I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 77. “We have $6.3 million. Why can’t we take a vacation?”
Episode Date: January 10, 2023Tommy is 60 and he’s run his own business for more than 30 years. He loves his work and doesn’t plan to stop. Caroline, his wife, is 56 and is retiring from a stressful job in a few months. Togeth...er, they’ve amassed over $6M. She’s ready to spend it but Tommy can’t stop saving and investing. Links mentioned in this episode Get Money Coaching with Ramit Download the Conscious Spending Plan Join Earnable 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.
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Every time he'd sit there and say,
God, I wish I'd win the lottery.
And I'm like, well, we can't have.
And we still don't, we still wish we could win the lottery.
Each month, I'm putting money away.
That's how my mind works.
It's like, that's how you get, that's how you get by shit.
Yet I realize there are times that I do feel like I control things too much.
And that's probably a huge downfall for me.
And it's stupid.
She's not doing anything wrong.
But this is how I react to myself.
I get worked up over stupid ass stuff.
Okay, and do you want that relationship
the way it is now or do you want to change it?
I want to change it it but I worry. I
worry that if I'm not in control then. Well I didn't ask about the black. I just
asked if you want to change it. Yeah a little bit. And that's probably my biggest
fear about retiring is that I'm not gonna have my own money anymore. We're not
gonna spend any money now because he feels like we don't have the double income.
And by the time we can't spend money,
as you know, when we're older, I won't want to travel as much.
And we're saving for Tom to live to 100,
is what we're doing.
We're totally saving for Tom to live to 100.
I want to do stuff now.
Meet Tommy and Caroline. Tommy's 60, Caroline's 56. This is their second marriage, both of them. And they've been married for six years. The reason they came to me
is that Tommy is having trouble spending. And because Caroline is just about to retire from a very
stressful job, this has become a very pressing topic.
What are they going to do when he continues to work and she's retired?
She wants to travel.
She wants to spend some of that money.
He does not.
Now for everybody listening and watching on YouTube, I want to encourage you to treat
this episode like a crystal ball. You have the chance to see into your future and to see what it might look like if you
accumulate a bunch of money, but you don't necessarily know how to spend it.
So for those of you listening to the I Will Teach You Be Rich podcast or for those of
you watching it on YouTube, I welcome you to this episode of Tommy and Caroline.
I need to chill because I think
we're in a really good position.
Caroline's retiring this March
and I'm so excited for her
because she's got a super stressful job.
I know we can make it work, yet I freak out too much.
I freak out when I see all these Amazon purchases and I question why it's happening.
Perfect example. Caroline decides to buy a pair of headphones that we already have a wired pair of headphones.
And I know it's stupid because it's probably like a
$20 or $30 purchase, but my mind just says,
Hey, we already have it.
I need to let go of that kind of shit.
I know I do because she's doing nothing wrong, nothing.
But I get worked up on that.
When you say, tell me that you freak out.
Tell me exactly what happened.
It's just kind of nothing was said to her,
but I just inside, I internalized by saying,
why did she do that?
There's no reason for that.
I wouldn't have done that.
So why does she do that? And it's reason for that. I wouldn't have done that, so why does she do that?
And it's stupid.
She's not doing anything wrong, but this is how I react
to myself.
I get worked up over stupid ass stuff.
Okay.
Caroline, do you remember that headphone situation?
Well, yeah, I could tell because he kind of rolls his eyes.
Or he tries to control the situation.
He'll say, we don't need it.
It's a good thing I did buy him because we would be in bad shape right now if I didn't buy him.
Because the ones that he had didn't work.
That's one. What else?
What was something that you just bought that's?
Oh, okay. She's probably going gonna get mad at me on this.
She was telling me on a walk that she just purchased
a cool dress that she really liked,
that she for an upcoming wedding.
Don't know when that wedding would be,
but it'd be a cool dress.
Yet she also confided by saying that,
yeah, don't know if I'll really be able to wear
it or fit into it or maybe it won't work for this particular wedding.
And it just blows my mind.
Why would you buy something when you don't know for sure that it's doable?
It is $600.
Okay.
And where did that money come from?
Which account? My account. Your personal account?600. Okay, and where did that money come from? Which account? My account.
Your personal account?
Yes.
Okay.
How long have you been married for?
Five years.
Seven years.
Well, known each other for seven married five.
Okay.
All right.
You guys want to get your story straight on how long you've been married?
Well, we met 2013.
We got married in 2017. That's nine years.
No, two that well, okay, 2017. We know each other for nine years. We've been married since
2017. And that five? Am I doing my math wrong? It's five and a half. So almost six years.
When we got married, it was my opportunity. I was like, listen babe, let's start fresh. Let's just do our wedding
anniversary and birthdays. We can't do like the first day and the first time our parents
met. It was just too much. I said, let's just start fresh. So maybe that's what's going
on here. All right. So you've been married somewhere in the neighborhood of less than
10 years. Whatever the number is. Yes. Okay.
Is this a first marriage for both?
Second.
Second for both of us.
Second for both.
Okay, great.
Notice a few things already.
When Tommy describes himself as freaking out, I ask him to get really specific with his
behavior.
A lot of people use the word freaking out to describe all kinds of things.
Some people use it to describe losing their temper and screaming at their partners.
Other people use the same phrase for the very mundane.
Like they sit in their heads and they wonder, hmm, is that worth it?
I really do not like the phrase freaking out.
In my opinion, it is never descriptive and I find that people who use this phrase tend
to start to treat it almost like a comfort blanket.
They'll just shrug and say, I started to freak out.
I can't help it.
I don't know.
That's just me.
I freak out.
No.
We're not going to do that.
We're not going to use inflammatory phrases and then laugh it off as just this quirky little
thing.
I just freak out.
No.
We're going to get specific with the attitudes and behaviors
that we use when it comes to money. And then we're going to specifically dig to see if we can
rebuild those habits so they can start to serve you. So when you initially got married,
when was the first time you talked about money in a serious way?
When was the first time you talked about money in a serious way?
Caroline, I'd say the first time we talked about it was we
discussed that it be beneficial to us to have a
Join account and each one of us have our own separate accounts that are the accounts that we had. And that way, it wouldn't be,
oh, I'm gonna nitpick your spending and vice versa.
But then again, I hardly ever spend anything.
And I think that so far that's worked out really well.
Caroline, what do you recall about the first time
you talked seriously about money?
Yeah, same thing.
We were gonna do a joint account
and we were gonna contribute a certain seriously about money. Yeah, same thing. We were going to do a joint account, and we were going to contribute a certain amount of money.
And then if we could afford trips, we'd take trips or stuff
like that.
So yeah, we definitely had our separate, which I would definitely
need.
And that's probably my biggest fear about retiring
is that I'm not going to have my own money anymore.
I'm going to have to sort of rely on
like going into, I guess, our money, but it's for time contributing, the me contributing. So,
yeah, it's going to be uncomfortable, probably. And how far off is retirement for you? March 31st.
In a few months. Okay, well, early congratulations. That's cool. Yes, thank you. All right. So,
um, when you describe your feelings about retirement, are they positive or negative?
I'm negative only in the sense that I planned on working longer. It's just my job's too stressful.
I work for a company that was bought and they got rid of people and just, you know,
made other people do more than they normally have to do.
And it's just too stressful.
I can't do it anymore.
Yeah.
All right.
How would you describe the two of you in terms of money?
Like Caroline, if you had to describe Tommy in a word or two
when it comes to money, what words come to mind for you?
Conservative. What else?
I don't want to be me. I mean, I think he's kind of, I think he's kind of cheap.
I think, yeah, I mean, I know that if I want to, like we, if we look at boats and we bought a boat for our lake house, I knew, you know, it had to be reasonable.
There was no way, like there's some boats out there that are, you know, $60,000, $100,000. There was no way. There was even though we probably could afford it. There's no way. It's not even an option.
How much did your boat end up costing? even though we probably could afford it, there's no way. It's not even an option.
How much did your boat end up costing?
About a use boat for $18,000.
Okay.
I don't know anything about boats.
In the grand scheme is that cheap, expensive,
for your area and your place of living.
I'd say it's cheap.
Yeah.
All right.
Here's something I want to throw by you or me.
Okay.
Here's a perfect example of how my mind works.
I'm always like competing with myself.
We got gas.
I filled up the car the other day.
