I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 75. “We 4x'd our salary as COVID nurses. The experience haunts us. So does the money”
Episode Date: December 27, 2022Jenee and Dan are 31 and 34. They've been married for three years and they're travel nurses, moving from city to city to alleviate workforce pressures. During the pandemic, they earned up to 4X their ...salaries, allowing them to pay off their debts—but at a huge emotional and mental cost. Links mentioned in this episode Join my Money Coaching program Get the I Will Teach You to Be Rich book Get the IWT Rich Life Journal Download the Conscious Spending Plan Connect with Ramit Get Money Coaching with Ramit Download the Conscious Spending Plan Get my New York Times best-selling book Get my no-numbers journal 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I feel pretty stupid to be honest about money. We paid off everything. We checked all the boxes that we had agreed to do.
We needed to check off, but I don't know what to do. It's like a dog chasing a car and I found that they caught it.
I don't know what I'm doing, but I feel pretty shitty about that and kind of embarrassed to be honest.
He got hit with the IRS bill one month before we were supposed to be leaving our wedding,
which was international.
So unless we paid that debt, I wasn't going to have a groom at my own wedding.
It was really tough.
It was really tough.
You still feel resentment from that?
I feel like it's hard to not.
I think I just struggle with, you know, how it started and feeling like
if I don't keep control over everything that he's going to make another bad decision,
I still feel very alone in this.
Jenae and Dan are 31 and 34 years old. They've married for three years and they are both nurses.
During COVID, they became travel nurses and they were moving from city to city to help
with COVID in very difficult circumstances. As travel nurses, their income skyrocketed.
And suddenly their financial situation has completely changed,
but they can't seem to change the way they talk about money
and the way they feel about money.
If you have the time to quietly listen to this episode,
I would highly recommend it.
And I want to remind you that we now feature this podcast
on YouTube so you can actually watch Dan and Janay
throughout today's conversation.
I'm Ramit Saiti, and this is I will teach you to be rich.
We had that together, a financial goal,
to be debt-free.
And Dan's rich life is to own this, in my opinion,
expensive car. And Dan's Rich Life is to own this, in my opinion,
very expensive car. And I'm not a car person, so I don't get it.
And that's Dan's Rich Life, not my Rich Life,
but I'm here to support it.
But it was kind of always just like far off,
like, yeah, okay, like when we get this goal,
like then we can talk about this.
And we ended up reaching that goal. Okay, like when we get this goal, like then we can talk about this and
we ended up reaching that goal way
way faster than I even anticipated and had the
money psychology built up for
So damn I started talking about okay, so like how do we transition now to your rich life and
I just lost it. You lost it means what?
Borderline panic attack, like,
because we've been so focused on saving
and getting ourselves in a really great financial situation
that the thought of spending, you know,
Dan if it's okay to say like $150,000 on a car, to me is just like
borderline nauseating.
Is it really? Did you feel it physically?
Yes. Oh, like when I tell you I had like almost a panic attack, like I'm actually being serious.
Like, we had to stop the conversation because I couldn't handle going any further.
And so was that the night that you filled out the application to speak to me?
Yeah, so I had seen the email earlier while I was at work that you were looking for couples.
And I was like, wow, we'll never qualify for that, like whatever.
And then that night we had the argument.
And so I had had um, I had a glass of wine.
And I was like, you know what? Okay, I'm going to help this. Wait a second. Hold on. Let's
just clarify. Most people do not apply drunk to my podcast. I was a lot of screaming. I wasn't
drunk. All right. Although that is pretty cool. You know, like people in the old days, they
used to get wasted and go out to bars and now they like people in the old days they used to get wasted
in, go out to bars, and now they get wasted in the apply to be on a podcast.
Wow, we really live in the modern times.
Dan, what was it like having that conversation?
Walk me through what happened in that conversation from your perspective.
Coming into it, I was super excited to talk about it because I felt like she said it was a far off dream.
We'll talk about it for 55, 60 years old when we paid off everything in her debt free.
So I'm just super stoked to be talking about it at this point in my life.
I'm like, it's coming way fast.
And I thought we paid off everything.
We could check all the boxes that we had agreed
we needed to check off before we could even
talk about this car.
So I was super excited going into it,
but then you know, when I saw how uneasy it was making her.
And wait, hold on, hold on.
Don't skip the important part.
How did you bring up this car?
Oh, man, I talked about it every day.
What's the car?
You don't talk about it to me every day.
It's a beauty pair.
True.
It's an Audi R8.
Audi R8.
Yeah.
When you set up and see in your newer, you can pull it up.
Audi R8, let me just look at this thing.
It's a little like a 2020.
It's a sports car.
Yeah.
7.5 out of 10 and car and driver.
I mean, okay, hold on.
Price. What is the okay, hold on. Price.
What is the price 150k? Is that what you said? Yeah, for a used one. Okay. All right. For a used one. We're meet for used. Okay. What is it about this car that gets you excited, Dan?
I love to drive and this car has been out since 2008 when I was stocking boxes at Walmart
over and I riding my bicycle to college, you know, before I came to the nurse and I saw
this one doctor roll up in it.
I don't know why he was at Walmart at 5 in the morning, but he rolled up in it.
I was pushing carbs and I was like, man, that is the coolest thing in Carver scene and it
had just come out in America. It've been out in Europe for a while and ever since then I've just been
loving and vacuated with the car and every time they make a new model it's better and better and
I'm like that's the one I want and I'll do anything to get it and I've been working towards it
ever since, slowly but surely. Cool, I like hearing that. So you go from stacking boxes at Walmart.
You see this car and then 12 years later or so, you've
paid off your debt.
You've accomplished a lot with your finances.
You come into this conversation and what did you
say to Janay?
I said, how can we say for this car?
I think we can afford it now.
I have the numbers
crunched and I probably came out way too excited, way too fast. But what do you remember
happened next? Her face did a thing. Can we see that thing right now? Here, watch this.
Janelle B. Dan for a second. Okay. it's time for the car. Audi R8.
I think we can afford it.
Is that it, Dan?
Yeah.
Okay.
So how would you describe that face, Dan?
That Janay's just did.
Disgusted, like not really.
That's not my disgusted face.
Okay. Not on the same page, no way.
Not on the same thing.
Like, I have something to say, but I'm not sure how to say it.
I got a little disheartened, honestly.
I thought we had talked about it, and we're on the same page,
and we realized where we were at.
And now this was the same thing to talk about,
and then I feel like I'd checked all the boxes,
like I said, and we're ready to do this now
and she's not at all.
