I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 94. “We paid off all our debt. Why do I still feel so guilty about money?”
Episode Date: May 2, 2023Kate is 28 and Christine is 33. They’re married, living in the Detroit area with their nine-month old son. They’ve paid off credit card debt, sold their Ford at a profit, got out from a bad house ...purchase, and generally are doing extremely well for their ages. So why are they so anxious? This episode is brought to you by: Ness Well | IWT listeners can get an extra 5K welcome bonus when they apply for the Ness Card at nesswell.com/ramit. Babbel | Right now, when you purchase a 3-month Babbel subscription, you’ll get an additional 3 months for FREE. Just go to Babbel.com and use promo code RAMIT. LMNT | Right now, LMNT is offering 8 single serving packets FREE with any LMNT order. This is a great way to try all 8 flavors. Get yours at DrinkLMNT.com/RAMIT. Links mentioned in this episode • Get my New York Times best-selling book • Get Money Coaching with Ramit 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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Discussion (0)
I just carry a lot of stress worrying about the past and the future.
Someday we're going to have to start paying off these student loans again,
or someday we're going to have to pay for preschool, preemptively worrying about things like that.
I think I spent a lot of years of my life anticipating that I was going to never do well financially.
So I was like mentally prepared for that until I wasn't.
I don't think you should feel guilty for spending within our plan.
And I wish we had a little extra over at the end of the month, just in case of things going wrong.
I don't know, I feel like I'm just always double checking to make sure I understand it all.
Do we really have this much in our grocery budget or do we really have this much in our grocery budget, or do we really have this much in our guilt-free budget?
I don't believe that it's real.
I was feeling like she's gonna hide money
or hoard money from me,
and she was feeling like,
I was gonna put a stack of credit cards in.
I want to exude more confidence and competence
in our financial relationship.
I want to learn these things so that I can teach them
to my son in ways that my parents did not teach me.
I have the vision to not want him to go through
the feelings that I went through.
Meet Kate and Christine.
Case 28, Christine's 33,
and they live in Michigan with their new baby. What's going on is that
they both come from very different backgrounds with money, and they keep having the same conversations
which makes it feel like they're spinning and getting nowhere. As you listen, I want you
to think about an area of life where you have felt stuck. That is Kate and Christine.
By the way, I wanted to let you know that on
each episode now, we're highlighting each couple's numbers on screen for our YouTube viewers,
so it's easier to follow along. And people on the YouTube channel really love it. They like
being able to see the numbers, plus their faces and body language, so I would highly encourage
you to check it out. Just go to YouTube and search for my name. You can also get a copy of my book,
including the audio book on Amazon and Audible.
Let's get to it.
We've been having kind of the same conversation
over and over for a long time.
At least a year, I think.
Year, yeah.
Let's be kind of that when she thinks about money, it's always a negative emotion for
her.
I mean, I wouldn't mind if she bought up money to me if it was like, hey, I want to do
something today.
It's more positive and less like, you know, guilty about the spending.
I don't think you should feel guilty
for spending within our plan.
And I wish we had a little extra over,
like at the end of the month,
just in case of things going wrong.
Like, I need to tweak it every month.
Tweak, what?
Yeah, I'm a tweaker. I'll like tweak the categories of like we should spend this much in grocery
and this much down the dogs and hey, wait, are you doing this on my conscious spending plan?
No, we actually have our own budget. Don't you? Yes, exactly. My CSP is not meant for tweaking
and optimizing. It's meant for Senate and forget it. Okay, now
I'm now starting to understand you have your own little system, which is causing you problems.
I don't know. I feel like I'm just always double checking to make sure I understand it
all. Like, do we really have this much in our grocery budget or do we really have this
much in our guilt free budget? Like, I feel like I feel like I don't believe that it's real.
There's something or that it's right.
Why is that?
I just always feel like I'm missing something.
I don't know if it's because I can't
wrap my mind fully around the math
or I just don't trust it.
And Christine, what's it like being on the receiving end
of the stream of consciousness?
It's frustrating because I mean, I wasn't some credit card debt when Kate and I met and now we're through that and I feel like I've made a lot of behavioral and psychological
changes towards my how I do with money.
And I kind of, I kind of hope that Kate would come with me on that and I feel like
maybe there's still some open booms from that past that we've gotten through.
Your past?
Our past together. Well, I guess it was what I thought in the relationship. So, yeah, it would be
my past and my best behaviors. And the best what I thought in the relationship. So yeah, it would be my past and my best behaviors.
And the best that I brought into the relationship.
And so I feel like Kate doesn't necessarily trust that I'm not going to put this in that
place again.
Okay.
Hey, is that true?
I don't want it to be true, but yeah, maybe a little.
It can be really hard for people who've always felt behind with money to actually trust
their plan.
So, when Kate says she doesn't really trust her numbers, when she constantly logs into
her accounts and tweaks things, it's really another way of saying she doesn't trust the
plan, which deep down means she doesn't trust herself.