I was so pissed at myself.
Couple miles down the road.
I got it.
I could have gotten it for 12 cents less for gallon.
Tommy, this cannot be really happening right now.
Another incident.
Come on.
It didn't stop berries.
Tell me, we're getting yellow stone.
Okay, you want to get the 50s and the yellow stone.
Okay, it's a good show.
I went ahead and bought it.
You bought the H.C.
Version.
No, hell no.
Okay, I never do that either.
That's the waste of money I'm never gonna do.
And then I find out my son said, Hey, Daddy, oh, we got you already have it on YouTube
TV.
Why don't you ask me?
I'm pissed at myself for $40.
I mean, it's not even worth it.
I mean, how come you didn't say something or how come you didn't check it out?
I thought I did. It's not funny.
How much sleep did you lose over that one, Tommy?
I probably did.
I know it's stupid, but I'm just that's how I deal with stupid shit like that.
Tommy is doing this interesting thing here where he's pre-apologizing.
Have you noticed it?
It's like walking into the room
after you've done something
and going over the top with your apologies.
I know I shouldn't have done that.
I'm terrible.
I just can't do anything right.
I'm sorry.
One apology is good.
Two is better.
Ten starts to feel disingenuous.
I want you to be aware of this,
because it might be a real acknowledgement of contrition
or it might be a strategy.
Sometimes it's actually an unconscious strategy
that people use, but it is a strategy nonetheless.
Personally, I find Tommy really likeable.
But I'm starting to get a little suspicious of the number of times he's apologized in
just the first few minutes of talking.
But really, I have no idea.
It's just a guess right now.
Let's pay attention to what he says and how he says.
And the other thing that may seem waxed, but I just have this feeling I'm going to live
a long time.
Like, to at least a hundred.
Don't, and I'm not saying this is bragging. I just feel I'm going to live a long time. Like, to at least a hundred. Don't, and I'm not saying this is bragging,
I just feel I'm gonna live a long time.
I wanna make sure that I don't have to be a burden to anyone.
Never do I want it.
My kids are anyone to worry about me.
How many kids do you have, Tommy?
Three.
All right, how old are they?
Well, they're old.
They're 34, 33, and 30. All right, and how are they doing? They're all successful. They're all there 34, 33 and 30.
All right.
And how are they doing?
All successful.
They're all fine.
Okay. Great.
Do you anticipate them needing your financial help in their lives?
No.
Tommy, we spoke on the money coaching call.
That was a lot of fun.
So you raised your hand and we had a conversation in our money coaching call. That was a lot of fun. So you raised your hand and we had a conversation
in our money coaching group. So I mean, do you recall the conversation that we had?
That I don't believe a lot what you had to say in terms of kind of convincing me that we are good financially. And that if I wanted to, I remember talking about
we want to take, I want to take a trip to New Zealand. All right, you got to hear this clip.
I was doing a Q&A with my money coaching group members and I saw Tommy's question and I knew
I had to take it. Listen in. All right, Tommy, if you are here, Tommy, please unmute because I really
want to talk to you about this question is so good. Tommy says, I just turned 60. My wife is
retiring this April. I've been self employed for over 34 years. I will continue to work because I
enjoy it. My wife has worked her ass off and she wants to spend. I would love to know how much I
need to budget each month so I can chill. Can you help me? Two question marks.
Okay, Tommy, please are you on this call?
I'm here. Oh, okay, Tommy. My man, first of all, I love that you put save in all caps. It must really be on your mind. Why do you like to save?
I don't know. It's like competitive.
It's like the more I save the better I'll be
and more prepared.
My financial guy says we're good.
You know, and I don't believe him.
And he shows me facts that, you know, each year
it's going to be worth more.
You see it here, you see the math here, you trust your guy, but here you don't really believe
it.
Is that correct?
Hell no.
But I did notice you said this thing about my wife has worked her ass off and she wants
to spend.
Now, what does she want to spend on?
And you know what, she does not spend a lot.
She really doesn't. She's very good.
But I just, oh, wait, not spending a lot means you're good.
Did I catch that? Well, no, she really, I know, I know,
but what if she starts doing that?
Keep going. What if she starts doing it and then what happens?
Like, what if she starts spending a little bit and then she trips and falls and start spending
$50,000 a month? Any concern about that happening? Oh yeah, no, not that much, but
how much then? I don't know. I'm embarrassed to say that, you know, I like, I got to keep saving.
I talk to so many people who are in this same situation and they have 500,000, 5 million,
13 million, and they still cannot bring themselves to spin. I told my group I'd like to go to New Zealand.
Oh, what's there? The world's highest bungee jump. Oh, my, okay, amazing. That is
terrifying to me. You are healthy. You have the money. You have the time because you work and you
seem to have a flexible schedule. Is there anything stopping you from doing these things?
I can't afford it. The fact of the matter is you're 60 years old, you're healthy. You
want to go bungee jumping in New Zealand and you can afford it with the money that you
probably have in your checking account or savings account. Or if not, after two months,
you would be able to afford it. What would that feel like if you did that?
I think the cool. Have you ever if you did that? I think it'd be cool.
Have you ever done something like that? No, the words like I analyze everything.
Just a quick question. Again, you're 60 years old. Do you have to wait until next winter to go?
Yeah, because I need to save up.
Okay, so like how much is in all your accounts?
Just like a, are we talking like $10,000, $10,000, $100,000?
Just a ballpark if I were to open up all your accounts together.
What's three million?
Three million plus the house, two million plus the cash flow.
I'm not sure you need to save up 500 bucks a month for a year.
Anybody agree with me?
Like could you just go and then pay yourself back?
No, because you had to work for it.
You got to like save me.
Tommy, listen to me closely.
There is no virtue in living a smaller life than you have to.
You already have the money.
You have the health.
You have a loving partner.
You have kids.
You won.
It's time to cash it in.
That was a live Q&A from my money coaching program
where I show you new ways to apply my material
to your finances and I answer your money questions
right there on the spot.
You can join at iwt.com slash money coaching.
That's iwt dot com slash money coaching. That's I W T dot com slash money coaching.
Now back to my conversation with Tommy and Caroline.
I each month I'm putting money away
because that's how my mind works.
It's like that's how you get,
that's how you get by shit.
You get, you don't just say, okay, I'm gonna buy it.
I gotta make sure that I have the money.
And if I don't, I'm gonna save up for it.
I'm gonna earmark this amount of money
and that's how I'm gonna do it.
Sounds pretty reasonable, the way you say it.
But I also remember that you,
I had to pull teeth to get you to talk about New Zealand.
And then when you finally said, oh, that would be cool.
It was like, yeah, we'll go on that like a year from now or 18 months or some long time
from now.
Does that sound familiar?
Yes.
I was like, why should you just go next month?
In fact, why don't you go next week?
Can't afford it.
Oh, you can't?
I guess I'm looking at these numbers
in your conscious spending plan with all those zeros.
Oh, that must be a very expensive trip to New Zealand.
My gosh.
We're gonna live a long time.
We gotta take care of that.
Not that long.
I mean, got a lot of zeros in this conscious spending plan.
What's up with that nod, Caroline? You think so too?
Well, I mean we talk about a place in Florida and I I knew you know if we would get a place
It had to be reasonable. So this we do some Arabian bees and this one place that we stayed at the Pandos were going for 200,000
I thought oh he kind of retained that yeah, yeah, and itandoes were going for 200,000. I thought, oh, keep trying to
entertain that. Yeah, yeah. And it was on water. So I said something to him and he said,
sure, boom, he changes mine completely. He was like, I don't think we need to spend the money.
So how do you to come to agreements on spending money? How does it go?
spending money. How does it go? I think ideally we come to a solution. I don't want to know ideally. I want to know real. Give me a scenario.
That was a mistake on my part. I violated my own rule, which is ask a vague question,
get a vague answer. And that's exactly what started to happen. If I hear
people going into vague language, ideally we do this or we usually do that, I never let
them continue. I don't care about their answer because it's always fake. In vague language,
when we are talking about ourselves vaguely, we're perfect. We always try to work out. We try to eat,
right? We try to manage our money. In real life, we haven't opened up a sub savings account
in five years because our kid keeps waking up at 5 a.m. and we lost the password. And if we roll it all
back, it's because my mom didn't love me because I got to be on my math test in fourth grade.