And she wasn't really responding to what I was saying,
or my enthusiasm at all, and I could let
help right off the bat.
So it was a little disheartening,
but I could put in so much work
and now I can finally say for what I want.
And it's like, wait, hold up.
No.
And today looking back, would you change anything about how that conversation went?
You still feel the same way?
Yes, I still feel the same way.
Okay.
And can you describe that in a sentence when Dan says he wants to get that $150,000 car?
What do you say?
So I think it's, I think it's, I've been carrying the financial burden for a really long
time. And I feel like I'm the one that got us out of debt.
And it feels a little raw to finally have reached that goal and then to get hit with.
You know, if your dream car was not $150,000, like maybe it would be a conversation, but it's just
really hard for me to ever understand wanting to spend that much on a car.
Is there a number that would be okay for you?
car. Is there a number that would be okay for you?
Probably not. Yeah. So you came to me because Dan wants to buy $150,000 car, but I think that you have a very interesting
financial situation. Can you walk me through where you used to be a
few years ago in your finances?
A few years ago We actually got married. It's gonna be
Three years coming up. I
Was in debt. I had 30,000 dollars worth of debt whether it was a car loan
It was student loans from nursing and then I owe the IRS some money from a stupid mistake that I made
And you'll kick my ass when I tell you,
but I pulled money out of my 401k early to pay for the down payment
on my first house.
Yeah.
Why did you do, wait, hold on.
You pulled out 401k for the down payment on the house
or the IRS debt?
No, down payment on the house.
And then I thought I'd paid the penalty
and I didn't.
And so then I got hit with the $9,000 bill a few years later
from the IRS saying, you never paid the penalty.
Can I interject real quick?
He got hit with the IRS bill one month before we were supposed
to be leaving for our wedding, which was international.
So unless we paid that debt, for our wedding, which was international.
So unless we paid that debt, I wasn't gonna have a groom at my own wedding.
Oh, how did that make you feel?
Can you see my face?
Yeah, but I wanna hear you say it though.
So, this cost was incurred from his first marriage.
So this cost was incurred from his first marriage. And so me as his second marriage, feeling like I had to bail out my husband so he could
show up at the altar was really difficult, especially since I was walking into a relationship, having been hellbent on having no debt and not needing to feel like a burden. And then I got hit with, I need to pay off
the IRS. So my own husband could show up at our wedding was, it was really tough. It
was really tough. You still feel resentment from that?
I feel like it's hard to not.
A lot of the couples I talked to have this scenario in common.
One of them made a certain financial decision years ago, and now the other is still resentful
about it.
That decision might be having secret debt or needing a financial bailout for some irresponsible
decision, whatever.
But years later, even though the financial part of it might be solved, the emotional scars
remain.
And you hear it in the way the other partner talks about it, very much like Janay.
She says, it's hard not to feel resentment.
I think we can all understand that.
We can all understand what it's like
to have a partner do something that we can't forget about. And I wanted to reflect on
the idea that one thing we are never taught is how to heal. Let's say something bad happens,
financially speaking, like a partner hiding debt. Let's even say that you decide to make
it work. Your partner pays the money back, they apologize, they do everything right. But who teaches us how to heal?
Are we simply supposed to try to squash our feelings? Do we just try to ignore it? Is it just about
time? I think this is where a great therapist can help. There are excellent strategies out there
on how to heal, how to rewrite the way you think
about a scenario, whether it's months ago or even years ago.
And I just wanted to highlight this because it's a very common scenario that goes beyond
money into the deeply emotional.
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Offer and benefit terms apply. I understand that the real problem is that it started off
the financial relationship in an unhealthy way.
Would that be accurate to say?
Absolutely.
100%.
And today, what was your financial situation when you got married?
I don't even remember, Dan, do you? I was 100% in the positive. I had no debts. I had paid off all
my car. I had traveled extensively. And I lived the life that I really wanted to before I got married.
I lived the life that I really wanted to before I got married. So we just kind of came from very different backgrounds and getting married, I guess.
Yeah, she had a paid off card, 25,000 in the bank and was rent to an apartment at the time.
So, okay.
So, best forward from there to here, what was the big thing that changed for the two of you?
So everything in all elaborate, like we have no debt, we have, I think like 50,000 investments, 50,000 savings, we paid off our house in full, and it's worth 600,000 right now.
We both have high paying jobs, and very little month to month bills. We just
have the basics that everybody has. So everything's changed. We've paid everything off.
And I mean, it all changed when we read your book to be honest, not to just brag for you,
but like it really did. Like we, she was reading
your book on during the pandemic when we were separated, she was in Baltimore working
really hard. I was working in California and it just puts structure into our lives. And
it was like a very attainable series of tasks that you can do and I can't do anything. I can't do anything.
I can't do anything.
I can't do anything.
I can't do anything.
I can't do anything.
I can't do anything.
I can't do anything.
I can't do anything.
I can't do anything.
I can't do anything.
I can't do anything. I can't do anything. and everything's been, I mean, money has not been our stressor since that happened.
Like, other things outside of money have been our main stressor, and I love that.
And we both are so grateful for that.
Yeah, super grateful.
I, money was very contentious in our relationship in the beginning,
to elaborate on what Dan is saying.
and to elaborate on what Dan is saying. And I used to feel very offended by how he would spend money.
And I would kind of micromanage it
because I was running the finances.
And I felt like I was the only one.
I knew how to do finances since we came in the way that we did,
which has since changed.
But having the mutual guilt free and having his guilt free and my guilt free
where I don't get a say on how he spends his money, that was huge for us and and really,
really helped our really, really, a lot because he could spend his money even if I thought
it was really stupid, but I didn't get a say on it. And that was really important as far
as moving us forward
out of constantly fighting about finances.
That's amazing.
That's one of my favorite things
that I've heard from the two of you.
It's, you know, they're very good people
who get into very bad fights.
And they think that it's a personality issue.
And they get mad at their partner.
And they never realize that it's a structural issue and they get mad at their partner and they never realize that it's
a structural issue that's invisible.
It's like somebody getting mad at themselves for not taking 10,000 steps.
Well you live right near a freeway overpass.
It's really hard to go walking without fear of getting run over by a truck.
It's a structural issue.
And so when you change the way that you set up your finances together and you each have
your own guilt-free spending, the fighting just vanishes overnight on that topic.
And you two are living proof of that.
So congratulations, that's outstanding.
Thank you.
