I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 84. “We spend 98% of what we make—but we refuse to change our lifestyle”
Episode Date: February 28, 2023Kristine is 32 and Thomas is 35. They’re raising three children in the Midwest. They love their jobs, are happy with their incomes, and just upgraded to a third, much larger, home. Everything is goo...d–except that they’re going broke. With astronomical fixed costs, something’s got to give. This episode is brought to you by: Rocket Money | Stop throwing your money away. Cancel unwanted subscriptions – and manage your expenses the easy way – by going to RocketMoney.com/ramit. DeleteMe | if you want to get your personal information removed from the web, go to joindeleteme.com/ramit and get 20% off a plan for you or your entire family. Links mentioned in this episode Get my New York Times best-selling book Get my no-numbers journal Get Money Coaching with Ramit Connect with Ramit Download the Conscious Spending Plan Other episodes Instagram Twitter YouTube If you and your partner have a money issue and you want my help, I occasionally select a couple to work with, free of charge. Apply for my help here. Produced by Crate Media.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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 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, I want to hear from you. Please apply at iwt.com
slash apply. 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.
We both enjoy and like our jobs.
Our three kids aren't going anywhere.
We want them to have a nice childhood.
We want to live the way we're still living without the burden of knowing every single dollar
that we make is allocated to someone.
We don't want to move.
I don't care about cars.
We could drive less expensive cars and that's fine with me.
This is our forever home.
I mean, we don't...
We don't ever want to move again.
Our jobs are our jobs and our income is what our income is.
But I think you two are living above your means.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Have you ever acknowledged that to each other?
No.
I don't think so.
I knew, you know, all these things were coming up and just got really scared.
Scared of what?
Going into debt and not having a way out.
Meet Christine and Thomas. Christine's 32, Thomas is 35, and they have three young children.
They are based in the Midwest and they have been in their latest house, which is their third for
about two years. Now, Christine and Thomas are drowning with their money, but they
don't know it. All they know is that they're stressed out and they describe it as treading
water. But when I look at their numbers, I am alarmed. They genuinely believe that they just
need to make a few small changes to fix things, but that won't cut it. I'd like to invite you to
watch this episode on YouTube,
where you can see the full thing. Just go to YouTube and search for my name, Ramit Sethi,
and you'll be able to follow along. This is I Will Teach You To Be Rich. Let's begin.
My relationship with money is stressful.
Like it's a cause of stress for me pretty consistently.
How consistently?
Daily.
It feels stressful daily.
When do you think about it first?
In the morning, when I wake up in the morning.
We use the YNAB app.
And so in the morning I see like, oh, you have this many transactions to import.
Or I look at our checking account just like, you know, I have this like mental idea of like, you know, the beginning of the month is when most of our bills come out.
So I'm just like, okay, I just like want to just for a little bit of peace of mind check that like we have i know you know i know
approximately how much we need to have in our checking account throughout the month and you
know based on when our bills come out so i just want to make sure that like something isn't a
surprise to me and going to you know impact our checking account um unexpectedly getting my kids ready as you're
getting your kids ready you're checking into YNAB and the accounts yeah so like I we have a
three-month-old daughter so like when I'm feeding her in the morning I won't be you know scrolling
through my phone and it's kind of just like on the rotation I check my social media I check my
I check our checking account I you know just kind of the rotation of the apps, I check my social media, I check our checking account, or just the rotation of the apps that I check.
We use Google Sheets, so we have everything shared on our budget.
And so Christine, like she said, is monitoring this stuff multiple times a day.
And so then she'll message me or text me and be like,
we have this coming up or gymnastics payments coming up.
And so I'd say a lot of it is during the day, instant messaging as well.
And what does it feel like when you see the numbers in YNAB in your accounts?
In YNAB, it feels like I have to go through and like check what all of these are and then
like how they impact the amount that we have budgeted for that for the month um and then when
i look at my checking account it's a little bit less stressful because i don't see like the details
and how they relate to what we have budgeted for the month it's just like i'm just looking at a
number there i'm like oh okay like nothing happened overnight that i that is a fire oh that's interesting so are you looking for fires
when you log in yeah and if you find them what do you do um i try to just like store that away
for a while until i have a chance to like go back in and
handle it. Like, you know, speak, speaking of details, like for example, this morning, I
logged into our checking account and I saw like, Oh, a check was cash that we had written.
And we were both like, shoot, like, I didn't know what the check was for because I couldn't see like
the image of the check. Um, and I asked her Thomas and he didn't remember what the check was for because I couldn't see the image of the check.
And I asked Thomas and he didn't remember what the check was for either.
And so that was stressful for me this morning because it was a couple hundred dollars.
And I was like, I don't remember this, where did this come from?
So that was something that was on my mind for a couple hours until I could find out what it was.
It sounds stressful.
Yeah. Like before 10 o'clock in the morning, you're just inundated with all these numbers and
worst of all missing data.
There's nothing worse than missing data.
It drives me insane.
Okay.
And then you have, you're looking for fires. It sounds like you're the firefighter, the financial firefighter in the relationship. Is that true? Yes. Okay.
Is that what you want to be? No. All right. So our mornings are very different, but
putting the kids aside, if that's even possible for just a second, the last thing I
want to do in the morning is wake up and look at a bunch of rows of numbers. And I don't.
So do you think that there's a possibility, a world that exists where you don't have to check
your accounts every morning? Yeah, I think that's possible. How come you don't have to check your accounts every morning?
Yeah, I think that's possible.
How come you haven't done it?
I don't know.
Habit?
What else?
Well, you're telling me it's stressful in a bad way.
So why haven't you changed that?
Because I don't feel like we're comfortable enough or we have enough of like a cushion in our finances or a savings, you know, in our finances that can like kind of like account for those ebbs and flows.
Yeah.
Feels like you're living on the edge a little bit.
All the time. Yeah. It feels like you're living on the edge a little bit. All the time.
Okay.
All right.
Thomas, tell me about your financial firefighting every morning.
My financial firefighting every morning is listening to Christine.
And, you know, I am not a morning person and having three kids under five, um, it's a lot to do.
I'm out the door by 7am bringing the kids to daycare.
Um, and so I'm not super chatty in the morning and I am not very talkative in the morning.
When do you talk about money?
Um, all the time, basically whenever Christine brings it.
Oh, okay.
This is a super common reaction when one partner is anxious about money and the other is avoidant.
The avoidant person almost always believes that their partner constantly talks about money.
And to some extent, that may be true. If you are anxious about money,
you will probably tend to bring up money a lot, especially at inopportune times.
In the morning, when you're in bed, when the person comes home from work, all the time.
As you can hear, Christine cannot imagine a world where she isn't constantly checking her accounts.
But it's also true that the avoidant partner exaggerates how often money is brought up because they're sensitive to it.
If money was brought up even once a month, they would probably still say she brings it
up all the time.
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 to cycle through messages. I use keystrokes to
schedule messages, like when I want to ask one of-workers a question, but I don't want to send them an email on a Saturday. Now, I can work
through dozens of emails in minutes using this. And Superhuman just introduced an AI feature,
which allows you to take a huge email with all these people chiming in and automatically
summarize what's going on in a few bullet points. It'll even draft emails for you.
So if you want to buy back your time,
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.
Today's episode is sponsored by Element,
a very tasty electrolyte drink mix.
And I want to read you a response that I got
from one of our readers who started using Element recently.
His name, D, he wrote,
you convinced me to try Element
and I'm pleasantly surprised by how much I enjoy it.
The magnesium is really helpful for managing headaches
and getting quality sleep,
but it tastes so much better than I was expecting
given the salt factor.
This will be my new go-to for workout recovery
and the blistering Florida summer heat.
