I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 196. “He used to help me with debt…Now he’s making it worse”
Episode Date: February 18, 2025Frank (29) and Jill (33) are parents of two young kids and are trapped in a vicious cycle of overspending and debt. With fixed costs eating up 107% of their income and $25,000 in credit card debt, the...y’ve been repeatedly digging themselves into a hole—and scrambling to climb back out. Frank solves panic with credit card balance transfers. Jill struggles with emotional spending rooted in childhood. Their lack of communication and alignment has created a wedge in their marriage, making it hard to face their financial reality together. Can Frank and Jill cut spending, break old habits, and build a stable financial future for their family—or will they let the weight of their debt pull them down? This episode is brought to you by: NordVPN | Secure your online privacy with NordVPN’s special offer. Get a huge discount on a 2-year plan, plus 4 bonus months free, when you sign up at https://nordvpn.com/ramit. Superhuman | Get a free month of lightning-fast email at https://try.sprh.mn/ramitsethi. ZocDoc | Download the ZocDoc app for FREE at https://zocdoc.com/ramit then find and book a top-rated doctor today. 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. Fabric by Gerber Life | Join the thousands of parents who trust Fabric to protect their family. Apply today in just minutes at https://meetfabric.com/ramit. Links mentioned in this episode • I’m looking for couples to work with on my podcast in 2025; please apply at iwt.com/apply • Order my new book: Money for Couples Connect with Ramit • 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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On today's episode.
Our mentality is always like, it's just me and him.
And if we just put enough stuff around us, then we'll be all right.
We'll be able to function.
And it's not true.
Meet Frank and Jill.
Groceries have quadrupled since the start of our debt.
Frank is 29, Jill is 33. They're married
with two young children and they are stuck in a vicious cycle of overspending
and credit card debt. I'm angry at the cycle. I'm angry at myself. I'm angry that
we can't be aligned. I'm frustrated. Frank and Jill both struggle with the money
messages they grew up with. I was taught by my mother that the credit cards are the devil and if you get them they
are going to ruin your life.
We'd ask like, oh can we have this cereal and she'd be like no we don't have a coupon
for that and so it was just constantly like no.
They tell themselves stories that prevent them from taking responsibility for their
poor spending habits.
My rich life is not driving a Ferrari. I want to be able to just relax and go places and go hang out
with the kids and not fear poverty. And their inability to talk about money has driven a massive
wedge in their relationship. I felt like he's checked out. Like even when I asked,
hey, can you figure out what your retirement is? It was like, I don't care. And to me, I'm like, don't you understand? Like that's what
we're working towards.
If things don't change soon, they might face some major consequences.
The biggest fear is we're going to be bankrupt and all of the fears that we have been fueling
are going to be reality.
Can they ditch their old money habits
and start working towards building their rich life?
We need to stop doing these things to us
and we need to come together and make time for each other
and make time for our money.
Now let's meet Frank and Jill.
I'm about to open Frank and Jill's conscious spending plan, which breaks down their net
worth, income, and exactly where they spend.
You can download and create your own conscious spending plan or CSP using my free template
at iwt.com slash CSP.
Okay, Jill and Frank, they write,
We both want to live a rich life, but we continue to block ourselves from making sustained changes.
We are back in debt again after our second child.
We're trying to get out of debt before our credit cards go high interest next August.
She says, I always want to plan and think ahead,
so I often bring up money conversations,
but I end up chasing him and nagging him
for things to happen.
We struggle with overspending me out of emotions
and him out of resentment and emotions.
He never spends anything,
and I always end up making the purchase
for the kids and the household.
This is a very common dynamic.
Let's take a look at their CSP.
Assets, 341,000. and the household. This is a very common dynamic. Let's take a look at their CSP.
Assets $341,000.
Investments $27,000.
Savings $42, not $4,200, $42 in savings.
And debt is $449,000.
Total net worth of negative $80,000.
Okay, before I go on, I should point out that it's often that people have a negative net
worth, especially early on in their lives.
That is when you factor in things like student loans or other types of debt.
But what is obviously and immediately concerning is the fact that we have anyone with only
$42 in savings, but especially young parents.
If I saw this in my own life, I would stop everything and I would focus on this.
This is a red alert.
It is a 10 out of 10 emergency.
Let's keep going along.
Gross monthly income is about $120,000 a year.
Okay, nice.
Fixed costs at 107%.
Okay, right there is the ballgame.
They are broke.
They are spending more than they make every single month just on fixed costs alone.
So this is it. Right here we know why they feel stressed.
We know why they are fighting about money, avoiding money, using words like chasing and nagging.
It's right here. Let's break down what's going on in this fixed costs. Housing costs are not crazy.
They're at about 21% or so.
Got a car payment of $750.
Nothing crazy as well.
Let's see what else.
Whoa.
Debt payments at $1,571 a month.
That's a big deal.
Okay.
And then groceries at $1,500 a month.
It's difficult when you have two of those things.
Let's look at investments. They're at, predictably, they're at zero. at $1,500 a month, it's difficult when you have two of those things.
Let's look at investments.
Predictably, they're at zero.
Savings are, what the hell?
Savings are at 5%, but that 5% is $300 a month for Christmas?
And then guilt-free spending says negative 12%.
I don't believe that.
I believe they're probably eating out, probably spending on a bunch of discretionary stuff.
I almost guarantee that they are spending a ton of money on kids' stuff.
People who are in debt, especially credit card debt, it's almost 100% correlation being
in credit card debt and an inability to say no to kids.
So there's a lot going on here, but I'm actually really excited to get a chance to speak to
them.
I think that we can make some big, big changes with their spending and probably zoom out and really
help them think about money in a different way. So, looking forward to talking to them.
We have big problems to attack here. The biggest fear is we're going to be bankrupt and all
of the fears that we have been fueling
are going to be reality.
We've tried to get ourselves out of this process three times and we're back here again.
We don't have the tools.
There's something deeper here.
We need like a behavioral change.
And I've seen your podcasts and your videos and I'm like, okay, this might be the person
who can like help us get to that space
that we're trying to hide from.
And if I could wave a magic wand right now, what would I do for you?
Showing us the mirror, right?
Like how we're both playing a role in this because it's two of us.
It's not just him.
It's not just me.
It's both of us.
What do you say Frank?
If I could wave a magic wand, what would you want me to do for you?
That question is tough for me because the magic wand is just, obviously, just erase
our debt and be done with this.
But what does that do for me ultimately?
I want you to do it again.
I want to learn how to stop going into debt, how to stop these compulsive behaviors of
just, oh, it's 50 bucks.
Oh, it's 20 bucks.
I want to stop getting myself into more and more problems.
The one thing I want to take away from here is hope.
I want hope that there is something that we can do to problem solve.
And I want there to be just this like motivation that we can find to just get out of this,
what feels like a forever ending hole, like a tunnel that's just slanted downwards.
How would you describe your financial situation today?
Our financial situation to me is credit card debt in this economy with two kids is tough.
You know, you felt like you get ahead, but then you don't because clothes, kids, school,
you know, everything is just getting expensive and more and more each day.
And so our financial situation is right now we're just bearing through these first five
years while childcare is like $1,500 a month.
So we're just like grinning this out because we're just going down just enough every month
in the red.
Okay.
Jill, how about you?
How would you describe your financial situation?
I feel like it's self-inflicted.
I think the childcare is a piece of it. If we could just hone in our like impulse
control and like the once, I think we would be fine. To me, I think it's a communication
and being on the same page thing and being proactive versus reactive and being conscious
and able to make decisions together. And to me, that's where the problem is, is that we
just can't be on the same page
ever, or it's an argument, or the other person's like, okay, whatever, just do whatever.
So I'm hearing a few different things. I'm hearing your financial situation is self-inflicted,
which is kind of contradicting what Frank said about clothes are getting expensive,
childcare is getting expensive, groceries are getting expensive. And I'm hearing communication
is an issue. You don't really talk about money or if you do, it's quick.
It's fly by night. It's disagreements or fights. One person retreats. Did the two of you have
a shared vision of money?
I mean, we started your program and we realized a lot of the things we want for the future
are very similar, but we never had had that conversation before, so we really never knew that.
That's good.
Which program?
Are we talking about my book or my money coaching program?
What are we talking about?
The online money coaching program.
Oh, okay.
And what happened when you finished the program?
We sure didn't.
Really?
What happened?
The same cycle that we always have.
Fear.
We get scared.
We don't want to look at the reality.
So you go through the videos.
Did you attend one of the calls?
Yes.
Okay, cool.
What did it feel like when the two of you were on the live call?
Fear.
I got hope.
Hope?
Yeah.
Fear, shame, and hope.
Interesting.
Were the two of you sitting together?
We couldn't.
We have to divide and conquer with the kids.
Okay.
How old are the kids?
Seven months and four years. kids. Okay. How old are the kids? Seven months and four years.
Wow.
Okay.
All right.
So you're really in it.
Young kids.
Okay.
Did you talk about the money coaching after you attended the session?
Yeah.
We did.
Yeah.
We're hearing all these things about how people can live your rich life, how to be somebody
that is enjoying your own current financial situation,
as opposed to someone who's driving a Ferrari.
I don't want that.
I want to be able to just relax and go places
and go hang out with the kids and not fear poverty.
I want to be able to enjoy the small things.
Just being able to eat out and not look at the bank account.
That's what I want to do.
What does it take in order for you to do that?
Get our finances together in such a way
that I don't have to question that the money's not there.
Okay, but then I'm confused
because y'all didn't finish step two of the program.
Yep.
Why?
Got busy, as we say.
As we say, we didn't have time.
Is that a phrase you use a lot?
Every day.
Is that true?
Do you not have time?
It feels like it.
Between kids and work,
it just seems like we're running around like crazy people.
We're like, our one son has autism,
our other son's seven months old.
So between daycare and work,
we barely cross paths until it's Saturday or Sunday.
How long would you say that this disconnection of time
between the two of you has been going on for?
Seven months.
Since the baby came, the second one.
No, no, no.
For 11 years.
Wow.
Different.
Huh?
Come on.