100% were witnesses to that.
It's exciting.
It's really exciting and designing our
Rich Life together. It just felt like this would never come and being able to do it together,
it's made us stronger as a couple, just aligning ourselves and being on the same page with work
and towards something. It's great. That's awesome. Well, I'm thrilled. I'm thrilled. And
congratulations for paying off that debt and getting in such an
Enviable financial position at such a young age. I see
Janay 31 and Dan you're 34 gosh you're set up right. How do you both feel about your finances today if you had to describe it in a word?
Unshore.
Unshore. Okay. Yeah. And Janay.
I was gonna say proud.
It's interesting, isn't it?
We only got one word.
I'm very proud too.
I'm just, I don't know what to do.
It's like, I just, a dog chasing a car and I finally caught it.
I don't know what I'm doing.
Yeah.
What if I go from here?
So is that the question today?
Is we've accomplished more than we ever thought, but now we're not sure what the next
chapter should be.
Yeah, absolutely.
Dr. Mbia.
Okay.
Well, this is one of the reasons that I do what I do, that I'm so excited to be able to
help you design your rich life and then to use money to live it.
Okay.
Very few people teach money in a way that connects with people,
that excites them. And so when I looked around at all the books out there, most of it was
somebody older telling me all the things I couldn't do with money. So the journal that I recently
created helps you and maybe your partner sit down and dream about money. I call it the no numbers journal because there's not a bunch of compound interest charts
in there.
It's really questions like, who do we admire about money?
What do we want to spend more money on?
What would make us feel amazing if we could never have to worry about it financially speaking
again?
So the journal is an amazing way, whether you do it solo or whether you do it with a partner
to really dream and create a vision around your rich life.
Then of course, it's not just about dreaming, otherwise this would be a life coach show.
This about actually putting it into practice.
And that means you need to use money and understand the language of money in order to live your
rich life.
Automate your finances.
Get your investment set up.
Spend less than one hour per month on all of your money.
Even understand these intricate questions like $5,000, $5,000, should I invest it at once
or should I dollar cost average it?
How do I buy a car?
Should I buy a house?
These kind of questions are all answered in I will teach you to be rich
my book. I'm going to link both of these in the show notes. But if you've been waiting
for the right time to take control your money, get the books, start using them, and in six weeks
you will see a massive transformation. I wasn't even sure I wanted to come on here, to be honest.
I wasn't even sure I wanted to come on here, to be honest. I didn't know she applied.
I found out that she applied.
This caused a lot of fights, to be honest.
What fights?
She applied after talking about the car, but hadn't told me,
and had told me one morning that we had qualified for an interview
with your service yet, and that's when I found out that,
and then like a week later, we're here.
And I wasn't not even sure I wanted to come on
because I'm just, you know, I'm super nervous.
I'm just, I didn't know that.
No, nervous about what?
Just putting on my business out there.
And I feel like I'm,
I feel pretty stupid to be honest about money.
And I feel like I'm gonna get my ass handed to me
by Remy.
I'm not sure I'm ready for that.
Why do you feel stupid about money?
You make a very good income.
You have a paid off house.
You used to push carts at Walmart
and now you're making taking home six figures.
Why do you feel stupid about money?
You know, growing up, I just, I didn't get taught
a whole lot about what to do.
I was kind of shown a little bit not to do.
And I even have a credit card until Janine I got together.
Like, I was told credit cards are bad, you know, like, you're just going to go and debt.
And that's what my parents did.
They were in a whole lot of credit card debt.
They were always in debt.
Money was always a really sourced spot. And it was something
we didn't talk about growing up. It was once a month my dad laying out all the bills and
receipts on the kitchen table and you didn't go in the kitchen that whole night. You went to your
room or you went to your friend's house. Why is that? Because there's going to be a fight. My
dad was in a good mood. And when did you start feeling good about money? Do you feel good today about it?
I feel good with how much I have. I don't feel like I have as much knowledge as I
should or know enough. I don't feel like I know what I should know at this age of my life. And I feel
pretty shitty about that and kind of embarrassed to be honest.
How would you have known?
Google, like this day and age, I could have read a book.
I could have done something.
You did read a book.
I did.
You're right.
But until this point, I can only blame my parents so much,
but I didn't do anything about it either.
And I feel pretty embarrassed about that.
And you know, like pulling out of my 401k, like looking back, like, I was stupid. Are you? Like, why would you do that? Look, the kitchen
example was a really telling example. When everybody in a family knows you avoid dad and you
avoid this room on this specific night of the month, you know that that's real. You know that money is a very
sore subject. The fact that you worked at Walmart, the fact that you didn't have a credit card
until you got together, it all paints a picture. You were not raised learning about money. You were
not raised with healthy financial models. Okay, sure, you could have gone on Google, you could have
done a lot of things. I agree, you could have. And I do think we should take personal responsibility. But the
story gets interesting because you actually did read a book. You actually did go to nursing
school and improve your career, which is a huge part of finance is improving your earning
ability. Now, did you read the technical mumbo jumbo
about 401k withdrawals?
No.
Was that a mistake?
Probably in the grand scheme.
Is it a killer?
No.
You make enough in like a month
to make up for that 401k penalty.
And you're young.
So in my opinion, the fact that you have come as far as you've come, the fact that
you had the courage to come on this show, to me, that is more than enough to make up for
not having parents who taught you about money and not having reached out on Google. Sometimes
I think it helps to have somebody give you an outside perspective. And my outside perspective, Dan, is that you're doing pretty well with your money.
Absolutely.
And if I can brag on him,
he's not painting the full picture.
He was going to nursing school all during the day,
and then working all night at Walmart
to pay for a nursing school.
That's amazing.
This guy, when he puts his mind to something,
it's incredible.
How did you go from three years ago, having debt,
to paying off the house and having a bunch of money
and savings and investments?
What happened?
To be honest, COVID, we're both critical care nurses.
We've been a nurse for 10 years,
and she's been a nurse for just about that
amount of time and we do travel nursing and it's a little bit more lucrative than just
normal nursing.
It comes with a cost.
What's the difference?
What's the difference in how much you make?
It just depends on where you work, but here in Southern California, I was taking home
on a staff job, a permanent staff job. I could take home about 1200 a week and then travel nurse saying before COVID, you
know, you can take home about 2,000 to 2,500 a week. So you doubled your
income during COVID and that was.
Dr. and COVID we tripled quadrupled because of the demand and supply?
So would you travel to different cities?
Yeah.
