Financial Feminist - 220. How to Talk About Money with Your Partner with Ramit Sethi
Episode Date: March 17, 2025Talking about money with your partner can feel awkward, overwhelming, or straight-up terrifying—but avoiding it? That’s a guaranteed way to create resentment, stress, and financial chaos. Nearly h...alf of couples argue about money, and 36% say it's one of the biggest sources of stress in their relationships. So, how do we break the cycle and actually have productive, meaningful conversations about money with the person we love? Enter Ramit Sethi—money expert, bestselling author of I Will Teach You to Be Rich, and the host of Netflix’s How to Get Rich. He’s here to help us navigate the messy, emotional, and psychological side of managing finances as a couple. We’re getting real about why money fights happen, the invisible scripts we bring into relationships, and how to align financially even when you and your partner have wildly different incomes, spending habits, or financial values. Plus, we’re tackling one of the biggest taboos—what happens when a woman earns more than her male partner. If you want to stop arguing about money and start feeling financially aligned, this episode is a must-listen. Ramit’s Links: Order Money for Couples: https://www.iwillteachyoutoberich.com/books/ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@ramitsethi Money for Couples podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/money-for-couples-with-ramit-sethi/id1577864998 Read transcripts, learn more about our guests and sponsors, and get more resources at https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-show-notes/220-how-to-talk-about-money-with-your-partner-with-ramit-sethi/ Looking for accountability, live coaching, and deeper financial education? Check out our exclusive community: Join the $100K Club: https://herfirst100k.com/100k-pod Our favorite travel and cash-back credit cards, plus other financial resources: https://herfirst100k.com/tools Not sure where to start on your financial journey? Take our FREE money personality quiz! https://herfirst100k.com/quiz Special thanks to our sponsors: Squarespace Go to www.squarespace.com/FFPOD to save 10% off your first website or domain purchase. Rocket Money Stop wasting money on things you don’t use. Cancel your unwanted subscriptions by going to RocketMoney.com/FFPOD. Quince Get cozy in Quince's high-quality wardrobe essentials. Go to Quince.com/FFPOD for free shipping on your order and 365-day returns. Netsuite Download the CFO’s Guide to AI and Machine Learning at NetSuite.com/FFPOD. Gusto Run your first payroll with Gusto and get three months free at gusto.com/ffpod. Indeed Hiring? Indeed is all you need. Get a $75 sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility at www.indeed.com/ffpod. Public Fund your account in five minutes or less at public.com/ffpod and get up to $10,000 when you transfer your old portfolio. (see disclosures: https://herfirst100k.com/financial-feminist-show-notes/220-how-to-talk-about-money-with-your-partner-with-ramit-sethi/) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Nearly half of couples say that they argue about money,
and 36% say that money is a huge cause of stress
in their relationships.
If you've ever argued about money in your relationship,
this episode is for you.
Ramit Sethi is back to talk about all things money
for couples, let's get into it. Hi, Financial Feminist. Welcome to the show. I am thrilled to see you as always. Thank
you for being here. My name is Tori. I'm a New York Times bestselling author. I am a
money expert. I have helped over 5 million women save money, pay off debt, start investing
and start businesses. And if you want a free personalized money plan for wherever you're at in your financial journey,
you can go to herfirsthundredk.com slash quiz. That is a free financial plan, herfirsthundredk.com slash quiz.
We're gonna ask you a couple questions to be able to deliver you the best advice for wherever you're at right now.
Today's episode is a great one because my friend Ramit Sethi is back. You know him from his book, I Will Teach You to Be Rich,
but you also probably know him from his Netflix show as well,
which is all about money.
And his specialty is money for couples.
How do you manage money in a relationship?
How do you have hard financial conversations?
How do you both get each other on board towards your financial goals?
So we are talking all about invisible money scripts today
that we bring into every relationship.
These are the narratives that you might not even know
you're believing or the psychological side of money
that you're bringing into your relationship
with your partner.
We are talking about the common money fights
that Ramit sees in the couples who come on his show
and what to do if you're in a relationship
where you and your partner either have very different ideas of how they want to manage money, very different incomes. And we're
talking about if you make more than your male partner, if you're a woman dating a man, we're
going to talk about that too. Ramit Sethi is the host of Netflix's hit show, How to Get Rich,
and the author of the New York Times bestseller, I Will Teach You to Be Rich. Ramit is known for
his unconventional insights on money psychology and his no-nonsense approach
to designing and living a rich life.
Rumi also hosts a popular podcast called Money for Couples,
which features real life couples sharing real stories
with real numbers from behind closed doors.
This is one that you're gonna wanna share
with anybody in a relationship and your own partner.
This is required sharing.
Do not pass go, do not listen to the rest of this episode
until you have shared it with your partner.
Because bonus points if you listen to this episode together.
Maybe just like turn it on while you're in the car together,
while you're driving somewhere.
Nice way to introduce this conversation
without a lot of overwhelm or intimidation.
So great episode for anybody,
but especially someone who is struggling
to manage money and their relationship.
So let's get into it.
But first, a word from our sponsors.
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Rumi, we're so happy to have you back on the show. Can you tell us what you do and why is it so important?
If you have ever thought about going beyond
a spreadsheet and living a rich life, that is what I do.
I help people use their money to live a rich life.
It could be traveling six weeks a year,
could be buying a beautiful cashmere coat,
could be being home to take your kids home
from school every day.
That is what I do, that is why I love what I do.
You have given financial advice for nearly,
is it two decades now, but over the past few years,
you've really honed in on personal finance for couples.
What drew you to that specifically,
and why is that so important?
Well, my wife and I began talking about money
much more seriously when we were dating.
I have to admit, I violated my own rule
from chapter nine of my first book,
where I'm like, talk about money early.
And I didn't, and my wife called me on it.
She said, hey, it doesn't feel fair
You know, you know everything about my finances
I don't know anything about yours and that began a series of conversations
Including how we see money how much we have signing a prenup
combining our finances even deciding on
How we want to use money on a day-to-day basis.
I think it's fascinating.
I think it is so, it is the combination of money and psychology.
It's super juicy and voyeuristic.
I could never stop talking about this.
Well, you mentioned your experience with your wife and I think it is so interesting that
you knew everything about her money and she knew very little about yours
What were those first financial conversations like between both of you?
Well, they were one-sided because she asked me for some advice about her 401k something like that
And I was like have you ever heard of this book? I will teach you to be rich
You might recognize the guy on the cover yeah Yeah, that's me. So, you know, I helped her with some 401k question and as a matter of that,
I knew about her income and her investments and stuff like that. It was fine. But what I forgot
to do and what I failed to do was to realize that can start to feel very unbalanced when one partner
in a relationship knows
more about the other or just knows more about money. That doesn't feel good. And I
see this often when I speak to couples on my podcast. One partner earns more
and almost naturally they become the money person. Which is a big no-no. So we
started talking about money. And we had actually one of my favorite conversations of all, which was just, hey, here's how much
we both have.
What do we want our life to look like?
And it was just blue sky.
It was so beautiful.
Do we want to live here or there?
What kind of family do we want?
How often do we want to see our parents?
And it was just very exploratory, brainstorming.
That's a feeling that I love and I want every couple to have that feeling regularly. That
was the good stuff. But we also had a lot of tough conversations. Our conversations
about a prenup started off pretty well, but then they got really hard.
And eventually my wife said, look, we should go see a therapist. This is not going the
way it should be. And so I literally went on Yelp and searched therapist near me. We
went to the closest one.
That is the most male thing I've ever heard.
She was so good though. She has these great questions. And she said to both of us, how do you see money?
When you think of money, what word comes to mind?
She looked at me.
I said, growth.
That's the easiest question I ever heard.
I could literally see the numbers floating in front of my eyes.
Rule of 72, Trinity study.
Just like, oh, so easy.
Then she turns to my wife, asked the same question.
And she goes, safety.
I said, what?
I looked at her like, what's that word?
That's the equivalent of saying metal.
Look, metal.
What, what does that have to do with money?
And it really revealed that we saw money so differently.
I have been an entrepreneur for 20 years.
I feel safe.
I feel physically safe, financially safe.
That's not a correlation for me.
