I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 181. “We argue about money daily b/c he can’t stop talking about Ramit”
Episode Date: November 5, 2024Nathan (35) and Linda (37) are arguing about money constantly due to Nathan’s anxiety and stress. He continually optimizes and re-optimizes their finances, worrying about retirement and the amount o...f money they’ll be leaving behind for their children. Nathan even applied to be on the show nine times in a row, and Linda just wants him to chill out. What will we learn from a couple that makes good money, but can’t stop stressing about it? This episode is brought to you by: Superhuman | Get a free month of lightning fast email at https://try.sprh.mn/ramitsethi. 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 https://drinklmnt.com/RAMIT. 99designs by Vista | Get $50 off your first design contest at https://99designs.com/ramit. Netsuite | Get visibility to everything in your business in one place. Sign up and defer payments, with no interest, for six months at https://iwt.com/netsuite. Facet | Get affordable, accessible financial planning with a flat fee membership. For a limited time, the $250 enrollment fee will be waived when you sign up at https://facet.com/ramit. Links mentioned in this episode • Get tickets to Money for Couples LIVE coming to a city near you in January Connect with Ramit • Pre-order my upcoming book: Money for Couples • Get the Podcast Newsletter and watch me analyze an anonymous couple's spending each Saturday • Get Money Coaching with Ramit • Download the Conscious Spending Plan • Listen to my book—now on Audible • Get my New York Times best-selling book • 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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Nathan is more of a like,
I wanna get this done really quickly.
He's a lift doer.
So he wants to check things off of his list.
I'm very analytical. Wanna make sure that the money that I calculated in our retirement
is going to meet the goals that I have for our family.
Nathan is a 35-year-old dentist, and he's the ultimate warrior.
I have insecurities, and I think that that's why I'm always looking for validation.
Linda is 37 years old, and she spends a lot of energy
helping Nathan feel okay about their finances.
We're very stressed about money
just because we can't spend the way that we used to.
It's been a big change,
so I think we do carry anxiety and stress.
But Nathan's constant optimizing is causing arguments
between him and his wife.
His anxiety has gone through the roof
and he's desperate to get my take on their finances.
I move to both of those.
We make a decision and then I learn some new bit
of information and then I go back.
And Linda, she just wants Nathan to chill out.
I think we both prioritize different things.
I want Nathan to feel more secure in the decisions
that we've made as a family.
Can Nathan and Linda get on the same page
and see the actual amazing reality of their finances?
What you call research is really just worry,
disguised as homework.
It just adds more and more stress
because again, stress is life.
I thought like, man, I'm just really well prepared.
And then when you come in, you're like, you're nuts.
Like you're nuts. All right.
We have Nathan and Linda say we bought a new house and now our mortgage has doubled.
Expenses the same and he won't stop spending.
We'd like for me to help us with our conscious spending plan to see where we can cut.
We are unable to stop talking about money every day.
Huh?
Why?
Oh, we have talked about Ramit for the last three weeks nonstop.
Fantastic.
What's the problem?
I don't see any problem here.
Why don't we take a look at the CSP?
What?
Assets, $2.3 million.
Why do they sound so alarmed already?
What the hell?
Why does this happen to me every time?
In their 30s?
All right.
Investments, $694,000.
By the way, their CSP has a lot of writing on it.
Like a lot.
You find this with people who they really feel the need to get every detail out.
I'm like, it's supposed to be a spreadsheet with a few numbers, not a freaking essay on
the right side.
All right.
Savings, $79,000.
Debt, $1.5 million.
Okay.
It says their business and their home.
Interesting.
And then total net worth $1.5 million.
Very good in their 30s.
Okay, let's take a look at the income.
$30,000 a month.
Okay. And then Total Net Worth $1.5 million. Very good in their 30s. Okay, let's take a look at the income.
$30,000 a month, okay.
So $365,000 a year.
What?
Fixed costs are at 76%.
No way.
It's one thing if your fixed costs are 62 or 63% when you have a household income of
$55,000, right?
Things are expensive.
Bread would be proportionally expensive if one of you is making $20,000 a year.
But making $365,000 a year and having 76% fixed costs, that's typically overspending.
This CSP has people's fingerprints all over it.
What I can already tell is that because they have so many categories, explanations
for every single line, they are way deep in the weeds and they are missing the big picture.
Their CSP is basically double the length of every other CSP because they just added a
bunch of stuff.
Maybe I need to lock the CSP so you can't add any more rows.
I never had this situation before, but I think we need to make a change.
Something's weird here. Okay. I have a note from my producer. Ask them how many times they applied to the
podcast.
All right, we'll find out. This is a very interesting CSP, but I feel like I'm gonna
have to be pretty direct on today's call. Let's see what happens. I was sitting in my basement, just alone. And I had heard about you. And so I applied.
And then I applied in her name. And then I played in my name again. And I played in her
name. And I don't know. I just thought the more times I played, then your team would
be like, you know what? This guy's I would be a love to have him on her show
How many times did you apply? I think like eight that's kind of weird, right? Yeah, I am quirky like that sometimes and then I
Take joy in if I have a goal in mind. I have always pushed really hard to get it and I was trying to create my own
Are you impulsive?
No, oh I was trying to create my own. Are you impulsive? No.
Oh, wow.
Look at the body language.
He says no.
She's nodding furiously.
Okay.
All right.
So you fill out the application and spoke to my colleague and Linda, what did you think
of this?
I want Nathan to feel more secure in the decisions that we've made as a family. I think he's lost a little bit of faith in us, especially since we moved.
And so I'm here to support him.
I hope that this helps him get some faith back because history has shown us that we
do sort of have faith in each other.
But, you know, the last six months been a big change for us.
So I
think we've lost them with that.
Okay, let's talk about what happened six months ago.
We bought our dream house. Okay, we had a 7% interest and we had a 3% interest in our
old house. So it's a different monthly payment. Going into buying the plant, the house, we
came up with a strategy because we knew
that inter-price would eventually come down and we talked with lenders and came up with
a plan of refinancing.
So we took out a loan that you could refinance.
So we're just waiting for the interest to come down.
And once we get to our goal, we'll save about $1,500 a month at our mortgage.
And that will get us to a place where we feel
more comfortable. We're savers and I'm used to saving more. And so I think when we look
at like what we're saving now versus what we used to save, it's different.
When you say you're a saver, finish the sentence for me. I'm a saver. And if I'm not saving,
then I am what? If I'm not saving, I don't have money for my kids college and have retirement money
and savings for house projects.
If we're not saving as much as we used to, then we just can't do the things that I have
in my mind.
And it's just an adjustment.
Nathan, do you agree?
We came together, we go, look, we'd like to move out of our
neighborhood. We like to, you know, this is going to be a bigger house. And it's going to be a bigger
mortgage. And I think that in the time I'm like, yeah, I think like, that's what we want to do.
And then so we make, we make the move when we buy it. And then I hear, you know, I'm doing research and I, you know, see one
of your podcasts that says, Hey, this is how you can figure out if you can afford a house.
And then I go, Oh, shoot, Linda, like, we didn't look at that. We didn't calculate that.
And then I get nervous. I go, Hey, do we even look at this? Do we do this? And then I freak
out a little bit. And she was like, look, we were embarked
on this together. And now you're kind of moving the goalposts on us. And that's where we are you.
And that's where I think that she goes, hey, you've lost faith in us because look,
I know our finances too. We don't do it the same. You're reading Ramit's book, you're
doing all these things. And how I get there is different than how Ramit or you are getting
there.
Is your fight about me? That's what it sounds like.
Every night after the kids go to bed, he's like, okay, let's talk about our rich life
as it pertains to vacation in the next five years. And while I like that, it's not, he
wants to talk about our rich
life often. Okay. But even one thing you said is we did have a financial advisor that we talked to
prior to buying this house that gave us a max mortgage. And we're actually lower than that. So
I think you sometimes forget that we have, you know, talk to experts about smart financial
decisions. We haven't made our decisions in a vacuum.