So I ended up going to Baltimore by myself for about six months to work out on the East Coast
while they were kind of overwhelmed.
And ironically, what was that like for you?
It was awful.
It was awful.
I can't even, you know, I can't describe the mind fuck that happened because I would
I would walk past a cooler full like a truck, like literally we had a semi truck that was turned into a cooler
and all the dead bodies were just piled in it.
And that's what you would walk past in the morning,
walking in.
And then, you know, you would,
we had over 80 people on ventilators,
which in a normal world would be like five.
And then you had the mind fuck up, like people not believing COVID is real.
And I got my life threatened.
I had people tell me they were going to kill and rape me on my way back to my car because
their loved one was a nice you and and it wasn't safe for them to leave and people didn't believe that
that we I don't even know how to explain it and I go to the gas station and just try and fill up gas in my car and people I had someone spit on me at the gas station.
Yeah, because I was in scrubs and they felt like it was a conspiracy.
It was, you know, you got told on the social media and on the news that you were a healthcare
hero and then your reality was just so different.
And then you were also terrified because you're constantly in contact with
something like you didn't understand and you just were trying so hard to to keep you alive because
that's that's my job and that's all I'm trained to do. And you feel like a failure when someone
doesn't stay alive and and to be that person that has to call the family and FaceTime with them, and because we couldn't let families in.
And so, I came to tell you how many hundreds of hands,
like, I held this, they died
because their family couldn't be there.
And I know that we made a really amazing
financial decision through the pandemic,
but I genuinely believe people will never understand
what it cost. And I'm not even being dramatic. I'm sorry. It's just it's still really two
three years later. It's still really, really, really hard to talk about.
Yeah. I can see that. We on the outside, you know, we saw videos of the trailers outside the New York
hospitals, but that was it.
We never saw inside the COVID ward.
And Dan, I can see even your reaction as Janay is talking.
And I'm sure that it hit you as hard.
I'm sorry, you both had to go through that.
I'm sorry, every nurse and every doctor
and everyone in the medical field had to go through that.
And we will never understand it from out here.
Yeah, I think I think a majority
of the critical care nurses now are on meds to help them.
Really? I would say 80% is the research that's been done.
I developed PTSD, I developed panic attacks, which I'd never had before in my life,
and that was something Dan really had to help me through.
Are you getting help for that now? Yeah, yeah, I have an amazing counselor.
I have a phenomenal PTSD certified counselor.
Good.
Which I think I heard in a podcast you had brought up cognitive therapy.
Yeah, CBT.
Yes, that's, I'm actually doing that for.
Well, that's good.
That's really good.
Yeah.
I'm really happy to hear that.
And Dan, how are you doing?
I mean, it hit me pretty hard.
Kobe was killing people left and right.
And, you know, I would say just, I don't have PTSD and I'll never understand some of the stuff she went through.
I'm just angry and I feel guilty sometimes that it wasn't me out there instead of her.
I didn't know what cost it was going to come with otherwise.
I don't think we would have sent her out there and I just feel guilty after time that she's
dealing with this and struggling with this every day.
I'm doing okay. I really am. It's, it's
harder for me to see her struggle more than anything.
All right. Let's take a, just a 60 second break and then we'll come right back. Just stand
by. I still find it hard to listen to that clip.
At the end of it, I felt like we all needed to take a minute, me included.
And so I suggested that we take a break, come back, and we did.
And a week later, one of my colleagues reviewed the video and she said, do you know what happened
during that break?
I said, no, I was out of
the room. She said they both got up and hugged each other. If you had the chance to watch
it, I would encourage you to. One of the things that this show has done in a way that even
I did not expect was to go far beyond the numbers on a page.
And to really remind us that a rich life is about more than what's in Excel,
more than what's in your bank is deeply emotional.
Money touches every part of what we do and who we are.
And so when I'm talking to Dan and Janay,
I'm not just looking at what's in their conscious spending plan.
We have to understand how they got to this situation.
And in their case, how they made this kind of money.
So in my conversation with them,
I wanted to acknowledge how difficult that must have been,
even though I can never fully understand
it.
And then I wanted to gently bring us back to their financial situation.
The numbers that we're going to talk about are not just numbers that came out of thin
air.
They came in a context.
And I need to understand how that happens so that I can understand what your feelings
are about money.
So while you were COVID nurses and traveling nurses
during COVID, your pay went way up.
How much did you say it changed
from your normal standard rate?
Triple to quadruple.
Okay.
And how did you feel about making quadruple what you
used to make? It didn't feel real. Yeah. It didn't feel like enough sometimes.
Or what you were doing. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So you started making all this money.
And what did you do with the money? We put it all at the house, paid off the any debts we had, we paid off both
our cars. We paid off your house, how fast? We bought it. Well, we bought it in 2019, June of 2019,
and we paid it off two months ago, so three years. Why'd you do that? So, ironically, we used your psychology, which I know, you know, this wouldn't be your
advice, but we used your psychology.
What is your rich life?
For us, with how uncertain everything was and how it just felt like the world was crumbling underneath
us. And we didn't even live together for the first year of our marriage. I'll say, I wanted
to just feel like that we had something concrete that if the whole world crumbled beneath us, that we had
some place to go to that we could be safe at and financially safe at. And so Dan very
graciously agreed to work with me on that because he would have preferred to put it into
investments and savings. But given our background and the fact, I think at this point, I was in Texas,
so we still weren't living together. And we just decided to put all of our
extra funds into the house. So that way, if the day comes, that we both are
burned out and we both can't fathom going to work
We have a safe place to do that and we have a place with very minimal
Overhead like we could both work at Subway and filmmaker
Payments because all we have is our electric and our gas, you know, so and it was very unconventional
But when we sat down and looked at what a hour
rich life right now look like, that was our rich life is just
to feel safe and to feel like we could transition out of our
field. If we both felt like it was better for our mental health.
Yeah. Well, I think you made the right decision.
Rich life isn't always about the numbers.
It's really not.
And I really applaud you.
You did use my psychology.
You just adapted it for your situation.
And that is the highest use of creating a rich life
is adapting advice from people you
trust for your own situation.
I can't fathom what it's like to be talking to my partner
and say, we might be burned out and never work
at this income level again.
We need a plan for that.
So well done.
Who's the next set strategy to be honest?
If we need to.
There are not a lot of people who consider an exit strategy at the age of 29, but really because of your extraordinary circumstances,
you had to. And so you took that quadrupled income and you paid off the house. Okay, great. So
you have a paid off house, which is worth what, 600,000 did you say? Yes. And how much are you making now compared
to what you used to make pre-COVID?