The solution here is not to bust out a spreadsheet and
show her how all the formulas work. This has very little to do with the numbers. What I want to
encourage everybody here to do is to start trusting yourself with your money. You know, I see a lack of
trust in so many different areas. It's when people tell themselves, yeah, I'm going to read that book, but in the back of their head, they know even as they say it, they're
not going to read that book. I know I should probably open up an investment account and
they know they're not going to do it. I'd rather they just not say it because once you
get to the point where you cannot trust yourself, it's over. And so what I try to do on this
episode and with other guests on other episodes is to help them
shrink down the field of play to really help them commit to something that they know they will be able to do and to start to rebuild the trust with their partner and oftentimes themselves.
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slash remit, R-A-M-I-T. Let's start at the beginning. How'd you meet?
Well, we met basically right when I finished grad school.
I had just moved home with my parents,
and I was going to take some time to figure out what I was doing with my life.
But we met and it was a whirlwind and we fell in love and we ended
up, I ended up moving out of my parents into her house pretty quickly. How quickly?
What was it, Christine? Oh my God. How many weeks? Oh my God, come on on this is like a stereotype. Yeah we take it trophy on a
great bet loved in. Alright fine. Alright that's hilarious. Okay so you moved in and have you been
together ever since? Yeah. Okay fantastic congratulations That's awesome. So what happened in terms of the credit card debt that I keep hearing about?
I feel like it was kind of a couple months into the relationship. Um, we went on a vacation together. And, you know, I was still only working a part time job, kind of getting back on my feet.
And so Christine was paying for everything. And she was making more money than I ever imagined
I would ever make. So I was just like, I don't understand those numbers. If you got it, you got it.
I believe you. And then after that vacation, then she kind of told me the actual numbers of what she made.
And kind of revealed the beginnings
of like the credit card debt felt like,
oh, I've just been letting her treat me
to these dinners and vacation.
And I didn't even know that she was in debt
and going into debt doing this stuff.
And at the time, I didn't have much to contribute financially.
It's a little worrying when I hear couples who just slide on into a relationship without
conversations about money.
That's because we come from totally different perspectives with money, different socioeconomic
backgrounds, parents, views of money.
And so if you just slide on into a relationship without having a series of conversations, what
does money mean to you?
What do your parents teach you?
What's something you're working on?
Here's what I'm working on.
Setting expectations helps you avoid these blowups that often happen when couples never
talk about money.
You said you had some credit card debt.
How much did you have at the time?
I want to say I had like 3,000. How'd that feel to you? some credit card debt. How much did you have at the time? I want to say I had like 3000.
How'd that feel to you?
Terrible.
OK.
I wasn't really making much money.
When I was in grad school, I really, really struggled financially.
I had a full ride and I was teaching.
So they were paying me to be there.
But it was simply not enough.
Yeah.
Christine, how much did you have on your credit card at the time?
I want to say 5K.
It felt like a lot.
It felt, yeah, I, I, I, I, previous to that year, I hadn't carried any debt.
Oh.
So it was new to me.
Okay. So when you new to me. Okay.
So when you got married, did you both have credit card debt
at the time?
I think mine was paid off by the time we got married.
Okay.
When we got married, I think the debt at that time
was probably closer to 10, maybe even 12.
It was going up.
Okay.
I haven't credit card debt.
Why'd you get into debt?
I made some, yeah, I'm just spec'd,
I made some just really bad financial choices
all at the same time.
Like?
I bought a house, I got a brand new car
and my sister moved in with me at the same time.
What kind of car?
Brand new Ford Escape because that's where I work.
You worked at Ford?
Do you still work there?
I do work at Ford, I do.
Oh my God.
You make those great trucks that you love so much.
Well, I don't know.
Oh my God, this is, you know, this is the ultimate irony
because every time someone comes on this show,
they drive a Ford.
I go, why?
Okay, so you're an engineer at Ford?
Yes.
Oh, that's cool.
All right.
So I went work at GM for a little while,
but I sold it and then I bought a GM car.
Okay.
And then after Kate and I bought this house
and we were looking at the numbers
when I was out of,
actually I think we were still in credit card debt I was out of it. Actually, I think we were selling credit card debt.
Then it was right when you like, you know, cars were going, it was a good market.
So I sold my bolt, uh, then we were able to take some of that money and pay off credit cards.
But you know, okay.
That's cool.
So you sold your car at the peak.
First of all,
this is amazing.
It's like, hasn't happened in decades
where people are trading cars like commodities.
You made a profit.
It sounds like, and then you paid off
your credit card debt with that money.
Okay.
Some of it.
Some of it.
I'll take it.
And what do you drive now?
No, we share a car.
We have a Subaru.
A Subaru!
I knew it! I knew it! I was waiting!
When you gave me that look, I was like, come on!
Okay.
All right, it all makes sense now.
All right, one thing I want you to notice is that when people get large infusions of cash,
they tend to pay off debt or save.
This is very clearly shown in the research, and it applies to tax returns, stimulus payments,
lots of different cash infusions. But interestingly, when people get money that's just
slowly increased to their paycheck, they tend to spend it. And this is really important to know
because you should know how most people, including you, behave with money.
Also, if you listen to this show and you're in my money coaching group, you
know how to take all types of money, large infusions, small increases over time, everything
and redirect that money towards your rich life. I'll add a link to my money coaching program
in the show notes. Christine, I'm curious about your role in the relationship as it relates
to money. You've mentioned debt, but I understand there's a story
behind that house and your sister.
