I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 87. “We’re in $400,000 of debt, but we can’t say no to our kids”
Episode Date: March 21, 2023Kenna and Ryan are 36 and 45. Up until recently, Ryan worked and Kenna stayed home with their kids. Now, with that earning dynamic flipped, they’re facing new challenges with how they spend and save...—especially when it comes to their children. This episode is brought to you by: LMNT | LMNT is offering my listeners a free sample pack with any purchase, that’s 8 single serving packets FREE with any LMNT order. Get yours at DrinkLMNT.com/ramit. Sakara | And right now, Sakara is offering our listeners 20% off their first order when they go to Sakara.com/RAMIT or enter code RAMIT at checkout. Rocket Money | Stop throwing your money away. Cancel unwanted subscriptions – and manage your expenses the easy way – by going to RocketMoney.com/ramit. Links mentioned in this episode • Get Money Coaching with Ramit • Get my New York Times best-selling book Connect with Ramit • Download the Conscious Spending Plan • Get my no-numbers journal • Other episodes • Instagram • Twitter • YouTube If you and your partner have a money issue and you want my help, I occasionally select a couple to work with, free of charge. Apply for my help here. Produced by Crate Media.
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I lived in a very conflicting house, money to grow on trees and also
can't take it to the grave with you. So if you have it, you may as well spend it.
I just thought I was gonna be smarter than my mom, that I was gonna do it better than her,
that I had read the book or listened to the CD
and that it was gonna be different.
But you only have $50 in savings now.
Yeah, I'm a frivolous expender.
I will just buy stuff.
I'll break my facts about my kids whatever they need.
Because what does it mean to you?
Everything.
It means that I'm providing for them.
It means that I'm not going to hit rock bottom.
Like I'm not going to fail.
I'm going to do whatever I have to do.
Like how could you not grind so hard to get what you can for your kids?
It's just like, it's just so annoying that we even allow ourselves to get into this position.
Meet Kenna and Ryan.
Kenna's 36, Ryan is 45.
They have two young daughters and recently bought a house in the Denver area.
Now they have an interesting money dynamic that recently flipped.
Ryan used to work a long hours while Kenneth stayed home with the kids. Now after getting
her degree, Kenneth is working, making about the same wage, and Ryan stays home. The problem
is their numbers don't add up, and they have some serious money beliefs that are left over
from their childhood. Today's episode is about
money stories, and you're going to hear exactly what I mean. I'd like to encourage you to
watch this on YouTube where you can see the full episode including their facial expressions
and their reactions to some of my questions. It's quite illuminating. I'm Ramid Saiti,
and this is I will teach you to be rich. So who wants to go first and tell
me the way that you view money in a sentence or two? It's just a way for me to have fun
while I'm living my life. And I feel like I will never have enough.
For anything. They seem kind of opposite don't they? Oh yeah. When did you
discover that you had different views of money? Very early on, very early on. Like I said,
well you were managing the finances prior to us even getting engaged, you know, because I'm a
sloppy spender. And what was the last time the two of you had a specific disagreement about money?
Can you remember that? I mean all the time like Christmas time she wants to have a budget like
$200 hard for each child and I'm like well what if I see something that I want to get them and
we've already spent the $200 like I should be able to go get that for them if I want. You know like
$200, I should be able to go get that for them if I want. You know, I'm a frivolous spender.
What does frivolous mean?
I would just buy stuff, just to buy it.
Like, whatever, disc golf stuff, I already have everything I need for disc golf, everything
you could ever want, and I'll buy other stuff, and then it just sits around, I don't use
it, but I have it, you know?
Okay.
And like with that Christmas example, 200 bucks per child,
what ended up happening?
We went over the budget.
Ryan always wins.
I have a hard time telling him no.
And so I'll say because he did work so hard
for so long that I didn't feel that it was okay for me
to say you're working 60 plus hours a week
but no, you can't spend $50 on disc golf
or $50 on Christmas.
What was the budget for Christmas this year?
Well, I would say this last year, $200 per kid
and then Ryan and I didn't really get anything for each other just because we did overspend on the children
Okay, and so it was 200 bucks per kid. How many kids?
We have two kids. Okay, and so 400 bucks was the budget. How much did you end up spending?
I would say close to 600
Okay, okay But that was keep in, like we had budgets for ourselves as well, you know, for me,
for her and for her, for I, and we dipped into that and took away from our budget to make
to make that extra for the kids.
How do the kids?
Seven and four.
He used to work.
I was just here at home mom for six years. I've managed the finances ever since we've combined finances when we got married.
And I prior to getting married.
Yeah, even prior to getting married.
I've been out of the loop on the finances for a long time. I was just working just making the money and kind of was handling everything.
Let's walk through that step by step. So you were both earning incomes back then,
early on in your marriage,
and how long were you married before you had your first?
Three years.
Three years. Okay.
And how much were you both making collectively
in those first three years?
70,000 maybe.
All right, so you're making 70K,
seems like you could afford to go out and eat out and have fun,000 maybe. All right, so you're making 70K, seems like you could afford to go out and eat out
and have fun fair enough.
Yeah.
Okay, so you got pregnant.
When did you have a conversation,
if at all, that, ooh, we might need to change the way
that we manage our money?
I don't feel like we did. Yeah. I don't feel like we did.
Yeah, I don't feel like we did either.
I feel like she just took the reins.
Okay.
It didn't need to be said.
Like, we had planned for one of us to stay home with a child.
So we knew that was obviously going to chop one of our incomes right off the top.
Okay.
So we went with who was making more money at the time.
And that was me, you know, simple.
And she stayed home.
And the decision about one was going to stay home.
Was that a financial decision or another reason?
We didn't have children for other people to raise them.
Notice how quickly that response rolled off Ryan's tongue.
Almost like he said it a million times before.
File that clue away.
Okay, got it. Got it. All right.
So you're at home at this point, Kenna, with your first born,
and you're also managing the money.
And when did you start to realize that you needed to tighten things up?
Immediately. So at the time, we lived in a different city, much lower cost of living,
moved to a higher cost of living area when our daughter was almost one and once we moved here,
it was like we were going paycheck to paycheck, our house payment almost doubled. So yeah, it was pretty about a year in.
Did you own or rent? So when we lived in the low cost of living area, we were renting and then
bought when we moved to high cost of living. Okay, got it. And what was the reasoning behind the buying?
Because a mortgage was cheaper than rent. Really? Yeah. What's the general vicinity of
where you're living? Denver. Denver. Okay, got it. All right. And still to this day, the cost,
I mean, the cost of our mortgage is much cheaper than what we would rent our house for. Really?
Break it down for me because I already have your mortgage here is $2073 a month.
What would you rent it for?
25, 26, 27.
Okay.
All right.
Now, when I factor in utilities,
it's $2073 plus $373.
So that's like $2400 right there. Yeah. Do that's like 2400 right there.
Yeah.
Do you see what just happened there?
They made the biggest financial decision of their lives, and they doubled their expenses.
Why?
Because they believed it would be cheaper to buy rather than to rent.
But in 10 seconds, I just ran some basic numbers with them.
It happened so quickly, I don't even think they realized it.
So let's just pause and go through those numbers again.
For them to rent, it would cost about $2,500.
Their mortgage is $2,073.
So they still believe they're saving money, even though they doubled their previous housing
expenses.
This is basically how most people think.
They look at the sticker price
and they go, well, it would cost more to rent, therefore we are saving money. But once
we factor in the utilities that they pay every month, their total housing costs or TCO
total cost of ownership is $2,400. That's just $100 less than renting. Again, if you have
a simple view of money, you go, see, it's cheaper to own, but let's go deeper.
What about all the phantom costs,
including tax and interest on their loan?