So she's making a good amount.
She works in Catholic.
I think she's averaging about 4,000 to 4,500 a week.
Take home.
Wait, what's up with this weak thing?
Why do you guys talk on a weekly basis?
It's the travel nursing, Lingo.
So we're both still travel nurses.
4,500 times 52, 234,000 take home. All right, that's pretty good. Like really good. And
Dan, what about you? Up until this week, I was taking home about 5,300 a week.
But it's dipping down. I work ICU still. So it's going to dip down to about
2000, 2500 a week. Well, that's a big jump. So it's going to cut half. So it was really ironic the
timing of this podcast because we did we definitely found out this news this past weekend. Well,
that's good. I think it's great. Look, times are going to change. Finance are going to change.
Exactly. We'll take it when we can get it. So the two of you take home around 340,000 a year.
OK, is that fair to say?
Yes.
OK.
I think that's a pretty stable.
What other expenses do you have?
Anything big?
The cars are paid off?
What?
Yeah, everything's paid off.
We also, we rent a house close to the hospital
because she has to be
close enough that she gets called in. She does a tax and stroke. So that rent costs a lot. How much?
5,000 a month. So it's actually, it's more, it's 5,200, not including new utilities. So
kind of a lot, right? Well, we're in the LA area. I mean, I know that you can understand that.
Okay, got it.
Let's recap on the numbers very quickly.
Jeanne brings home $234,000 after tax.
Dan's income is about to be cut in half.
He's going to make $106,000 after tax.
That's about $340,000 a year household income post tax.
Their cars are paid off.
They paid off their $600,000 house.
And they rent another one closer to the hospital
for about $5,000 a month.
Okay.
Now what?
So, so the question is what, what do you do with this money now?
I'm very happy. I'm super thankful. And I know how fortunate I am to be in this position.
I just don't feel like I'm allowed to spend it.
And I don't feel like I'm, I almost say worthy,
but like I just don't feel like I deserve it.
And I don't deserve to spend it.
And I know some of that comes out of probably
guilt for the way we got here. And what Janay, it went through and her bailing me out our
first year in marriage. And like, I feel like I owe her still. And I don't feel like I
deserve my rich life some times. I feel like she should get hers first, if we have to
decide. And, you know, I see how uneasy it makes her the face she makes when I talk about the car.
And that makes me kind of want to not get it and not go for it because I don't want to make
it her feeling safe.
So I struggle with feeling safe only because we both are still to travel nurses and we won't
do this forever.
I think the average travel nurse career is two years and the fact that we're on six years
we're way above the average.
So if we both were today to decide we're done, we want to take a staff job at a local
hospital and just go on salaries. Our money would be drastically different.
And so there's a part of me that, you know, as long as we're traveling, I guess I just never feel
safe because it's not the real numbers. If that makes sense, it's just this like temporary thing. And so for me, I just feel like it's not realistic that we'll do this forever.
So this money is not forever.
And so it's hard to build an expectation for your life when you don't have your real
numbers.
Yeah.
Dan, do you agree that the money you're making now is pretty much the top that you will
make together?
Absolutely.
As nurses and months, we went back to school and did something else.
In our field, yeah, I don't see it going to public, but it did.
That's a really interesting situation to be in, isn't it?
Most people, especially if they're in their 30s, they're kind of at the beginning of their
career and they're looking up and in your case you've reached the peak and
There are real costs
And associated with being at where you are. So what do you do for the future?
Janay and Dan remind me of another group of people whose income peaks
Early in life. Can you think of who?
They have a limited window of time. They're earning
a tremendous amount of money and then suddenly it all goes away. Who is it? The answer?
Professional athletes. Athletes work demanding jobs. It's unsustainable on their body and
the savviest ones plan ahead for the next chapter of their lives.
Now, just a quick note on some of the common things you hear about athletes.
There are a bunch of stats about how 80% of NFL players go broke, et cetera.
Here's my question to you.
Wouldn't you?
Think about it.
Imagine you get into the NFL NBA, whatever sport.
Where would you have learned about a Roth IRA? I mean, 90% of people
who come on this podcast haven't even read my book. Then you have very high expenses,
very high. And I think this is where people on the outside look at athletes and they scoff.
They take on this very superior, oh, if I did did that I would be saving 90% of my income. Look
there's this guy in the NFL who only stays at a cheap hotel while all of his other
people they spend all kinds of money
What a luxury to be able to judge other people about their money
There's a New York Times article called the $25,000 rookie dinner
There's a New York Times article called the $25,000 rookie dinner. This dinner is expected of NFL rookies.
You got to pay for the more experienced players on the team.
Well, it's easy to sit here across your arms and say, I would never do that.
Oh, really?
How many of you have bought a house because society told you to?
How many of you wear the same exact clothes as
everybody around you at work in your neighborhood? You think that's just an
accident? No, it's because we are social animals. We've respond to the
expectations around us. To me, it makes perfect sense that athletes spend all
their money. Nobody taught them about money. Their expenses
suddenly skyrocket beyond mere mortals. And of course, they have a limited window of peak
earnings, which sitting back here, we can all sit here and say, oh, well, of course, I
would compound it and I would invest heavily. But when you're in it, the human mind finds
it very comforting to imagine that high earnings will go on forever.
Just the same way that you imagine your great health will go on forever.
It's very difficult for us to imagine that our future might involve worse outcomes.
Again, with athletes, I'm not saying it's right, but I understand it.
Now, to Janay and Dan's numbers, I'm going to walk through their conscious spending
plan with them as we go line by line and you can actually get a copy of that same conscious
spending plan for your finances right from my show notes.
So if you were to take the athlete analogy, the two of you are currently professional athletes,
you can't do it forever, but you're doing it for now.
What advice would you give to an athlete in your situation?
More in saving, not savings, but I'm always trying to say damn investments. Yeah.
Okay. All right. So basically, you haven't really thought strategically about
your investments until this point because you've been paying off the house.
Is that correct?
We've been so tunnel visioned.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is a great opportunity.
We get to take a deep breath and zoom out.
We get to really honestly analyze where you are, right?
Your professional athletes, you're performing at a high level.
It's not going to last forever. So therefore, what is the strategy? And then once you Your professional athletes, you're performing at a high level. It's not gonna last forever.
So therefore, what is the strategy?
And then once you have that strategy,
you can start figuring out,
do you have access to this account
or that account, you can go down the rabbit hole.