Those are the details that I'm looking for
because those are the details that actually matter.
So remember, ask a vague question, get a vague answer.
I get a lot of questions from people
who have used my book.
They've automated their finances,
they've set their investments up.
They go, all right, I did the basics, what's next? And when you've made a lot of money, you'll notice that there's not a lot of
advice specifically for you. The blog posts that are typically focused around people who are just
starting off or even people in debt do not really apply to you anymore. And it can also be embarrassing to ask. You can't really post about certain topics when you have money because your friends don't
know how much you make.
And nobody really wants to hear about, how do I take cooler vacations?
Or, what do you all do for tax optimization?
Because the first response is, oh, rich people problems.
I don't like that phrase because rich people problems are problems nonetheless.
How are you supposed to find someone you trust, whether it's an accountant or a travel advisor?
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Is this concept of money dials, the areas where you love to spend money.
The most common one is food, the next most common one is travel, and the third most common one.
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For me, I love hotels that falls under luxury, I love convenience that falls under having my food
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Give me a scenario.
But we don't have the calendar. I tell you that I get told no.
Okay.
And I say, what about my money?
You know, I've told her I said, we're going to travel.
I'm not going to wait.
That's why I want to go to New Zealand next year.
She's like thinking, hmm, is this gonna happen?
I've already put it in the works with the travel agent.
So it's going to happen.
Not sure what month is probably gonna be January,
February of 2024, because I gotta save up for it.
But I'm sure I will have enough saved up for it. How much you need to save up for it, but I'm sure I will have enough saved up for it.
Yeah, how much do you need to save up for that trip?
I'm thinking probably about 20,000.
Okay, how long is the trip gonna be?
A month.
I'm already taking money, I'm putting money aside.
Okay, Caroline, do you agree with that?
Yeah, I would think that would be a good amount of money for a month.
When you rent something for a month, it's more reasonable than like a hotel for a month or whatever.
Okay.
You're about to be retired.
Tommy says he doesn't want to retire for a long time.
What's that going to mean for the two of you?
Meaning about spending money? He says he doesn't want to retire for a long time. What's that gonna mean for the two of you?
Meaning about spending money? Yeah, we're traveling, spending money,
that kind of thing.
I wanna keep at the same income level I'm at,
which is pretty low, and I do that for tax reasons.
So I don't wanna be pulling a boatload out of our savings savings and I just, I would like to keep it at that.
And I'm not working just because, oh, I'm nervous.
I do, I really enjoy what I do.
It's a lot of fun.
And I think I'm pretty good at it.
And it excites me.
I think guys who retire early, die early.
And I'm not going to do that.
OK.
Caroline, what does it mean for you that one is going to be
retired and one is not?
It means like he just said that we're not going to have as much
income.
And I worry because we're young.
I want to do stuff now.
I don't want to do anything because we feel like we don't
have money.
And then when we're 75 because he's going to live to a hundred,
we're going to do stuff and I'm like, yeah, I don't see it that way at all. I had a mother that
did everything. She always was going and going and going and going. Then she got sick and she didn't
do anything. She ended up still giving us money because later on in her life she didn't do much.
My greatest fear is that we're not going to spend any money now,
because he feels like we don't have the double income.
And by the time we can't spend money as, you know,
when we're older, I won't want to travel as much.
And we're saving for Tom to live to 100 is what we're doing.
We're totally saving for Tom to live to 100.
I see.
Tommy, what do you think about what Carolyn said?
She had some pretty important things there.
I believe we need to be on the same page.
And then I do believe it's pretty smooth,
because Caroline's going to speak her mind.
And she knows that I'm going to speak my mind,
yet I realize there are times that
I do feel like I control things too much. And that's probably a huge downfall for me,
but huge attribute because I own my own business and I guess I've had to go with that mindset, that, you know, the
buck stops with me.
If things screw up, it's my fault.
And hopefully they go well and, you know, collectively will do well.
But I know I control shit way too much.
All right.
You want to change that or no?
I. yeah.
Yes, put it this way. I love playing sports.
And when I'm on a team sports,
I am never ever the coach or the manager
because I love when other guys are telling me what to do.
Love it.
It's like for once, I don't have to worry about this or that.
It's just, I gotta worry about how well I perform.
Okay.
So you like being the individual contributor
when it comes to sports.
At work, you're the person in charge,
the buck stops with you,
but it sounds like you have also adopted that mentality when it comes to money
in your relationship. Would that be fair? Yes. Okay. And do you want that relationship the way it is
now or do you want to change it? I want to change it, but I worry. I worry that if I'm not in control then. Well, I didn't ask about the butt.
I just asked if you want to change it.
Yeah, a little bit.
You really should watch Tommy's facial expressions
as I ask these questions.
He's quite expressive and it tells you a lot.
Check out the YouTube video.
You could say no.
I'm not trying to lead you with a graph.
You don't want to change it.
Tell me. Then I will answer a little bit. I'm not trying to lead you with a graph. You don't want to change it. Tell me then I will answer a
little bit. I feel like moving forward. This is this is a big
thing about how we spend our money. And I get I get worried
about it. And even our financial guy has said, Hey, it's
you're good.
You guys are good.
Well, I don't know.
I don't know how much we can spend each month.
That's what I want to feel comfortable with.
Because if I know that, then I can chill.
I can relax.
So you believe that if you have a certain number in front of you, that suddenly you're going
to relax about money.
Yes. Okay, here's a little pop quiz for you. If you were in my chair, how would you approach the rest of your conversation with Tommy and Caroline? What route would you take?
Think about it. Some people are tempted to emphasize the numbers. Tommy, you're a millionaire.
are tempted to emphasize the numbers. Tommy, you're a millionaire. But what if I told you Tommy already knows that and he hasn't actually changed anything because of it. What else
would you do? See, one of the things I'm trying to do here is to get as many of the details
out of couples that I speak to. But I'm also evaluating the details that they give me. Most of it candidly is noise.
Some of it is interesting, but it's a route with a dead end or a bad end.
You'll sometimes hear me wave couples off of a certain conversation route they're going,
if I can tell it's not going to be good.
Other times, I will hear something, and it's really important, but it's not as important
as the burning issue.
I'll give you an example from this conversation right now.
Tommy has mentioned his finance guy.
Now I haven't gone down that route intentionally, but I'm willing to bet he's paying somebody
a 1% AUM fee, which is a total waste of money, especially at their net worth. Now ordinarily, I would spend time talking about that, but I don't want to do that.
Just like Frank soccer referees out there, you know the advantage clause, just let it go.
Same thing here. I can see this mistake happening, but there are bigger things that I need to talk
about. And frankly, if I were to bring up that AUM fee, he's probably paying a financial advisor,
Tommy would welcome it because he wants to do anything except tackle the real issue here.
Ah, the real issue, the burning pain.
That is what I'm always looking for. Because if we can solve that,
the $30,000 question, or in their case,
the $10 million question,
then the rest of their concerns are mere trivialities.
So this is what I mean by focusing on the big wins.
There's usually one main issue
that is more important and meaningful
than all the next nine issues combined.
We want to search for it and take as long as we need to do to find it, but when we find
it, we want to go full head on to confront that issue.
You mentioned that you never want to be a burden on your family.
I can understand that completely.
And you mentioned that you don't want to have to worry
You want to know that there's enough right how much is enough?
Look that smile I like this have you talked about this before I'm gonna go out a little bit
I don't know it 12,000 a month. Well, but-
Is that enough?
I don't, not really.
How much is enough?
I would think 15,000 a month.
Okay, Tommy.
If we can afford it.
Well, I'm not asking if you can afford.
I'm just asking how much is enough.
I don't know.
How much of the two of you make together?
How much of the two of you make right now every month together, gross.
Yeah.
So I think mine's kind of tricky because I'm self-employed.
So how much do you pay yourself?
That's 37.50 every two weeks. So how much do you pay yourself? Nets
3750 every two weeks
Hold on every time people give me these weird
It's like 7500 a month gross
That's net okay, okay, so gross. I think was about 7300
Higher gross behind Okay. So gross, I think was about 7,300 every two weeks. It would be higher, gross, we would be higher.
I know, but the count takes out to the 401K to do other things.
So.
Yeah, that's why I like to see gross.
But whatever, all right.