And a good decision involves lots of different inputs, not just one person, not just one
book, lots of different perspectives.
And then ultimately you decide what's right for your individual situation.
I have a comment to make and it's not going to be the one you think.
Lots of people make an impulsive decision to buy a house and then they dive in headfirst to much larger costs as they freak out because suddenly they don't have
anything left over at the end of the month, which happened because, you know, they didn't
run the numbers before they made the biggest financial decision of their lives.
But that's not what's happening here.
Nathan and Linda did run the numbers.
They even spoke with a financial advisor
who gave them the go-ahead.
And so everything was seemingly fine
until Nathan found new information.
My book, my podcast.
And that has him second guessing himself.
My first thought is that Nathan is impulsive.
My clues are that he applied almost 10 times to my podcast
because he's questioning everything
based on reading some new book and because he's treating the idea of a rich life as a
task that should be talked about every single night.
Now, this is the beginning of a real problem because there will always be new information
that contradicts a decision you make.
I constantly get messages in Instagram and other DM platforms with people saying,
what do you think about this thing?
What do you think about Apple credit card?
They're going to constantly be second guessing themselves for the rest of their lives.
What you really need to do is to develop a deeply rooted confidence in your decision
making and you get that confidence
through competence. Now I have to say I'm also curious about Linda's reaction to Nathan.
Linda, the way you talk about this situation feels very casual. Like,
you know, we got a bigger house and we kind of knew it going in and like, yeah, it's just an adjustment for us.
There's that.
And then Nathan sounds a little bit more like, I'm freaking out a bit.
I didn't run the numbers properly.
Now I'm not sure.
Okay.
There's that.
And then there's the application.
On the application, one out of 10, how serious is this?
Eight.
We have talked about Ramit for the last three weeks nonstop.
We keep fighting because of it.
What's going on here?
For me, we need to rein back our spending.
We were able to buy whatever we wanted when we were in the last house until we can kind
of go through our
financial plan which is going to take about a year until like interest rates come down from the time we bought the house. We have to be more conscious of it and I think sometimes Nathan is more of a
like I want to get this done really quickly. He's a list doer so he wants to check things off of his
list and I don't know that we can do that as much.
So we do conflict sometimes about that.
What do you think, Nathan?
I'm very analytical.
Want to make sure that the money that I calculated
in our retirement is going to meet the goals
that I have for our family.
Part of the reason that I get nervous,
so I don't know if this is
just me or not, but as somebody who is a minority in US culture, especially an Asian male, Asian
American, I have insecurities and I think that that's why I'm always looking for validation.
I am always looking for validation. That's pretty insightful.
OK, I appreciate the self-awareness.
Linda, does that strike you as true?
I think we're very stressed about money
just because we can't spend the way that we used to recently.
I will say that I was not as conscious about our spending when we were in the last
house because we could afford to not be. This sounds like every American. Like
literally this is the American story. Oh it was the two of us. Maybe a little baby
and then we were living large. We rented or we had a small little house. We would
eat out and we would travel and it was fantastic and then
We got a big house because we're Americans and then oh
We can't spend all the money we used to because we have to repair our basement. Is this not the classic Americana story?
Yes, but
We're in the suburbs now. We are on a tree with a bunch of carrots like we're
plan on staying here forever. Right. So we're like sort of cultivating a childhood for our
kids. There's nothing wrong with it. I'm just saying it's not that surprising. Like, of
course you can't spend as much you bought a much bigger house at a much higher interest
rate. It's like, yeah, what's the surprise here?
How stressful it would be to step back.
So it's been harder than you thought
to cut back on spending.
Okay, Nathan is saying, I need validation.
I'm not sure if we have made the right decision.
Right, what else?
I think we both prioritize different things. Like my focus is more getting the kids that
they need and his focus is getting the house what it needs. And so between the two things,
we're like, trying to take care of things on our different paths, but then small ticket
items that add up and are harder to cut.
Like what? I just bought a backpack for my
son because he needed a backpack to go to school. How much was the backpack for your little one
who's what four years old? Two. Two. How much was it? $40. And what about you Nathan? What are you
spending money on? Most of the stuff is kind of for our house or every once in a while I like to place some
golf.
For our lawn I was getting fertilizer, I was getting mulch and the mold traps.
How much are these mold traps?
I have to know.
For a two pack, it was 50 bucks.
Okay, and how many of those do you need to get?
Two, two or three.
So hold on.
You have to talk to someone who doesn't know any of the words we're using right now.
How often do you have to get these?
If you notice you have mole activity, you get them once and you can reuse it.
All right.
I'm going to get roasted so hard online.
Rameed, safety doesn't know about mold.
What a...
It wasn't, it wasn't the cost of the mole trap to me. hard online. Ramit, Saity doesn't know about mold. What a...
It wasn't the cost of the mold trap to me. It's the mindset around spending. We already
paid the mold people to get rid of the mold. Wait, okay. Oh, hold on. Are we talking about
M-O-L-D like dog or M-O-L. E. Like the little mole animal.
Oh my god.
The little brody.
Okay, wow.
This is hilarious.
Moles.
Who knew?
All right.
Okay, so you don't like that he's being wasteful by buying duplicate mole traps. Nathan, do you feel any particular way about her purchases?
She really likes to do Ridwell, which is sustainable recycling. And she likes to buy organic for
groceries and for the longest time, with know, with our grocery bills being higher
and those things, I don't love it. I always say like, do we have to get these things?
I feel like we can get a broccoli that's not organic and we're just going to be just fine.
Okay.
And so she gets upset that she's like, this is really important to me, like eating what
she says is healthy, which I agree to a certain degree, but when it hurts bottom line sometimes,
I go, look, that's something that we can cut out.
Do you all have an agreement on how much you should be spending?
Basically, do you use a CSP?
We know what
our budget is and and we have lowered our monthly grocery bill by like $200 a
month. Oh wow 200 bucks the magic number I appreciate that. That's a great example.
I'm not making fun of you. I appreciate it because pretty much everyone who comes
on here can lower their grocery bill and everybody plays the oh there's no way
Ramit Sethi
so out of touch when was the last time you shop for I go look nobody even knows
their numbers when they go to the grocery store if you literally just say
I want to save 50 bucks you can save 50 bucks almost everybody at the grocery
store that's pretty cool you set a goal you save 200 bucks that's awesome I
appreciate it all right um I think we need to just look at the numbers, honestly.
So first of all, what was it like filling out the CSP together?
I mean, we talk about money a lot, so I think it was just like getting it down on paper.
Who wrote all the words on the CSP?
Nathan.
Nathan, what the f***, man?
You wrote 400 paragraphs.
I'm like, no wonder they don't feel good about money.
Okay, I just need to explain what I'm seeing here.
Without even reading a single number on their CSP, I can see clear as day that Nathan and
Linda are over complicating their finances.
There are a hundred notes in the margins.
A CSP is supposed to be simple.
Nathan's explanation helps me understand
that he's actually not just being impulsive.
He's anxious and he's insecure about things beyond money.
And his CSP is just a symptom.
In fact, his entire financial setup is just a symptom.
In the meantime, Linda seems okay with this, but I gotta tell you, I would not be.
At what point do you actually start to feel good about money?
Right now, my suspicion is that Nathan will never feel good about it.
Let me take a look at their numbers after a quick break.
After 20 years in business, there are a few things that I have a lot of patience for. For example,
my Netflix show. I waited to find the right team, the right network, and to get it right.
But for other things, I have very little patience. If you're late to a meeting by five minutes,
I've already gone. If you get to the front of the Chipotle line and you've been dilly-dallying
around looking at your phone and you don't know what to order, it makes me want to know what went wrong in
your childhood that brought you to this place.
And finally, clicking around with a mouse to manage your email.
Have you ever seen somebody using Outlook or Gmail?
Their mouse takes like two hours to go across the screen and then they click once and then
they're typing like this.
Are you kidding me?
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Welcome back.
Let's keep going.
Basically, part of the reason of wanting to jump on here too is so that I can get all
this out and then I can go live my life.
Hold on.