Well, first off, I love hearing about your
experiences with our sponsors on the podcast. I want to pick the very best sponsors for you,
so keep your feedback coming and thank you. Element can help prevent and eliminate headaches,
muscle cramps, fatigue, sleeplessness, and other common symptoms of electrolyte deficiency.
If you're sweating or feel dehydrated
and you want to replace your electrolytes,
consider Element.
They have eight great flavors like citrus salt,
watermelon salt, raspberry salt,
and even lemon habanero.
Right now, Element is offering eight single serving packets
free with any Element order.
This is a great way to try all eight flavors. Get yours at
drinkelement.com slash Ramit. Try it totally risk-free. And if you don't like it, they'll
give you your money back, no questions asked. You have nothing to lose. This deal is only available
through my link. Let me give it to you again, drinkelement.com slash R-A-M-I-T.
That's drinklmnt.com slash Ramit.
But yeah, I mean, like just the example she shared this morning with that couple hundred
dollar charge, we were still in bed when she saw that.
I probably had been just woken up a few minutes ago. And so I didn't know where it was from. with that couple hundred dollar charge we were still in bed when she saw that i was i probably
had been just woken up a few minutes ago and so i didn't know where it was from i didn't you know
still in a daze a little bit and um and what does that feel like to talk about money in that context
um i'm getting to the point now where i'm more used to it and expect it, but it's not what I want to talk about when I first thing when I wake up.
Okay.
Okay.
I can understand that.
When would you want to talk about it if you could choose?
What's the smile that everyone's secretly having?
Well, because we used to have Sunday budget meetings.
Okay.
Well, because we used to have Sunday budget meetings.
Okay.
And that was maybe before kids or with one kid.
And just over time, they have gone away.
But we would sit down every Sunday night.
And we use a different budget platform before then and look at everything and plan for the week.
And we don't do that anymore.
Were you in a better place when you were doing that?
Financially speaking?
Probably, yeah. Okay. We have a lot more expenses now than we did. I'm sure that's true. Three kids is a lot. But is there any other potential correlations here? Let me try to lay out the
facts as I've heard it. You used to talk about money every week. You were in a better financial
position. Now you don't talk about money every week. You're in a better financial position now you don't talk about money every week you're in a worse financial position is there any correlation maybe all right
the magic wand would be no weekly meeting um and i think that's a little bit why it stopped was
because i could tell christine was getting frustrated um you know sunday night i kind
of want to watch football or something.
And we had to turn the TV off and sit down together for an hour and look at finances.
Wait, what do you mean?
That sounds fucking awesome.
I get to turn off football and turn on finances.
That's the dream.
The American dream.
That's the Sunday scaries right there.
Oh, all right.
Yes, we have different dreams.
Okay, so that's kind of why it stopped.
So what is your dream?
Like,
what would it be if you could do anything?
Um,
have someone take care of it all for me.
Okay.
Okay.
You don't want to,
you don't want to talk about it.
No,
not really.
Okay.
I know for the most part where we're at,
what we have,
what our expenses are.
Um, but yeah, I, I don't love talking about it.
Okay. That helps me understand where we're dealing with here.
So, Christine, you reached out to me.
Why now?
Because, so in the fall when I had reached out, I knew that there were some things
coming up, um, in the next couple of months that were going to greatly impact us. Like our mortgage
went up. Um, we, you know, had another daughter, so daycare, she started daycare this month. Um,
so that's, you know, an extra kid in full-time daycare.
Um, and you know, a hospital bill on top of that, I knew that was coming up. And then we, um, about a year and a half or so ago had found ourselves in some credit card debt. And so we had transferred
that debt to, uh, um, zero interest card for a period of time and I knew that time period is
expiring soon so we have to you know you know we've been paying on it every month
and somewhat on track to pay it off in the next couple of months but so I knew
you know all these things were coming up and just got really scared. Scared of what? Going into debt
and not having a way out.
Or I shouldn't say not having
a way out. I know there's a way out. I know there's
always a way out. But
just we've been
working to get
rid of this one credit card debt
and then we're coming up on
that at the same time
getting flooded with
all these other increased expenses so just not sure that that's like how we're gonna make it
all work i feel like we're always like treading water and just like bobbing at the surface it's
like you know this month we are maybe a little bit ahead so like great and
then like the next month we're a little bit under it's just kind of like always up and down and I
feel lonely like that like you know because like I know that Thomas doesn't want to talk about it
and I don't want to be the person that's like nagging about it all the time either. Um, so I've kind of like taken on the responsibility of
that, um, or taking on the responsibility of like managing things. And it's just, you know,
made me feel a lot of weight, you know, it's just very stressful and I feel,
you know, alone in the stress. Um, you know, yeah, just very stressful. And I feel, you know, alone in the stress.
You know, yeah, it definitely makes me feel sad that she thinks she's alone because I don't want
her to feel that. But then I also know that she knows, you know, that I, it's not my favorite
subject to talk about as well. So. Some couples leave very, very obvious clues and today's clues
are enormous. They used to have money meetings when they were in a better position.
Now they don't, and they're in a worse position.
Thomas mentioned he's listened to the podcast before,
but he also admits that his dream is to not think about money or talk about money
or manage his money at all.
Oh, and by the way, she checks their accounts in bed every morning to put out fires.
And by the way, she checks their accounts in bed every morning to put out fires.
I want to talk about Thomas's dream of never having to think about money or talk about money.
It's a really common one, but unfortunately, it's delusional.
Think about it.
You would never say that about food.
You would never say that about parenting.
But we say it about money.
And the reason why is that we see money as a negative,
as boring, as hard, as a source of pain and shame and debt and negativity.
And until we can change that view, there will be avoidance.
I think one thing that's maybe jaded me in the past was,
this is our third home.
And I kind of did the whole home buying processes before,
like working with realtor and lenders and all those things. And it,
and it took a toll on me to just the amount of communication and things like
that.
And I,
once we finally got in this house that we hope to be in for a long time,
I was kind of like,
I'm done with this,
you know?
And,
and this means what?
Like money?
Like, yeah, I guess.
Big expenses,
dealing with lenders, paperwork,
credit card stuff.
I was just over it.
Okay, I get it.
That's a lot of paperwork to go through, but that's like
me going into the forest,
finding the most gnarly,
rotten mushroom I can ever find. It's got maggots
crawling on it. And then I eat it. I eat it three times. And then I go, you know what? I'm fucking
done with food. Food is disgusting. I'm done with that. You picked the worst of the worst of the
worst thing to engage in three times. And now it's really colored your view of money.
Yeah, exactly.
Notice the blending of buying a house with money.
Thomas had a bad experience buying three houses.
So now he goes, all money is bad.
And this is a classic clue for all or nothing thinking.
They have kids.
Let's say one of their kids throws up on their shirt.
Are they going to say, I hate all kids?
Of course not.
But why?
What's the difference between what Thomas does with money
and what he likely does with his children?
The difference is if you are a parent,
you understand that a kid throwing up
is one tiny part of parenting.
Yeah, it sucks, but it goes with the territory.
In other words, you can see the big picture, including the joys of parenting, and you can
put that disgusting puke in perspective. With money, most people do not have that perspective.
They do not understand the big picture. Thomas literally sees buying a house as equivalent to money. He sees Christine's
anxiety about money every morning as money. So it makes sense that he doesn't like money,
that he avoids money because from his perspective, money sucks. So you've had expenses going up
before these expenses recently increased. How were you doing with your finances? with the medical bills, we've had so much more larger expenses happen where in the past,
it was so much smaller expenses that would pop up that we could manage and handle better.
Now, I still think we're okay, but we need to be more careful and more smart about what
we're spending our money on.
I would say that before these larger expenses came up, we were not in a wildly different place.