For her, it was.
And that actually allowed us to come much more closer.
It sort of made us realize, oh my gosh, we have so many things that we see money differently
about.
The way we were raised, our jobs.
And now we talk about money in a different way.
We talk about it regularly, positively, proactively.
That's what I want
for every couple.
We've both done a ton of research, both looking in the data, looking at the studies, but also
talking with our audiences about how just money comes down to often upbringing, how
you viewed money in relation to how your family viewed money. And even it sounds like the words you and your wife both chose
have a lot to do with maybe how you were brought up around money.
So what did you discover when you were researching how
men and women talk about and feel about money and how is it different?
Well, I talked to a lot of couples and thousands
of them and I always ask them, what do you
remember your family saying about money when you were a kid?
And it's quite revealing.
You can even see it in their body language.
You're almost transported back.
And here we are a five-year-old and they will usually say the same two answers.
The most common answer is my mom or my dad said, we can't afford
that. That is the most common. And hey, maybe it's true. Maybe the parents couldn't afford
it. However, as a child, you hear that one times, 10 times, 10,000 times, and you internalize
that you simply can't afford it. And that is why I now speak to couples who have often
done very well with their finances. They may have a high income or even millions of dollars, and they still
agonize over the price of blueberries. Also, wealthy people are weird freaks. They are
obsessed with the price of berries, but that's a whole separate issue. Freaking spreadsheets
open. Ooh, I'm cross categorizing. I'm doing a V lookup on raspberries. Why don't you stop
doing that and get a life? Let's focus on some stuff that matters.
But that's the most common answer.
The second answer that people remember
about their families saying about money is simply silence
because most families don't talk about money.
In America, we have this tortured love-hate relationship
with money and especially for parents,
they often see money as something bad to protect children from. But you would never protect your kid from learning how to
ride a bike. No, you say like, get on that bike. It's just fun. We're going to learn
it. And yet, parents often do not talk about money thinking, let kids be kids. And I couldn't
disagree more.
I mean, it's very similar to any sort of taboo topic, right? Like, sex education in schools
is either typically bad or non-existent unless you get it from your parents. And the way
you get it from your parents, I think, shapes your relationship with sex for the rest of
your life. I think the same thing with death. Like, all of these taboo topics, if approached
the right way, have the ability as children
to completely transform how you view sex, death, politics, religion, money for the rest
of your life.
But most of us don't have parents because they're not equipped with the tools to be
able to teach you how to be financially responsible or how to talk about money in a safe way.
I agree.
And it's also culturally mediated.
There are certain cultures that are more open about it,
certain that are not.
There are certain socioeconomic groups
that talk more about it.
For example, I had this very fascinating couple
on my podcast.
I'll never forget.
She was just over 40, and she was very successful.
She was a self-made entrepreneur making $200,000 per month.
Very successful.
And she was dating a man who was just a little younger
than her, late 30s.
And he had recently quit his job to start his own business.
He was making $25,000 per year.
Now, that's a stark difference in income. And it was causing certain issues
because the primary disagreement was she wanted him to occasionally pay for dinner. She wanted
to feel taken care of. Makes sense to me. Fine. And he actually said, Yeah, I agree.
I want to. So they would go out to dinner once in a while and he would slip his card on the table.
And you know what she would do? She would push it back and she would say,
no, I want you to max out your Roth IRA.
So mixed signals.
Mixed messages, exactly. And there are so many fascinating parts of this two-part episode on the
Money for Couples podcast. But one thing that was revelatory was I asked her,
you're making $200,000 a month.
What do you remember your family saying about money
when you were a kid?
She's like, oh, they were talking about investing
when I was five or six years old.
Of course they were.
Of course they were.
We tend to see this in higher socioeconomic families.
They talk about money.
It's like a lot of families, we talk about food.
We want to have a healthy relationship with food.
Why don't we have the same inclination towards money?
I am in a similar relationship with my partner
and I find it so interesting, that story,
because I make a lot, a lot more than my partner.
My partner, I joke, is a civilian.
He is not an entrepreneur.
He is not a public person and works very hard at his job,
but does not make a lot of money.
And so we've had to have a lot of conversations,
especially if we're trying to go out to dinner
and it's a restaurant I choose.
And for me, a money dial is food.
I call them a value category.
You'd call them a money dial.
Food out is one of my favorite things to spend money on.
And so I'm choosing the restaurant that's more expensive.
And it would be completely unfair if I choose the restaurant
and then expect him to throw down his credit card
because this is a restaurant or a lifestyle
that I can afford and is now normal for me
in a way that it isn't for him.
So how do you navigate it? What did you decide to do?
I mean, if I bring up, I want to go to this restaurant, it's on me to pay.
And I think we've also had conversations and we've discussed this on the show before
that if we were to move in together or start sharing some of the bigger expenses,
a 50-50 split does not make sense. That is equal, but that is not equitable.
So maybe actually can we talk about that as a solution for folks as well?
I think there is this misconception that like, okay, when we start having conversations about money,
and I want to be an equal partner, it's a 50-50 split.
But most partners don't have the exact same financial situation.
You're both making $75K a year. You both have the exact same financial situation. You're both making 75k a year.
You both have $10,000 invested.
Like very few people have the exact same situation.
So what problems does that lead to when we say,
okay, we're just gonna split things down the middle?
Excellent question.
When you're dating, things are relatively simple.
I don't encourage people who are dating
to combine their incomes in general.
So, you know, it's like, hey, we're going out
and maybe one partner picks up dinner,
the other picks up drinks,
or however you decide to split it.
As long as you both feel good about it, great.
Can we pause there?
How do you have that conversation?
Because I know there's some people listening of like,
how do I bring up, hey, I'm going to cover dinner
if you can cover ice cream after,
or like whatever that looks like.
I'll cover dinner, you cover the movie.
Let's start at the beginning. Let's start with dating.
When should you talk about money?
Okay, take it from the guy who didn't follow my own advice and talked about it too late.
Everybody listen to what I'm saying, not what I did.
Okay, frequent advice in the personal finance world is you should talk about money as early as possible.
First date. I'm like, you guys have never been on a first date.
Get a life. That's not how people,
pulling out your freaking Roth IRA on date one.
Hey, everybody look, Vanguard. No!
By date three or four, you probably like the person a little bit.
You're curious about them.
That's a great time as you're learning more about them
to start asking genuinely curious questions.
Hey, where'd you grow up?
What'd you guys do for the holidays?
And I'm listening for clues. If they're like, oh, every December we go to Aspen. genuinely curious questions. Hey, where'd you grow up? What'd you guys do for the holidays?
And I'm listening for clues.
If they're like, oh, every December we go to Aspen.
Oh, wow, that's quite interesting.
Or if like my family, you know, for vacation,
we got in our minivan and drove from Northern California
to Southern California to visit our family.
That's also telling.
So I'm not asking numbers, but I'm genuinely curious and I'm kind of putting together a
little collage of what I know about this person.
A great time to start talking more substantively about money is the first time you take a trip
together.
It can be the first trip, first nice dinner.
It's that first moment where the stakes are a little higher.
And I want to tell the exact phrase
that I encourage you to use in this moment. Adapt this for whatever relationship status
you're in. You go to your partner and you say, hey, I'm so excited about this trip we
get to take. I can't wait for us to spend five days together and be by the ocean. It's
going to be amazing.
I took a look at my numbers
and I have a sense of what I can afford,
but I would love to hear from you.
How are you thinking about money for this trip?
Now, let me break down what I did in three parts.
First, I got excited.
I always pin it to the North Star, the rich life vision.
I'm so excited.
I appreciate you.
I love spending time with you.
That's number one.
And it's not about money at all, actually.
It's really, it's like,
and we'll come back to what you did with your partner,
but it's what I advise people to do too,
which is like, how do we use money as a tool
to build the life that we want?
It actually has nothing to do with money originally.
It's like, we want to do this thing, which is travel.
I'm so excited for that.
So it takes money out of the conversation for a second
before things start getting a little more serious.
Always start with appreciation and a reminder
of what we're doing and why we get to do it.
The next thing I did is very important.
Too often people give away their power when it comes to money.
And the way they do this is they say, what do you think?