You guys talk about money every single day.
You come home at night, you go, I'm tired.
Let's talk about our rich life.
Right?
What seems like maybe the issue isn't the CSP, but something deeper.
I went over the CSP four times before this call just making sure that everything was
tight and everything.
I understood everything.
But it's funny, I thought to me, I'm like, man, I'm just really well prepared.
And then when you come in, you're like, you're nuts.
And I go, okay, yeah, I could see that.
Think about it.
Do you start to see some links?
So applying 10 times, writing like extremely exhaustive details. First of all, why is there a line
item for a diaper when it's $100 per month? And then two, there's a description next to
it. Like I don't know what diapers are. Environmentally conscious brand. Nathan, what's the need to
explain it all? Tell me about that.
Yeah. So I put all the diapers there because I noticed that we spend it regularly go, okay,
so this is a fixed cost because we regularly do that. And then, and then as I was going
down and I was like, well, is this should this all go under, you know, the 15% miscellaneous?
And then so I think I wrote the sustainability part
because I would go to Costco and buy diapers,
but she wants to get sustainable diapers.
I think that the CSP leaves fingerprints
of every person and couple that fills it out.
Every couple fills it out differently.
When I look at this CSP,
what do you think I see? Anxiety. Yes, anxiety. Yeah. What else? That's the big
one. Clinging onto every detail. Why? I think we don't trust right now with like, we're not used to having to think about our
spending. And so now that we do, I, it's been a big change. So I think we do carry like
anxiety and stress.
When we first met, I was thinking about spending all the time. You know, I still think about
spending all the time. And, and it's funny because my parents are like, why are you so stressed all the time? Because you made me stressed.
They came from Vietnam during a war time. All they had was the degrees on their back.
And they go, look, you'll get ahead in your life because of your degrees. They can never
take that away from you.
But now they're like, why are you so stressed? And or they go, hey, we didn't teach you to
be cheap, we taught you to be frugal. And it's just, I think it's funny. So like, I'm
a product of you guys. So yeah, it's true. You are a product of them, of course. But
you also get the chance to turn the page to the next chapter of your
life.
I know I'm thinking small, I want to think big and I want to get better at it. I think
where I appreciate myself is like, I've done therapy, I'm always looking to continue to
improve. And I think but partly with my insecurity of doing the right thing, you know, I might
take it too far sometimes.
I appreciate that.
I think you're pretty self aware.
I mean, I think you have both hit upon what the CSP reveals to me.
It reveals anxiety above and beyond everything else.
And that is manifested through like the CSP
is easily double two to three times longer than anyone else's CSP. Okay, way too many
categories. It's overly precise. And that's not the point. Anxiety causes you to go deeper
and deeper and deeper into the weeds to look for precision as if the meaning of
life is to get more precise on your CSP.
That's not the meaning of a rich life.
The meaning of a rich life is to design it and then to use your money to live it.
It will be very difficult to live a rich life if you are constantly down in the $3 weeds.
So that's the first thing it reveals.
Second it reveals micromanagement, like if we control everything, then nothing will get
by us.
Almost like trying to stop the ocean from flooding by holding your arms out.
Can never happen.
And three, it just reveals chaos to me.
When I think of calm, cool and collected with money. I think of someone who's fluid.
They know their numbers.
What's our income?
What's our net?
Are we saving enough?
What's our savings rate, investment rate,
asset allocation, when are we gonna be a million?
Those key numbers.
And the rest of it, we can be fluid.
We can have it live somewhere
but not have to control it all the time.
How does that strike you, Nathan?
When I don't have that control over those numbers, I don't want to wake up and be like,
oh my gosh, I didn't put enough into VTS AX and I missed out on this opportunity. The
last three years we had a financial advisor who was doing 1% and then lo and behold, I
read this book, don't do 1%. I'm like, oh my gosh, I need to take back control of my money.
Because that's what happens if I let it coast.
Things like that.
It could be Asian culture, too.
They go, look, if you're in control of everything, you're not going to miss anything.
You notice what just happened there?
What did I say first?
And then what was your response?
How do you feel about this?
And then I went into a holster.
I want to kind of try to recalibrate the dynamic right now.
What might be another answer you give me?
Before we hear his answer, I need a quick favor from you.
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It really helps me and my team.
Wow.
If you didn't think about that, that's something I can try.
Nice. Here's another alternative answer you might give. Oh my gosh, I never thought about
it like that. Now that you pointed out, I noticed that the reason I have 50 lines in
the fixed costs area is that I feel I have to control everything. Maybe the first thing I can do is to focus on five key numbers and not worry about those
things that I used to worry about.
You see the difference in that answer?
Yeah, it's looking ahead and not looking back like you said.
What's so tough is it's just not natural for me to do that.
Just because something is a natural, it's not natural to ride a bike the first time.
It's not natural to for me to do that. Just because something is unnatural, it's not natural to ride a bike the first time, it's not natural to eat ceviche, whatever.
And what might be a different way to say it is, wow, here's what I could try going forward.
Doesn't mean you have to get it perfect.
It's just, here's what I could try.
And it just totally recharacterizes the way that you're talking about yourself.
You're not stuck in the past, you define your future.
All right, let's look at the numbers in the CSP.
So here we go.
We pull up the CSP.
Linda, why don't you read the word in bold
and then the full number next to it.
The assets are 2.3 million.
Investments are 694,000ments are $694,000.
Savings is $79,000.
And debt is $1.5 million.
Total net worth?
$1.5 million.
OK, $1.5 million in your 30s.
How do you all feel about that?
This is why I feel like we've lost a little bit of faith,
because we've gotten here.
We've done the work and I think sometimes I sort of have more faith and I'm more emotional about
some of our decisions and Nathan is more analytical so he can sometimes struggle that if I don't do
like all the big long calculations. What was my question to you, Linda?
I feel good.
I feel good about it.
Why do I have, why do I talk to every depressed millionaire in the country on this show?
What the f**k is wrong with everybody?
Linda, did you notice what you just did?
Downplayed that we're, that we have that much money.
Yeah. And what else?
What did you do instead?
Looked at a problem.
Yeah, you're the typical American living in the suburb
who has a lot of money and somebody goes,
oh my God, what a beautiful kitchen.
Oh, well, you know, the problem was the Calicotta marble
from Italy, it's so crazy how long it takes.
They're trying to give you a compliment.
$1.5 million in your 30s.
And the question is, how do you feel about that?
Let's try it again.
Linda.
Okay.
I feel good.
We worked our ass off for that.
Oh, that's a good answer.
Okay.
Nathan, how do you feel about that?
I'm unsure.
Okay, that's honest.
Go on.
It's partly because of the world we live in and it's always getting more and more. So
1.5, I know that that's like more than a lot of people, but is that enough for what, is
that a good start for where we want to take my rich life, basically?
All right, listen.
I'm well aware of how absurd it sounds
for millionaires in their 30s to talk about
how unsure they are if they have enough.
And yet, this is real.
A lot of people don't have that kind of money,
but they believe that some magical day when they have more,
they'll suddenly feel good about it.
As you heard on this show, just having more money does not change
how you feel about it.
And there are also a lot of people with money,
or a house, or a beautiful family, who still worry.
That's not stupid and that's not absurd.
That's human.
I think it's a beautiful thing to listen to people's worries,
to meet them where they are,
and in some cases tell them, hey, your feelings might be real, but they are out
of sync with reality. And that's the last tactic I want to point out to you. You'll
notice that both of them answer in terms of problems, often in terms of the past.
How do you feel? Well, it's okay, but I'm not sure it will be enough, and when I
was younger I always thought... Sometimes the best thing you can do
is to notice your thought patterns
and your speech patterns and change them
because our language often becomes our destiny.
Like this.
They might say,
I'm really proud of how far we've come.
I still feel anxious about my future,
but my top goal right now
is to appreciate where
we are as a family.
You struggle to connect to your feelings, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I get it as an Indian guy.
I totally get it.
Somewhat similar upbringing, I'm sure.
Not really taught about how to connect with our feelings.