How did you end up with this house?
Yeah, so my parents, they had us when we were really young
and they both struggled with addiction throughout our life.
My other sister who's intellectually disabled.
my life, my other sister who's intellectually disabled. So as soon as I felt like I was in a good place,
with money I thought, the guardianship of my sister,
my mom, she said that she was like, okay,
with everything that's happening, but she's not a very trustworthy person
and she's kind of chaotic.
And I was told that a judge probably wouldn't grant it
if I didn't have a home with her own room and everything.
Who told you that?
That lawyer.
Wow, how old were you at the time?
I was 25, maybe 26.
25, 26 years old.
You took guardianship of your sister.
That means you were her legal guardian?
Yes.
And the court or the lawyer told you you got to buy a house.
So I did all this like word character letter
that's about myself,
figuring out what the living situation needed to be.
And one of the things they said was,
yeah, you're gonna have a much stronger case if you buy
how. And how did you react to that? I mean, did you say, okay, I'm going to do it. It's just a matter,
it's what I need to do next or were you like, oh my god. So I think something that I
is like a saying that is persistent in my life is if there's a world there's a way. Okay, yeah.
And so I think I ran the numbers initially and I was like,
okay, this is going to be, I'm going to cut it real close.
Like I drain my savings.
Did you end up selling the house?
Yeah, we walked away with 12k after all the
realtors seized everything.
So we used that for every down payment for this house.
Okay, got it.
And what was the price you paid and sold just at a curiosity?
I bought my house at 142 and I sold it at 180k.
Yeah, I think 180, 185.
Yeah, that's good.
It's good for everybody to hear.
You know, you think you to it $40,000.
But actually, when you subtract out,
let's just go through the list.
You're real trophies.
What else?
The down payment for the next house.
Yep.
Repairs.
Repairs, mortgage fees, right?
Anything else?
I don't think so.
Closing costs.
Closing costs on the new place?
Yeah.
Totally.
Instead of 40K, you end up with like 12K.
Makes perfect sense.
I think this is quite startling for people.
Was it startling to you?
I knew that going in.
Okay, good. And pulled the realtor like like if I can't sell it for this month it's not worth it.
Like we'll stay here basically. Wow. Okay. All right. Good. All right. So you got the 12k. Put it as a down payment for the new place and that's where the two of you are right now.
Mm-hmm. Yes. That was so important. Do you notice how many ways home ownership is explicitly and implicitly
favored in America? Literally the court telling Christine that she should own a house to show
she's more stable. I find that absurd. Think about how that message would be received by young people,
poor people, minorities who have been systematically redlined out of home ownership. What a joke.
minorities who have been systematically redlined out of homeownership. What a joke.
Also notice that she bought her house for around $142,000, sold it for $185,000, but only walked away with around $12,000. I think that about 90 plus percent of people
would simply take $185, subtract $142, and go, yep, you walk away with $43,000, no, you have to account
for all the phantom costs, including transaction fees.
And now I will acknowledge that she did have more cash, but she took some of it for the
next down payment.
But that's what most people would do.
The point I'm making is that if and when you buy you must factor in all costs because
you cannot simply take a big number, subtract the smaller one and go poof profit.
Great.
All right.
So, do you still have the credit card debt?
Christine?
No.
So we paid that off about a year ago.
It was all paid off.
How'd you pay it off?
Bonus, extra turn.
Yeah, for a while, we've decided no credit cards are allowed to be used. We were buying everything on debit cards. Of course, like everyone,
things like really separate. And we were paying off the credit cards steadily.
And did you make progress that way?
Yeah.
Good.
Yeah, slowly.
All right, see, both of you have paid off credit cards.
That's great.
Either of you ever celebrate?
We probably did something small, I don't know.
Like what?
We probably did something small, I don't know. Like what?
What a beer, cheers.
Christine, do you remember that?
I do remember it.
I think we were probably already going out.
We could pull that.
So someone's like, cheers, it's Friday.
And the other one was like, oh yeah, we paid off this debt that's been with us for years.
Okay, that cheers to, all right, let's drink.
Exactly.
Pretty much, yeah.
What?
So do you understand why I'm asking the question?
Yeah.
Why?
Because it's a big deal.
It's a big deal.
And creating these rituals around money,
I think is really helpful.
And part of the reason that you may still be
psychologically stuck in the past
is that you haven't truly internalized
that we are credit card debt free.
We did it.
Do you believe that?
Yeah, a little bit.
Yeah.
I think it goes a little deeper.
A lot of people are able to grow their money faster than their money psychology.
These are the people who have money in the bank, but still agonize over buying cucumbers.
Or they check their accounts multiple times per week, which is total overkill and is happening
here. Or they simply still live in scarcity in fear rather than embracing this new chapter
of life.
You don't just magically embrace a new chapter.
You have to take a second to recognize it, and you have to do that over and over again.
Think about it.
In school, these rituals happen for us, like graduation, different grades, different teachers, even different buildings.
But with money, we have to create these rituals ourselves.
So ask yourself, what rituals have you created around money for yourself and for your family?
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So what seems to be the issue on a day-to-day basis? I think I just carry a lot of stress worrying about the past and the future.
The past being credit card debt?
