I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 202. “She racked up $50K in debt — why should I trust her with money?”
Episode Date: April 1, 2025Emma (39) and Dave (39) make $258,000 a year—but they’re stuck in a toxic money dynamic. She built a financial plan during maternity leave. He didn’t believe her. Now, they’re battling over tr...ust, $50K in debt, and whether they can afford a $700K house. With conflicting money roles—she’s the anxious planner, he’s the passive skeptic—they can’t move forward. In this episode, Ramit breaks down their “chaser/avoider” dynamic, the emotional cost of skepticism, and how to finally create a shared vision. This episode is brought to you by: Stamps.com | Sign up at https://stamps.com/ramit for a special offer that includes a 4-week trial, plus free postage, and a free digital scale. Trust & Will | Protect what matters most in minutes at https://trustandwill.com/ramit and get 20% off plus free shipping. 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. 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 DeleteMe | If you want to get your personal information removed from the web, go to https://joindeleteme.com/ramit for 20% off. Links mentioned in this episode • 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I don't want to tell you what I did.
Tell me, come on.
Emma believes she's the best with money,
and I feel that she's not.
Part of it was our wedding.
I took a loan from my 401k just to make sure we had money.
What the f***? You took out a loan to pay for your wedding?
How much?
I'm putting all this money in the savings,
and you're still telling me it's not enough.
I have this like small chunk of money
that's like controlling what I can and can't do.
Discretionary money stresses me. When we have these financial conversations, it's not enough. I have this like small chunk of money that's like controlling what I can and can't do.
Discretionary money stresses me.
When we have these financial conversations,
they typically don't end well.
And I think I want to hear this from someone else.
It encapsulates a lot of the conversations we have.
I'm talking, Dave is listening,
but he doesn't really believe in what I'm saying.
I don't think it's funny
when one partner is skeptical of another.
I actually think it's one of the most soul-crushing dynamics that exists in a relationship.
And also, you have a narrative,
we don't have any money, we're not spending anything.
Guys, if you don't effectively communicate,
you can't make good decisions.
You're going to slide into every financial decision of your life.
I'm about to open Dave and Emma's Conscious Spending Plan,
which breaks down their net worth, income, and where they spend their money.
You can download and create your own conscious spending plan at
IWT.com slash CSP.
That's a free download at IWT.com slash CSP.
The applicant says, I'm the driver slash planner,
and I want us to combine and automate everything,
but I'm also the overspender in debt.
Interesting.
He's the basic paycheck to paycheck and defines himself by what is in his checking account
on a given day.
Fixed expenses are really high, daycare times two and debt.
We're trying to buy a house and we
surround ourselves with rich things and people but we can't seem to make an inch
forward. We're actively trying to buy a house but we're 50k in debt with 40k
saved so we're anxious about getting more into debt. I live in fear every day
we will never be able to retire. And they, what?
They make $280,000?
All right, let's take a look.
Assets are $5,000.
Fine.
Investments $158,000.
Okay.
Savings $41,000 and debt $53,000.
Wait, what?
The way they talk is so depressed.
They're 39 years old and they have a net worth of $151,000.
Okay, they have a very high income.
$260,000 to $280,000.
But it's interesting that their fixed costs are at 61%.
So typically when you have a high income, you will see that number naturally go down
because you rarely see anybody spending $4,000 a month on groceries.
Basically this is the power of earning a high income.
When your income goes up, you're still buying roughly the same type of bread.
So it's a little surprising to me that I see a 61% fixed cost.
And I'm wondering where are they spending their money?
If we look at their housing, you know, it's a little pricey. they can afford it, but it's a little pricey. Okay, fine.
Then we add on insurance, we add on childcare, we add on a car payment. Now it really starts
to add up. Now let me say this. It's okay to be at 61%, but it explains why I see words like stress and anxiety. You can see that they have
added basically multiple line items spending a thousand dollars a month. Okay. So I can understand
where they're coming from. Let's take a look at the rest. Ah, here we go. Investments, 3%. Their
post-tax investments are $540 a month. They're probably putting something in pre-tax. Not bad.
And I will say they have $158,000 invested.
Fine.
Savings, okay, are at 1%.
They're saving $200 a month for a down payment on a house.
And they have $41,000, which is like four,
four and a half months of an emergency fund.
If I'm making $270,000 a year, I want more than four months of an emergency fund.
So it's interesting.
And then finally, oh, what is this?
Guilfrey, what the f***?
Guilfrey Spanning's at 33%.
Okay, $5,000 a month.
So now I really got to speak to this couple to find out what's going on.
What I see is a lot of stress, a lot of overwhelm.
I see one partner who's anxious about money and chases the other who avoids it.
Classic chaser-avoider dynamic.
I also see that their income is quite high, but it's being spent in quite a peculiar way.
What I also see here is that there's a lot of communication I need to dive into here
because these numbers don't tell the full story.
There's a lot going on and I don't quite understand it yet.
So I'm looking forward to speaking to this couple.
So Dave had been putting a ton of money into savings because we're saving to buy a house.
And then he said, I'm going to stop for a while so I can kind of catch up.
So now Dave, all of his extra money just goes into his checking account.
And I am like, well, what's all that money doing? It's just sitting there.
It's not in our savings account.
It's not in an investment account.
It's just kind of sitting there.
Okay.
Is the money still there?
Yes.
All right.
What's your perspective, Dave?
So my perspective was that I stopped putting money into savings only because I was literally
living with like, you know, I'd say a couple hundred dollars a week and half of that goes
to my basically paying for gas because I do work very far away.
So it felt like every single month I was falling short and kind of freaking out about not being able to pay
the bills and all that stuff. So I was like, hey, I need to take a break.
This is because of how much money Dave was putting into savings. And I said, we have
the money. Don't put as much money in savings and you don't have to feel like that. So when
he says, you know, I didn't have enough money, I said, you, we did. It was sitting right
there. It's not like we didn't have it.
Emma, what are you feeling right now?
Frustrated.
Okay. Dave, how are you feeling as you explained words like scraping by and freaking out?
I'm annoyed. I was putting a lot into savings while someone else was putting the bare bare minimum in my eyes.
Okay. So I'm sitting there struggling and yeah,
the money isn't savings, you can take it.
But also, we worked hard for those savings.
We are planning to buy a house with those savings.
I didn't want to have that burden over my head anymore,
but just felt like I was working paycheck to paycheck.
David, sounds like a lot deeper than annoyed.
Maybe not heard sometimes, maybe misunderstood.
Okay, I appreciate that.
The reason I asked was,
minutes into our conversation,
I can already see a dynamic here.
Do y'all notice that dynamic?
Yeah, I guess in our house, it seems as though sometimes Emma believes she's the best with
money and I feel that she's not. And I think we butt heads on that a little bit, but we
use different language towards it. The language being, why don't we put money in a savings?
Why aren't we starting this account?
But I think there's some other issues behind that.
Whereas sometimes I feels like, Hey, if I'm the only one putting this huge chunk
of money into our savings and you're still telling me we have all this debt
and you're still telling me it's not enough and
I'm the bad guy, that's where I start getting a little annoyed and frustrated.
Okay.
I'll just tell you what I observed.
In five minutes, I asked you, can you tell me a time where you didn't see eye to eye
on money?
There was this thing about the savings account. Both sides very frustrated, immediate frustration.
Both sides defensive.
Do you all see the dynamic that I see?
Yeah, I can hear that.
Okay.
You all ever feel joy around money?
Of course.
I guess like when I get my bonus, I'm like, oh, that feels good.
How long does it last?
Not long.
Like 10 seconds? What are we talking about?
Yeah, until I put it towards another bill.
10 seconds of joy per year?
Alright.
Do you all think it's possible to not feel
stressed about money?
I hope so.
I'll take that as a no.
Yeah, I do.
Okay, Dave says yes. Emma, how would you do it?
By not having debt.
That would be a first step.
Okay, so like if you pay off your debt,
let's just wave a magic wand and tomorrow you're debt free,
would you be stress free?
Not stress free, but less stressed.
Okay, is it possible for you to feel good?
Yes.
How would you do it?
By paying off debt and having a plan that we're actioning on and allows us to do the
things that we want to do.
Sounds pretty good to me.
I agree with that.
Dave, would you agree with that?
I agree with that.
Okay.
We're all on the same page about that.
That's good.
Yay.
Okay.
So the question for today is what has stopped you from paying off your debt and from coming up with a plan?
we both work very hard and she does spend a
Nice percentage of her checks just paying off her debt and she's been doing it for years and she's almost there
I'm very proud of her for doing that
Did you know Dave felt that way? I?
Think more recently when I've just showed him more I brought him into exactly
What the debt is and how much I pay so I feel like he's a little bit more aware of it now. That's cool
I like that a lot sometimes we do things with really positive intentions
Really positive outcomes and we just don't tell our partner
And they don't how how can they know if we don't tell them? I think it's really cool that you shared that with Dave so that he is in the loop about
it.
