I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 81. “We’re broke—but $55,000 private school tuition is a non-negotiable” (Part 2)

Episode Date: February 7, 2023

In part two of our revealing conversation with Sarah and Kevin, we offer solutions for their serious debt accumulation problem and grapple with the hard truth about their biggest non-negotiable expens...e: $55k a year for their three daughters’ private school tuition.  Links mentioned in this episode Join the Earnable program Get Money Coaching with Ramit  Connect 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 This episode is brought to you by: LMNT | Right now LMNT is offering my listeners a free sample pack with any purchase, that’s 8 single serving packets FREE with any LMNT order. This is a great way to try all 8 flavors or share LMNT with a salty friend. Get yours at DrinkLMNT.com/RAMIT. 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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Starting point is 00:00:00 If you've been enjoying this podcast where I speak to couples and share their real numbers, their income, their net worth, their debt, all of it, then do me a favor, go over to Apple Podcasts and please leave a written review. It really helps us grow the podcast and it's also something that I can share with my team who helps produce this amazing show every single week. So do me a favor, go over to Apple Podcasts, leave a written review and it will be a big favor for me and for my entire team. Thanks for watching. Thanks for listening. If you're in New York City or the tri-state area, listen up. This year, I'm looking to coach couples live in person on this
Starting point is 00:00:37 podcast. So if you and your partner want to be personally coached on money and relationships, this is your chance. Now, whether you can't get on the same page with your spending, maybe one of you has loads of debt, maybe you're about to go through a huge life change like a baby promotion, career change, and you're just stuck on how to handle the financial side of it, and you live in the tri-state area,
Starting point is 00:00:58 I want to hear from you. Please apply at iwt.com slash apply. On the income that the two of you make, you make too much money to be behaving this way. There are sacrifices that are going to have to be made. So goodbye, Tesla. Goodbye to a lot of the expensive things you would have ordinarily done because you are taking all of that money and redirecting it to fifty five thousand dollars a year for private school. Are you both mentally centered and emotionally ready for that?
Starting point is 00:01:41 That is a struggle. That will definitely be a struggle. So the question simply asked is, are we setting ourselves a failure? Well, what's the worst case for you two, financially speaking? Continuing down the path we're on. The slope, yeah, for sure.
Starting point is 00:02:00 The path that we're on is the worst case. Wow. Wait until you hear this episode. Sarah and Kevin make over $250,000 a year, but they're broke. They recently sold their house and paid off a bunch of debt. But six months later, they're back in $50,000 of credit card debt again. In part one of our conversation last week, we discovered some of the psychology behind how they treat money. And they told me about some of their fears about repeating some of the generational money mistakes that their parents made.
Starting point is 00:02:37 But at the end of the conversation last week, there was a big surprise. They told me that they've decided they're going to spend $55,000 a year on private school for their children. In today's conversation, I want you to make sure that you listen until the end. Today, something quite amazing happens. Please make sure you follow through until the end. And remember, you can watch this episode on YouTube. As always, the body language and the facial expressions tell you so much more than just listening. So remember to follow me on YouTube. You can search for Ramit Sethi
Starting point is 00:03:14 and of course on Apple and Spotify. I am Ramit Sethi and this is I Will Teach You To Be Rich. Are there any other things that are really important for the two of you to start doing? Saving for the girls' school next year. What? Where'd that come from? We haven't talked about that at all. No. So they're in private school. And so we had to switch their school. It's for all three. It's about, without financial aid, it's about $55,000 a year. for all three it's about without financial aid it's about 55 000 a year what the fuck fit where did how are these secret expenses coming up right now 55 000 what else um this next year i think that's it that's all i mean the school don't you have to make
Starting point is 00:04:00 a donation to these private schools too? No. Okay. She's like shrugging. Yeah. All right. Okay. So 55, where's that money coming from,
Starting point is 00:04:10 by the way? So this was our first year and we use some of the house, the money that we, when we sold the house, we used it to pay it for the first year. And where's it going to come from next year and the year after and after that? Great question. That's. And where's it going to come from next year and the year after and after that? Great question. We're asking ourselves that same question.
Starting point is 00:04:31 All right. How do you think we should fix this problem? Let me lay out the elements just so you hear me, because I know you're embroiled in all the weeds. Here's what I see. The two of you make a high income. You make like $210,000 a year in base salary. You have $180,000 of debt. Of that debt, $50,000 is credit card debt. You have $93,000 in savings. You have some things you want to do. You want to buy land, et cetera. You have three kids. So you guys basically just want to be upper middle class in terms of income, but essentially have no net worth for the rest of your lives?
Starting point is 00:05:29 No. That's what people who end up, they live in a nice neighborhood, they live in a nice house, their kids go to private school, and they have nothing. That's exactly what they say. What if you lived in an area with a better school district for your school-aged children? That would require moving out of state. And would you be open to that or no? Well, not with his job, no. Okay. No. Okay. And would there be any other places within the state that you'd potentially be able to move to? No, we are in the best school, high school, school district in the state. Okay. Got it.
Starting point is 00:06:08 And have you both agreed that this is like, it's either private school at 55 K or homeschooling? Has that been, that's the discussion you've agreed on Kevin? Well, really it's been just private school. More private school. I have in the chain in my head the possibility of dwindling one
Starting point is 00:06:33 child. It's so hard. It's very difficult. Okay. It sounds like this private school is one of the things that is critical to you. Yeah. Why don't we see if we can make it work, and that will tell us in very stark numbers, and then we can decide what our options are. How about that?