No, what do you think? No, what do you think?
You better know your numbers before you start
a conversation about money.
You're actually delegating your power and your authority
by going, what do you think?
That's actually unacceptable.
I have a lot of compassion for money.
I have infinite compassion for people who don't understand
how savings and investing works,
but I have very little patience when people willingly give away their power and then turn around and say, hey, it doesn't feel fair.
So in part two, you say, look, I ran my numbers. I have a sense of what I can afford, which
is amazing. And then politely you say, but I'm curious what you think. And that's part
three, which is engaging in a dialogue, right? I'm not coming in there guns blazing. Hey, look at how much my savings rate is.
No, it's like, hey, let's talk.
And I have a number.
Maybe you have a number.
Maybe you don't have a number.
But let's figure out what this looks like for us.
Now, adapt that to the first time you go out to eat at a fancy restaurant
or when one of you buys a gift for the other
and you're thinking about holiday gifts, et cetera.
It's it's pinning it at the North Star,
making sure you maintain your power,
and engaging in a dialogue.
Okay, that's so helpful.
I want to then ask the question that's on everybody's minds,
which is, what are the red flags when we are dating
and we start to have these conversations that spark that,
ooh, this might not be a healthy relationship.
And what are the absolute deal breakers if we're having this conversation and something
happens?
Like, how do we know this is not fixable or this is not solvable?
To me, there's one deal breaker when it comes to money, absolute deal breaker.
And that is if your partner is unwilling to talk about money.
We can work with a lot. Yep. But if they're not willing to talk about it,
if they are simply shut down,
if they shame you for bringing it up
and they might use language like this,
why do you always have to bring up money?
Can't we have one night where we don't talk about money?
That's a method of simply shutting you down.
That's a red flag to me.
I have a second red flag, not as severe, but pretty bad.
And that's cheap people.
Listen, I can fix a lot, but I can't fix cheap.
People who are cheap actually revel in being cheap.
And they've actually created an identity
where they are virtuous for being cheap.
Oh me, little old me, simple Ramit,
I don't need that fancy
wine or Topo Chico or type of car because I am a simple virtuous man who simply exists
with a 35 year old cotton shirt. It's not cute. It's not cool. And it actually is very
difficult to change. So I don't mind if someone's like, hey, I actually don't really care about
nice hotels or eating out isn't really like my thing. I prefer to eat at home. That's
fine. But there's a difference between being a conscious spender and being cheap. And when
you're cheap, it affects the people around you. And you always lead with cost. And that's
a red flag.
We've talked about this before on the show, but I love it when you talk about these invisible
scripts.
Can we explain what's going on from a psychological perspective?
How might these show up for adults, but specifically in relationships when we are starting to have
these financial conversations?
Invisible scripts are beliefs that are so deeply held that they are invisible to us.
I'll give you a few examples of invisible scripts we have.
In America, you need to buy a house to be successful. I know you and I both share
those laughter over this. So that's one invisible script. We genuinely believe it.
Let me give you another invisible script. If you work hard, you can get ahead. I think that's in general a positive invisible script.
I think it can be taken a bit far in the individualism of it,
but in general, I think it's good.
Another invisible script is you should go to college.
And when it comes to money, oh, there's a lot.
Some of them would be, we don't have enough, or inflation is crazy. I get this one a lot.
Inflation isn't, grocery prices are insane. I go, really, are they? Can you show me how much you
spend on groceries? Oh, no, I don't keep receipts and I don't track any of it, but it's crazy.
The way we feel about money is highly uncorrelated to the actual amount in our bank account. And you
can multiply that by a thousand when it comes to how you feel about the economy.
And so, with invisible scripts, we often have stories that guide our thoughts about money,
our behavior with money, and our feelings about money.
Common ones in relationships would be, we don't have enough.
I spoke to a couple last night on my podcast, and they were concerned they don't have enough. I spoke to a couple last night on my podcast and they were concerned they don't have enough.
They were a high earning couple.
And she said to me, it feels like we live paycheck to paycheck.
First of all, I fucking hate that phrase.
The median American does not live paycheck to paycheck.
The median American has a net worth of $193,000 and $8,000 in their checking and savings accounts.
That's an invisible script that has pervaded culture
Because of a fake survey that was made up by a marketing firm
So she goes it feels like we don't have enough money. Like all we do is just like
Live we have no money to save and spend we go through her numbers
They're putting aside thousands and thousands of dollars a month for retirement
They're also spending thousands and thousands of dollars on eating out and on luxury items.
So, I don't mind that we all have strong feelings about money. Feelings are real, emotions matter.
But sometimes your emotions are not telling you the truth. And so in order to live a rich life,
we have to do two things. The first, you got to know your numbers. You have to know your numbers.
It's unacceptable to say, I'm not a money person. Yeah, yet. But you're about to pick
up a book and learn it. That's number one, you got to know your four key numbers from
my CSP. You have to understand what compound interest is. It's a basic, simple language
of money. It's not hard. The second thing is, you got to master your money psychology.
And that means you really have to work on
acknowledging the invisible scripts you have about money,
probably starting in childhood.
You gotta ask yourself, how do I want to feel about money?
And you have to develop a practice,
which I know we both talk about,
in terms of feeling good about money
and building confidence through competence.
In that example you gave of the couple you talked to last night,
that tells me everything I need to know, which is, again, it's not about money.
And most of the problems that we think are about money
have nothing to do with the actual stack of bills in our bank account.
It is the feeling of not having enough or feeling of being unsafe.
And you were mentioning being paycheck to paycheck.
There are people out there as we know
who are actually living truly paycheck to paycheck.
Indent new paragraph, but there's a whole set of people
who say I'm living paycheck to paycheck,
almost as their way of not having to engage with money.
And not like, if you have a Netflix subscription,
you're not living paycheck to paycheck.
It's like you are not in actual survival mode. So I think that it is important for us to get
honest with ourselves. Are we actually in like deep financial ruin or poverty because there are
plenty of millions of people out there who feel that way. And then there are people who
are paycheck to paycheck because they mindlessly spend or because they're not owning their money choices.
And I think there is a huge difference between both of those that I want to make sure people
acknowledge for themselves of like, are you actually there?
Or are you just ignoring the problems so that you're there because of it?
I agree.
I agree.
By the time people turn 40, the number one worry is money.
And yet, almost nobody has read a single book on personal finance.
Okay?
Now, I want to say that's the personal responsibility part, which is even if you're in $50,000 of
credit card debt, as the couple was last night, there is a light at the end of the tunnel.
We can work with that.
I talked to people who have $500,000 of student loans.
We can work with that.
However, I also think it should just be a little bit easier. I don't think
the world should be stacked against us in every way. Like, trying to figure out how
to read an insurance prospectus or propose what it's so confusing, trying to figure out
if Wall Street is ripping us off. And by the way, they are. That's confusing. Trying to
get housing because of NIMBYs who prevent new supply from being built means housing is so expensive for everyone.
That shouldn't be as hard as it is. So I want to acknowledge all that as well. And I also want to say,
we got to take control of what we can.
When we come back, Rameet and I are diving into the most common money fights.
How to get a partner who is ambivalent about money to get more involved,
especially when one partner makes more than the other. We will see you after this word from our sponsors.
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Let's talk about some of the common money fights you see in couples.
Like can we list them?
Can we talk about what's going right and what's going wrong and how we can fix it?
Most common money fights is one person pointing the finger at the other and it almost always
goes like this.
I can't believe you spent that much at Target. I can't believe you bought
energy drinks again at the gas station. It's very common. And then they each go to their
respective corners of the boxing ring. They point fingers. I can't believe you do that.
How are we ever going to save for the kids? We have to repair this thing in our house.
And then they go to sleep, sleep on opposite ends of the bed, and they wake up in the morning and pretend it didn't happen
until it does six weeks again.
That is the classic money fight.
I want to point out a couple of things about that fight.
Number one, the only time most couples talk about money
is when they fight.
That's it.
They don't, no couple sits down, almost none.
Oh, let's do Ramit Sethi's agenda.
Hey, let's start with a compliment. Oh,
my gosh, look at our four key CSP numbers. Nobody's doing that. That's why I wrote a freaking book.