How often do you talk about money together?
Maybe once a month.
What do you talk about in those conversations?
These conversations are more towards retirement, even though we still need to buy a house.
You're both 39 years old.
Why have you suddenly started talking about retirement?
I am a long-term planner, and I know what we do now
is going to help drive what we're doing when we retire.
And I know that we need to make movement now to do that.
Dave, what do you think about retirement?
It's not something I really thought about at all
until Emma brought it up.
My focus was make as much money now as you can.
I'm not really financial savvy.
I know 401Ks, but like, you know, other accounts like a Roth IRA, like how the rich stay rich,
like that whole formula that's foreign to me.
I can help you.
I can tell you how I've built wealth and how a lot of people I know have done it.
Do you feel like you are the driver of your money
or do you feel like you're a passenger?
Yeah, I feel more like a passenger.
Okay, I agree.
I think that's pretty honest.
And Emma, would you say you're a driver or a passenger?
I'm a driver in some terms,
like all of the stuff I allocate to 401k
and our medical and the kids savings.
So like I am in control of like that. But then when it comes to like the discretionary money, I feel like a passenger. Because it's like I have this like small chunk of money that's like controlling what I can and can't do. And so like that discretionary money stresses me.
I've been there so I get that but maybe we can take a look at it and help you feel a little bit more in control
Also, sometimes we just have to accept this is the phase of life. We are in I understand you have a house That's a little small for your family right now. And sometimes we can make changes and sometimes we can be like, okay
This is reality
for
XYZ future. Let's figure out a way to accept it
Just moments into this conversation. You can feel the tension for XYZ future, let's figure out a way to accept it.
Just moments into this conversation, you can feel the tension.
On one side, Dave is frustrated.
He thinks he's the only one putting significant contributions
towards their savings goals.
And on the other, Emma's frustration is boiling over
as she struggles with the lack of a clear plan
for their debt and how to start thinking about the future. And did you hear what Dave said about
Emma's relationship with money? He said Emma believes she's the best with money
and I believe she's not. That's quite a striking statement and what's even more
interesting is that Dave describes himself as quote, not financially savvy.
So if you're not financially savvy, are you really in the position to be judging who's good with money
and who's not? Well, we're going to dive into the complexities of their money dynamic after this short
break. Growing up, you notice a lot of peculiar things about your parents. Like my mom would take
us anywhere. She would sit and watch us at sports
She would take us to any type of educational thing
But she absolutely hates going to the post office and I could never figure out why
Until I grew up and became an adult and I hate going there too. Nothing wrong with the post office. I'm a big fan
I just don't want to wait in line
I don't like lines anymore
and so if I find a way to skip the line
or not have to be there
and figure out which freaking envelope I need,
that is a big win for me.
Now, you know, one of my money dials
or areas I like to spend on is convenience.
And thanks to this episode's sponsor, stamps.com,
you don't have to wait in lines
at the post office anymore either.
Stamps.com handles all of your mailing and shipping needs wherever, whenever.
All you need is a computer and a printer. They'll even send you a free scale.
Using their app, you can access all the USPS and UPS services you need to run your business
right from your house anytime, day or night. No lines, no traffic, no waiting.
Plus you automatically see your cheapest
and fastest shipping options from different carriers,
including rates you won't see anywhere else
like up to 88% off USPS and UPS.
Have more flexibility in your life with stamps.com.
Sign up at stamps.com slash Ramith
for a special offer that includes a four week trial
plus free
postage and a free digital scale.
No longterm commitments or contracts.
Just go to stamps.com slash Ramit.
What normally happens when an older generation dies?
A lot of times they leave a house.
Now imagine you're long gone and your kids have this one house. Two of
them want to sell it. One of them wants to keep it. What's going to happen? You have
to think about these things. And that's one of the reasons you need a will. With trust
and will, you can create and manage a custom estate plan from the comfort of your home.
Go to trust and will dot com slash Ramith and get 20% off plus free shipping.
My coworker recently created a will
for her family on trust and will.
And here's what she told me.
Getting started was incredibly easy.
I just followed their prompt.
I provided the needed info about my beneficiaries,
assets and personal preferences.
In less than an hour, I had a will,
power of attorney documents, last will and testament and H less than an hour, I had a will, power of attorney documents,
last will and testament and HIPAA authorizations, all of which I easily downloaded and I could
have them executed or checked by a for hire attorney if I wanted.
Now I personally used an attorney for my own estate plan, but not everyone has access to
a great estate attorney.
So if that's you, trust and Will might be a great option
because they make estate planning accessible and affordable.
Each Will or Trust is state specific, legally valid
and customized to your needs.
Their simple step-by-step process guides you
from start to finish one question at a time.
And Trust and Will has an overall rating of excellent
with thousands of five-star reviews on TrustPilot.
Let Trust and Will uncomplicate the process for you.
Protect what matters most in minutes
at trustandwill.com slash Ramit
and get 20% off plus free shipping.
That's 20% off and free shipping
at trustandwill.com slash Ramit.
Now back to the show.
Who was the first one who started this conversation about saving?
Emma.
We were saving for a house.
You wanted to start talking about putting savings away and you had asked me, hey, can
you do this amount a week?
And I said, yes.
And then I did it, and here we are.
How did it come up?
I had just read your book about automating
what's going where and all that jazz.
And I was working on it on my side.
And I had asked Dave, can you automate into savings?
So we know exactly how much is going in there.
Okay, and Dave said yes, and that was it?
Yeah, there was a lot more in my brain going on, right?
But that was like Dave's piece to the puzzle.
You mean the part that you shared with him.
Already in your first substantive conversation about money,
what dynamic did we see?
We saw one person, Emma, the quote
driver, doing all this work behind the scenes, but not really bringing the other partner,
Dave, along on the journey.
Wait, can I just tell you what I did really quick after reading your book?
Okay. You want to interrupt my analysis? Go ahead.
Sorry. I read your book and I was on maternity leave and I took the big post-its that go on the wall and I was on the ground writing all
the plan out for us and then I put it up on the wall when the kid was napping and
like we went through it. So why did you bring that up? I'm curious. Well because
that was part of what prompted this conversation with Dave was I had this
plan and part of that plan was that we needed to automate the savings of
the account. And when you were doing this massive plan on the floor, did you bring Dave into that
planning session? I wrote it all down and then put it up on the wall and we looked at it together
after. And what was that like when you looked at it together?
Thought I was back in math class
and like just was being taught a lesson.
Do you like being taught about those money things
you saw on the wall?
It was off putting up first.
I guess my hang up at the time was,
why is Emma teaching me this?
She's not some financial expert.
Oh wow. But would you admit that you're not a financial expert yourself?
Yeah, absolutely. I'm not. Obviously, she's my wife. I know it's all within good intentions, but
I know she's not great with money either. But my thought process when I first saw the whole
thing laid out was I think I want to hear this from someone else.
And did you find somebody else to teach you about money?
No.
It's not really fair, right?
She's like doing some work.
Maybe she didn't even get everything right, but she put an effort into it during maternity
leave.
She put together this plan and your initial reaction was, why is she teaching me this? We need an expert who by the way, I'm not going to go and find.
Right. That's also not what I did. I sat there, I listened. We were conjuring up a plan.
I know she made a plan. Did you believe it? Like deep down?
It had me worried at the time. I'm still already.
Kind of going paycheck to paycheck a little bit, and it's.
Oh man, now I got to put more money here and she wants five different accounts
and I have to separate everything and it just seems like a lot.
Did you tell her that?
I don't remember.
I don't know if he said the words, but I know Dave very well and I got the feeling.
I knew coming away from that, that doing all of that was going to be a lot and he was uncomfortable
with it.
So what do we do when we are presented with this massive plan that our partner put together
without really talking to us about it?
It's going to require a lot of work.
I don't necessarily have the confidence in my partner.
Realistically, do we think that plan is going to get executed or not?
No.
Emma says no.
Dave?
No, because it didn't.
Exactly.
What are you observing about this meeting with the big thing on the wall?
I think it encapsulates a lot of the conversations, big or small, that we have.
I'm talking, Dave is listening, going along, but not believing and being like, I don't
trust that you know what you're talking about.
So you can say whatever you want and I will say yes, but he doesn't really believe in
what I'm saying.
Dave, what are you noticing about this example with the big thing on the wall?
Obviously, I could see Emma's excited about it.
I was certainly more than willing to listen.
But Emma's right about me.
I do have internal feelings that probably don't agree with her at the time.
I don't remember exactly how the whole conversation and the presentation went.
But-
Hold on. What's that? Why the laugh, Emma? the whole conversation and the presentation went but
Hold on what's that why the laugh Emma? Yeah, I said I wasn't a presentation
It sounds like to David was he sat down like a student and you stood up like a teacher
I don't think this is funny. Actually, you said it right. This is a great microcosm of your relationship with money.