It's been the entirety of our relationship.
As far as the disconnect of the time, I mean, we've always avoided the
conversations, but now that we're trying to come at the conversations, I feel
like more times than not, we're struggling to get the time.
Jill, if I asked you, what is your rich life, what would you say to me?
For me to be able to spend time with the kids and my husband and to, you know, have shared
memories and build memories with the kids and be able to take care of our health to just be able to
live through the day and not be stressed on edge because our finances are in my mind all
the time. Not being where I want to be, not being able to have those conversations. I
have tried to figure out ways to come at conversations and I always feel like it's not successful.
Do you remember what my question was?
What's my rich life?
And do you see where we just ended up?
Me feeling like I can't have a rich life with my husband.
I would say you talking about your problems versus painting a picture for me of your rich
life.
What I can hear from both of you is a really narrow vision
of where you are today.
So much so that when I ask, what is your rich life?
Within 30 seconds, we're back to why you can't live
your rich life.
Yeah.
Frank, do you see that pattern as well?
Yeah.
Do you both believe that there is a future where
you can answer a question like the one I just gave you with a positive.
When you asked the question earlier about like, how did you guys feel after you went
on like the monthly call?
We both felt like, oh, look, people do do it.
People have done it.
And so the conversations to me was like, oh, like we can do this.
Well, I appreciate that.
And that's one of the things I love is being able to expose
and show you other people who've gone through tough times
and made it.
So good.
Okay, it sounds like you two conceptually believe
that there's a future that can be brighter than today.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Perfect.
We've got to believe that.
Let me understand a little bit more
about day-to-day lifestyle.
Jill, what do you do?
I'm a therapist.
I own my own private practice.
Cool.
All right, Frank.
I work from home.
I work in IT.
Okay, great.
All right, let's talk about the finances.
If you had to describe how you feel about your finances
in one or two words, what would be the words?
Busy.
Okay.
Like a hamster wheel.
Okay, have you ever felt calm about your money in the 11 years you've been together?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I used to be the sole income for a while when she was going to school.
And so I had no debt.
I just had to worry about affording the next thing.
And that was calm.
Even though it was, I now realize looking back, I had it good then I was like, oh no,
what am I going to do?
So you're a worrier.
So it's interesting that you worried back when you were even calm, you were worrying.
Now you're worrying more.
You're going into debt more.
And you mentioned to me if I had a magic wand, you would have me waive it, pay off the debt.
But even if your debt was paid off, would you stop worrying?
Absolutely not.
Okay.
Something deeper than the amount on the spreadsheet, right?
Do you notice that when I ask questions around how they talk about money, Frank uses the
phrases we're too busy or we can't find the time.
Now remember, they're parents with young children and it makes a lot of sense.
They are incredibly busy.
It's also a story that we commonly tell ourselves. We are too busy to do X, and we find that the results show up,
for example, with their finances.
I'm not here to tell anybody how to run their time
or even how to run their money.
But once you get comfortable with the story
that we are too busy, suddenly suddenly becomes a self-fulfilling
prophecy.
In fact, it's easy to dismiss most parts of managing your money.
As Frank just mentioned a moment ago, he's been a worrier since before they had debt.
So there's a lot to unpack around his relationship with money.
Let's listen in as he talks about the money messages he heard
as a child.
I grew up in a house where money was like, you didn't have it. And if you did have it,
it was spent ridiculous. You know, bills are not getting paid, but you go order $90 and
pizza as a kid. You're like, oh, young pizza. As an adult, that's a poor choice.
You grow up poor?
I would say middle class with self-destructive behaviors.
Very interesting.
What part of the country did you grow up in?
Columbus, Ohio.
Okay.
What do you remember your parents saying about money when you were a kid?
We don't have any.
What else?
We got some.
Let's go spend it.
And they spend it on family stuff like pizza or anything else?
Pizza, toys, adventures.
We would go like
tubing down the creeks. You know, we would go to camp and eat now stuff like that. And
then what happened when you didn't have money again? What would they say to you? There's
no money. I'll do those things. We got to wait till the next check. Do you ever see
your parents talking about saving or investing? I didn't even know what stocks were. I heard
of like people investing. Of course, you know, you've watched movies, but you're like, how do you even approach that?
When you look back at your childhood, what lessons do you take away about money?
Save it.
I know that kind of contradicts what I just said, but save it.
That's the lesson I took away.
Save it all.
Don't spend anything.
That's a little contradictory based on how much you're spending right now, right?
Yeah. When the kids came along, it was like a brain switch for me. That's a little contradictory based on how much you're spending right now, right? Yep.
When the kids came along, it was like a brain switch for me.
I was like, well, they need it.
I have to give it.
Wait, doesn't this sound like you just switched right into your parents?
I don't want them to know, oh, we can't afford it.
I tell my son, you know, you got to, you got to save up for that.
I'm trying to teach him lessons that I need to teach myself.
You know, I'm trying to say like, we only have five bucks.
He goes picks out an $8 toy and I'm like,
ooh, the budget's fine for this one.
You can get away with this for about a year and a half more.
And then they get too smart.
They know what's going on.
Dad's over here telling me one thing
and doing completely the opposite.
Kids are really smart.
You better find a new line.
That's not gonna last much longer.
Yeah, I have to get creative.
What do you think will happen when your son starts to point out?
How you're saying one thing and doing another how you gonna react to that and you know, I'm gonna feel horrible like dad
We don't have it but you can go do that
Very interesting response. You're going to feel horrible not I'm going to make a change right now
So that he never has to point out
that I'm saying one thing and doing another.
What do you get out of that?
Out of saying I'm going to feel horrible
instead of talking about
what you are going to change behaviorally.
I have this path in my mind that it's not changing.
Sounds like I'm looking in the future
and I see no change.
It seems to me, I agree,
you believe your future is already determined
and therefore when you look at your future,
which is a future you don't like,
the only natural conclusion is, I'm going to feel horrible.
Can I tell you, I look at it differently?
I look at your future as unwritten.
Of course you have some clothing that you are wearing.
It came from your childhood.
These are messages you picked up.
These are lessons you learned consciously and unconsciously.
So yes, you're bringing those with you,
but the next chapter of your life is not written yet.
And I believe I have control, I have agency
over what is going to happen to me next.
Do you think that way or not?
I think I can learn to think that way.
I think I can change and do something different.
That's why we're here, I wanted to come here.
I'm glad you're here and I appreciate you showing up
and going full force with me and
with your wife.
Okay, so you grew up, not a lot of messages about positive saving, investing, a lot of
we can't afford it.
Now I'm curious about you, Jill.
What do you remember about the phrases your family, your parents used when you were growing
up as it relates to money?
I mean, I grew up poor. So the phrases were usually that we don't have it or we can't
have it. We'd go to the thrift store for clothes. When we go to the grocery store, my grandma
would always like go down every single aisle and then she'd have her coupons. And so she'd
whip out every single coupon. And I remember like we'd ask like, Oh, can we have this cereal?
Like all of our friends have the cereal. Can we have this one? And she'd be like, No, we
don't have a coupon for that. And so it was just constantly like, no.
You mentioned your grandma.
My mom has mental health issues. So my, my grandparents raised me, I think after like
two or three.
Got it. Well, I'm sorry to hear that. And did that lead to you getting into the world of therapy?
It did.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was a rough, rough childhood, but my grandma was a big proponent of like getting services.
So you know, even though like we were poor, she made sure like we had the state insurance
and went to the therapist and saw people and she always made sure we went to the doctors and dentists so health was like really important to her. We were poor but
we didn't need anything. We just wanted stuff.
Of course, every kid wants stuff.
Yeah.
So you grew up a lot of talk about we can't afford it and did that same type of conversation
continue throughout your teenage years?
It changed.
You know, I would say probably in elementary, my grandpa started talking to me.
Like, my grandpa was the financial guy.
So he would be always sitting on the porch reading a finance book.
Like he would always talk about the investments he was doing.
So there was three of us, my sister and my brother that they took care of, and
I'm the youngest. So he always would talk to me about like, hey, these are the books.
This is where I keep all of your guys' stocks. And when I started working, he was like, you
got to put back your 30% for savings. And I just, no, I didn't want to hear any of it.
To me, it was like, I finally had my own money to do all of the wants that I was always told
I couldn't do. I wanted a cell phone when I was in my teens and they were not going
to pay for a cell phone. So I had to buy my own cell phone. I wanted extra clothes more
than what they were going to be able to afford and so then I would purchase those extra clothes.
So it bred this concept of like extra money when in reality, like that
was the money that I needed to be preparing myself for life with. And he was constantly
telling me that, but I just was like in one ear and out the other. It wasn't until we
got out of debt, like the second time where I was like, oh, like this is what he meant.
This is why this is so important. I'm getting older and I don't
have any savings. I don't have any retirement. And I'm like, man, all of that extra money
that I was using for things that I wanted that I didn't need, I could have had all these
savings because my needs were met with my grandparents. They're just like the once.
And so that's exactly how I spend as an adult.
That's the challenge I have is telling myself, no, you do not need that.
You have your needs met.
That's my issue.
Is that the challenge you currently have as well?
I still fight it.
Yeah.
I mean, I go through periods of time where I'm like, I'm on it.
This is my plan.
I want a retirement.
I want to not work my whole life.
And then literally like, I'll just be like, oh, but I really want that.
You feel like a battle, like you're fighting a battle with yourself.
It does.
It literally feels like my adult self is fighting my child self.
Like I'm trying to like tell the child self like, dude, like I know you want that, but
like you really, like, I know you want that, but like, you really,
time is running out. Like, you've got to get yourself together. And then the child self
is like, I hear you, but I really don't care. Like, let's just get this one thing.
That's powerful how Jill admits that. Her grandparents provided for her and tried to
teach her to save. But because the message she internalized was,
you can't have that, she struggles to manage her impulse control.
It's like driving a car. Her grandparents only taught her how to hit the brakes,
and that has turned into all or nothing for Jill.