So they fight and they only do it reactively. Yeah. No one's, it's put like this, people hate
flossing. Okay. You know what they hate more than flossing? Planning 40 years from now,
how much they're going to have to floss. Yeah, it's reactive. It's not proactive ever.
It's totally reactive. And then one final thing which drives me absolutely insane.
Hey, let's spend the next 30 years of our relationship fighting over a $3 turnip at the grocery store.
You all are wasting your lives asking $3 questions instead of asking $30,000 questions.
You know what I would love to hear before I die?
I've only been doing this 20 years.
Hey, I'd love to hear a couple having a drop down battle, eviscerating each other over
their savings rate.
I said 5.5%.
You said 6.5%.
The difference is over $360,000 over our lifetime. They never had that conversation.
No, they're busy arguing about how much you spent on radishes, a complete waste of life.
The amount of coffee you buy is probably not going to materially change your life.
The amount you spend on energy drinks, while stupid and bad for your health,
probably not going to change your life as well. In fact, if you want to buy energy drinks and you
love it, I'll find a way to make sure you can buy those energy drinks in your guilt free spending category.
But you are playing small when you sit there and fight about $5, $10, $20 expenses, and
you ignore the $30,000 questions.
What's our savings rate?
What's our investment rate?
What's our asset allocation?
What's our debt payoff date?
The exact month and year will be debt free.
When will we have a million dollars and what does that even mean?
And most importantly, what is our rich life?
One of the questions we got from our community that I think I hear more than anything else other than we fight about money is probably
one of us is involved and the other one isn't.
Like, I care so much and I try to get my partner to care,
and they just go, maybe the well-intentioned version is just like,
no, you've got it, you know more than me, versus like complete apathy.
So how, if you're on the involved side, well, let's assume you are,
you're listening to this show, you're the involved one, right?
You're the one that is actually interested and your partner's not.
How do you get them to care?
And at what point is it then a red flag where we're talking about before,
where the person isn't willing to talk about money at all?
How do you know, you know, the version of the relationship where it's like,
actually, this isn't working at all anymore?
Yeah, yeah, it's a really tough question, but it's so common in many, many, many relationships.
You have one person who is quote, the money person, right?
And they actually, they chase their partner, they chase them figuratively, they chase them
literally to get them to please engage with my please sit down and can we talk for 10
minutes and not have you start a fight about it.
And this is a really tough situation.
You don't want to feel like you are the only person in the relationship pulling the other
partner.
No, you'd rather be both holding hands and going against the wind and doing it together
because you can give each other strength. And you know what? Sometimes in life, one of you falls, one of you gets laid off,
one of you steps back for family reasons. That's okay, that's natural. But it sure feels good to
know your partner's by your side holding your hand and they can pick you up when that happens.
If you are in this situation, first off, I would suggest you understand the four different money types.
One of them is an avoider. I write about this in the new book.
And avoiders use a series of conscious and unconscious techniques to avoid money.
When you read this, you will recognize your partner because they will say things like,
Oh, you know what? You're better at money than I am.
Or I'm just not a math person.
There are very specific phrases that I've cataloged in there.
And what this will help you do,
it's not meant to get you mad.
You've already been mad enough.
It's meant to help you understand what is their money type
and how do you relate to that money type to reach them.
Good news is you can reach an avoider.
The hard part is not only will you have to go through a process and sadly you will probably
have to take on the emotional labor of helping them to change, but you're actually going
to have to take a hard look in the mirror because partners of avoiders often have a
hand in their partner's avoidance.
Let me put it bluntly, if you didn't take care of the bills, would they?
Probably, probably, if you left for six weeks
for some reason, would they make sure
that the household kept running?
Probably, and so part of it, not to blame anybody,
but simply acknowledge the reality of the situation
is that when a partner continues avoiding,
the other partner, the one who's in the chase
or avoid or dynamic, often chases them more and picks up more of the slack.
And it is really hard for you to say, you know what, I have to be willing to let a couple
things go and it might fall down and shatter.
As long as it's not going to destroy this family, I have to recalibrate our relationship.
So I have some very specific techniques in there.
But in general, I would say it's common.
You will both have to reconceptualize your relationship with each other and with money,
and you can use the word-for-word scripts in the book to help get that going.
I also want to acknowledge for people who are in heteronormative relationships, and
if you are a woman, stereotypically, still, the man in the relationship is handling the money, is handling especially
a lot of the bigger financial decisions, the investing.
Can we talk about this? I'm sorry to cut you off.
No, please.
Okay. This drives me insane and I just have to make a point, especially because I know
your audience. They are so loyal to you and they listen. Okay, over 50% of the time when I'm talking to couples,
I'm speaking to them and I have all kinds of relationships,
heterosexual, gay, all kinds of relationships,
men, women, older, younger, all cultures.
And in a heterosexual relationship,
I'll ask them, what's your role?
What is your role in the finances of the family?
And so almost always it goes like this,
the man goes, well, you know, like I,
she does the day to day and I do like the big decisions.
I go, okay, what does that mean?
Big decisions.
Oh, like investing, buying a house.
Okay.
I go, all right.
I'm already getting very suspicious already.
Like my antenna are going up.
Then I turned to her, I say, is that accurate?
She goes, yeah, I do the day to day.
I go, what does that mean?
She goes, paying the bills. Okay, listen, I'm, is that accurate? She goes, yeah, I do the day to day. I go, what does that mean? She goes, paying the bills.
Okay, listen, I'm going to be very direct here.
If you believe that managing money is paying the bills, you are playing small.
Paying the bills is not as valuable as so many other parts of the personal finance system
that you have in your family.
A computer can pay your bills better than you can.
That's why I don't pay mine myself.
It's automated.
A computer can do that better than you or I ever can.
So if I were to simply say like,
oh, let me log into my Chase account and pay it off,
that's not a valuable use of my time.
In order to be a valuable member,
a partner in a relationship,
we want to be focusing on the things that are important components of a rich life.
Valuable things would be determining what are our four key numbers? What's our savings rate? Do we
have a debt payoff plan? Hey, what's our rich life? Are we alive? Those are valuable, but I hate
seeing people play small. I hate it. It's a tragedy to
live a smaller life than you have to. And managing money is not paying bills. That's actually small.
That's playing small. I want everyone to play big, much bigger than logging into account and
manually transferring money over. No, I want you to be living your rich life. I want you to be
strategizing with money. I want you to be involved in the investments. That is the level of big that I want everyone to be playing.
Okay, so let's talk about this. This is the like, always I wish we were in person because
this is one of those where I like want to connect with you one on one. Because I completely
agree with that. And this is you know, my entire platform is like, yes, grocery shopping,
bills, fine. But like, no, we need to be investing.
We need to be negotiating our salaries.
We need to be starting businesses.
And I completely agree with the $3 versus $30,000 decisions.
I also know that we live in a society
and we were talking about money scripts before.
We know, I know from the data that I found in my book,
the societal expectation
is that men know how to do these things
and so they should handle it.
And that women don't have the skills
or don't have the expertise to invest.
And of course we know that's bullshit.
No, I agree.
I think that this is also part of the scripts though,
where yes, I think at the individual level,
we can start taking responsibility and going, you know what, I am going to learn how to invest as a woman.
I am going to figure out how to negotiate my salary. I am going to figure out what our
debt payoff plan is. I just also want to acknowledge for people listening that you grew up in a
society where men and women were not really allowed to talk about money, but it's more
societally acceptable for men to talk about money, but it's more societally acceptable
for men to talk about money and to pursue money and to think strategically about those
big decisions.
So I do think that is what you're battling if you are a woman dating a man where society
expects men to handle this one thing and you to handle the other thing.
So it is then on you, unfortunately, as the individual to then say,
no, I'm going to be an active participant. Listen, I agree that there's a lot of historical
reasons as you talk about frequently in your book and on your social media. You know, there are
women were not allowed to have their own bank accounts until very recently in American history.
That's crazy. 1974. Yeah. Most men have no idea.
And so when we talk about things like secret accounts, there's like a whole thing I cover
in the book.
There are gender based differences with money.
And the reason that I'm getting so mad and so passionate about this is that I hate seeing
the expectations of playing small that have been placed on women with money.
