I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 71. "We finally talked about money. I can't believe how little he's saved"
Episode Date: November 29, 2022Emily and Alex are in their mid-30s and have been dating for two years. They recently had a discussion about money and Emily was disappointed to learn how little Alex had saved. What would you do if y...ou talked about money with your partner and you were disappointed at what you discovered? 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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I could tell that she was disappointed in what I brought to the table.
She's often said, these are things you should know.
These are things you should have already known.
And she's right.
I was really disappointed because at our ages, I think that he should have been further along or should have been more careful
about money and saving.
I don't think Emily trusts me with money.
That scares me.
And he told me, I'm a spender, but I'm not a dadder.
And so that scared me too.
And the conversations we've had, they've not been productive at all.
They've actually felt destructive.
And we're just going nowhere with these same conversations over and over.
And I said, we need to be productive.
And what we're talking about, we can't keep going like this.
Yeah, I definitely as
Kind of planned for the worst of money because I've been through the worst and I don't ever want to go through that again
He was a spender for 17 years. He didn't save for 17 years. I don't think that's just gonna drastically go away overnight
Emily and Alex are in their mid-30s and have been dating for two years
Emily and Alex are in their mid-30s and have been dating for two years. They recently had a conversation about their finances, where they shared how much they
have, how much they make, how much debt they have, and Emily was disappointed to learn what
Alex had saved.
On today's call, you're going to hear from both partners, but I'm going to spend more
time with Emily because I think that's where the real insights unfold.
So I'd like to ask you a question.
Imagine you and your partner finally got the courage to sit down and share your income
and your debt and your savings.
And one of you just felt bad.
You felt disappointed.
You wondered, that's all they have. What were they doing all this time?
What kind of lifestyle can we build together? What do you think that would be like?
What do you think would be like for your partner? Well, this happens more than you can imagine.
And today, you get to listen into Emily and Alex talk about their money realizations
on the I Will Teach You to Be Rich podcast.
We had kind of a financial disclosure counseling session
and right before we went with the counselor,
we went over all of our finances together.
And before that, I had had some clues
as to his financial situation,
but I didn't know the black and white hard numbers.
What were the clues that you had had?
The industry he's in is not a high paying industry,
and some of the things he told me about living abroad
for so many years, and that he wasn't really able to save
as much as he'd wanted living abroad.
Alex, so walk me through that moment. Were you excited? Were you nervous? just he wanted, living abroad? Alex.
So walk me through that moment.
Were you excited? Were you nervous? What were you feeling?
Yeah, I was excited. I was a little nervous also because I knew that she was further ahead,
and I knew that I was obviously further behind.
How'd you know that?
Just the way that she talked about money.
And what?
She was, she sounded very savvy.
And she knows what she's doing.
Is that cause she recommended a book called,
I Will Teach You To Be Rich?
I actually saw, I will teach you to be rich
when I was helping Emily Pack one day.
And I quickly went on an app and I purchased the book and I was over
over over a break while we were in different locations. Why did you do that?
Because I knew I needed to out my game. Wow. And out of curiosity was that before or
after this kitchen table conversation? It was before. Wow. Okay, that's impressive. So you saw this book,
you realized you needed to get up to speed and you went out independently and bought it and listen
to it. That's really cool. Have you ever listened to this podcast before? Yeah. You have? Actually,
this might be the first time that someone who came on this podcast has actually read my book
i feel like we need to give a round of applause to everyone on this this conversation like you're the only people who have ever read my book who have come on this god for sake and podcast
gold stars here
i mean i'm impressed all right so here you are at the kitchen table. You pull out your phone. You proceed to share your numbers.
I remember looking at what I'd had in my account, what I had invested, what I had saved,
also a recent land purchase, and I thought it was going to be an opportunity where Emily and I
could meet, put everything on the table, or put at least our finances on the table and talk about how we could move forward from where we're
currently at. What do you remember happened? I could tell that she was
disappointed in what I brought to the table. What did that feel like to you? I understood why. I completely understood why.
I just didn't expect the rest of the conversation to go the way that it went. Later in the
in the afternoon, we were further talking about it and she did end up crying and explaining to me how she felt and how that really affected her trust in me.
And I felt shameful for not being in a place
that one guy my age couldn't should be
into that she didn't feel safe.
Safe was that a word that you used or she used? It's a word that she later used, but I was internalizing that feeling based on how she reacted.
I was really disappointed because at our ages, I think that he should have been further along
or should have been more careful about money and saving and
Coming back to the US and working in the US. I was surprised that he hadn't been able to make up some of that time and save a little more and it was just kind of a realization of
Disnagging thought and I had in the back of my head. It was a confirmation of that that
and I had in the back of my head, it was a confirmation of that. That scares me. And he told me when he was sitting there, I'm a, I'm a spender, but I'm not a debtor. And so that scared me to. I think I would be the
one who always would have to keep track of the finances and kind of be the finance police,
raining and spending behavior if we combine our finances and being the
one to hold us accountable to the budget or to what savings goals we have. I don't expect
Alex to change 17 years of behavior in five months.
How would you feel if you finally sat down with your partner to share your finances and
you realized they didn't actually have that much.
I think we can all sit here and judge, but if you've been responsible with money, if
money has been a value to you, something that's important to you and it hasn't been to
your partner, I can see how that would be disappointing.
Now one thing that's really hard for people is accepting that they may not have the kind
of life that they envisioned.
Think about it.
If you grew up envisioning a certain type of house in a certain city, doing certain things
like brunch or effortlessly eating out or traveling, and you suddenly realize that's not in the
cards for me, that is extremely difficult to accept, especially now when you see other people doing it every
single day.
And I don't have any wisdom on what to do about it.
It's one of the hardest things that I can imagine.
I will say during the great financial crisis, I remember an LA Times article about wealthy
families who had lost their houses, and they couldn't
afford to go to the same restaurants, country clubs, that kind of thing.