I noticed because when I ask you how you feel, you give me a thinking answer.
In fact, you pivoted to are we going to have enough, which is a mathematical question.
Talk about this with your therapist.
Yeah, I mean, what just came up in my head was you come home one day and you get an A
minus and your dad's like, why didn't you get an A?
Yeah, happened all the time.
I'm sure we both know a lot of people who grew up with similar upbringings, right?
Parents kind of like A plus, that's expected, all that.
It's interesting that some people take well to that, right?
And they're like, yeah, I like to work or I have high expectations, whatever.
And I think one of the things that I hear from you, you told me is I constantly need
reassurance that I'm doing right, which I'm 100% sure traces back to childhood.
Yeah, talking to therapists, it's definitely always the central part of me that we talk
about.
And in a lot of times they go, hey, look, you're enough.
You are enough already without even looking at all the millions of dollars you have.
You don't believe it though.
He also doesn't believe it if I am the one that tells him he needs to hear from somebody
other than me.
Hearing stuff from your loved ones, you're like, yeah, you're my loved one.
You have to tell me that when you hear it from other people.
It's it's different.
What Linda said is really interesting.
Like she may have the exact math that I have, but you're not going to listen unless you hear it from what?
A financial advisor, a guy who wrote a bestselling book, etc.
And, you know, while it's cool, we get the chance to talk.
In life, ultimately, what makes you successful is to be able to parse what's going on and
then make most of the time the right decision for yourselves.
It's like, hey, if we compound $1.5 million for 40 years or 30 years, how much will we
have?
You can run that.
What does the calculation tell you?
Will you have enough?
It says around anywhere from sites have gone seven to nine.
Is that enough?
Right now I'd say no.
Okay, all right.
What is the number that's enough?
Is there a number?
Well, probably like 10 or 11. Okay, what's the difference Is there a number? It's probably like 10 or 11.
Okay. What's the difference between seven and 10?
So what I've tried to do is calculate, okay, what is college going to be for my kids?
So I go to kids, I want to have the option to pay for my kids college that they need it.
So I go to kids, I want to have the option to pay for my kids college that they need it.
I guessing they're going to have two kids each.
So that's four kids want to give them a little nest egg that they need it.
I want to give my kids some down payment for a house that they need it.
You know, honestly, there's things that my parents were able to do as refugees.
I am sad or nervous that I won't be able to necessarily do the same things that they are
able to do for their three kids.
Linda, what do you think hearing this?
I have faith that we will be able to sort it out.
Yeah, you try to make the best decision with the information you have at the time,
but if you make the wrong decision,
I think we've proven over the past eight years
that we've been together that we can fix those decisions.
And so I struggle that he doesn't have that same faith
and that he carries so much anxiety
about all of these things,
because I don't necessarily agree
that we won't be able to provide all these things for our kids and grandkids.
All right, I'm just writing down a few words I just heard from you.
I just want to point something out.
We're sitting here talking about your CSP.
We haven't even gotten to the income yet.
The words that you both use to describe the current situation is sad, struggle, lost faith, and
don't have confidence.
We're all looking at the exact same numbers.
Okay.
And this is the beautiful and confusing part of money psychology.
We are all looking at the same numbers.
And all three of us see something completely different.
How can that be?
So part of it is that we've been maxing out everything that we can for the past couple
of years and we are not currently maxing those things out.
And if you're not maxing things out, it makes you according to your own definition as a
saver a what?
I don't know.
A failure. Think about it.
When we were mapping everything out and we were like doing everything we should, Nathan
was not as riddled with anxiety about it as he currently is.
But since we stopped doing what we're used to and we're focused more on more short term
gains than long term gains, I think it's been a struggle.
Give me an example. What happened?
Nathan spends a lot of time in the conscious spending plan,
but then I don't necessarily think when he like hits a button on Amazon,
he's consciously spending.
He loves the conscious spending plan, but he also loves spending unconsciously.
Okay, go on.
In this coming year, we sort of made the decisions we made
in order to get our forever home and build this life
for our children.
So we have to like be more conscious of what we're buying and be more aware of where we're
putting our money and like focus on the things that are really important.
You guys are not getting the point.
You're stuck in the weeds.
You're stuck in the tactics.
We are three of us looking at the same exact numbers.
One of us, Nathan is going, this is a disaster.
I'm worried.
I'm stressed.
How am I going to have enough to pay for my great grandchildren's college graduate school?
There's no way.
I'm sad that I can't do it.
Sad.
That's the word you use, Nathan.
Sad.
Talking about $1.5 dollar net worth in your 30s
I'm sad that I can't do something for people who are not even born yet
Your kids kids. I'm not kidding. This is this is what you said then we have Linda
Who's going?
Well, he worries a lot. We are spending a lot and it's stressful and you know, like we spend he's spending unconsciously
Okay, so there's that it's like a lot of like he he he it's good, but it's also bad
And then there's me going what the fuck is going on right now
like when I calculated this I
easily calculated
Eleven million dollars at retirement.
Like I didn't even do anything.
I just plugged in the exact numbers you have
and it's 11 million.
I didn't even talk about your assets, selling your assets.
That's way more money too.
11 million bucks.
And I go, yeah, your spending is a little high,
but there's some obvious reasons why.
We can fix that in 10 minutes.
But here's the point.
You are looking at the world through a set of lenses,
Nathan, where you are always
exclusively going to see the downside. Like you could have $20 million right now and you
would not be happy. You would be worried. What would you be saying at 20 million? I
don't know. There's a lot of risk. We're paying too much in investment fees. What about our
kids trust costs a lot of money. And the question I have for you is, do you want to go the rest
of your life feeling bad
about your money?
No.
Are you sure?
Impossible.
Okay.
Who are you if you're not worrying about money?
I'm lazy.
I'm somebody who's not striving to be better.
Yeah.
Because in your mind, the opposite of worrying is lazy
Linda what is it for you? Relaxing? Yeah, that's how that's how it is for most people Nathan the opposite of worrying is
relaxed calm
But for you because you you not only were raised worrying
Probably but you have now come to actually thrive on it.
Think about it.
You come home from work and you go, CSP time, I'm worried.
It gives you that feeling, doesn't it?
I have a purpose.
I'm worrying.
Now you're not just worrying for yourself, you're worrying for your family and your great
grandchildren.
I'm worrying because that's what I do as a man. That's
my job is to worry and provide for five generations forward. But if I took away the worry from
you, then what would it leave?
Unvulnerability. I'm like, Oh my gosh, I'm totally exposed now. This is who I am. Is
this? Yeah, this is good enough.
I'm going to cut in here because this is such a powerful statement.
If I take away the worry, is this good enough? Am I good enough?
I think most of us feel this in some way. I know I do.
If I wasn't a CEO, who would I be? What if I wasn't a husband? What if I wasn't in shape?
What if I wasn't known online?
Who would I be?
And if you really twist the knife on that,
it starts to feel very uncomfortable.
Nathan takes his anxiety and he redirects it
to working harder.
And in a way, that's constructive,
which is why optimizers like Nathan
can often get lost in their optimization.
They justify it.
They say, hey, me being in control has gotten me good results, so I'm going to get more
in control and therefore I'll get more good results.
But there's a problem.
You can't control everything.
In fact, the more you do, the more you start to lose a sense
of what's truly important.
When I started my business, I was a control freak.
A lot of entrepreneurs are.
In fact, I told myself that.
A lot of entrepreneurs are control freaks.
Ha ha ha, who became a half joke to me.
I obsessed over every tiny detail.
I wrote every email, every Instagram caption.
And as my business grew,
I couldn't keep up worrying about the small details.
There just weren't enough hours in the day for me to obsess over every single
social media caption and email, everything.
And I had to systematically strip control away from myself.
And my team certainly helped.
They told me over and over for years, you shouldn't be doing this anymore.
And it took a long time.
And that is what allowed my business to grow.
It also allowed me to focus on the bigger picture and frankly, it allowed me to have
more fun.
My challenge here is to help Nathan see that there's a better future ahead.