I want to give you an example that just happened to me.
I was on book tour.
I went to a bunch of cities across the country
and I have been doing these larger theaters
and we had this just beautiful theater in Chicago.
We were, I was doing my show at.
Before the show, my team came into town and we all met
and we went and did this cool like dinner theater thing.
And we came and we all met and we went and did this cool like dinner theater thing and
We came and we're gonna take a photo and we were in one of the upper wings of the theater and it was a little crowded so we start to
Get all together the photographer was there and I noticed several women
crouching down I
Hate the sorority squad. I hate it. To me, it is playing small. And actually, nobody
expects like, the way I think about it is when I'm taking a photo, the people behind
me, they can figure it out themselves. This is my height. This is who I am. Boom. So I
said, no crouching. I want everybody up take up space and
There was a little surprise around the room because you never really heard that before take up space. You are you take up space
That's the same thing in money. We don't need to crouch down for somebody else
People behind us can take care of themselves. It's not my responsibility. I'm here for me and
I want that for money man or woman. I want us to decide what is our rich life.
I want us to be cognizant of the invisible scripts that exist.
I'm not saying we all can break out of everything.
That's obviously unrealistic.
I know my parents are immigrants.
I know I grew up in an immigrant family.
But I also know that when it comes to money, I can't imagine going the rest of my life simply accepting
cultural scripts. Because if I accepted the cultural scripts, for me, think about it,
I would be working as a software engineer somewhere. I would probably be the money person
in my relationship. My wife and I wouldn't really talk about it. I'd be handling it all.
And that's not the life I want. So I wanna encourage all of us,
yes, I acknowledge there are a lot of money messages
out there, a lot of invisible scripts.
We can't fight against all of them.
That's not our job.
But I don't like the crouching.
I don't like it physically.
I don't like it financially.
I think we can stand up tall and take up space.
No, I completely agree.
And I mean, I would be living a very different life
if I had made the quote unquote right choices for me, my gender, or what society believes my gender should do. No, I completely agree.
I mean, speaking of playing big, let's talk about breadwinners and let's talk specifically about when women are the breadwinners in relationships. I know from research from my book, you might have found this for yours too. In heteronormative relationships,
there was a study done that in census data, if the woman made more than the man, the woman
would lie and say she made less. And the man would say, no, I made more and lie as well.
So can we talk about some of what's going on when both from the invisible script, patriarchal
norm of it all, but also like actionably, how do we navigate,
especially when a woman is the breadwinner in a heteronormative relationship?
Well, it's happening more and more commonly. You know, in major cities, women in their 20s
earn more than men. And a lot of people don't know that it's happening more and more. And that presents a series of troubling, fascinating challenges and opportunities.
My view, there's so many ways we can analyze what is going on. What I look at primarily
is there has never been a model for this before now. Of course, there were exceptions in the past,
but in general, for a variety of reasons, men earned more. But that's changing and it's
changing fast. And so when you are experiencing a sociological difference in incomes, gender
roles, expectations, career paths, family planning. Boy, it becomes very confusing to men and women alike.
Now, we can't lean back on past history.
That's part of what the murkiness of today is.
In the past, if you look at traditional, a quote, traditional family structure is like,
okay, dad goes to work, mom stays home, 2.5 kids and a white picket fence, etc, etc, etc.
It was a clear
model. And if there's one thing masses of people like, it's a clear model. Tell me what
to do. Oh, I should buy a car and a house to be successful. Cool. I'll get a dog too.
But suddenly you have people getting married later, etc. So I work on an individual level.
Although I studied sociology, I work with individuals.
And my question always for them is, what's your rich life?
What does it look like for you?
And I spend a lot of time with people,
hours and hours when I talk to them,
because this is a very hard question.
How can you ask somebody what your rich life is
when the largest extent they've really thought about
is like, I want
to travel. And now I'm asking them like, Hey, wait a minute, if if in a heterosexual relationship,
if one if she earns three times as much as he does, it's all nice to say like, Oh, yeah,
like, kumbaya, everything's great. Okay, who's doing the laundry? Who's cooking? Who's waking up? When the baby's crying? These are real
questions. And I don't mind if the couple goes, you know what?
She makes more but we've decided we prefer this type of
traditional quote traditional relationship. Okay, as long as
you talk about it, it's fair to you. Cool. But most couples
don't talk about it. They actually don't
talk about it even though one partner, in the example I'm using, she's earning two, three times
more and that is actually the worst of all worlds. How can she be earning three times more? You don't
talk about it at all and suddenly she's waking up every night and doing the laundry. It actually
doesn't make any sense unless you talked about it. So it is critical for couples to start the conversational muscle from as
early as possible. Start talking about it when you're dating. You don't have to talk
about every little last thing, but hey, how would you feel if this? Do you want to live
on a farm? No, I want to live in a high rise. What if one of us got injured? Do we expect
our parents to live with us? Again, you don't have to have the right answers. You just have
to be able to flex the muscle of talking about it. Life is going to be infinitely challenging with
its varied situations that it confronts you with. Somebody will get laid off. Somebody
will get in a car accident. If you've built up that muscle of talking about it and realizing
we're a team, sometimes one of us is going to be in the lead, sometimes another is going
to be in the lead, realizing that the lead doesn't only relate to money, but overall relationship contributions.
Then we can find a way to work together in our relationship.
Oh, things are heating up. When we come back, we are talking about resentment and relationships. So stay tuned.
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Can you speak about resentment when one person is the breadwinner?
I see it a lot.
I see it a lot.
I asked couples a lot.
How do you feel about money?
And I will say I want to spend a second speaking to the gentlemen listening today.
I know you have a lot of women listening, but I also know you have a lot of men.
When I've spoken to couples, even when I was on tour recently, I brought couples up live
on stage.
And these are not actors.
These are real people.
I only know a teeny bit about them.
And it all unfolds live in front of a huge audience. And very often, I was speaking to men and I would ask
them, how do you feel? And they would say, well, I think it's, you know, I think we can
do this. I said, hold on a second. My question was, how do you feel? And they, they're startled.
This is me. This was me at age 22.
If you asked 22 year old Ramit, how do you feel about X?
I would have instantly said, well, I think it's about blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
I had no ability to tap into my feelings.
I'm I was raised an Indian guy.
We didn't talk about feelings, especially not for Indian boys. And that is true of a lot of men, especially in certain cultures.
And so I'll ask the audience, hey, how many men in here struggled to connect to your feelings?
Like at least 50% of men raised their hand.
It is really hard to build the skill of tapping into your feelings. I'm not talking about just for men, I'm talking about for everybody.
My wife and I, we've seen a therapist, she actually gave us something called the wheel
of emotions.
It's fucking awesome.
I needed it.
I needed like a beginning wine taster needs that little wheel of oaky whatever.
I needed it because, well, I'm going to tell you something, this just happened.
My book came out, got on the New York Times bestseller list,
and she calls me.
We talked and she goes, Oh, my God, it's amazing.
I was on tour.
She goes, How do you feel?
I was like, good.
She literally said, I know, I know.
I mean, I've been I've been working on this for like 20 years and that was my natural reaction
She goes she called me on it too. She goes. Yeah, listen, you're not allowed to say good
Yeah, give me another word and I was like, I really wish I had my wheel of emotions
so I share all of this to say I
Know how hard it is to talk about feelings yet, especially for men
but for everybody.
Because so many times, either we don't have access
to our feelings or our feelings around money
are all negative.
I'm scared, I'm worried, I'm anxious,
I'm overwhelmed, I'm ashamed.
In relationships, too often we do this thing
where most of the time we feel bad about money.
But when we start talking about it on those rare moments where we talk about it, suddenly
we turn into like spreadsheet analysts.
Hey, look at this number, the $4.50 actually doesn't reconcile over there.
It would be much better to say, you know what, I have some questions
about some of our spending, but actually don't want to talk about that today. Actually, I'm
just so excited to get a chance to talk to you about money. And I'm actually going to
share how to have your first positive conversation about money now, whether you're dating or
you're married 30 years, you can use this. Start off and it's four parts. Very simple.