Starting point is 00:07:03 All right. So payoff credit card debt was number one school payments number two is there anything else that are the big rocks for you well i want to say the house but you're shaking your head what are you thinking that's not happening anytime soon this was a house you wanted to build told me it was a dream of yours since you were young okay and and you say it's not happening anytime soon why um well because
Starting point is 00:07:53 my kids education because it's a sacrifice that i have to be willing to make for my children to be and have the education that we want them to have. Okay. Okay. I can respect that. Sometimes these trade-offs are really hard. You know, there's a vision we have of our life as we expected it. And then other things come up that you never could have predicted. And suddenly that dream you had,
Starting point is 00:08:46 that crystal clear vision of what you want in your life is just not within reach or it's a trade-off. Have you ever thought about that before? In small things, yeah. But in big dreams, I've always been the one that's like, I'll make it happen. However I need to. I'll make it happen. However I need to. I'll make it happen. How do you make it happen usually? Pushing harder.
Starting point is 00:09:17 Sacrificing. Expanding myself. Running myself ragged typically. What would your kids think about you when it comes to money? Do you think that they see you running yourself ragged sometimes? Mm-hmm. Yeah. Let me explain what's going on here.
Starting point is 00:09:38 Sarah and Kevin have decided that they absolutely, positively must live in a specific neighborhood that has the best school for their girls. Not only that, they've decided to spend $55,000 a year on private school. When I ask if they'd be willing to move anywhere else, they say no. Okay, fine. I can respect that. If you asked me if I was willing to wear Crocs, I would say no too. I've learned that it's not helpful to tell people they simply cannot do what they want to do, especially when they can technically afford it. So I'm going to do a little exercise with them. I'm going to show them exactly what this private school will cost. I want them to be able to internalize and visualize what their life will be like for the next 10 plus years if they choose to go down this route.
Starting point is 00:10:26 And this is something that most of us never do. We stay at the surface level. We say things like, I want that car or I want to take this vacation. I want to buy that house. But we never interrogate that belief and say, okay, how is that going to affect our lives? That's because we very, very rarely understand the relationship between what we buy and how it affects our finances. Many of us don't even understand the relationship between our finances and our day-to-day lifestyle. That's what I want to change. So let's start with how Sarah and Kevin talk about money with their kids.
Starting point is 00:11:04 Sarah told me that she's had a dream for a long time of building a house for their family. I'm going to ask her what her children would think about their parents' financial choices. You think they care about this land, this house that's in your head? Yes and no. I think that, I think partly they see how much I want it. And so I think they want it for me. And I talk about it and I talk about dreaming with them. And I talk about, I've gotten there. And what do they want? What do they want their rooms to look like when we do this? And to try and get them to be a part of the process.
Starting point is 00:12:00 So I think they're invested in that way. Let me ask you a question. So I think they're invested in that way. Let me ask you a question. Do you talk to them similarly about your investments and your savings? What lesson do you think you're communicating to them? To dream but not be realistic? Maybe. And that maybe success is buying a house or buying something. And maybe it is for them. Who knows? That's their future. It's not us to decide. But gosh, I really would like for them to see mom and dad, your own words, being good stewards of money okay everybody sit down we've got 50 bucks
Starting point is 00:12:59 and we're gonna go out to one place to eat how do we want to choose well we can't do it all we only have 50. oh my gosh if we choose that one appetizer we're not going to be able to buy anything else then a little bigger. The 13-year-old, quite savvy. You can do a lot with a 13-year-old. Wouldn't it be nice for them to learn about trade-offs like you are learning about trade-offs right now? Yeah. Yeah. So the excitement that you have communicated to them about this house, I love that you are able to do that.
Starting point is 00:13:25 I love that you are able to do that. I love that. I think we might need to redirect it into something else for the next while. Trust me. If they see you getting excited, they're going to get excited. Yeah. Yeah. All right. So paid off credit card debt, school and the house, it will certainly take you time to, to come to terms with that. But do you feel deep down that you could come to terms with not moving forward on this house for the next,
Starting point is 00:14:01 let's say 10 years? Eventually. Okay. That's a fair answer. Can I tell you something? There are things that I would not be able to come to terms with. It would be really hard for me to, and some of them are materialistic. Like I've gotten used to certain things that I like. If you told me I could not do it anymore, it would be devastating for me. I remember when I was seven years old, my parents bought land when I was really young to be able to build on.
Starting point is 00:14:41 I think I was six or seven around that time period. And that never happened. They ended up having to sell it. And, um, and I remember like hearing about that and getting to design a house and, and I was seven and on the old like computers, I would go and like try and draw my own houseplants, like, um, playing Barbies. I just wanted to set up the house. Like I didn't care about actually playing. I just wanted to build and create. And so this, I mean, literally been my entire, my grandfather was builder. Um, it was in It is in my blood. And I love that kind of stuff. And so it's very much a passion.
Starting point is 00:15:32 This is going to be a passion project. Well, there is a possibility in the future at some point. But if right now with the current income, even if the two of you make $100,000 a year more, that house is not in your future for at least the next decade. In my opinion, it is respectful to tell people the truth. Looking at their income and expenses and their financial habits, Sarah and Kevin have no chance of being able to build a house in the next decade. Now, I never would have told them this at the beginning of our conversation. I needed to understand their finances. I needed to understand their attitudes. But now I get it. And I've built
Starting point is 00:16:17 some trust. I think that a lot of us spend our lives dreaming about something big that we want to do. I find that less than 5% of us actually try to plan it out. Oh, Ramit, we want to live in Rome for a month someday. Awesome. I go, that sounds amazing. How much would it cost? Can you get time off work? What about your kids?
Starting point is 00:16:43 For most of us, we simply defer these logistical questions until someday in the future. And I think the reason for that goes quite deep. Some of us don't want to look into it because the reality might be too scary. That the dream we've been telling ourselves we want to do for our entire lives actually might not be possible. It's too scary to think about, so we never open a single calculator. But if someone comes to me and they ask for help,
Starting point is 00:17:11 I believe it's respectful to tell them the truth. Now that Sarah knows she cannot build a house for at least the next decade, she can start to go through a process, probably starting with grieving and eventually accepting it, which will allow her to focus on a process, probably starting with grieving and eventually accepting it, which will allow her to focus on a more realistic tomorrow. This is what I mean when I say in order to live a rich life, you've got to be honest with yourself and with the people around you.