How does that sound?
Sounds great.
Let's look at the conscious spending plan.
So if each of you could pull that up,
Jine, will you walk us through your net worth?
So your assets are currently what?
Our assets are about 650,000. We have about 52,000 in our actual investments. We have 50,000
in savings. And then we have our house's value and then both of our cars are paid off.
Okay, great. Your house is how much again?
It fluctuates between six to six 50. Okay, great. Your house is how much again? It fluctuates between six to six fifty. Okay, great.
Depending on the market. All right. Your income is your gross monthly income is what?
Let's go each person. So mine is about 22,000.
And Dan? Mine was about 24 until,000. And Dan?
Mine was about 24 until this week.
And what does it know?
It's going to go to 2600 a week.
And the reason we give you the net is because our gross,
a lot of our money isn't taxed.
So our gross and that are very close.
I need to pause here and point out the peculiar way that Dan and Janay talk about money.
They describe their earnings on a weekly basis.
When I ask how much they make, Dan says,
it was 24 until this week.
Are you catching those oddities?
When we talk about money, we don't talk about weekly earnings.
Weekly is too variable.
We talk about annual gross income.
It's like if I ask how big someone's house is, they're not going to say 430,000 inches.
That's just fucking weird.
You tell me how many square feet it is.
If you want to get confident with money, you have to get competent with it.
And part of that competence is learning the basic language of money.
So if we talk about income, we talk about annual gross income.
Now, next up, when I ask how much they make, if I were in Dan's position, I would say,
going forward, I'll make X dollars
per year. What he made in the past isn't really relevant. And I have to admit, I miss this
when I was talking to them. I really wish that I dug in to why he insists on telling me
what he used to earn. As I was listening to this conversation again,
I was thinking to myself, is it ego?
The idea that he has to point out how much he used to make,
even though what he now makes is a lot less,
or is it a mistaken understanding that his new earnings
will somehow skew our calculations?
I don't know, I'm fascinated with it.
I wish I had caught this when it happened, but I missed it.
So gross, Daniel, probably what, 32 a week. So whatever that makes that, does that sound
about right? That's what it was going to be. It was 60, 700 a week gross is what I was making.
But that's changing. As you should calculate this, I want to share something. For everybody
listening, the reason it's important to get these numbers all standardized,
is that you want to be working with the same numbers,
everybody.
So if it's weekly, if it's take home,
you need it all standardized,
just use the conscious spending plan
and then everything flows from there.
So any analysis you have to do to standardize it,
is worth it because everything else
can be so much simpler after that. All right, what's the number?
So now it's going to be $3,600 gross.
How much do you invest per month right now?
Is the answer zero?
Nothing.
Okay.
Sometimes I like to work with nothing because then we can get it right from the beginning.
And how much do you save?
Of course, you save more than you invest, of course. You save $1,000 a month for vacations.
Is that accurate?
That is.
Yep.
You have $1,000 a month for an emergency fund.
Is that accurate?
I bet it is.
Yes.
People are always accurate about their savings.
And yet, it is actually totally inconsequential
compared to their investments.
So right now, you're, you basically have a lot of money left over.
Would we agree?
Yes, that's always, that's always been, how it's been for the last year, which is all
that money went to the house.
Got it.
So you've got a ton of money now, and you're like, what do we do with this stuff?
Yeah.
Is that right? Yeah. How do we do with this stuff? Is that right?
How do we get back on track?
Like, for a long term success.
Yeah.
Well, long term success.
Yeah.
How do you take that athlete approach and use your money to set yourself up today for tomorrow?
Yeah.
Right here.
All right.
So just looking at this, what do you think the correct answer is, where should you put more cash
than is currently allocated?
100% of investments, yeah.
Yeah, good, I agree.
Totally agree.
So do you recall my guidelines for how much most people should be investing?
It was 10 to 15%.
Yeah, 10 to 15%.
What do you think your numbers should be?
Should it be higher or lower than that?
I would like it to be higher.
I agree.
I agree.
I agree.
For two reasons.
One, your athletes and you're not going to be making this forever.
So therefore, the more you invest now, the easier it's going to be for you later because
that money compounds.
And two, you actually have a lot of cash. And when you have a lot of cash, you probably should be investing it aggressively,
especially if you are early, like young, like you two are. So those two reasons tell me your
investment should probably be higher than 10 to 15%. So let's ballpark it. We don't need to get
specific, but what do you think that number should be?
If the average person is doing 10%, what should the two of you be doing?
25, 30 maybe.
Yeah, I was thinking 30.
Okay, I agree. Ballpark. Without getting into ultra specifics, 30, I bet you you can make it work.
Maybe even 35 for the next year or two years while you're doing it.
Why? Because you also are way understanding on your fixed costs on a monthly basis.
So when most people remember what that number typically is for people? 50 to 60 percent.
Yeah. And yours is 34, maybe 37 if you've factor in some forgotten expenses you didn't include.
maybe 37 if you factor in some forgotten expenses you didn't include.
That money right there, if it were me, I would take every cent, I would take
30, 50 minus 37, I would take 13% throw that directly into investments, and then I would add on
10 to 15% of investments. That takes you right around to 28 or 30%.
Just a quick note here. If you're listening and you want to DIY this, you want to do it yourself,
you can get my book and download the free conscious spending plan and plug in your numbers.
A lot of people make huge changes doing exactly that. If you are the kind of person who wants a little help,
you want to ask me a question, get my answer directly and have some help working through the numbers. You can also get that help.
You can join my money coaching program. Every month I share a specific lesson on money.
Like this month, I taught my money coaching students how to do an end of the year annual review
where you plan out what you want to do next year, where you want to travel, how you want to spend your money.
And also, you take a look at what happened this year and decide on what worked and what
changes you want to make.
I also do Q&A on these calls, so you can get your specific questions answered.
You can join at iwt.com slash money coaching.
And yes, you can get recordings of all the past sessions, including the one I just did on how to plan your annual review.
That's iwt.com slash money coaching.
It all kind of starts to make sense, right?
I think there's a part of it that wants to keep everything,
not everything, but like
in cash that I feel like I have control over and I feel like when I hand it off to investments,
like, even though it's a stable investment, like it's still like I can't access that money
and that makes me feel nervous.
Because?
Because I don't want to go back to where we once were.
I just never want to be caught off guard again.
You know, obviously the way our relationship started.
I was really, Dan was not transparent with me about his finances
until we were getting married.