What about maintenance, including random light bulbs
and a roof repair nine years from now
and even the value of their labor?
If you factor in all those things,
it is more expensive for them to own than to rent,
but they don't know that. You have to remember this phrase, rent is the maximum you will pay,
and your mortgage is the minimum you will pay. Okay? The real clue here, besides even the housing,
is that canna and ryan live their lives by telling themselves simple stories.
Sometimes those stories might be true, other times they are obviously false, but without
actually digging deeper into these simple stories, they will be unequipped to understand a
very complex world.
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So you got this place in Denver, you bought it, and you realized that your housing costs
and everything else went up.
So Ken, there you are at home with the baby managing the money.
The weeks that we were sure we would get behind, because we don't, we didn't, at that
time we didn't have very much savings at all. And then on the weeks that we would get ahead,
I, we would just spend all the money
that we were ahead instead of saving it.
Okay, got it.
And what would you tell yourselves at the time?
What was the story you told yourselves?
That you can't take it to the grave with you.
It means that you spend it.
Who said that you?
Or you write?
That's like the, the the one I heard growing up.
What a shot.
Yeah, I lived in a very conflicting house.
Money didn't grow on trees and also,
you can't take it to the grave with you.
So if you have it, you may as well spend it.
Lower middle class?
Yeah, I wouldn't even say middle.
I would just say lower class.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Tell me about it.
Was it two parents or one parent?
So two parents up until I was 12, my dad passed when I was 12, but my mom was at stay at home mom that whole time. My dad worked construction. He worked construction. Okay, and so he worked.
What do you remember about the rituals of money in your household? So there, I never remember any
positive discussions about money. There were lots of fights about money.
And I remember anytime I would ask for anything,
it always seemed like, they said no.
So I started working when I was 14
so that nobody could tell me no.
Like, how do you even ask?
That's not the type of people we are.
Pretty much.
What else do you remember about the rituals of money growing up?
So I remember lots of past due notices getting sent to our house. I remember cars being repossessed.
Barrowing, you know, having to call family and friends to borrow money.
I'm on asking me to borrow money like once I started working.
Wow.
Okay.
And how do you feel about money between,
let's say, being a young child and 16, 18 years old?
How were you feeling about it?
So when I was really young, it wasn't fair.
I was a jealous of my friends who got to go do things,
who got, you know, new pair of sneakers
like in the middle of the school year.
There was a lot of jealous was a lot of jealousy.
And then once I was able to work for myself,
I wanted more money.
You know, I wanted to just work as much as I could
because I wanted more money and also,
because I just didn't want to be at home.
Yeah.
And you mentioned that your dad passed away when you were young.
Yeah.
What effects did dad have on your relationship with money?
I don't really know because my mom kind of went into hiding,
I guess, I had to have a younger brother and sister
and so I kind of had to step up and like do laundry
and feed them dinner and make sure
that they were up and ready for school.
My mom didn't start working immediately after.
I don't know.
I don't think it changed it.
I definitely didn't have any more positive feelings
about money after he passed.
But how did your family make do once your dad who was the primary earner passed away?
So she collected his social security.
And when she ended up going back to work, what were her feelings about having to go work?
I don't think she was happy.
You remember her saying anything?
No, not at the top of my head.
She didn't start working again until after I was already
out of the house.
Did your parents ever talk to you about investing?
No.
Saving?
Nope.
Um, choosing a partner like the role of finances in your relationships?
Nope.
Okay. Okay.
My mom doesn't even have a, um, a checking account.
She doesn't have a checking account or a savings account.
She caches all of her checks that King Super's still.
Still. Wow.
Have you told her that you listened to this show?
Also, well, unfortunately, her, we haven't spoken for like about two years, but I got it.
Okay, got it, got it.
Yeah.
Okay.
Wow.
All right.
So did you know that Ryan?
Yes.
Maybe not before like we got really into the thickest thing.
Yeah, that's not first date conversation.
You know, hey, the cars got reposed.
Anyway, what do you want to have for a drink?
Like, oh, by the way, can we keep going to your house, please?
You can order while drinks.
That's how I drink it.
Well, Kenna, it's really interesting what you said.
Something really subtle, you know,
that you felt jealous of your friends
who got shoes in the middle of the year.
That is very subtle.
That the idea that if you're ever gonna get new shoes,
which by the way happens maybe once every four years,
when you absolutely need them,
it's only gonna be at the beginning of the year.
And you better make sure those shoes stay.
Yeah.
That's life for a lot of people. And if you grew up where your
mom or dad was like, all right, your shoes look like they got a little thing on them. Let's go get
something new. Doesn't matter what date is that or matter what month it is. You're just like,
what does that mean? Yeah. So I appreciate you sharing that. Yeah. Ryan, think back to when you
were a kid, what what do you think back to when you were a kid.
What do you remember about money growing up as a kid?
Like now that I'm older and looking back,
I have a different view on it,
but it was definitely acting like we have money.
And you know, like maybe the nice house,
but you know, not able to go do things.
So it was like a lot of like fakeness in association
with money for me, like watching
my mom and her husband. Go ahead. Your parents were divorced early on?
Oh yeah, I never knew my dad. He was just not in the picture until I was already what, 36 years old.
Okay. And so it was just my mom, single mom. And then she got remarried when I was five and had my brother and sister.
And then he was the primary money maker. She was stay at home mom. And like I said, they
always acted like they never talked about money. I never heard them talk about money. They
never talk to us about money. I never, they struggled. I never knew it. But now looking back, it was like a lot of false fronts.
Like what?
Like the nicer car and the nicer cornered lot house
that they were overpaying on rent for
so that they could look like they had money,
because that was a big deal from my mom to,
she's like, she wants to be rich.
But she hasn't wealthy money wise.
So how do you know that?
The way she carried herself though,
like always like above, like always pretending,
like, you know, like it's no problem.
Like I could buy the Rolex, you know,
or this, you know, or this car is paid for,
or whatever the case may be.
But like the real version is what we're feeling
living in the house with her
and not having food in our refrigerator
and not having cable TV because we couldn't afford the bill.
And then, you know, it's just,
like I said, there was a lot of a fakeness associated.
Like, yeah.
Just play pretend.
Like I only saw the struggle once they got divorced
and we had to move back in with my grandmother. Oh, when did that happen? What age were you? Oh, man, my
sister was. I was probably 12. Okay, so at 12 they get divorced. And you have to
move in with your grandmother, your mom's mother. And how did money start to
play a role in your life then?
Well, I saw my mom not making money and just kind of kicking back.
And, you know, I quickly realized my grandma was paying for all of her groceries,
paying for her school clothes, buying us her Christmas presents.
And my mom was just kind of kicking back.
And I was just kind of like like I can't not have money like I can't be a bomb like that
like and just live off somebody else and let them just pay for everything and not even feel
remotely guilty so at a young age I was I had a paper out you know I wanted to pay our
air Jordans my mom told me no I got a paper out I bought myself air Jordans. What'd you make on that paper route? Oh my goodness
It may be like 13 blocks every two weeks. Okay. All right for what were you like 12 13 years old? Yeah, yeah
Right, that's a lot of money. Yeah, it was all right. It was all right to think that the think back on it
It's just kind of crazy. Yeah
How come I mean 12 years old and you're like,
I'm gonna go get this for myself.
Like, you won't tell me.
You know?
But then that, I feel like that encouraged a bunch
of bad habits because I was like,
I'm gonna get this money and I'm gonna spend it
on whatever I wanna spend it on.
And if I don't have money on Thursday
and I have to wait till Friday to get paid,
then that's just what it is.
You know, and that kind of built up some bad habits.
So.
When you think about going back to that 12 and 13 year old, and I see you get emotional,
what is it that you're feeling thinking about your young self?
Just like, what a...