You basically make like 10, 12,000 a month gross,
but you could pay yourself more, you could pay yourself less,
you choose to pay yourself that much, right?
Right. All right? Right.
All right, fine.
And Caroline, you make approximately 7,000 a month.
Fair enough?
Yeah, probably.
Mine's going into 401K and medical bill.
Gross, you make more than that.
Caroline, you're about 160 a year.
I just want to point out as you do through your pay stubs and stuff,
I just want to point out for everyone watching and listening like here,
we have a multi millionaire couple who doesn't even know how much they make.
It's fucking awesome.
I don't look at the bank account.
It's awesome.
He should look at bank account.
I do look at the bank account.
Yeah, it's like 13,000 a month. Yeah, I probably
make 13,000 a month. I did one six,
whatever, by 12, whatever. It doesn't matter to me. You all make a lot of money. Fine with
me. You're money. You're incomes about to disappear, Caroline. Fine. And, uh, Tommy,
you can basically pay yourself whatever you want to pay yourself.
You choose to pay yourself that much.
Could you pay yourself more theoretically?
You have the cash flow for it?
Yes.
Yeah.
So Tommy, can I ask you a couple of questions?
So you're 60 years old.
Yes.
You're multi-millionaire.
Successful entrepreneur.
Do you accept those things?
Yeah, the multi-millionaire, no. I mean, I'm looking at the numbers. There's
there's multiple commas. Let's put it that way. You are a multi-millionaire.
If you look at it that way, yes, I guess. Yeah, the way like facts. Okay. So you
are a multi-millionaire successful entrepreneur. How long you've been running
your business? Little over 30 years. Fantastic. All right. How many businesses do we know that even last that long?
That's amazing. Okay. You're telling me that in 30 years and millions of dollars of accumulation,
you have never been able to figure out how much money you can safely spend every month.
We've been told about figure on 12,000 dollars a month and you'll you should be fine.
Okay, and do you accept that number?
I think so. I think we can do that.
You told me a second ago I I need to know the number,
because then I'm just gonna hand over
financial control to Caroline.
Well, you know the number.
I don't know if that's the right number.
I think it is.
I see, I see, I see.
Okay.
I've never been in a position like this.
It doesn't seem real.
It seems.
Okay.
I mean, I'm proud of what we've done.
We've saved the shitload.
And we've done it.
I want to say kind of the hard way.
It's like making smart choices, not overspending on stupid shit.
And that's knowing our means.
Okay.
And if we go back to you, you saved a lot.
You're proud of what you did.
You never thought you'd be in this position.
And therefore, to think about spending more means what?
Man, if you don't follow the course, Tommy,
you're gonna fuck it up.
So you better keep saving.
Yeah.
I'm just being honest. I appreciate it. I gonna fuck it up. So you better keep saving. That's, I'm just being honest.
I appreciate it.
I think that's real.
What got you here could work.
It would work with the mentality
of where you were at 30 years old
when you started this business.
And at that point,
probably you were actually about 30 years old, right?
When you started this business, yeah, hustling, trying to get your first client, et cetera.
Every entrepreneur goes through that stage, I get that.
But every entrepreneur is in a way trying to get to where you are.
And what a shame if you still act the exact same way you did as when you were 30 years old, just starting up.
I guess I don't look it as being a shame.
It's like I gotta keep hustling.
I gotta keep having that edge.
I gotta keep doing this.
Can you hustle and still enjoy some
of the benefits of what you've worked for.
I guess I know I should enjoy it more and you know, Caroline pushes me to do that.
And I know I'm kind of a dick.
Tommy's showing you what happens to successful people who wrap
frugality and saving into their identity. When they finally succeed, it is virtually impossible
for them to change their identity. And you will see that successful people like this display
a complete inability to get off the hamster wheel. Because when
you've always lived for the future, telling yourself that someday you'll spend your money,
you have actually let the skill of spending money meaningfully deteriorate. Now, if you
are listening or you're watching this, Tommy's actually giving you a huge gift.
He's giving you the gift of a crystal ball into your future.
Many of you, especially the ones who have read my book and joined my earnable program
and money coaching, you're going to end up with a lot of money.
But if you don't learn how to meaningfully save as well as spend it, it's very likely you will end up with more money than you can
use and no real ability or willingness to spend it.
Carolina will tell you this, that's two things that I love to spend money on and I don't,
she said traveling, I do, but when it comes to sporting events and concerts, don't care. I will go to as many
as possible and I'll try to get the best seats if I can. And I love doing that. That's my
indulgence. Okay. You don't worry that you're spending too much on it? No, because I feel I deserve it. Oh, you deserve it.
Where did that come from?
Because I wore a card.
I mean, to me, that's pretty minor just saying, hey, I'm going to spend it on, you know,
concerts and sporting events.
Okay, good answer.
What else is best case for you?
Concerts?
You want to go to one every year quarter?
What are we talking about? Oh shit, at least I'd like to go once a month minimum. Wow. Okay. What kind of seats you want to get there?
Ooh, that'd be cool to have like really good seats. You ever done that? Yeah, I got you so concerts
maybe once in a while get some great seats go every month fantastic. What else?
Sporting events.
Hmm. Yeah, I think it'd be cool.
You know, I I know so little about soccer,
but I think it'd be cool to check out a world cup.
That'd be cool. Sounds good to me.
Do you think we may be able to apply that to some other parts of your life?
Ah.
I know I guess I should. to apply that to some other parts of your life. Ah. Killife laughing.
I know.
I guess I should.
What?
Caroline, what does it mean to you to hear Tommy sharing
these things?
Any surprises?
No.
And I mean, eventually, like, you're 401K,
they make you take it out.
So then I'm thinking, OK, when they make us take it out,
Tom's probably going to put it in another savings account.
He's not gonna spend it.
Yeah.
I mean, I can just hear it.
I'm hearing it from him now.
I know what retired men do,
like optimizers like you, Tommy.
I know it because I talk to them.
And they take their RMD, you know,
they're required to take it out.
And then they literally put it right back in.
They invested again.
I go, what the fuck are you doing?
And they go, whoa, I don't even know what to spend it on.
And this is where it goes from funny to haunting.
They go, what would I spend it on anyway?
And I go, let me get this straight.
I don't say this to him because I'm not trying to psychologically devastate a 72 year old
man.
But I go, let me get this straight.
You work your ass off for basically 45 plus years
to accumulate a bunch of money provided for your family.
You did all that, but along the way you forgot
what you actually wanted to spend it on,
maybe you never even built the muscle
of knowing how to spend it meaningfully.
What's the point of all that money?
I agree.
I sort of agree.
How about the way that the two of you
deal with money together?
Best case.
Not me bitching.
That would be the best case scenario, not me worrying about
stuff because I slowly am believing that we do have enough to so I can just
relax more. Okay, that's good. Maybe another 30 years and you'll believe it.
I think 10 years I think I'll be good. So what changes 10 years from now that you don't
already have? I'll have more. You'll have millions.
Yeah, but I think it'll help. It'll help us.
Have the two of you ever considered just a legitimate question.
Is there a point at which the two of you have invested too much money?
Has that question ever come up between the two of you?
No. That's what I thought.
Yeah, never.
Because that's not a question that middle class people ever really confront.
It is you save, you invest, you kind of scrap
and scrape it all together.
And hopefully by the time you retire
you've got enough to live a comfortable life
and maybe travel.
Fair?
Fair.
That's the archetype for how we live in America
in the middle class.
But first of all, I'm looking at that very nice tree
behind you, Tommy.
Now, I don't know if that's a middle class tree or not,
but I'm gonna tell you something.
I bought my first Christmas tree this year with my wife, okay?
We went to the little tree lot.
We got a little tree.
I'm talking like it's like three feet tall, okay?
So we have no idea.
Does this tree cost like $10 or 150?
We have no clue.
So we get the tree and then we're like,
oh man, we gotta get some lights for this thing.
We go to target, we get the light,
we don't know how many lights to get.
So we get one strand and then we come home
and we have to wrap and we're like in a budget way.
Let's just stretch this strand out.
You know, it doesn't even go to the top.
And I'm looking at your tree, I'm going,
that is a very nice tree.
Lot of ornaments probably took you 20 years to collect.
That plus the fact that I'm looking at many millions
of dollars in your bank account,
I'm going, maybe some of the old middle class rules
don't apply to you to, have you considered that?
Hell no.