And of course, all the comments were jeering at them, saying, oh, boo, who rich people can't
go to the country club anymore.
And I remember thinking, okay, I can understand not feeling sympathy when other people are having
it so much worse. But I also realized that losing
your social life and status is incredibly painful. It's easy to mock people. Oh, you can't
eat out that fancy restaurant. But for every single one of us, losing our social status
would be one of the most painful things you would ever have to go through. Something to think about as we hear Emily's reaction to Alex's finances.
Okay, so how did that conversation end with Alex?
I was really upset with him and we went and met the counselor afterwards.
I think I ended up crying in that counseling session
and I don't remember exactly.
It didn't end well.
Those five months ago.
She wants to feel emotionally secure,
financially secure, physically secure.
And a big aspect of that is finances.
Yeah, I definitely want to feel financially secure and trust my partner with finances. And what does it mean to you when you say financially secure?
I think it means that we both earn a good income and we're able to save. It means that we have the same goals
financially and that they are we're on the same page together we're
saving together we we want a similar lifestyle that I don't think he's gonna
go out and spend money that we haven't discussed on things that we haven't
previously talked about. What's good?
Over six figures to me.
Okay.
Over six means what, 101,000 or 700,000.
I...
Right now, I earn more than Alex,
and I would like him to earn as much as me.
Because what? Because then I think we
could save more and try to fill in the gaps of some of those missed years of retirement savings.
Do you believe that? Absolutely, I believe that. I don't believe this. I think Emily's using a very logical reason
to substitute for a feeling and not being honest about it.
I'm sure I could spend 15 minutes on this with Emily
and maybe she might realize it, but what's the point?
Let's just keep moving.
So it's strictly about the retirement goals
and the savings amount. That's why you want him to earn as much
as you.
And I think too we've talked about if we get married and have a family, me being able to have
a little flexibility of not having to go back to work three months after I have a child.
Okay, makes a lot of sense.
Alex, what do you think?
Can you earn as much as Emily does?
Yeah, I certainly think I can. Even in my industry, I'm finding ways to to earn more.
We actually looked at the dream job course together. And that really inspired me to look at
take a different angle on on how to approach people in my industry. And even that ideal job that I would one day have,
and even though I've not got that just yet,
I've made steps to do that.
I've started my own consulting company
where I'm working with individuals and organizations.
And that just started in, I think, the last few months, and well over five figures right
now.
Really?
Yeah.
Wow.
How do you feel about that?
I am amazed.
It feels like the start of something amazing.
And that's something that I feel has always been inside me, something that I've tried doing
the past when I was living overseas.
But now it feels like it's an opportune time to start this up.
And so when I think of my full-time job and also my part-time consulting, I think is a
real opportunity for me to really not just get to a level playing field with what Emily
earns, but also to
To top that up and to help her feel more secure and safe for us or our family could one day feel more safe and she could spend
That flexible time with with our kids if we were to have them. Okay, and has anything changed since then?
We definitely talk more about finances and about strategy. I know he's changed
some of his behaviors and he's told me about them. I mean, I don't
ask to see his financial plan or anything because then we haven't commingled our finances.
Our finances are separate. So I'm not looking over his shoulder, you know, monitoring his finances, he's an adult.
And just so I understand, you two are dating, you live together, but are not married,
is that correct?
We're dating, we don't live together, we live separately.
Okay. And do you think that the next step of your relationship would be living together
or combining finances
or getting married?
Yeah, I think the next step, in my opinion,
would be getting married.
I would not commingle my finances unless I was legally
married to somebody.
And even then, I don't know how much I would
commingle those finances.
I like anyone with a point of view on money.
Sometimes I agree, other times
I might disagree, but I still like to see when someone has a strong point of view. I actually
think the rarest thing in the world is a point of view. So when Emily says she wouldn't
co-mingle her finances before getting married, I respect that. And I also happen to agree with her.
All right, so you have this conversation. You both realize that you have some
mismatches in what your expectations were. What happened between the end of that
conversation at the kitchen table until now?
We went to England and Portugal and Italy and Sweden.
And so we planned this trip together
and we kind of said a truth
and decided not to talk about the finances on the trip
and enjoy our time together.
You said a truce as if talking about money is war,
but we're gonna say a truce just for Europe.
Maybe I said the tr truth with my own head.
I don't think we actually verbally said that.
I think that was my mental.
My mental.
So first of all, you're the only couple I've ever heard.
Actually you, Emily, because I don't hear Alex
saying a word right now.
Emily's the only person I've ever heard used a word
truce with money.
I like it.
It's very grand.
All right, we have an Italian truce. Go ahead.
So we go on this trip and I had to mentally discipline myself not to watch what he spent and
watch how he spent money on our trip. I just had to put it out of my mind and enjoy our time
together and not worry about what he
spent because after he told me he was a spender.
Of course, I'm watching how he's spending money.
And give me an example because I know that you put it out of your mind, but I bet you didn't
forget how he spent in Europe.
Can you remember a specific example?
Look at that smile.
She's like, do you have three hours?
There was one, we were on the beach and we were going to rent these cabanas and he had gone
up. And there was so many cabanas on the beach, but we just plopped down into these ones
and I said, can you go and see, you know, and then he paid for them and he came back and
he said, those were so expensive. And I was surprised. I said, well, you could, you know, you should have come back and he said those were so expensive.
And I was surprised, they said, well, you could, you know, you should have come back and told
me and we could have walked down to the beach and gone to a cheaper cabana because we weren't
going to be there all day.
So something like that.
And how much was that cabana?
It was a hundred euro for the two.
I didn't expect it to be a hundred euro.
That's for sure, but it was. And so I just thought,
you know what, we're here. We're not going to be back here. Let's just enjoy rest. Let's not go
up and down the beach to find a place to sit. How long have you two been dating?