Earlier we heard Frank describe the money habits that he picked up from his parents and is now passing on to his own kids
There's a lot at play here, but I will say even the very situation they are in
Gives them the opportunity to rewrite their story. Let me tell you what I mean
They're the parents of young children. That's incredibly stressful
Overwhelming, of Of course you're busy.
Maybe true.
But what if we rewrote that story to say,
yes, we might be a little overwhelmed.
Of course we're going to be busier than we ever thought.
And we get to make amazing changes
and to build a healthy relationship with money
that will be passed down for generations to come.
We'll be right back after this short break.
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Let's get back to the conversation. You said that you got out of debt for the second time.
Can you walk me through the number of times you've gotten into and out of debt?
So while my grandfather gave great lessons on retirement and savings, he did not talk
about credit cards with me.
He didn't talk about how to use them, how to manage them, none of them. So I was already under this misconception of like extra money. So when I got my first
credit card, I was like, oh, I have this extra money I can use. Oh, this is great. I'm going
to just spend it. And oh, I only have to pay this small amount monthly. I can afford that.
Then that was the slippery slope of me just, oh, I don't have it right now, but I'm going
to get paid.
Let me just swipe my card over and over and over again, like through my college years,
Starbucks coffee.
How much debt did you get into?
Oh God, the first time I think 12,000.
Okay.
Did you pay it off?
I did. Yeah. Did you pay it off? I did, yeah.
How did you do that?
My husband said, I'm not going to marry you
until you get the step paid off.
We're talking about Frank?
Yes, we're talking about Frank.
What?
Okay, I have to say that surprises me.
Frank, that's, I love the boundaries.
I love that.
I love any partner who says, look,
this is what I need in order to be in a healthy relationship. I'm not trying to
change you, but I'm telling you what I need. Frank, that's
pretty cool. Where did that come from for you?
It came from a very, very disciplined man who would not
spend any of his money unless he had it. I was taught by my
mother that the credit cards are the devil. And if you get them, they are going to ruin your life. And so I didn't own one. I didn't want one
and the debt associated with them.
So Jill, what was your reaction when he said that?
Oh, I'll take care of it. Don't hold my french fries. That's all it takes because we were
like, I think six years in at that five years in maybe or?
Yeah, we waited waited at the time. Wow yeah. That's kind of interesting you waited five
years to talk about that. She was still going through college and hadn't entered
the workforce. I was working full-time. Alright so he said I would like you to
pay that debt off otherwise we're not gonna get married and Jill you were like
cool say no more. How long did it take you to pay that debt off, otherwise we're not going to get married. And Jill, you were like, cool, say no more.
How long did it take you to pay that debt off?
A couple years.
Yeah, three years.
Was it hard?
Yeah, it was hard.
Yeah. And looking back, do you feel proud?
Absolutely. I mean, I celebrate it when we got out of debt that first time.
Wow. So you get out of debt, you all get married.
When was the second time you got into debt?
It was when we lived next to a Earth Fair, which is like Whole Foods
and my wife grew up being told no on a lot of the food choices that she wanted and
Credit card later I turn around and look and I was blindsided
By some severe debt and I was like, whoa. Whoa. Whoa. Whoa. Hold on. How much is severe debt?
I think I was like, Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Hold on. How much is severe debt? I think it was like 14,000.
What do you buy? Like frosted flakes or something?
The same stuff your grandma told you you can't buy.
You're like, I'm going to buy it now.
What is it? No, no, no.
I would handle pretty much all the stuff for the house.
I would go grocery shopping, get the household goods, all those things, because
he would go to the grocery store and get like the cheapest stuff.
And I'd be like, I don't want this cheap stuff.
And then he'd get upset and say, why?
We don't have the money for it.
And I would say, but we do.
And then he was like, well, then you just go grocery shopping.
I don't care.
I wanted the pristine health.
So everything was organic.
Everything was grass fed.
Everything was like the best of the best.
So but it was not.
It was outrageous to come home with a brown bag.
I'm like, it could have been that bad.
You're like, it was $400.
I'm like, it fits in a bag, a brown bag, and it's 400 bucks.
What's in there, gold?
It sounds like the way you brought it up
would be kind of jokey.
Was it a joke or were you mad?
I was very mad.
I didn't know that it was going on a credit card.
I didn't know the true cost of these items.
In the moment, I'd be like, oh, this is good.
This is great.
Oh, this tastes great.
This is nice.
How much was this?
Okay, wow, that's outrageous.
At the time, it was like, how could you do this again?
So you got into personal debt,
buying groceries for both of you.
Yes.
All right, so Frank finds out,
and then what happened with that debt?
I got upset, and I said,
I am going to fix this right now.
You are going to give me your credit cards.
I'm going to take you down to a federal credit union.
You're going to get yourself on a payment plan
with a personal loan.
And you're going to pay this off
and you're going to hand me the cards.
What is this guy?
It's not Frank.
It's like, Frederico.
Frederico comes out just freaking gangster.
Suave.
He goes, this is how it's going to be be you want to get married to me, Frederico
You're gonna pay off your debt fourteen thousand dollars a day. Let's go. We're going to the credit union
We're gonna take care of business. Where did this come the second time?
Wait till we get to the third time. Hold on Frederico. Let me take a step by step. Okay. I know you like to run around here
All right
So so you go to the credit union, you put the payment
plan in place and what happens? It gets paid off. What did you do at the end when you paid
it off?
Celebrate it again.
We went out to dinner.
High five. Good job. Love you. Celebrate. Okay. Are we in the middle of the third time right
now?
Yeah. We're in deep.
There's a caveat here though. Because after that last time, I was like, I'm sick of this cycle. I want
to get ahead of this. And I went spreadsheet happy. And I was like, we have to figure out
where our money is going. And at that point, I had broken the trust enough, I guess. And
he didn't care. He wasn't trying to have the conversation. I was chasing him for months.
Even though the debt had been paid off, why were you out of it, Frank? I'm so sick of having the mindset of
we don't have it, we don't have it. I got jealous.
I was like, well, we don't have it. Why are you spending it? And I'm not.
I was like, okay, well, I'm gonna go buy a computer now. If I were gonna rack up debt,
I'm gonna do something for myself once in a while.
Whoa, I just have to jump in here because this is a heartbreaking comment from Frank.
It's heavy. But I'm also not surprised to hear it.
The thing is when one person in a relationship is the money person or even the enforcer as Frank or his alter ego,
Frederico was, and the other person is just content to be along for the ride, that can often breed resentment.
You do not want to be in a relationship where there's a parent-child dynamic.
It is bad in so many ways.
And in this case, that resentment led to Frank basically thrown in the towel,
saying, why bother?
Why do you get to buy whatever you want? And I have to be the bad guy.
This is one more example why it is so crucial
for both people in a relationship
to have an active role in managing the family finances.
There can never be one money person
because this is an example of what happens when there is.
I talk more about this in my new book, Money for Couples.
So what do you think about this decision?
Looking back, I'm screwed up royally.
I should have had conversations and kept the mindset firm.
You don't have it.
You don't spend it.
What happened on the third time?
Tell me what you buy and then we'll get into the
numbers. It's so much at this point. I don't even remember, but I just know there's between
electronics and children and household furniture. We bought a house because it was pre it was
during I think was during COVID. The market was just going insane and I was looking at
all these forecasts and I was like, did we buy a house this month or we're screwed? We did. And then the market went off the roof and our house
like went up $150,000 and value. Where'd you get the down payment? Where'd you get the
money to furnish the house and maintain it? Where'd you get all that? Credit cards. Oh.
Yep. Welcome to the debt. Yeah. Then we had our son, our one year old at the time, and he was in childcare.
So childcare wasn't expense.
So as we were putting our money towards that, we were also like, well, we need a couch.
Oh, we need a table.
Oh, we need a bookshelf.
Oh, we need clothes.
Go ahead and get the computer that you want because you're already $4,000 in debt.
What's an extra five?
How much are you in debt today?
Card debt.
F of loan. A loan I think is $25,000 in debt. What's an extra five? How much are you in debt today? Card debt? F a little.
A loan, I think is $25,000.
Loans too.
Auto loan is $25,000. Home is $220,000. Student loans, what are they?
$160,000 or $140,000.
We looked at it one day and we're like, oh no. Oh no. What do we do?
How do I problem solve? How do I logically get rid of this? How do I solve it like the last two times?
And I'm like panicking.
I just don't have a good solution.
The economy, groceries have quadrupled since the start of our debt.
To now. Everything's gone up.
Child care used to be 700 bucks a month.
It's 1500 today.
I don't know what to do.
Eventually, we're going to
run out. Our debt was maxed out. Our cards were maxed. That's when we realized we did
something wrong.
You didn't realize that before the cards were maxed out?
No. We were like, we have to spend this money. We don't have a choice. We have to do it.
It's what we have to do to keep it going keep the cycle keep the lights on keep getting the kids in school and
Keep paying for clothes and food ask us if we spent anything extravagant in the last year
I'd say no, we have been pretty
Good, I think about trying to make sure the things that we need are needs not once what's in your house right now
What's the most expensive thing in there? Oh, man, usually it's a car
What's in your house right now? What's the most expensive thing in there?
Oh man.
Usually it's a car.
Okay, so the car, yeah, obviously.
How much is that?
It's a van, 25,000.
Okay.
What's next?
The other car, which is 9,000.
We got computers that are probably our next big items.
The furniture.
What's the most expensive piece of furniture?
Our bed.
Oh yeah.
How much? It was 2,500 for the base and then 3 furniture? Our bed. Oh yeah. How much?
It was 2,500 for the base and then 3,000 for the mattress.
Okay.
So you all have a more expensive bed than I do.
Okay.
What's next after the mattress,
the $5,500 mattress and bed, what's next?
Solid wood Amish table.
Okay.
And then a $3,000 couch.
We bought a, you know, like a fancy Roomba for like a thousand dollars
I bought a monitor for my computer gaming and and working and I bought it's like a thousand dollars
And I think that was in the cycle of just panic buying all the things that we wanted. Can I make an observation?
Yeah, Frank. You said we haven't spent on a lot of extravagan stuff
I think you have to particularly for your income.
The bed alone, not to mention the table, the multiple computers, and on and on and on.