Our expenses were a little bit smaller, so we had a little bit more of a cushion month to month.
Um, but we've just never had a good, like, or a comp in my perspective, a comfortable amount in our savings that makes, you know, makes me feel like whatever comes our way, you know, we could
field it, you know, what is that amount? Probably 20,000 would be, would be comfortable a comfortable starting place for me
but we both wish we could make more money um and so that's kind of an ongoing battle i think where
i had a job my previous job right before this i was making more, took this job for more happiness.
And so not only did we have a large medical bill, another baby, two dogs, larger house.
We had no car payments before. Now we have one, all these huge expenses that we have to pay monthly.
And my job is making less money.
We don't put anything into our Roth and things right now where we used to.
What was the time period where all those changes happened?
Within like six months.
What?
Pretty close.
Well, looking back, what do you think about that?
Pretty close.
Well, looking back, what do you think about that?
I mean, we bought our house because the interest rates were so incredibly low that we could afford it.
And I still think we can afford it.
Can we look through the numbers?
Because I think that's going to provide something to ground us around.
Christine, walk me through these numbers. Yes. So our assets are $597,500.
All right, fine. Investments? $106,800. Okay. Savings?
Savings is a little over $5,000. And debt?
Um, savings is a little over 5,000.
And debt?
Um, our debt.
So this includes our mortgage, credit card and vehicles. And that's 394,000.
Okay.
What's the total net worth?
315,000.
All right.
How do you feel about that number?
I was pleasantly surprised when I, when we came, came up with that.
Cause I was like, we're positive.
That feels good to me.
Okay.
And how much credit card debt?
Our credit card debt is $2,200.
All right.
Let's take a look at the income.
Thomas.
Yep.
Just tell me your gross household income. Our gross household income is $11,122.
Yeah, that seems pretty good to me. And you said that you used to make more. Now you're making
$11,000 a month household income. So just to summarize so far, the two of you make $133,000 a year. You've got $106,000 in investments, $5,000 in savings,
$394,000 in debt, of which $360,000 is your house, $2,200 is your credit card, and $28,000
is your cars. And in terms of ages, Christine, you're 32, Tom is 35. All right.
So far, okay.
Let's take a look at the fixed costs, shall we?
What's that number next to the fixed costs?
The combined.
How much are you both spending on your fixed costs as a percentage of your gross, excuse me, your net income?
98%. Is that high or low?
Or what does that number mean to you?
Outrageously high to me.
Yeah.
Thomas?
Yep, same.
Okay.
What should it be?
That's no wiggle room at all.
Yeah, none.
What should it be?
75%.
Where'd you get that?
I think Christine told it to me one time in the past, or maybe it was 60%.
Yeah.
Well, I can't remember exactly.
It's less than 98%.
I'll tell you that.
It's...
Gee, I wonder why Christine wakes up every morning feeling worried about money.
And why when she tries to bring it up with Thomas, he avoids it.
When you lock yourself into high expenses like they've done,
you cause all kinds of downstream effects.
It would be like building a house
with an absolutely tiny kitchen.
You go, hey, let's save some space,
but suddenly you only have one burner,
which means cooking takes longer.
You don't have a big enough fridge to store stuff,
so you have to run to the store three times a week.
Your kids can't come home from college
because you can't cook enough food and on and on. These unintended
consequences happen all the time with people's money, but we almost never trace it back to our
fixed costs being too high. That is what's happening here. Generally, I prefer to see 50 to
60%. There are rare exceptions, but they are extremely rare and
you two are not in that rare of a situation. So with 98, what is the implication if you have 98%
of your take-home income is being spent on can't save to do you know things that we want to do
yeah what else can't go on vacation can't lose our jobs right that's a good one
what else can't get sick or have any other major expenses. It suddenly makes a lot of sense why, Christine, you're waking up, looking at your phone.
You're sending urgent messages about a $200 check, which I don't do that.
I don't.
And I don't want you to have to be fixated on $200 when the two of you make $133,000.
The way you have set your expenses up, it forces you to play small.
And so you have taken this beautiful set of eyes that you both have.
You can look at the entire world.
You can see for miles.
And you have turned it into a little pinhole where all you can see is cell D32.
What is that expense? And we need to light a fire in our relationship to identify this $13
expense that we don't know. Any of that sound familiar?
100%.
Spot on.
Yep. It sounds awful.
So it doesn't mean you're awful people.
That's not what I'm saying at all.
It just means the situation that you are in, it's not good.
So let's see if we can find a way to make some changes.
Okay, daycare slash school is $2,000 a month.
So who's that for?
Two kids, three kids?
Three kids in daycare and one is in a private preschool right now.
Okay.
Gosh, I hate how expensive childcare is in this country.
And we actually have our daycare is an in-home daycare.
And it's probably about the cheapest you could ever ask for.
In our area.
Do you have any maintenance on that Jeep Grand Cherokee? Aren aren't those horrible vehicles yes and the gas is outrageous too i have to drive i drive 30
minutes to work one way so i drive an hour a day why do you have a jeep is it like your childhood
thing exactly yeah i used to have uh just a car i had a chevy malibu with no car payment and then i liked that um
and then we added over 400 a month how did you decide if it if you could afford it
don't tell me you talked to the car dealer and he talked about monthly payment please don't say that
i will tell you that i very specifically remember being at the dealership and we looked at the,
you know, we drove it and whatever.
And we sat down and I was like, you know, the, the car salesman was, you know, gave
us the price or the monthly payment.
And I said, no.
And we walked away.
We walked out and I was so proud of myself.
Like, like, no.
And Thomas was like, I thought that was good.
Like, why did we walk away?
We had gone in there knowing that we didn't want to pay over $400 a month.
Thomas, I'm going to kill you right now.
What have I said on this podcast 10,000 times?
When the car dealer says to you, how much you want to pay?
You look him straight in the eye you say tco
motherfucker i don't talk car payments nobody ever talks payments you talk about total cost
of ownership i want to know the full price i think we said we didn't want to go over 400 a month
all right he's like i can make it work and he gave you a fat loan for what? 60, 72 months? What was it?
I think it was 60.
I don't think we ever have felt good about it.
And we even refinanced like a year ago and lowered our payment.
That's good.
But we still don't feel good about it.
Thomas, do you get why I don't want you to make decisions based on monthly payments?
Um, no.
This is why you never buy a car based on monthly payments.
You need to understand that car dealers are there to make the maximum amount of money
from you.
Let me show you how it works.
Assume you're buying a $75,000 truck at 5.5% interest.
Assume you're buying a $75,000 truck at 5.5% interest.
If you put zero down with a five-year loan, you'll pay about $1,432 a month.
And the total amount you pay for that truck will be about $91,000.
Let me say that again.
You thought you bought a $75,000 truck, but it's actually costing you $91,000 plus the incremental gas, plus all the other assorted maintenance, which means your truck actually costs way over a hundred thousand
dollars.
Do you see why I am so, so focused on fixed costs, specifically a house and a car?
Because these are the places that you trap yourselves.
Let me give you another example.
Let's say you want a lower monthly payment. Sure. Chet, your friend, a car dealer can help.
He'll just stretch that loan out to seven years. Now, instead of your monthly payment being $1,432
a month, it'll be $1,225. So you'll save about $200 a month. Now, most unsavvy people will go 200 bucks a month. That's a good amount of savings.
That sounds really good. Do not do that because the total cost of ownership will now be $94,000.
Okay. That's more than the previous one. So you will save a little bit every month, but you will
actually pay way more. This is how it works with all big purchases.
Your house has massive phantom costs.
Your car has very large phantom costs.
Investments have phantom costs.
If you don't understand what they are, read my book.
Never buy something expensive based on monthly payments alone.
Always calculate TCO or total cost of ownership and then decide if you can
afford it. That is how savvy people make big purchases. 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.