Almost two years. Okay. It doesn't sound that unusual to me. You've been dating for two years. You don't live
together that you might not have a shared mental framework on how to deal with a surprisingly
expensive cabana in Europe. Like it's kind of an esoteric situation. I'm not surprised
that you haven't encountered it before. I am not surprised by this example.
This is what's been on her mind for months,
a hundred Euro-Cabana.
What this really tells me is that the issue between them
is much, much deeper than a hundred bucks here or there.
It's about how they see money
and maybe even something we haven't even gotten into yet.
Listen in.
All right.
Okay.
So you went on vacation.
Was there any other thing that happened between the kitchen table conversation and now?
Why is everybody smiling but not talking?
I don't know why he's smiling.
I wouldn't know why he's smiling.
You're making me smile.
I don't have any debt. I
am not in debt by any means. But in terms of planning for that vacation, we've talked about
even recently, I didn't plan out how much we set a limit for what we're going to spend,
but I didn't budget for it. And then I think that not having a budget and not having a goal that I actually saved for that trip,
it really concerned Emily.
What was the number?
I think it was 2000.
Each, yeah, so it was about 4,500 total.
Okay, so that includes everything flights,
accommodations. Yeah, I think I thought he had saved and maybe that was an assumption,
but I thought he had already saved for it and that's kind of how he knew what his
woman was and then he got a bonus this summer and when we were looking over the extra income
that he's made in the last five months and talking about it, and he said, well, you know, where, like, where did you do with that bonus
money? What did you do with this? What did you do that? And he said, well, I paid for your
up with that. And I said, well, I thought you already saved for your and kind of put that
in your savings plan.
Did you do that, Alex? Did you save for it ahead of time or no?
I didn't. I had the money, but I didn't know.
Okay. And did you have 2000 bucks into checking or savings account?
I had it in the checking account.
Okay. So what's the problem?
You had the money, you decided on a number.
Sounds good to me. What's the problem?
I think when I think about saving for something and budgeting for something,
I think about planning and contributing X amount
to get there rather than taking it out
from a general checking account.
Okay, how much is in your checking account right now?
About 18,000.
Okay, that's a lot.
And then savings is about 20, 25.
Okay, that's, all right, your ratios are a little off,
but I wanna understand more about how you both think
about money, because it seems like this was an issue for you.
Emily, seems like from what I'm hearing,
he had the money, but it unsettled you that he had not,
what, planned for it ahead of time?
Well, I guess because he had told me he was trying to save more and try to contribute more to his retirement,
I was surprised that he didn't plan this trip expenses in his total expenses and savings.
Okay, got it.
All right.
So he didn't manage money the way you thought he would,
which surprised you. And combine that with the fact that it doesn't have as much as you thought
he should at his age and the fact that the two of you are talking about potentially getting married,
you start to add these things together and it starts kind of prickling your antenna. Is that right?
Yeah, that's right. Are you hearing the clues?
The real issue here is not the cabana.
It's not about the amount in his checking account.
And for that matter, why does Emily really care?
He has the money.
It's just not in the accounts the way she would do it.
What's a real issue here?
Something to think about.
I also hear some positive clues.
They both talk about money.
They've both gone to therapy, which is a great sign, and they are here talking to me, which
is another positive sign.
I want to pause here to ask if you have ever judged your partner for not managing money
the exact way you would.
And now that you're hearing Emily and Alex, what does it make you think about the way
you approached those conversations in the past?
Now, back to Emily and Alex, I'm going to shift the questions to them and I'm going to
ask them what they think the problem is.
All right.
So if you had to sum it up in one or two sentences, what do you think the problem here is?
I don't think Emily trusts me with
money. Emily? I think based on what Alex has told me and shown me, I feel like I would bear the burden of our finances, me.
And I already have a lot of pressure on myself because I'm also trying to make up from
some things that happen to me.
So I feel like I would have that extra, that burden responsibility because of, like he said,
he's still got a lot to learn and catch up.
And I'm not saying I'm some financial expert
here by any means, but between the two of us,
the burden would be on me.
And would that be acceptable to you?
Well, no, I want us to be partners in this.
Where are you not on the same page?
Well, no, I want us to be partners in this. Where are you not on the same page?
I think Emily understands finance is much better than I do.
And I understand that she's often said, these are things
you should know.
These are things you should have already known.
And she's right. And I said, I know, and I'm sorry, I'm just learning
these things. I'm not buying this yet. Notice that Emily says the burden of the finances
would fall on her. Well, yes, for the majority of people in America, the burden of finances
falls on the higher earner. She also says he has a lot to catch up on.
Yes, I'm sure he does, but the fact that he has bought my audio book and listened to
it, and he's started this side business, those are very promising.
We're not there yet.
So I'm going to start gently pressing them, especially Emily, to try to get to the root
problem. All right.
So you mentioned that your spending is misaligned on vacation, but then we talked about it's
not really misaligned.
Where else are you not on the same page with spending?
This is a pin drop silence in here.
Excuse me.
Is somebody, is my audio just go out?
I'm letting him go for it.
Okay.
That's what I'm trying to work out and understand.
My concern is, like I said, he was a spender for 17 years.
He didn't save for 17 years.
I don't think that's just going to drastically go away overnight.
Okay, I agree. Is it possible you're creating a problem where one doesn't really exist?
I have all done. This is a question for me. I hope not. I don't think so. Okay. Well, let's find out. What do you remember feeling about money?
Like from teenage years into your
20s? What word would you use to describe your feelings about money? I think ambivalent.
My brother was very focused on money, my older brother, and he actually gave me your book
when I was in my 20s. And he was just very thankful about having seven figures
by the time he was 30.
Tell him to send me an email.
I'd love to hear if he used my book.
That's great.
I love hearing this stuff.
Okay.
I will tell him.
And he, my parents didn't chase money.
They worked, their jobs were more of their passion.