That is extravagant.
Our mentality is always like, it's just me and him.
So we have to figure out how do we make me and him work well enough to keep our day to
day going.
And so we're like, okay, if we have a better monitor,
then we're going to be working faster.
If we have a Roomba that cleans the floor,
then we won't have to mop the floor so often
because we're so stressed.
If we just put enough stuff around us,
then we'll be all right.
We'll be able to function.
And it's not true.
This is the most Americana of stories.
We don't communicate effectively about money.
We don't even spend a lot of time together.
We tell ourselves the story that we're doing it all for our kids,
but we lie to our kids.
We tell them, save money. We don't save money.
Meanwhile, we're increasingly in debt. We're busy.
We start to concoct stories.
Well, we need this because of that.
Let's buy this. It'll make us feel better. We then to concoct stories. Well, we need this because of that. Let's buy this.
It'll make us feel better.
We then tell ourselves another layer of story, which is we're not actually buying anything
extravagant.
It's all necessary.
We're investing in our time and ourselves.
And you end up where?
Yeah, in debt.
In debt, disconnected, feeling behind, stressed out, bad health.
Here we are.
Now, what happens if you keep going?
The biggest fear is we're going to be bankrupt
and all of the fears that we have been fueling
are going to be reality.
You're going to be bankrupt. Do you know when?
We're already in the...
All the interest rates of the credit cards go on full strong next year.
Yeah, we're already in the red.
Oh, you have artificially low interest rates right now
Yeah
We balance part of my panic problem solving was that balance transferred to zero percent interest cards for a year so that we would have
Some time to pay things down and just keep slapping as much extra income as we could
That's what we're doing to fix it right the second and I'm taking on more household stuff
My wife is taking on more hours at work. We're trying to get ahead.
Frank, what role has your panic played
in contributing to this financial problem?
It's so overwhelmed and so anxious about it
that I just push it to the next day.
And there's a tightness in my chest all the time.
Now imagine you bring that panic,
that manic energy towards money. What ends up happening? We got to balance transfer.
We got to do this. We got to buy this. We got to do this. Don't tell this. We got to
fix this. We'll figure it out. I don't know what to do. I got to go to sleep. We'll figure
it out tomorrow. Not calm, cool, and collected. Frenzy, panicked, making every short-term
decision you can. Jill, you recognize this pattern that I'm describing?
Yeah. I bring it up all the time.
I wish we could just have a calm conversation.
I just want to sit down and just talk about it, but it doesn't have to be anything more
than just a conversation.
You are a therapist.
Have you two gone to therapy together?
We have in the past.
Yeah.
Was that helpful?
It was at the time.
And how come you haven't gone back to talk about money?
You think that was the thing you could do?
What do you mean?
There's a whole financial therapy industry.
There's even therapists who can just help you talk about connecting.
I try to have these conversations with him.
He just shuts me down.
I didn't know there's therapy for money.
He tells me not to talk about the expertise I have.
He doesn't care about it.
He doesn't want to hear it.
I'm sorry.
It's got to be tough.
Yeah, it's hard.
I feel like I try to look at things from the like a big picture.
And I mean, I still have my issues.
I have my anxious and all those things.
But like, there's a lot of times before it got to this level that I tried to say,
hey, something's not right. We need to sit down and look at this and it was just like,
it's fine, it's fine. It's in the green, it's in the green, whatever. It's fine. I'll just
put money towards it or you know, it was just constantly pushing me away from the conversation
and it was hard. I felt really alone.
Do you feel that way today?
He's gotten better, but I still feel like there's days where he's just, sometimes it
feels like he's in his head having all these conversations with himself and I'm just on
the outside kind of like, hey, I'm here. And sometimes it's like I'm talking to him and
I'm looking for feedback or I'm looking for engagement and he just says, uh-huh,
or tries to walk away and it's been hard. And I've talked about therapy. I brought it
up multiple times and he shot me down. I don't know how else to approach it to be heard.
So then I give up and I say, well, I'm not going to do this financial thing on my own.
I'm not going to penny pinch on my own. And so I'm just like, who cares? Let's spend it on the credit card.
I don't care anymore.
Are you both at that point where you both
just don't care anymore?
No.
I care a lot.
I care now a lot.
Yeah, I got really scared when we saw that big number
and it was double what we had ever gotten ourselves
out of before.
I got scared when I started to halt drastically.
First two times you got into debt, it was Jill.
And then the third time, it seems like the roles are reversed.
Am I reading that correctly?
I feel like I still played a role in it.
For me, it was like, I don't care anymore
because we're not going to have the conversation.
And I feel like maybe his was,
I didn't get my opportunity now, here's my time.
Okay, fair enough. I appreciate that.
So both played a part in debt number three.
We're both killed.
So why don't you all just keep going?
I never wanted to keep at this rate. I've never wanted this to be in this state.
Well, you are here.
Yeah, but we are here.
So why don't you just keep going?
We've been telling each other, we want to have generational wealth for our kids.
I don't care so much about generational wealth.
I feel like we've had a really hard life and I would like to just be able to spend quality
time together and to spend it with the kids and watch our kids grow up and actually be
present.
I want to be home with them.
I want to spend quality time.
I feel like I'm missing the time I have when I'm healthy enough to be with my kids.
So for me, that's what I want and I'm angry. I'm angry at the cycle. I'm angry at myself
I'm angry that we can't be aligned. I'm frustrated
Yeah, I hear that you both hear that you're not aligned about why you want to make a change right now like
generational wealth talking about it at 29
Versus Jill's like, we got our whole lives
ahead of us.
The two of us, the four of us.
It's the anxious, it's the wearying.
What is going to happen at the end?
I think what I'm hearing from you, Frank, is I believe I've lost the game for myself.
If you've lost the game, then Jill's simply going to be running uphill for the rest of
her life alone because you're checked out.
Do you believe that you've lost the game for yourself and it's over?
No, I think if I can fix my mistakes and change my behaviors, I could turn this around.
I feel like the problems that I have, I have to handle those myself.
You know, yes, we do make choices together, but sometimes she leans on me to make a choice
and I make it and it's not a good choice.
And I have to change that so that we can have a better future.
Jail, how are you doing over there?
That hurts. Like that's like that hurts to hear.
Why?
Because that's how it feels. Like that's how it's felt. And I didn't know why it felt that
way. It didn't make sense. I felt alone. I felt like he's checked out. I felt like he's written
it in the sand and that there is no tomorrow. Why are we even planning it? Even when I asked,
hey, can you figure out what your retirement is? It was like, I don't care. And to me,
I'm like, don't you understand? That's what we're working towards. That's why we're working
so hard. If he already feels like his life is over,
then yeah, why would he be trying?
I'm trying to think about how this has got to feel
for you, Jill.
Like in a way it's like, oh, I finally understand
why he's acting that way.
But also, oh my God, is my husband
at 29 years old checked out?
To me, I'm like, there's so much to live for.
Like we have these two beautiful kids.
Like, all of it kind of just hit me like a brick wall.
Like, well, if he doesn't care to be here with me in this, then of course he's not going
to care about how he parents or how he cares about how he treats the marriage or how he
wants to spend time with me.
Of course he wouldn't want to spend time with me if he doesn't care.
He's done.
There's nothing here anymore.
Sometimes it's surprising the kind of things that we hear on this show. Hearing Jill say
she doesn't think her husband cares anymore is incredibly devastating. But since she's
repeatedly asked Frank to engage and he has shut her out.
I completely understand what she's saying.
That would be painful for any of us.
Of course, this points to something so much deeper than strictly their finances.
This is why I always encourage my guests to speak to a therapist.
But this is also a classic example of how a crack in the foundation can bleed into so many parts of life, including money.
It's very easy to get to a place like this, especially with young kids at home, including one with special needs and an increasingly disconnected view of money.
It doesn't have to be like this.
Yes, they're at a crossroads here, but I
think they can make changes that will help them correct course. If they are
going to get aligned, they have to do it together. This disjointed way of everybody
going to their own corner is not going to work. And we will dig in after a quick
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below. That is drink lmnt.com slash Ramit. Now back to the show. Let's see if I can help
Jill and Frank find a way to work together as a team. You want to talk to each other
right now? I feel like this is a really important moment for the two of you. Yeah, I definitely feel like I care. I care more than I show. I tend to be reclusive in my behaviors.
I tend to handle and fix things by myself. Frank, listen. You're not listening to your
wife. You're definitely not listening to me. What did she say? She says he feels like I'm checked
out. She's not asking for you to give a 10 minute exposition on why you do this and that.
What do you think she's looking for right now?
Apology.
How about just accepting what she said and validating her?
Wow, I can see why you feel that way.
That's gotta be so tough to feel alone.
I am sorry.
I am, I am sorry.
And it does hurt to see that you feel
the way you're feeling. I don't want you to feel that way. And I does hurt to see that you feel the way you're feeling.
I don't want you to feel that way.
And I want you to feel loved and I want our kids to be happy.
And here I'm apologizing and I still don't know if he understands what he's apologizing
for.
Apologize for making you feel alone throughout this whole time.
Making you do it all by yourself and not being a part of the solution.
Okay.
A lot to work through here.
Some of it is not my specialty.
I would like to talk about the numbers.
I would like to talk about the money.
And we'll talk about how that's affecting the two of you.
How's that sound?
Good.
I want to take a look at your numbers because
we've just spent quite a bit of emotional energy
talking about some pretty deep stuff,
stuff that definitely needs to be explored in therapy.
Let's take a look at the numbers, which will help ground us and see where you are today.
Jill, why don't you go ahead and read the word in bold and then the number in full next
to it and just work your way down.
Assets are $341,109. Investments is $27,554.
Savings is $42, and debt is $449,000
for a total net worth of negative $80,861.
Okay, just so everybody hears those numbers correctly,
we have savings of $42.
Yep.
That's the full amount.
And then debt of $449,565.
All right.
What do you all think about these numbers?
Not good.
Yeah, I want the savings to be up so we have emergency funds, and I want our investments
to get to the point where we're investing money so we can retire.
Jill, how about you?