Starting point is 00:17:37 I get tons of email every single day, and I want to give you a behind the scenes look at how I manage emails from my team, from my family, and from you. I use a piece of software called Superhuman, and this is an email software that I actually pay for out of my own pocket. It works with your existing email service like Gmail or Outlook, and let me share how it saves me over 10 hours a week. So here are a few things I love about it. First off, it splits my inbox into different streams. So my important emails come into one place. It's not cluttered with a bunch of subscriptions everywhere. Next, I use keyboard shortcuts, unlike you barbarians who literally click and peck through every single email. U to mark it unread, S to star it, J or K
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Starting point is 00:18:53 Superhuman is a no-brainer to me. It's something I spend my own money on and I love it. Right now, all IWT listeners will get a free month of Superhuman. You can get started at superhuman.com slash Ramit. That's superhuman.com slash Ramit, R-A-M-I-T. I've got a colleague who's going through something stressful in her family life right now. And she's having these anxious thoughts and she told me it makes it hard for her to sleep. And we were talking about it and she said, you know what's been helping? She puts on a sleep story from Calm about a train ride through England. It's a guy with a very nice British accent. And within five minutes, she's asleep. I think it's very interesting that we talk about sleep. We worry about sleep.
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Starting point is 00:20:48 to Calm's entire library. That's calm.com slash Ramit. I hear making up for the past, the credit card debt. I hear incurring over half a million dollars for our children in school. That's important to you. Okay. You want to send them to private school. I hear you, but I don't hear anything about going and getting ahead. 200, $300,000 a year. What a tragedy it would be to simply be treading water for the rest of your lives. Is there anything we can do about that yes what putting money into investments yeah i'd like to because right now it feels like you're swimming
Starting point is 00:21:39 against the current doesn't it everything you're doing's just like, why is this so hard? And then we get a cash infusion. We sell the house and then we're back in debt. And then we get inheritance, but we already know if we spend that, we're going back into debt. You're just swimming against the current. Nothing's changing. And don't you think if you make an extra $150,000 a year, you're going to find some other way to spend that money? Yeah. you're going to find some other way to spend that money. Yeah. So you've got to start getting ahead even while you are dealing with some of these things.
Starting point is 00:22:11 Okay. All right. If you want to do all these things, let's just say that's $1,000 a month for paying off your credit card debt. I'm just picking a number out of the thin air. If you did $1,000 to pay off this credit card debt. I'm just picking a number out of the thin air. If you did $1,000 to pay off this credit card debt, by the way, it would take you five years to pay it off. And on a $50,000 balance,
Starting point is 00:22:39 you'd pay $42,000 in interest. So that sucks. But all right, let's just say $1,000. You could change the numbers dramatically if you do 2,000, but I'm just giving you an example. School is going to be how much a month? It's 5,500. Okay. Let's just say 6,000. Okay. 6,000 a month. And your investments should be what? What's a number we can pick as a ballpark? Well, 10%. Yeah. Let's say 10%.
Starting point is 00:23:17 And should it be gross income? Let's start there. 10% of gross income. What's your gross income? 23? Gross annual income. Sorry, annual. No more monthly.
Starting point is 00:23:33 Say it out loud for me, please. No more monthly. I'm going to rip this tendency out of your mouth if I have to come over there myself. Say it. What's the number? 230 annual income. 230. All right. No more monthly. I want that haunting you. If I have to come over there myself, say it. What's the number? 230 annual income.
Starting point is 00:23:45 230. All right. No more monthly. I want that haunting you. Listen, if anyone wants to buy a recording of me saying no more monthly, send me a note. You cannot live a rich life if you are only focused on what's happening this month and next month. It's like trying to drive while only looking five feet in front of you. You have to use
Starting point is 00:24:05 a financial system to automate your expenses and your saving and your investing so you can finally look ahead. Now, if you already have that system and you still find yourself constantly playing small and only talking about month by month by month, focus on changing your language and your money psychology to an annual perspective. Just start by saying, what is our rich life this year? And map it out accordingly. If you don't have that system, you can use my book to get it set up. And if you need a little implementation help, you can join my money coaching program at IWT.com slash money coaching. So six, seven, I W T.com slash money coaching. So six,
Starting point is 00:24:44 seven, eight, 9,000 a month just to achieve these basic, well, they're not basic, but these important things to you. What do y'all think about that? So it's, um,
Starting point is 00:25:04 it's a large amount. It's a lot. Yeah. Any questions so far? Nope. All right. I notice it looks a little tough for you. Tell me what's going through your head right now.
Starting point is 00:25:19 Just, yeah. Is it tough to start to get into the numbers like this yeah i think that at this moment it can feel like you're watching your dreams get calculated away and i want you to stick with me this moment is really difficult because you have to confront reality. And it's going to be hard. I can't, I wish I could make it all easy, but it's not. But I can tell you that if you're able to confront reality and make some tough choices, that you have a very, very bright future ahead. Okay.
Starting point is 00:25:58 Okay. So let's take it step by step. And if you feel overwhelmed or you're not sure about something, tell me. Okay. All right. So what we see now is that your fixed costs are 151% of your take-home pay. What does that tell you? Our fixed costs are too high.
Starting point is 00:26:23 Let me repeat that number for you. I usually recommend that fixed costs be 50 to 60% of take home pay or after tax pay. Their fixed costs are 151% of take home pay. They are spending more than they make every month on their fixed costs alone. I want you to hear the details in this next exchange. It is so revealing. This next exchange is going to show you that it's actually quite easy to overspend, in part because you and I don't make decisions based on some spreadsheet. In fact, most people rarely even make decisions based on numbers at all. No, instead we buy the family SUV or the gym membership or even the
Starting point is 00:27:12 private school for the girls. We create meaning and we try to buy what we think is a rich life, but we almost never buy numbers. Here's the trick. In order to live a rich life, a truly rich life, you have to deeply understand your numbers. So I'm going to try to help Sarah and Kevin get from 151% to 50 to 60%, but you can imagine how difficult this is going to be. For Sarah and Kevin,
Starting point is 00:27:43 it will feel like cutting off parts of their lives. But this is part of the process for them to understand what it will truly cost if they want to live in this specific area and send their kids to this expensive private school. Yeah, you're going broke every month. So that's not going to work. And also we haven't even actually factored in paying off your debt. So let's go ahead and do that. Let's just start with $1,000 a month towards your debt. Shit, now you're at 160%. But guess what?