So to see my brother, his main driving force was money was different
All right, so what happened in your 20s 30s
What were the major developments for you?
well, I got married
and
I
Was married to espouse who had quite a bit of money and his perspective was, don't
worry about money.
This is our money.
This is our family.
We will be fine.
And I will take care of the money.
And I will be the planner about money.
Okay.
So what happened? We didn't stay married and he didn't really mean all of that about it
with our money and that we were okay and I ended up spending almost... Well, all of my savings on legal fees to get out of that marriage.
Well, I'm sorry to hear that.
When you say that you spent all of your savings, how much was that?
Over six figures.
Wow.
Okay.
And are you fully separated, divorced now?
Yeah.
Okay.
What was the role of money in that marriage?
It was really horrible because even though we had a lot of money, he would get on to be about
money all the time. That I was spending too much if I went to the grocery store that towards
the end it was really it was really unpleasant. I was in God's school at the time so I wasn't
working full time. And just that I was basically a parasite.
Do you say that? That actual word. Yeah, that actual word.
And is the implication that he was making the money, you were not, you're just basically
mooching off of him.
Yeah.
It's terrible.
Especially because from what you told me, he had told you earlier, our money is ours.
Yeah.
Where did that come from?
That he would say, I mean, the parasite word, it's quite extreme.
It's extreme, but I think it fit in with person he entered that being.
Looking back, what are your takeaways from that marriage?
Looking back, I wish I had not been so trusting about he was going to take care of the finances
and been more involved. And after that marriage ended,
I worked really hard to save again.
And there's just this almost like self-defense mechanism of,
you know, I have to be able to provide for myself.
I will not rely on
somebody else for money ever again or trust that they've got it figured out, or that they're
going to take care of me because it was so hard to get back to a place of being able to save
and be financially okay after that. I'm really sorry you had to go through that.
All of it, the marriage, the marriage is dissolving, obviously, words like a parasite, and
whatever else may have happened.
I hate hearing that because it stays with you for a long time.
You know, it's not easy to get over.
So anyway, I'm sorry you had to go through that
and I appreciate you sharing it.
Thanks.
Do you think you've brought any of those lessons
into this relationship?
I think a certain expectation that he should have
these things figured out financially.
Because it's finished a sentence for me.
Well, because I think at our ages we should we shouldn't be relying on anybody else, right? I learned that the hard way
Okay, any other reasons?
I I think because who I was married to before had it all figured out
It that's what you want me to say and no no no on, hold on. I don't want you to say anything.
I want you to say the truth.
Well, I think that's what you're getting at.
And the irony of that is sure he had it figured out supposedly.
He came from generational wealth.
So how much of that was his own is debatable,
but he was so ungenerous with his money, with the money.
What? Like what? You know I love examples of cheap fucks. Okay. Just let's do it. Tell me.
We, but let's bet. We could not have people over for dinner because he didn't want to pay
to feed them. Oh my God. I'm in heaven right now.
He didn't want to pay for what pizza?
What are we talking about?
Just whatever if we grill out or make a solid or whatever.
What did he say?
He said, I don't want to pay to feed people, other people.
And was your response like, don't you come from three generations of wealth?
Do you ever say that?
I said, well, we can afford it.
Uh-huh.
And his response?
No, we can't.
Really? He said, no, we can't afford it.
Okay.
See, the things going through my mind
are things that I would use to verbally
eviscerate someone on Twitter.
But I forget that you were married to this person.
So usually you don't try to impale intimate partner.
Okay, fair enough, fair enough.
Don't take my advice on verbal destruction, at least in a relationship you want to continue.
All right.
What else was he cheap about?
Anything to do with the house, if we needed to buy anything for the house, we couldn't afford it.
And when I paid for grad school, he didn't have with any of that.
And in a way, I'm glad because during the divorce, he couldn't claim that he financially supported
me with those payments.
I became scared to use money and spend money.
How long ago did the marriage end?
Everything was legally finalized around two and a half years ago.
Okay, great.
So you know, you get some time to get some perspective and kind of think about what lessons
you took away.
Some of the lessons that I heard you say were he micromanaged money was constantly on you about your spending and he said we can't afford it.
He called you a parasite which cannot have felt good. He lied presenting himself as you know
very wealthy but then when it came down to ordering a salad for friends,
he wouldn't do it. Are all those fair to say? Yeah, all that's fair. Okay. And he made you feel like
you were insecure with money. Like you didn't, you wouldn't know if you were going to have enough.
It's possible you brought some of those lessons to this relationship, right? It's possible.
Yeah. Should we just put them all out on the table?
Because I think it would help us move forward.
Yeah, let's do it.
Let me just break in here to talk about a few things.
If you're a cheap tipper, you're going to want to turn this podcast off right now because
I fucking hate you and I'm about to blast you.
Oh, and if you're not sure if you're a cheap tipper, but you use phrases like, why should
I have to pay for companies underpaying their employees?
Or we don't do this in Europe or, oh, remete.
So you're saying I have to tip 25% even if the service is terrible.
Just know that you are a cheap fuck who's going to die alone.
All right, you know what?
I don't want to spend another 20 minutes ranting about tipping right now.
Just Google remete tipping and watch my videos. But I do want to talk about the obvious
clues that Emily is giving us. She went through a traumatic marriage,
specifically related to money. And she has obviously brought a lot of those
lessons into this relationship. To you and me, this seems obvious. But if you
rewind and listen back, it's also evident that Emily hasn't connected
her past marriage to her financial expectations
of Alex today.
And without understanding that connection,
she will forever be feeling resentful
about tiny issues like a cabana,
but the real root cause is so much deeper.
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The feeling I'm getting is that some of the examples
you've given me today, when I hear them, I go,
all right, I mean, I don't know if I would have got a $100
cabana, but okay, fine.
But the lens you're viewing them through seems like it's almost assuming the worst.
Would you agree?
Yeah, I definitely kind of plan for the worst of money because I've been through the worst
and I don't ever want to go through that again.