Yeah, I mean, I want to invest more.
I want to save more.
I want to get the debt paid off.
I would like to see a positive total net worth.
That'd be wonderful.
Do you all see the connection between your behavior
with money over the last 11 years and the net worth numbers?
Yeah, absolutely.
OK, let's go down to income.
This time, let's hear from Frank.
Frank, what is the combined current monthly income?
$10,613.
All right.
10.6K per month gross,
which is gross income of $127,351 per year.
Did you both know that's how much your household makes?
Yeah.
Yes.
Oh, good.
Okay, great.
Now we're going to work our way down the CSP going through the four key numbers.
What is this fixed cost number right here?
107%.
Your fixed costs are 107% of your net pay.
So that's it.
That's the end.
You're broke.
Yeah, this has been the conversation I've been having is that we're not okay.
One hundred and seven percent means you're spending more than you make just on fixed costs every month alone.
All right. Let's just finish off and then we'll come back and do the line items.
Investments are at zero. You're putting zero dollars away. Is there any 401k or pre-tax money going away?
Not currently.
There was in the past.
All right.
So zero dollars going there.
Savings, almost zero, but it looks like you all put $300 a month away for Christmas.
Am I reading that correctly?
Oh, no, no, no.
That was $300 flat.
Oops.
Like for this year coming up, how much will you spend?
$300.
Yeah.
All right. And then the last one.
Guilt-free spending says negative 12%,
I know that's not true,
because when was the last time y'all ate out?
Yeah, that's true.
Monday.
Out of curiosity, where'd you eat?
Firehouse subs.
Yeah.
Okay, how much total?
Everything, including delivery,
I think it was 60 bucks.
Okay.
I mean, according to CSP,
you spend negative $783 a month.
How can that be?
I don't know.
We spend more than that.
I know you do.
The answer is it's going on your credit cards.
No, it's owner draws and we're paying it with cash.
Yeah, the income on that sheet is her base salary.
She makes more, but she keeps it in the business.
So that income is not accurate.
It doesn't.
What's with all these technicalities?
Alright, maybe you're not putting on a credit card,
but in the end, are your credit card balances going up?
Yes.
Are you spending more at all on your credit cards right now?
No.
No, we're not doing that.
You put them away?
Yeah.
We are trying our best to every single chance we get
to throw all the money at it.
Yeah. I need to understand more about how you make money, Jill.
You're a therapist, you get paid per session.
Yeah, I'm on salary, so I pay myself.
And then it fluctuates based off of people canceling
or whatever, then I'll do owner drolls.
You run your own business, is that correct?
Yes.
Okay, so can we just look at this? Which salary are you? Are you the higher or the lower salary? or drolls. You run your own business, is that correct? Yes. Okay.
So can we just look at this?
Which salary are you?
Are you the higher or the lower salary?
The lower salary.
Okay.
47.37 a month.
Yeah.
Okay.
So you're paying yourself $56,000 a year in base salary.
Yes.
Okay, cool.
And then how much on average do you take in salary draws or anything else?
It's between 2,000 to 4,000 additional each month.
What?
That's a lot.
It's only been since the past two months
because I increased my hours a lot.
In order to make more money?
Yes.
And is this part of why you feel like you're
not spending as much time with your kids
and you're resentful of that?
I used to have everything built in.
So I had time for my husband and time for the kids and that's all
gone.
Can we make the change right here and just see what happens? So like you're actually
taking home if we're going to be conservative, let's just say you're taking home 2000 extra
per month. Watch what happens to this fixed cost number. Okay, this percentage that currently
says 107%. Watch what happens when I increase your take-home pay what that number dropped to you maybe five
You know from 107 to 85 percent. What do you all think about that?
Well, not I mean, that's why that's why I took one that the hours before we go line by line
Do you all know why I recommend 50 to 60 percent for fixed costs to live a rich life?
So your fixed costs are fixed.
Every month you pretty much spend this amount.
And if you wake up in the morning and you've already got 60% of your money going somewhere,
you still have 40% of it that can be distributed among savings, investments, and guilt-free
spending. But let's say you wake up and in the morning,
you got 85% of your entire month's money
already claimed by your fixed costs.
What does that mean?
You gotta live with 15%.
Yes, and what usually happens when people have to live
with a very small amount?
They explode out because they're so-
Yeah, explode.
They're just wanting something more.
You want more because you feel scarce, which is correct, especially the way you were both
raised with money.
You go, I don't want this feeling again.
I'm going to just spend money.
You run up the credit card.
But also notice what's happening here.
People who only have a little bit of money after their fixed cost claim up the majority,
they don't save or invest any money.
And they remain stuck in this cycle because they cannot escape. The
only way you escape your fixed cost is to invest and save aggressively. You will never
escape otherwise. You'll be doing this for the rest of your life.
Yeah, that's kind of the conversations that I wanted to start having is the ability to
start saving and investing so we're not constantly, like I said earlier, the hamster wheel.
Yeah, you're on the hamster wheel
because your fixed costs are at 85%.
No wonder you're stressed out, no wonder you're fighting,
no wonder you're avoiding each other
and not talking about money
and can't even connect enough to fill out a spreadsheet
knowing you're going to be here talking to me.
It's that you have no money left over.
And yet you're still going out to eat
and still doing those things, knowing deep down,
oh my God, we probably should not be doing this.
Yes.
You have trapped yourselves.
Yep.
We'll finish reviewing their conscious spending plan after this.
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Now back to Frank and Jill's conscious spending plan and their fixed costs.
Let's go through them line by line.
Your mortgage is not bad.
It's 17%.
That's quite low.
So you got a very low total payment relative to your income.
That's great.
Your car payment is $750.
A little high for my taste, but okay.
Not bad. It's fine.
That's gas too.
I didn't know where we should put the gas.
Yeah, that's good.
That's how it should be. Good job.
Okay.
Your debt payments are $1,571.
And we know that's not the true number
because your credit cards are about to kick in, right?
Well, the extra money that she owner draws,
we try to put it all towards the debt payment.
Well, that can't be.
You told me you just went to Firehouse Subs or whatever
and got a $60 meal.
Come on, let's get real.
What are we talking about here?
We really put a portion of it towards the...
How much portion?
What percent?
50%.
You're telling me you put $1,000 a month towards your debt. Extra. Yes. Yeah.
We were at 32. We're down in two months to 24 now. Oh. We're trying. Okay. I stand corrected.
I apologize. That's impressive. Tell me the numbers again. We started at 32 and then she's
killing it and I'm taking on other stuff at the house and we're trying to just do as much as we possibly can and now we're down to 25?
32 to 25 in two months?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's been a long two months.
Whoa, hold on.
Damn.
Take the win.
That's impressive.
So you put effort towards this debt, you prioritize that you did it together and you're getting amazing results.
This is promising. All right, let's get back to it.
My eyes are open. So again, you have $1,571 in debt payments,
but you are putting at least $1,000 extra towards it every month.
Yes. Whoa. That's on top of $1,571.
I think we put like a thousand one check and then a thousand the next check.
We went down hard on this credit card.
Love it.
Let's keep moving.
Groceries at $1,500 a month.
What's that?
We have allergy kids that are allergic to milks
and stuff so we have to buy specialty foods for the kids.
Fair enough.
Y'all have to shop very consciously for your kids.
I get that.
It's probably going to be more expensive regardless, I get that.
Yeah.
Y'all ever say no to your kids?
Yeah.
Like for what?
He wants everything in the store and I say no, just pick two.
Okay.
What about like pick zero?
No, I can't.
I feel horrible.
What are you teaching your kids when you do that, especially your older one?
You get what he wants when we go to the store.
Mm-hmm.
Yep.
And what's going to happen as he gets older and he gets his first job and starts spending
money?
What's he going to do?
Get what he wants.
Mm-hmm.
What's going to happen when he has kids?
They're going to get what they want.
Know his love.
Yes.
Can be delivered lovingly.
It can be delivered with a great lesson.
Sometimes it can just be delivered with one syllable.
No.
But I will tell you that 100% of the couples I speak to
in credit card debt struggle to say no to their kids.
You two are a statistic.
I love being a statistic.
It means I'm like most people in most things.
Amazing.
If I'm like most people in most things,
that means I could probably use advice
that most other people use in most things. If you two are like every other couple
I've spoken to in credit card debt who struggle to say no to their kids, how do you take that
and what might you do with that information? Say no. You got to have boundaries. You got
to fix the behavior. Whose behavior? Our behavior. Oh, so you're saying fix your behavior first, model it,
go through the same thing your kid is going through,
learn how to modulate and talk and communicate about that.
And then when you go to your kids,
it's gonna be that much easier
because you yourself have regulated yourself.
What's that sigh?
Hope.
It is?
I never heard someone give a sigh of hope like that.
It's relief. I don't think the way that you're thinking these things out for us.
Okay. I don't think like this. Okay cool. I appreciate that you're receiving this
well. That's awesome. That's as much as I could have hoped for. Fantastic.
Let's keep going. I have a question about your mortgage. Does that include your
property taxes and... Yes. Okay it does. Great. And maintenance? What about stuff
you got to fix in your house? Where's that?
We had a home warranty that you just paid
and they'd come and fix your stuff.
We just canceled this last month
and we're gonna take all the money
that we would have used for that
and put it into a savings account.
Come, I don't see that in your savings.
We just did this like two days ago.
I didn't think consciously to update this file
because I was like, what does it matter?
But now I'm thinking, if I change something,
I need to update the numbers.
Isn't that sort of the theme of your behavior?
What does it matter?
Yeah, I'm seeing that I think that way,
and I need to change that behavior.
And Jill, what is the theme of your financial behavior?
Give up when he gives up.
Why?
You earn more than he does.
Not to say that means you know more about money,
but why would you put yourself in the passenger seat with money?
Because I was tired of fighting.
I don't care anymore.
I do want to change it because I know that this is my life too.
And that's why every now and again I say,
no, we got to do this because I know this is my life
and this is our children's life and it's our life.
Sounds kind of vague.