And then the discussions came to like,
okay, are we gonna combine finances?
How are we gonna do this?
And then I felt like completely accosted
with the amount of debt that he was in,
especially since it had been such a goal of mine
to walk into a marriage, not like that.
And so I think I just never want to be like shocked again.
I want to like be able to handle everything and not feel like I'm gonna
fall made my brains out.
This is a great example of Janei not psychologically turning the page on her
concerns. She's worried about money and rightfully so, but their financial situation has dramatically changed.
She is still assigning worry and blame to the numbers part of it, but they both agree
they should ramp up their investments.
They both have way more money than they used to.
In my opinion, it would be a tragedy to let those concerns from years ago
limit her rich life and actually limit their rich lives together. What would it take for you to feel
safe that you could handle anything coming your financial way? I don't know. Let's try. Yeah.
I don't know. Let's try.
Yeah.
Do you think it's a number?
No.
Why do you ask that with a question mark at the end?
Because I think it's, I don't feel secure in our numbers because they're not real numbers.
And so I guess I feel like I don't know how to develop real expectations in real.
Does that make sense?
Why is it not real?
Because it's going to change one day and it's going to be a lot less one day.
And the life that we're living right now is not those numbers. The life
that we're living right now is the inflated numbers. And so I feel insecure in the fact that like
we're not living a realistic life maybe. Hold on a second. You ever go to the gym? Oh yeah.
You ever squat or see people squatting? So my squat right now is probably higher than it's
going to be when I'm 75 years old. Is my squat not real? No, I mean yes, yes your
squat is real. It's real. Will it be real when I'm 75 and I can't squat as much?
Yeah. What's the difference? It's proportionate. Yeah, it's proportionate.
It's the season of life I am in. Right now, the amount you make is very high. I think it's
great. I agree. Is it real? It's real for now. The money you're making today is real, but the money you're making tomorrow not as flex
worthy, but it will also be real.
Would we agree?
Yes.
Yes.
I want to run this past you.
You know, people have the DNRs, you know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I've talked about this with my wife.
I was like, if I can't squat two plates, just end it.
Just end it. And she was like, not, she't squat two plates, just end it. Just end it.
And she was like, she does not find that funny at all.
I find it absolutely hilarious.
I was like, babe, come on.
Just, I don't want to live on a planet where I can't do two plates.
Is that wrong to say?
Is that wrong to tell my wife that?
No, no.
Thank you.
All right.
I heard it directly from two nurses giving me
their stem. I'm like, I took it on your chest. Yeah. DNR 225. Okay. So, um, wait, where were we talking?
So, to me, it would be a tragedy to go through the next two years, five years,
10 years, always worrying about what's going to happen
in the next season and not actually taking stock
of where I am today.
How hard you worked, the decisions both of you made,
you've certainly taken on a lot in order to be able to make this kind of money
and to not see it as real feels to me like you're doing yourself a disservice.
What if this amount that you're making, which is for the next two, three, four years?
What if that looked and felt real to you?
What if you acknowledged it as real?
How would you change the way you treat money?
Well, as in the money that we've made,
the goals feel real.
We accomplished them.
It's very black and white.
Our house has paid off.
That was our goal.
Our savings account, that was our goal. All of that's very black and white like our houses paid off like that was our goal. Our savings account that was our goal like all of that's very black and white to me.
Now that all of that's done I guess I'm entering into the gray area.
Can I just point something out?
Sure.
When you were going through each of those check boxes, did any of them feel really good to you?
Did any of them feel really good to you?
No, they felt like things I needed to accomplish. Yeah. So you checked off the house, you checked off paying off the cars,
you checked off building 50k in savings, and here you are now,
and it's all about what's the next check.
But none of those felt good, and none of them are going to feel good, because this isn't
about checking a box.
You already won.
It's about actually changing the way you look at money and the way you feel about money.
So I'm going gonna ask you again,
let's go through, we'll take as much time as we need.
If you looked at the money you are making now,
the extraordinary amount of money you are making,
which is higher than you're gonna make in the future,
and you really acknowledged it as real.
It's real, even for a time period, but it's real.
How would that change the way you look at money and feel about money?
So I'm going to answer with an example of sorts. You know, we're all nurses and in our profession there's a divide, there's the travel nurses and
there's the staff nurses. And the staff nurses do the same work that we do. Maybe less comfortably,
they live at home, you know, they have all their stability, yada yada yada. But they make a lot less
than we do. And we get resented a lot.
Before the pandemic, we were like the cool kids
that traveled and showed up
and knew what we were doing
and were accepted as like,
oh, we want to be your friend.
Since the pandemic,
there's been a really huge divide
of people being angry at us in our own profession, you know, ignore the outside world like in your own profession and in your own nurse community, people hate you because you're doing the same job as them and you're making X amount more.
So I think there's there's a lot of that that has built up into how I feel about the money that we've made and the fact that it's like,
I'm proud of us and I know what we went through to get here and
but there's that part of you that just feels like you didn't serve it.
You're
screwing the system,, your taking advantage,
your, you know, all these negative things that people kind of come at you with.
And I think that, you know, after two years of hearing it,
that's the only thing that I hear
when I look at what we accomplished.
I want to stop feeling so disconnected
because I know my worth as a career professional. And I know that I make
a huge difference in people's lives. And I know that was my expertise that like
people have had good outcomes because I was the person there in that room. So it's hard because
like on an altruistic level like I know myself and I'm so proud of myself.
But then you just constantly have been hearing these other messages about you and about yourself
and about the way people view you for the past couple of years that I don't.
And you know, that's something you get my counselor have been working on.
Like, but it's just for for two almost three years, it, you almost feel like you're living this bipolar way
before you're a hero, you're not a hero,
you're a good nurse, all the nurses hate you
because of the money you're making.
And it's just this constant,
and I haven't personally figured out how to
make all of that blend together
into something my brain can even start to handle.
This explains a lot, doesn't it?
If you feel bad about the way you earned money, it's going to be very hard to feel good
about the way you spend it.
Some people really need to hear this.
You crypto charlatans who promoted bullshit and then rug pulled when you made money off
unsuspecting people
I hope you have trouble sleeping and spending any of your money for the rest of your life
Just kidding most of you crypto bros are broke anyway
With Dan and Janay. It's clear that Janay is very conflicted about the money she earned during COVID and this is one of the real issues here
earned during COVID. And this is one of the real issues here. Notice that on the surface, most of the things we worry about have nothing to do with the actual root cause. But it
takes a lot of work to make the connection between worrying about the price of a car or
creating endless checklists about money? I don't know for me.
