recreating what your family taught
you. And because both of your families were quite different, it's not really jelly. Do
you both feel like there's any connection between the way that you were raised and
the way that you think about your own children and their education? Oh yeah. Can you explain
what connection you see? Because it was a given and it was the next step, I believe it's the next step.
And that's ultimately why I decided to go with the 529 and it took me so long to get to
set up an account for my kids.
Because I figured the 529, it can go to what they want.
It doesn't lock them into a certain school like the program that I used or that my parents used for me, but it's
It's just what's next and you're responsible for I'm responsible for putting food on my kids table
I'm responsible for sending them to college
That's kind of how I view it. It's just another
Responsibility that if we're able to, we should be able to,
we should do for them.
Okay.
What about you, Gabby?
See, I, like I said, I took advantage and I had fun in college and I just see my son
having fun on my dime in college.
I just hope he doesn't have as much fun as I have,
and he's more responsible than I was.
Because yeah, I definitely made a lot of like poor choices.
I partied, I studied, I graduated.
Like, that's part of the college experiment,
experience to party and have fun.
You're in college, I get it.
Our kids gonna get drunk at college.
It's gonna happen, but he's also gonna study.
Hopefully.
I just hope the return on investment
is as beneficial for them as it was for me
because I feel like I was like lucky, like extremely lucky,
because I don't know so many people who've gone to college and like it was just like a waste,
like all my siblings like they went to college and like it's completely unrelated to what they do now.
Like my brother studied art history and I was was like such a waste. Like he did
nothing with that. And like I know other people who were like went to school for many years
and like it was like nothing after nothing. I just hope that this investment that we're
doing isn't going to be to his first throw away degree. And then his second degree. Well, that he pays for himself.
I hope so.
This quote really stood out to me when Gabby said, I don't want him partying on my dime. I am just struck by that comment.
Personally, it is something I would never, ever have come up with.
In my culture, there's an almost maniacal focus
on giving your children access
to the best possible education you can.
The idea of considering them partying on my dime
is so foreign to me, it is inconceivable.
Now, I will say that this maniacal focus on education
can be taken to an extreme.
Some people go into debt to pay for their kids' college, which is not a good move.
But in general, it would never occur to me to be almost resentful of my child going to
college and even to use the phrase, partying on my dime.
Think about the different phrases that you might use that come from the way you were raised.
And in this conversation with Amy and Gabby, notice the dynamic taking place by the way.
They've now backed up into their respective corners. I was raised like this, so I think this,
well, I experienced that, so I think that. Now knowing what you know and being married to Amy,
who had a different educational experience than you,
I'm curious what lessons you to choose
to pass along to your children rather than simply
recreating what each of you individually did.
What lessons would you want to pass to your children about education, Gabby?
I want to say when I was 12, that's when I figured out when I wanted to do, and that's what I do now.
So I think it's about once you find that thing you like is like, how do you like keep learning
more and more about that.
So I feel like if there's something that sparks my kids' interests, if we educate them
into that interest to improve that skill or whatever it may be.
You lean into it.
Yeah, we can like nudge them into that.
Because I never got that nudge.
I love that.
Amy, do you agree with that?
Yeah.
Great.
Now, Amy, what's one of yours that you
want to design for your children and pass along?
I'm pretty open, which is ultimately
why I decided to go with the 529 because it goes
not about the 529 he doesn't even want to save money for their college at all but it goes into
whatever they decide to do it'll cover that it'll help with that they if they want to go to
tech school for something they can do that if they find a path I did not have a path. I sat in my orientation and was like,
what should I do with my life? And I kind of vaguely got there.
But Amy, do you get that your husband isn't even convinced that you should save a scent
for your kids' education? That's why you're here. But I look at it more as not aware of how easy it could be right now as opposed to when
they're 9 to 18 years old.
And it's like, okay, well, we need to come up with 120 grand.
It's, he doesn't understand how beneficial it is to do it now is my assumption on how, where he's at.
Okay. Did you guys want to talk about it and see what happens?
Because I'm sure you can sketch out a compound interest chart for him and show him.
How do you think that conversation will go, Amy?
It'll go with, at the end of it it help you like, well, just do whatever.
It's your in charge of the money.
All that stuff.
It's so complicated in me.
I don't understand how it works.
Amy, just to really be transparent, if you could explain
something to him and then he's just going to go, ah, whatever, do
whatever, then you just put it in a 529.
Why are we here?
Because I want someone to tell me what to do with the money.
We seem to have a lot of extra money, which is a good problem to have.
So it's just like how should we deviate up, you know?
I don't think that's the real question you want to ask.
You truly already know the answer to that.
You can invest the money, you know right now from your conscious spending plan, you're
a little over here, a little under there, you can adjust it.
You have research to $5.29.
I don't think that's your real question today.
My job isn't to answer the questions people come to me with.
If that was my job, I'd be an executor.
I'd be a desk clerk.
Hell, I wrote my book answering every conceivable money question you can have and people still
get stuck.
It's not their fault.