How can my mom like fail me like that?
Like how could you not grind so hard
to get what you can for your kids?
Like, and then you're cool just taking back
and watching your kid go out there and do that.
You know, like I'll break my back
to buy my kids whatever they need.
Because what does it mean to you?
Everything.
It means that I'm providing for them.
It means that I'm not going to hit rock bottom.
Like, I'm not going to fail.
I'm going to do whatever I have to do.
You know, and that stems from me not having, and me having to do for myself, and I want
my kids to learn the value of doing stuff for themselves, and working hard and earning
things, but I'm not going to, I'm going to tell them to be a kid.
They don't have to work right now when your 12 years old, your dad's got you.
Okay.
Yeah, sorry. No need to apologize at all. I don't I haven't
talked to my mom in probably six years just because of all of the traumas that I've had
growing up and that I've been working through lately. When do you ever get to hear someone
being so honest about their upbringing? You start listening to Ken and Ryan and I think
it's easy to be annoyed at first. Oh, boohoo, you overspent.
Just stop it.
But as you listen to their background, if you're really honest, I think you admit that
you have no idea how you would react if you grew up that way.
For example, Ryan grew up in a divorced household, and the lack of money played a huge role
in his upbringing.
And now he's estranged from his mom.
I may not agree with his spending habits, but I can totally understand how he got here.
And notice the simplicity of the story he's created for himself.
He literally tells himself, my mom didn't grind.
I'm going to grind for my kids because if I give them everything, it means I love them.
On the surface, it's a logically coherent story, but if you dig
into even one layer it all starts to fall apart. What do you think you brought from your childhood
into this relationship as it relates to money? So I feel like I definitely brought motivation
So I feel like I definitely brought motivation to earn money and to not ever be in a position where our lights are getting shut off or our cars are getting repossessed and also an unrealistic
and unrealistic expectation that everything was just going to be easy.
Because it wasn't easy for you growing up.
It wasn't and I guess I thought because we were both.
I mean when we were both working at one point so that that was it seemed like our finances were
very easy then. I guess I just thought I was going to be smarter than my mom that I was going
to do it better than her that I had you, read the book or listen to the CD and that
it was going to be different.
Okay.
Is it different for you right now?
It is because I've never gotten a shut off notice or our cars repossessed and we have
we carry car insurance and the things that, you know, our license plates are up to date and all of those things that you do to be legal.
But I don't think that the mindset has changed much.
I thought that I would have like a half a million dollars
in retirement.
I thought that we would be now being our forever home,
that it would be easy for one of us to not work.
Right now, one of us doesn't work,
but Ryan still has to work part time.
It's not the luxury of just being able to stay home
and just be a full time stay at home, Dad.
Okay.
So you thought you would have more money,
more stability, what else?
More vacations, the ability to put our kids in after school programs or dance or
not have to be quite so selective about what extracurricular activities they do.
If we need a new dresser, being able to just go buy it instead of having
to like save for a month to go buy something for, you know, a couple hundred dollars or
being able to just not have to look at my bank account every single day.
Yeah.
Okay.
Amen to that.
Ryan, what'd you bring from your upbringing horrible spending habits?
Uh-huh, and that started around age 12 13 for you. Yeah. Yeah, and I like I didn't really like
lack of caring towards money
Wait, how can
I care about money to have stuff, but I don't care about enough about money to that or when I was young in my 20s and 30s
I didn't care enough about money to be wanting to aggressively put into a 401k like I cared more about material things and
You know, I didn't care if
I had to put something on a credit card because I didn't have all the cash for it. I don't mind
That's most kids all right look on a credit card because I didn't have all the cash for it. I don't mind.
That's most kids.
All right.
Look, I know I'm supposed to be uplifting and stuff, but like most kids are stupid when
it comes to money.
They don't know anything.
Okay.
So if some 18 year old comes to me and they're feeling all down because they spend all their
money on whatever it is 18 year old spend money on in app purchases or whatever mine
field, whatever that don't write me I don't
want anyone writing me about these stupid kids games that I don't know I don't have an 18
year old I don't know anything about 18 year olds anymore but I don't blame them now I will
say you are 45 yeah maybe it's time for us to make a change what do you say come a long way we've
been together what 13 years. Yeah.
And so I think we're both finally just done fighting and want to create a solid plan that
we can just move forward with.
I was just kind of like, I'm over here working and all shut up and go work 60, 70 hours
a week and do what I have to do. And you just take care of everything. Let me know if I can spend some money, you know?
I'd be like, I want to go out with my boys, I need $100.
This is a classic way of thinking for people who grew up without money.
The idea is, I'm just going to grind, and if we're struggling,
I'll just grind harder.
I will figure it out.
The idea of long-term planning is conceptualized totally differently if you
grew up middle class or wealthy. As people who grew up poor try to replicate that idea of grinding.
They often discover it's limitations. Here's an excerpt from a book I love called The Power of the
Past by Jesse Strybe. She writes, in general, those who were born into professional white collar families
had sensibilities that I call managerial. They preferred to plan, deliberate, mull over,
and organize their resources, their children, and their daily lives.
Their partners with blue collar roots typically had different sensibilities, those that I call laissez-faire.
They prefer to feel free from self-constraint.
Rather than wanting to analyze, plan, or meticulously organize their lives, they prefer to go with
the flow and live in the moment.
These differences played out across multiple domains in their lives.
Now, this book has a lot of complex ideas.
Some you may agree with, some you may
disagree with. But you will see these differences coming up time and time again across different
couples that I speak to. There are a couple things that drive me insane. One, when I post a
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R-A-M-I-T.
Now that our role's a reverse, and I'm going to stay at home, mom, I feel like I need
to take some of that burden off of her.
I can't just be like, make the dinner menu, a budget for the groceries, make sure all of
our credit cards are paid on time.
I felt like she didn't ask me to do that when I was working and bringing in all the money,
so I shouldn't be asking her to do that while she's working and bringing in all the money. So I shouldn't be asking her to do that while she's working and bringing in all the money.
Why not now?
I mean, we've done enough damage already.
We've racked up a credit card, sold a condo, used the proceeds to pay that off, only to
rack up another credit card over frivolous spending.
So that aspect needs to go, and there's some changes that need to be made.
So I think it's only fair.
So how does money come up in your relationship?
Who talks about it?
Kenna brings it up to me.
As often as she can, as often as she thinks
she can get away with before I get a little bit fed up.
Money has always been a topic that I want to talk about
and that I want to be working on as a team,
and I don't bring it up in the right way.
I'm not inspiring Ryan to want to help,
because I always focus on the negatives,
like how we're short, or these are all of our debt payments.
Ken, how often do you bring it up?
Probably at least four times a week.
So I've been reading your book.
I'm reading it the second time.
Yes, we are finally trying to automate our money.
So Ryan is doing some side work.
And so we have finally committed to his side work money
going into his personal bank account
and that he is going to,
that all of the credit card bills are going to automatically be paid out of his bank account.
Okay.
And that I am going to, you know, the my paycheck, a portion of my paycheck is going to
go into a checking account that we will pair mortgage out of, a portion of that paycheck
is going into a high old savings account, which we just opened three weeks ago.
And then the rest of it, like I'll pay our utilities with.
Okay.
So this is the most like automation we've ever had.
Usually all the checks just went into our joint account
and we paid the money, used it for fund money.
You know, we paid everything.
I just got one question for you.
How fucking good does that automation feel?
I was telling Ryan it, it's awesome. It finally feels like, well, because we're doing it together,
I feel like because the credit cards are finally coming out of his account, he has, he's invested.