One in which he can willingly give up control because he's earned the right to.
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Now we can't predict the future, not with our investments, not with our business, we're going to make, I want to know if we have a problem and what we are doing to take care of it.
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IWT.com slash netsuite. Now back to the show. Who am I if I'm not worrying about money?
What I want is when I'm not worried about money, I can be out of my head. I can be joyful.
That's powerful. It's really powerful. I've seen this meme online about someone who is
in a prison, but the prison I think is coming from their own brain. Right? They've created
and the prison has a door, they can just walk right through it. But because it's coming
from their own brain, they don't realize it feels very much like
that's what's going on here.
Do you see the same way?
It's definitely exhausting in my head.
I want to break from shackles so that I can just be relaxed.
Because I know at my core, Sunday mornings, I'm feeding my kids, we're
dancing to music.
We're just having an awesome time.
Awesome time.
And then, you know, somewhere around 12 o'clock hits like, okay, what do I need to be doing?
We don't worry about the house.
We gotta do all these things.
I can't just sit on the couch and just watch Netflix.
This is like the Asian Cinderella.
Like, the clock strikes 12 and then you start going like,
what do I need to worry about?
Pick up the broom.
I need to do this.
I need to recalculate the CSP and run a compound interest calculation.
Like, damn, all my Asian friends are like, yeah, me too.
But like, it doesn't have to be that way.
Right. Let me give you an example from my own life. So I
Set my life up so that I'm not really worrying about money. What do I mean?
Day to day bills are paid automatically
When I make a big purchase, I take a lot of time to research it. I carefully consider, can
I afford it, things like that. And I buy below my means. I spend time, a little bit of time
on monitoring stuff, like a monthly meeting. Occasionally, I log into my accounts just
to look at the stock market. But that's about it. I have a lot of fun with money.
I've built that skill.
So I travel and I get clothes and whatever.
And I always connect it.
So when I'm traveling, I'm like, wow, I'm so thankful to be in this beautiful hotel.
And I think back to me starting to invest at age 14.
And I connected that money.
And that mindset is what allowed me to eventually be in this beautiful place
at this time.
What do you really want out of today's call?
To relax.
All right.
I can help you with that.
Do you truly want to change the way you interact with money?
Yes, I want to feel better about money.
And I want to change our relationship with it. I want to break away
from kind of what I was taught in my, my money psychology that's been drilled into me, it's
going to be hard, but I want to move forward and not backward.
Great. Let's go through the rest of the CSP and then we'll talk about how to do that.
All right, income. Nathan, go ahead and read this combined monthly income right here. $30,417.
All right. So you make $365,000 a year combined. Did you know that? Yeah. Great job. Nice job.
All right. You take home 22. You're doing a bunch of pre-tax investing, right? Yeah.
Your fixed cost is 76%. What do you think about that?
I think it's high.
It's high.
Okay.
And why is it high?
Because of our mortgage and our daycare.
Yeah.
It's those two things.
But candidly, your mortgage is not that bad for your income.
It's fine.
You're at 23.3%.
No big deal.
It's your daycare.
It's $4,400 a month.
That's a lot. Daycare is expensive. I'm sorry you have to pay that much, but that's what daycare. It's $4,400 a month. That's a lot. Daycare is expensive.
I'm sorry you have to pay that much, but that's what it is.
And how long will you have to pay that for?
Two more years of the big one, four more years of the little one.
To me, like in the next year, we're going to refi.
So we're going to bring that mortgage down by like a grand at least.
I mean, if we did it today, we would be at least a grand in the positive.
And then yeah, daycare, I mean, we'll have before and after care, if we did it today, we would be at least a grade in the positive. And then,
yeah, daycare, I mean, we'll have before and after care, but we'll save about $3,000 a month
when we do that. So I feel basically, in my mind, we're in the most expensive financial position
because we're paying this daycare premium and this interest rate premium. So if we were to take a hit on our retirement investment or college investments or whatever
this year, I feel okay with it because I have faith.
Okay.
And Nathan, how do you feel about it?
I feel comfortable that that won't always be there.
Great.
Okay.
Both of you have a very healthy answer to this situation.
I totally agree.
I look at that, I go, all right, it is high.
It's temporary.
You know the exact month and year it's going to stop.
As you put it, Linda, you are currently paying the most you are going to pay.
You could refi right now, your daycare is going to go down and then way down. So your fixed costs. I
can tell you right now, I don't have enough storage space in my raid array or whatever
the hell to go through every category in here. Groceries, subscription, kids swim, hardwoods. We have Linda therapy, Linda phone and gas, fine, credit card physical fee.
Do you see this constant need to be overly precise?
And because you spend all your time down in the weeds, which is exhausting, you have no
vision for how do we even have a lot of money? Like when I ask
you how do you feel about having $1.5 million net worth you have no answer because you are
obsessed with getting this precision down in the weeds. It's not serving you.
Okay.
Your savings is at $1,600 a month for general savings.
And you have a healthy savings account at almost $80,000. So that's pretty good.
I think the problem comes at spending.
So I think you both realize this, right?
You actually broke out your guilt-free spending.
I mean, you really broke it out.
We're talking $13 a month for a Christmas tree.
So the real problem
here is not that you have like 50 line items. The problem is that you're spending $1,361.
And if you factored it in, you'd be $2,000 a month short as you wrote. That's a problem.
So what do you all want to do about that? Refinance our home.
I mean, to me, it's like, you know, we sort of just have to ride this wave and be more
aware of what we're spending on.
And we might not be able to do the vacation this year, but next year after we lower some
of our fixed expenses, we'll have more on guilt-free spending.
I feel like we're playing Jeopardy tonight because every answer is the most American
answer ever.
Hey, we got a spending problem.
What should we do?
Refinance our suburban house.
Wow.
Ding, ding, ding.
Every American's like, why is this guy making a joke about it?
What's wrong with refinancing?
They refinance all day long, never pay off their mortgage.
Sure, you can refinance all day long, never pay off their mortgage. Sure, you can refinance, but that's not, that's like a one-off thing and you happen to be
lucky enough to be able to do it.
Maybe it happens, maybe not, whatever.
What else?
You want to cut back on your spending?
What I was wondering is, hey, can we not max out our investments?
And so we're at 17%.
Can we bring it down to 10 and still reach our financial goal?
Could you?
What do you think about that?
We bought the house.
My strategy was we buy the house.
We don't save to Nathan's retirement for one year because I have an employer match
So we want to take advantage of that and then once we refine we have more money
we would start saving in Nathan's retirement again and
When we started this rabbit hole
Conditioning and all that he sort of lost faith in that idea because he didn't feel like I did enough research on coming up with that financial strategy and that if we didn't
put the money in our retirement now, you sort of lose that opportunity for the year of 2024.
For me, I was like, well, this is our worst financial position. So in a couple of years,
when we have more money, we could just put it in a brokerage account if we have that
much extra. Well, that sounds logical to me.
Nathan, what was your response to Linda's suggestion?
Yeah, I don't think we need to max it out.
And then so then I was like, okay, great, we can start spending a little bit more.
And then Linda was like, well, now you need to rein it back in.
Like, we don't have enough.
Our rocket mortgage is saying that we're going negative.
I'm still a little unclear.
So first, Linda had this suggestion of, hey,
let's not max out our investments
because we're living in the most expensive time right now.
And then Nathan was like, I don't know about that plan
because I've started using the CSP.
That makes me nervous.
But then Nathan was like, hey, that actually might be right.
Let's stop maxing out.
And then Linda was like, hold on, you have not adjusted your retirement.
So we're actually overspending.
And that's where you are today?
Yeah, because you didn't adjust it back down. We're still putting the same amount in retirement
Why aren't you at the same place?
Both of you are like we don't need to max out our investments Nathan wants to still max them out until maybe this conversation
I think you're convincing him that we might not need to write yesterday. He didn't think we were doing enough
Nathan you're operating on pure scarcity.
And that is coming out in these very peculiar ways.
It's like, and one of the ways it's coming out is like, we need to max out our investments.