Well, do you want to... I feel pretty good about money. Do you want to ask me any questions?
I sell digital programs to people. Now you could say, well, Ramit,
why don't you just give it away for free?
Knowledge wants to be free.
You're only focusing on people who can afford $2,000
or money coaching, et cetera.
How do you think that I came to the comfort level
of saying, no, I'm actually happy to charge what I charge. And I'm happy to make
the profits that I make for the customers I'm helping. How do you think I came to that?
You know, you're value. Yeah. How do I come to that though?
A lot of hard work, a lot of expertise, a lot of guidance, I'm sure.
Guidance.
You know, the expertise part is true.
That takes a long time to develop.
But I will tell you that the first time I started selling something for $4.95 online,
a lot of people told me you're ripping everybody off.
You're just in it to make money.
All the same things that you heard just for digital format and it felt awful. For three years, I felt awful and get this every day,
I would write about earning more money. People would unsubscribe and on those,
back then I used a Weber and you could leave a reason you unsubscribe. So imagine this every
morning I wake up and there's people like, fuck fuck you You're just trying to make money. I will teach Remy to be rich and I was like I hadn't even opened my eyes
And I'm like looking at this through my blurry glasses, and I'm like, oh
relatable. Yeah, and and and
And you know what there were a lot of people who were like I
Loved your $5 ebook when are you coming out with something else?
And the way they wrote to me, the way they talked, the things they said, they were the
people that inspired me.
So I had a choice.
And it was brutal.
Three years of money psychology were basically 50,000 people from my business, my email
list unsubscribed, and I had to refresh it with all new people.
That was brutal, ground war every day. But I knew that for the rest of my life, I did not want to serve
some frugalista who just didn't connect with me and I didn't connect with them. That wasn't my
place on this earth. So how might you be able to adapt that for your own situation?
Oh, I mean, everything you just said, felt like a light bulb.
Tell me.
No, I spent years building myself up as a critical care nurse.
You know, I always had a passion for it.
I had, in nursing school, I had my head professor tell me I'd never be a critical care nurse. She said I didn't have the personality for it.
And I found my own path to it and I was determined and I loved what I did and I walked into a pandemic having equipped myself with all the knowledge that I could have to be the best nurse for that situation as possible.
And I watched a lot of other nurses choose in similar situations to me when we got laid off.
They chose unemployment and they stayed at home and I couldn't do that on my own level. I was like,
this is what I trained for in my nation. This is, this is, they need me and that's why would
I sit at home when I have this level of expertise and I can do this. And, and I don't think I've,
I've taken time to, to acknowledge that about myself.
And I appreciate you putting it in terms of I can understand because I did earn this money.
And I did walk in with an expertise that nobody else had.
And no one else could do what I did.
And for as long as I did, and I do deserve to feel proud of myself for that.
You do. I agree. Dan, I love seeing your smile as you hear,
Janay, as well. What is it? What are you taking away from this?
I'm so proud of her. She's come such a long way and everything she said,
you know, I've been telling her, but she has that mental block she can't hear it and hearing her say
to herself is, I'm so proud of her man.
She does deserve this.
She's a rock starner.
She's the best nurse she'll ever have and she deserves everything she got.
I'm just so happy for her that she's connecting the dots.
It's amazing.
I really love watching the two of you connect the dots together.
I really love it.
To me, this is the most powerful thing in creating a rich life.
I can't do it for you.
I can look at a couple numbers and make a couple jokes,
but it's got to be you taking the lead.
And in your relationship, it's got to be each of you connecting your own dots and then
the two of you connecting your dots together.
Nobody can do it for you.
So I love seeing.
Can you see it?
Almost how it's all coming together?
The change the way you're doing it, you feel about your expertise, change the way you
feel about money, change the way you feel about talking about it together.
And it flows from there into the most minute things like what percentage should we put
an investment in?
How do we talk about this car?
Yeah. Yeah.
So this doesn't change overnight.
You already made it.
What a tragedy if you don't actually internalize that
and then use the rewards of everything you've both worked for.
So do you think it's possible for you
to feel safe about money?
Yeah, I do. I do.
That's a good answer. I think it is absolutely possible.
Dan, do you feel safe with money?
Now I do. Yeah.
Now meaning when?
I mean after, for me it was checking the boxes and like getting, you know,
paying off the house and having no debt and knowing that, no matter
what I can, I can out work, whatever comes my way and have a DNA and we're a good team
and we've always problem solved the ball together, I feel, I feel really safe about it.
I like that.
I would want the car if I didn't feel safe, like I would not bring it up.
I think if we do it right and we go about it the right way,
we can be set up for the rest of our lives and go on all the trips that she wants
to have the car I want and have access and not ever work about money. I think we're in a position where
if we play our cards right we're going to be good for the rest of our life.
If we play our cards right, we're going to be good for the rest of our life. What a fascinating conversation with Dan and Jene.
One of the things that I introduced them to was this idea of chapters in their life.
Chapter one, particularly in Dan's life, was Walmart and mistakes with his 401k.
Chapter two, for both of them them was working through the pandemic,
quadrupling their income, but at a very high cost. And chapter three, which they are now
turning the page into, will be all about combining those lessons, accepting what happened
in the past, and then designing a rich life that
emotionally connects with both of them.
Dan and Janay sent me follow-up letters, and I'd like to read you an excerpt from both
of them.
Dan said, I learned that I need to work on my approach when talking to Janay, especially
when it is something that I am passionate about, but she may not be.
I also learned that going on a podcast and admitting to the world my most embarrassing
financial mistakes is kind of freeing and empowering.
I just want to be better for myself and Janae.
Janae wrote, I learned how to view my financial life stages as chapters.
Viewing things in our past as a chapter that is now closed
gives me the opportunity to believe in a different future.
Dan and I have built trust with each other
in so many areas, but not finances.
I learned I need to let go,
and I know and trust he is a drastically different person than when we first got married
Here's what they decided about the car
Quote we agreed with your suggestion so we will mutually pay
For $50,000 of the Audi and Dan will use his guilt-free money and any additional work above his normal hours
to save up the remaining $100,000.
We also decided to set aside 5% of our pay towards a car fund in perpetuity with the understanding
that Janay may need a new car since hers is older and starting to have some issues. Thanks a million for helping teach us how to be rich.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You to Be Rich. I'm Remete Saiti.
Please follow the show on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
If you haven't read I Will 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.
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