It's just that sometimes people believe they need an answer to one question when really
they need an answer to one question when really they need an answer to something
totally different. So in these conversations here on the podcast and with the ones
in my money coaching group, I start by thinking of myself as a detective.
People might come to me with a question they think they want answered but
sometimes as we talk the real answer they need is totally different. And this is
a recurring theme on this podcast. People
will come on here asking, why does my partner spend so much at Target? And it turns out
that one of their dads got divorced 37 years ago and that's the real issue. I think this
is such an important point for you to use in your life. Because often you walk into a room thinking
your job is to answer questions, but your actual job is something
totally different.
For example, when I work with people in our Dream Job program, many of them go into an interview
believing that their job is to answer the interviewer's questions.
Wrong!
If that's how you walk in, you've already lost.
When you walk in as an interviewer, your job is to communicate your key messages.
Yes, answer the questions, but also make sure that you communicate your key messages. Yes, answer the questions, but also make sure
that you communicate the key messages you want to share to make sure that you stand out
from everyone else. If I had simply answered Amy's questions, which by the way she already
knows the answer to, this conversation would have been five minutes long. And they would
have left, and in about a month they would have run into a much bigger fight.
And they would have failed. So I pushed back. I said, Amy, I don't really think that's your real
question today. Listen to her response. I mean, it would be nice for him to take a little more
initiative, not initiative, but like a little more interest in the money. Is there a question there?
Not really, because I know what the answer is.
I know what's the answer.
Well, but you do it so much better and I don't want to deal with it.
And you accept that?
It is what it is sort of thing.
You've both created lots of unconscious strategies to keep your two philosophies with money
separate.
The biggest strategy of all is Amy manages the money.
Gabby's out.
Whatever, I don't care about money, I'm not good at money, but of course nobody wants to
make a final decision
Because in the end Amy's probably just gonna win Gabby's probably not gonna care. So let's not really get into it
How does that strike you?
It seems like it could be a time bomb ticking
How so?
Uh, it seems like we're both driving in separate lanes and they're
going to merge soon. Or what if they don't merge? They could be all, of course. Yeah, they
could go away from each other. Imagine just fast forward for me for 20 years from now.
Your kids are in college or whatever they're doing, but they're in their 20s. Two of you haven't connected on money in 15 years.
What do you think happens then?
I feel like I'm always transparent with him.
So I try to connect.
Like when I add money to my account,
or when we get a bonus, or he gets a bonus,
let's be real, I, it doesn't automatically go into one place or another.
We're gonna redo the floors, you know,
so I try to discuss it and say, okay,
well, I think this is what we're gonna do next.
And he's usually like, yeah, okay.
And I'd like a little more of a conversation about it.
And I'd like a little more of a conversation about it. Um, yeah, yeah.
Uh, she that's exactly how it is.
Um, I'll get a big check and then she'll deviate out like a bunch of money
goes to this, bunch of money goes to that.
Um, but yeah, I leave her to make decisions.
I don't really kind of pitch in.
What happens in 15, 20 years from now?
I get burnt out. I get tired of making all the decisions.
Two totally different views. One short term.
It'll work itself out. It always does.
The other long term. Let's save. Let's invest. Let's make a plan.
Wouldn't it be a tragedy to live a
smaller life than we have to or our kids have to? Do you see how the way that you were raised
with your family's trickles down to even what you consider important? Yeah, it's everywhere.
And very few of us pay attention to the way socioeconomics play out, our family dynamics
play out, class plays out, all these things play out.
Like even the questions you're asking are represented by your family environments.
The kids' savings might be the question,
and the culture and class differences might be the theme.
But the biggest challenge here
is really Gabby's lack of involvement,
and worse, his lack of desire to be involved.
Who changed the kids' diapers?
We both did.
Yeah.
Why?
Who's better at changing the kids' diapers?
No one was better. Come on. Somebody's better.
There are things you don't strive to be better at. That's right. You got me on that one. Okay,
who could do it faster? Probably. Yeah. Okay. All right. So then Amy, why didn't why weren't you just the diaper person? I mean you handle the diapers, you know, that's a lot of shit.
It's not that I want him to
take on
Responsibility of like okay, well you decide what's gonna happen here. It just a conversation
a more of a dialogue
as opposed to
You set up this you set up that I set up this, you set up that, I set up this. It's just a,
this is where our money is going. This is what we're doing. What do you think we should
spend the next bonus on?
Yeah, I mean, what do you think when you hear Amy say this? It seems like she's got a lot of stuff planned.
And I'm on the passenger side on for the ride.
What does that mean?
I take what she gives me and I accept it and I just nodded and smile.
It's kind of like we sync up and then go away.
Yeah, Amy? I don't think he ever really sinks up. He just hears it.
And says, okay. Yeah. Well, why would he? There's no reason for him to get engaged with money.
What is the reason for him to learn any of this? Can you think of one? Because it's our place.
It's our life. It's what we decide to do with our money. Like I said, we travel. It's
It's your
We're paying for it. We're using our money to figure it out. So you should have some sort of understanding
Of what is going on with your money. Amy, do you think his dad ever showed
any interest or excitement about money ever?