What I'm trying to do is to get you and you, Frank, to see if there's
a reason why you would want to make vast wide ranging changes to the way that you think about
money, behave with money, and feel about money. If you want to get out of this, you can, but it's
going to require a massive lifestyle, psychological, relational shift.
And I'm trying to hunt for that why.
Want to be able to see my wife happy.
I want to live a happy life with her and do the things that we want to do.
Jill?
I have a reason.
I want to change because I want to be able to one, not work for the rest of my life, to not always fear money, to be able to live
freely with my husband and my children and to be anxiety free around money.
What are you prepared to do in order to pay off your debt and build a healthy relationship
with money?
Anything.
Okay.
Jill? Anything it Okay, Jill?
Anything it takes.
All right, let's go back to the CSP.
So what do we need to do on this CSP
in order for you both to have
at least a healthy conscious spending plan?
Lower our fixed cost to 50%.
Yeah.
Let's even say 60.
Sure.
What do you want to do?
Groceries. All right, tell me the number. 60. Sure. What do you want to do?
Grocers.
Alright, tell me the number.
800.
Yeah.
I thought you told me this whole story about we need to get butter and we got to go to
the ends of the earth for this oil.
No, it is true if you want to go shopping, but it's not true if you want to meal prep
and not buy so much processed food and start actually making it from, you know, simpler ingredients.
What's happening right now?
Hold on.
What's in your cabinet and your fridge right now?
Usually what's in the fridge is like 28 containers of meal prep food with like chicken, rice,
and broccoli.
The taco style.
I don't believe that.
This is $1500 a month on chicken, rice, and broccoli.
I know that diet.
Yeah, here's where it comes out.
Frank, Amazon.
Is anyone going to tell me the truth right now or what?
I'm fearful you're all running out of money in a few months.
You have no savings.
You have two kids.
One of you loses your job.
Or frankly, if you just keep going the way you're going,
it's over.
That's it.
You lose the house.
I think I'd like to see your Amazon account.
Can you open it up?
There we go.
All right, hold on.
Let me just describe what I'm seeing.
This is from a few days ago, five days ago.
I see shampoo out of some healing ointment,
more shampoo, and then cutlery set, 360 pieces.
We have a organic aluminum deodorant,
cast iron care set,
and a 10 inch cast iron skillet.
This order was $77.87, and then the next one was $126.
Let's go down a little bit more.
This was also the same day.
This is kids body wash, hand soap, bamboo cutting board,
bamboo tong, a bunch of soap and tongs and stuff.
This total was $208.
All right, this is all in the same day.
Keep going down.
This is just a few days prior, $52 for Elf on the Shelf,
Paul Mitchell styling cream,
and volumizing foam for kids' hair.
30 bucks, similar day, more deodorant,
and then 41 bucks for body wash, et cetera.
Is there a total amount somewhere?
46 orders placed in the past three months.
So that's kind of interesting.
I didn't see Amazon pop up in the spending.
I put it in the groceries.
So what happened to all these stories about my kids need this and my kids need that
This goes back to that health conscious part is we are trying to get away from these nonstick poisonous pans
That's the mentality of why we bought them and that was all this month. Can I ask you guys a direct question?
Do you really believe this stuff? I believe that what you can put in your body
It does matter fine. And how's both your health? Our health is terrible.
I mean, I think it's half of its stress.
But maybe if we buy another 360 piece wood cutlery set,
that will change everything.
Yeah, yeah, pretty much.
Maybe we should return it.
I make jokes online about how a lot of these podcast bros,
they would be better spent stopping spending all this money
on these dumb mattresses and these ultraviolet light
Therapy whatever stuff they do take a hundred bucks a month
Go out with a good friend to lunch two times a month
It would be better for them than any of these contraptions that they buy now instead of buying these extremely expensive deodorants
Etc. Etc. What might be better for your health?
Lowering our debt.
Yes. Why?
To have more time to spend with our children so we could not have to worry about working
to pay off the bamboo sticks.
I'm not sitting here telling you like, don't buy this deodorant.
That's not my place. It's not my money.
But when I talk about living a rich life, I have learned that some people misconstrued
what I say. They take my advice and basically use it to twirl around
and chant rich life, rich life, rich life,
and then they just buy whatever they want.
That's not the message.
The message is you have to define your rich life,
and then if you can afford it, go for it.
But you gotta be able to afford it.
You all cannot afford the lifestyle you're living.
If you want to, we can talk
about how you both have to work more, raise your income significantly, pay off your debt,
but the fact is you cannot afford it right now.
Yeah, I agree.
I knew that our problem was we're spending money that we don't have on things that we
don't need, which then takes me back to your question earlier, which was like, what's my
behavior that I need to change is the once. It's gotten me in a lot of trouble. Most of my purchases are impulse purchases.
And so it's in that moment, I have to have it. There's no way around it.
Can we look at your phone right now? Let's open up to texts. What texts are you getting
from companies?
I have Hungry Root Nutrisystem that we did a long time ago, First Day, which was vitamins for the kids,
iFit, a hair product place, Pump Stuff.
Yeah, so there's a lot.
And all that is in what time period?
Gosh, within the last day.
Do you see that you surround yourself with temptation?
This stuff is designed to make you buy.
I see that. And the fact is
the two of you are not particularly good at having a vision of a rich life so you
end up just buying whatever some freaking charlatan is telling you to. I
can watch this stuff and I'm not trying to buy some substandard lotion for my
hands. I have one lotion, it's good lotion, I buy the same lotion all the
time, I don't need to try anything new
I know it works great now
Let's talk about what we can do going forward you told me in your CSP that you can cut some of this spending this Amazon stuff
Yeah, yeah, like how much I thought you need it
I would almost be okay with completely canceling it. Yeah, we can buy toilet paper at the store. We sure can. I like that.
So cancel Amazon Crime.
Yeah.
Or maybe Amazon Altogether, it's up to you.
Yeah.
That would probably be really helpful.
Amazing.
Oh God, yeah.
Let's go ahead and go back into the CSP
because you said you're willing to do anything.
So how much should we drop off
of this grocery's $1,500 bill?
I think we can get it at a thousand.
Okay.
Over time, I think you could get it down more,
but let's just say a thousand.
All right, your fixed costs are still at 79%.
We need to get that way lower.
Go ahead, tell me what else.
We don't need clothes all the time.
The kids need shoes and they need clothes.
They grow, they have to get them.
You might as well set yourself up for realistic prices.
What's the number?
50.
What else?
We're at 78%.
I mean the subscriptions, obviously.
Tell me the number you want to take these subscriptions down to.
Tell me what you're going to cut out of it.
We can cut out maybe 200 of it.
Subscriptions from 347 to how much?
$52.
Fantastic.
Wow.
Love it.
The number went to 74%.
Okay.
Wow.
It's a lot.
Still got to keep working.
Keep going.
What do you got?
How much stuff are you willing to sell?
I'd sell everything in this room in Mabilia.
I'd sell all my gaming systems.
I would just keep my computer,
maybe sell the monitor that's expensive
and get a small monitor.
Great.
How much can you make off of all that?
Be lucky to get a thousand.
You're willing to do it?
Yeah, if I have to sell it.
Love it.
You probably do if you want to get rid of this debt.
The debt is increasing faster than you can keep up with it.
And it's about to go turbo.
You know with those credit card interest rates
you're about to kick in.
You'll never catch up.
So $1,000 there.
Great.
How about you, Jill?
What are you willing to sell?
I sell everything, man.
I sell this whole house. I don't care where we go. I don't want
to be in debt. Sell it all.
How much could you make if you sold the house?
After everybody gets their cut and said, maybe we'll get lucky and get 60.
But what's the lowest amount that you could pay for a place that the two of you would
agree to live in?
I think at best $1,600, we could find a two bedroom, maybe a three bedroom for 1,600. We could find a two-bedroom, maybe a three-bedroom for $1,800. If you sold the house for $80, you end up making $65, let's just say.
All right, so $65, what do you do with that?
No, I wouldn't.
Pay off the car and maybe the credit card debt, but it wouldn't pay off the student loans.
You know your interest rate on your student loans?
They're all around 6% to 7%.
Okay, what's the total balance for student loans?
$165. Okay. What's the total balance for student loans? $165.
Okay. That's fine.
Frank, what's your opportunity to earn more money?
If I wanted to work all the time and be gone,
I could probably make $120 a year.
Okay. That's good to know.
All right. Here's what I'm thinking.
The first thing I love is that you're all willing to put everything on the table.
I love that.
A lot of couples are not, but you two are actually telling the truth when you say, we're
willing to do anything.
And I can see that.
I appreciate that.
Frank, you're willing to sell a bunch of stuff.
Sell it.
Get rid of it.
And first of all, that will simplify your life.
Less stuff means less temptation to get more stuff.
We're living a monastic life for a while.
It's going to be very simple in here.
You all should pay off your credit card debt
before the interest rate goes up.
Yeah, that's been our goal.
So do that.
Use the money accordingly.
But it all goes towards paying off debt.
Jill, we heard you say you will sell it all,
but first I want to know, in the house,
this stuff that you're buying is, again,
causing you to buy more stuff.
It's a never-ending cycle of the American homeowner
to fill up their house and never be happy
and always be stressed.
What could you make if you sold a bunch of stuff in your house?
Probably $3,000 easily.
$3,000? That's a lot.
Is that a realistic number?
Yeah, I have a bike in that closet that I do not use.
How much is the bike?
And it's like two grand maybe
Americans love expensive mattresses
Okay, they love them and then they love expensive bikes and both of them
They tell me I cannot live without these remit you cannot you cannot
spend less on a mattress because it's all about back pain and
Affordability is irrelevant same with a bike and it's always like thousands of and affordability is irrelevant. Same with a bike.
And it's always like thousands of dollars.
All right, sell that freaking thing.
What else do you have that you don't use
or you even do use and you can sell it?
I mean, there's a treadmill that's underneath this bed.
Goodbye.
I can go down to one monitor.
Gaming systems that I haven't even used in years.
We don't need those.
All right. Sell them or donate them, goodbye.
They're out.
We don't need all this junk surrounding us.
It's not for us.
It's not part of our rich life.