But often we try the same things we've tried for such a long time.
And there's a lot of different approaches that we can take to sleep.
Take Calm, one of our sponsors today,
it's the number one app for sleep and meditation.
It gives you the power to calm your mind.
They have meditations on things like anxiety and stress.
They can help you focus.
They can help you relax.
And as you heard, they have sleep stories for kids and for adults.
The Calm app puts the tools that you need to feel better,
including music, soundscapes, or even things that you can use to focus at work.
If you go to calm.com slash Ramit,
you'll get a special offer of 40% off a Calm premium subscription,
and they add new content every single week.
For listeners of this show, Calm is offering that exclusive offer of 40% off a Calm premium
subscription at Calm.com slash Ramit.
So go to calm.com slash Ramit for 40% off unlimited access to Calm's entire library. That's Calm.com slash Ramit for 40% off unlimited access to Calm's entire library.
That's calm.com slash Ramit.
Let's have a pleasant discussion about some of the worst things in the world.
One of them, finding a doctor.
First of all, you realize, oh, I got a problem.
But you don't know if you need to call a dermatologist or a podiatrist.
So you just start calling everybody.
Half of them aren't even there.
They don't even pick up the phones.
Then when you finally get somebody on the phone,
you're like, hey, I have this thing.
They go, oh, okay, cool.
We can see you in July.
Then you ask them, are you in network?
Half of them aren't.
And you're spending three days just making phone calls.
What if there was actually a better way to find a doctor?
Check out our sponsor, ZocDoc, the place where you can find and book doctors who will make you feel
comfortable, listen to you, and prioritize your health. ZocDoc is a free app and website where
you can search and compare highly rated in-network doctors near you and instantly book appointments
with them online. Once you find the doctor you want, you can book them immediately.
No more waiting on the phone with a receptionist.
And these doctors all have verified reviews from actual, real patients.
We're talking about booking appointments with tens of thousands of top-rated,
patient-reviewed, credible doctors and specialists.
The typical wait time to see a doctor is between 24 to 72 hours. You can even
book same-day appointments. If I need to book a doctor and I wanted it to be convenient and I
wasn't sure where to start, I would try ZocDoc. So go to ZocDoc.com slash Ramit and download the
ZocDoc app for free. Then find and book a top-rated doctor today. That's Z-O-C-D-O-C.com slash
Ramit. ZocDoc.com slash Ramit. So your debt payment is $300 a month. What is that for?
Our credit card. Okay. When's it going to be paid off?
Well, it has to be paid off by, I think, April. Are you on track?
No, we're a little off track. What happens if you miss the full payment?
Then we'll have an interest payment on or be charged interest for moving forward.
Is it for the remaining amount or is it for all the amount
that you had during that last 12 months?
Great question.
Don't fuck with these 0% offers.
Can I just tell you right now?
Let me just put it this way.
You're not smarter than the credit card companies.
So I often find couples,
they have some credit card debt
and you know what they do?
They spend more time
finding some cool 0% offer than they do actually fixing their spending. And so they go, okay,
we got the 0%. It's 12 months. Why wouldn't I take it? I'm going to do it. What they don't
realize is if they look in the fine print, sometimes if you do not hit the exact term
specified, not only will you pay interest going forward, you'll pay interest on everything retroactively.
Also, your credit score, if you miss a payment, it can affect all kinds of crazy stuff.
You can't beat these credit card companies at their game.
You can beat them at your game, which is to pay the debt off as quickly as possible and
then never get into it again.
All right?
I would strongly encourage you,
I haven't looked at the terms of your 0% thing, figure out a way to pay that off.
I added up your mortgage and your utilities and it's 25% of your gross income. What does that tell tell you? Is that good or bad?
Well,
if you want us to be at 50-60%, that's half right there.
Yeah, it seems like a lot, and
it seems like
it's expensive to
keep our
house.
I also
think that our house is our most important asset.
And it's the most important part.
Not the most important part, but one of the biggest parts of our livelihood and family.
All of our girls have their own room.
We have a finished basement now.
And a three-car garage. know, and three car garage.
So it's an important expense.
It's important because what?
Because.
It's of like high value to us.
Like we.
I think what Thomas is maybe trying to say is like, that's something that we don't want to
change. Like we don't want to move. Okay. Well, I get it. Most people don't want to move, especially
out of financial necessity. That's the greatest shame there is in America. So, all right. I
understand that you are where you are. You have your house. You've told me it's important to you,
but I think realistically you should really, uh really write yourself a news story, which is we spend a lot of
money on our house. We value it, but it's not like it's a cheap house. Did you grow up in the Midwest?
I did.
Your parents, what do you remember them in terms of their lessons that they taught you about money?
My parents were extremely frugal.
My mom was a Catholic school teacher,
never made over $40,000 in 38 years.
My dad was an architect, but in small town Iowa.
And so, I don't know,
maybe towards the end of their careers,
they made $100,000 together,
but it would only been a few years. maybe towards the end of their careers, they made a hundred thousand dollars together, but,
um,
it would only been a few years.
So we know we probably went on maybe three vacations, my entire 18 years living out,
growing up same house.
And my parents never had a car payment.
They always paid cash for their cars.
Oh,
wow.
They,
um,
they still even to this day,
but growing up,
they would walk, they walk all the time and they
bring a grocery sack and pick up cans and turn in cans. And everyone around town, everyone kind of
knows everyone in small towns knew them, knew that we're not homeless people or poor people,
but they would pick up cans to get those couple bucks every week.
What was the dynamic between your parents when it came to money?
From what I know, I think they had a really good relationship with money. They have a financial
planner that would come to our house maybe every six months where me and my sister would have to
stay in the basement while they met with Rick upstairs. There was one time when me and my sister were both out of college where my
parents finally, we had like a family meeting and they looked at like, this is how much we have in
retirement. You know, if we die, this is where these things are. Yeah. This is how much we have.
And we're like, Whoa, wow. You guys have a lot of money. And they're like, that's because we didn't
do anything. Okay. And what do you think about that? That they didn't do anything?
You know, at the time, I wish we could have got on more vacations and stuff like my friends were
doing. But now looking back, I'm like, wow, they're going to retire and they're going to have
a lot of money for when it seemed like they didn't have jobs that made a lot of money.
Yeah. Are they retired now? They both are retired. Yep.
Okay. Do you grow up in the Midwest also?
Yes.
What are some of the money lessons you took away from your upbringing?
There's, I think, I mean, there's a lesson I feel like in, I don't know, frugality is the right word, but I do remember like, you know, we would use coupons when we'd get pizza. And I remember like going to, um, you know, like my mom likes to go
to thrift stores and like things like that. Like I remember that. And I carry some of that with me
today too. Do you carry any of those lessons into your relationship with your children?
Do you carry any of those lessons into your relationship with your children?
I think a little bit in terms of like, I want them to be able to do gymnastics and I want them to be able to do swimming lessons because I love it.
And like those kinds of things I want to provide for them.
So if there's other areas that we can save so that we can spend money in those areas or like put our five-year-old in private preschool,
you know, that's, those things are important to me.
How many siblings did you have?
I had two.
Two. Okay. So there was three of you, just like you have three daughters.
And what, if you can recall, I had two two okay so there was three of you just like you have three daughters yes and what
if you can recall
what was the square footage
of the house you grew up in
ballpark
1500
okay
what is the house
no
oh
he's Thomas
it's always the partner who knows
the partner always
Thomas how much
uh
I'd say the house that she grew up in
because it's still the house
we go back to for
holidays and stuff
$2,500 at least
$2,500 okay
and what is the square footage of your current house?
$3,200
okay
any takeaways from that?
Christine?