Not really, because I think he just focused on
I do what I like to do and I get paid for it.
And Gabby, you told me you feel what about money?
What's that word that starts with an R?
Oh, I'm rich.
Yeah, you feel rich.
So Amy, let me translate for Gabby.
Gabby grew up with a dad who never really engaged
with money, mom took care of it.
And by luck and by hard work,
Gabby has made it.
He is rich.
He's married. He has two children. You is rich. He's married.
He has two children.
You can afford to go on vacations and the kids are going to schools.
It's great.
What reason is there at all to engage with all this weird, confusing stuff about money?
Just knowledge to know what's going on, just to be aware of what you have.
It's great to feel rich and by no means are we struggling, but it's good to know where
we can go and what we can do and how the money will get us further in life.
You may have grown up with that value. Ask Gabby if have grown up with that value.
Ask Gabby if he grew up with that value. Do you grew up with that value?
I was completely unaware of it.
The real question today is not about a 529.
It's not even about where should the money go.
It's about how the two of you see money.
You see it profoundly differently.
Amy, your perspective is we have a set amount.
We need to automate it, invest it,
save for the children, plan vacations,
get the floors repaired.
Like we could do all this stuff.
We have money, we could do it, we could take control of it.
Does that sound accurate? Yes. Okay. Gabby, your perspective do all this stuff. We have money. We could do it. We could take control of it. Does that sound accurate? Yes. Okay.
Gabby, your perspective is we made it.
We are rich. We can buy the things we want to buy.
We go on nice vacations. House is good.
Kids are good. If we need more, it's there.
And why worry?
Does that sound accurate?
Oh, yeah, definitely.
Do you see how those two lenses on money are profoundly different?
Yes.
Yeah.
Okay.
Pause here.
If you were me, how would you proceed from here?
What would you do?
Amy has admitted she wants Gabby to be more involved with their money, to take initiative,
to do it for the knowledge.
Gabby says, he already feels rich.
So why worry?
If you were me, what would you do right now?
Let's watch what happens
So Gabby walk me through your net worth tell me about those numbers
so assets
468,000 and assets
That's like our house
cars What kind of cars do you have?
Hi, Brutes, I got a Prius.
She's got a cord.
Hi, Brute or something.
Hi, I got a cord, yeah.
Thank God.
All right, anyone who gets a Honda
gets an automatic high five from me.
Well done, round of applause.
Honda lovers, come together.
Okay, very nice.
So your net worth is about $350,000. You're both 36. All right. How do you feel about that?
I feel like that's not accurate because our house is extremely overpriced right now.
And what's the accurate homeowner comes on this podcast? Most are all delusional. Oh no. I
I put some new
covering laminate and it raised the value $50,000 because
I saw it on HGTV. Oh my fucking God, you're about to have a real realization when you
marked that thing to market. Never mind. You, Amy, are actually, can you please say it louder
for all the homeowners listening? It's ridiculously overpriced right now. If that's true, why
should you sell it? Because then we would have to buy a ridiculously overpriced right now. If that's true, why don't you just sell it? Because then we would have to buy a ridiculously overpriced house.
She's preaching to the choir.
Can I get some gospel music in the background right now?
Does everybody hear this?
All the people who go, I'm going to buy a house.
I'm going to be so rich.
And then I go, oh, that's cool.
You're going to buy your primary residence.
That's cool.
And you're going to treat it like an investment.
They go, yeah, because real estate only goes up.
And in America, real estate is the greatest investment.
And I go, okay, interesting. By the way, when your house price goes up and in America real estate. It's a great investment to like, okay, interesting.
By the way, when your house price goes up, if it does and you factor in all costs, if you
do, which you don't, let's say you make a $100,000 profit or $500,000 profit, how you
going to get that money out?
If you sell your house, where are you going to go live?
Most homeowners do not want to go rent again.
And if they sell, they're selling into a higher
Market than when they bought and they just look at me and they just blink and you know what they say Gabby something you said earlier on the call
Well, they're rich when it happens
Yeah, I fucking hate that. All right. Thank you Amy for the refreshing. I feel like I just list her in my mouth
I feel so fresh and honest right now.
All right, Amy, how much income is your household making here?
I think including bonuses, Gabby's probably at like 115.
All right, your rent is $1,911. Your mortgage. That's pretty good.
What do you think about that?
It's better than...
I know. I know.
I know people that pay more rent at apartments in this same area.
Yeah, that's really good. All right.
I'm pleased.
That's 21 or 22%.
Okay, fine.
You have an HOA, fine.
Why is your utility so high?
I wrote down 375 because why did I put it in I have our water our electricity and our cable I
wrote down 375 and I probably just went up to 420 just to because you're a saver. Yeah, yeah, all right
went up to 420 just to because you're a saver. Yeah. Yeah. All right. So again, I want you to notice Amy and Gabby, you better be listening to this because this is going to affect you for the rest of your
life. Both of you. So Amy, you have this thing where you like to play a conservative. I don't mind it.