Yeah, just kind of like not wanting to get back there and also carrying probably some
very unhealthy messages
and just feelings about money.
Okay.
And then what's the future?
What's that worry?
The future is like, are we gonna,
like someday we might have to have two cars.
Someday we're gonna have to start paying off
these student loans again or someday we're gonna have
to pay for preschool and just like preemptively
worrying about things like that. Ah, you love to worry. You could say that. Is
that fair enough? Yeah. What do you what do you like about worrying? It makes me
feel like I could be prepared for things. That's a good answer. Anything else?
I know the classic answer is control.
Control.
Would you agree with that?
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
All right.
Christine's over here grinning.
What?
What do you think Christine?
Anything else you want to add?
No.
Yeah, I think Kate's the account every dollar person
and she said in the beginning,
she, if she could save it all, she would.
Like, if we didn't have GFS and it all went to saving,
I think that would be her preference
to make her feel better.
You like that, Kate?
You wanna save everything?
I would like to save more aggressively, yes.
You wanna create a blanket made out of $1 bills?
Keep your warm?
Yeah, maybe.
What?
Ha ha ha ha ha.
I mean, we can do it.
It's not that expensive.
You know, it'll give me a hundred bucks.
And some yarn.
We could probably make it happen.
True.
This was gonna sound really off-course,
but I went to music school for classical music.
And you know, that's not exactly a lucrative field.
And I think I spent a lot of years of my life
sacrificing for this thing and also anticipating
that I was going to never do well financially.
Ah!
So I was like mentally prepared for that until I wasn't.
What changed?
I realized that I wanted things like a family and a home and a comfortable life and the opportunity
to participate in society the way normal people do.
Yeah, I was definitely operating on that mindset for a long time.
So, I think in order to exit that mind, that area,
mentally, I kind of decided that I was going
to put music aside as a viable career path
because something I still do,
but I basically decided I'm not gonna try
and make money at this anymore.
Fine, so you made money at other stuff?
Yeah, I have a different job.
Great.
How do you feel about that?
I feel good about my job, but I think that there's a little bit,
like there's a part of me that associates the abundance
of money with like a failure as a musician.
That's deep.
Yeah, because it's like part of being a musician and making it as a musician
is like really extreme sacrifices. Yeah. Do you hate money? I used to think I did, but no.
Do you love it? No. How do you feel towards it?
We are hoarding.
Wow.
Tell me more.
Like we're kind of, I'm still building trust for it, like building the belief that it's worth pursuing, like,
instead of this other thing that I was dedicating my life to. Yeah. And I think that
there's some hurt and sadness over the structural issues that led me to that breaking point, the decision point.
I can understand that.
I mean, you spend your whole life becoming really good at this.
You internalize the set of beliefs that are reinforced by the structures around you,
right?
People making jokes about, well, you know, that's why we went into music and all that
kind of stuff and this sort of
artists are meant to be poor and starving and it's everywhere.
And you just had to set it aside consciously.
And here you are.
That comes with grief.
Even though I see those instruments in the back,
I can see that you're still active as a musician
in some form. It's not
the same as going the path you originally thought for yourself. But this path you chose now, the
one where you make more money. What does that give you that music did not? So much. Tell me.
not so much. Tell me. Friends, good mental health, a sense of like direct material feedback that I am doing something that other people value in the world. Yeah. And how about with your family?
I feel like I am bringing something to the table for them.
It feels like when I was dedicating hours of my day to just saxophone, it really felt
selfish.
That's got to be a weird feeling. It feels selfish, but you're also not making any money. but really selfish.
That's gotta be a weird feeling. It feels selfish, but you're also not making any money.
Right.
But then it's kinda like,
well, I've just been doing this for so long.
What else am I supposed to do?
And if I were to give up that, it makes me feel
even worse than I feel.
It's this nice little box that you kinda end it up in.
Yeah. There's a lot of entangled, bad thoughts and beliefs and voices.
Well, I think it's very courageous that you were able to decide the next chapter of your life.
One thing that I'm really hoping is that as you really start to internalize this new chapter, the one that you yourself chose,
that you can get really specific and vivid with what your choice has gotten you.
Yeah, it's true.
And I'm just wrapping my mind around the future stability that I'm going to have as a result.
Like I started a retirement account, which I never planned on.
Yes.
So it's those kinds of things that have been enabled
by this choice.
That was really interesting.
On this podcast, we talk about how you grew up
around money a lot.
But I haven't had the chance to dive
into the professions people choose
and their effect on your money psychology. If you know artists,
you know they have some seriously messed up beliefs about money. And it's not just artists
themselves, though I do think the entire industry does attract certain types of people. It's
the culture that's been created and systematically reinforced. It's the unlimited supply of musicians
who want to be famous, which allows a pyramid-like structure
of poorly paid people at the bottom, and a few stars, who everyone wants to be.
You see this dynamic with actors and actresses, rappers, concert pianists, it's everywhere.
One thing I love about this show is that we can be deeply intimate with two people, but
we can also get the opportunity to zoom out and talk
about the structures around us and how we are products of our environment.
Kate recognized her environment wasn't serving her and she made a conscious choice to change
it.
That takes real courage, but it also comes with a basket of emotions, grief, shame, confusion,
but also excitement and curiosity.