I don't think it's funny when one partner is skeptical of another. I actually think
it's one of the most soul crushing dynamics that exists in a relationship. I don't think
it's funny to indulge your partner and let them talk, thinking in your head, this plan
isn't really going to happen. I don't think it's funny to question your partner's credibility,
which may or may not be good,
but then to offer no solutions yourself.
I think it's telling.
I think there's a lot of things we can do with this.
I think it's really candid and honest of you both to share it,
and I appreciate it.
But I don't think it's funny.
What do you both think?
I mean, I think what you just said is very insightful and a way that Dave and I probably
have never looked at that situation.
What part of it was new to you?
The skeptical part and how it just goes deeper than just talking about money, right? It's
how we relate to each other. It's how we respect each other.
The idea that one person needs convincing.
Dave, why do you need to be convinced?
Do you know about money?
No.
So then technically shouldn't you just go along
with whatever Emma says?
Not all the time, because I know Emma has a,
not a good track record with money.
Maybe scared me at the time.
How do I know if this plan is going to work?
I've kind of seen how you dealt with money in the past.
I see how you spend it.
I'm a little hesitant to believe this.
I think that's a fair fair thing to say.
Okay.
Another approach might be hey, I don't really know if Emma knows
what she's talking about.
I better learn this stuff because then I can understand what she's saying and maybe ask her some questions.
That's true.
You didn't do that, right?
No.
Passenger.
What do you all think about this dynamic?
Is it good or bad?
Not great. Is it going to get you where you want to go together?
No.
Hell no. It's like you two are in a boat.
You don't even know where your destination is.
One of you is not particularly good at
boating. You capsized it a few times
already. But you're the one who's like
we're going east. And then the other one's
like what the f*** east? I don't
even know if you know what east is. I'm going to
stick my oar in the water and I'm gonna wait until you show me true north.
I'm really stretching my knowledge of nautical terms here.
Okay, please.
Let's end this metaphor.
But you're not getting anywhere with one person and their oar in the water and the other's
like talking furiously and rowing this and rowing that direction.
Can't get anywhere.
And the worst part is you're not even having fun doing it.
Y'all just feeling anxious and skeptical.
The answer is not to just wait.
It's to change something big.
Okay.
You know what?
I'm cutting in quickly because looking back, I wish that I had approached this part of
the conversation differently.
Dave's skepticism about Emma's relationship with money
is actually really hard to hear.
And yes, she has struggled with credit card debt,
but using that as an excuse to dismiss all of her efforts
with the family finances does not seem fair.
It also doesn't seem like a good strategy
because if you are constantly second guessing someone else,
that's not gonna get them to rise up
and to become confident and competent.
And this skepticism is something that a lot of people,
particularly women face, you know,
whether it be mothers under constant pressure
to prove themselves, whether it's going to work
and somebody questioning them, making them feel like they have to justify their
Mere existence or why would you think that when the same questions are often not asked about other people?
the feeling of being unfairly questioned of
Someone being skeptical of you for merely existing is one of the worst feelings on earth and in a way
I think it's especially gendered.
I don't think men experience this of being questioned
for one thing or another all the time.
If anything, if I had to really stretch it,
maybe we take a man who's not assertive
and we call him weak.
Can you imagine what it's like for the guys listening?
If I was like, why don't you just be more assertive?
What's the problem? Why can't you do it you just be more assertive? What's the problem?
Why can't you do it?
Just be more, just speak up.
And they're like, I don't act like you, I'm not you.
Well, why don't you just do it?
That feeling is horrible.
Now imagine that happens to you
in so many different parts of life.
I wish that I had brought this topic up right here
because this skepticism is toxic.
What I would have asked Dave would have been something like,
what would it take for you to trust her?
Because once you get caught in this,
I don't trust my partner narrative,
it's really hard to break free.
I would like to lean in more to this idea of the house.
When you met, and I believe you had your daughter
before you were married, is that correct?
Yes, so we were in California when she was born.
Then we moved to Connecticut
and that is when we started saving for a house.
Let's talk about the numbers that you chose for the house.
How did you decide how much you wanted to put aside
each week or each month for this house?
How much we could.
That's the thing is that we're still so far beyond
even being able to put a real down payment
on a house that works for our family.
We're not talking luxury.
How long will it take you to have enough for a down payment?
At this rate, like 10 more years.
Okay.
We can put it at least 5% down right now
on say a $400,000 house.
So you have 20,000 you could put down right now.
Yeah.
Okay.
Could you afford a $400,000 house?
Technically no.
Why?
We'd be paying probably somewhere around 4,000, maybe a little less, but it's
still, it's still a lot of money per month compared to what we pay in rent,
which is also a lot of money per month. But we're willing to stretch that $400,000 a lot more because the housing market is just
terrible.
What do you mean you're willing to stretch the $400,000?
To maybe $500,000, maybe $600,000.
How could you do that if you can't even afford a $400,000 house?
We can make it work.
Daycare is killing us.
There's a lot of debt and it seems like all this is getting taken care of within a year.
Okay.
We'll look at the numbers and we can certainly make some projections.
I think that'll be really helpful.
I understand that you were looking and you found a house that was above your budget.
How much was the house that you found?
I think it's around 700
700,000
Okay, so what happened? I was very uncomfortable with that number and
It ended up going for about that before we had to talk about it more Dave
What was your approach when you heard the house was available? Did you want to get it or no? I did. What did you say to Emma? I
Said we can figure it out. Okay, you know our daughter's at a daycare next year your desk paid off next year
That's a good chunk of money back in our accounts to help pay the mortgage
Okay, awesome
Did you know the exact dollar amounts or was it more of a feeling that these things are going to be gone from our?
Spending so that'll probably make up for this new mortgage
Maybe it was more the feeling I didn't have the exact dollar amounts. Gotcha and Emma when Dave said that to you
What was your reaction? I wanted to see it on paper
Okay, did Dave put it on paper for you?
No.
Dave, you don't put things on paper when it comes to money, right?
No, not the best at it.
So Emma, what happened then?
The house ended up selling for hire.
And so we weren't kind of forced to make a decision together on that particular house
So if we were to come up again, we'd probably be in the same situation potentially. What will you do next time?
Hopefully not the same thing Dave will say like I think we can make it work
Reassuring even though you don't really know about
The numbers how can you reassure someone if you don't actually know what you're talking about?
about the numbers. How can you reassure someone if you don't actually know
what you're talking about?
Yeah, that's a good point.
And then Emma's over here, anxious,
worried about the numbers, wants to see it on paper.
But of course, you know, when you asked that question
of Dave, he's not gonna put it on paper.
He even said he doesn't really do the paper stuff,
the number stuff.
So when you ask him that, it's not really a fair request,
is it?
No, and I guess my ask would be,
I would want him to participate
and we could look at it together.
I want you all to do your money together as well.
That's why I'm here.
But let me also say this.
I don't really think it's fair to ask your husband to work together on the most complex
financial decision you will ever make.
You all haven't even sat down and mapped out having two savings accounts.
How can you expect to figure out an amortization chart together?
It's not fair, right?
Dave, would you agree?
Absolutely.
Okay, cool.
I love when we all agree on a few key things.
I do think that, Dave, you've taken a back seat.
I think you are the passenger.
And what's worse, I actually think you are the backseat passenger.
That's not healthy.
I don't like that.
Emma, I think that the way that you engage with money,
it's not serving you
because you're actually not feeling good.
Even though it seems like you've paid off a lot of debt.
It's not serving your relationship
because Dave's not engaged.
And sadly, sometimes the person who's more apt
towards money has to find a way
to get the other partner engaged.
Agree.
Yes.
I think that is what we've been feeling
and not been able to really vocalize to each other.
Dave is what I call the ignorant reassure.
And you see this dynamic in a lot of the heterosexual couples I've spoken to.
In these couples, she will often manage the day to day finances.
The way that she describes it is pay the bills, make sure we have enough in the checking account,
et cetera.
And oftentimes she will start to get worried about the money.
Are we going to have enough?
Maybe she has a history of scarcity with money and she will bring these topics up.
And he will do this.
He'll cross his arms effectively and say,
we're gonna be fine, babe.
Stop worrying.
It's like, how the do you know you're gonna be fine?
You haven't looked at the numbers in 13 years.
He is the ignorant reassure.
Ignorant because he, and it's almost always he,
has no real relationship with the numbers.
He doesn't look at them.
He just earns a paycheck and that's it.
Reassure, because deep down, he sees emotions as bad and he wants them to stop.
Now, as a guy, I totally get this.
Emotions feel uncomfortable.
I just wanted to stop so I can look at my spreadsheet all day.
Sell C32 never made me feel this way.
So what does he do?
He goes, it's going to be fine.
You don't know if it's going to be fine.
You don't even know what fine is.
You have no relationship with the numbers.
You're simply saying, stop worrying.
Your worries are not real.
You will see this dynamic of the ignorant reassure in many places.