3000 bucks plus 1000 over there, that's 4000 bucks.
I like it, I like it.
That's really good.
Okay, great.
And then the reason I asked about the housing was,
if I'm looking at your housing,
I don't know if it's a good idea to sell your
house or not. I don't know. The reason I'm saying that is, yeah, of course you'd make
some money and you would be able to clear out some debt, which is great. But right now
you have a probably a very low interest rate. Your housing percentage is pretty low, 17%.
I want to know that you can find a place that is cheaper than this because right now at least your mortgage is locked.
But if you're renting, for example, let's say right now your mortgage housing costs
are like $2,600 a month is my guess total. So if you found something that was $2,500
a month, I'll be like, don't do that. Why would you take on all that risk to save $200
a month? It makes no sense. But if you found something for say 1200 a month, boy, you're saving a lot of
money. You would be taking that difference and paying off debt, investing it, doing all
of those things. So this is the way we got to think about housing decisions. What's going
on? What do you both think about that?
I'm thinking how are we going to make that work with our jobs? That's my first thought.
And then my second thought is our kids having a backyard, having a consistent school district.
How about having parents that don't go bankrupt?
We put so much pride in being able to buy our first home, but we're just one really
bad repair away from this being just another issue that we can't afford.
You two can keep the house if you want.
You have to make other changes
in order to make it feasible.
Right.
It's a very good housing percentage,
17% way lower than 28%.
It's just that the rest of your costs are way too high.
So you either need to cut some of this stuff
or you need to figure out a way to make a lot more money.
But you can't do all these things, not on your income.
Yeah.
Well, I love that Frank and Jill are open to making changes like selling their house.
It tells me they're actually serious about getting out of this cycle. But I'm not sure
that selling their house is the best idea. That's right everybody, especially internet
trolls online. Ramit Sethi, the person who you have claimed is totally against home ownership, which is
a f***ing lie, is saying it might not make sense to sell your house.
The truth of course is that I'm not against buying a house.
In fact, someday I'm sure I will buy a house.
What I ask you to do is to run the numbers on the biggest purchase of your life, which
in any normal world should not be controversial advice. It is only in our highly weird puritanical society
where our one and only one religion is home ownership
that people rebel against the mere suggestion
that you should run one calculation
before you spend hundreds of thousands of dollars.
What f***ing world am I living in?
Anyway, Frank and Jill, good job,
but I don't know if you should sell the house.
What they need to do is run the numbers and find out
if it would make sense for them to sell the house
because they could save a substantial amount by renting.
Now, if you have questions about whether you can afford
to buy a house or you should rent,
I've got a free house buying guide for you.
Go to IWT.com slash house and you will find it there.
Now, the other option Jill and Frank have
is to increase their income.
Listen in as I ask them about their earning potential.
Let's talk about the income side.
Right now, Jill, you're making 6,700 bucks a month,
including that draw.
This is your own business.
How much are you charging?
I charge 150 per session, but I have no out-of-pocket people.
Most of them are insurance, and insurance sets the rate that you get paid.
Can you raise your rate?
No, not with insurance.
I've thought about working in Charlotte where I could charge out-of-pocket because there's
city folks and people who are able to pay that amount but then it's a commute.
So what's the solution?
The option that I've always gone to is just that I work more hours which has been really
difficult on me anyway.
To me I feel like I've maxed myself out on my options and the kids are already struggling
with me not being around.
I literally see my one son like for an hour a day and I literally see my infant like to
put to bed.
This is really hard.
It is hard, but I also am angry at myself because I know I did it to myself. Well, you didn't.
I don't believe that there are no options.
I don't believe that the two of you are stuck and this is it in your late 20s and early
30s.
I don't believe that.
That's sometimes the benefit of talking to a third party, somebody who's not in the weeds.
You knocked out $5,000 of debt in the last couple of months. I think that's
pretty impressive. We looked at the Amazon spending. Not only did you agree that you
don't need a lot of this stuff, you actually told me you want to close off your Amazon
account. Amazing. You agreed to sell thousands of dollars worth of stuff. That's going to
go straight to your debt. Amazing. We're making progress. It feels hard because it is. We're
in some of the hardest parts of this transformation right now. But this is stuff that really matters.
And it matters because it's big numbers and it matters because it's time with your family.
Jill, have you ever considered how much you might make if you worked for somebody else?
I used to work for someone else. I made less.
Right now you make approximately $80,000 a year when we include those owner draws.
Is this it for your career? Is the max income?
I don't want it to be. If I find an ability to work in Charlotte,
then I could make more income. I mean, that's something that we've avoided for a really long time.
If your salary is capped out at $80,000, okay.
Then we'll accept that and then we'll shift over to Frank. avoid it for a really long time. If your salary is capped out at 80k, okay.
Then we'll accept that and then we'll shift over to Frank.
And then Frank needs to make a lot more money.
And Frank might need to travel and that's how it has to be.
But right now I feel like I'm pulling teeth.
I'm trying to get you all to give me solutions.
You need to get these numbers down. You need to pay off your debt.
You need to start saving and investing aggressively.
It needs to happen right now. How do you want to do it?
We struggle with finding those solutions because we haven't had the people in our life to teach
us about these things and give us any guidance and we haven't been able to find that information
ourselves.
I appreciate that.
But Jill, you had your grandfather talking about investing when you were young.
And how did you describe your reaction to him?
In one ear and out the other.
Correct.
You both subscribed to my money coaching program.
It's very accessible.
It's very friendly.
I'm there answering questions live.
Did you finish it?
No.
So while I appreciate that you may not have the network that some other people have, you
all have the information available to you.
It's free, it's premium, it's everywhere.
It's not about the information, it's about you two.
That's fair.
We're at 74%.
Got to get this number down.
You just cannot have a sustainable life with your fixed costs that high.
We might need to downsize the house.
I mean, there's all those shadow costs. We might need to downsize the house. I mean, there's all those shadow costs.
We might need to go to something smaller.
Yeah.
That could certainly change things in a huge way.
You would need to be measured about the decision
because again, your housing costs are not out of control,
but your other costs are high.
And so if you wanted to downsize,
you would need to make sure that you accounted for all costs.
How much would you walk away with?
How much would it cost to move?
How much would it cost to get a new place set up
and activate it and all that stuff?
First month's rent, last month's rent,
lots of those considerations.
And would you be saving enough on a monthly basis
so that in one year, two years, it would
be worth it and then from then on it would be much more worth it?
You would need to be very thoughtful about those calculations.
It's not something you do on a whim.
Here's my suggestion.
You need to earn more money and I think that you need to drop the assumptions about if
I can't work more, I can't charge more, I can't do this in Charlotte. Find a way. Like when my parents were growing up and they had, you know, big family, not a lot of money.
They're just like very pragmatic about this. We're going to find a way to do it.
We're not eating out. We're not doing this. We're going to do that. And that's the way it is.
That is our family culture. Look at this. In this book, the new one, I talk about how to create a family culture. In our family, we, what?
My wife and I, we are debt-free.
We are a debt-free family.
Or in our family, we always eat dinner together
on Friday nights with the kids, whatever it may be.
In your family, what's the culture that you've created?
We're workaholics.
We're workaholics, we are stressed out in poor health and we buy stuff to feel better about
our dire situation.
Fair?
Yes.
And we also don't communicate with each other.
Fair.
All right.
In our healthy relationship, what do we do?
Communicate about finances.
How often?
At least every month.
Okay. How are you going to do that? There was this whole thing about. Okay, how are you going to do that?
There was this whole thing about the kids.
How are you going to do that?
We're going to make it happen.
Find time.
With the kids.
Okay, great.
Make a priority.
Either just, if one kid has to sit nearby us
while we do it, that has to be how it's done.
Maybe include him into the conversation.
Love it.
What's next?
We write down things before we buy them.
Love it.
What about the food thing?
You're all dropping your food costs dramatically.
How are you going to do that?
We need to start shopping store brand products.
We cook our meals.
The whole thing about like, we buy all this organic stuff.
The fact is you just can't afford it.
I'm sorry.
If you want to afford it,
move into a one bedroom apartment
and then you can buy all the fancy stuff you want.
That's up to you.
It's your choice, your money, but you can't do both.
So it would be very worthwhile for the two of you
to really define in our family, we blank.
You can always change it, you can always add or remove,
but right now there is no we.
And sometimes if somebody slips,
they try something, you just go,
hey look, I thought we agreed.
Like this is our family.
You don't have to come down on them,
it's just like, hey, just a reminder,
like this is what we agreed on
I want to make sure that we're both sticking to it sometimes I need help
But right now it seems like you want to go out to pizza tonight, but in our family we only spend on
Whatever eight hundred bucks a month for groceries. Oh, okay cool
Back to this. Let's talk about the earning part the last part of it. The earning needs to go up
It's just that simple Frank. When was the last time you looked for a new job?
Two years, I tried the two-year cycle project
and slowly, steadily increasing over two years.
I'll look and seek for new positions.
And how much can you get paid today?
Well, if I take a job that's no longer remote,
I could make a lot more, like 50,000 more a year.
If you had to commute?
Yeah, I have a CDL Class A license.
I could become a truck driver.
Well, here's how I would approach that conversation, okay?
So I would start off by saying, let's talk about,
look, I have this amazing opportunity.
If I wanted to, I could make $50,000 more.
First off, can we just give each other a high five
that we even have this opportunity?
Like, that's amazing that we even have that.
Like high five, I love you, oh my gosh, we're so fortunate. Then can we talk about what would happen if I did this?
Let's first start with all the positives. What would we get? Well, let's redo the CSP.
I would type in adapted numbers. You would see things go insane. The numbers would come
way down. You would have thousands of dollars extra you could save, invest, okay, all that.
Let's talk about what it would mean for us.
Positive stuff.
Well, we'd have more money, we could have some help, etc.
Okay, now all that stuff is great.
We stayed there, we focused on the positive,
now let's go to the negative.
Well, what would it mean?
It would mean time away, it would mean
you would have to take on more burden, Jill.