Not really
I mean I do feel like we live in, I felt like I lived in a nice house
growing up. Um, but of course, you know, like I had friends with nicer houses too. Like I wasn't
like, I didn't have the nicest house. Um, I have nice sweaters, but there are people who have even
nicer sweaters. So does that mean that I don't have nice sweaters?
No.
All right.
Thomas, what was the square footage of your house growing up?
1,200 maybe, 1,100.
How many siblings?
Me and an older sister.
Okay.
Can I just point out the elephant in the room?
Your parents both had smaller houses than you two do.
And you two have this house in your early 30s.
Okay.
Now, if you can afford it, fine.
But Christine, one of the things you mentioned was that you took away from your parents that
they would cut back on certain things so they could spend more on experiences.
And you also like experiences for your kids.
But right now you have a lot of money in your house.
You have a 3,200 square foot house.
That's pretty big.
I mean, not pretty.
That is big, huge. Now, if that is what both of you
value, awesome. We can find a way, hopefully, to make it work in the conscious spending plan.
But if you value that and childcare and, and saving,
you can't do it all on your income.
Yeah, I would say for me, the house is the number one.
Christine?
That we like to keep?
Yeah, value the house more than the other major expenses. Yeah. Value the house more than the other major expenses.
Yeah. Because we do feel like this is our forever home. I mean, we don't...
We don't ever want to move again.
All right. So your fixed costs are $8,200 a month. Again, reminder, you take home $8,300. So what do y'all want to do about this
fixed cost category? Make more money. Yeah. Everybody says that. But if that were true,
but if that were true wouldn't you have already done it yes okay so you know i noticed something interesting on your uh interview with my
colleague you both said we want to see if there are some changes we can make because we don't
want to have to radically change things in our life do Do you remember saying that? We love both enjoy and like our jobs.
Our three kids aren't going anywhere. We want them to have a nice, you know,
a nice childhood. And, um, we want,
we want to live the way we're still living without the burden of knowing every
single dollar that we make is allocated to some line.
Okay. Christine, what about you?
My perspective from that statement was we don't want to move. I don't care about cars. We can drive less expensive cars and that's fine with me.
Daycare, we have to pay for daycare.
So the biggest thing for me was just like, we don't want to move.
Okay.
So what do you want to do?
Christine.
Your guilt-free spending is negative 10%. So you're losing like hundreds of dollars every month as indicated by the
sheet.
Christine just took a big sigh.
I think that's where Christine mentions how we're kind of
bobbing because like one month we
you know we just did
um you know
we got money from Christmas so like
oh but we don't want to count that
and it's like oh we had hail damage
so we got an insurance claim
so we have this unexpected
money and that's these things
things keep popping up
but like we talk about it we're like we can't count on these things and we don't want to count
on these things but that's the only way we've been like able to yeah to not feel like we are
totally losing money every month but you you are. And we still are.
Okay.
So what do you all think is the solution here?
Please don't say earning more money.
Well, I think, you know, we've talked about it multiple times.
I think the car, the vehicle is a huge piece.
Something that we explored recently was, um, uh, selling Thomas's vehicle and, and purchasing
something that we, um, that a friend was selling that would be a lot less expensive. Um, but you
know, through that, like week or so of like thinking about that and, you know, kind of like
running the numbers of like, what could we get for Thomas's vehicle?
And what would we buy this?
You know,
all of this.
So what did you decide Thomas?
So we still have the Jeep.
Okay.
The more I'm thinking about it, I'm like,
do I,
it's just a car.
I don't know.
I guess I've never had the car growing up that I wanted.
You know,
I had my parents hand me downs all the way
through high school, college.
And then this is
the first car that I actually
bought that I liked and wanted.
And so now
just to give it up, or not
just to, but to give it up
because it's too expensive
sucks.
Sucks means what?
Knowing that I'm going to drive something that I don't like.
Yeah.
Feels like what?
It's a bigger picture, I guess, in the scheme of things.
The car gets me from A to B,
and if it means we have more money to live the life we want to live,
then that's a sacrifice that I should make that really isn't even should be
considered a sacrifice, I guess.
It's interesting hearing you talk about it like that kind of contextualizing
this car from it first being a dream of yours and something that you
achieved. It seems like you were proud
to be able to achieve it to now saying, well, in light of looking at some of these numbers,
maybe it's just a car. It's kind of an interesting journey to hear you say that.
Have you ever talked about anything else like that? I don't think so. Not really.
like that? I don't think so. Not really. So if we were to truly mathematically calculate this,
you would go search for a car and you would find out that this car, you're going to get a used car and you can do a chapter nine of my book. It has how to do this. Your Jeep payment is currently 407.
Just for easy math, let's make it 400.
Let's say you cut that payment in half.
That's pretty extreme.
Would you agree?
Yes.
All right.
Plug that number in.
So again, your Jeep payment is going to go down by half.
Plug it in and let's see how it affects your overall money.
So it would be, how much do we have for gas?
Because with the van is 300, the half would be 200.
So that's 500 with...
I think we usually have about 300 for gas.
Can I suggest something, guys?
Yeah.
$15 here or there makes no difference.
Keep it simple.
I'm just trying to show you how the overall thrust of this works.
We'll just have it at 500.
Whoa, whoa, whoa. Not that simple. Go back. So what he just did for everyone who's not watching,
it was $953 a month. And Thomas was like, fuck it. Let's make it 500. I was like, whoa,
hold on. You took my advice too literally. Take it back to 953.
I want to show you. Let me go step by step here. Okay. So 953, you got a Jeep payment of $400.
I just want to cut that in half just to keep things simple. So if I cut that in half,
how much would your payment be? 200.
So if I cut that in half, how much would your payment be?
$200.
$200.
So why don't you take $200 off of your current car payment?
So instead of $953, it would be what?
$753.
Exactly.
All right.
Cool.
And yeah, you'd probably save a little bit more with gas and all that stuff, but whatever.
We're in the ballpark.
Okay.
Can you tell me what just happened to the fixed cost number?
What did it used to be?
And what is it now? It was at 98%, went to 96%. What does it tell you? It doesn't really make a huge difference.
This is irrelevant. You sell your Jeep, it's irrelevant. Should you? Yeah, sell that thing.
But this is not going to move the needle for you at all. And think about it. You were about to
spend the next two months analyzing it. I don't know how to calculate
all this shit. And it's pointless.
What does this tell you, both of you?
That we're micromanaging.
Yeah.
I think it also says that...
I don't know. I think that was a pretty big, drastic change and our fixed costs
barely moved. Which tells you what?
That more and more little things like this aren't going to move the needle.
I could tell that was a challenge for you to put yourself in a different set of shoes,
but I appreciate you did that. I think the way I would articulate it would be, gosh, that really opened my eyes.
I thought that selling this car would be a huge thing. And now I realize what I thought was huge
is actually not even close. I need to make a lot bigger changes than I thought. The thing that felt enormous to you,
like having to move heaven and earth to emotionally reconceptualize this car,
it actually essentially makes no difference. And I don't know where to start, but I'm ready.
and I don't know where to start, but I'm ready.
Yep, that's how I feel.
Why do you think you've ended up here,
spending 98% of your income on fixed costs? What decisions have brought you here?
have brought you here?
I think the biggest decision would be to get a new house.
And then I had got a new job two months later,
having two dogs that have not been cheap,
which is an understatement. At one point, one of our dogs was taking eight pills a day
um and so we were spending hundreds of dollars a month on these dogs
and then also the decision to have three children
i think when we've articulated this with each other in the past that we have thought
it's going to be a lot now but we're always going to make more money as we get older.
And so knowing that we think we can afford it now,
but we should just keep making more money as we get older.
But you took a job that pays you less.
Yes.