I'm conservative in many different areas, financially speaking. And yet, if you do what you just did, like it's 375, but you put 420 in and you multiply
that out for the next 40 years and you do that with your investments and you do that with this and
that, you're doing yourself a disservice. Okay, I don't mind a little margin of safety built in.
I don't mind it. But if you're doing this just everywhere,
which you probably are, you don't even realize it, you're doing yourself a disservice because it's
almost like going swimming with a 20-pound weight on your back. You can't reach your full potential
when you jump in the pool for the first time with a 20-pound weight on your back.
Okay. All right. So you guys are paying basically 29% of your gross income towards your housing.
It generally the recommended guideline is less than 28%.
29% I'm not going to throw a fit.
It's no big deal.
It's fine.
Just a second.
I want to talk about being conservative with money.
If you're conservative with money, that can
mean you have a 20, 25% savings rate, or it can mean you drive an old car, you live beneath
your means with your housing, it can mean a lot of things. Being aggressive with your money
can mean you put all your money into crypto, sorry, that's not aggressive, that's just stupid.
Or it can mean you take risks like using leverage,
it can even mean you quit your job and start a business.
Generally speaking, I like being conservative
with my money.
I personally value having a little more money
and savings than I typically recommend,
and I live beneath my means for a car, et cetera.
But I'm also aggressive in other areas.
For example, if I get a huge windfall,
I will invest aggressively, and I spend extravagantly on the things I love, like travel and convenience.
I want you to get in the habit of knowing how to put on different money lenses at different
times. For example, if I'm at the grocery store, I'm not going to worry
about what a head of lettuce costs, because no lettuce is ever really going to change my
finances. But if I'm going to buy something that will be with me for years, like a house
or a car, I'm going to scrutinize it extremely carefully. In other words, don't be aggressive
or conservative with your money overall.
Instead, I would encourage you to pick the areas of life where you want to be conservative
and pick the areas of life where you are intentionally aggressive.
You choose.
Let's talk about investments.
Gabby, walk me through this. I see that we have the post tax retirement savings
Roth R.A. Amy has like 350. Then we have the kids 529. That's another 50 bucks there.
And then how come there's nothing here with my 401k? Because that's all pre-tax from the money that the company essentially pays for or puts
before it even gets to our bank.
How much is that per year that you're contributing?
For him?
Yeah, 401k. It's not too much because we only just started to do a little above
the match. I want to say maybe 10, 12,000. I don't know off the top of my head. I don't
remember. It looks like it was like somewhere around 11 or 12,000 last year in total got contributed.
That's kind of a lot. Why are you guys talking about this? Like it's changing your couch.
12k? It's a lot of money. I'm getting no's anything right now. Amy's like, I don't know. Gabby's lost
in the paperwork. What the hell is happening right now?
The money just disappears and it goes there. If you feel like you make more money and it's just disappearing, that is exactly why you need a system to decide where the money is going to go.
You can decide if you want the money to be invested or used for amazing vacations or whatever you want.
I'm going to talk about this more in my money coaching program. You can go to iwt.com slash money coaching
to join and get live coaching directly from me.
You're savings goals.
You have no savings goals
except a long-term emergency fund.
So I don't do the whole bucket system.
I've never done that.
I just kind of put the money in.
I have like my base like $5,000, $30,000 on comfortable and we're good. How dare you not use my sub savings account
idea? I've worked so far. Well, okay, let's talk about that. I'm not going to berate you. Look,
I'm here to help. Okay. But I will say this, you currently have $55,855 in your savings account.
It's a lot of money.
But it's some of it's for the kids.
So, are there sub savings account called kids?
Yes, there is.
They each have their own account.
Amy, are you like the mom who buys stuff for her kids, but never buys anything for herself,
like the mommy martyr. Are you that?
I'm not a wander, so I don't look at it as a martyr. If I want something, I buy it. That's a yes.
I'm a little concerned that you have sub-savings accounts for your kids, but not you. Do you know why
I'm concerned about it? Why? You tell what do you think? Well, I have it set up for them because it's like
I look at it as that's their money and we have our money. So we do have a savings account and
I use it when we do it. Okay, fair enough. Again, I'm not here to berate you. Yeah. I'll say this.
to beret you. I will say this. The reason that I find it helpful to have sub-saving accounts, named sub-saving accounts, is that when people put money in a general pool, it just kind
of sits there. And often, it produces very dysfunctional behavior. So people will come up with
an arbitrary number. They go, I need $10,000 to feel safe.
Okay? And then they get $10,000 and then they still don't feel safe. So, they put 20 and
30 and just keep going. And they have no purpose for it. So, it just sits there. Meanwhile,
a couple of things are happening. Number one, they're not actually using their money
for things that they want to do, like a vacation, et cetera.
And if they do go on vacation, they'll just arbitrarily pull it out of there without understanding
if they actually had enough or not.
That's problem number one.
Problem number two is actually more serious but more invisible.