If you see it, call it out and recalibrate your relationship.
Why do you need a house?
For me, just having a house feels like our family is settled.
This is where our kids are going to grow up.
This is the school system they're going to be in.
We can paint the walls.
It's ours.
And right now you feel unsettled?
Yes.
That doesn't feel good.
No.
Emma, are you the one who wants a house
or Dave, do you also want a house?
I also want a house too.
I want some stability.
Be part of a community, part of a neighborhood.
What is the most important?
Have you all discussed that?
I think the most important thing for me
is the kids having a yard, having a driveway to play in us having space to be a family
We're really ramped right now doesn't sound like you actually talked about this like it with clarity. Would you both agree?
Not with clarity
Again, I'm not blaming y'all. This is how most people talk about the biggest purchase of their lives
Again, I'm not blaming y'all. This is how most people talk about the biggest purchase of their lives
They actually start with the destination first and then they reverse engineer it into coming up with several
Reasons why they need a house, but they are rarely crystal clear about exactly why they are getting a house
It sounds like you're saying you need more space. Is that right? Yes. Okay. What if I told you, yeah, you can have a bigger
house but you got to move like 40 minutes away or 80 minutes away or whatever. How would
you all feel about that? In answering your question then location would be number one.
Dave, would you agree? What the f***? That never came up once. You all see what I'm talking
about? Well, I feel like it's just so ingrained in us that we know exactly where we want to be that we forget.
Is anyone seeing the pattern here?
Oh, there's this thing in my head,
but I never said it out loud.
And so it's causing massive amounts of confusion.
Yeah.
Guys, if you don't effectively communicate,
you can't make good decisions.
You're going to slide into every financial decision
of your life.
Why am I creating this massive freaking calendar presentation?
I don't know.
I never told my partner.
Why am I sitting back like this skeptical of my partner?
Oh, I don't know.
I never really told her, hey, I actually don't think you have a great track record and it
makes me nervous.
Here's what I'm going to do about it.
Why are we buying a house?
I don't know.
Everybody needs a house, right?
Guys, we got to be more communicative about this.
That's why we're here.
All right, you want location?
Amazing, I love it.
That's actually my first priority as well with housing.
Location first.
I'd rather have a much smaller place
and have an amazing location.
Would you all be willing to make that trade off?
Sounds like you have a pretty good location right now.
What if all other options for bigger places
were in worse locations?
Would you stay in this place?
Yeah, I would.
All right.
It's helpful to know.
When we look at the numbers, it's going to tell us a lot more.
I just want to point out that so many of our goals are based around this idea of what life
should be.
And it's usually a vision that we all have in our head.
A suburban house, a yard, going apple picking in the
fall, which can all be nice.
But we should know what it takes to get that.
For example, if you want to have that big suburban house, would you be willing to move
an hour away?
Meaning you or your spouse is gone for an extra two hours a day. Would you be willing to cut your vacations
from twice a year to once every three years?
Would you be willing to go two months without eating out?
These are the questions that I want you to be asking
because most of us don't think about actual trade-offs.
We just go, I want that.
We don't think about what it takes to actually get that.
So if you find yourself in a similar situation with you or with your partner, ask yourself,
first of all, do we really want that?
Let's get specific.
Let's get vivid.
Second, what are the sacrifices we will have to make to get that?
Now let's take a quick pause to support our sponsors.
Okay. Now let's take a quick pause to support our sponsors. Okay, for parents, I want to know
what is the cutest question your kids have asked you
and what is the most horrific one?
The cute ones are like,
why do I get wet when I go swimming?
And then the absolutely mortifying ones are like,
mommy, why do you have hairs coming out of your chin?
What are you supposed to say to that?
I want to know, tell me in the comments.
Tell me the cutest, tell me the worst comment.
But you know what else kids will ask you
and sometimes parents get stumped?
What happens if you die?
That's right, Ramit Sethi,
who loves to have morbid conversations that nobody else will,
is talking about your premature death.
And you know what the answer is?
You give that little cutie,
you say, oh, I have term life insurance.
So in the case of my premature death,
you're financially protected.
Give him a big hug, eat some jello.
You can get that with Fabric by Gerber Life,
the sponsor of this week's episode,
which gives your kids financial support,
even if you are not here anymore.
Fabric by Gerber Life is term life insurance.
You can get done right from your couch,
all online and on your schedule.
You could be covered in under 10 minutes with no health exam required.
Fabric has partnered with Gerber Life, trusted by millions of families like yours for over
50 years.
It's made to be flexible.
They've got high quality policies that fit your family and your budget, and they'll offer
plans at a million dollars in coverage for less than a dollar a day.
With over 1,800 five-star reviews,
they are rated as excellent on TrustPilot.
Join the thousands of parents who trust Fabric
to help protect their family.
Apply today in just minutes at meetfabric.com slash Ramith.
That's meetfabric.com slash Ramith.
M-E-E-T, fabric.com slash Ramith. Pol-E-E-T fabric.com slash Ramit.
Policies issued by Western Southern Life Assurance Company,
not available in certain states,
prices subject to underwriting and health questions.
For the first three weeks of this year,
my team and I were on a multi-city tour for my new book.
That meant back-to-back travel days, flight after flight,
going to the venue early and staying late.
And when you're on your feet for that long,
it's hard to remember to take a bathroom break,
let alone remember to stay hydrated.
In the production room,
my team had a whole pile of packets of Element,
this episode's sponsor,
sitting right there on the table.
And it helped make it easy for my team
to stay energized and hydrated.
Element is a zero sugar electrolyte drink mix and sparkling electrolyte water.
Formulated to help restore hydration,
Element is suited specifically for athletes and people on keto or low carb diets.
They are also the hydration partner to Team USA weightlifting and many Olympic athletes.
Comes in great flavors like citrus salt, watermelon salt, and mango chili.
Get your free Element sample pack with any purchase at drinkelement.com slash rameen.
And try totally risk free.
If you don't like it, they will give you your money back.
No questions asked.
This deal is only available through my link, which you can click in the
description below that is drink lmnt.com slash Ramit.
Welcome back.
Let's keep going.
What was it like doing the conscious spending plan together?
We've done it together before, so we kind of knew our numbers.
Whoa. Awesome. When did you do it for the first time? About like a year and a half ago. Go ahead.
It was around the same time as the chart and we weren't really happy with it but we didn't know
what to do about it so we just kind of like did it and then we're like okay. All right let's take
a look at the CSP huh? The one that you're unhappy about. Emma, can you read off the word in bold and then the number in full next to it for this entire box? Go ahead.
Assets, 5,000. Investments, 158,000. Savings, 41,000. Debt, 53,000. Total net worth, 151,000.
All right. What do you all think about those numbers?
They're not horrible, but I wish they were different.
Okay.
Dave, actually, seeing it on there, it doesn't make me feel so bad.
Which part?
The total net worth?
All right.
I like when people see the CSP and it gives them a new perspective.
Sometimes we forget how far we've come.
We're over here hoarding money or feeling worried about XYZ and we go, wait a second, I gotta actually zoom out, look at the
big picture. That's what the CSP excels at doing. It allows you to see everything in a very simple
format. So I'm really happy to hear that. Dave, can you tell us your gross monthly combined income?
$21,554.
Did you all know that your household income is $258,000 a year?
Emma says yes.
Dave?
Yeah.
Do you guys think that's a lot of money or not?
I think that's a lot of money.
Emma? It sounds like a lot, but then I feel like
it only is as much as you have, with all the expenses. I feel like so much is being taken
out that when it comes to saving and spending, we have nothing. So as much as I know that
that's how much we make and that feels good, that only goes so far when we actually don't
like see it in our everyday.
Okay, I want you to remember what you just said. $258,000 ago, we don't have any money to save or spend. You said that, right? I did. Okay, hold that thought because we're going to look at the
rest of your spending. Okay. Let's take a look. All right, so you're netting 15k a month, which
means you got a 401k, right?
I am the only one that has 401k.
You're maxing it out?
I'm contributing the most amount that I get the full match for.
All right, fine.
That's still thousands of dollars a year.
That's meaningful.
That matters.
It's real.
Okay, we got to start rewriting our narrative that we make $258,000 and we don't have any
money to save or spend. That's simply not true. We see it right there. Let's keep going fixed costs
61% what do you guys think about that? It's a high number. What should it be? Wait? Is that right?
Mine is 82 and his is 67. How is it?
61 come back that is weird one of you is at 82% and one of you is at 67%
That is weird. One of you is at 82% and one of you is at 67%.
So... So I added in the line of child care. I don't know if that messed things up.
Oh, yeah.
Sorry. I know. I'm sorry.
Why do you guys mess with my formulas? Why?
I know I wasn't supposed to, but I didn't know where to put child care and that's a fixed cost.
All right, fine. So now your fixed cost is 76%.
Yeah, it's not great.