I would be scared. And I deeply understand why you wake up and why you look at these things,
why you send these instant messages. From a IWT philosophy perspective, you shouldn't be doing
any of that. But realistically, day to day, I understand it. I would be feeling very
scared living on the edge. Christine, what do you think was behind the decision that led you here?
Like our dreams and like what we always imagined for our life and our family.
You know, just kind of like,
I always imagined that I would have three kids
and I, you know, always imagined
that we'd live in this nice house
in a nice neighborhood.
And so it was kind of, yeah,
just like what's wanting everything that I wanted
and wanting it right now.
That's honest. Thomas, do you agree with that?
Yeah, I would agree with that. And I think at the time when we were in our old house,
we weren't even looking to move.
But then looking at what the rates were when we
were talking to our financial advisor,
we were like, we just want to throw it out there
that we are thinking about maybe moving.
And he's like, if you're going to move in the next five years,
now's the time to move because the rates will never be what they were.
Okay, hold on. We have to do this.
I didn't want to have to do this.
Christine, do you want to just have this conversation?
That's a true story. No, Thomas, you don't know what's have to do this. Christine, do you want to just have this conversation? That's a true story.
No, Thomas, you don't know what's about to happen, but Christine does.
Christine, do you want to go ahead and just take control of the next two minutes of this conversation?
Go ahead.
About the whole situation and the financial advisor?
Yes. Just answer all the questions that you know I'm going to ask you. Go ahead.
So we hired this financial advisor several years ago when we were starting our family.
And at the time, we didn't know much about personal finances.
We had a checking and savings account and that was it.
Yeah, it was like a vulnerable feeling.
We're having kids and we feel like this is the right thing to do to like you know help get somebody to help manage our money did you did you hire a parenting advisor
when you had kids no that's weird just jumped right in huh yeah do you know the other questions questions I'm about to ask you? How much we're paying him? Yes. I want to say it's like,
I don't know exactly. I want to say it's like half a percent. What? It's not half a percent.
As I say, I think it's half a percent like quarterly.
That's more realistic. These motherfuckers, they it oh let me uh let me uh set the term
one-eighth uh of a year three-eighths it's like how's any human being supposed to calculate this
shit quarterly can you pull out the piece of paper that has the fees on it i know you have
it somewhere i actually i don't i would have to dig for it of all the numbers you have at your
fingertips this is the one number you don't have?
Honestly, I've been putting my blinders on to it.
Because?
Because it's kind of been my goal or something.
I'm like, I need to break up with him.
Oh, I'll do it right now.
I'm an expert at breaking up with financial advisors.
It's just like the awkwardness, I guess.
Do you feel awkward if somebody came in and robbed your house and you're like,
dear sir, could you please stop robbing us of all of our life's assets?
That would be awkward, right?
How about this guy charging you 2% per year?
2% per year means over 50% of their returns will go into his greasy little pocket. If you want
to learn the math, read my book. I'm not even going to get into it right now because I'm just
going to get too mad. But I do want to highlight how they got to this place. Did you hear it?
A lot of following the American dream. They wanted a big house, so they bought it. That's about the
level of rigor that most people put towards the biggest
purchase of their life. I'm not judging Christine and Thomas. This is actually extremely common.
What I am saying is it's no surprise that so many people feel trapped with money. So many people
feel like they can't afford to do the things that they claim they want to do, like go out for a nice dinner without worrying or take a weekend vacation. Why? Because they've made a series of episodic
one-time decisions like buying a car, then a house and trap themselves in what has become
the American nightmare. You're over here, like literally counting the dollars, using coupons, things like that. And you have this financial
advisor, you don't even know how much you're paying him. And it doesn't add up. You're not
actually concerned about costs. I think what you are more both concerned about is playing the game the way you have seen it being played.
And the way you both saw the game being played is you buy a house, you stay in it for a long time, you're frugal on a bunch of little stuff, whether it's the cans or the coupons or taking a road trip for vacation, and then life kind of works out.
Would that be fair?
Yeah, fair.
Very fair.
It's not even about the financial advisor.
We could fix that.
You're young.
You haven't paid that much in fees right now.
The fees really hit you later on in life.
So it's a totally recoverable decision.
No problem.
What do you think is the real issue here?
What we're focusing on? Yeah. And what is that?
Small everyday expenses and not things that will long-term set us up for where we want to be.
Yeah. Yeah. Christine, would you agree? Yeah. I agree with that. Can I tell you that I really hate this idea that managing money is making sure that bills are paid on time. It's playing small. Do you know, Christine,
that a computer can make sure bills are paid on time better than you ever can?
So why are you spending your valuable time, quote, managing money, tracking down a $15 check. It makes no sense.
I would rather have the two of you together manage your money by focusing on five really
important big things. Start there. Look, our fixed costs are way too high. We need to talk
about how to get that down below 60%. That is managing money. Our investments, we need to be investing at least X percent every single month.
And if we're not, we got a bigger problem.
We got to talk about that.
That is managing money.
The real wealth is created in a couple of areas.
One, designing your rich life.
I would love that to be part of managing money for the two of you.
And two, the nuts and bolts mechanics of personal finance involve these four critical numbers,
your fixed costs, your savings rate, your investment rate, and your guilt-free spending.
Get those right, and you shouldn't have to worry about the $15 check here and there.
What do you think, Christine?
I love that.
Where do we start, though?
I want somebody like you to come to our house and just tell us what to do.
Because I don't know where to even start.
You're not going to get that.
I know.
Can I tell you the real truth, Thomas, is you're going to have to engage with money.
This is one of the most important things in your life.
In fact, let's break it down.
What are the three important things in your life?
Family.
Yep.
Health.
Okay.
And livelihood. health. Okay. And
livelihood.
Okay.
Livelihood would be work,
money,
all those things.
Right.
Okay.
Great answer.
Christine,
what about you?
I would say
you know,
our kids
and
each other
and
experiences.
You know what's interesting?
I love your answers, first of all.
They're aligned.
They're a little different too, which is cool.
I like hearing all the similarities and differences.
But some of the things you mentioned are your top three things
are not actually represented in your spending at all.
So do you all see that the way that you've gotten here
is you've gone bottom up.
Whatever was put in front of you,
you were like, we want that.
Let's get that house.
Let's get that car.
Let's just do this.
But you forgot about also going top down,
which is let's start with our vision of a rich life.
What is important to us?
And let's actually give ourselves permission to
spend more there if we can afford it, but then we're going to have to cut on stuff that's not
important to us. Yeah. So can we do that exercise right now? Sure. All right. What is your rich life? If you were to describe it, let's go Christine first.
I would say my rich life is that we, I was thinking about this and kind of thinking of like,
I want to be able to spend like $50 to $80, like no questions asked. Like that's my conspiration money. Maybe I have to cut in here. Listening
to this after I spoke to them, I find that answer to be so sad. And I wish I had said something
at the time. Christine's rich life is being able to spend $80. No questions asked. Think about that
after all the work, all the worrying, all the decisions they've made,
that is her promised land? Surely there's got to be more to life than not worrying about $80.
That's like me saying my rich life is walking outside and not stepping on a nail. That's it?
That's all we're working for? What you see here with Christine is a series
of decisions that have forced her into thinking small, but she's been doing it for so long
that she doesn't even realize it. Let's continue. Some things like around our house that we,
that I would like, we, when we bought this house, it was a new build. So
like, we don't have landscaping and we don't have a fence. We'd have a swing set, like things like
that for, um, for our house would be something that I'd like to have. And then I'd like, if we
could go on, you know, one or two vacations a year, like if we could go on a family vacation
and then like a vacation with just Thomas and I
at least once a year
would be something that I...
It would be my rich life.
Fantastic.
All right, Thomas.