Starting point is 00:28:15 That's reality. We're going to put everything out on the table and then we're going to figure out what to do. So your rent is 16%. Is your rent really low? What is it? Low cost of living over there? Yeah, it's fairly low comparatively. Yeah. And we downsized quite a bit.
Starting point is 00:28:41 All right. That's pretty good. 16%. Don't move, okay? I know know you want to but please don't because if you move it's going to be somewhere more expensive right yeah don't do that i'm just telling you i i rarely are in that directive but i'm like you got a good thing going here don't mess with it uh insurance whatever car payment. Yeah. Your car payment is, uh, you can't afford it. You can't afford these two cars.
Starting point is 00:29:14 Like not even close. So that will have to be made a change. So I want you to start changing some of these numbers, take that car payment and cut it in half. Let's watch what happens to that overall number. All right, so 1,000 takes it from 160% to 149%. What do you think? It was alight drop. To me, the way I look at it is, okay, I should probably do that, but holy shit, how am I actually going to get to 55%? It actually does not feel possible. Correct. Okay. Can you spend less than $1,500 on your groceries every month if you were really thoughtful about it? Yes.
Starting point is 00:30:06 Yeah. Yeah, we can. How much? How much can you take that number down reasonably? I would say maybe 1,000, maybe 1,200. Pick a number that you are confident you can do. Probably 1,200. All right, make a change. 1,000, maybe 1,200. Pick a number that you are confident you can do. Probably 1,200. All right, make a change.
Starting point is 00:30:34 Okay. You're at 146%. All right, we're moving in the right direction. I like what I'm seeing so far. All right, kids activities, $8.99. Yeah. like what i'm seeing so far all right kids activities 8.99 yeah what do you want to do here can i just tell you a quick story my sister took horseback riding lessons when she was a kid she did it like two times she She loved it. You know what my mom did? She pulled her out of that shit. She's like, we can't afford this.
Starting point is 00:31:09 You had two rides on a pony. You'll remember that forever. You're done. I wish you could do it all. Yeah. What decisions do you want to make here? So I have a question. Knowing we're doing this off of base salary,
Starting point is 00:31:37 is this something that we could decide, I guess, year to year, because we do know we have things coming in and like soccer for our oldest is $2,400 a year. And so if we choose to, okay, so we know that I'm going to make an extra, I don't know, $5,000 dollars one month what was that word you just said an extra no it started with an m sorry i'm not aware of what that word is no it was after that every month month sorry i don't know what that word means an extra twenty thousand dollars per year thank you very much okay an. An extra $20,000 this year. And we're like, okay, we want to make sure the girls have activities.
Starting point is 00:32:31 Okay. Here's how you do that. Absolutely. You can set up a rule for the two of you that says any additional amount we make above our salaries gets allocated in this way. But here's the trick. You can only do that taking last year's bonus that's now in your account and use it for the future year.
Starting point is 00:32:55 Yeah. Do you see how you haven't been doing that? Yep. And that's screwed you. Yeah. Because you're basically counting on all this money now. And if it doesn't happen, you're in real trouble. Right.
Starting point is 00:33:06 So I say we put it at zero. Okay, go ahead. Make the change. And that'd be one of those rules. Okay. You know what's really cool about what you just did? It's very courageous, I think. It's very courageous for you.
Starting point is 00:33:24 Clearly, you care about your kids and their activities. I know both of you do. For you to say, we're going to take them out of these things, you may not want to. I'm sure you don't. But sometimes parents cannot afford it. Very courageous. Girls' school, you have 5801 here. Okay.
Starting point is 00:33:53 And you told me that's one of the important things you want to do. Okay. Subscriptions. Fix this, please. Yeah, this is a lot of the business stuff. Take it out. Take it out. Just give me what's in here for personal.
Starting point is 00:34:12 Two. 700, maybe. I'm going to say 700. Let's talk about this. 700. maybe i'm gonna say 700 let's talk about this 700 uh-huh jim pilates food delivery food service all that stuff yeah is all that continuing no okay take it out it says zero you don't have any like hulu or netflix or something oh yeah so yeah i mean i'll say 100 okay 100 bucks fine i can get with that
Starting point is 00:34:57 we have a miscellaneous amount here that automatically adds 15 which i think is good so you're currently at First of all, I've never clapped at someone spending 125% of their income on fixed costs, but I'm going to take the win on this because we went down from 150 to 125. That's not bad. That's not bad. However, you don't have enough money to pay for this lifestyle. It's like an Indian parent congratulating their kid for getting a 98%, but then going straight for the jugular and asking what went wrong for that last 2%.
Starting point is 00:35:32 I have been trained well. Right now, I'm in no rush. I want them to feel the exhaustion of everything they've just cut, only to realize that it actually made no difference at all. They are still spending more than twice as much as they can comfortably afford. It's untenable. I need them to feel this frustration before they finally decide if they're willing to make a real substantive change. I don't know if it'll happen, but I know that right now they are not
Starting point is 00:36:05 ready. They are still telling themselves stories that are totally untethered to their financial reality. This is when I decide to make a gentle suggestion. Can I make a suggestion? Can we take, just to view this correctly, can we take the girls' school in row 17 and move it to guilt-free spending? Yeah. Let's just see what that does. Okay. All right.
Starting point is 00:36:39 So look what just... Whoa, holy shit. What happened to the numbers? Dramatically. Tell me what just changed. What happened to the numbers? Dropped dramatically. Tell me what just changed. What changed in your fixed cost percentage? It went from 124 to 76. Okay.