You go, Hey, I'm so excited. We get a chance to talk about money. I realized in the past when we've talked about money,
it hasn't really gone the way I wanted to. I think sometimes maybe I'm a little overbearing,
but I'm excited because I want to do this together. Part one is just you pinning it
to the north star and maybe even acknowledging with a little vulnerability, something you
are not the best at. Part two, you know, right now when we talk about money, I feel worried.
I feel anxious.
I feel alone.
How about you?
What I'm doing there is I'm talking about my feelings, but then I'm also engaging my
partner.
I want it to be a discussion, not a monologue.
Part three, when I think about money, I want to feel calm, confident, connected. How about you?
And your partner shares what they know. Part four, so simply you just say, hey,
when should we talk next? That's it! Give each other a big old hug and a big kiss
and call it a day. You don't need to be talking about your freaking estate plan.
Not on the first conversation. Just have fun. Give each other a day. You don't need to be talking about your freaking estate plan. Not on the first conversation.
Just have fun.
Give each other a hug.
Good job, babe.
High five. And that's it.
That is how we start to feel
good about money.
I think it was Terry Cruz who talked
about when he was
training people one on one, like
doing fitness
training.
He would have them drive to the gym every day for a week, but not go in.
And he's like, I need them to get comfortable,
grow the habit of just drive to the gym.
You don't even have to leave your car, just sit in your car and then drive home.
And that's kind of what we're doing, which is just like,
you're not even talking about money,
really, you're talking about how you feel about money.
And then once the training wheels are off,
once you've gone to the gym and driven to the gym
for a week, then we can start to have conversations.
But I agree, I think one of the most harmful things
you can do is listen to this podcast and go,
oh my gosh, I need to go talk to my partner about money.
Honey, we don't have a will, we need life insurance, to my partner about money. Honey, we don't have a will.
We need life insurance.
We don't have a retirement plan.
We don't know what our rich life is.
Don't take that away from this episode of just diving into the deep end because it will
not go well.
Yeah.
That's I love what you said.
I totally agree.
That Jim example is so good, by the way.
It's funny.
It's too often we let our anxieties in our head come out with stream of consciousness.
And y'all, you got to stop that.
Everybody.
You know, I know on the internet these days, no one's being directive.
Okay?
I am!
Rameed Sethi!
Stop that!
It's actually not helping you.
It's making you spin up even more. And it's driving your partner away.
Your anxiety may be real, but that is not something for you to dump on your partner.
In fact, a much better way is to deal with that on your own.
Get mental health help.
Get a therapist.
Read a book.
Practice.
Literally record yourself and then listen to it.
This that's amazing.
Try it.
But also,
when you talk to your partner, you got to remember, ask yourself, how do I want to show
up? Okay, sometimes I even do caricatures with my guests on my show. You know, like,
I'll have a guest who's incredibly fearful of money. Every time they talk about it, they're
always catastrophizing and asking the worst thing. I go, who's that person? They're sitting
on your shoulder. What's their name? And it's, I'll make them give them a name,
Catastrophizing Carrie.
I go, what's Carrie wearing?
And she's like, you know,
I get them to really visualize it.
She's wearing a tattered shirt.
You know, it's like, she just,
she's not the kind of person you want to take advice from.
And then I say, who do you want to take advice from
on your other shoulder?
And it's, you know, calm Colleen.
What is Colleen wearing?
A very stylish piece of clothing that appeals to you. How does she look? She takes a deep
breath before she answers and she smiles. And she even acknowledges when she doesn't
know something. Calm Colleen isn't expected to know everything, but she will say, you
know what? I don't know the answer to that, but let me find out and I'll get back to you.
So we have to remember every time we show up, whether with ourselves or with our partner,
we are creating a groove.
And over time that groove calcifies.
So if you're always showing up anxious, if you're always worrying about what can go wrong,
boy, your partner is probably not going to be drawn to that. It's like you're reading my mind because what I was literally going to say is, one, you can't dump
your own stuff on your partner. And if I'm an external processor, you got to go do that in
therapy. You got to go do that with a friend. You got to go do that somewhere else. And the
second thing is something that my therapist, I see my therapist, my partner sees our therapist, and then we see her together.
And one of the things she tells us all the time is,
you have to bring your best self to this relationship.
And I know that sounds so obvious, but you have to decide
what version of me am I going to bring into this conversation.
And if it is the one that has not processed any of the external bullshit,
that is not your best self in this relationship. And if it is the one that has not processed any of the external bullshit,
that is not your best self in this relationship.
Right on.
Can we talk about how all of these things
might show up differently or uniquely
in queer relationships?
Well, I speak to several different queer partners
on my podcast.
I'll tell you something interesting.
We make it a point to reach out to LGBTQ community and we really want to represent everybody.
We've had several gay female couples, several, and it's really fascinating.
Could not get a gay male couple to come on the podcast.
I'll give you some names.
Please. I want to talk to them. And so listen, we make it like I'm asking my producers on
my team like, what are we doing? Why? You know, what can we try? I reached out to one
of my gay friends. I said, Hey, I'm trying. What's going on here? What am I not doing? What am I missing?
Because clearly I have a blind spot.
And he said something really interesting to me.
He said, you know, if I didn't know you,
I would not come on the show
because I would think you're a bro.
And I've been hurt by a lot of bros before.
And I was like, fuck.
Like that's honest. That's really honest. So, you know,
it hurts to hear, but I also get it. At least I get it from where I sit, from what I can
understand.
We had, I'm proud to say we had our first gay male couple on stage on Book Tour. It
was awesome. They were young, like 23 years old, creating their rich life. That was amazing.
But it's, I will say like, it's a challenge. I do see the dynamics are slightly different
with the couples I've seen
because we don't have the heterosexual male, female dynamic
that is so common.
But I don't really feel knowledgeable enough
to speak confidently from such a small group
that I've had the chance to speak to.
Yeah, I think that in my experience, talking with some community members, confidently from such a small group that I've had the chance to speak to. Yeah.
I think that in my experience talking with some community members, I think that one of
the big things that shows up is ironically because the gender roles aren't there, there's
then the conversation of like, what is our role then?
And so I think that that tends to be one of the first hangups for queer couples is,
speaking of like charting a new course, right?
We have a lot of data and history on traditional relationships.
So if you are, it's almost the same problem in a different way.
It's like, okay, we're not doing the traditional heteronormative relationships anymore.
So there's that issue.
But we're also, of course, then we can't do that either.
So I think that that tends to be one of the first problems is it's like,
what is my role?
And I'm putting that in quotes in this relationship.
If those roles hasn't been predetermined for me.
Really interesting.
Yeah, I'd love to learn more as I go through this journey.
Rumi, I was, I literally wrote this down to ask you about 20 minutes ago. We can cut this
if you don't want to talk about it. But the bro comment brought this up for me. One of
the things that I respect so much about you is around 2020. I think it was a tweet you
said, everybody's been saying this whole time in my career,
as someone who writes and speaks about personal finance,
that politics doesn't have a place in personal finance.
And I remember very distinctly in 2020,
you were like, I believed that for a really long time
and I'm not doing that anymore.
And it was one thing that to be 100% honest with you,
I was like, first of all, about time.
And second of all, it was really refreshing because I did see you as one of the more like
traditional personal finance people that wasn't going to talk about politics.
And it was kind of disappointing.
And I loved that shift for you.
Can we talk maybe about like why that shift happened and what compelled you to be like, no, we do have to
have a conversation about how politics and systemic oppression impact our money.
Yeah, thank you for asking and thank you for noticing. And I appreciate, you know, the
call out. I think it was time. It was time far before that. I believe that comment happened in 2016 when Trump got elected.
Oh, sorry. Okay, got it.
You know, I've been liberal for a long time. The more successful I've become, the more
liberal I've become.
Truly, me too.
Yeah. And, you know, I grew up the son of two Indian immigrants. They came here packed
up. My mom had never been
on a plane before and she flew across the country to meet my dad who she had married
seven days earlier. Okay. I grew up very lucky. I grew up with two educated parents who taught
me to work hard. We were middle class. We didn't eat out that much. We ate out when
we had a coupon and it was maybe every six weeks. When it came time for college, they said, you're going to college,
you're Indian, but we don't have any money. So you better find some scholarships. And
I did. I like to work hard. And I was also lucky. With a single flip of a switch or a
tiny change in some genetic thing, or where I was born, my life could have
been completely different. I still go back to India, I see my family a lot and
there are systemic reasons for my success. Yeah, of course I work hard, of
course, but I could work this hard in a different country and I would have nowhere near the level of success.