They often let money sit in their savings account at the expense of investing it and therefore
lose tons of money due to low investment returns
and inflation. You can imagine Amy that this account, which is now 55k, might grow to 100k,
maybe 150k. Now in a way, you should be applauded for that. But in another way, that's money that
could have been deployed and used elsewhere. That's what a savvier investor would do.
What do you think about that?
I kind of like the bucket system
because there's been many times on vacation
where I wanna indulge a little bit more
and she would be like, no, no, no, no, no, don't, don't.
Just because the vacation itself is expensive, we don't need to go do this extra excursion
or this because it's super expensive.
But I think if we had a bucket system and we dedicated, this is the vacation money, who
cares, it's there, let's just pull out of it.
So I guess that's why she's kind of scared of pulling out of the
really big bucket for everything. But I will say that that is something that, and I even mentioned
this to you, I don't know if you remember, but I said I would like my rich life to be when we go
on vacation to do more things. So we go on cruise a lot because it's really close and it's an easy trip for us. We usually would do an inside cabin and I would like to do a window or a balcony to kind
of just make the trip a little better.
So we just went on a vacation.
It sounds like we go on a lot of vacations.
We really don't.
But we just went on this trip and we did an outside room and I think we did a few more things
Then we normally would so that's I
Accepted I've I don't know the right word. I have taken that into light of how we
Use our money. Yeah, but you
You say that yeah, we buy the cruise now,
but, and that's all pay for it and done,
but like, once we get to the cruise,
you know, it's some, they're gonna suck money
out of us anyways.
What did you want to do that we didn't do on this last one?
And remember, we had our two kids with us.
No, it's not just that, like even on,
when we went to Disney a few years ago, you know, and I wanted to spend a little bit more money,
and you weren't happy about that.
And that's probably going to happen on this next Disney trip we do,
where the kids are going to drive us nuts,
and we're going to have to spend a little bit more money.
Like, you don't just pay for the vacation.
You always spend more when we get there.
And I know you're always a little bit more when we get there. And I know you're always a little
bit tight when we get there. That's when you start really pinching the pennies.
When we went on vacation, my souvenir was a postcard. Like we were not wonders. Like my
parents told me, you get a postcard. Look at this fun thing that you have to look at.
I didn't get a t-shirt and then this is a cat.
Can I put something out?
Yes.
What was the entire purpose of what you want
on this podcast?
What is it?
To be more aware of where we're at.
For him to be more aware of where we're at
if we're doing.
For him to be more engaged.
Yes.
Fine.
And he's being engaging, yes.
I am.
He is being highly engaged.
Gabby, I really appreciate you,
that last entire thing about your perspective
on the sub-saving accounts.
You know what I love?
I love that you have a point of view.
You go, you know what?
I really would like sub-saving accounts,
because of this reason, this reason, this reason.
So I love that.
Now, I'm not saying you have to agree, Amy, but I definitely want to give Gabby a round
of applause for engaging.
That is awesome.
I'm always looking for a point of view because I want both of you to be engaged.
Amy, what was your reaction to hearing his point of view?
But I agree with him. I don't understand how I'm not understanding.
You did not agree with him.
I understand where he's coming from and I will work on that.
Wait, I'm just asking a quick, not what do you want to do.
I'm saying what was your instinctive reaction to his comment?
To explain it away.
Yeah.
I don't think I realized I even did that.
Exactly.
What do you think we're doing here right now?
Exactly.
Amy, he has a point of view.
If I'm in your chair, I'm going, oh my God, he's getting engaged.
Let me talk about this. Hey, Gabby, why? Tell me why. Oh my God, he's getting engaged. Let me talk about this.
Hey, Gabby, why?
Tell me why.
Oh my gosh, I never thought about that.
I didn't realize that I did that.
You know what?
First of all, when we go on vacation, I want us to both feel great.
I never want either of us to feel like we're wanting, as long as we're within reason,
but we have money.
We save it. We should be
able to enjoy ourselves if it's getting an extra drink or an extra excursion. So I'm really open
to changing things. If you think we should have a sub savings account for vacations, I'd be open
to it. I'm still trying to process it because I never really thought about doing it that way, but
gosh, I guess I'd be open to it.
How do you think that differs from what you said, Amy?
No, no, because if you look at my other chart, I did separate a vacation and a regular
savings.
I'm not answering my question.
Amy, if you want Gabby to be engaged, I need to listen to what he's saying.
Exactly.
And you probably need to welcome his input,
even if he disagrees with you on a couple of things.
Honestly, I actually happen personally.
You know I happen to think he's right
because the sub-sames account,
I have a lot of reasons for it, whatever.
But my opinion is not what matters here.
It's the two of you coming up with your rich life system together.
The way I would be thinking about it, if I'm in your shoes, is saying, is this a deal
breaker for me?
Because if Gabby comes along, he goes, I think we should put 98% of our money in Bitcoin.
No, we're not going to do that.
That's a deal breaker.
But he's saying something quite healthy. Hey,
I'd really like for us to do sub savings. If I'm you, I go, that is a, I'm encouraging
him. That is a great idea. Gabby, would you be willing to help me sit down and figure
out how to do this in our capital one account? Oh my God. Suddenly, it's a way for you
to connect on money. Oh, that's what I'm looking for. Cool.