He has to like, now he knows when the credit card bills are due. And before, he never,
I couldn't tell you. Yeah yeah you didn't know the login
information January is the first month that the credit card bills are coming
out of Ryan's account and so far it's been it's been awesome good Ryan how does
that change feel to you it makes me feel more involved it makes me feel like I
have a stake in the game you know where I didn't before if you spend more than an
hour per month on your money, you are almost certainly wasting
time.
You can DIY the automation yourself, get my book, I will teach you to be rich, I'll put
a link in the show notes, or if you want my help, join my money coaching program.
I will answer your questions on our monthly call.
You can get a link in the show notes and you can join for our next call. So I understand that Ryan, you were working.
Hannah, you were a stay at home mom and then this flipped.
When did that happen and why?
It happened in January of 2022 because Ryan's job was really overworking him. And there were every day where he would leave
before the girls would even wake up.
And then most days he was getting home after they had already
been up to bed.
And it was really taxing on his physical health,
his mental health.
And mental health.
Yeah, mental health.
And so in 2017, I started a degree,
bachelor's degree program.
And so when I graduated, we knew that that was gonna be,
you know, the plan that once I got my degree,
hopefully I'd be able to match his earnings, you know,
60, 60 hour a week earnings,
and then he would get to stay home.
And were you able to do that?
So, in theory, yes, but it, it,
it wasn't enough. Uh, how much were you making at the time, right? Um, 70. Okay. Maybe a
little more. Okay. And kind of how much do you make now? Well, now I make 70, but when
I took the first job that I took after college, it was 56.
Oh, wow. So you started making 56. Ryan, you said, okay, I'm going to be the stay-at-home dad now.
And how did you make that work? You know, the $14,000 difference.
Well, Ryan worked.
I got a part, I just got like a brainless part time job, just took a siloetate, that little bit of extra money.
Wow, okay, that's cool.
You two are working as a team.
It wasn't enough.
It wasn't enough, but there was no issue
with one person working, one not, et cetera, et cetera.
No, like I said early on, like we didn't have our children
for someone else to raise them.
So it's super important that our values are the ones
that they're, they're're main getting main, you know
Yeah, their main course meals from I guess. Okay, great. All right. I get it. So right now
Cana you make 70? Yeah, and Ryan. Do you work a part-time job now?
Yeah, I just do Amazon deliveries. Okay. How much do you make?
Just maybe like 1200 a month
1200 a month. Yeah, that's it and that's just
Enough to pay all of our credit cards are personal loan and fuel my car for the
For the deliveries do you plan to continue this arrangement going forward?
Yeah Do you plan to continue this arrangement going forward? Yeah.
I would eventually, I mean, I don't, I'm a very goal focused and eager person.
And so I don't plan on staying at $70,000, not even till the end of the year.
So hopefully, you know, we're hoping to get to a point where I, you know, I met under
a hundred, just over a hundred, and then Ryan can just work at like a fun job.
He won't feel so.
And also once we get these credit cards paid off, that's like our main focus right now
is just one by one, not going to m moth and then as those get it off and shut
down, we can not have to work as much. Essentially, it's a sheep won't have to work as much.
And then our relationship is totally predicated on like, oh, when this happens, then we'll be able
to do this and then, but then that thing happens and we're just waiting for the next thing to happen.
And also sometimes when it happens,
it doesn't work out the way you thought, right?
You mentioned you sold this condo,
you paid off the debt and now it's back.
Are you worried about that happening again?
No.
Oh, okay, you're not.
Can I are you?
I am.
Well, I told him just two days ago that we should cut the credit cards as they're being paid
off and he said, well, we don't have to do that.
I guess when I have that conversation right now, I'd love to hear it.
I think they need to be cut.
I think they need to be cut.
I think most of them need to be closed.
Yeah, I agree with most of them being to be closed.
And I'm about to understand like the, the ceremony is active cutting them.
And like that doesn't tell me anything for me.
What do you do for your seven and your four year old?
Is that two daughters?
Yes.
What do you do on their birthdays?
Little birthday party.
Cake, candles, presents.
What's with all those dumb ceremonies?
Why would you do that?
Well, I mean, I've heard there's a little more ceremony
than cutting a credit card to me at least.
What are you talking about?
How much do you have on your credit card?
Which one?
Yeah, which one?
All of them together.
30,000.
That's a lot of money.
Dude, no shit.
So can we create a ceremony around that?
100%.
All right, awesome.
You know what, let me put it this way.
I learned a little secret from my wife.
You can create as many ceremonies as you want.
Nobody stops us as adults.
You could create a ceremony every Monday.
But for the big things, it's like, we got to do this.
Yeah, I agree.
I don't even think I have to pay them off.
Can we just cut them all up right now?
I mean, yeah, I don't.
It's not like keeping them.
Isn't like some super ceremonial thing for me either.
It's like, you guys either way.
You guys want to do it right now?
I'm good either way.
Should we do it right now?
I can go get them right now.
Yeah, get them.
This is so big. This is huge. Is it? Huge. Okay. How many are there? Two?
Uh, five. All right. So where's the scissors? No, we have a shredder. Oh, well, I need to see it
happen. Yeah, Canada will show you. It's the right underneath there. It's that underneath. I'll walk
these down to right now. Yeah, yeah. Hold the camera up. Yeah, Canada will show you. It's the right underneath or it's that underneath. I'll walk these down to earth right now.
Yeah, yeah.
Hold the camera up and let's get these things going.
Okay.
All right.
This is a big moment.
Are you guys gonna like do some kind of chant or song
or something?
What are we gonna do to make this theatrical?
What about a big hug and a smooch?
Yeah, that sounds great to me.
Sounds good to me too. Let's get it on
camera. What would you, what would you rather have? No, no, that's maybe it's my pitch forks
and you know, go down there like I like it. It's meaningful to you. I am, I'm your half
respectator. I'll be right back. All right. I'm so proud of him. I might cry. This is cool.
I'm trying to see if I can,
the shredder doesn't have a very long cord.
What is fun?
Are you okay?
Are you sure this is something you want to do?
I don't want to use them anymore.
Do I have a hug?
Okay, you'll hold that.
Oh, there we go, there we go, great, great, great.
Okay, yes, go ahead. Let us hear that
sound. So satisfying. Is that thing shredding? Yeah. Okay. What does it feel like to see
these things going down the tube? Okay. For me, it likes to signify that Ryan is really
really like on board. And that means that when he says that he's ready to like get out of that.
I think that's so cool. Hey, round of applause, I will take the win. That was awesome.
That was so cool. Are you crying? No. I don't have emotional attachment to these things. I just never
had anything. Like I think like really like what set the tone
for like me liking the credit cards was,
we went to apply for a home loan
and they were like, dude, you're like a ghost,
you don't have any credit.
And I was like, boom, on top of my game,
you know, I don't know anybody anything.
And they're like, no, that's not the way it works.
So, you know, we all do the best we can with what we're taught.
You were never told anything about money.
Okay, but now you're married, now we're here.
So let's get it to the next level.
No big deal.
Yep.
All right.
So first of all, that was awesome.
Today is Tuesday.
I think we've got to name this day.
This day will forever live in your family history.
What do you want to call this thing? Yeah, what do you think this thing that just happened?
What do you want to call it? It's freedom.
Financial freedom fest 2023. There it is. Sold. I love it.
Financial freedom fest. I'm putting it in my Google calendar as soon as we're done.
There you go. It's a recurring one every year. Every year.
Celebrate it. You know, you all do a cake for your kids. Whatever it is, but
you're creating a new culture for yourselves. Rituals are always exaggerated. They're always theatrical.
Sometimes they're so exaggerated. People put on theatrical. Sometimes they're so exaggerated people put on costumes.
Okay, they buy trinkets and they are talked about.
When your daughters, when it's coming up for their birthday, I'm going to go out on a
limb and I'm going to guess you say, what do you want to do for your birthday?