I'm with you. I don't want you to ever go through the worst again.
I guarantee by the time we finish talking today, you will have some strategies, you will not have to worry about worst case scenario.
Let's put that on the table right now. Okay. But when you're in a new relationship and, you know,
you're talking about potentially coming together,
physically, financially, all kinds of stuff,
it's kind of hard to build a relationship when you're,
primarily looking at what the worst case scenario is, right?
Yeah. Alex Alex, like, yes. Alex like yes yeah tell me Alex yeah it is and it's it we've
had the same conversation for the past five or six months now and it feels like
it's it's the same thing that keeps coming up about the conversation.
That she won't be able to trust me with money, that she'll be managing the finances,
that will she be able to allow her
and me to have the lifestyle that we would ideally like to have?
Sounds constructive.
Well, why are you giving me the thumbs up?
It is constructive.
It is?
No, actually, so I think I get heightened devotional mean and I just start feeling scared and resentful.
Do you see the difference in changing the lens the way you look at the world of money?
Yeah, I definitely think that would be a more positive line frame for us to work off
of than worst case scenario. I think for me, I get frustrated,
and that's a little bit not only at Alex,
but at me.
It's like I'm almost talking to him
the way I feel about my situation sometimes.
Let's talk about money lenses for a second.
In America, the primary money lens is cost.
That is what 90 plus percent of people use every single day. How much is
this cost? Oh no, that's too expensive. But you and I intuitively have other money lenses.
And you know that. That's why you buy name brand diapers or protein powder. And there are
a lot of different money lenses. They can be safety, luxury, experience, delight, even status. And you can Google
Rameet money lenses for more. My goal for you is for you to have a set of money lenses that
you can use in different scenarios. Just as an orchestra needs multiple instruments, you
too should have multiple money lenses. Let me give you an example. When I buy a commodity like salt or a ladder, I'm just going to get the cheapest one.
That's cool.
Also, I had a guy on this podcast who has a $25,000 toolbox, times three.
If he still listens to this podcast, he's really pissed that I said a ladder is a commodity.
Please don't email me.
I don't buy ladders.
That's just an example.
But when I book a restaurant for a business meeting, I'm not using cost.
I'm choosing one where I know I can get parking
and I can have a quiet conversation
and good enough food.
That is security.
When I travel, I'm booking luxury hotels
because that's one of my money dials.
That money lens is luxury, even delight. Now with Emily,
I'm using this concept of money lenses more metaphorically. She looks at the world of money
negatively, always asking, what can go wrong? But what if she took those lenses off just for a minute
and asked herself, what could go right? When we first shared our finances back at the kitchen table,
when I got my phone out, I thought that's what we were
going to start working toward.
And it hasn't been, and the conversations we've had,
they've not been productive at all.
They've actually felt destructive.
And like I mentioned, we were just going nowhere
with these same conversations over and over.
And I said, we have to be productive.
And what we're talking about, we can't
keep going like this.
Emily, what do you hear from that?
I see a point and I agree. I thought we had a very productive conversation the other day though about money and that was the first.
Don't jump in. Don't jump in. Keep going Emily.
I think for me, I get frustrated and that's a little bit not only at Alex, but at me.
It's like I'm almost talking to him the way I feel about my situation sometimes.
Yes.
Now, I completely understand that.
Can I bring it back to what I just said a second ago because I really want to hear you respond
to it.
So Alex said, I feel that our conversations
have been destructive and we can't keep going on like this.
Can you respond to that?
I agree.
I want to make them productive and not stressful
and make them nice to have.
Great.
Awesome.
Thank you.
Can you see the difference in the two responses that you gave?
Yes.
What was the first one?
The first one was sort of defensive and an explanation about why I come at things the
way I do and the second one was agreed to move forward more positively. Love it completely right and by the way you did this unconscious thing
Which Alex you were about to play your part Emily said
You know that last conversation was blah blah blah and then she paused and then you took debate
Alex and you were about to reassure her
So notice even in a short relationship such as yours,
you've developed these conversational groups.
That's okay.
Every couple does it.
I do it, we all do it.
But I love what you said at the end, Emily.
Hey, I don't want it to be that way.
I want us to have nice positive conversations.
Now that's a place we can work for.
Yeah.
Mm-hmm.
Alex, what would it look like for you
if you and Emily had a positive relationship with many?
I think we could strategize together.
Obviously, she has a greater insight into what to do
with, let's say retirement funds and things like that.
And it'd be wonderful for me to work together with her if we're going to get married to do that. So there is that greater trust there with our finances. So we can just be strategic with
which funds are going into or which retirement accounts are going into.
I'd love to have those sorts of conversations where we get talked together
rather than I should just know it because of my age.
Yeah, that does sound nice.
One of the conversational habits that you and your partner have developed.
Let me try and take a guess. If it comes to money, one person tends to bring
it up. One person in your relationship is the worrier. And the other walks on egg shells
around money. That person proactively reassures the worrier, saying things like, okay, we
have to talk about some money stuff, but don't worry, it's not that bad. I kind of love hearing
these conversational habits. To me, it's like the wrinkles on someone's face.
I don't think there's something to hide.
I love seeing wrinkles.
I think they show a lifetime of experience.
And I don't think of them as a mark on us.
I think they are a part of us.
But when it comes to conversational habits, they can also be destructive. If one person
is always worrying or defensive or avoided, it can create real dysfunctional dynamics. So I
want to make a suggestion. Try this in your next monthly Rich Life review. You know, that
meeting every month where you talk about money, flip the roles. The person who usually talks less, now they're going to run that meeting.
And this principal question of, what are all the things that are wrong with our finances?
Flip that.
Try this.
Amazing.
What are three things we can celebrate this month?