Starting point is 00:36:57 76 is within striking distance of 60. Yeah. That's a big change. And then what happened to the guilt-free spending number? What is that number at right now? 48. Yeah, 48. And it should be 20 to 35%. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:15 Okay. Whoa. So I'm seeing some things happen here. Can I tell you what I see? Yeah. I see that your fixed costs are still over what they need to be. But 76 is within striking distance of 60. It's achievable.
Starting point is 00:37:34 You could do it. You can never get from 150 to 60. It's just, you can't. You can't cut your way down that much. But 76, we could make some things happen here. Now, let's look at your guilt-free spending number. Should be 20% to 35%. It's 48. You're spending way too much on guilt-free spending.
Starting point is 00:37:52 However, at least you're in the universe, okay? What I want to point out is that you have no vacation, no eating out, no nothing. There's one more thing I noticed here, which is you have no savings and no investments. We have problems, but at least we're starting to chip away at things and see if it is possible. What do you take away from this example, what we're doing right now? That there are sacrifices that are going to have to be made. Okay, I need to admit something. Technically, their kids' private school should be a fixed cost. That's because they've indicated
Starting point is 00:38:45 there's no way they're gonna eliminate it, and it is a long-term expense. You know why I didn't count it there? Because this is my show, and once in a while, I get to break the rules. I'm doing this for a reason. I do not wanna break our momentum right now by getting into this semantic debate,
Starting point is 00:39:02 and oh, if we move it over here, technically, it's gonna do that, because ultimately, that's not what I'm trying to accomplish here. I don't care about the semantics as much as I care about helping them make a psychological breakthrough and change their financial reality. I want to give them a totally new way to look at their money. If I have to break one of my own rules, I'm cool with it. It's kind of like someone coming in and rearranging your living room. Suddenly you can see it from an entirely new perspective. One of my money dials is generosity. For example, I love tipping big. I love buying gifts and
Starting point is 00:39:40 experiences for my family. And recently I bought my parents a subscription to Delete.me, this episode's sponsor. Delete.me is a subscription service that will remove your personal information that's being sold online. If you've ever Googled your name, you'll notice tons of search results with your personal information being shared online. That's not okay. It's not okay for you. It's definitely not okay for your family, including your parents. Now, Delete.me will remove it all. Your name, address, phone number, all of it. It automatically works in the background to scan and delete your personal information from over 30 data brokers, but they'll do custom requests on over 580 data brokers total. The thing is, identity theft is a real issue. An estimated 15 million
Starting point is 00:40:28 Americans had their identity stolen in 2021. We've had a number of people on this very show who were victims of identity theft, and often it put them into tens of thousands of dollars of credit card debt and it ruined their credit. That's why I find Delete Me so valuable. It's a service that I personally use and I love it. They reviewed over 4,600 listings for me and removed dozens of pieces of personal information. I knew it would be important to protect my parents too, but I also knew that they probably wouldn't sign up themselves, so I just got it for them. So if generosity is one of your money dials, great. If you care about your parents at all, if you have ever given them a hug, just sign them up. You know they aren't going to do it for
Starting point is 00:41:12 themselves, but you also know that they probably need it. So if you want to get your personal information and the personal information of your loved ones removed from search results on the web, loved ones removed from search results on the web, go to joindeleteme.com slash Ramit for 20% off a plan for you or your entire family. That's joindeleteme.com slash Ramit, R-A-M-I-T for 20% off. Recently on the show, you heard me speak to Jennifer and Andrew. They were struggling to pay off their credit card debt and they had a bunch of subscriptions that they didn't even know about. Look, if you love having all these subscriptions and you can afford it, I'm all for it. But a lot of times when people actually see all the subscriptions they've signed up for months or years ago, they realize they need to make a change because they could redirect where that money is going much more towards their rich life.
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Starting point is 00:43:20 That's rocketmoney.com slash R-A-M-I-T. All right. So we got to put in some money for investments. Throw that in there. It's probably $1,100. There you go. Beautiful. $1,200. Fantastic. All right. Now we got to get some savings in there because I know you have savings, but it's not. The reason that I insist on savings is that I'm trying to get you away from this episodic problem you have, which is you kind of just wait until you have this inflow of cash, and then you just like randomly disperse it. I don't want that anymore. I want a system. So every month you are moving towards your goals. Give me a savings goal here. Give me 5%.
Starting point is 00:44:07 Nice. 600 bucks right on the money. All right. Okay. We're still a little high but we're we're we're getting there how much are we going to make on the bonus and distribution i need to factor those in now um well for me i think minimum will be about 20 000 this year okay 20 000 cool and uh what about for you, Kevin?
Starting point is 00:44:53 Bonus-wise this year, let's just plan on $50,000. Five-zero? Five-zero. All right. That makes things a little better. $70,000. Can I just make a point, Sarah? If you think about your expenses, are there areas in your business that you can cut down on? Yes. Like how much? I would say probably 90%. What the fuck? What? Yeah. Wait, this is cool. What's the dollar amount that you could eliminate if you needed to tomorrow? Cause you do need to, um, yearly. Okay. Yeah. Give me yearly. Uh, no month monthly. I was just trying to stay away from our monthly work job. Um, I would say monthly probably three thousand dollars three to four thousand wait which one let's say three thousand three thousand that's thirty six thousand dollars a year you feel you can comfortably cut that right
Starting point is 00:45:54 now uh yeah yes uh that's pretty awesome what do you think's going through my head right now that's pretty awesome. What do you think is going through my head right now? I should do that. Yeah. And what else? What are you going to do with that money? If you cut it all?
Starting point is 00:46:14 Tell me exactly what you do tomorrow. You go and eliminate all that stuff. What happens then? It's freed up for other things. To come over and do debt and all the other stuff. Yes, that's fucking awesome. We're finding $36,000 under the couch cushions. But the key is we got to actually pick up the money from the couch and then we got to put it in the right place we want it to go.