All right, is it time to consider that now?
I don't know.
I mean, you're talking to a guy who grew up middle class and now some of the rules don't
apply to me that you used to.
Maybe this is a good conversation for us all to have.
What do you think?
Maybe a little bit.
I should show a little bit more.
I mean, that's what you told me you wanted to do on this call.
I'm giving you the
option here, Tommy. Caroline's like, yeah, keep talking. Yeah, she's loving it. Yeah, it's
definitely, definitely. I don't want to be upset about money. All right, let's talk about it.
There is a point where when you accumulate enough,
it actually starts not making sense for you
to continue saving and investing at the rate.
You work.
Now, this really only applies to people
with a considerable amount of money, okay?
The vast majority of people, they need to save more
and they need to invest more.
And it's very difficult for a lot of people, especially housing costs, all that stuff,
you know, in your case, you're mentioning to me, Tommy, that you still put a ton of money
in your 401k, Caroline, same thing for you.
And all that is great.
I love a good 401k.
I love all these tax-advanced retirement accounts.
But the fact of the matter is, Caroline, you're about to retire.
Tommy, you're 60.
And when I look at how much money you've got,
and the fact that you're gonna continue working, et cetera, et cetera,
I start to ask myself, what if you took,
let's just say $5,000 a month, just a round number,
and instead of putting it in a 401k or whatever savings vehicle
He just used it for cash flow and use it for traveling and used it to not have to go two miles down the road for cheaper gas
And he used it for whatever it is you wanted to use it for
What would happen
So I'd have to work harder.
Okay, because-
I get more jobs.
Uh-huh.
Because what?
Because, that's, I,
because I need to keep,
you know, invest, I need to go,
you know, invest in the 401k and other things and-
Why?
Because it's like, I don't, in the 401k and other things. And why?
Because it's like, I don't, I don't believe I'll have enough or we'll have enough.
Yeah, the I'll keep doing that. Good answer.
And Caroline, you disagree?
I totally disagree.
I think, like I said, my mom, I mean, not to use her as an example, it's probably not the best example, but
she didn't have that much money, not anywhere close to what we have.
And she still gave money to her kids when she passed.
And the same thing with my dad,
he didn't have a whole lot of money.
And, you know, well, everyone,
his Tommy's kids will tell him like,
dad, go have fun. Go spend your money.
We don't want any money.
What do you say to that, Tommy?
I tell them to mine their own business.
You sure?
You know, I told the same thing to my parents.
Did you know that?
What?
I sat down with them.
And I, because my dad was telling me, you know, he called me and he told me some deal
he got on something, and I said,
you know, dad, you don't have to go for all the deals anymore.
You have enough.
And he and my mom, they didn't believe it.
And so I sat down with them,
and I made their finances really simple,
even though my dad is,
he's quite savvy with money. But being savvy
with money versus knowing if you have enough, those are two very, very different skills,
very different. I said, we don't want any money. We want you to spend every last cent.
And I even put them on like a travel budget. But not the kind
you think. It's a budget where you have to spend this much every single month. And that
actually has proven, it's, you know, it's taken a little bit of work, but it's proven to
be a different way of looking at money. What do you think about that? I think your dad should be instructing me right now.
Probably true.
This is a very interesting and advanced topic.
And this is really only applicable for people who have enough money
but have an inability or unwillingness to spend it.
In this case, we do a bit of a reverse budget. In many ways,
it's what the conscious spending plan is for. That's why if you download the free conscious
spending plan, I put the link in the show notes, you will start to automatically build this
skill of spending money in areas that are meaningful to you. I'll give you an example.
Let's say that you want to become a better photographer. Okay, great. In your conscious spending plan, specifically the fourth category, guilt-free
spending, you can allocate 200 bucks a month for photography classes or equipment, whatever you want.
And you can look at your conscious spending plan and you can see what is important to you. Now, guess
what? Maybe you tried for six months,
you go, I'm not into this, let me put it aside.
Cool, you just change your conscious spending plan
and you shift it to something else.
Your conscious spending plan and your calendar
really reflect your season of life.
And that concept of a season of life is really important.
When I was in my 20s, I was very aggressive at saving
and investing. And even though my income was relatively low to what it would become, just as
almost everybody's income and their 20s is low compared to what it will become,
I wanted to get my habits right. I was aggressively investing a larger percentage of income
because I wanted those habits and I wanted that compounding to kick in. I was also spending a lot going out. Taco Tuesdays, I was
living in San Francisco, the New York. I was having a great time. Now I couldn't do
it all. There were things I couldn't afford then that I can afford now, but I was
spending as consciously as I could have. Looking back, I think I could have done
things a little differently. I would have probably spent more on having fun, but at least I gave it some thought.
If you get to the point where you have more money than you actually need, this happens to a
surprising number of people. It's just not talked about in the press. You start to encounter some very
unconventional decisions that you may have to make. For example,
for the vast majority of people to be able to max out their 401k is a dream.
To be able to max out xyz account is a dream. There may actually be a point where you go,
I'm not going to max it out. That money has higher utility to me now than to save it for retirement later. So again, this applies to like less than 3% of people, but on this podcast, I like to
show you all gametes, whether you're $800,000 in debt or you have over $10 million in net
worth, I want you to know how to play the game of money no matter what level you are at. There are a couple things that drive me insane.
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I'll tell you a scenario that you're going to yell at me, but I feel justified.
This past summer, Caroline's son and girlfriend came up. And of course,
Caroline said, let's go to the best, most expensive restaurant, which is we love. We both love.
And I'm like, why can't we just grill here and just chill? And long story short, it was at least 500 bucks for all of us to, you know, eat, drink.
Often you see these kids once a year. Well, no, we see them more than that, but this occasion was once a year. Well, no, we see a more than that, but this occasion was once year.
Was it worth it, Tommy? It was fun. It really was fun. Do you think ten years
from now when you have millions more just purely based on compound interest?
Do you think you would feel differently about that type of meal?
I guess I look at it this way.
I wouldn't have expected my parents to do that. And nor would Caroline expect her parents to do that.
Did either of your parents have millions of dollars?
No.
No.
Did either of your parents have their own business
that they ran for 30 years to this level of success
and care lines income as well?
Never.
No.
It's hard to take an identity that's not our parents
because in a way deep down it might even feel like
we're rejecting what they taught us.
They would never take us to eat at a place that's $125 a person.
I get that.
And you don't have to do it every day.
It doesn't sound like you're doing that.
But if you had the ability to ask your parents,
mom, dad, if you had the money,
would you have taken us out to a nice meal once in a year?
What do you think they would say?
Yeah, I think he would, you have the means. What's really more important than the amount spent on this one time dinner is the fact that you have kids coming home.
Still a great relationship with them. To me, that's way more meaningful than how much
you're spending. You could go to a pizza place for 20 bucks. It doesn't matter to me. But the fact that you all
chose to go to this place and you created a memorable dinner, to me, that's way more meaningful
than the amount you spent. And I actually think that the two of you have earned the right
to focus more on meaning than on money. Most of us go our whole lives
only thinking about money by necessity. We got to save, we got to buy clothes for the kids,
we don't have enough, but you won that game. You won. And you can keep playing, Tommy, you never
heard me once say anything about I need you to retire
tomorrow. That's your decision. You won that game of money. And now you get the chance to focus on
meaning. And if you don't do that and you just keep playing the same game for the next 10 or 20 or
30 years, you're leaving so much on the field.
That's how I look at it.
That's a good analogy.
I like that.
Meaning over money.
Think about that phrase.
It's not something that would have resonated with me at 20.
At 20, I was willing to work unlimited hours.
I wanted to grow everything.
Grow my skills, grow my friend group, grow my net worth. Meaning over money would not have made sense to me in that season of life.
And there's another example I want to give you. If you take someone who is struggling to pay their bills,
this concept also makes no sense. It's just words.
bills. This concept also makes no sense. It's just words. Meaning over money does not make sense, nor is it relevant to someone who's struggling to just pay their bills. But I'm
not talking to those two groups right now. I'm talking to Tommy and Caroline, who are
multi-millionaires, and Tommy's in his 60s. It is a tragedy to live a smaller life than you have to.
And for someone worth millions of dollars to even think about the price of a $500 he
has once a year with his kids, that is too small for Tommy.
Excuse me for being direct, but that is the truth.