So let me try to understand where these feelings are coming from.
All right. When you think about the money messages you received growing up,
what do you remember hearing from your family?
I remember it just being arguments.
Family, middle class, what were they? I remember just being arguments.
Family class, what were they?
It's honestly hard to gauge,
like probably upper middle class,
but during my time growing up,
it was very tumultuous in terms of like,
my mom would work and then she would be not working because she was having
babies and raising babies. How many kids? Three and I'm the oldest. Okay.
My dad lost his job in 2008 and never really went back to working full time after that.
So then it kind of all fell on back on my mom. I mean Kate, Karen parents have a very nice house on a lake. And when I met her, I thought she didn't want for anything.
Yeah, okay, great.
So upper middle class at a minimum.
And what were your professions of your parents?
My mom's an attorney and my dad is an engineer.
When they talked about money, when you're a kid, what
was the context of that? They fight, they smile, what? They fought. They would fight about
my mom would be mad at my dad for not working harder and my dad would be mad at my mom for spending too much just
back and forth like that but they had totally separate finances which was
always very confusing. Why? Because they don't trust each other. They just don't
agree on things. They're not really collaborative with each other.
They still married? Yes.
You left like, is that a laugh like, I'm not quite sure how they're still married?
Yeah. Okay. Okay.
Find a.
Even Christine's like, yeah.
Okay. Got it.
Understood.
So they don't see eye to eye on money.
They kept their money separate.
They're still married, like decades later.
Yep.
Still going at it, fighting, arguing?
I probably, I bet they don't fight much anymore,
but that's because they're so separate now
that they just probably don't even really talk about it.
They share a house and that's pretty much
the extent of it.
Gotcha. How do you feel about that relationship now that you have your own family?
Very perplexed. Because I feel like Christine and I have found so much power and collaboration
and communication. Yeah. Like we are all of our plans for the future our joint.
And I feel like that makes things much
simpler and more fruitful. Yeah, I love that. And I just see my parents now approaching retirement age and they're both like
stressed out that they're not gonna have enough for retirement and I'm like
Now that I'm married, I'm like, you could have just been working this out
together all along.
And you would be better off.
You see that stress in your own life anywhere?
Well, yeah.
I'm obviously stressed, probably unnecessarily.
I don't know, I mean, I inherited my mom's stress genes.
She loves to be worried too.
When you're a kid, she's worried about what you ate. Do you have a raincoat on?
She gets your grades up.
What else?
Yeah, just always be careful, be careful.
Right.
Be careful, mom.
And can you complete that sentence?
Be careful because what?
You don't want to get hurt or you don't want to poke your eye out
or you don't want to break your sister's nose.
Love that.
Okay, great.
Now, this is real.
And so you as the oldest and the recipient of all of
that, be careful, be careful. What if this happens? How did you receive that as, let's say a 10-year-old
and older? Responsibility and burden. How would you say that that's manifested in your life as you became 15, 20, 25, et cetera?
I think I feel like I have to always
have the safety net in place.
That's my role kind of.
If I do that, it means I'm fulfilling my basic
inherited duties.
And if I don't do that,
then I am failing everyone around me. And what's going to happen if you don't tell everybody,
be careful. What's going to happen? Everything's going to go wrong. There you go. There you go.
Kind of like how your mom felt probably, right? All right. So your mom was sort of anxious about money, anxious about everything.
You internalize that.
Yeah.
Is there an area of your life where you are confident, comfortable, intuitive?
Um, I feel that way about being a mom.
I love it.
Tell me about that.
I just, I feel like with my son,
I kind of have the vision to not want him to go
through the feelings that I went through. And I feel like I have a good handle on how to go about that.
He's only nine months old.
Yeah, I know.
I love hearing you say this.
How did you arrive at that feeling already at nine months as a mom?
Well, I did a lot of therapy and self-reflection
like during the months that I was pregnant
and just kind of mentally preparing myself
and knowing my own tendencies
and having tools in place to deal with them.
I least sophisticated, like A plus.
You're not saying that you know everything.
You're not saying you're perfect. Nobody expects that, but I love hearing you use the word vision, I have a vision, we have a vision.
I think your son is very lucky.
Yeah, I want to exude more confidence and competence in our financial relationship and just our financial life.
I want to learn these things so that I can teach them
to my son in ways that my parents did not teach me.
What a profoundly important moment.
Kate didn't miss a beat when I asked her what area of life
she's comfortable and confident
and intuitive in.
If you are listening or watching this, what's your answer?
For me, it's this.
I love talking to people.
I love hearing from you.
You can see me when I'm talking to these couples.
I'm here 100%.
And it's fascinating to hear Kate talk about where she's intuitive,
because it tells me she's not an overthinker in every part of life. With her son, she has a vision,
such an important word, is something bigger than the day-to-day worries that usually consume us.
But did you catch how she developed that vision?
It didn't just come naturally. She worked hard at it. She did therapy and she worked on
herself about what she wanted to pass on and not pass on and how she wanted to show
up as a mom. To me, this is actually amazing because it means that all of us can do the
same thing with our money. You're not bad with money. Refrain that.
I haven't always been Greg with money,
but now I'm learning how to take control of it.