I thought compounding interest was one of the most powerful things.
So if we miss out on that, then, you know, we missed out on accumulating more wealth.
That is technically true.
If you do not contribute X dollars for the year of 2024 or 2025, yes, you will miss out
on that compounding and over 30 years, that will probably turn out to be a pretty decent
amount of money.
So what?
Yeah.
Then going back to the failure thing, then we're a failure because we didn't get to where
we were planning on getting to.
You already exceeded what you were planning.
You already beat that number.
The thing about scarcity is that people who have a scarcity mentality are very good at
convincing themselves that they're not being scarce.
They're just being careful.
Like, we're young, we should max it out because it's compounding, etc.
You have learned enough to be dangerous with investments. Compounding is powerful. You
should try as much as possible to max out, especially when you're young. All those things
are true. You're totally right. But because you are so in the weeds, you are missing the
big picture of what is going on
here.
Let me explain what just happened here.
Nathan and Linda have high fixed costs.
And some of this is temporary.
Some of this is because of the new house.
But they don't really understand the true picture here.
Because they're so focused on the past, and they are looking at the world through a pair
of scarcity based lenses, they
aren't accounting for how much they've already saved and invested.
Instead, they're hyper-focusing in the weeds.
He's saying, we need to max out investments for compounding.
And she's saying, when we refinance, everything will be okay.
Yes, their mortgage increased. But the issue here is that Nathan and Linda haven't adjusted how much they're contributing to savings and retirement to offset their fixed costs. They planned to do that,
but they didn't actually follow through. Why? Because Nathan is indecisive. You can see how these deeply rooted beliefs
in ourselves, our insecurities, our lack of confidence, our anxieties come out and manifest
in the most peculiar of ways. They did not adjust their spending. Why? If you trace it
back, trace it back probably to his childhood, it has to do with insecurity and needing to be reassured and needing to be told that you are enough.
But it's a very difficult way to live.
Imagine going to a restaurant, you order an omelet, but right before your food comes out,
you see somebody else, you change your mind.
Eggs Benedict, that sounds better.
Can I have that instead?
And just as you're getting your cup of coffee refilled, you go, ah, too much caffeine.
Can I have an orange juice instead?
You can't even enjoy what you're eating because you're wondering if you picked the wrong thing.
Being indecisive is a terrible way to move through life.
But as we can see here, the connections between what we are doing with our money and why are
often very nebulous.
What is the big picture?
Describe the situation happening in your family finances.
I'm spending so much of my energy doing one thing and at the end of the month our cap
flow is negative.
Yes.
Meanwhile, what else is happening?
Our investments are growing.
Yeah.
But by how much?
By 7 to 8 percent. Okay, so finish the whole sentence
for me. At this year in my family, we are losing money every month, we're spending more
than we make, and... We are gaining $70,000 in our investments every year. Yes. Okay, so what is the logical conclusion?
Invest less so that your cash flow is positive or net neutral.
When I see a young parent or parents, I've always said give yourself a little bit of
room if you have a 8% savings rate, bring it down to 5%, even 3%, even 1%.
Just keep a little bit of money going.
But for a couple of years, give yourself a little bit of ease.
All I ask is that you make it systematic.
So you sit down and you go, look, this is the kind of life I want us to live for the
next four years.
The next four years, I think we should spend more on X, Y and Z because we are busy, babies young,
school, childcare, all that stuff. So I want to do X, Y, Z. And after that, those expenses
will go away and we will resume aggressive investing.
What do you think about that?
I would like to do that.
What you wanted me to come on here and do is to help you analyze Make sure you're gonna have enough for your family, right?
It's not the real problem at all
You can do the math yourself
When are you gonna feel confident enough that you're doing the right thing that you don't have to second-guess yourself?
The answer is you may never feel that way
But well how I want to feel is I want to feel starting tomorrow comfortable that way. Okay, I like that
Love that now that is talking about the future. Literally tomorrow. I love that. Good answer. Where is your therapy fee, Nathan? I don't see it in the fixed costs.
Right. So I, the therapy was in the past and then through my job, I was getting like a free session
every month.
Nathan, that is the most important expense on this CSP and you are literally being a
cheapskate.
What percentage of the time have we spent talking really about your mental health today?
The whole time.
Yeah.
And yet there's literally zero dollars dedicated towards it.
There's a phrase, show me someone's calendar and I'll show you their priorities.
My version is show me someone's calendar and their conscious spending plan and I'll show
you their priorities.
There are entirely too many people living in their spreadsheets who think they're one
optimization away from finally feeling good.
You know what the truth is?
Most of them would get more benefit from going for a walk, for seeing a friend
once a week and probably talking to a therapist.
Now, as a man with immigrant parents in the U S I have a lot of compassion for
what Nathan is wrestling with.
And I see a lot of similarities between how he grew up and how I grew up.
And I've seen a therapist and it's helped.
One of the things I wanna do on this show
is to demystify mental health
because it directly influences your rich life.
Your rich life is not just about a bunch of numbers
on a page, how many episodes do I have to show you
to get you to understand that.
It is about so much more.
Money, yes, but also how you feel,
what choices you make, your confidence,
your ability to enjoy things.
And one of those things is to know when to spend money
to improve your life.
Think about it, if your sink was leaking,
you would call a plumber and you would pay
basically whatever they asked for.
But when it comes to our minds,
somehow we rationalize our suffering to
save money. Makes no sense. Being cheap with your own self is no way to live, especially when it
comes to your mental health. I'm going to see if I can get Nathan on board after a quick break
to support our sponsors. I have a friend of mine who was taking care of his granddaughter the other
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Let's get back to the conversation with Nathan and find out why he hasn't been
seeing a therapist regularly.
Explain that to me.
I have a pretty long commute from work.
And so when I when I go to work, I go, we have a we have a great life.
I think as a whole, I am feeling pretty good after our conversation here.
It definitely is something I feel like I should be going to regularly.
100%.
Nathan, this should be a big expense. You should be happy to spend a lot of money on it
Once a week minimum. Yeah
your view of yourself and your money is
Not in alignment with reality as I see it
Okay, as I always say your feelings can can be real, but they may not be
telling you the truth. You really genuinely feel that way, but our feelings can lead us astray.
And you could literally make an extra $10 million and you would still feel bad. You would not feel
enough, etc. This is something that needs a lot of work. And I would highly, highly recommend it.
Yeah. All right. Yeah, I think he sometimes has anxieties about these kinds of things
and you know can sometimes extend outside of
money that
Doesn't allow him to enjoy
Like his weekend, but the evening obviously
That's that's like you're basically screaming that you've told me I come home from work
I'm tired and I start talking about our rich life. That's actually, you're basically screaming that. You've told me, I come home from work, I'm tired, and I start talking about our rich
life.
That's actually not a healthy reaction.
And you can see, like Linda's like, I don't want to talk about this anymore.
She probably hated me the minute I showed up.
I was a guy, stupid rich life.
I've been hearing it every day for the last five years. Honestly, it makes me feel better because I do.
I crunch less numbers and I sort of lead with like gut and think of what feels right.
So it makes me feel like I understand finances better than I might have thought I did.
I think your intuition seems to be pretty good.
I do think you can lean on your intuition right now
because you both make a lot of money.
I think that if one of you lost your job
or you had something happen to the house,
you had to do some emergency repair or something,
I think things would get very, very stressful very quickly
because you haven't built a healthy relationship with money, either of you.
So right now, Linda, you're kind of going off gut and your intuition tends to be like
pretty good.
Like logically, you were like, let's cut the investment and redirect it here, which is
a good intuition.
I agree.
Nathan, you're just like, oh my God, the world is gonna end and we need to calculate everything.
The good news is you're earning a lot,
you're investing a lot,
so the nuts and bolts stuff is good.
That part is great.
The actual win comes from creating a principle,
which is we fight for simplicity, turning the page,
and starting to work on the communication around money.
What is our rich life?
It can't be a conversation that's happening
at 9 p.m. every day, that sucks.