Focus on the menu.
Focus on the ambiance.
Focus on the stories you shared over dinner. Focus on the menu, focus on the ambiance, focus on the stories you shared over dinner,
focus on anything, but not the price.
You are too successful to fixate on the price of one dinner.
Yes, there are situations where the price of something is totally and completely irrelevant.
And this is one of them.
Let's open up that conscious spending plan.
All right, fantastic.
Okay, let's, before we,
before you look at all that, Caroline, just ballpark,
just looking at me without looking at the spreadsheet,
how much money do you think you both have?
Okay, so I don't look at our cars and houses income.
So I would say we we have probably three million
Okay, all right and how does that make you feel?
I think that's a good amount. Okay, great. All right, and you're understanding of how much income you make per month total
ballpark it for me.
Okay, so I made last year like 165.
And Tom?
I'm gonna say 180 or 200. Let's say 200.
And then we got the house which generated 60K fair.
Or even 100K, let's say,
cause it was gross, let's gross it up.
Okay.
All right.
So that's 465,000 last year.
How's that gross?
How's that sound ballpark?
Sounds like a lot. Yeah, it does. It does when you
add it all up. Three numbers. Yeah, I mean, you guys see something. Look at this discomfort
on your faces, by the way, I love it. Do you know what did you both of you think you
make together? Like, let me guess like 180 to 200. Is that what you thought you make?
Well, I made 165, but I didn't know. I thought it was maybe 300 total.
That's, and do you know why there's such a disparity?
I have no clue.
What are the reasons that I like people
to give me their gross number?
Is that when you take the net,
you're actually taking out like 20k here, 20k there
for your 401k and all these other things, and you just don't count that mentally.
That's one of the reasons that two of you have been so successful at investing, because
you're just taking out 20k at a time and throwing it into your 401k and letting it compound.
Amazing for investing growth, horrible for understanding how much you're actually making every year.
So when you hear 465, hey, look, maybe I'm off by 30k, who the hell knows?
But I'm in the ballpark. Would you say that's fair? I'm in the ballpark.
Right? I guess. I guess so. All right. I'm right. I'm in the ballpark. That's a lot of money,
right? 465,000, even if it's 430,000. That's a lot.
In fact, it's over $130,000 more than you thought you were making. So it's important to be
fluent in the basic language of finance. Now, Caroline, you mentioned earlier that you don't see
the house's income. I agree, but I do see it as part of your net worth because it's paid off.
Right. Would you agree with that? Yes. Okay. So you have 2.7 million. No plants,
did liquidate it, fine, but it is there and it's worth 2.7 million. Fair? Fair.
All right. All right. Very good. How about your investments?
We're worth 3.5. That's a lot.
Yep.
What do you feel about that, Tommy?
We did good.
I think we did really good.
I'm proud of that.
That's awesome.
Solid work.
All right, your savings?
How much is in there?
Mean in our bank, we, I think, about $14,000.
Yeah, that's what I see. Why is that number so low? I mean, in our bank, we, I think about $14,000.
Yeah, that's what I see.
Why is that number so low?
Low, that's the way it should be.
Uh-huh.
Why would I want to put money that's earning nothing in savings?
You're a classic optimizer, Tommy.
You're always optimizing, but if you only have $14,000
in your savings account, which for a
multi-millionaire is low, then guess what it means. What are the ramifications of
that? It means I'm doing good. No. I'm putting money in a good source.
Making raw interest. Tommy, you have to wait over one year and three months to
take a fucking trip to New Zealand when you have a net worth of over $6 million.
It makes no sense.
Tell what you got to say for stuff.
You can't just like boom.
Yes, you can.
Okay, let's flip this.
Take me.
If I want to take a trip to New Zealand,
do you think I'm going to wait 15 months
to save up money to go to New Zealand?
I'm going to say no.
Why?
Because you're way more of an optimist than I am
when it comes to money.
What's the implication?
Like neither of us is running out of money anytime soon?
I'm doing it a smarter way than you are
I like to confident it's okay, maybe you are who knows
Yeah, I mean, that's a smart way of doing it.
Save it.
And because, you know what, here's a great way of looking at it.
If I do it my way, it's like, I am set now.
I don't have to worry because I put that money aside.
And we can both totally relax.
And we have a lot of money.
It's like, I don't care what we spend now
because I saved it.
I agree with that philosophy, all of it.
When you go on your vacation,
I don't want you worrying about eating out,
ordering an extra drink, taking a little tour.
I don't want any of that.
I want you to be able to be comfortable.
My question is, you casually mentioned that oops, I forgot to include $5,000 a month in net income from
this property you've got. Fine, we added it. No big deal. But like, where's that money
going? Couldn't that money be applied directly to the trip so you would quote have enough within
four months?
I guess I know I act like I'm uncomfortable because I am because what if I need that money
for work?
Because it's kind of been staying in the company.
I know, but Tommy, you know and I know every entrepreneur knows they need to also take some
of that money out of their business where it will just get sucked up.
Yeah, I mean, let me do it my way for a little bit, okay?
Okay, maybe 10 more years.
Yeah, right.
No, I mean, this is helping because the one thing
so far, not so far, I mean, a lot has hit me.
You're coming about looking back and saying,
hey, the memory of going out to the memory
of doing something with the kids, that's huge.
I mean, that's everything to me.
I love that.
Yeah.
Let's create a little bit more of those.
The fortunate thing is you've actually got the right ingredients here.
You have the money.
You have a pretty high income.
You've been consistently investing for decades.
And so everything overall looks great.
I am very happy to be able to work
with these kind of ingredients.
The tricky part here is the psychology.
And for everybody watching and listening,
you can hear that it is real.
You can have millions of dollars.
Tommy, you have it.
And it's still often hard
to really feel like it's enough to really feel like you hit where you need to be.
All right, you have zero debt. Again, you have only $14,000 in savings. I just want to point out
that it's a little bit irregular. It's not that big of a deal because we could fill that up with
$150,000 like that.
But okay, what's your total net worth, Tommy? Could you say that number out loud for me, please?
I believe it's a little over six million.
Chell and what do you think about that number? Can you say that loud for me?
million. Yeah. What do you do? I don't know. I mean,
money is like every time he'd sit
there and say, God, I wish I'd win
the lottery. And I'm like, well,
we we kind of have. And we still
don't, we still wish we could win the lottery.
It's my goofy.
Maybe it's not about the actual dollar amount, but it's also about the way you feel about money.
And maybe we can use some of the money to help you connect that feeling and build the skill of spending it.
and build the skill of spending it.
How about that? I know how your finance guy,
I know where he came up with that 144,000,
or 12,000 a month.
He basically took 3.5 million,
how much you've got invested,
and he calculated 4% of that.
That's a 4% safe withdrawal rate.
And that's what that got you.
Now, that number, that's where it came from.
Tommy, you said, I don't know if that's right or not.
I don't see any glaring problems with that calculation.
It's a very simple back of the napkin calculation.
If your money is properly diversified and invested, it's returning about
7% per year. I would safely calculate a 4% withdrawal rate. Some people like to be a little
more conservative. They go 3.5 or 3. But with many millions of dollars, you know, you've
got buffer, I see no glaring problem with assuming a 4% safe withdrawal rate.
Cool. How you feel about that? Feel good? Yeah. All right. Cool. Let's not forget that there's also
$5,000 of net income a month. There's Tommy, your income, which if we were just doing
this safe withdrawal rate, you two would be making $12,000 a month, probably in a tax-advantaged
way.
But you also have $5,000 a month, plus Tommy, whatever you're making, which is a lot, plus
you're going to start getting social security and other distributions soon.
That's kind of a lot of money.
I guess it is.
Meanwhile, your assets, your portfolio, is continuing to grow over the long term.
How does it make you feel to hear all this?
What is the message you're taking away?
It sounds cool.
Get my voice.
It sounds cool, but it's like, yeah, I...
Well, honestly, here's what I feel.
If I go what you just said, I become soft.
It's like, you know, here's what I feel. If I go what you just said, I become soft. It's like, ah, you know, it's,
I shouldn't work as hard,
and it's gonna make me soft,
and I don't wanna do that.
And I know you're gonna give me that old man's story
about some dude who was 72 years old,
who, you know, what's he gonna do with it?
What's wrong with, that makes me feel good.