Starting point is 00:46:40 Okay, that's pretty awesome. So that's not even your distribution. We're talking about expenses right now. You could stop spending. Yes. And you can transfer, you can add $3,000 a month to your income. Yeah, yes. So you tell me, how would you decide?
Starting point is 00:47:02 Right now, you have an extra $3,000 per month to do something with. It's like you're playing Oregon Trail and you get to choose where do you want to go in your wagon. What do you want to do? Well, so if we just add an income, it'll adjust those numbers. Go ahead. Love to watch the flow. Oh, shit. What does that number say on fixed costs it's below 60 57 my friends and we haven't even touched the bonuses we are we're getting there i feel a little hope what do you feel feeling good feeling better yeah we're
Starting point is 00:47:49 getting there step by step this is good i just want to point out what just happened sarah you got this business yeah you you had it all kind of conflated in with your personal. We fixed all that shit. It's separate now. Now that you have clarity, you can finally start to take a magnifying glass to that business. Every dollar you spend is a dollar that could be in your family's accounts. So, you know, if there's things that you need to spend on, absolutely spend on it. But if there's things that you're just like, these are nice to have, I don't really need
Starting point is 00:48:26 it, goodbye. And what that did was it made a dramatic change in your family's personal finances. I think now that you have this much more efficient way of looking at your business, I actually think your expenses will be lower. Potentially, your income will be lower. Potentially your income will be higher. And I think your profit margin is going to go way up. In my Earnable program to help you launch and grow your business, we talk about this. Some people come in, they have no business idea. Fine. We help them find one. Others already have a business running and we help them grow it.
Starting point is 00:49:02 You can find a link to join Earnable in the show notes, but we're not done with Kevin and Sarah yet. You could take some of that $93,000 in savings and you could apply it towards the debt. You don't have to do it all. You could put some of it towards it, like paying an extra $25,000 towards credit card debt or even hell $50,000. That changes things dramatically especially from an interest perspective what do you think about that i was wondering if we should do that from the like that should be our next move what's the interest rate again on that credit card payment it's high it's an indulgence it's like 26 or something
Starting point is 00:49:45 that's the highest i think it's 20 i think all right so it's a lot all right yeah um i can't tell you exactly what to do on that it's up to you but if it were me here's how i would think about it i would be okay ninety three thousand dollars dollars my expenses are for fixed costs are nine thousand four hundred dollars so i have like 10 months of expenses banked roughly i go i don't want to pay this fucking interest it's really high interest i want to take some of that money and I want to apply it and pay it off immediately. I personally would take the 50K from the 93,000. I would pay the credit card debt off right away. But more importantly, because I don't want to get back in this situation again for a third time, I would create very clear rules on what our spending changes are going to be. Can never get back into credit card debt again. That's the commitment. What do you both say about
Starting point is 00:50:54 that? Yes. Okay. I never saw such a big smile. All right. Yeah. All right. You both agree. Sarah, do you agree? Yes. The next one is the but i honestly in in the in the state we live in and the conditions that we're in that we're in yeah we don't have public transport so not sure what options we have you guys have two thousand dollars a month in car payments with the lifestyle you want to live you cannot be driving a seventy five thousand dollar or so car you can't not if you want to have the private school and all this stuff you have to live, you cannot be driving a $75,000 or so car. You can't. Not if you want to have the private school and all this stuff. You have to be basically the way you're living, the way you want to live. You're telling me, you're telling me we want to pay off our credit card debt, which means
Starting point is 00:51:36 we want to put at least a thousand dollars a month towards it. Maybe more. We want to invest at least 10%. We haven't even talked about savings and we want to invest at least 10%. We haven't even talked about savings. And we want to send our three daughters to private school. What that means is the rest of your life is going to essentially look like you don't earn very much money at all. So goodbye, Tesla. Goodbye, Tesla. And goodbye to a lot of the expensive things you would have ordinarily done because you were taking all of that money and redirecting it to a considerable amount of expenses,
Starting point is 00:52:15 like $55,000 a year for private school. Are you both mentally centered and emotionally ready for that? Mentally ready? No. I honestly will say. We'll see. But yeah. Mentally not ready. Sarah? That is a struggle.
Starting point is 00:53:04 That will definitely be a struggle i think the thing that we the one thing we have said and kevin mentioned that earlier is that that is not, it is a non-negotiable for us. The school. And the school. Okay. Yeah, the school. And so if that's true, then we have to be willing to do it.
Starting point is 00:53:39 So I'm telling you, I'm not trying to scare you. Okay. What I am saying is you guys want to live an elite lifestyle. It is elite. I'm speaking financially speaking of $55,000 is quite expensive. I get it. I know many families who pay for private school. You have your reasons. I totally respect that the implications on your income, especially considering you have this debt load of, you know, 150 150 000 plus means that realistically a lot of other things are going to have to be cut to the bone
Starting point is 00:54:10 so i don't want to sugarcoat it for you because the worst thing i can do is you know we play around with some numbers here and we leave and you go and basically spend the same way you've been spending on day to day and And in a year, you actually have more debt. And you're like, what the fuck we tried and it's not working. This is a radical reconceptualization of the way that you treat money. Okay, I can see from the nods on your faces. You're both getting it. Yeah. Eyes wide open. Love it. Kevin, I'm happy that you're both getting it yeah eyes wide open love it kevin i'm happy that you're discussing things like what are we going to do with the cars you know and i think the two of you probably need to go a little further on that but i like that you're both open to it you know you came on this call
Starting point is 00:54:56 saying uh communication is an issue i feel like we're actually having a very constructive conversation with some very difficult numbers here how How do you both feel about it? Great. Yeah. Yeah. Cool. We've made some tough calls already. The house, not going to happen for at least 10 years.