That is real. That is true.
And having grown up in both cultures, I know how hard so many people work in different countries.
And you simply cannot achieve what you achieve. I notice you're tearing up right now.
I'm crying. You're going into podcast host mode, which I
appreciate. I mean, it's just a hard time to be alive right now.
And one of the things I committed to was that after the
recent presidential election, I wasn't going to get wrapped up
and what they called them, we can do hard things, the MAGA riptide of it all.
So I wasn't going to be constantly elevated
by something that the Trump administration did or said.
And when I just think, I have that feeling about myself a lot too,
where I am so lucky for what I have and it's luck and it's privilege.
And if I was born in a different era, a different country, with a different skin color, my life
would be very different.
And you just start to think about, you know, our work is so important and it's also, this
is so much bigger than us.
And I think about that a lot and it's something that sometimes scares me because you and I
I think are very good at, of course, making an impact and teaching people to control what
they can control.
And there's also so much outside of our control that feels really scary right now.
And I was also just moved by your story because it's so true.
It's like we are both so lucky and privileged,
but we also have things that, you know, are not privileges.
And so I'm just thankful for the people who do this work,
even when it's inconvenient and even when it's not,
it's not smart, it's not a smart business decision. Like, you and I have both been very outspoken. And I don't know about you. It's cost me a
lot of money. It's cost me a lot of money. It's cost me a lot of opportunities. But I
wouldn't do anything different because I think that's my responsibility.
One of the funniest things that happens, you know, I get a lot of trolls
because I talk about politics.
You get so many trolls, it's so funny.
And they're so different than my trolls.
They're so different.
I've been waiting for 20 years to meet a smart troll.
They're not smart.
I'm like, please bring me somebody who's smart.
I'm like eating a bagel with my left hand
and just verbally eviscerating these losers
with my right hand.
It's so easy. I'm like, you got anything? Come on, I've been online for 20 years. You don't have anything?
Anyway, one thing that happens a lot is they start to give me advice. As if I would take advice from,
you know, Lord of War 52868 online. I'm like, as if you need it. Yeah, as if you need it.
They go, Ramit, you really shouldn't. First of all, stick to finance.
100% of the people who tell me that are white guys.
And I post their picture too.
I have a whole thread on Twitter where I literally post their picture.
Thank you for your advice to stick to finance.
I'll tell you to stick to mustard, which is all your entire feed is about.
But they give me advice.
It's going to hurt your business.
I'm like, if it costs me $1, fine. If it costs me $1 million, so be it.
When I was learning US history in high school, I read about Nazis. When I studied cults and deception at Stanford, I learned about many different cults around the world.
And I thought, wow, that's horrible and intellectually interesting, but that can never happen here.
And when you realize we're no different than anybody before us, we are human and history does repeat itself,
then if I can't speak up, a person who has been very fortunate, who's
worked hard, has become very successful, who has a worldwide platform and a lot of money,
if I can't speak up, then who can?
Yep.
So I'll take the arrows from Lord of War, the loser online, please.
But what I want is for people to know, you're not alone.
You're not crazy.
There are certain things that are simply wrong,
like denying election results, like denying vaccines,
like trying to lower taxes on guys like me.
I don't need the tax refund, okay? I have plenty of money.
What I need is for social services to be increased.
And it's okay to say that, and you're not crazy to be public about it.
Plus one to all of that. Thank you.
When we come back after a word from our sponsors, we're doing a rapid fire to end our conversation.
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Okay, I have a rapid fire for you.
Switch gears.
Hold on.
I'm going to take a second.
Thanks for asking about that.
Actually, I really appreciate that.
Yeah, I got asked to speak at Google and after the election, they won't talk to me.
But like, I think they're rolling back to EI.
Yeah, they just ghosted us.
We sent them like four more emails.
They just ghosted us and that's happened to a couple brands that we were in talks with like late October. We were very outspoken
We lost like 80,000 hundred thousand followers
Fine, but it was like, okay, this is where this is the hill you're dying on, huh?
It's very interesting switching gears back to couples. Let's do a rapid-fire
We asked our Instagram community to chime in
on some questions for you.
Some of them are like true rapid fire
and some of them we might want to get into.
When should you get a joint account?
When you get married.
Or if you move in together
and you have a certain joint expenses you want to split,
fine, but joint when you are married for sure.
I have a very passionate answer to this question.
And I think you will also agree with me.
When should you completely combine your finances?
When you're married.
You should also have your own individual accounts, though.
OK.
Because I am like, never absolutely
should you completely combine accounts.
You always need some of your own money.
Each partner should have their own individual account
that only they have access to.
It should not be secret, in my opinion, no secrets.
However, you should be the one who has access to it.
And whether or not you earn money or not, doesn't matter.
Each person gets some amount every single month.
Yeah. When do you know the conversation isn't productive anymore?
When should you take a break and come back?
You know it immediately.
If it's not going well, if you have something in your nose, take a break.
Low stakes. Hey, let's take 10 minutes. And the person, I learned this from our therapist,
person who asked for the break, they're the ones who bring you back.
Yeah, love that. My partner is freelanced and I'm salaried. How do we organize our finances?
Pick a number as a freelancer that you can commit to making. This is important for people with variable income. So let's say you make
some months you make zero, some months you make six thousand a month. Pick a
number where you're confident. Base your projections on that and then go one extra
step which is create a rule for any money above that salary. What happens to
that money? How does it flow? That'll keep things smooth. Should every couple have a prenup? No, most couples don't need a prenup.
You need a prenup if you have premarital assets. You know, a business, a house, a
large portfolio, or any number of things. Most couples when they get married, they
come to the table with pretty similar amounts of wealth and it's overkill in
their situation. The thing I always highlight for people too is that
if you get married, the state has already decided, right,
what that is going to look like.
So make sure that you're okay with that.
And if you're not okay with it,
and like in Washington state, it's a 50-50 split.
So if you're not okay with 50-50,
then you do need a prenup.
And I'll also say too, it's not just about assets,
it's also about debt.
So if one of you is coming into the relationship
with a large amount of debt, a prenup or a post-up if you want to do it after
might make sense for you too, because that's the part that's inequitable too.
Community members said that their partner doesn't want to get married until they're
more financially stable. Can you walk me through like psychologically what's going on here?
Well, this is common for men. Men have this invisible script
of, I need to be set, financially set before I can get married. Of course, almost no men have a
number. It's just a vague feeling. I think we shouldn't mock it because all of us have these
vague feelings about money around enough and around feeling scarcity. What is
important in that situation is to gently and compassionately probe. Hey, I totally
understand that. I like to understand a little bit more about what that means
for you. What does it mean to be set? Is that a number? Is there a path? And then
remember not to give your power away. You're not simply just saying like,
oh, okay, what you say is right.
No, it's like, hey, I totally understand that.
Here's where I am. Here's what I need.
And you see if you can make those two things work.
Well, and this is back to
you talked to it the first time you were on the show.
And one of the things I love that you discussed
is most people can't actually say what they want, right?
They can say what they don't want a million times over.
But they can't say what they do want.
And I think that's a version of that conversation,
which is what is set.
Most people can't define that.
Yeah, I ask people like, what's your rich life?
And you know what they usually say to me?
They do two funny things.
They go, I don't wanna be like chained to the desk.
I don't want to have, I go, hey,
that's really interesting what you don't want.
How about what you do want?
And they stare at me completely shocked. The other funny thing they do is I go, hey, that's really interesting. What you don't want. How about what you do want? And they stare at me completely shocked.
The other funny thing they do is I go, what's your rich life?
They go, oh, you know, I'd like to have a beach house.
It doesn't even have to be big.
It doesn't even have to be near the beach.
It doesn't even have to have a roof.
Maybe just two walls is fine.
I go, what the fuck kind of minimization is this?
Even in your hypothetical rich life,
you're telling me you don't even need a roof?