It's like, yeah, I guess I look at it this way
and Carolina left is because I hate being pigeonholed
by an age because I feel that I can do almost as much
as I could when I was 40 and I strive to do that.
Yeah.
So to me, if someone said,
ah, you know, you don't want to wait till you're 70,
I'm like, fuck, I'll be fine when I'm 70.
I know I will.
Well, you look like a healthy guy, for sure.
And I like the, I like to, you know, active guy.
I like the fact that you're like age doesn't define me.
One thing that I have learned is it's not just ourselves.
It's not just ourselves.
It's not like you're the average guy.
Financially speaking, you're not health wise, you're not.
But there's also things that happen in terms of a family member.
There's external things that happen sometimes
that we just can't escape.
Here's my point.
If you have the money, the time, and the mobility
to be able to do a few of the things on your rich
life list.
Why not do them now?
The idea that it's going to make you soft.
That might be true, or it might just be a story you tell yourself.
That's true.
I could be just telling myself that. I have to admit, I worry about the future.
Don't worry about the past. Don't give a shit about the past. It's taught me lots.
I need to live more in the present day. We can get in the psychological aspect, but I worry
about the future. Like, will I have enough? Will I be able to do this?
What do you think we've been doing for the last two hours? I know. I know. And it helps trust me. I'm not like throwing this the wayside. I think we have to have
compassion for Tommy here. If you've been thinking a certain way for 30 plus years, you can understand
how hard it is to change. And we've heard this same thing happening on multiple episodes of the podcast.
We've heard couples come on and one of them has trouble changing even though their own attitudes
and behaviors are not serving them. But it is simply hard to change. That is human behavior.
So I think we need to have a little bit of compassion. And it becomes even more notable
because if your attitude or behavior has actually made you successful, it's 10 times harder to change.
Think about it. Tommy has saved diligently. He's always minded his money carefully. That has made him successful. And now you're asking him to essentially change that.
I wouldn't say it's as far as cutting off a physical limb, but it is certainly changing a part of your identity.
And if you can think about somebody coming to you and taking a part of your identity that you treasure, you're funny.
And I go, don't be funny anymore.
Be like the trolls who try to come at me on Twitter.
They're not funny.
Be like that.
You'd be like, no, I'm not going to do that.
That's what Tommy's going through right now.
But the fact is, it's not serving him anymore.
I know this sounds weird, but I'm thinking, okay,
by hearing from my trades, hearing from my clients,
hearing from past clients, oh, he's not working as hard or he's not doing that, and that would bother me.
It'd be like, shit, here I go, I shouldn't have done that.
Now I gotta get back.
You want some help on how to deal with that?
Sure.
Do you?
Yeah, I guess.
Okay, let's say that somebody says that.
What would your natural reaction be?
I'm being honest, I'd say fuck you.
Yeah.
What are you saying?
Prove it.
Yeah.
What fuck you? I'm coming back and I'm going to work twice as hard.
And they'll see it.
Fuck them.
Yeah.
Right.
It is.
I know it's pretty wack.
No, it's right on brand.
It's exactly what I expected.
Part of that is what got you here.
You bust your ass.
No one's going to ever see you as not putting in the work.
They know you. That is your identity. I respect it. I think that sometimes identities are
like layers. We can add on layers and we can remove layers. And we actually have more
control over those layers than we think. What if, just, we try on this layer for a second,
they said, oh, you know, Tommy used to be so responsive. He just doesn't answer my text anymore.
He's losing his edge. And your response might be something like, hey, I'm so sorry to hear
that. You know that I love every one of my clients and I put you first. I've decided that I'm going to be spending more time with my family,
but you're right that it's totally unacceptable for you not to get a response.
I'm going to fix that so that you will always have one point of contact in my
business who will respond to you within 24 hours.
How does that feel?
That's a good answer. So I'm pretty good at putting together those kind of scenarios. That was a good one. You put your client first, you acknowledged
them, you even admit that was unacceptable. But you do not apologize for putting your family first.
I love doing that.
That is what I do in earnable.
We workshop your business ideas together.
I do it live with you.
I help you understand the psychology of your customers.
I even script out what you can say to them.
So if you are interested in earning more and starting a side business, even if you don't
have an idea, we workshop that, how to find a profitable idea.
And every time I do this live, we have business owners in there who are already doing pretty
well and they want to know how to take it to the next level.
So, I will put a link for the earnable program in the show notes.
I would love to see you so I can help you workshop just like I helped Tommy do it right there.
If you ever have scenarios like this, you know, I love doing this kind of stuff.
But really that gets to the core of your identity. I have no doubt you can come up with 20 answers like that on your own.
You're very good socially, I can tell.
But it's about you being able to say I'm adding on this new layer to my identity.
It's not going to take anything away from who I was.
It's just going to add a new layer of richness to who I am.
Do you be willing to explore that?
Yeah, I like that.
All right.
That's cool.
Caroline, what do you think about that?
Absolutely.
That's cool.
I did a couple of things there.
That layers concept, I gave him a new framework
that he can use.
So if he finds himself feeling tension
at having to change his identity,
now he has some language that he can use to describe it.
I actually would not be surprised
if Tommy finds himself saying,
oh, I'm trying on a new layer of my identity
this week.
Okay.
Second, I gave him some specific words to use for a very real situation that he's worried
about.
Now, remember, they came to me asking if they have enough to retire and how Tommy can
feel a little more comfortable spending.
How did we end up here?
Scripting out his conversation with a hypothetical customer.
Well, the answer is, as you start to unpeel the layers of what the real issue is, you discover
these tiny little objections or reservations that somebody has.
And from the outside, they seem so irrelevant, so small, but to that person, they are huge.
They're absolutely huge.
And so Tommy clearly is concerned about what his customers will say if he's off traveling
around the world.
Boom, let's acknowledge that.
That's a real concern for you.
Tommy, let me show you the exact words to say.
And once somebody gets one roadblock off then another one off hopefully they start to
see that this is possible to change. So my hope is that he can tackle this and then he can
start to realize oh I can do this with one thing I can do with many others. I wondered what
else Tommy and Caroline have talked about doing together.
Okay.
Well, he's talking about the New Zealand trip.
I want to go to Italy.
So maybe we can go to Italy in September.
Oh, wow.
We can go to New Zealand in January, February.
Okay.
Okay.
Talk about it.
How would you decide on that decision?
Have the conversation.
I'd like to plan a month in Italy.
What do you think?
I mean, I don't ask for much.
So it's hard for me to even say that.
I'm great with that.
I want to go.
Yeah.
That's it.
First of all, this is awesome.
I love the discomfort, by the way.
Your discomfort is my pleasure.
Okay, just so you know.
Now, that's it.
That's all you need to say before you go off and play in the whole thing.
I'll probably want to know the expense.
So I have to figure that out.
Why don't you talk about it right now?
Do you, Roland, do you think he actually,
he didn't say that?
Why do you assume he wants to know about the expense?
Let him say that.
Ha, ha, ha.
I guess, so normally, yeah, I think I would say to him,
like, what do you think?
And I'm thinking the same kind of money
that we spend in New Zealand.
That's a lot.
I don't think we need that much freedom.
Why do you have to be more expensive in New Zealand
versus, there's more.
Hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on.
But there's so many things I just wanna,
I'm gonna add my commentary, okay?
This is my dream job.
So first of all, that's a very nice tree you have behind you.
You don't need a tree like that, but you still got it, didn't you?
Yes.
All right, you got a lot of nice stuff.
You don't need it.
I don't need whatever, but I still got it.
And I don't think either of us are highly materialistic, Tommy.
There's certain things that you mentioned yourself, you want.
The memories, the meaning.
So instead of reacting with your instinctive reaction,
which when it comes to money is what?
I gotta think it over.
I gotta make sure we're good.
I gotta analyze it over. I gotta make sure we're good. I gotta analyze it. Yeah. Let's
let's give a name to that little little guy on your shoulder. Who is it? What what what's
the person's name? Dickhead, I don't know. Okay. Did not expect that one. All right. Little
dickhead is over here and what what is little little D wearing? What does he outfit it in?
He probably looks like an accountant.
That's a good one.
So what is he, describe that for me.
You know, a straight lace guy saying, hey, you know, going like this, holding their, you
know, rubbing their fingers against their chin like, you know, oh, you sure.
What else do you think about this?