Let's do it, Kirstie.
Yeah.
There we go.
You'll get me excited, yeah.
Because I then I know I can spend this and go crazy on the cruise then.
Yeah.
And you should.
You say for it.
Hey, why don't we just pick the sub savings account right now?
What are they?
Let's start with Gabby first.
Gabby first. Well, I promised her when we got married, let's start with Gabby first. Gabby first.
Well, I promised her when we got married,
I would do one cruise every year.
So definitely there has to be in the budget
for a minimal one family cruise.
Great, one cruise.
Let's go back and forth.
I like the dynamic.
Amy, you're up next.
I, we could do a vacation and a house
and then just general
Emergency fund
Very exciting. So the vacation is the cruise. Is that the same thing?
Not the only thing we do. So let's split it out. We have the cruise. That's one
We have like we have like Orlando parks. I think she's assuming like going like Disney and Lego land.
Like we're planning and doing a lot of those like kind of trips
for the kids.
Theme parks.
Yeah, I think it's not descriptive.
I want to be descriptive because I don't want to call it vacation.
It's just too weird.
You take too many vacations to just call it vacations.
So we got the Cruz.
We got the theme park.
What else?
I would like to do a bigger trip for our 10 year anniversary, so look at it.
Oh, speaking my language.
You're up.
Wow.
Hey, Gabby, look at your face.
You just, you kind of perked up right there.
Oh, because that's when she says that,
that's a no kids vacation, and a no kids vacation
are always the best.
Anyone hearing the big clue, the deafening clue?
Amy, what does that tell you right there?
That we are working together.
I love that.
Figuring out what to do.
And yes, and what gets Gabby excited when it comes to money and saving and spending
Occasion what kind of vacations
Was without the thing go
So let's talk about that because guys. I'm always hunting for the thing that gets someone excited about money
10-year anniversary.
Book it. I love it.
You put money aside.
You, you, you should talk about where you want to go and then reverse
engineer how much it's going to cost.
You know, I've talked about how to do this before.
But this kid-free vacation is really giving me some ideas.
Want the two of you take it and run?
Let me hear you talk about it.
I know she mentioned Europe.
Where, where would you like to go in Europe? I would love to do the Netherlands and Holland and that area because we haven't done that
before. I haven't done that and I know that's not some of the areas that you've been to.
Oh, okay. I don't know what's happening there.
It just sounds like cold and boring.
What would you like to do?
I don't know. I want to have exotic food.
That's why I really want to go to Japan,
because you know how much I like sushi and all that.
And then, of course, all the underground arcades in Japan.
I got to go there.
I'm open to go wherever you know that.
So we can look at that and see what we can do.
I also, I do have a cousin in Japan,
so we always see him there too.
I got cousins everywhere.
Okay, first of all, how did that feel compared to the first time?
More scripted.
I like specifics.
specifics are good.
More scripted.
I'm like, well, that's not the answer I thought I was going to get, but okay.
You know what?
Sometimes, if you're in a conversational rut or a dynamic that you can't seem to shift
out of, sometimes scripting is actually okay.
And you just make fun of it. You go,
okay, this guy from me, he told me we got to use these weird scripts. So sorry if it sounds
a little theatrical. Dear Gabby, where would you like to go? And everyone's kind of like
in on the joke, but guess what? It still works. It still works. So I don't mind if it felt
a little scripted. Honestly, I just want you to feel positive.
I felt a lot better listening to that.
And my favorite part of that was when Gabby, you were like, I don't really like the Netherlands.
And then Amy, very, very skilled response.
Amy, do you remember what you said to that?
I'll go anywhere.
I will try.
I love to travel.
So I will get to wherever I want to go eventually. I will try. I love to travel. So I will get to wherever I
want to go eventually. Is my God. That's great. And you asked him, where would you like to go?
You tossed the ball back to him. That was such a beautiful dynamic.
You know, it's funny how resistant we are to scripted conversations. And it echoes what I've
said a lot that many of us are more comfortable
doing something that we are failing at than doing something new that we might possibly
fail at. So we keep having the same kind of conversations instead of trying a new approach,
like a scripted set of questions, which might feel weird. But to me, weird is going through
the next 40 years of life,
not being able to talk about money.
That's one of the reasons I wrote the new journal.
So I could share a bunch of provocative questions
and scripts for you to think about money in a new way.
And if your partner gets a copy,
you can both work on it independently
and then bring your answers together
and compare them, talk about money in a way
that you've never connected on before.
Sometimes I think we just need a little help to have these conversations.
Now back to Amy and Gabby.
How much is a trip to Japan going to cost?
All pocket for me.
Just so you know, I looked up the prices of airfare.
It looks like about 2 about 2000 bucks per ticket.
That's one way.
It could be eight to nine grand, 10 grand.
Maybe 10.
How many years till your 10 year anniversary?
Two.
Ah, okay.
So this starts to become something you really want
to think about.
Here's how we did it.