It's gotta be something fun,
it's gotta be something different,
and you gotta talk about it in a different way.
Then, how do we simplify this?
Because this is not working.
And what's the point of having $1.5 million in your 30s
and you're all like, oh, boo hoo, Eeyore, like sucks.
You should be grinning for joy.
Wow.
I love being able to take my kids out to pizza.
I love being able to buy flowers for my wife.
I love being able to surprise my husband with something from Amazon.
Not hearing any of that. Right?
So, the real win comes from turning the page and focusing on that connection.
That is what's going to get you to actually feel good about money.
Honestly, some of our best times together is just going to a restaurant and bar, sitting
next to each other.
She loves to sit next to each other and cuddle and
just talk. Awesome. And when did that last happen? We do it once a month, to the best of our ability. And we have for the last two years since our son was born, we tried to make that a priority.
I love hearing that. I don't hear it enough. What if you did more stuff like that? I think it's so
awesome that you already do that once a month
What else could you do for that type of connection?
We try to do like this class weekend we went to the pumpkin patch and we bought the wristband to allow you to get to all the rides
Um at the pumpkin patch and we were like
it sort of felt
Not frivolous, but like we should have been able to do it guilt free. And I feel like we talked about the cost of the wristband when we shouldn't necessarily
have needed to.
He was like, how much is it?
And I said, $20 a person, but Devon's free.
And then I was like, that seems like a lot.
All right.
And then I said, well, if you like, if we went to a museum, it would be the same cost.
Are you all seeing this dynamic?
Do you guys see what happened?
What role did each of you play in this conversation?
He stressed about it and I justified it.
He stressed about it and you are what?
Justifying the cost.
Yes.
Do you see the dynamic here?
Nathan, you are stressed because to you stress means care.
I'm stressed, therefore I care.
If I don't express worry, then who am I?
I'm a lifeless shell of a man.
I'm nothing.
So I have to express worry.
And the only way I know how to deal with money is to agonize over it.
And usually verbally, basically ensnaring
whoever happens to be around me, which is my wife.
I'm worried, I'm anxious, are we gonna have enough?
Is it seven or 8% and on and on and on.
Just constant worry and anxiety, out loud, okay?
It's toxic.
And then Linda's role,
she's on the other side of the boxing ring.
Linda, what's your role?
That's the thing.
It's going to be okay.
Here's why this actually makes sense.
If you compare it to the price of a movie on and on and on and then Nathan gets to what?
Nathan, once you hear that reason, what do you get to do? Make that decision. Make the decision and go,
I didn't have to do it myself. She told me it's okay.
He told me Ramit Sethi came on this call and told me it's okay.
The teacher told me, the financial advisor told me, everybody told me, I don't have to
make the decision myself.
So when I ask again, what did each of you get out of it?
Nathan first.
Undue stress?
To you, your invisible script is stress is life.
You are most alive when you are stressed out.
You see that?
And the opposite of stress is what?
Bum.
Can you think of a time where you made any significant financial decision without stress? Everything has some sort of some little bit of stress. I was going to say all of clothes,
but like I mean I do the research so I spend all the time there making sure that I'm getting the
right one. So like there's stress inherent stress in there. Maybe when you have $10 million,
then you won't feel stressed.
What we've seen is no matter how much money you have.
It's not a numbers problem.
It's here.
It's here in your feelings and it's here how you think.
Yes.
And so back to you now, Linda,
what did you get out of that conversation about the
credit card and the pumpkin patch?
I was able to like take care of him and calm him down.
Yes. You were the voice of?
Reason.
Yeah, of reassurance. He's agonizing again. Oh no, he's doing what he does. I need to
step in, Linda, he's doing what he does. I need to step in Linda and
Take care of him take control of the situation. Yeah, maybe take care of him
Another thing that we just recently there's like moss on the roof so we have to take care of the moss
and he wanted to do it himself and
To me there's like a lot of things you can DIY, but like removing moths from your roof
that stop water from getting into your home,
it's like maybe something you should breathe to an expert.
Okay.
And you could like fall off the roof.
Like there's a couple of different reasons
I don't want him up there.
But then, so I was like,
oh, our friend was like a cheap guy, go to him.
And then Nathan needed me to validate and make the final decision
of hiring the guy.
You can see that these deep feelings come out in a thousand different ways.
If it's not the pumpkin patch, it's the moss.
If it's not the moss, it's the mole cleaner.
If it's not the mole cleaner, it's the dishwasher and it's a thousand different.
You can never play, forgive the expression, whack a mole.
You can never whack enough because there will always be something until you tackle the root
cause, not the symptom.
And the root cause is feeling, I'm not enough.
For me, worry and stress is life.
And not feeling stress is death.
And the dynamic that has emerged between the two of you.
Nathan stresses out agonizes worries articulates it out in many different ways.
And then Linda comes to the rescue.
Hey, it'll be okay.
Let me calm you down.
I once like saw some article about people who keep the door open, are way more stressed out than
if you just make a decision and live with it.
And I think he struggled with, there's a better option.
There's always a better option.
And to me, it's like, well, I don't want to talk about it anymore.
We made the decision.
Let's just see if it's a good one in six months, we can reevaluate.
Okay, I agree with that.
I think overthinking is one of the worst possible traits that you can have.
But the fortunate thing is you can change it in many different ways.
One, overthinking often just deep down comes from a sense of insecurity.
Did I get it wrong?
I need to be perfectly right?
What if I'm wrong?
And on and on and on.
That, you can work through that in therapy.
But second, we can create some rules and systems.
So right now, what's an example where Nathan
was doing some overthinking about a purchase?
I bought him the drone for his birthday,
and then it was the wrong one so we returned it.
And then this year I bought him the drone
that he wanted for his birthday.
And he was like, but the new one's gonna come out soon.
Eventually what I ended up doing was green lighting him
to buy the drone so he was able to do his own
little happy research and purchase a drone.
Did it work?
Yes, we have the drone now.
Yeah, great.
So what do you notice about that example?
That he took control.
You gave the responsibility to him.
Think about how often he spins up anxiety and then
tosses that anxiety ball to you. It happened at the pumpkin patch and what did you do when
he tossed that anxiety ball to you?
I took it.
You received it. You engage in it and eventually, you didn't even like toss it back
to him.
What'd you do?
Just like petted it and made him feel better about it.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
So what would be another approach?
I say please make that decision yourself.
No, that's what you basically do already.
Take the ball and toss it back to him.
Nathan?
I mean, to say like, look, I don't have an opinion on this.
This is a decision you have to make.
Whoa.
And would you receive that well?
What would you do if she said that?
With our dynamic, it'd be feel very foreign.
And I, yeah, and it's tossed right back.
But what I guess what I would
like to do and starting soon is taking it and running with it.
Okay, I love that. Can we make an example right now of something that's going to happen
in the next three days where you would normally toss the anxiety ball to her, but she's going
to toss it right back to you?
I haven't made that decision on the roof person yet. But basically-
Shall we just do do right now.
Linda, you're sending back the decision
to get somebody on the roof.
And I will make the decision tomorrow
to text the guy to come to our house.
And he is gonna take care of the roof.
Thank you for making that decision.
I'm happy that you found someone that you're comfortable with and I appreciate it. Love it. Okay round of applause take the win
Okay, that was really good. This is fun, right? It's theatrical. It's almost like absurd
You have to make it a little absurd, you know, and both of you clap and it's all this stuff
Because the first few times you're already gonna feel weird, but then after a while you're like, oh
like Because the first few times you're already going to feel weird. But then after a while you're like, oh, like, then you can even make a joke out of it.
Are you trying to toss me the ball right now?
You know I don't catch that ball.
Good luck.
That was a nice try.
But it's back to you.
I like that.
Hearing the story from the pumpkin patch really helps crystallize their money dynamic.
He gets anxious.
She calms him down. And then he's absolved of responsibility.
This is where the real challenge begins for Nathan and Linda as a couple. They've been
stuck in this never ending cycle of Nathan making a decision, panicking, walking it back,
and then Linda getting pulled into that panic. If Nathan is going to learn to be decisive,
Linda is going to have to set boundaries and she's going to have to work to recalibrate that relationship. That can
be uncomfortable, but with practice, I feel very confident they can do this together.