For your birthday, we're going to go here.
It's a thing, right?
Absolutely.
Well, guess what?
You do the same thing for this ritual. That imbues it with the importance that it rightfully holds in your family.
I love that.
Beautiful.
So the two of you will do that and guess who else you're going to bring in on that ritual.
You?
Not me.
I mean, you can invite me.
You can send me a calendar invite.
I'd love to come.
But I'm not talking about me.
Who else is really important in your day-to-day lives?
Our kids.
Yes, so shouldn't they be brought in on it next?
Absolutely.
Yeah, 100%, 100%.
Get them so excited that they go,
what are we doing for financial freedom?
That is when you know that you've created
real culture in your family.
Oh, I love that. I'm so excited.
I'm excited. Okay. This is so cool. Let's go through your numbers.
Because I want to talk about some of these numbers and what I saw here.
Who created the conscious spending plan?
We did it together. We did it together.
Cool. What was the experience like?
Good. Yeah, it felt good.
It felt good. Why did it feel good?
Because we haven't been on the same page a lot with with finances. experience like. Good, yeah, it felt good. It felt good. Why did it feel good?
Because we haven't been on the same page a lot with finances and I get really excited
about my strategy.
She gets pumped over numbers.
Yeah, my spreadsheet and like how we can make it, you know, how this is going to work
out, we're going to be able to pay extra here and there and Ryan is just kind of like,
as long as the bills are paid, I don't care.
At least in the past, Ryan has always said, as long as the bills are paid I don't care. At least in the past. Ryan has always said as long as the bills are paid I don't
I don't care what's happening. Where I'm like wanting to do the celebration. You've crossed over.
You've crossed over Ryan. Well it makes me happy to see you happy.
Ryan let's go through the net worth section. What do you see first?
Ryan, let's go through the net worth section. What do you see first?
How much? Oh assets 500,000. Okay. What is that?
That is our cars are home
And that's it. How much is the house worth?
Almost all of it probably like 460. Okay got it and
your investments thousand bucks. Okay, your savingsand bucks. Okay, your savings?
50 bucks. Okay, and your debt?
400,000. Okay, what is that? 400,000? Our house, our credit cards and our personal loan.
The personal loan was to make improvements to the condo that they sold and the condo is the one that they claim to make a $78,000 profit on, which obviously is not true because they didn't really calculate
the phantom costs. They then use that profit to put a down payment on the next house and
to pay off a car or two and Ken as car, but they elected not to pay off the loan itself.
I'm going to skip over this because there are a lot of bunch of details. And frankly,
there are some much more startling numbers in this conscious spending plan.
Let's talk about your fixed cost.
What's that big number, Kenna?
You see on the right side.
Oh, 86%.
86%.
So you're spending 86% of your take home pay on your fixed cost.
What does that number tell you?
That's too high.
That's correct. What number should it be theoretically? That's too high. That's correct.
What number should it be theoretically?
50 to 60.
Yeah, that's what I like to see.
You know, we can all argue, I'm right or wrong,
but 50 to 60 is a really healthy range.
So let's go down the list.
Your mortgage is $2,073.
And your utilities are $373.
If I add those together, that's about 30% of your gross income, a little higher than
28%, but okay, not a big deal.
It's outside, let me add a little nuance to that.
It's not a big deal to exceed 28% for if one, you have very low amount of debt to, if
you live in a high cost of living areas, basically impossible to do 20%,
three, if your incomes are going up, et cetera.
It's not gonna break you to go one,
two, even three or four percent above,
but it becomes riskier.
It's less money to save, spend, invest.
And we're kinda seeing that as we go down the list.
All right, your debt payments are $1,000 a month.
Okay, that's a lot.
Now, I have a question for you.
Is that the minimum?
Yep.
Oh, that sucks.
It does.
What happens if you're paying the minimum on your debt?
You never pay it off.
Yeah, years and years and years.
Okay.
Good.
It's good that you understand that.
Let's see what we can do about that. Your groceries are 600 a month.
How do you feel about that?
Pretty low, especially in like today's market where groceries are so expensive.
You know, we could probably, I would like to have a little bit more.
Yeah, who does the grocery shopping?
Both of us now.
Okay.
Well, and we usually go over that sometimes by 20, sometimes by $100 every month, just depends.
But that's the number we try to, that's our budget, I guess.
Let's not do this.
Let's not do fake numbers.
If anything, let's do numbers that are above what you spend, because the worst thing in the
world is to make a number
here on your conscious spending plan that you keep failing, and then you just go fuck this
CSP. We don't even really take it seriously.
Well, and that's how it was when I tried the budget a long time ago.
So I'll change this to 700.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'd rather you be realistic, and then we can actually work with reality.
Okay.
Yeah, 700 is more realistic for sure.
So, nothing here stands out as crazy spending,
but you only have $50 in savings now.
Yes.
It's embarrassing.
It's embarrassing.
Uh-huh.
Kenna, what do you think?
What's the word that comes to mind for you?
It makes me angry.
Why?
Because I know better.
Okay.
When did you buy this house?
2019.
July of 2019.
All right.
So.
And we probably have zero dollars in savings at that point.
Okay. So over four years, you saved up $50.
It's going to take you quite a while to build that savings account up.
And for going at this rate, what do you say?
I say we have increased the savings rate.
So I will say that I mean, there.
We we have struggled with putting adding money to our savings account
then being short, so then having to take money away from the savings account to pay for our bills.
So, I mean, we've had, at one point, $2,000 is probably the most we've ever had, but
it hasn't always just been between zero and 50.
Yeah, I get that.
All jokes aside, I really like to think of a savings account as primarily going in.
Yes. Rarely coming out. Okay. All right. All right. Let's look at the income.
Kenna, walk me through the income. So my monthly income gross right now is 5,833.
And then we were conservative with Ryan's and put 1000.
And then we were conservative with Ryan's and put 1000. Okay, nice job being conservative. I like that. Very good sign. Good habits. That's awesome.
So collectively, you make 82,000 gross. Yes. What do you think about that?
It would be a bit higher. Yeah. I mean, once we add that, that you know 2400 from yours
Okay 82 84,000
Any feelings about that Can you make it on 82,000 dollars a year with two kids?
Yep, we are making it like we're not
Like we're not struggling to put food on the table. We're not telling our kids
They can't go to the water park for the birthday. You know what I mean? We are making it.
However, some of those purchases, though, were on credit cards.
Yeah, I've gone credit cards.
And that's why we, and that's what I was going to say, we're, we make enough money to pay
all of our bills. But if we didn't have credit card bills, we would have a lot more.
Yeah, things would be a lot, we'd be able to.
We would have a lot more. Yeah, things would be a lot.
We would be able to.
I'm not sure I can buy the thing like,
we're making it, but we have over $30,000 in credit card debt.
Yeah, so I mean, that's not making it.
No, I totally agree with you.
What does making it mean to each of you?
Ryan, what does making it mean?
I could go to that restaurant without even thinking about it.
Just walk right in and get my meal.
Okay, Kenna, what does making it mean to you?
Being able to save enough that I can retire early.
Okay.
able to save enough that I can retire early? Okay. Ryan, hearing your definition versus Kenna's definition, what do you notice? My definition is very small. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Like it's so small that it's like a speck in the landscape of a rich life.
Like to be able to go out to a restaurant. Yes, I can see why it's important.
When I was in my early 20s,
I wanted to be able to go and order appetizers
because when I was a kid, we couldn't do it.
So I totally get what you're saying.
I totally, deeply understand it.
But I also think now, especially at the age of 45
with two kids, there's got to be more
to a rich life or more to making it than just to be able to go to a restaurant.
That would be amazing.