We had the exact same thing,
tenure anniversary for my wife and me.
In your case, I would do back of the napkin calculation.
I would look at airfare.
I would figure out basic hotel prices.
Where do we want to stay?
Maybe you care about hotels,
maybe you can economize there.
Food places, how many days you're going to go,
things like that.
You basically, and then I would add on 15%.
Maybe even 25% to account for things I didn't account for.
Like taxes.
You know, taxes in hotels and airfare is quite expensive.
Factor all that stuff in.
And then you're going to come up with a number.
Let's just say it's 15,000.
If it's happening in two years,
that means you divide by two,
that means you need to save 7,500 per year.
And if you break it down by month,
you know exactly how much you need to save,
roughly 700 bucks a month.
Now could you do that?
If I asked you today,
could you save 700 dollars a month for the next two years?
We're rough. I would say no because there are other things that I'd want to save for as well.
Okay, fair enough.
So what happens when your 10-year anniversary comes up?
We dream a little smaller or we don't go for as long.
And essentially we're dipping straight out of the savings.
Well, what's that savings money for?
Well, yeah, the way she has it tied out right now is the savings just one big bucket
for whatever we want or need at the time.
Or want, yeah.
Well, really, well, do you want to go to Japan?
Yes.
So do you see Amy?
Why it helps to have sub savings accounts? Because you would be go to Japan? Yes. So do you see Amy why it helps to have sub-saving accounts?
Because you would be able to see,
you actually need some of that savings money.
You need it.
It's an emergency fund.
You need that.
You need it for your children.
It's their money.
Okay, fine.
But the rest of it is not clear how much is there.
And so you can't have an honest conversation about should we go to Japan for an extra two
days or should we get our floors done.
And that's a conversation that I think would be a really healthy, fun conversation for
the two of you.
In order to get there, step one, split out your sub savings accounts and put the amounts
needed for each.
Two, calculate how much your dream Japan trip would be. Dream.
And then you have the information to be able to decide, hey, maybe we can't do the dream.
Let's chip away a couple things, shorten it by a day, kill this type of hotel, whatever.
But I have a feeling that's very possible to two of you.
I think you should do something special for your 10-year anniversary.
10-years is amazing.
I think you should celebrate it.
So a couple of suggestions.
One, do you have to wait two years before you take a child-free trip?
No.
No.
Okay, okay.
Yeah, I was very excited about it. You said it gets one of our cruises next year's child-free. No. Okay. Okay. Gabby's very excited about this thing because one of our crew's next year's child free.
Good.
Great.
Great.
I'm glad because when I asked, you know, what sort of child free places might you go,
you had a lot of really exotic ones, which I love.
But I also think sometimes it's just about the two of you connecting.
And it could be like an hour away, staycation.
It could be super cheap.
But when I saw Gabby light up with the idea
of a child-free time, I thought to myself, wow, if I'm in this relationship, I am creating
a money rule that says something like once a quarter, we are going to have at least one
night child-free somewhere outside the house.
How does that sound to both of you? Awesome.
Good. That's what we're talking about. That's how we use money to get excited.
That's how Gabby you start to get involved. You start to ask really great questions. Hey, you know, I'm curious, why are we putting this much in our 401k? Could we save $100 here and put it towards our child-free trip?
That would be really cool.
So you get engaged. Amy, what do you think about that?
I like it. I can get behind that.
So how much do you currently have invested? He has about 48, 43, 48 somewhere around there. 48, what? 1000. Okay. And just
give me the total amount. Okay. 50, I would go like 55,000. How much are you investing every year? All park is fine. I
would say
10 to 12, but this would be like the first year we're actually doing that. Let's just say 10,000 be conservative. Okay. All right
And you two are mid 30s. So let's say you have 30 years to grow it. Okay. What should I choose for the interest rate?
Something conservative like Like what?
We usually say like 7 to 10 percent, right? 7 percent is good. Eight, you could make an argument for,
we would not use 9 or 10. Those are what's called nominal. That doesn't take into account inflation.
So 7 is the number I use. It's conservative. So you end up at 65 with this much money. Look at Gabby's face.
Gabby, read that number out loud.
Oh man, that's a lot of digits.
That's like $1.4 million.
Yeah, what do you think about that?
Holy shit, I would never even imagine that much.
You ready to become a millionaire?
I already feel like one, but this is like,
this is like, you know, you feel like you're a superhero because
you're a little kid, but this is like you actually become the superhero.
Just compare Gabby's tone right now with how he sounded when we first got on this call.
At the beginning, he was not engaged at all.
What do you think changed?
What do you think was the key moment that Gabby suddenly got interested in their money?
So the good news is, you have so many options. Like, if I were to tell you, I want you to hit the
$2 million mark and I want you to take your cruise and I want you to go to Japan. Do you think it's possible? Now that I see these charts and numbers
It it seems possible
With some balancing out of little numbers here and there agreed
Amy do you think it's possible?
Yes, okay, great
It just seems like it's very doable and
Easy for us to get there if we just adjust our numbers.
Love it.