I want you to try to flip the script to change these conversational
grooves because they'll make you realize those grooves do not make up who you are. Those
grooves can be changed and you can choose what type of relationship you want to have around
money. Now, if you want my help to do this, you can join my money coaching group
where we talk about money every single month live in a positive environment and I answer your money questions.
You can join at iwt.com slash money coaching.
All right, 239,000 total net worth. How do you feel about that number?
I feel like it's low.
Okay, how old are you?
35. Okay, so it's low because what? It's low based on the age.
Oh, which website did you read for your age? I look at the retirement trajectories.
What does it tell you?
By my age, I should have at least double my income.
Fate.
Okay, what is your income?
It's about 160.
Okay.
So yeah. When did you start making 160? Just recently I got a new
job about a month ago. Wow. What a surprise. And what were you making before then? I was making
about one twenty seven one twenty five. One twenty five. Wow. Two fifty. And how much is your net worth again? Could you read that number to me?
To 39.
Hmm. So, any relationship between 125,000 and basically 250,000?
So, that is, that is about double, but it feels very behind for me. Wow, really? You're telling me that the way you feel about your money does not correlate
to the amount of money in your bank account? I know, shocker. This is so crazy. Who came up with
that phrase? Is there somebody who says that every single episode on his podcast? I will teach you
to be rich? I just fell right into your traffic with a freight of goods. Yeah, I mean, that's what I do.
What I do. It's for these moments.
God, that felt good.
Just a quick reminder that if you are worried about money
with $10,000 in the bank, you're still going to be worried
at $100,000 and a million dollars and often 10 million dollars.
Your feelings about money are highly uncorrelated with the
amount of money in the bank, which is why you have to independently work on improving your money
psychology. Another thing, guys, please stop reading these stupid fucking websites that tell you
how much you should have saved up by age 30 or 40 or 50. Do you think these sites factor in your
student loan debt or the fact that you live in to Leo versus Manhattan?
Or the fact that some of you want to live a minimalist,
subsistence farming lifestyle and the others want to stay at Aman Hotels?
What the fuck is going on right now?
Why is it that people will spend more time learning how to post disappearing text on their tick-tock videos?
Then on calculating four simple numbers that will give you 85% of what you need to know in terms of how much money you'll have for the rest of your life
But you have to understand coming out of losing so much
Mm-hmm. I I think of how much I could have had I get it. I totally get it. Let me give you a hypothetical example
Okay, I'm a guy who
Doesn't read any books about money.
Instead I get my advice from TikTok, where I clicked a couple of different videos and now
I follow many realtors who tell me that I can make passive income from buying houses,
because houses always go up.
So I go and buy a house and the house, I pay 300,000 and it ends up being worth 700,000 on Zillow.
I go, oh my God, I'm rich.
Remete that idiot was wrong.
Real estate does only go up.
I make $400,000.
But then the market turns and my Zillow's estimate goes down to $500,000.
How much did I make from that house that I bought for 300?
200,000. How much did I make from that house that I bought for 300?
200,000? Yeah, but it feels like I lost way more, doesn't it?
Yeah, because of the potential you had that you thought.
So what advice would you give somebody
who feels like they lost that money
and they feel
way behind?
I would talk to somebody so much more differently than I talked to myself.
Tell me.
I would say, I think you're doing well.
You're able to save.
You've got a better paying job.
You have savings.
You have investments.
You're just going to continue to save.
You'll be fine.
Okay.
Hold on. I'm going to do something. Okay. I'm going to continue to save, you'll be fine. Okay, hold on.
I'm going to do something.
Okay, I'm going to hold a reflection up to say that again, say that to yourself.
Say it, say it nicely.
Okay, I would say, um, you're continuing to save and you have been able to save and make up money in a short amount of time and
you will be fine.
You will be fine.
I like that.
I like that it feels a lot more compassionate.
I like that it meets them where they are.
I like that it's not punitive.
What do you like about it?
Yeah, I mean, it's hard to beat yourself up financially all the time.
You know, some people listening have been in the unfortunate situation where they were
beat up a lot by someone verbally.
You know, it could be verbal abuse.
It could just be just not nice things.
And after a while, it doesn't feel good.
It feels really bad.
And it starts to often make people believe that about themselves.
Now imagine you tell yourself that every day, I'm behind, I'm behind.
You look at anyone else's money, like your partners, we're behind, we're behind.
It seeps into everything. Going to the grocery store, going out to eat,
going to a European trip.
Are you behind?
I'm not even convinced that's true.
You have hundreds of thousands of dollars in the bank.
$1,200 of death.
Looks like you got a pretty good income.
160K, that's outstanding at 35.
Seems to me like you're doing pretty well financially speaking.
Have you ever heard anyone tell you that?
My mom.
Well, that's good.
That's good. I'm glad she said that. She's good. That's good.
I'm glad she said that.
She's right.
It's going to be very hard to make changes
unless you can fundamentally change the way that you talk to yourself.
I'm curious for those of you listening to this.
What do you notice about the way Emily talks to herself?
And can you think of any examples in your own life where you practiced negative self-talk?
If you have, go to my Instagram page and leave a comment there on this episode's release.
Sometimes, I think it helps to share how we talk about ourselves.
Now, let's jump ahead.
I want to just give you a couple of quick numbers on Alex.
He has $90,000 in assets, including
a Subaru. And for some reason, he bought land in Colorado. He's got $55,000 in retirement
accounts and $25,000 in savings. Yes, you're thinking exactly what I'm thinking. So how
do you feel about your numbers? I feel considering that I've started again three years ago.
I'm moving in the right direction.
There's certainly not where I want to be at this stage in my life,
but I feel I've made some great steps.
In a recent money coaching call, you actually use my CSP as an example.
And I was wondering, what can I do?
What do I do?
And you just said, let it cook.
Let it cook.
I remember.
Let me just refresh everyone,
because in our money coaching sessions,
once a month, we all get on
and I answer people's questions.
And you had sent this question ahead of time.