You know, so I like, and the retiring like early, I don't know, I've been pretty sloppy,
so I'm already 45, probably gonna have to work this one out. And, I don't know, I mean, just like not having a whole lot when I'm a kid, like I'm super
satisfied.
Like if we could sell this house and buy a nicer house than this one and just be chilling
on the rocking chairs, like that would be enough for me.
Like, I don't, so I don't, I mean, I would feel rich at that point.
And I mean, I know it's a different definition than a lot of people's rich, but, you know,
I would feel rich having the same house for our kids to come back to in college, which
can and I do not have.
Like we can't go back for the holidays to our house and go to our old rooms.
You know, I'd like to have that for our girls.
That would be, that would make me feel like I'm living a rich life.
The honest truth is that right now,
Kenneth and Ryan will not be able to live much of a rich life.
It will take decades to pay off that house,
and that's if everything goes right.
If the roof breaks, they're done for.
And even if they eventually pay off the house, they have almost nothing to live off of in
retirement.
There's no pension, social security pays a modest amount, they are in trouble.
What's really surprising here is how small Ryan's definition of a rich life is.
We've heard throughout today's conversation that Kenneth and Ryan both tell themselves
a lot of stories.
Well after a while, you start to believe those stories.
Soon you even create other stories that end up shaping your life.
For Ryan, he looks at his numbers and says, hey, we're actually doing okay.
Better than I grew up.
That's a story.
One that allows himself to sit back and make no changes, because after all, according to his own definition, he's a story. One that allows himself to sit back and make no changes because after all, according to
his own definition, he's doing okay.
But what if I looked at his numbers?
And I said, wait a second, we have tens of thousands of dollars in debt on this conscious
spending plan and you've saved $50 in four years, you need to make a change.
That's another story.
But it's one that would necessitate change.
So the question for you to ask yourself is,
what stories are you telling yourself about money?
Which of them might be true and which of them might not be?
Now, if you grew up not being taught the skills
of planning ahead like we've heard on today's conversation,
this can be very hard, but it can be done.
What do you think you spent on in the last month?
That was above and beyond your fixed costs.
Well, in the last month, we had Christmas,
but if you discount maybe a month
where we didn't have Christmas, most of our...
No, no, no, I want to count Christmas.
Oh, most of our...
600 bucks for Christmas. What else?
Just
get his get his birthday. So we went, we went out for the day, spend about
three hundred bucks.
Lannan's birthday was December 10th. So we had her birthday party.
How much and I think it was like two something, two fifty.
Okay.
What else?
Her presence were a hundred dollars.
And Abby on that.
That's about it.
Eating out.
Anything else?
Oh yeah.
Oh, how much is eating out?
On a high month, $300?
Okay, so that's 75 bucks a week. That's like one meal per week.
We usually don't even,
other times we don't eat out in a week.
Yeah.
Okay.
All right.
So that's $1,150 on
Guilfree spending
So that is an example where you're in the red. Yeah, you spent more money than you made
And I would be willing to bet that you're spending a comparable amount
Most months even though Christmas was in December
There's probably something that happens in July, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
And sometimes there's a big expense that blows up and we have to amortize or spread that
out.
So you're probably spending around a thousand to 1500 bucks extra per month and you even
reflect here.
I could see that.
What do you think about that, Ryan?
I see you just staring off into space right now.
I'm not staring off into space.
It's just like, it's just so annoying that we even allowed ourselves to get into this
position.
Yeah.
It's like we both, I think we both consider ourselves semi-intelligent people and it's like
you can see yourself going down the path and you just don't stop it.
Yeah.
You know, you just let it go and then all whatever will deal with it at some
point. I mean, I've even told her before, I'm like, well, we just
make the minimum payments.
And then when we saw this house, we'll just use the equity from this house
to pay off the credit card debt.
And then we'll be at zero again.
And then her next answer or next statement is, yeah, until we get
another credit card and then do this whole thing over again.
And I tell her, no, like we don't do this over again.
Like we dig ourselves out this time and that's it.
Okay. And then instead of a thousand dollars going towards our credit card debt, a thousand dollars,
not even a thousand, seven hundred dollars could go to a retirement account and $300 a month can be for us to
eat out.
Right?
If we don't, you know, like just foolish in my younger years.
Okay.
Still being foolish today.
Well, that's what I want to talk about.
It's one thing to focus on what happened in the past.
What happened in the past happened, but what is more concerning is the beliefs and behaviors
that you're bringing to today's money.
Okay?
We can't change that you have $30 plus $1000 in debt,
but we can change the way that you think about money,
talk about money, and behave with money.
So think about money. As about money, and behave with money. So think about money.
As an example, the idea that we can just sell this house and roll over the equity and
cash out and blah, blah, blah.
You don't even really know how much you made from your last house.
In fact, you made a lot less than you think.
So we're not going to play that game because we already know where that one ends up.
It ends up with you back in debt.
That's a gimmick if you really get honest with yourselves.
We're gonna like magically cash out our house ATM
and then all our problems will vanish one day.
Uh-uh, that's not happening.
So that's think.
We're gonna change that.
Talk about money.
Like it's not so bad if we just eat out.
We need to get Christmas gifts.
I need to provide for my children in this way. You can provide yourself right into the
ground. That's talking. And behaving is everything from how do the two of you talk about money? Who brings it up?
And most importantly
What about your spending where you swiping your car? What are you buying?
What is around you physically in this room that you're in in your closet in your garage?
Even your house itself that is all a reflection of your behavior, behaving.
So think, talk, and behave.
We've got to change all of it.
The bad news is, this is really hard.
It's hard because it's been part of you both for over 13 years, and it's now part of
your dynamic.
It's woven in.
But the good news is, I believe you can change it.
And if you do, and if you really both get on the same page
and you're rowing in the same direction,
you can make rapid changes to your finances.
Like you will make rapid changes within six months.
You will start to see huge changes.
How do you feel hearing that?
So excited. I feel like if in six months that's happening
I'll be or super like you know just happy and impressed
Awesome, you know because it's a it's a huge move for us
Yeah, like we've been we've been okay living paycheck to paycheck and we've been okay doing what we've been doing
Yeah, you know at least we've been able to justify it to ourselves.
Yeah.
You know, it could be wrong.
You know, we were, you know, I'm not saying we were right, but it's just enough is enough.
Yeah, enough is enough.
A rich life has got to be about your children.
It's got to be about your children.
It's got to be about the two of you. It's got to be about who you are,
your actual identity, not the fake identity
that you mentioned, Ryan, the one that you said,
you consider foolish.
Remember that?
It's the one that you really are.
So, reconnect with that. And tell me what is going through your mind, your rich life.
I don't ever have to worry about any of our bills being paid for.
There's always positive money left over at the end of the month.
You know, and we're putting that positive money into the right places.
We're not just, oh, we have positive money.
Let's go out to sushi. We're actually just, oh, we have positive money. Let's go out to sushi.
We're actually like, hey, we have positive money. Let's do this with it to help make this happen.
And what is the role of your daughters in this rich life? What are they observing?
Good, excellent spending habits. I guess, like, we're pretty open with our kids, so I guess we
would bring them in for a conversation about it.
So there would be the vocal part of it.
Of us teaching them like, hey, we're doing this.
This is why we're doing it.
These are the reasons.
And then when they see the fruits of our labor
and they see us sitting on that rock and chair
in the front porch at the same house we've been in
for 30 years.
Yeah, that's rich. That's beautiful. All right, you get the privilege of taking them on a journey
with you. And the journey for the two of you is going to be tough. But as far as your kids
are concerned, they don't know. Seven years old, everything is exciting. So you get to create whatever story of that journey
You want and they experience it like that's the magic of childhood. Yep
Okay, kind of what about you. What's your rich life?
Like I said before you know the bills are are paid automatically. I don't have to worry about if one has gone up 10
$10
that month.