That's pretty high. It should be 50 to is 76% Yeah, that's pretty high
It should be 50 to 60 percent and frankly with your income, which is a very high income
Typically, it's the lower end of that
So at 76 percent that number right there is why you feel stressed and anxious and why you're having these small
Arguments about how much money is going into a savings account
Y'all get that?
Yeah.
Right there.
We'll dig into those numbers in a minute, but let's keep going down the list.
Investments, 3%.
Savings at 1%.
And that is $200 a month for a house down payment.
And then finally, we have guilt--free spending which claims to be 19%.
I actually don't think you all know how much you're spending on guilt-free spending per month. Do you?
Emma's shaking her head no. Dave is standing like a statue.
Approximations are okay the first time you do the CSP. You know you kind of jot down what you think
but then the instructions in the CSP are you actually got to pull your numbers and you got to look at the rest of the year.
What do we spend and you got to spread that out to get a much more accurate number.
You don't know how much you're spending and also you have a narrative.
We don't have any money.
We're not spending anything.
Because our stories are more powerful than reality and that's what the CSP helps you
cut through.
Dave, what are you noticing from this?
The eye opener.
It's interesting to see how much we're actually spending on certain luxuries, I guess.
Yeah.
You know, the irony is because you all don't really talk about money, you're not actually
both engaged with money.
Not at all.
You actually don't have any guilt free spending because all your money is guilt ridden
That's a terrible way to live especially making two hundred and sixty thousand dollars a year
But if you actually were a team and you came together you said like let's create a shared vision
Let's actually decide what's important to us. Let's be honest and we both need to be at a certain level
We need to understand money suddenly Suddenly you would actually have more
money to spend guilt free than you do right now.
That'd be great.
I got some questions for you now on the numbers. We have $53,000 of debt. What type of debt
is that Emma?
Student loan and credit cards.
How much is the student loans?
Student loans like $5,000.
What's the interest rate? 7%. And the rest of it? $48,000. What's the interest rate?
7%.
And the rest of it?
$48K credit card debt?
I have one personal loan that was a consolidation that's $15K at 6% and the rest is credit card.
What's all that debt?
I wish I could tell you.
I opened my first credit card in college
and I had a lot of student loans
and I feel like it's just snowballed since then.
And I feel like I was just never really had the tools
to manage money or like knew what I was doing.
They're like, what do you spend it on?
Just everyday stuff.
I was just trying to live and get by
and I feel like I didn't have enough money for a while.
So I was using the credit card to do that.
Who's the one who makes more out of the two of you? I do. live and get by and I feel like I didn't have enough money for a while so I was using the credit card to do that.
Who's the one who makes more out of the two of you?
I do.
Okay.
Emma, you make $13,000 a month gross.
It's a lot of money.
Both of you make a lot of money.
Dave, you make 8k a month gross.
It's very good.
When you look at me and you think about how I relate to my money, do you think I'm constantly
in motion?
No, I know you're not.
So what am I? It's supposed to automate and you're not supposed to have to think about it. Describe my behavior with money thoughtful planned
Purposeful. Mm-hmm calm describe your behavior with money
rantic impulsive
You like it?
No, I don't I struggle because it's part of just, like, how I work.
Like, I need to, like, check things off.
I need to feel like I'm doing something.
And because I feel like money is something that we need to work on,
I always feel like I need to be doing something to make it better.
Maybe.
What I don't hear you saying is,
I really need to find a way to calm myself.
I don't hear you saying I need a way to find a way to connect with my
husband about money. I don't hear you saying I need to find a way to work together with
him to create a vision of money for our family. I don't hear any of that. What I hear is we
need a house. We need a house, house, house, house, house. I hear we need to transfer money,
this money, that money, this money money this money that consolidate do it all
It's very erratic
Yeah, it is
How long have you been in that behavior pattern?
forever
And you said that's just the way I operate. What if I told my wife listen lady? I don't talk about feelings
Okay, that's that's just the way I am
What do you think my wife's response would have been to that like see you later? Oh
Yeah, I don't think she would have been too happy with that
She would have really laid me out. But yet you say that about yourself. That's just the way I am
I don't believe that I believe you can be calm cool
Connected with Dave when it comes to money. I don't think you're getting that right now.
I think you're getting a lot of drama.
I think it feels in a misguided way productive,
although it's not.
You have $53,000 of debt.
It's not working, obviously.
I know.
And I feel like that's where I am, I'm at a loss.
Okay, Dave, I want to check in with you.
Does any of this surprise you?
No, I'm hearing a lot of truth from Emma, which she's very good at. She's very good
at talking about her emotions, even while we're talking about our finances.
I agree. You're more emotionally attuned, Emma, but I also think you have some stories
about yourself that are obviously not true. You could change the way that you think about
money, behave with money, and even feel with money. Do you believe that?
I do. Absolutely. Yeah. Okay. Good. Good. That's a huge step. That's great. Why do you all have
separate accounts? Yes, it goes back to hesitancy. I'm worried she's going to spend a lot and then
that leaves me with whatever bare minimum I would need to get gas and whatever keeps me going to work.
So it's like I'm worried she still continues her spending habits and I'm stuck with the
bare minimum.
What Dave would you say are Emma's spending patterns that you refer to?
What are you talking about?
A lot of Amazon packages and I fear rolling her eyes but there's packages every day and
there's no real accountability for it.
What else besides Amazon?
What's going on with credit cards?
What's the rest of it?
I don't know.
You ever ask her?
Well, she's showed me all her statements.
I'm not very financially literate.
I couldn't tell you exactly what's being spent, but I do see money being spent.
And I do know that she's doing a lot of work paying off her debt.
Can I just kind of call out the elephant in the room right now?
What I don't sense is a lot of curiosity from both of you and what's going on here.
And even in that last few sentences, Dave, where you said like, I don't know, I'm not
financially oriented.
I just need a number.
I'm not into that, Dave.
You're telling me that you feel anxious about money all the time.
You don't trust your wife who has two kids with you to combine money, but you can't figure
out how to read where she's spending her money or have her create a chart for you.
I just don't buy it.
I actually just don't think this is important for both of you.
I think you've gotten used to feeling bad about money.
I think you have these dreams of buying a house and you both have found a way to thrive
on this anxiety about money without actually changing anything.
I think we're struggling because we don't know how to change it.
I think we both want to change it.
We both recognize the cycles that we're in and we just keep on going in them because
we don't have the tools or the communication skills to change it.
Okay, I agree with that.
But if you really want to change it, what I want to see or what I would expect to see
from both of you is physically and figuratively leaning forward.
I feel like I'm pulling teeth to get answers.
Honestly, I'm starting to get a little frustrated.
It feels like they are leaning back
and expecting me to fix everything for them.
And it's a funny dynamic I see a lot on this podcast.
People go through a lot to come and speak to me.
They fill out an application,
they talk to multiple people on my team,
they have to do all kinds of checks and complete their CSP.
It's very time consuming.
And then when they finally sit down with me, some couples basically lean back, put their
hands in the air and go, you fix it.
Their entire mental model is that they have done the work to get here.
And now I'm a magician who's going to wave this magic wand and fix it for him.
Not gonna happen.
That's not how this works.
In fact, I'm not gonna fix your situation.
You are.
What they don't realize is that their delegation
of this problem to me is just yet another symptom
of the passive relationship with money
that has led them here.
So I'm gonna try to shift that right now.
Listen as I toss the ball right back in their court.
I was over at a friend's house the other day
and he was telling me how people know where he lives.
He's an online personality.
He's like, I gotta find a way to get rid
of this information.
I'm like, dude, delete me.
I use this service myself.
Join delete me.com slash Ramit. Put your information in there. They will scan the internet. They
will remove it. You don't have to play whack-a-mole. They will do it for you. He was like, what?
This actually exists. I said, yes, I've been using it for years. I pay for it myself. So
I want you to use the same thing. Get your information removed online, your name, address, ages, relatives, names, and
information.
Get it all removed and let this service do it for you.
They do a great job.
And it only takes a few steps to set it up.
You sign up, you submit your information for removal.
Delete me experts, search for and start removing your personal information.
And in seven days, you'll receive a detailed DeleteMe report with what they've found so
far.
Then they continue to scan and remove your personal information regularly all year long.
This is a service I personally pay for and I regularly recommend it to my friends and
family.
So if you want to get your personal information removed from search results on the web, go
to joindelete.com slash Ramit for 20% off a plan for you or your entire family.
Again, that's joindelete.com slash Ramit.
R-A-M-I-T.
So here's what we're going to do to change the dynamic.
Right now, we're going to switch things up.
I am not telling you anything from now on.
I am simply executing what you tell me what to do.
We have the conscious spending plan in front of us.
So you ask me questions, I will answer them for you.
You tell me let's cut this spending or that spending and we can do it.
But I can't be the one driving this because Dave, you're playing passenger again.
I'm just not into it.
And Emma, you're justifying your behavior by saying it's just me.