And it was, hey, I've made these changes,
I've done this stuff, but it just feels like,
I don't have enough.
And I took a look at your CSP.
And I remember your numbers were solid,
your earnings were good, your percentages were on point,
you were investing pretty aggressively.
It's just that it takes time to get it.
It's just like getting a train rolling.
You know, it takes a little while.
You go, how do I get the train to go faster?
You go, just keep the engine going and keep moving.
And at a certain point, it gets so, it's so big
and so fast you cannot stop it.
So I remember very vividly and I'm so glad
that we get to talk more in detail here
because financially speaking, the fact
that you've accomplished this in what,
just three years, is that true?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's outstanding.
Thank you.
Seriously outstanding.
So well done.
We all start from different places in life.
When it comes to money, when it comes to understanding
of physical fitness, everything.
The fact that you have made these changes
in three years is really exciting to me,
and I think you should be commended for it.
So together, the two of you are gonna make $290,000 a year.
And how's that number sound as a household income?
I think it sounds great.
I think it sounds great. It sounds good. Okay. $290,000 at 35 and 40.
This sounds pretty good to me. That's not even peak earning
years. And you got to side business, cook in. Ah, there's a
lot of potential here. All right. I'll take the silence to be complete
agreement with me. Let's move on. I want to say for the record, I am very proud of him with his
side business because I think it's, you know, helpful. Like, I think one of the things you say is
there's no maximum to the amount you can earn. And that's true. And he also loves it when he talks about it.
He just loves it.
So I am very happy and proud of him.
And I love hearing that.
And what does that make you feel when you see him excited about his side business?
Oh, it just, it feels me with joy too.
And I want to help him achieve all those goals.
I love that.
Nothing better than seeing your partner really locked into what they're doing.
They love it, they're good at it, they're thriving.
It's just, it's one of the best feelings in the world.
Emily, I wonder what it would feel like if the two of you could feel like that with money.
I think I would have to feel like that about money for myself first before we could get there. You're exactly right. It's like people asking me, how do I teach my kids about money? I go,
you get good with money yourself. You have to master it yourself. Become very good and confident
before you can turn around and teach your kids. I think you're exactly right.
All right, you save Emily 12%.
So you have vacations, gifts, long-term emergency fund, and whatever fun type of stuff.
And then you're guilt-free spending. Emily, you're spending 29%. Is that correct?
No, I mean, it kind of fluctuates because if I don't spend it, then I just move it over
to savings.
I will say, at this point in my life, I can spot a lie on a conscious spending plan
within milliseconds.
It is an amazing skill that absolutely nobody on this planet cares about.
Anyway, you can get your own copy of the conscious spending plan at IWT.com slash episode 71.
So how much do you spend a month on guilt free spending?
I would say I will be thick.
I try to keep it under 500.
What?
Yeah.
Why?
Why do you do that?
Because I want to save more.
Okay.
I don't mind you saving more.
What's the purpose of saving?
To enjoy it later in plan for things.
Going back to that prepper psychology, what was it again?
To control.
Yeah. Like, I don't mind that you save aggressively. I don't mind it.
It's fine. Yeah. But there are little signs that you give me that you're not enjoying your rich
life today. No, I'm definitely not. So let me just ask you this, Emily, how do you want to show up with money to yourself?
Well, I'll give you an example. So if a friend wants to go out and meet, you know, everything is very social around food and food is expensive right now. And so if they want to go to dinner,
it stresses me out because I'm thinking you went in plan for that and that's going to be expensive
and I don't want to pay the money. Even though I want to see my friend, I don't want to pay the money, should go.
Okay, can you remind me what my question was to you again?
Can you say it out loud?
How do I want to show up?
Yeah, and what was your answer in one sentence?
My answer was the negative answer about money.
That's correct.
I'm giving you the chance to blue sky tell me how
you want to show up with money. Okay, I would like to be able to go out for that dinner with my
friend and not worry about the cost. I would like to be able to get my nails done and not think it's
ridiculous cost. What else? I want to be able to travel and have a kevan, a date record, and all of the things, and
I'll hurry about it.
I like it.
And how about feelings about money?
How would you like to show up?
Who do you want to be with money?
I don't want to have to worry about money and constantly check my accounts.
How often you check your accounts on your phone, which I know you have like 10 apps on your phone.
I check them, I mean, I don't check them every day,
but I check them every week.
Uh-huh.
What's that feeling you get right when you click
submit and you're about to log in?
The spread.
Dread, really dread.
Yeah, I do dread sometimes.
35 years old, $239,000 net worth
and you feel dread logging. And why is that?
Because it just feels like it's not enough.
I could be doing better. Yeah, you could be doing better. You could be in the NFL or you know,
you could, I don't know, be making $10 million a year, but you're not. That's true.
making $10 million a year, but you're not.
That's true.
You know, it's hard to feel good looking forward if you're always looking backward.
And what a tragedy it would be if you go through the rest of your life, feeling behind,
never to realize that you were actually at the front of the pack.
Hmm, that would be a tragedy. Yeah. When you say it like that.
So how do you want to show up with money? Who do you want to be?
I want to feel good about saving and then be able to enjoy.
You know, I do work very hard and I've worked really hard over the last three years to save.
And so I don't...
Something you said earlier too, when you have someone talk negatively to you about money,
it can really affect how you view yourself and view money.
And then how sad that you have someone talking negative
with you about money.
And then you talk to yourself that way.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I definitely want to show up in a positive mind frame
with money.
I love that.
I love that.
Can I share how I want to show up with money?
Yes.
Yeah.
What do you think my answer is, by the way, before I give it?
How do I want to feel about money?
You want to feel good.
I want to be positive.
Yeah.
Yeah, positive, yeah.
Good.
What else?
You want it to bring you and your spouse joy.
Yes. So, for the loved ones in my life, I want to be able to use it to solve problems, to be
adventurous, to give ourselves the gift of leisure and adventure.