Did you go up poor?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Where there's a will, there's a way.
Yeah.
There's a strong connection, right?
And is that a recurring theme in your life?
You know, when it came to college and all that,
I remember asking my dad,
like, how are we gonna pay for it?
And he was like, it's simple, we're gonna stay poor.
He said that.
As in like, oh, then you'll get financial aid
and it'll be, you know.
So, I always remember.
What is your conclusion from that?
It today or then?
I didn't really understand how that college is expensive. I didn't I mean
I guess I asked the question so I knew that it was something people worried about
Yeah, but I was really kind of asking like do you have money satisfied for me?
You know what I mean?
And now how this is going to happen?
When you look back at his answer.
Now I see it as like lack of ambition.
Really?
Like, I was younger than it kind of felt like,
oh, so you don't have any hope beyond this.
Like, this is the life that you see for a...
Got it. So, you're saying looking back now with your wisdom,
you see your dad's comment that the only way
we're gonna pay for your college is for us to stay poor
as dad keeping himself small, limiting himself,
playing small so that that was the only way that you could afford to go to college.
Is that how you see it?
Yeah, that was he like, he didn't see anything better for himself either.
I see.
Did he go to college?
No.
Okay, and how about your mom?
No.
Are you the first to go to college?
Yeah. Wow. Congratulations. Thank you. That's
quite amazing. You went to college. You took care of your sister. You're an engineer. Have you
celebrated this? When I started making, you know, like good money, I made, I didn't know what I was doing.
I didn't have no idea what to do without amount of money.
And I think because I handled it so poorly.
And I think that's where the frustration is between Kate and I.
It's like, I want to celebrate and feel like I work really hard.
And buy whatever I want or whatever it is.
But I know that those behaviors
tend to sound like a wrong path, so it's difficult.
And so what would you say you do instead?
Instead of celebrating?
Yeah.
Like in, I guess in the past year, it felt like we were fixing ourselves.
I mean, there was a lot going on with Kate not working and all that, but it feels like restriction.
Kate, when you hear Christine share her story about how she grew up and any of that has surprised you?
No. Okay. Anything strike you as you hear that last part where I
asked her if she has celebrated her accomplishments? Yeah, I I don't think
necessarily that we've celebrated explicitly but I don't know.
I'm inclined to feel like our whole life
is kind of a celebration.
Not.
I know.
It doesn't count.
It doesn't count.
That's like telling your son when he turns five
and he goes, hey, where's my birthday cake
and you go, every day is a celebration
when you're breathing oxygen.
Sounds like I hate you.
And gosh, from hearing what I'm hearing, Christine, honestly, the journey you've been,
it's worthy of celebrating.
You know what's funny?
Professionally, I'm very happy and proud of my business and my co-workers and my Netflix
show and this podcast.
But I'm really proud of two things.
First my relationship with my wife, because
we love each other, and we spend a lot of time working on getting better together.
Second, the fact that I got physically fit, because I was a skinny Indian guy, and that's
what I used to call myself, and it took a lot of work, not just physically, but mentally.
And those things don't come naturally to me.
On the fitness side, I should be wearing an extra large Cisco shirt and working in tech.
But it took an immense amount of different decisions and embarrassment and humbling myself
to learn how to change my body.
The lesson here is about what you are proud of.
If you're in a relationship, you cannot compliment someone too much.
You cannot celebrate too much.
How many couples have you heard on this podcast?
You've paid off $50,000 of debt,
but they never even celebrated.
This is such an easy win that I want all of you to go for it.
Take the areas of life that you are proud of
and celebrate it. You will get a lot out of it. Take the areas of life that you are proud of and celebrate it. You will get a lot out of it.
I want her to feel trusted and loved and supported.
And how do you want to show up when it comes to money?
with peace. Are you showing up today?
With anxiety.
Scarcity?
Yeah, yeah, I think so.
I think so.
I'm going to be a lack of self-trust.
Self-trust, a lack of self-okay.
All right, so now tell us and tell her what you want to show up with when it comes to money.
I want to show up with a solid foundation that we can build on together.
that we can build on together. I want to show up with excitement and happiness.
Abundance? Yeah. Possibility maybe instead of worry? Yeah. Fair enough. Do you want to go wild? You want to like spend all your money tomorrow and just go blow it in Vegas? No, definitely not. I don't think so. I don't think anybody
wants you to do it or expects to do that. I think you're going to be prudent. You want to go back
into credit card debt? No. Okay, good. It's good to get that out there. So how can you show up with abundance and possibility,
but also not go into credit card debt? Are those things reconcilable?
I think that's what I'm not sure about. I'm still really transitioning
out of kind of an old frame of mind and trying to really let go of the past and live in the current circumstances.
Okay, so take all the idealized things that we just discussed.
For a moment, just give me two minutes of your time now. What would it look like if you lived your
life like that? What would be different about the way you talked to your wife?
Here's a hint.
Would you be doing that stream of consciousness thing?
No.
Hell no.
Why?
Because it's not fun for anybody.
Correct.
What else?
It's not productive. Correct. What else? It's not productive.
Yes.
What else?
And we deserve better use of our time.
Yeah.
It's not actually getting you where you want to go and it's costing you a lot.
You see the costs of doing that just that one little thing?