I would like to be a season ticket holder
at my favorite,
with the Iowa Hawkeyes.
All right, that's cool.
All those sound good.
I like that they are...
I can see your eyes light up when we talk about it.
Is there anything about...
Do you care about kids' college?
Do you care about retirement?
Does that fit in anywhere here?
Yes. I guess, yeah. That's true.
Yeah, I mean, I think kids' college
and having three girls,
knowing that weddings are a thing in the future as well, especially knowing our wedding, how much Christine's parents helped us out with that.
But yeah, college, weddings, and then not having to work until we're 68 years old as well.
I mean, we both want to retire.
Can I just tell you,
just so you know,
I'm the opposite.
If there's a hundred bucks missing,
I'm like, whatever,
who really gives a shit?
But I know every last decimal place
on my investments.
What's the difference?
The investments are much larger.
Yeah.
And long-term.
That's where we spend the time and attention.
That is way more important than $15,
$20 here or there.
Do you see why I'm emphasizing knowing certain,
focusing on certain things versus other things?
Yes.
Okay.
Makes all the difference.
Yep.
So
let me show you something.
Here's your investments right now.
You have $106,000.
Agreed?
Yep.
And how much do you invest every single year?
We haven't been for like the past year outside of our 401ks.
401ks are investments.
Yeah.
So whatever that is.
So if we do 600 a month.
600 a month?
Yeah.
So let's just say 7,000 bucks.
Fair?
Just want to clarify something.
401ks are retirement accounts where you invest money.
One odd peculiarity that I've learned with people is they literally do not consider 401ks to be part of their investments.
We have this mental bucket where a lot of people, they go, no, we don't invest, but oh yeah,
we also have this 401k thing that we contribute to. I'm like, that's an investment. There is this widespread
lack of basic knowledge about money. And it's no surprise that we feel worried when it comes to
money because most of us do not understand the basics. Let's just make it 8,000 because I don't
want to get a bunch of math people complaining. Years to grow. How many years until you want to retire, Christine?
22.
22, great.
And what should we assume for your return rate on your investments?
If you've read chapter six and seven of my book, you know this.
I haven't gotten that far, but I think it's 10%. Okay, yeah.
10% is a good nominal number minus inflation. We can assume roughly
7% to 8%. I like to say 7% just to be conservative. All right. How much is it going to be worth
your portfolio by the time you are 55? Guess. A million dollars.
A million dollars.
Christine?
I was going to say 1.5 million.
$892,000.
What?
Ouch.
Are you both disappointed?
Yeah.
Very.
All right.
What does that number mean to you?
We can't live.
We can't retire at that age.
Why?
How do you know?
I guess.
I'm going to sound so stupid, but everyone,
I mean, it just seems like you have to have over a million dollars to be able to retire comfortably.
Okay. This is a really important number. And it's one of those things that I want you to get savvier about because you can't just go the rest of your life mindlessly saving without knowing how much you need,
what type of lifestyle.
This is worth understanding deeply.
You spent more time looking up your Jeep than you did thinking about the number that is
actually going to determine the second half of your life.
So it's really important to engage on this.
That means you're going to have $35,000 a year to live on.
What do y'all think about that?
I mean, you would think like we wouldn't have, you know,
our household please paid off and other things like that,
but also paying for college and all those other things that are going to take
those spots. So I,
there'd be no way we could live off that.
Yeah.
There's no way that we could both live off of that.
We really need to focus on our future and,
and,
you know,
investing for our future.
our future and, and,
you know,
investing for our future.
The thing that matters the most is what are we investing in and what can we
do to make sure we have the most amount of money when we need it?
My concern is that it's very easy in America to just get on the conveyor
belt and go.
You wake up, you go, oh, that's what success looks like. I want that. I want that. And you
wake up one day and you blink your eyes and you say, how did we get here?
Yeah. And I think that's kind of what led us to where we're at with this conversation today.
All this is fixable, but you have some stories you tell yourself.
This is, we wanted this. We're not willing to give up this. Okay. I'm not here to tell you what you believe is right or wrong. I'm here to probe and interrogate your beliefs and say,
is that true? Do you really need three bedrooms, four bedrooms, whatever? Maybe. Five. Five. Five bedrooms on $130,000
income. I know you live in a low cost of living area, but that doesn't add up.
You have 98% of your income is going to fixed costs.
What are you hearing so far in this conversation that is different than what you have previously
talked about when it comes to money? For me, I think what I'm hearing is that we need to, um, kind of prioritize our investments,
um, and, and start there. I agree. I think our, our focus
of where it has been needs to change. You know, we've gone through Dave Ramsey.
We did every dollar where we tracked every thing we spent on.
We do YNAB now.
And I think we can keep those things,
but our focus has to be,
I think number one is a big mind change set for me to be involved.
is a big mind change set for me to be involved.
Let's figure out what we need to do together where we can prioritize and shift our focus
to not the little expenses,
but what can we do together
where we can break up with our financial advisor,
do it ourselves intelligently, and make sure
that we're putting our money in the right spots for us for the future without having
to drastically change our lifestyle, which we've kind of gone through and we can't really
do.
Wait a minute.
That would make a huge amount of difference.
Hold on. I'm concerned that you're taking away the wrong message.
Okay.
Yes, you need to prioritize investments. Yes. But it's very interesting to me that you've
suddenly both gotten super motivated about investments, seeing that $892,000 number.
That is a problem, but that's not your near-term problem. That's like you're driving and you see a wreck five miles down the road.
But guess what?
There's a truck swinging around the freeway right in front of you.
What is that truck?
Our fixed costs.
You still have this belief that we don't want to have to dramatically change our lifestyle.
You guys spend 98% of your take-home income on fixed costs.
Yeah.
I really have to be very candid with you.
There is no extra money to invest because every month you're currently losing money.
It's up to you how you want to proceed.
I'd love to walk through your fixed costs and actually talk about some options.
Yeah.
Sometimes it just helps to have a fresh set of eyes on this stuff.
Sure.
Okay.
This is probably going to be a little difficult to talk about.
And I don't generally, I don't come into conversations ever planning to be like,
no, no, no, no, no.
That's not my style and I don't want
to do that. What I do want is your participation in helping to create the kind of life that you
want. It's got to be your rich life together. Okay? All right. Let's look at the numbers.
All right. Let's look at the numbers. So we're in the conscious spending plan.
A good guideline is to get this number below 60%.
And I will say one thing. You have young children, sometimes, especially in these early few years,
it's okay to break the rules a little bit. You know, your savings rate might not be
what it needs to be later.
That's okay.
We can give yourself a little bit of grace.
And once the kids are in school,
you know, you can increase that number.
But 65%, okay.
98%, it just can't happen.
So how do you, I'd like to see the two of you have a discussion about this and I will observe where to start I mean we just really don't want to move. I mean, that story about downsizing
and everything,
I just don't think for either of us
that's something we want to do.
Don't talk to me. Talk to each other.
Yeah, I don't want to.
We love our house
and we want to be here forever.
Right?
Taking the house
out of it, I think that's where we need to start
since the house is off the table for some reason let me painfully illustrate what they are about to
do over the course of 30 minutes they attempt to adjust their truck payment, pay off the van, a loan repayment with
Christmas gift money, dog expenses to stay at 100, lowering their insurance costs, which is
managed by an advisor. By this point, by the way, we're at 84% on fixed costs. They then continue
on to cut $100 eating out, cheaper phones, drop Amazon Prime, cut swimming lessons, cut gymnastics.
eating out, cheaper phones, drop Amazon Prime, cut swimming lessons, cut gymnastics.
And now we are at 83%. All right. So what did we start the fixed cost number at when we started this analysis? 98. Okay. What is it now? 83%. All right. How do you feel about that?