All of these things are true.
I want convenience.
And I want to be able to be spontaneous if a friend says,
let's stay for an extra couple of days on vacation.
Why not? Let's do it.
I want to also be safe.
I want to know that I'm not going to run out of money.
All of those things can be true.
So take your answers for me, we're all awesome.
They're all totally accurate.
Now, can you take those answers you gave for me
and can you give me your own answers, Emily?
They don't have to be mine, but give me yours.
Okay, so I wanna be able to go out for dinner with the friends
and or go on a trip with the friend.
I wanna be, I don't wanna feel feel like I'm going to run out of money,
but that I can choose a job that I love,
but that maybe doesn't pay as well,
at some point in the future,
or if we have kids that I can stay home for three years
while they're young and not go back
to a really job right away.
That Alex and I can travel together and travel with our families.
I think that would be nice for both of us.
I think we'd both appreciate that.
And no, yeah, not worry about the Kavanaugh.
Yeah.
Gosh, that felt so different to hear you talk like that.
Did you notice it?
Yeah, it feels a lot lighter, gosh.
Yeah, it's probably been a long time since you talked about money like that.
Yeah, I mean, I have not dreamed about money in a long time.
Yeah, I like this idea, this metaphor of, it was so heavy for so long, but now I've taken that
weight off my body and I feel lighter.
I like that.
It almost lets you choose which direction you want to go.
Let me trace how we got here.
First Emily came to this call, disappointed with Alex's finances.
We later discovered that she'd gone through a traumatic previous marriage where she was
called a parasite by her ex-husband.
Now in this relationship, she hyperfocuses on things like 100 Euro Cabana and the way
that Alex has set up his accounts.
And she also feels behind about her money, even though she has hundreds of thousands of
dollars in her 30s. She also feels behind about her money, even though she has hundreds of thousands of dollars
in her 30s.
Now, I don't agree with her,
but I can understand why she feels that way.
And through our conversation,
now she's finally realized that she wants to show up
differently with money.
As she puts it, she wants to feel lighter.
She wants to be more positive.
I think this is a huge realization.
And the key, this is the extra step that I take with my, I will teach you to be rich philosophy,
is to go beyond intention and to actually make the changes be part of a system.
So what I suggested to her was that she carve out a specific amount of money for her guilt-free spending that will let her feel lighter and more positive.
Did you hear her say that she doesn't really do much with her guilt-free spending money?
In fact, she just saves it.
I go, why do you save it?
She goes, I don't know, I need to save more.
So what I proposed to her was that that money could be used the next time they want to Cabana together or to go out to dinner and not worry about the bill.
It can be used for anything she wants.
But with money, you have to go beyond intention.
You have to make it part of a system.
So when I look now at your guilt-free spending, which technically allows you to spend $2,000
a month.
You tell me, how can you use that money
to match up with how you said you want to show up?
It's...
Um...
Gosh, that's a good question.
I think, too, going back to your word, I like the word light.
I want to be light about money.
I don't want to have this heavy burdensome weight about money.
So for my guilt-free spending, I think, Alex and I could explore.
Do weekend trips around the area?
We've talked about different places we want to go.
So we could do that.
I'm not any hard time thinking about how I want to show up
with this money.
Remember how you said that Alex has thought this way
about money for 17 years and it's going to be tough for him to change.
Remember that?
Yeah, absolutely.
It doesn't just apply to him.
That's right.
Yeah.
It takes time.
I love this first step you're taking.
I think it's very powerful.
And the larger question beyond that is how you feel good about doing it together.
Yeah.
Mm-hmm. It's gonna be very tempting for you both to go back into the weeds.
Emily, you're especially comfortable there. I love the weed. I know, but it keeps you small.
That's yeah, that's a good perspective. It's hard to say through the weeds. Yeah.
You've been down there for too long.
And I want both of you to elevate.
When I think about you, Emily, and you, Alex, and the two of you together,
I want to be able to use words like generous or adventurous or spontaneous.
Whatever the word is that fits the two of you
And you know what I trust Alex
Do you trust him Emily? Yeah, I trust him Alex what you have achieved in three years of getting ramped up with money is
incredibly impressive it really is and
I don't care how old you are we We all start from a certain point. Three years
you did this. Within the next five years, I can't even begin to imagine how far you're
going to go with your money. And if the two of you end up combining finances in some
joint way, you two have an incredible future together financially speaking.
Alex mentioned earlier in this conversation that he didn't think Emily trusted him. I'm actually speaking.
Alex mentioned earlier in this conversation that he didn't think Emily trusted him.
That's a haunting comment from a partner.
And I'm glad that we were able to at least partially work through that.
I have a lot of confidence for the two of them.
They are very open.
They're both willing to play ball and engage. And Emily, who as I mentioned at the beginning
of this episode, she spent a lot of time talking with me.
In fact, we spent the bulk of our time focused on Emily.
She was here for her.
She was engaged.
And even on the occasion where she got defensive,
she recognized it.
So I have very, very positive and high hopes
for Emily and Alex.
After our conversation, I received a follow up from them.
You can get the full letter from the show notes, but here's what Emily said.
Quote, on an unconscious level, I knew I was carrying a heavy burden with money and control,
but it was much harder to admit it out loud and have it
mirrored back to me.
It made me incredibly sad to think that after getting away from someone who used to berate
me, I am doing the same thing internally to myself regarding money.
Alex and I had a good conversation about finances last night, our strategy for combining
finances, where we
want to spend and how much we want to save.
We can travel and not worry about a hundred euro charge.
I want us to get to a place where we are money partners and it becomes our money, including
dreaming about what we can do with our finances to live the life we want.
I think they can do it.
You can read the full follow-up letters from the link in my show notes and thank you for
listening to I Will Teach You to Be Rich.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You to Be Rich.
I'm Rameet 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.
for how to build the I will teach you to be rich system
into your personal finances.