Starting point is 00:55:14 Okay. Kids, activities, not going to happen this year. Okay. Tough, no doubt. It'll take time to internalize that. But gosh, I feel like we're just moving along and we're at least seeing that there's possibility. But I have to say one thing to you. I want to talk about the kids' school right now. Because you're going to have this distribution stuff coming in. You also have
Starting point is 00:55:38 this inheritance that's floating around. And hopefully every year you both have a nice, healthy distribution. I want to give you some different ways of thinking about your children's school. You've told me that it's a non-negotiable. Totally fine with me. My job is to help you figure out how to do it. And the problem is once you put your kids in this school, you can't just pull them out. It's very disruptive. So how do you think about that that what would you do to be absolutely certain that you can afford this school for the next 12 years apply for financial aid okay that's good you definitely should yeah um i don't know.
Starting point is 00:56:26 What if you wait one year? What do you mean? What if you waited one year, and instead of incurring the fees, let's say this year, you waited one year, took all the money you normally would have spent this year, banked it, and then by the time you put your kids in this school, you have a war chest. So if something goes wrong, you do not have the pressure of, oh my God, where are we going to find 6,000 bucks a month right away? They're already there at the school. What? I mean, this was, they're in the middle of their first year. Oh, well, okay.
Starting point is 00:57:06 That option's out the door. Yeah. All right. So what the fuck? You signed them up for this school without even knowing where the money was coming from? Yeah, well, we pulled from the house. That house is not like the giving tree. That thing doesn't last forever.
Starting point is 00:57:21 All right. Do you see the, I get it. They're already there. So we can't do that. Do you kind of see though the behavioral issue here? Yes. What is it? Just articulate it back to me. It's, and you're speaking in terms of what, like we're putting the cart before the horse, I guess is the thing. Yeah. Yeah. Like on the income that the two of you make, you make too much money to be behaving this way. If you want to get to a level where you are financially comfortable, potentially one day financially very successful, then you can't keep thinking this way.
Starting point is 00:58:00 This is truly insane. this is truly insane. They literally signed their kids up for a $55,000 a year commitment for 12 years with no idea how they're gonna pay for the second year or anything beyond. What is the end game here? Do people who make these decisions ever stop to think, hmm, what if something goes wrong?
Starting point is 00:58:22 What if one of us gets laid off? What if we can't keep up our lifestyle that we have now committed ourselves to for over a decade? Why am I even asking this question? I already know the depressing answer. The answer is people do not make a plan. They do not think beyond the month and they simply hope things go all right. And when they don't, and it ends disastrously, the people have no idea what actually just happened. And that's when they start going on Twitter and saying, life sucks. This is horrible. Life sucks. Yes. Life sucks for me right now, having to imagine how bad things can go. I'm truly at a loss here. I think in my conversation with Sarah and Kevin, I wish I had taken a break to get my composure back. So what I tried to do was I tried to summarize where we were in part,
Starting point is 00:59:07 just so I could remind myself what in the hell is happening right now. Can we sum up with where we ended here? So you have your fixed costs at 53%. That's fucking awesome. Is anyone else excited by that yeah all right i think that's amazing uh shit i just realized i realized i made a mistake the we took the um kids school where where did we put that is that in fixed cost right now yeah fuck we kind of all right well i'll tell okay it's a technicality i'm just going to tell you why i'm a little it's a little we're playing a little bit of tricks and it's not good but i'm gonna tell you
Starting point is 00:59:58 so if we move that 5800 back into fixed cost costs, you'd be way over. Yeah. Right. And the fact of the matter is that, that your girl's school is a fixed cost because you have zero intention of ever stopping paying that money for the next 12 years. So technically it is a fixed cost. And what that really says is you're still over on fixed costs by a lot. So look, we're playing some games with the CSP. I don't really like it, but there's no other way to do it. The implication here is that basically you need to keep getting your bonuses and distributions and you need to be setting them aggressively aside in savings.
Starting point is 01:00:42 All right. That's that. And it also implies that you don't have much else to spend for guilt-free spending on anything. And that's something that it troubles me because most couples, they want to go on vacation. They want to do fun things. They want to do that. And I don't like setting up a system where you can't do it because you're not going to actually listen. You're just going to be like, fuck all this. So you really have to be thinking about what is the marathon that we are running. So you have a marathon of at least
Starting point is 01:01:16 12 years of high expenses. That's the way you chose it. Okay. That's how it's got to be. All right. What questions can I answer for you? This is me putting the onus on them now. I have helped them as much as I can. Now it's on them. Watch what happens. Well, I got a big one. All right. I heard you all throughout and keep pinging
Starting point is 01:01:58 I heard you all throughout and keep pinging and trying to maintain this cadence, this velocity. So the question simply, simply ask is, are we setting ourselves to failure? I can't say yes or no. You are setting yourselves up for a very difficult rest of your lives. The reason for that is you first, you have some difficult habits that you've already exhibited. So it's not like we're starting from a blank page. That's number one. Two, $55,000 a year of a fixed expense for at least 12 more years is extremely high. At your income level, it is very challenging. At your income level with your spending habits,
Starting point is 01:03:11 everything has to go right in order for you to do it. Could you do it? Yeah, I think so. If you were to radically change the way you manage money, it could happen. But you two would have to be a completely unified team and you would also have to be lucky. The good news is that you have a high income, household income with the possibility of making more. That part is really promising. But I don't like to only count on making more money in the future i can't build a life around
Starting point is 01:03:46 some hope well you know reality check a 38 43 year old couple have um 150k um that earth proportionally to our revenue, it is ridiculously low. All of our 14 years of marriage led us to this. Right or wrong, here we are. This is it. Now we're looking at the biggest chunk, the principle that we set ourselves, that our kids will get great education. And in the current plan that we've put together, it is obvious that it is what drives
Starting point is 01:04:36 our lifestyle overall down. And so those are all the thoughts. You know, it is... Are you asking if it's worth it? If it's worth it. I mean, where it is worth it for... We know it is worth it for education, for our children's education, because we've told ourselves that for the longest time.