I can't change.
Not into it.
I'm trying to change our dynamic and we're going to change it with a big bang.
So you tell me what you want to do.
So I think we want to continue with the conversation on how couples like us can do better in our
current situation.
Okay, great. What specific questions can I answer for you?
How can we save more money throughout the year? How can we allocate our monthly finances?
And the best way to combine our accounts together where we both feel comfortable.
Okay, let's start with talking about the accounts.
Because I think that's the foundation of your finances.
There's good research showing that combining accounts is very helpful when it comes to
money in a relationship.
Not only is it good for trust, it's good to make things smooth.
Right now, it's very confusing.
It's also complicated.
You got money being transferred around different accounts.
Somebody has to reconcile all this stuff. At the same time, I hear what you said, Dave, about one,
worrying about Emma spending too much, which is a real concern and we should talk about that. Two, wanting to make sure you have money for yourself, which I totally respect. Each partner should have
money for themselves for guilt-free spending. Each partner should have money for themselves
for guilt-free spending.
It doesn't even matter if one partner's a lower earner,
doesn't matter if this partner earns zero dollars.
They should still have money for themselves
for guilt-free spending.
So one way to solve that is to combine your incomes
into one joint checking account.
All your joint expenses are paid from that.
And because you're married with kids, most of your expenses are joint. Under your fixed costs, pretty
much everything is joint. So you could pay all that from your joint. Your
savings is going to be joint. Your investments are to some extent going to
be joint. They'll affect both of you. And then your guilt-free spending, most of it
will be joint because you're a family. But each of you. And then your guilt-free spending, most of it will be joint, because you're a family,
but each of you should have some amount of money
that goes to each of you.
If one person wants to go out for beers,
the other wants to get a massage, that's fine.
As long as it fits within your number, boom,
you're even using a separate card for that.
An individual card, not your joint card
where you then have to transfer back and forth.
You see how that works?
Yeah. How does that sound?
That makes sense to me.
What would it look like and feel like if the two of you had joint finances like I just
described?
I would love it.
I think it's a good first step.
I think we could also just have more healthy conversations and we could look at it together
and separately.
I think that's where we struggle a lot right now, that we can't take our time to look at it
separately because we have different accounts.
So I can't see everything,
he can't see everything.
So it's very hard for us to then come together and
have a conversation because
neither of us has the full picture.
For me, it creates trust.
We're both working at it together.
Don't mess us up, we can call them out right away for it vice versa, but it's
It builds partnership. Yeah, I agree with that. I might even look at it in a slightly different way
I would say something like look I'm really excited to combine our accounts
First of all, it's gonna be easier for us to see what's going on get the big picture
accounts. First of all, it's going to be easier for us to see what's going on, get the big picture. It means that we're going to be more aligned. And I want to build trust, part two.
I have to tell you, I'm a little worried. It worries me because in the past, I know
you've gotten into credit card debt. And I want to be really open letting you know that
I'm worried, but I also know that I have to trust you.
And this is a way that we can come together.
The way I feel is, I really don't want to get into any more debt.
That would be really hurtful to me.
But I know that mistakes might happen.
And my expectation is that we both talk about money every month.
We both have total transparency on our spending. We're both involved with managing at least one number, groceries, eating out, whatever.
And in that way, I want us to get really good as a team at paying off debt, at investing
more, even on spending on the things we love.
That's part two.
Dave, what'd you notice about that part two?
Accountability, a little bit of grades.
I'm not great either by any means. You know,
I'm not going to let Emma take the whole brunt of that conversation. It does fall on both of us.
Agreed. I mean, I don't think you've ever said anything like that in your relationship, have you?
I don't think so. No. You've been the passenger and Emma's been chasing you, even though she's
not even particularly great at spending or managing money.
She admitted it.
Y'all, everybody admits it on this call.
But yet she's chasing you and you're sitting back avoiding the more you avoid, the more
she chases you're in the chase or avoid her diner.
And in fact, you're even going like this, convince me, but there's no trust.
So it's a very odd dynamic that the two of you have.
You're just stuck.
And the only way to get out of it is to decide to get out of it and to radically change. Setting up accounts is the first
step. What's next?
How we can move our investment percentage higher?
You currently have 3%. It's maybe like more like 6% if we include your free tax So let's just make it easy like 12,000 bucks a year
So Emma your question is how do we get that number higher you tell me tell me what to do and I will change numbers
As you tell me and as I look at the top right rent you like
None of that really can really change
So groceries would be the first one that I think we could cut from. How much?
$200.
Okay, you're the shopper.
Do you actually have a number that you use when you shop?
I try and keep it to 800 a month,
which is like 200 a week,
but then there's like extra stops.
So then it's about a thousand.
All right.
So you could eliminate $200 a month off of that.
Is that what you're telling me? Yeah, you feel confident about that?
Yes, I definitely can do it. Love it. Love that answer. Okay, let's take it down to 800. Good job
Watch this number up here. It goes from 76%
What happened I went down percent it went to 75%
Okay, cool. It's a small move, but it's a move in the right direction that shows us that we can affect these things
I agree. Should we just redirect that money into investments.
Yeah let's just do it right now yeah i'm just gonna put it for stocks you can obviously do for whatever you want keep going.
Dave your phone bill is at one forty maybe we can get that down a little bit.
That's what my phone bill is you get yours paid through work so it doesn't make sense for us to do a family plan and then you're into paying a phone bit. That's what my phone bill is. You get yours paid through work, so it doesn't make sense for us to do a family plan and
then you're end up paying a phone bill.
What's happening right now?
We're separating our finances.
Yes.
And Emma's really what Emma just did is she's asking for help.
And what you're doing, Dave, is leaning back and you're explaining why it is the way it
is.
She's not asking for you to explain why it is the way it is. She's not asking for you to explain why it is the way it is.
She's saying, help me.
So what you should do as a passenger is get your ass out of the passenger seat and say,
babe, you've been driving for long enough.
In fact, you just saved us $200 a month.
Let me take the wheel for a second and let me make some suggestions on how we can increase
the investment number.
Get out of the passenger role.
Go ahead, Dave. Auto insurance, we are going to combine ours and that's going to save us an
extra hundred a month. Really? Yeah. You already checked that? Yeah. All right. So tell me what to
do instead of the $180 combined, it would be 280
We're saving like an extra hundred dollars by combining that so we can put an extra hundred dollars into investments Okay, watch look at the fixed cost number. It's at 75% went down to 74%
Yeah. All right. What do you want to do with 100 bucks? You want to put it in investments?
Yeah, I like stocks. All right, let's put it there. We're still at 5%
Alright, well, let's find somewhere else so we can put it there. We're still at 5%.
Alright, well let's find somewhere else so we can move it up.
Nice!
What else you got?
Where's the Amazon stuff?
I don't see that on here.
The boxes everyday?
I have a subscription.
I mean, I count that as goat free.
Open up Amazon real quick.
Go to your orders if you don't mind.
Alright.
So there are sprinkles for Valentine's Day.
Decorations for my parents 50th anniversary that's on Sunday and nail polish.
Okay, keep going.
Just read them off.
A under the desk cable holder for my desk. Kitchen scissors, because we lost them.
Diaper cream for our son.
Dryer sheets, diaper pail, garbage bags.
Our kids soap, my protein powder.
Dish soap, a water filter for our fridge.
Hand soap and a brush.
Okay, let's pause.
What do you think about those purchases?
Some of them are necessary.
Some of them probably are not.
How do you decide what's necessary and what's not?
I don't have a good criteria.
Sounds like you see what you want and it arrives the next day.
If it's not for myself, I feel like it's okay.
This is a common deception that a lot of moms use, usually with their kids. next day. If it's not for myself, I feel like it's okay.
This is a common deception that a lot of moms use, usually with their kids.
And I see almost always the story that people in this situation often tell themselves, it's
not for me.
I don't need all this stuff, but it's for my kids.
And I can see as I say it, you becoming a little bit emotional.
But we have to ask ourselves, what lessons are we teaching kids by buying thing after thing with no framework on what is necessary? What's important?
We have to ask ourselves. What is it costing our relationship? And what's it costing you individually from mental health perspective?
I'm not here to tell you not to buy soap or anything
But I do think that there's probably no vision of what you spend as a family.
Can I ask you a question about food?
Dave, finish this sentence for me.
In our family, Dave, when it comes to our kids,
we...
When it comes to our kids, we definitely spoil them.
Oh, y'all make $260,000.
I don't think any of your parents made 260K.
It's not surprising that your kids get more.
Plus they have Amazon Prime.
I actually don't think it's a problem
that your kids get more than you.
Things have changed since back then.
You all remember how many toys we had as kids?
Not a lot.
However, the question is not simply about quantity.
It's about meaning.
Do they understand the value?
Do we even understand the value as their parents?
How are we deciding what they get? Emma, let me ask you the same question. In our family,
when it comes to our kids, we...