This sucks.
Your rich life sucks. Sometimes I tell them that and they're shocked me you don't even need a roof. This sucks. Your rich life sucks
Sometimes I tell them that and they're shocked one guy. He had a lot of money. He I go. What's your rich life?
He goes coffee and I was just like that's boring. That's boring and he was shocked. Someone would say that to him
I go listen, dude
You have like millions of dollars and you're telling me the answer is you're going to the grocery store and buying Dunkin Donuts coffee beans
Ooh
And he was you know, I was saying it cuz I knew he could take it answer is you're going to the grocery store and buying Dunkin Donuts coffee beans. Ooh!
And he was, you know, I was saying it because I knew he could take it. I wouldn't say that
to everybody. What I, what we ended up realizing was he loves, he really loves coffee. I go,
man, first of all, you can get nicer beans if that's what you choose. But second, you
make coffee every day. Why don't you hire a barista to come to your house and show you
new brewing methods? And third, why don't you go
to the national coffee competition? Make it a trip. Take your partner, go there, have an experience.
And he had simply never thought about the power of thinking big.
Yeah. Yeah. Well, and even we've, our first conversation sparked that for me where, you know,
that was, I think we spoke in, gosh, 2022, 2023.
My life was changing a lot. I was making a lot more money and I was starting to determine,
okay, what do I want to do? And I'm having that conversation now where, yes, I was,
okay, I want to travel more. I want to be more generous. But now I'm defining what does that
actually look like. And one of the things I want to do, I'm going to really try to do this by 2026,
I think, 2027 maybe, but I want to
go take a cooking class in Italy, like a cooking intensive where I go for at least six weeks.
I live in Italy. I take a cooking class. Like that is what I want to do. And the thing everybody
listening about that, that's so powerful is I can taste what that feels like. I can sense it. I can see what my day looks like.
I can see what my life looks like in a way that I don't get
when I just go, oh, I think I want to travel.
Or I think nice restaurants maybe.
Like that's not definitive,
but it's also not going to help you actually get to your goal
because you don't feel it.
It's not a sensory experience yet.
Totally right.
The smell, when you say travel,
I wanna know what seat on the airplane you wanna sit on.
I wanna know what time of the day are you drinking wine?
Oh, you're drinking it during sunset?
Is it windy?
What are you wearing?
Who's with you?
All of those details, they give you a why.
And I remember, I'll tell you something,
I did this exercise with my wife,
we called it the 10-year bucket list exercise.
It's in my book.
And it's both of you sitting down, writing down
what would be incredibly meaningful and magical
over the next 10 years.
And then you have a fun time.
Let's compare notes.
Oh, you wanna go skydiving?
Do that on your own, I'll meet you at the bottom, ha.
And then you pick one that you both love
and you actually start putting money towards it and you make it happen. One of the things that I picked was write a book at a hotel
I'm a writer and I love hotels. So a few years later
here I am writing money for couples and I forgot that I put this on my 10-year bucket list and
My wife goes, hey, why don't you go to that hotel you're talking about in Kyoto?
And why don't you write part of your book there?
I go, oh my god.
So two weeks later, I literally, I knew the exact seat I was going to sit in at that hotel
because I've been there before.
I knew the exact view.
I knew what I was going to be wearing. I knew what it smelled like. I am there two weeks
later looking at the exact view and I felt an immense amount of gratitude because it
was like bringing a dream to real life. And that, that is the power of a rich life. It
can be as extravagant as flying to Kyoto to write a book, or it
can be as simple as every Friday when I pick up my son from school, we're going to go get
a piece of candy every Friday. It's up to you, but it's so important to visualize the
feelings, the smells, the emotions.
Should you ever have a joint investing account?
Yeah, you can. They tend to be a little bit more rare because most people have their 401k and IRA and theirs and theirs.
But you technically can in certain ways.
And I'll highlight for people, some people don't realize this.
A Roth IRA is individual to you or a 401k so you can max it out and your partner can max it out.
So both of you can be contributing the full amount of money every single year or at least getting up to that full amount of money. So
that's, I mean, depending on your tax situation, but that's a nice thing. What's something
you can do now to protect yourself financially? If the worst happens, your partner gets injured,
your partner passes away, how can you protect yourself and potentially your children?
Easiest thing to do is to have an emergency fund that is three to six months of your fixed
expenses.
Please remember fixed expenses, they don't include things like eating out, et cetera,
because if one of you lost your job, you'd probably cut that immediately.
So it's everything in my conscious spending plan are fixed costs.
That's like groceries, rent, auto, the bare minimum to keep the lights on.
Take that monthly number, multiply it by three to six.
I recommend six.
And that is the best thing you can do
to set yourself up for safety.
My final question for you, Remy.
You've talked to, at this point,
thousands and thousands of people
and hundreds and hundreds of couples.
What is the best tip, trick, takeaway that you have?
And if you can tell us a story of a specific couple with that tip or takeaway, that's really
helpful. Well, the best tip when it comes to money is to automate it. None of this should be
an existential crisis. You know what I mean?
Like, my investing is easier
than brushing my teeth every day.
I brush every day, but I still gotta wake up
and pick up that toothbrush.
My savings just grows.
So does my investments.
And I have a pretty good projective ability
of how much it's gonna be in one year,
or well, five years, 10 years, 30 years.
I speak to a lot of different couples from different socioeconomic backgrounds.
A lot of times there's some big challenge with them, but there's this one couple where
they'd actually done very well. Like they were in their 50s. They had millions of dollars
and I asked them, how'd you do it? There's no magic. There's no secret trick. They said
we started investing when we were in our 20s.
We maxed out as much as we could afford.
When we made more, we increased our contributions and we just let time do its thing.
I love that because it is revealing in its simplicity.
We constantly look for secrets, hacks, tricks. Right now
I have a video up on my YouTube channel about why most people should not pick individual
stocks and I have all these people arguing with me. They're arguing with me, a guy who
has probably a larger portfolio than them, probably more deal flow and proprietary research, and yet the majority
of my portfolio is in low cost index funds. Why? Just think about the logic. Why would
somebody argue against someone who's been doing this for 20, has been investing for
like 30 plus years? And the answer is deep down, we all want a secret. I want a secret
to beat everybody else. The real secret to money is you actually
don't need to beat everybody else. It doesn't need to be hard. It actually can be simple,
easy, out of sight, out of mind. And what you realize deep down when you do automation,
you get to turn the page and get away from your computer and live a rich life. That is
the key. I call them salvation investments. Like we think, okay, crypto, the lottery, right? It's
like, okay, this is the thing that's going to finally save me from my financial problems.
Most of them are scams. Most of them are not going to make you money at all.
Rameet, thank you for your time. Thank you for your expertise. You know this already,
but I have to tell you that a huge part of my financial journey was directly influenced
by and from your work. And you were kind enough to lend your voice to my book, which I'm so
appreciative of. I just love and appreciate everything you're doing. So thank you. Plug
away my friend. Money for couples. Plug away.
Thank you so much that I'm flattered and honored. For everyone who's
listened Money for couples is my new book. I shared some of my most interesting and fascinating
findings including word for word scripts, what to say, what to say when your partner
avoids these conversations, how to have kids that are not spoiled, and how to even know
if you can afford a house a mattress a car
There's some very counterintuitive findings in the book. I think you'll be quite surprised money for couples is the book
It's also the podcast every week. You can listen and watch on YouTube couples sharing their most intimate
Real numbers from behind real closed doors. I love it. Thank you for being here. Thank you
real numbers from behind real closed doors. I love it. Thank you for being here.
Thank you.
Thank you so much to Rameet for joining us.
You can get his new book, Money for Couples,
wherever books are sold,
it pairs very well with his first book,
I Will Teach You to Be Rich,
and of course, with A Side of Financial Feminists, the book.
All of those books are incredible resources for you
to be able to manage money better as an individual
and as a couple.
And you can listen to his show, Money for Couples,
which is honestly such an interesting concept.
It's so good.
It's like voyeuristic and helpful
because you get real numbers
and a real peek inside people's relationships.
And like, that's fun.
That's fun to see what everybody else is up to.
Thank you so much for being here.
As always, Financial Feminist,
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