Starting point is 01:05:07 But I'm just wondering whether we could make it work differently. Should we just play for a second and see what happens if we entertain the idea of not spending $55,000 a year on private school? Yeah, why not? Does it make you nervous to explore this? I think so because then my next question is, okay, then where do they go to school? What do we do? And what do we do with the $5,800? Let's open it up. I'm going to copy this sheet. Now, go ahead.
Starting point is 01:05:45 Why don't you have a conversation about what you would do with $5,800 a month? I think just based off of this, I think increasing our investment is going to be a big deal.
Starting point is 01:06:01 It's always going to be into savings so that we can stay in a 5% to 10% mark and 10% mark for investment. I think you're right in terms of investment. We probably need to target maybe let's say 15%. Then the savings. Okay. So comparatively you added uh that was 600 so you added a thousand dollars so you added two thousand dollars which is so it left uh it leaves us with three thirty eight hundred dollars that we can put back in a fixed cost or guilt-free guilt i think guilt-free yeah there's something i forgot about that one um i mean i think that in terms of guilt free spending it should be i mean the dining out those kind of things and that puts us at just over 5 000 so we still would have about 800 left correct and. And that's the 100 for 800
Starting point is 01:07:05 for the kids activity. Or the car. Whichever we took out. We took out both. But yeah, I mean It's something. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:07:24 And the investment is important. Yeah. And the investment is important. Yeah. What are you all noticing? And what are you both feeling? It's like dead. It's a bit of sweet. It's, I feel air in my lungs,
Starting point is 01:07:46 but I felt like it's, they're constricted at the same time. My lungs are constricted at the same time. What does that mean? Meaning that I feel like there's a sense of relief that, oh, look at that. You know, we don't have to shrink our life.
Starting point is 01:08:07 And we can actually look up to the future. And at the same time is the constriction that I feel is the best investment that you can make for your children is their education. And we equated that. We equate that to financially because
Starting point is 01:08:29 it might be educational challenge as parents. So we try to say, here, private school, do a better job than we can do. Yeah. Is that true? Jokingly, it's... On the academic side, yes.
Starting point is 01:08:47 Hold on, hold on. It's funny, but you mentioned that you were potentially going to homeschool them. Yeah. I mean, with help, that would be the worst case thing. Not worst case, that's not true. That would be... Well, what's the worst case thing. I get not worst case. That's not true. That would be.
Starting point is 01:09:06 Well, what's the worst case for you two? Financially speaking. Continuing down the path. It's slow. Yeah, for sure. The path that we're on is the worst case. You wrote me. I'd love for Kevin and I to be able to talk about money
Starting point is 01:09:23 without being scared. The next conversation will be the end of our marriage. Yeah. I mean, it's not like we're just talking about the weather. This is 10 out of 10. That's what you wrote. 10,
Starting point is 01:09:37 10, 10. Yeah. So the school, it, it was presented as a non-negotiable i get it we talked about it for at length is it not is it is it an option because if anything's an option now that's a good answer i can work with that yeah can i tell you something um i'm sure you have your reasons for wanting to send your daughters to private school.
Starting point is 01:10:27 And if that's what you choose to continue doing, okay, it's your money. It's your choice. I guess I want you to be able to zoom up. I understand if there's one of your daughters needs extra help and the private school is the best place to do it. I totally get that. But I want to look at this in the totality of your girls growing up with parents who are not worried about money every single day of their lives, of passing on some of the
Starting point is 01:10:59 things you picked up with money, Sarah, and changing that. Like generational messages are real. And I wonder which of these decisions would provide a real change for your daughters. The school, changing the school. To what? To cheaper slash free options could be i think for children to be able to see their parents feeling good about money teaching them valuable lessons about money that changes the dynamic a lot and forget about money just seeing parents actually
Starting point is 01:11:44 being able to breathe. Like I was telling you, I feel like I could almost physically, I could actually breathe just by walking out through this exercise. If this is a reason why our marriage would continue to be stressed, then it has to be considered.
Starting point is 01:12:07 Let me share the follow-ups because this is a situation we have never had before. After each conversation, I ask my guests to follow up and send me the answers to a few questions that I have for them. Sarah and Kevin did write back. Let me read what they wrote. Sarah said, I think the thing that surprised me the most were the numbers. We've never calculated our finances in such a way that gave us a completely clear picture of where we're at. It was hard, crushing at points, but motivating and encouraging as well.
Starting point is 01:12:40 Our conversation really drove home how I have to start taking more responsibility with our finances. Money doesn't have to be scary. We definitely have some hard decisions to make, but now I believe that we can get to a place that will allow us to build a healthy relationship and pay off and keep off all the debt. Here's what Kevin said. It is evident that Sarah and I do not have healthy financial habits. Ramit uncovered behaviors that led us to where we are today. My biggest learning point was to know where to start. I embarrassingly admitted early on in our conversation that I struggled to adapt the CSP to our lives.
Starting point is 01:13:15 Once we understood the importance of working with the revenue, we are certain of the rest made sense. This was probably the biggest takeaway. Okay. Well, I appreciate Sarah and Kevin coming on and being so candid in this conversation. I wasn't satisfied with those answers.
Starting point is 01:13:31 I wanted to know specifically what changes they were going to make. Also, they were supposed to send me their updated CSP with the decisions they made, but after the first follow-up, we never did. I really hope that Sarah and Kevin find these last two episodes eye-opening and I genuinely hope that they are able
Starting point is 01:13:49 to recommit to making a change. The stakes are very high. Their family's future and their happiness and relationship depends on it. Thank you for listening. I'm Ramit Sethi. Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich. I'm Ramit Sethi. Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich. I'm Ramit Sethi.
Starting point is 01:14:09 Please follow the show on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. If you haven't read I Will Teach You To Be Rich, my book, pick up a copy. You can get it at any bookstore or any library, and it will show you the specific tactics for how to build the I Will Teach You To Be Rich system into your personal finances.

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