And what numbers might you adjust?
Not saying we have to do it right here, but what numbers might you adjust?
How much we invest, how much we make.
Mm-hmm.
What else?
Well, I would say it's the buckets.
It's like these big things that we want to do
is put those numbers on the table so we can look at them
and make sure that we essentially can meet those goals
for those projects and vacations and stuff.
I think leaving those out in the ether is stressful because it's unknown,
but I think when you put the numbers down and you actually just look at the numbers,
I think it kind of like eases the pain.
Maybe what's that smile on your face? He's getting it. He's getting it, but also you're getting it.
I think that's amazing.
It becomes like a puzzle and the two of you get to design
how the puzzle works.
It's your life, it's your rich life.
The final thing I want to talk about
is saving for your kids' college.
So with all the things that we've talked about,
I would love to hear the two of you
discuss how you might make a decision
about the kids. How do you think that we should assist our children and make it
so they can do what they want to do and get to where they want to do go with us being able to do
the things that we want to do as well.
And in regards to their education?
No, like in addition to us traveling and us assisting them and being the people that
they want to become. I mean, I think the best way to get me excited is if we can, because I don't want to get,
I don't want to be stuck like my mom was stuck with like, you stuck with our kids for
years on end and they never leave that house.
So get me excited is if we can get our kids,
because I think staying at home in college
is like the worst thing ever.
They cannot stay home and go to school.
So I think what will get me excited is
they leave the house and go to school elsewhere.
I don't care if it's an hour away
or like on the other side of the country.
I would be excited if they had an education
and were able to venture off our house for their
education.
That will get me excited if we can come up with a plan that can push them to get out of
here and get an education.
I think that's a good goal for us to have. And I think to get to that goal would be to assist them how we can and help them get
there.
My parents helped me and I went away to school.
I couldn't come back, but I had the tools and the diploma and things that got me out of
the house.
And it's all going to my realization,
my parents didn't help my sisters
with their college or any of that.
And that's why they were stuck there and still stuck there.
And it's now coming clear if we do invest
in their education that we won't be stuck with our kids till they're 30 also.
So yes, this is actually getting me excited now.
Wow, round of applause for both of you.
That was fantastic.
I really love both of you smiling.
I love both of you talking.
Gabby, I loved you making that connection.
Never thought about it.
36 years old, you never realized it until just now, the dynamics of what played out in your
family.
And think about how many other invisible scripts or hidden messages you carry from your
family that you've never thought about.
And think about how those might be affecting you today.
So when Amy's sitting here saying,
let's put some money aside for the kids.
And she thinks she's talking to you.
It's almost like you've got a screen up.
And she's talking to the invisible script
from Gabby's family 20 years ago.
This is where the two of you get to really have
some great honest conversations.
Use the journal that I just created.
I'll talk about it, both of you fill it out
and you can compare.
Some of those questions in there go right to the heart of this.
What did my parents teach me about money?
What would I change?
Who do I admire?
And the two of you sit down and get a glass of wine,
go somewhere without the kids, talk about it,
and go, oh my God, I never realized that until now.
And it's almost like the two of you are putting on
new eyeglasses, you can finally see each other in focus.
That's a beautiful thing.
Gabby, if there were one thing I would want you to take away from today, it is that you
walked into this call believing that the opposite of ignoring money is worrying about money.
What do you think it is now? It seems like you could get being aware of it, can get you excited.
Yeah, love that, love that.
Being aware doesn't mean you have to worry about it, but aware means the two of you can
talk about it joyfully.
You can spend an hour a month doing your Rich Life review.
That's in the journal.
You talk about fun things.
Oh my gosh, this cruise.
Look at the pictures. I found some new pictures of the cabin. I think we should do this cabin.
What kind of cabin do you think we should do? It becomes exciting. I love this conversation
with Amy and Gabby because it allowed us to dig into the power of their past. Again,
I want to encourage you to pick up this book, The Power of the Past, by Jesse Strive. I found it to be extremely insightful. Also, very controversial. There are
a lot of things in there you might not agree with. But to me, that makes a fantastic book,
and a fantastic way to engage with some of these concepts that are often taboo in our culture.
Now, I received a follow-up from Amy and Gabby after speaking with them. You can read the full follow-up at iwt.com slash follow-ups, but here's what they said.
Today, we were able to sit down and reallocate our extra money in savings to go towards our
investments and our newly formed buckets.
Since our emergency fund currently covers six months, we will focus on savings for our house, cars, our annual family trip, and a big kids-free trip we will try to do
every two to three years. Once we land on a place and get approximate prices, we'll adjust
our savings rate to match it accordingly. This gives us more time to save up for Japan.
I love it. And you can get these very same buckets using your
conscious spending plan, which you can get for free at iwt.com slash episode 70.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You to Be Rich. I'm Rameet Saiti. Please
follow the show on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
If you haven't read, I will teach you to be rich. My book, pick up a copy. You can get it at any
bookstore or any library, and it will show you the specific tactics for how to build the I will
teach you to be rich system into your personal finances.
into your personal finances.