Yeah, I mean it snowballs into
arguments sometimes or just general
More general stress than it's even warranted and by doing that
What would you be able to do instead?
We could enjoy time together, playing with our baby, or watching a movie.
You guys ever left when you're doing the conscious spending plan and talking about money?
I don't know why not. It was fun, right? when you're doing the conscious spending plan and talking about money?
Probably not. Probably not.
It's fun.
I'm laughing right now, joking around with the two of you,
your car, and all this, this money can be funny, don't you think?
But what is it about when the two of you talk about money
that it suddenly becomes so serious?
What is that?
I think we're trying to defend our own positions. We go into it defensively. Yeah, I'm trying to convince her that this is why we should do this or we shouldn't use the credit card for the
I agree. You can't be funny when you're making a court case. Okay?
But yet, here we all, all three of us are,
and we're joking around, and everybody's teasing each other.
And, you know, it's quite fun.
I feel like we're all learning something.
Is there a way that when you talk about money,
you could bring in some of that humor,
some of that teasing, some of that love
that you have in other parts of life
into the money discussions?
Christine, I'm seeing a smile on your face. I want to start with you.
Yeah, I think we could. I was feeling like she's going to hide money or hoard money
for me because I, you know, I believe the money was there and she was feeling like I was
about to put a facet and credit card debt. Right. We go into these conversations with
these beliefs about each other.
And they're kind of the worst beliefs, aren't they?
Yeah.
Like she's hoarding, she's gonna put us back into credit.
I mean, that's serious stuff.
Meanwhile, I talked to you, the two of you're laughing,
you've paid off credit card debt, you've had a son,
you've made career choices.
Like 98% of what we have talked about is positive.
Do you realize that?
Yeah.
So why is it that in your conversations
with each other on these money topics
that seems like 98% of the time is super serious
and potentially even negative?
I think that's why we came to apply for the podcast
and we were like, yeah, everything's so good.
It was struggling to talk about it.
Yeah, we've been wondering that, like we have a good life,
we have a great relationship.
And then all it takes is one conversation
about a purchaser, whatever.
Right.
So what do you say we take a look at some of the numbers?
Because I'm really curious.
All right, let me pop this up.
So your assets, let's go, Kate,
can you read me off your assets here and give me the full numbers?
348,000. Okay, and what is that? That's mostly our house and our car. Right. And then we included some of my instruments in it. Cool. All right. Investments. What do you see?
109,202. Okay, great. Savings? 10,000. All right. And debt.
293,281. And what's that?
Um, that's our mortgage and student loans.
Okay, how much of the student loans?
Minor about 34,000.
Okay, I think Christine's are about 8,000.
Is that right?
Okay.
Okay, great.
Total net worth?
173,921.
Okay, how do you feel about that?
Good. Cool. Christine, how do you feel about that? Good. Cool. Christine, how do you feel about that?
Um, I don't know. I guess I'm neutral. I, that's it. Is it good or bad? I think it's not bad.
Okay. I don't think it's bad. You got a net worth in the six figures.
Pretty good to me.
Let's go, Christina.
This time, can you read me off your gross monthly income for each of you?
So I'm bringing in $8,400 in a month and K is bringing at $1,200 a month.
So total, you're making $115,000 a year gross.
How do you feel about that?
Good.
I feel good about it.
Great, I feel good about that too.
All right, so you're netting $7,000 a month
and your fixed costs, what's that big number
right next to the fixed costs?
54%.
Whoa, how do you feel about that number? Great. Great. I feel great.
About it too. Right in the middle 50 to 60%. I took a look at your housing.
I added up these two numbers. You're at 27, 28% right on the money.
You live in a, what's a general area you live in?
We live in Detroit. It's Detroit. Detroit, okay, got it.
Yeah, I was gonna say, it's hard these days to get on 28%.
You know, we talk about 28% used to be possible.
It's very difficult, especially for young people, and especially in high cost of living areas.
You've done it.
That's great.
Don't move.
You got a good thing going with your housing.
And this, by the way, is on Kate.
I understand that you are you making like a part time
income right now?
What do you think you might make ballpark
if and when you go full time?
Probably like 40 to 50,000 a year.
Whoa.
Let me remind you that Kate and Christine are 28 and 33.
And most importantly, they recently had a baby boy
and they have a loving dynamic.
It's very obvious.
A little bit about their numbers.
Their net worth is about $350,000.
They have just over $100,000 invested.
$10,000 in their emergency fund.
$93,000 in debt, which is a mostly paid-off house and
two relatively small student loan balances. Christine makes $8,400 a month as an engineer,
a number that's likely to go up given her age, and Kate is making $1,200 a month as an event
planner. She's also their son's primary caregiver right now. So if
and when she switches back to full-time work, her income will go up. Even their conscious
spending plan metrics are very good. 54% fixed costs. 27% on housing. This is all great.
So where's the celebration? Where's the pride? Okay, so so far in our discussion,
what has surprised you about what we've talked about?
I think I've been surprised at how hard it is to think about celebrating.
Yeah. I mean, I think we just, we don't prioritize
that just doing stuff that you have or just as a family.
And the vacation we just took was great. We went with friends and it was awesome.