Keep going. What else do you say? Let's think about this. Keep going.
What else?
Because this doesn't make a lot of financial sense now.
Yes.
You know, maybe go to Italy, but maybe you don't need to spend that much.
Yeah.
Maybe we get a better deal.
Yes.
Love deals.
This person's on like orbits or expedia.
Oh, have you considered this?
What if you took the connection,
the five connections on the way to Rome?
Yeah, what else is this person saying?
I'm not doing that.
You want to do that?
Well, five, five.
Give me a little bit of credit on something.
I told her, I said, hey, I've been thinking
about this New Zealand trip and I want to go business class.
What's her response?
Well, of course, it's really far. class. What's her response? Well, of course.
It's really far.
Okay.
I'm thinking what?
Okay, okay.
Well, we'll come back to that.
I have a little coaching that might help
with that conversation,
but that's a cool conversation.
I'm proud of that.
So little dickhead over here,
dress like an accountant,
and always telling you,
I don't think you're gonna need that.
Let's run the numbers.
Now, who's the other person on your other shoulder?
Mr. Chill.
Mr. Chill, what does Mr. Chill look like?
Maybe like the big Lebowski.
Okay, very good.
And what does he say to you?
Just relax, man, you got it covered.
It's, it's all good.
Is Mr. Chill going to let you spend your way
into running out of money?
I hold not.
No, he's your guy.
So you can decide what he,
he doesn't have to be the guy who gets you bankrupt.
It's your Mr. Chill.
So you tell me, is he gonna let you go that far?
No. I don't think so either. No. Mr. Chille is not Mr. Spend it all on yachts and stuff like that.
Mr. Chille is more saying what? Have fun. Have fun, man. Just if it means you're going on a kick-ass trip, have fun, go to the best restaurants,
you're staying at some good places, you're not worrying about how you're going to get
there because you got it off, your travel agent has it all figured out.
I'm loving watching Tommy and Caroline's face as they go through this moment.
You should see, it's dreamy, it's aspirational,
and most of all, it's fun.
This is how money is supposed to be.
This is how it can be for Tommy and Caroline and for you.
Love it. Love it.
And one last question.
Each of them is holding something in their hand,
something that really demonstrates their worldview. What is little D holding in their hand, something that really demonstrates their worldview.
What is little D holding in his hand?
My first visual was probably holding like, you know, you read about teachers when they really
hold this big stick like whacking you on the back of the head or vaccine.
You better think about it. And you know, Mr. Chills probably,
oh, he's got a,
Brian Alaskan Ambrin is hand or Pina Colada, something like that.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm thinking he's got the Pina Colada and he's got a camera
or a little photo book.
And he's just going like,
this is what you're gonna create.
These kind of memories.
Right.
What do you think about that?
I love that part, yeah.
I like this a lot, especially for you
because you have these voices.
Now you've given a name to them.
You've given a look to them.
You even know what's in their hand.
You got this guy. He's having his drink. The other guy's got that punitive little stick.
And when you have these conversations, right now, this guy, Mr. Punitive, he comes out
or Lil Dickhead, as you call him. He's your first reaction.
cat as you call him. He's your first reaction. But you have the choice on who to listen to.
Now, here's the trick. They're not going anywhere. They're both going to be there. My advice you is not just get rid of one of them because that's not going to happen. They are with you. They are
part of you, but you get to choose who to listen to. Okay. And it's kind of nice to have a balance, but right now would you
agree they're a little out of balance? Yes. Okay. Okay. So let's try that whole last thing again.
Caroline, you mentioned that when it comes to Italy, you have a general target budget in mind.
target budget in mind. Go ahead, bring it up, and Tommy, when you react, let's see what happens. Okay, so I want to go to Italy for a month and I'm thinking it's going out to eat nice places will be staying at.
What do you think?
I'll figure I'll have a portfolio for you,
but I don't have it at hand.
So maybe that's, I mean, I love Italy, so I jump on that.
Well, you know, I love traveling. So I'm good with that.
Cause I can,
for me, don't get mad at me for,
for singing this,
but I will be able to save for that.
I'll do that.
I like saving.
It's okay.
I'm not,
look, I'm not here to get mad at you.
I'm here to help you listen to that voice.
Okay. I really like that you said, yeah, I can not here to get mad at you. I'm here to help you listen to that voice. Okay.
I really like that you said, yeah, I can get with that.
Sometimes, look, you're still gonna have
a little bit of that accountant in your back pocket.
It's never gonna go away.
That's okay.
If you feel the need to have a little document
where you write down, okay, I need to put aside
$2,000 a month, that, that, that, that.
Okay.
But part of changing your dynamics sometimes
is to start with the behavior first
and often the attitude follows.
You're figuring it out together versus I'm saying this
and you're saying that and then like,
why, you're multi-pearlionaires.
Why the fuck are we arguing over $10,000?
It makes no sense.
Let's argue about, want to go to this restaurant
and you want to go to that. Okay, fine. We'll do them both, but we're going to do one on Tuesday
and one on Thursday. That's a cool argument. We don't actually have to argue anymore. We want
in my mind, I'm not telling you to go drop 500k on anything. I don't even want to talk about
that Florida condo. I don't think you should get it in the next 12 months.
I think you should work on building up the skills
of spending money.
First, both of you should feel good.
You should come up with some conventions
for how you're gonna make decisions about money.
Certainly, if you wanna go get an Airbnb, go get it.
I would hold off on anything that big,
but trips like Italy, New Zealand,
dinners with the kids, it's a no-brainer.
That should be getting done. That is a skill. It is time to build right now.
So what you're saying is next September, or is it this September? Are we going to Italy?
Well, it's, well, it's the one coming 2024.
I don't know if 2023. Whoa, what?
2023, that's, yeah, the coming September, yes.
So we should do Italy this.
Yeah, exactly, yeah, absolutely.
Yes. Okay. Are you cool with that, Tommy? Sure. Why not?
Hey, that's cool. That's there you go. That's Mr. Chill talking. I don't mean this in a bad way,
but this went way better than I expect because I didn't think you're going to tell me much at all.
better than I expect because I didn't think you're gonna tell me much at all. I'm just being honest. I
do have a better perspective.
You know, you didn't tell me how you shouldn't be saving, you know, that type of thing.
You just gave me different perspectives and I
I love looking at different perspectives, love
I love looking at different perspectives, love seeing both sides, and then I will decide what works best.
Look, I was never going to convince in one phone call a successful 60 year old man what
to do with his accumulated fortune.
He's made it this far on his own, and I'm totally fine with his needing to make the final
decision himself.
What I hope happened is I gave him some new ways of looking at his money.
I pushed him in a way that probably nobody around him pushes him.
And he had to respect some of the things I was saying because I know the numbers.
I also gave him these frameworks that he can use, little people on his shoulder,
which he can reference as he naturally responds in a way that he has honed over 30 years.
Now, Tommy and Caroline both sent follow-ups. Let me read them to you.
Tommy said, I've learned that it's okay to say the following to clients.
Quote, I've decided to spend a little more time with my family.
However, I will still give you the attention your project deserves
and I will be,
continue to be available to your needs.
Caroline said,
she learned each time I want to plan something with Tommy,
I should bring it up as a memory instead of money.
Wait, that's it.
We talk for that many hours and that's the conclusion.
Tommy, your conclusion was how to talk to your clients?
Okay.
Tommy also did say, quote,
we're planning on spending a month in New Zealand
in January or February, 2024.
Okay, look, I'll take what I can get.
Okay, sometimes, I guess if you're 60,
you're gonna do things your way.
All right, in a way I find it hilarious.
I mean, we spent hours talking about money psychology
and Tommy's conclusion was how to deal
with a hypothetical problem client.
In any case, I really appreciate Tommy and Caroline, both of you coming here,
sharing your numbers, sharing the way that you talk about money. You can clearly see that there's
a lot of love there. And you can see that Tommy does want to travel more. He enjoys the memories.
There's a lot that he has to work through. Caroline, I know you've been
very patient. I know that with your upcoming retirement, it's going to become even more important
for you to start living your rich life. So my hope is that the two of you can really create a
language and a habit to do it together. Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
I'm Remeete Saiti.
Please follow the show on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
If you haven't read, I will teach you to be rich.
My book, pick up a copy.
You can get it at any bookstore or any library, and it will show you the specific tactics
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