Give them what we think they need.
You know what occurs to me? I don't think you two have really developed a family culture.
Like, I'll give you an example some families might say in our family
We eat dinner together every weeknight or in our family. We have dinner out every Saturday night cool
That's a culture thing. That's awesome in our family. We take off our shoes before we come in the house
Okay, cool in our family. We are very relaxed about rules for our kids, except when it comes to safety.
You all have any rules like that? Every Friday we get takeout pizza, come home, let the kids watch
a kids movie. Yeah. They love it. Every night we try to sit at the table all together. Emma, you know,
she's great at preparing meals, getting
dinners ready, making sure that we can do that type of thing.
Amazing. Okay, I'm glad that I gave the example. I love hearing these. Emma, you got any ones
you want to share too?
While we're eating, even if Dave and I are not eating, we sit with the kids and we talk
to them or read them a book because I just want to make sure that eating is like a happy celebratory time
Yeah, yeah, also our family. We really value time outside and play
We are always on the floor playing with them getting outside every day going to walks going to the skate park
You know what? I got to tell you. I love hearing different people's
philosophies their points of view on
eating on different people's philosophies, their points of view on eating, on parenting, on
cleanliness, whatever. I love it. I don't even have to agree with it, but I'm just
like, damn, for you to have come up with that rule every night we try to eat with
the kids and we sit there and talk to them or we read them a book. Like, you had
to go through a lot of really hard dinners to come
up with that. And I love it. It shows me that you too have a vision. That is so cool. In
my opinion, having that strong point of view, one of the rarest things in the world. Now,
can you do me a favor and apply that to money in our family? When it comes to money, we...
When it comes to money in our family,
we value travel, memories during that travel.
We value going out with each other.
Okay, I like it.
You're telling me in your family,
you value travel and experiences.
Is that right?
Yeah.
Okay.
Where's that on the conscious spending plan? Not. Yeah, that right? Yeah. Okay. Where's that on the
conscious spending plan? Not. Yeah, that's the point. So,
while you may value travel, if you really value whatever it is
that's important to you as a family, it should show up on
your calendar and it should show up on your CSP. That's how you
know you're actually being honest. What's happening right
now is your money's just going random places.
Let's create a rule.
Let's create one that helps you create trust
with each other and money.
Emma, why don't you go first?
We talk to each other about anything
before we buy anything.
All right, you gonna text him for everything you buy?
No, no, no, no.
Can I give you a simpler example?
Yes, please.
In our family, we talk about money once a month
and both of us come prepared and ready to share our numbers.
Doesn't that accomplish the same thing
without putting a spotlight on me
and making me the victim or the criminal?
I know it's hard because you don't have a healthy model.
Your parents didn't really talk about money.
Get that it's hard, but imagine't have a healthy model your parents didn't really talk about money get that it's hard
But imagine you talk about it openly. Yeah, and honestly
Mm-hmm if I had debt, what would I do?
With my wife to build trust. I would to her allow her to see it Lee like what it is and
Let them see it every month. I would make a plan
For my debt payoff.
I would show them the exact month and year that the debt's going to be paid off.
And every month, like a video game, oh, I'm 6% closer.
Still on track.
In fact, got a bonus at work, put an extra $5,000 towards it.
It's going great.
High five!
Building trust by loving you. Not just transparency, which is great, but also getting
excited. What do you think about that?
That sounds really nice. You build trust with your kids every day, don't you?
I hope so.
Yes, I'm sure they love you and I'm sure they trust you. How do you build trust with your kids?
Just spending quality time with them, listening, not just to respond but to hear them.
Any possibility of doing that here? We do struggle with that with each other
Yeah, I totally agree
That would be such an amazing thing to do say you know what I want to build more trust with you Dave
I want us to both build trust. I want to take a couple of steps forward one thing
I'm gonna do I'm gonna create a debt payoff plan, and I want to show you
So every month you're gonna to see where I am.
But also, next time we go into therapy, I want to talk to our therapist about what are
some other tools we can use to build trust.
It's so important to me, this isn't just about numbers, it's actually about something so
much more important than numbers.
It's about us and the connection we are building together.
What do you think about that?
Something that I don't know that I realized was kind of at the core of a lot of what's
going on.
Dave, I want to hear from you because you correctly raised that, hey, part of the reason
we haven't combined money is I don't really trust our handling of money. What do you think
about her responses here?
I'm proud of her. It takes a lot of courage to admit your debt in general.
You know, it's not easy.
When you say I'm proud of you, to your partner, what a beautiful thing.
When we're kids, we want our parents to be proud of us.
When we're older, we want our spouse to be proud of us.
And instead, actually, Dave, when we started this call, you're at the opposite.
The opposite of proud is often skeptical.
That's why I said it's death to a relationship. Skeptical means I don't even believe what you're telling me.
But being proud is the opposite of that.
So I think it's really cool that you completely swung
to a much more loving side of that spectrum.
Now, Dave, Emma took two steps forward.
She said like, hey, this is how I wanna build trust.
How about you? I don't think Emma really trusts you about money either. She said like, hey, this is how I want to build trust. How about you?
I don't think Emma really trusts you about money either.
She hasn't said it, but I suspect it.
Emma?
I think in a different way.
Yes.
I think you're afraid of money.
I think you're afraid of her behavior with money.
I think you don't understand money.
But most of all, if I were your partner, I would find it difficult to connect with you
because you are so
passive with money. Yeah that is true. I can suggest this I can pay off $50,000 of
debt he's just gonna sit there glumly. It's really hard to be in a constructive
relationship with a partner who's just opaque. You want your partner's love you
want their connection at least you want some kind of response and the partner goes...
Yeah.
It's actually one of the most devastating things that can happen. So finish the sentence
for me because you need to build some trust as well. In our relationship, when it comes
to money, we...
In our relationship, in our family, we will be more transparent sharing our finances.
Oh, we'll combine our finances. Is that what you're saying?
Yeah.
I think sometimes when it comes to making changes with money, we start using like real
technical language. People start speaking like Shakespeare. I doth not know what to do with my
f***ing CSP. Just speak English, okay? Hey, in our relationship, I didn't combine
our finances because I didn't trust you, but I realized you are trustworthy and I need
to take a step forward as well. So I would like to combine finances and work with you.
How's that sound?
Helpful. I'm feeling more optimistic, more excited. I think it's something we can pull
it off.
I agree. I have total confidence so far. So we've talked about combining incomes.
That's great.
I have total confidence in that.
We talked about creating some rules.
Rules are not meant to necessarily be restrictive.
You create these rules because they start to really share the type of culture you're
creating in your family.
Now let's look at the CSP for a second because I got a question about combining your income.
Now have you all noticed the disparity in fixed costs?
Emma, your number is 80% for your fixed costs
and it's 65 for you, Dave.
I guess part of that is,
Emma, you have a lot of debt, right?
Yep.
You're also paying all the childcare
while Dave is paying all the rent and utilities.
Can you kind of see how you've both set yourselves up You're also paying all the childcare while Dave is paying all the rent and utilities.
Can you kind of see how you've both set yourselves up to be stressed?
Yeah.
If you're spending 80% on fixed costs, you're broke.
So the question might be, is there any opportunity for you, Dave, to help Emma with her debt?
I guess she's never asked.
Emma, what do you think?
I think for myself, I would rather pay it,
but part of it was our wedding
that I took out a loan for to pay for,
so part of it was combined.
What the f***?
You took out a loan to pay for your wedding?
How much?
I don't want to tell you what I did.
Tell me, I love it.
No.
Tell me, come on, I've heard everything on the planet,
nothing fazes me anymore.
I took a loan from my 401k just to make sure we had money and then we had to put stuff
on the credit card.
So then I had taken out a personal loan to consolidate those credit cards from the wedding.
What the f***?
Do not do this.
There are very few reasons I would ever support borrowing from a 401k and a wedding is definitely
not one of them.
But I am glad that Emma shared it because it's so revealing.
This conversation isn't just about today's money struggles.
It's a symptom of decisions made years ago.
It's just like in math.
If a proof doesn't add up, the mistake usually happened way back in the process So similarly when Emma and Dave borrowed from her 401k
They set off a chain reaction that led to mounting credit card debt
And this is a powerful reminder of how one wrong turn can snowball over time
You ever pay the 401k loan back. Yes. All right. How much did the wedding cost?
40,000
And you're still paying that off yourself. I
Don't even know what portion of that is in mine I just I feel responsible for doing it and you did ask for me to help and I do remember helping on that and
Then you said it was paid off
My 401k loan. Well, I'm just talking about the wedding in general.
I don't know about the 401k loan or any of that.
You guys see that having all these different accounts and all this complexity.
Yeah.
It costs you a ton. You don't even understand what's going on.
This is like how many years ago? Four or five years ago?
And it's just totally in the dark. One way that will help with this is simplifying your accounts and starting to actually talk
about money regularly.
I think that you should probably shift the wedding debt.