Jill's like, I don't wanna do that,
and so it would mean this, and it would mean that,
and we're apart, and you write it all down. And you sit on it for a day. And you come
back and you talk about it. You take another crack at it. Here's what I'm thinking. I definitely
think we need to make more money, but I don't want you to be on the road that much. Is there
something else we could do? Or you know what? I think this is a really good idea for the next two
years. Two years, extra 50k. it puts us in a position, we pay this
off, we do it aggressively, we get on our feet, and then we can switch to something
else. Who knows? That's how I would have that conversation. What do you notice about that
approach?
It's bought out and you're waiting on the decision.
We're working together.
Yeah. Both of you have a voice. This is a decision for both of you. It affects the two
of you. It affects your kids. It affects your relationship. But we got to start with all the positive stuff.
That's the thing I noticed. It's not like just everyone going to their corner of the
ring and then boxing. It's like, no, let's be methodical about this. Treat it with the
respect it deserves. Similarly for you, Jill, your role, your income, you're a therapist,
you have options. Maybe there's a commute involved, who knows?
Maybe you move cities, who knows?
The fact is right now though, it's not sustainable.
You too cannot operate on $162 a month in guilt-free spending.
No way, you're spending 10 times that right now.
You have no savings.
The minute something breaks in your house
or something goes wrong with your car,
you too are in big trouble.
So the biggest suggestion I have is you immediately
start saving at least $1,000 a month.
But the truth is you need to make some big changes fast.
It's as simple as that.
How are you both feeling hearing this?
It's hard information.
It's information we knew.
It's information that we didn't want to look at,
that we couldn't have an open dialogue for longer
than a few moments.
So I think that's progress.
To even be able to sit down and have this conversation and us both still be sitting
here, that's a plus.
I feel like we're actually going to be able to move through this and get on the other
side of this and feel like we have a life to live.
I love that.
Frank, the choices that we're doing are only hurting ourselves. We are the thorn to our own financial problems.
And we need to stop doing these things to us.
And we need to come together and make time for each other and make time for our money.
And we need to we need to get this ball moving quickly.
Yeah, I like that.
Time is not on your side.
But if you start to use time, it can become your biggest friend, not your biggest adversary.
Look at this.
Here's your investments.
$27,554.
You're not contributing anything else right now.
Let's say we give it 35 years to grow.
You end up with $294,000.
That's at retirement.
What do you all think about that?
Wow. Not enough. That's at retirement. What do you all think about that? Wow.
Not enough.
That's not enough. We ain't retiring.
That means you would live off about $11,000 per year.
Good luck. Yeah.
Good news is you have a house, but nobody can live off $11,000 a year. Certainly not
35 years from now.
That's what I was afraid of.
Sometimes the best thing we can do with our fears is shine a light on them and look them
straight in the eye.
This is our future unless we make a change.
So you two have digested a lot.
We have talked about your childhood.
We've talked about your relationship, talked about your careers, your income, your spending,
even the stories you tell yourselves and you tried to tell me.
What are you going to do tomorrow?
I have a conversation, a real conversation,
and reframe our thinking.
Love that.
Then what?
Change how we spend.
I think having physical cash to limit us
will be a good way to handle this.
Good idea.
What else?
Maybe I, instead of doing the drastic approach
of changing careers, I try to go to the next step in my career.
Maybe I look for a promotion.
Love that.
Map it out.
Talk to the boss.
There's so many options on the table.
You're doing two things at once that are so powerful.
One is you're moving fast.
Get those things on Facebook.
You start using cash.
And then two is you are zooming out,
out of this dark, never-ending tunnel
that you described to me at the beginning of our call, Frank.
And what you've kind of done is you've stopped the sliding down and you said, wait a second,
I don't want to go down there anymore. It sucks down here. I'm pausing. I'm looking
around with my flashlight. What are my options? Because I'm making my way back, back to the
light. That's where I'm going.
Yeah.
Agreed.
When we do make those big changes, what does it look like in terms of our retirement and savings?
It's a great question. Let's say that you sold the house and you took $10,000 of that money
and invested just that $10,000, right? Okay.
Let's see what would happen. So that used to be 27. We'll make it 37. Watch this number right here.
Instead of 294, it turns into 400,000. So that $104, it turns into $400,000.
So that $10,000 turned into an over $100,000 increase.
You'll see the power of that.
Now imagine we keep that.
It's at $400, but we do $12,000 a year or $1,000 a month investing.
Okay.
Look at what happens here.
$2.1 million.
Wow. What did you notice?
That's feasible.
Like if we can climb out of this and have like be regimented, like we can actually retire.
We could actually have a life to live.
Yes.
This is why I was, I was getting a little aggravated when we were spending five minutes
talking about some $10 subscription.
And I was like, we can't be doing this.
These are the numbers that matter.
$10 is a waste of life for you two to be focusing on.
Remember I talked about $30,000 questions?
Here it is.
This is what I would be starting with as a couple.
We are going to be investing $1,000 a month.
We make $150,000 a year.
We can find $12,000 a year to invest.
Wow, yeah.
And if we can't find $12,000, we'll start with $5,000.
And as we make more, we'll increase that number.
That's so powerful.
On the other hand, you could end up changing nothing.
You could end up perpetuating the same cycle
that both of you grew up with, doing the same thing,
teaching our kids this, doing these games about,
oh, let's just tell them to save, but we don't save.
Let's buy them everything, not teach them any restraint.
And then you all end up without a lot of money. And then you all end up without a lot of money,
and then your kids end up without a lot of money,
and it goes on.
I don't want that.
Agreed.
Yeah, don't want that.
Cool.
Now, what should I expect six months from now?
Downsizing in some capacity.
What does that mean?
I have three desks in my office.
I don't need this.
I don't need this.
I don't need all this stuff.
This stuff doesn't feel good anymore.
It just feels like a burden.
Oh, there goes two months of retirement right there.
Look at that.
Wow.
I love that.
So you're going to have a simpler life.
So that means stuff in your house, your room is going to look simpler.
It's going to be gone.
Love it.
Yeah.
Beautiful. Okay, great. And what else?
I think we need to make career changes, whatever that looks
like.
If that looks like me trying to do private pay,
I have never tried.
I've been too afraid to try.
Yeah, career advancements, that's a great point.
Amazing.
The two of you are so young.
If you both decided together, we are changing the way
that we live.
It is going to be, it's going to be a journey.
It's going to be a tough journey.
But the best part is you get to do it together.
You could get out of this, change the trajectory of your life and you could do it in two to
three years.
It will be magical.
You are at that point still in your thirties, young, and then you have wind behind you,
pushing you forward together for the rest of your rich life,
every stage learning, oh my God, this is what we want to do with our money.
Now we have a little bit of extra.
We paid off our debt.
We've taught our kids how to be responsible.
They're all learning with us.
We have a family culture of money.
We're having fun. We're being super responsible. We're investing aggressively. We actually
like talking about money and we are living our rich life together. That's what I see.
That would feel amazing. I want that. Yeah. Yes. Yes.
100%. I want to thank Jill and Frank for being so open today. Being stuck in this cycle of debt sucks.
It's heavy.
It feels like there's no light at the end of the tunnel.
And at a certain point, many people just give up.
They tell themselves, this is how we're going to live.
We've always been in debt.
We're always going to be in debt.
But it does not have to be that way.
They're going to have to make some big changes
to get out of this cycle.
And they say they're up for it.
But as you've seen on this podcast, almost everybody says they want to make big changes.
Only some people follow through.
And that is what we get to see right now.
Let's check out their follow-ups.
We will start with Frank.
One of the biggest surprises that I took from that call was just about how much we lied to ourselves
about the reasons why we're in this situation.
It seems that we have memorized some excuse
as to why we're in this situation,
but in reality we're in it because of our own choices.
So that was a reality check.
My biggest takeaway is to make time about, you know,
our finances and how to talk about them and not give up.
And just stay focused on our long-term goals,
our retirement, our savings,
and getting our debt paid down.
And speaking of our debt being paid down,
we chose to cut out Amazon completely.
We meant what we said.
We also are gonna start using cash.
It's easier to spend stuff when you're using a card.
So that's how we're gonna create a better household
around money, just being focused
and having those open conversations. So thanks again to your team for showing us
what we can do better as a family.
And now Jill's follow up.
What really stuck with us is just being able to have good dialogue and conversation about
our finances and not avoiding the problem. We've been doing a lot better with having a lot of conversations.
We went ahead and finished the money coaching program
and have started our automated system,
which we're getting used to.
It's hard, it's a hard adjustment,
but we're very, very excited to actually sit back
and allow our money to work for us
rather than us worrying about our money all the time.
We are looking into selling our home
and gonna be renting for a little bit,
which is gonna be a big shift,
but we are very excited about what's to come
and being able to actually afford
the things that we wanna afford,
which is going on vacations and trips with our family
and having more time together as a family.
And that's really what we're hopeful for.
So we have some big things in the mix of just life changes and already have paid off two
credit cards which we are very happy.
We paid off a personal loan and one of our credit cards and that was great too.
So we're making good progress.
Thanks.
Honestly, amazing.
Amazing.
Yes, I love all the tactical changes they made. Thanks. Honestly, amazing. Amazing.
Yes, I love all the tactical changes they made.
I love how quickly they moved.
I love all of that.
But what I really love is how they started to look at money differently.
And when you start to look at money differently, when you radically reconceptualize your relationship with money, you will often find that you reconceptualize your relationship with the people you love.
Jill and Frank, I'm very proud of you.
Thank you for sharing your story and please keep me updated. I want to introduce you to one of my friends, Jordan Harbinger. I've been on his podcast
several times and I love his conversations and his guests.
Jordan's conversations with guests include CEOs, FBI agents, spies, and scientists.
Recently I listened to his conversation with Chase Jarvis on episode 1061, Embracing Risk
for a More Fulfilling Life, and episode 1052, Whack!
Prenup Requests Put engagement to the test. And both
of them were great. I recommend you add the Jordan Harbinger show to your rotation. Check
it out at jordanharbinger.com slash start or search for the Jordan Harbinger show. That's
H A R B I N G E R on Apple podcasts, Spotify or wherever you listen.