Part of this exercise is, as we keep making smaller changes like this,
we started two hours ago at 98.
That's a pretty big jump.
I mean, there's a lot of work to get to that that we have to do, but...
Yeah.
Isn't that the right track?
It's good.
What do you say when your oldest brings home
a C- or something?
Do they even grade kids that young?
I don't know.
No.
What if you were my parents and I brought
home a C plus? Just look at the skin color.
Unacceptable.
We came to this country with $10 in our pocket
and you can't even get a fucking A plus?
Okay, so I'm not going to say that
to you, but I am going to say, look,
I think you could do better.
Utilities is also
higher, one of our higher
ones. Time to get a blanket.
And we also
have DirecTV,
which is
over $100 a month.
See, I don't
feel that bad about DirecTV. I know it's an
expense, but
I'm pretty proud of the way that I've every year called them
and said, I'm going to cancel.
And I don't think $100 is that bad when you think about if we're going to supplement that
with all these different subscriptions that are going to equal $100.
I think if you were making $500,000 a year, I wouldn't even be having this conversation.
Yeah.
But you two are living above your means.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Have you ever acknowledged that to each other?
No.
I don't think so.
Not in terms, at least, of these assets.
Yeah.
Well, every month you like these assets. Yeah. Well,
every month you're losing money.
Yeah.
You tell me when you want me to give feedback, cause I'm not here to just puncture holes in what you're doing.
That's not my role.
You know,
the direct TV,
we've talked about that before too.
I mean, that's, I mean, that's just I mean that's going back down
getting into the little things again
like we just talked about so I don't know
where we should go because
I think all the rest of the conversations
when we go down the list are all
these smaller things
right? somebody please ask me for my opinion these smaller things.
Right?
Somebody please ask me for my opinion.
I'm fucking done.
We want your opinion.
Yeah.
Okay.
Thank God.
I feel like I'm going to explode.
Okay, listen.
Yes, you need to be focusing on the big things, but when you encounter something that is small,
this is how you do it.
You need to be a lot more decisive.
I feel like we're so slow. Everything's moseying along. I'm like, fuck, we have a lot of urgency
here. You have three young kids. You're in your 30s. You either correct this or you spend the
rest of your life treading water. That sucks. So $100 for direct TV, I go, question number one,
is this part of my rich life? No? Gone.
Done. What's next?
That's the tenor I want to get, this cadence.
We've got to pick up the pace here.
All right, that's just my opinion.
Now you decide what you want to do with it.
Will you just do that for every line for us?
I did something better.
I just taught you how to do it.
How are we going to get it down to 60 though?
That's a great question.
Can we play with something for a second?
The beauty of having this on the conscious spending plan is we can just
delete something and see what happens and then put it right back.
So what is a very, very expensive thing on your fixed costs? A mortgage. Okay. Let's just
zero that thing out. Pretend that you have no payment. I don't know. Who cares? It's just a
model. Zero it out and see what happens. Okay. What just happened? Our fixed costs went down to 55%. From what to what?
83.
From 83 to 55% is what just happened.
In other words, all those changes you just spent the last half an hour agonizing over
were exceeded by one decision.
What does that tell you?
I focus on the big things.
And the fact is you're losing money every single month.
Somebody like me, a third-party observer with a clipboard,
needs to see something dramatic changing in your life.
Otherwise, you will be stuck here for the rest of your lives.
So you can put the number back on your mortgage.
It's up to you. But what would you like to do to make a bigger change
i don't know the answer to that
these ones make everybody uncomfortable don't they to talk about this
yes They make everybody uncomfortable, don't they, to talk about this? Yes.
And yet it is really the only thing that actually matters.
The point of this discussion is not to just arbitrarily get to 60%. Trust me, a day from now, neither of you are going to be motivated by some arbitrary number called 60%.
The point of this is for you to define your rich life, which you told me was family, was experiences, was health, etc., and to match up your spending into that vision.
and to match up your spending into that vision.
Even though you have made progress,
you are still approaching it with like a tiny 0.3 millimeter pencil. And you need to have a gigantic, gigantic pen,
broad stroke to make big changes.
One of the first things you said to me
when you spoke to my colleague was, we don't want to change our lifestyle too much.
And we're still there. You don't have to. It's your lifestyle. You will keep paying your mortgage.
You will send your kids to school, all that stuff.
It's fine.
But invisibly, you will be slowly getting pulled underwater.
And you will increasingly fight.
You will increasingly be stressed out with little issues that come up.
And you will continue to make arbitrary, episodic decisions about buying a chair
or a bed frame or taking a trip. And what will become bigger and bigger in your relationship
will be money. Let me jump right into the follow-ups because they are fascinating.
Christine said, I have been reflecting a lot on my mindset towards money
and our budget since our call. One thing that is really sticking out to me is that for years,
I've been focusing on small details, which put me in a vicious cycle of frequently checking
account balances and strictly tracking our spending, which has caused worry, stress,
and lost sleep. I learned that the real impact for our money happens at the 10,000 foot level.
Thomas and I now have a plan to improve our greater areas of spend. Our call also helped
Thomas and I to start handling our finances as a team. We have a short-term and longer-term
action plan that we both agreed to. I feel much less alone and am motivated to succeed
as a team with Thomas. And Thomas said, we understand that we are focusing too much on the
small details and not the larger picture. We also took to heart each other's feelings and thoughts
toward how we approach money. We've set goals. I am going to give up the Jeep, sad face, but we
both understand we are living above our means and willing to make sacrifices. They also updated
their plan together. And here are some of the decisions they made to reduce their fixed costs.
They also updated their plan together.
And here are some of the decisions they made to reduce their fixed costs.
In the next 30 days, separate from current financial advisor and shop out insurance,
cancel DirecTV, cancel gymnastics, look for cheap car options, begin process to sell Jeep,
cut a hundred bucks from monthly groceries.
And they continue on, get a raise, get a side job and not look at accounts each day. Their goal is within a year,
60 to 65% on fixed costs. Now here's an even more recent update. I actually heard from Christine
and Thomas a few weeks later, and this is what they said. Since our last update, we have sold
the Jeep and purchased a less expensive vehicle for Thomas, which reduced our car payment by $200
per month. We canceled our daughter gymnastics class, have reduced our car payment by $200 per month. We canceled our
daughter gymnastics class, have reduced our grocery spending and got the PMI removed from
our mortgage. Ryan got his annual 4% raise and I adjusted my tax deductions, which increased my
take-home pay. These changes have reduced our fixed costs from 97% to 80% of our income.
We still have a ways to go and we are very proud of the progress we have made so far.
We have weekly budget meetings and I've gotten proud of the progress we have made so far. We have weekly budget meetings
and I've gotten out of the habit
of checking our accounts first thing in the morning
or even daily.
I feel like we are partners
and more equally share the responsibility
of managing and being aware of our finances.
We've both been listening to recent IWT podcast episodes too
and it has been fun to have those as a topic of discussion.
You have made a big impact on us
and we really appreciate it.
Well, I'm thankful to both of them for coming on this episode, for having this conversation with me
and for you for listening. I'd like to encourage you with a couple of things that you can do now.
If you listened to this episode and you heard something that struck you, that you feel the
same way you're thinking too small.
You can take control of your money. First, you can do it on your own. Get my book, get it from the library or any bookstore. I will teach you to be rich. Pair it with the journal and you solo,
or you and your partner can sit down and design your rich life and use your money to live it.
Second, if you want help to actually do this faster and adapt it to your life,
get in my money coaching program,
iwt.com slash money coaching.
I'd love to see you.
We have hundreds of other people
who are sharing their wins and can help guide you.
And then I'm there as well,
every single month doing live Q&A.
Thank you for listening and I'll see you next week.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
I'm Ramit Sethi.
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.