Can we look at the numbers again real quick? You're investing approximately $70,000 a year.
You have $694,000, right? 30 years or so to grow. Right? 7%. Okay. $12 million. Is that enough?
For my analytical part, I guess I would say yes.
You will get $494,000 per year in safe withdrawal for 30 years. You will safely be able to withdraw that
and you will still have money left over.
Linda, you look a little hesitant.
It's the conservative side.
It doesn't factor in any of our assets.
So like, I'm good at it.
Yeah, that's millions short of what you will actually have.
Millions.
I think where I get concerned is like kids college
and saving for that.
You're really financially out of touch. I love that I get to do this on this show. I
talk to people and they're like, am I going to have enough? 12 million does not seem like
it's going to take. I'm like, what the fuck is wrong with you? What? Hold on. I got to
show this on screen because people. I know people are mad right now watching this and I'm gonna make them more mad.
I'm gonna fuel the rage.
Look at this.
30 years?
No, make it 35 just for kicks.
What's gonna happen to this $12 million, right?
It's gonna turn into $17 million.
You can't stop this freaking compound interest at a certain point.
Make it 40 years.
What happens if you save for 40 years? It's 25
million dollars. What are you going to do with 25 million dollars?
So many currencies.
But tell me this though, because our cash flow is negative now, we probably have to
reduce that.
Good point. So I'm going to take it back to 30 years. We're at 12.3 million dollars.
And you're like, hey, we're negative cash flow, so we need to cut this down. How much
you want to cut it down? Instead of 7070K per year, you're investing how much?
$40K.
Okay, beautiful.
Let's take a look.
Instead of $12.3 million, $9.3 million.
Let's do a 4% calculation on that, and that's $373,000.
Now I want you to understand something. I don't think you're only going to contribute
$40,000 for the next 30 years. Like, truthfully, if you cut this down for, I don't know, what
did you say, three more years, four more years until daycare is taken care of, the effect
overall out of $12 million will be minuscule.
Think about that time value of money now.
Is that $200,000 worth more to you now as young parents, or is it worth more to you
as part of $12 million when you're 65 and hopefully healthy?
Now because it's like the hardest phase of life that we're in right now. Yeah. Parents got to give themselves some grace, some help.
And the fortunate thing is you guys actually can afford it.
So to me, I always say it's a tragedy to live a smaller life than you have to.
In this case, the tragedy is just blindly maxing out without even knowing what you're doing.
Why?
Why am I maxing out 70k versus 40k?
What am I getting?
Is it worth it?
And the truth is that 10, 20, 30k is worth way more to you for the next three, four years.
And then you can go right back up to where you were.
That's it.
That's how you think about it.
So, I don't want you to get sloppy with your spending.
I really want you to actually go back and talk about your CSP and come up with a set
of agreements.
We need his guilt free spending, her guilt free spending and our guilt free spending.
That pumpkin patch conversation should have never come up.
If it were something like me and my wife, we're not talking about that. That's not at
the level of conversation we have. We already have guilt free money set aside, swipe the
joint card, that comes out of our joint guilt free spending. Never talk about it again.
That's how we operate. How are you feeling seeing these numbers?
Jen, I feel like we have a plan that I can tell Nathan Gleason.
Oh, okay.
What about you?
What about you, Linda?
I feel good that we're on the same page.
Okay.
Nathan?
Yeah, I feel great.
Honestly, yeah, I just wanted to talk to you about it.
I think the important thing, Nathan, is that while I'm happy that the two of you are on
the same page, and I actually think that there have been several breakthroughs today, which
I'm really happy about, the ultimate breakthrough is for you to get to the point where you are
not looking for confirmation from a third party.
Okay?
Sure.
It's always, it can be healthy to get help.
Sure, read the books, get the training, all that stuff.
Great.
But it becomes crippling when you cannot depend on yourself.
Okay.
And for that, that is actually going to be one of my pieces of homework to you.
I don't think I've ever assigned therapy.
And of course, it's your money, your life,
but I would highly encourage you to sign up. Take that ball this week and get that scheduled.
To me, of all the things that I see, that is the number one thing that I would tackle.
You have the chance to have a good time for the rest of your life or to have a really
bad time to stress, to agonize and then to tell yourself, oh, I'm actually just like,
I'm careful.
I like to research.
You get the chance to rewrite that chapter.
And I think that that starts by working with a therapist regularly.
A good one, not the free one. And couples therapy will be so helpful
for the dynamics like the ball, the anxiety. There's so many dynamics that I
see that a proper therapist given enough time could really help you on. And the
money part, while important, is just one piece of an overall dynamic.
It's worth it.
Truthfully, a marginal extra $5,000 per year of you investing doesn't really change much,
but couples therapy once a week, etc. would be massive.
Remember, most people who are thinking about money, they just don't
have enough of it. So they're just like, we're operating from a true scarcity.
You guys are playing a different game. But the thing is you've constructed this
reality where you're also scarce. We need to max out all our s***. No you don't. You
need to decide as a unit how do we allocate our money? It's up to you.
If you look at your allocation like a pie, you'll quickly realize, oh my God, we are
overweighted on some stuff and way underweighted on others.
And the Amazon stuff, throw it in.
Let's put it.
Let's put that as part of the pie.
Instead of fighting about it, let's just carve out a little slice.
Everybody can get what they want from Amazon.
Maybe it's like not as much as you want, but honestly, the way you all talk,
I think you can easily afford that stuff.
The rich life is not waiting for 40 years until you have $10 million.
The rich life is like, who goes up on the roof?
Oh, we actually can afford to pay somebody to come over and do it for us.
Rich life.
I want to thank Nathan and Linda for sharing your story.
I also wanna take a second to acknowledge
how difficult it is to come into a public space like this
and talk about issues like mental health.
Please remember, I'm not a therapist,
which is why I regularly recommend my guests
and everyone listening see a therapist.
Nathan and Linda showed up, they had real breakthroughs
in the way that they
view money. But the real work starts when this conversation ends. Let's listen to their
follow ups and see if they were able to make a change.
Hey Rumi, thanks again for chatting. It was a really good conversation. I think my biggest
surprise is that I feed into my husband's money anxiety and there's some simple things I can do to address that behavior. Another thing I was
surprised by was you saying that the small purchases don't matter and that I
shouldn't worry as much about them. I've always viewed these as death by a
thousand cuts. So it was really interesting to hear that that mentality
isn't really helping me. I've learned that in this age of life with little
kids in the high duty care payments, it's okay that we don't save as much for retirement and the feeling so
stressed about money right now doesn't have to be our mentality while we're
waiting for those daycare payments to lessen. The conversation also reaffirmed
that we're being responsible with our money and lowering our overall savings
doesn't mean that we're making the wrong decision. Something that we've changed
since we chatted is that we adjusted our retirement allocation
for Nathan so that we have more disposable income and we've adjusted our CSP to simplify
money tracking and understanding where the budgets are.
Thank you again.
Bye.
Now let's go to Nathan's follow-up.
Hey Rameet.
Thanks for having us on the show and talking with us.
My biggest surprise was that in an effort to be clear and concise and transparent with my finances,
thinking Linda wasn't meeting me halfway, I've created more chaos in my life and I'm doing too much.
Our conversation with you quickly turned to the root causes of my money anxiety to help address our problems
as a whole instead of getting into the weeds of our CSP, which I'm really thankful for.
My biggest takeaways are that I am good enough and that I need to relax and enjoy life more.
In turn, that will lead into more positive relationships with my work and friends and
family, kids, and most importantly, Linda.
Specific changes, I've decided to go back to therapy to work on myself.
I booked an appointment already.
I've reduced the amount I'm contributing to my retirement investments to free up more
money for more positive cash flow and I've removed many tiny details from our CSP
to make my life more simple and less chaotic. You know, I appreciate the time. Thanks. Thanks for watching!