There's just always enough that I'm able to save way more
aggressively for retirement, that our kids can participate
in extracurricular activities with no questions asked,
that we are able to donate to charities
and volunteer our time with our children that were able to
give them an allowance. I could literally go on and on. Love it. You have.
Don't I have my journal in front of me from your book like about whatever it
like means to me. I'm trying not to read it. But yeah, I have a very extensive,
very thorough, very vivid list. Beautiful. All right.
Stay there.
What we want to do is we want to find a way for you,
not me, you're going to do it,
to give yourself some breathing room.
Because right now you're wound too tight.
There's no extra money.
You're actually spending way more
than you even realize here.
And it's tough.
We got to get out of this cycle. So how do you think that
you can do that? As a good guideline, your fixed cost should be 50 to 60% of your take
home. That's just a general guideline. How do you think you can give yourself some breathing
room here? I'll be asking for a raise shortly. I'm currently like trying to explore
some options where I could bring just a little bit like I don't want to
overextend myself and take myself away from my kids and not be able to provide
for them in the manner that they need. But I'm exploring options of trying to
bring in maybe just two, three, four hundred more dollars a month and then using that money to start chopping down
Some of the credit cards that I'm responsible for so can I you said you're gonna ask for a race
Yeah, let's just assume you get it and if you don't get it you switch jobs and find a place where you do get it
Yeah, how much is your
Take home income going to be then
your take home income going to be then. $6666 and 66 cents.
So right now your fixed cost represent 88% of your take home.
Go ahead and make that change to your income.
And then Ryan, Ryan's all they make.
Oh, before we go on, let's take a second.
That was pretty cool.
That number was at 88% of fixed cost.
What is it now?
81.
Wow, okay, round of applause. I'll take the win. That's a big move% of fixed costs. What is it now? 81. Wow. Okay.
Round of applause.
I'll take the win.
That's a big move in the right direction.
Yes.
So that raise is pretty important.
Yes.
Oh, yeah.
How likely are you to get it?
Pretty darn likely.
Ryan, so you mentioned you want to pick up an extra $400 a month?
Yeah.
All right.
So let's go ahead and model that in. Ryan, why don't you type that into the CSP? He's a month. Yeah. All right. So let's go ahead and model that in Ryan.
Why don't you type that into the CSP? He's 1099. So I take more, I withhold more federal
and state taxes because he's a 1099 employee. Perfect. So what should we put for his take home then?
Well, if I have 1,400, I'm taking on 1,400. All right, another round of applause. We're down to 76%.
Well done.
We're going in the right direction.
Nice.
All right, so what this tells me is,
it's really important that both of you increase your income.
So while I do appreciate, and I support that,
each of you has modeled in making more.
I don't think it's realistic.
Well, for me, it's realistic because I don't take on very much right now, as far as like
hours go, so I can definitely like increase my income. Like, like, that would be no problem.
But you already, you're already making a thousand dollars a month, even 1200. You said you
want to increase that to 1400. Great. Can it go higher than that?
1200, you said you want to increase that to 1400? Great. Can it go higher than that?
It would just really, yeah, I mean, yeah, I mean, it could, it just gets stressful because I take care of the kids. So then I feel like I'm short-changing my children on like time and you know,
energy that they need. Like right now, I could, I just can't overextend myself. Like I already tried that and just not being able to give my kids what they needed as far
as the energy levels go because I needed to sleep because I was working late.
It just felt like I was just short-changing them and that wasn't fair.
I totally get you.
So let's be intellectually honest in our CSP. Like you're not going to
earn way more for the next year. No, you're not. That's okay. Let's not say that you're
going to. And let's recall that even in this, we, you know, you're still spending way
more in guilt free spending. I put the 1550 down there.
So what is the biggest area of guilt free spending right now?
Earth-a-celebrations.
Celebrations.
A ceremonial celebrations.
Yeah, I think generally speaking, it's the kids.
Yeah.
I never thought of it like that, just like that simply really.
It's the kids.
Let's get rid of them.
I'm just like, here.
I love my kids.
If you ever want to live with them,
I love you.
That is good.
Now, that's a funny mom right there.
Let's sell them.
We could probably make a pretty good profit.
We invested seven years.
We could stay off all of our debt.
Oh my God.
I might get in trouble for airiness myself.
That was good though.
That was good.
I think we're gonna be okay.
So, so that's really interesting, right?
You never thought of kids as your most expensive
discretionary expense.
What, why is that?
Cause they just get everything that I'd never had.
And I couldn't care less.
I know I need to care. I know, obviously, but like I said,
it fills something inside of me being able to like even give them something material
because I didn't have that when I was growing up.
What else didn't you have?
Love.
Your dad wasn't around.
Financial.
I didn't have financial guidance.
I didn't.
Do your daughters have their dad around?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They have love from their parents?
Apparently present. What do you
think they would choose water park or having dad around? Having me? No doubt. I am the
best. At least the best of them. I think you're right.
But from you looking back at your childhood, you had a really different perspective as
an adult on what you saw.
If we stopped right now, and I came back to 20 years from now and I interviewed your daughters,
and I said, what do you remember about growing up as it relates to money?
What would they tell me?
Oh, they would say we're messy.
Keep going.
What would they say they've learned from their parents?
That we're irresponsible with money.
Uh-huh.
What else?
That we've abused credit and put ourselves in a hole that's going to be hell hard to dig
out of.
But you Ryan give them everything you want, isn't that love?
Um, no, it's just, uh, it's just a feeling that I get from doing it. It's not the love, though.
What is love? What would love be to show them love with money in a respectful way?
I don't even know how to answer that.
Have you ever seen that done?
No.
That's an honest answer. Kenna, have you ever seen money treated respectfully in a family?
No.
Did you know it about yourselves?
family. No. Did you know it about yourselves? I mean, some things you just don't like, I never thought about, you know, I never thought in those terms. So, I mean, now looking back here in the question,
like, I never saw any responsible, you know, people with money. I never had anybody trying to teach me the ins and outs.
Yeah. But up until here in the question, like, I really never thought about it.
So you were trying to do the best you can with what you know. And part of that is,
hey, we have some money because I went out and I made $400 bucks last month. Of course, I'm
going to get you this gift. Of course, I'm going to take you to dinner. Of course, I'm going
to get you these toys. It's really simple. It's a simple way of looking at money. The problem is,
you're not living in a simple world. You have credit card interest rates that are probably above
20%. You have a mortgage with tons of phantom costs that you're not actually counting. You have credit card interest rates that are probably above 20 percent. You have a mortgage with tons of phantom costs that you're not actually counting
You have debt. You're paying the minimum for which because of the nature of interest, you're not able to escape from that
So a simple mentality
Works in a simple world, but that's not the world. You're actually living
But what do you want to do about it?
Change it.
We gotta stop spending so much.
Yeah.
I mean, that is very simple.
Yeah.
So the way that I see it, there are two big things that are affecting your financial spending.
Two, do you know what they are?
No, we're looking at them right here.
It's on the page.
What are the big numbers here?
One of them is very obvious.
Our guilt-free spending.
That we already talked about.
We didn't even really factor it in because I'm just like, you guys are spending so much
on that, we can't even really count it.
But yes, we fixed your guilt free spending, but there are two big things that are causing
the financial stress.
One of them is in your fixed costs.
What's the biggest number there?
Our mortgage?
Correct.
That's number one.
And number two is your income. And why is your income what it is? Because
you've both said this multiple times today. You agreed you don't want to have somebody else raise your kids. Yeah.
Fair enough. That's a value. I'm not here to tell you what's right or wrong, but it is causing you to not be able to make as much
as you ordinarily would.
And guess what, back in the day,
that was actually perfectly fine.