That should be paid off jointly.
That's my opinion.
I think the other debt, the personal debt that you incurred, Emma, that should be yours.
I think you should pay it off aggressively.
Do you know your debt payoff date?
It was November of this year, but that included putting my bonus, which I don't know exactly
what it was towards that.
So it's going to be paid off within a year?
Yes.
All right.
That's pretty good.
How come you seem so depressed about it?
I'm really impressed.
That's cool.
Because it seems like a far away way.
A year?
It's not. Oh, all things considered.
I spent one year trying to increase my Olympic lift by like five pounds.
A year is a very short amount of time. That's so impressive.
I feel like that's work that I need to do on just how I think about myself
and not beating myself up for
it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
To me, I see a blank page ahead of you.
You can write your story.
The story right now is we've always been bad at money.
We slipped into getting married and we had kids and we got this house and we work really
hard but it feels like there's no money left over at the end.
That's a story.
What story would you like to tell yourself
five years from now?
Your kid will be 10 years old.
Tell her the story.
Go ahead, Emma.
We didn't talk about money a lot,
and we made a change.
We made family values around money.
We talked about it.
And we created a partnership
about managing our money.
Beautiful. Dave, give me the same story.
What would you tell your 10-year-old?
Honey, when we first got married,
we didn't really know what to do about money.
We spent a lot of it.
We didn't realize what we were doing at the time,
but we met this great guy on the computer,
and we learned how to value our money, and we learned how to put it in the right places so that we can have the things we have now.
First of all, give each other a round of applause. That was really cool. To me, that shows me that you have the opportunity to rewrite your story.
Okay, great. Let's take a look at a couple of other things. Your debt is going to be paid off this year, which is amazing.
That's $2,900 a is going to be paid off this year, which is amazing. That's $2,900
a month going away. All right, let's take this down to zero. Watch this number. From
74% fixed cost to 56%? Whoa! Okay, that's amazing. All right. And then childcare?
Childcare will go down to 900 in September.
Watch this.
900.
Oh my God.
This is crazy.
Things just changed to 47% fixed costs.
That's amazing.
Now when that happens, what are you going to do with the thousands of extra dollars you
have per month?
I would probably allocate like a thousand more to housing
if we were to buy a house.
Yeah, that's what I was gonna say.
Definitely help out with any kind of mortgage payment.
You gotta stop talking in terms of absolute numbers
and start talking in percentages.
So maybe 50% towards the house payment,
25% in the kids college fund. 25% investment.
What do you think Emma?
I like that. Definitely 50% into the mortgage payment. I would like to add 10-15% to guilt-free
spending and like 20% in saving their investments.
First of all, I like the percentage talk. I like that you two are like, this actually feels like
pretty good energy. I want to be a little bit
more directive because you're all 39 years old and you told me that you're
talking about retirement. Both of you have got to get educated. You read both
my books together and both of you have got to start writing down certain things
that you want to achieve because it's very easy to slip back into whatever's
in front of you. I notice you both do that. Oh we got to like put a thousand dollars a month towards a house.
That's not how you do housing.
You would think about it by saying, here's how much it's going to cost us for a down
payment.
Plus, if we factor in total cost of ownership, it's instead of us paying, what are you guys
paying for rent right now?
2600.
It's going to be like 6800.
I'm making up a number. Therefore,
we got to have that much money every single month for housing after we fill up our down
payment account. That's how you think about it.
Do you all know how much you're going to have at retirement?
Oh, not enough.
You want me to just run the math for you guys?
Yes.
All right, watch this. What's your current principal?
$158.
And how much are you adding per year?
Like $8,000.
Years to grow?
26 years until you're 65?
Yeah.
And what interest rate should we put here?
Oh, I just put it anyway.
7%.
Alright, how much do you think it's going to be?
Under a million.
Maybe $600,000? $1 Under a million. Maybe 600,000?
1.5 million.
Oh, wow.
That's a much bigger number than I thought.
If I'm being honest, I don't know how much we need to retire.
And that in and of itself is an issue.
If I see that number and I feel like I
need to become more educated on knowing exactly how much we
need.
I mean, 1.5 million, I'd say that's a pretty good number.
Maybe you can't retire and just do whatever you want,
but there's some wiggle room there.
Dave, can I just be really straight with you?
Yeah.
You need to learn about money.
Dave, this is a really important moment.
This is an opportunity for you to be like,
oh, I have no idea what $.5 million dollars means. I better learn
Okay, yeah, 1.5 million dollars means roughly you can take out about
$60,000 a year in income you guys couldn't live on 60k a year. No
Remember this assumes you do not own a house. So you'd be renting. There's no way you couldn't even do it today
So it seems you do not own a house. So you'd be renting.
There's no way.
You couldn't even do it today.
You make like multiples of that.
So what that tells me is 1.5 million is not nearly enough.
So shall we do another calculation?
Let's say that you take the amount, Emma, that you were putting towards debt.
Let's just round up for easy math.
Three thousand.
That's three thousand a month.
That's thirty six thousand000 a year. Fair?
Yeah.
And what if we just put that all in here as well?
Okay. So let's take a look here. You all would be investing $44,000 a year. Look at this
number down here. $4.1 million. That's $160,000 in safe withdrawal income per year. What do you guys think about
that?
Feels good.
That's pretty cool. Four million bucks. That's pretty cool. If you were to put $50,000 a
year here, you're now at $4.6 million. It really adds up. What do you think the main takeaway of this is?
You got to get really clear and crisp on the numbers and see what we need and how we're
going to get there.
Agreed.
Okay, cool.
And then finally, can we talk about the house?
So your house that you're looking at would be like $800,000 a year. Is that true?
$600,000 would be the max.
I always assume a 20% down payment.
It's a good guideline in my opinion because if you can't save like 10%, 15% for a down payment,
how are you going to ever handle things breaking around the house?
So to me, it's almost demonstrating to myself,
I have saved enough. I have the discipline to be able to put 20% down.
That means I have the ability to handle whatever might come my way.
Okay? So let's just go ahead and take a look at this math real quick.
I'm going to say 20% down. You can always change it or whatever.
30-year loan loan 6% fine so it says from this very simple
calculator that you would be paying $3,611 but let me tell you this when I make my own calculations
I add way more than this but that's because I legitimately do not know how to fix anything. If it were me, just for safety, I would add another at least extra $1,000 to $1,500 a month.
So now we're talking like $4,500, $5,000 a month.
That's double what you're paying today, right?
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Now you can do it, but the question is, would we rather put our money in the market and
grow it for retirement or would we rather get a house and not put that money in the
market?
I haven't thought about it in that way to say what else could we use that money for.
I think the first conversation you ever had about money just presupposed you need to buy
a house.
It was just like, of course we do, Like frantic, we got to put money aside.
And what I'm really encouraging you to do after all this work that we've done is to
slow down and say, wait a second, maybe we want to buy a house that's important in our
family.
Okay, we can find a way to do it.
But first, let's zoom out and realize that a house is just one tiny piece of a rich life.
Just one. And maybe we want to buy a house. Maybe we want piece of a rich life. Just one.
And maybe we wanna buy a house,
maybe we wanna rent for the next 10 years,
maybe we want this or that,
but we gotta be thoughtful about these big decisions.
A big thank you to Dave and Emma for joining me today.
They came into this conversation
hoping to find a clear path to home ownership.
That's something that so many people
in the United States want.
But this discussion is a perfect example of letting the tail wag the dog.
And I see this a lot, especially with major life purchases where one financial decision
ends up driving an entire money philosophy.
Just like Dave, who justified this enormous purchase by saying, we'll make it work, rather than truly running the numbers
to ask, how will this affect our finances
and our retirement?
Now they've started developing the tools to step back,
see the full picture and make an informed decision together.
So they can stop being passengers
and start driving as teammates.
I'd love to know what they ultimately decided.
Unfortunately, my team reached out several times to ask for follow-ups,
but they never responded.
That's disappointing.
I spend a lot of time with couples.
I become invested, of course,
and I want to know what they did with the tools,
with the realizations that they had from our conversation. So Dave and Emma, I'd love to hear
back from you and wherever they are in their journey, I wish them the best. I get a lot of questions from parents on how to have money conversations with kids.
I'm going to keep talking about those conversations
on this podcast.
And I also wanna introduce you to a new podcast
called Who Smarted?
It's one of the top rated educational podcasts
for kids and families.
Each episode is 15 minutes,
perfect length for car rides or meal times.
And there are episodes like,
what are marshmallows made of?
Or do good luck charms actually work? and there are episodes like, What Are Marshmallows Made Of? or Do Good Luck Charms Actually Work?
Each episode takes kids on a fun, fact-packed adventure
in science, art, and history.
Who's Smarted is created by the team behind
the National Geographic show Brain Games
and the Netflix hit Brain Child.
You can find Who's Smarted on Spotify, Apple,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Go ahead, get smarted.