But yeah, I do wonder if we need to do more celebrating just the two of us,
so great kind of what we've accomplished.
Yeah, I agree.
And you have accomplished a lot individually and together. In some ways, I'm more proud of you than the two of you are of yourselves.
It's unbelievable. Really, like it's, I'm sitting here like, oh my God, what you've accomplished,
making decisions about leaving music or at least putting it to the side for your primary career.
And of course, Christina, how you grew up and what you do now is incredible.
So yes, we are going to structurally change the way that you spend money on celebrating
for the two of you.
It's like a blank canvas.
You two can choose what you want to do there. Yeah. I think I've been holding off on having this conversation
with Christine Pishdie.
Has accused me of saving too much.
So all you needed to do to have this conversation was apply,
get screen, fill out all kinds
of releases, get selected out of thousands of applicants, and then schedule it to appear
with me on this podcast.
Well, here we are.
Go ahead.
Please have the conversation.
I'm listening.
We're all listening.
Well, yeah, Christine, I think that we are unique and that we have a lot of large purchases
that we have in our goals for the future.
But I think that the only way we can make those happen is if we save a little more than
the recommended percentage to get there and to really be able to achieve those goals.
Plus, plus. Can I, before we get Christine's reaction, hey, can I give you a slight
reframe, a little different way to say that in same content, just a little
differently? Okay. Christine, I'm so proud of how far we've come. We've each paid off
credit card debt, we've joined our finances, we've built a beautiful life. We have our
son, we have our dog, we have this house, I'm happy and I'm excited to do this with you.
So would it be okay if we talk about adding some savings, not just for the sake of saving,
but so that we can start to experience the next level of our rich life, the honeymoon,
the instruments, the night out with the four-course meal. That's what I want to do. That's the kind of life that I want to do with you.
You sound a lot nicer and more positive about what we could be doing and the possibilities rather than why aren't we doing this. I agree. I agree. How did I start my whole thing? Do you remember what I said? Yeah, you talked about how proud you are of us and how great we're doing.
Yeah, that we deserve better. You can never say that enough. You'll notice there was one key difference. I mean, yes, I started with appreciation and yes, I explained the why. When you said, but,
I went like this, like I grimaced,
because you're equating,
like, hey, we're doing okay, but I think we need to save more.
It almost reminds me of, you know,
going back in time and your mom telling you
all her worries and things, be careful.
And I wondered if you could just reframe that to and.
We're doing great and I want us to do even greater together.
So that is what my impetus was.
What do you think?
Yeah, that sounds right. Okay. Now let's get Christine's was. What do you think? Yeah, that sounds right.
Okay.
Now let's get Christine's take.
What do you say?
Well, I think one thing that I should remember
is at the end of case of ours to me,
we got married.
She promised that our life would never back in better.
That's exactly what she said.
I feel like I haven't heard that since and have it backed up with actual action.
I'm really excited for it.
Thank you for seeing where I'm coming from and for seeing that I'm not trying to
hoard money or say in Vegas.
I just want us to live
our best possible life.
The numbers come second.
The Rich Life comes first.
A very interesting conversation with Kate and Christine today.
I'd like to share their follow-ups
that they sent me after we talked.
What surprised us?
We were most surprised to realize
that we actually don't celebrate our wins.
We often look at our life as one big ongoing series of rewards for our hard work, which
is true, but we see now that that perspective doesn't give us the space to relish and
celebrate what has already been accomplished.
It seems like a subtle mindset shift, but it's actually important to distinguish between
daily gratitude and special celebrations of big moments.
Number two, how we have been showing up about money versus how we would like to show up
about money.
Kate said, in the past, I've been showing up to our money conversations with anxiety,
defensiveness, and restriction.
I would like to instead show up to our money conversations with openness, abundance, possibility, kindness, trust, and curiosity. In order to do this,
I need to let go of the parts of my past that hold us back, such as my learned impulse
to control and the guilt and shame I harbour about leaving music behind as a viable career
path. I want to fully dive into this new chapter of our life and allow us to enjoy and celebrate
our successes and to think bigger about the possibilities for our life because I know
that Christine and I are so powerful and full of potential as a team.
Christine said, I feel like in our money conversations now, I'm being very defensive.
I avoid dreaming about a richer life because I don't want to stress
Kate out. In the future, I want to prioritize being open to having a richer life, and I want to be
vulnerable enough to create that rich life with Kate by dreaming with abandon. They also said,
we changed our CSP to factor in a new savings category, which we are calling New Zealand. After
discussing it further, we decided that we want to save up for 10 years, then take
our son with us on an amazing, super memorable international family trip.
10 years from now because we want their son to be old enough to fully remember the trip.
As for our honeymoon, we decided we will take it within the next year or two.
We will go somewhere cozy in the mountains where we can hike during the days and enjoy a private hot tub in the evenings.
I want to thank Kate and Christine for coming on the show and sharing their story
and their finances with all of us. Every time guests come on the show, it shows huge amounts of
courage to open up their lives for all of us. So thank you very much.
huge amounts of courage to open up their lives for all of us. So thank you very much.
Thanks for listening to I Will Teach You To Be Rich.
I'm Remete Saiti.
Please follow the show on Apple, Spotify,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
If you haven't read, I will 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.