Didn't both of you grow up with one primary earner
and the other person stayed at home?
Yep.
And do you think maybe that affected the way that you see
how you raise kids and make fun?
Absolutely, absolutely.
100%
And yet you live in Denver.
It's not cheap.
No.
Housing is expensive.
Food is expensive.
All these expenses, if you were to go back and talk to your parents, they'd be like,
are you kidding me?
There's no way.
Yeah.
So you are playing a one-erner game in a two-erner world.
We know that.
And we're trying to fight to the nail.
It's a not be part of, we're not the norm.
I got you.
You're not the norm in the sense that one of you is staying home.
I mean, and it's stay home dad.
Quite unusual.
That's what I mean.
Like a lot of people we know, they're just like resigned
to the fact that their kids are gonna be in daycare
and they're gonna be both working.
And they have the extra money to do all this stuff and we're not willing
to sacrifice that.
Like these girls are too important to us.
Okay.
Okay.
So then how do you want to get on financial track?
I guess I have to take on a little bit more for work.
I guess instead of $400, I need to get myself a 30-hour a week job so I can increase
that to $1,000 a week.
And what would happen to that fixed cost number, Ryan?
What do you say?
It went down to 56 percent. Okay, wow. Whether or not you agree to do that, I would like
everyone to give everyone a round of applause because wow, that was a breakthrough.
At least you know it's an option. Not saying you got to do it, but you just created one path towards relief.
Well, and I think in my mind, yes, it's a lot now, but if we did that, we would have way
more money to put towards the debt and the debt would be paid off sooner.
And then you wouldn't have to work 30 hours a week for that long.
So if my income went up, there is no reason for that income to go to your side for things that you've already gotten control of I can just
One we could put even even if it was like conservative that I made a thousand dollars extra a month
That's still a thousand dollars in payments a month and then we're talking in four months, one of the credit cards is gone.
Before that.
In four months later, another credit card is gone.
But it sucks in the meantime for me
because I have worked so much and missed out on so much
with the girls that I'm really relishing
in what I have right now.
OK.
Can you connect with what your rich life is
and what Kenna's rich life is
and also how you want to raise your girls,
what lessons you want to teach them?
Would this help that vision
or would this decision hurt that vision?
That's something I would need to think on.
I mean, I lean towards hell.
Okay.
If you decided to do this, Ryan, to work a little bit more,
what would you tell your daughters?
Visualize it.
I would just tell them, you already know what this is
because you've seen this life before
and I'm just doing this in a short term.
I don't want that.
You know, I don't want that.
I don't want anything.
You don't want to, but you ask me what I would.
That's the old Ryan.
I want the new Ryan who's thinking, what are my daughters going to say when Rameet interviews
them in 20 years?
You have the chance to create their experience for him.
And if you say, you know this, you've
seen this, it's just, there's no magic to that. Yeah, it's no magic. It's just so perfunctory.
Ah, you've seen this blah, blah, blah. This a chance to create magic. Okay. It's like the first time
you took him on an airplane. Oh my God, there's going to be the pilot. Then they're going to give you
peanuts. It's like, as an adult, who really gives a shit, but as a kid, it's like, oh my God, this is crazy.
Crazy mind blowing. Yeah. So do that. Again, let's assume you work more. Maybe it's 20
maybe 30 hours. What would you tell them?
We've put ourselves in a bad spot financially, and we're going to dig ourselves out.
And I'm going to sacrifice a little bit of time so that I can make sure we're in a better place
that we're not in the same place next year.
But I don't have to come and talk to her
and meet the all emotional and, you know,
like we can talk and be happy for all the steps
that we've made.
Okay, okay.
Okay, Ken, what do you think about that?
I love it.
Yeah.
What do you love about it?
I just feel like he's, he's invested.
Like he believes that there's a way out.
And he sees the light.
Even if it's really, really small,
that he sees the light.
Yeah.
Because I, the way that I was expressing it,
you know, it just wasn't resonating with him.
It wasn't hitting what it's hitting right now.
Okay.
Ryan, you could do the thing that you just said
with your daughters.
It's heartfelt.
It's a little depressing.
I mean, if my dad starts crying as a seven year old girl,
I'm gonna start crying, okay? Now, maybe that going to happen, but maybe I can give you another tool, another way.
You say, you know what? Mom and I are going to make some changes. And we sat down and we started
reading a book on money. And we like money. We use money to pay for our beautiful house.
We use money to send you to play soccer.
Money is important to us,
but the only thing more important to us is our family.
So we sat down and mom and I talked about
how we want to spend our money.
And we know that we overspend. It's like if you have
a hundred dollars and you go to this point and we spent a hundred and twenty dollars. It's not good,
but we realized it. We logged into our bank account and we caught it. And so we are going to work
a little extra so that we can pay off all of our debt and
we can start fresh.
We're going to be able to spend more time together, but for a little while, I'm going to have to
work a little bit more.
How do you feel about that?
They're pretty intelligent kids, so they'll understand right away.
We'll get it. Yeah, they. And what do, so they'll understand right away.
We'll get it. Yeah, they. And what do you think they'll feel?
They'll feel that feeling that we're willing to do whatever we have to do.
Whatever we have to do. We're trying to set them up for success.
Yes. Ryan, you get the chance to teach them an incredibly valuable lesson.
Incredibly valuable.
Which is that-
One that we weren't taught.
Exactly.
Parents make mistakes sometimes,
but only a very small amount of them actually admit that,
and hardly any of them ever talk about it with their kids.
What do you think your kids will remember 20 years from now
about that lesson? When I talk to them 20 years from now about that lesson?
When I talk to them 20 years from now, what lesson are they going to remember?
Don't overspend.
Don't overspend.
If you do, how do you get out of it?
You work a little harder.
Work a little harder.
You would admit it.
You would admit it and you work harder.
Now that is a lesson.
Here's what Kenneth and Ryan had to say after our call.
Hi, Rami. Thank you so much for speaking with us. It was fun, informative, and a bonding experience that we truly needed.
We listened to your recommendation and didn't talk about money after the interview.
Even though Ryan kept bringing it up, which is not typical, but he was excited.
Ryan was excited to talk about money. What did you do to my husband? We are really running with the financial freedom
fest and our scheduling financial freedom fest updates at the end of every month so we
can track our debt payoff progress. Our first monthly meeting went well. It feels so
good to be working towards this as a team for the first time in
our lives together. They also told me that Ryan is actively looking for a job that pays
more and will offer more hours. Here's their quote, we will have the tough conversations
with our girls once he lands something. But even that doesn't feel terrible anymore.
The example you gave us made light bulbs go off in both of our minds.
We are broke because of our kids, but we can live our richest lives because of them,
too.
Then I got a more recent update.
I want to share it with you.
Kenneth said, Ryan started working three days a week delivering for Amazon.
This will likely double his income each month.
We have plans to pay off our smallest credit cards
with his first two paychecks and then continue
to snowball the debt after that.
We are also looking into all of our fixed costs
and seeing where we can make big changes.
I requested a review with my boss next week
to talk about a timeline for a raise.
I've made a list of tasks I've taken on
and projects I've completed to make asking for that
raise easier. It feels like a new chapter has started in our lives and we have you to think.
Be ready for that calendar, invite to celebrate our one year anniversary of the financial freedom
fest. Kenan Ryan, well done. Thank you for sharing your story here on the I Will Teach You
Be Rich podcast. For everybody listening, I want to invite you to take control of your money. Two ways that you can do it. One, DIY. Get my book from the library
or any bookstore. It's called I will teach you to be rich. And within a few weeks, your
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Second, if you want help, if you want to get results faster and if you want to get better
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Regardless of what you choose, remember that you can take control of designing and living
your rich life.
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Thanks for listening.
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