I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 210. “We make $170k—but spend like we make $450k”
Episode Date: May 27, 2025Clara (29) and Devin (34) are married with three young kids, trying to build a future while juggling debt, stress, and wildly different approaches to money. Clara racked up $20,000 in credit card deb...t, while Devin chooses to gamble instead of investing for retirement. They earn well and own two properties, but with zero savings, 75% in fixed costs, and no shared goals, their financial foundation is crumbling. Underneath the spreadsheets and the spending is a toxic parent-child dynamic, causing Clara to feel disempowered and ashamed, while Devin’s “dreamer” mindset leads him to believe the next big win will fix everything. Can they dismantle these roles, get honest about their spending, and rebuild as true partners before it’s too late? This episode is brought to you by: Superhuman | Get a free month of lightning fast email at https://superhuman.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 Notion | Try Notion for free at https://Notion.com/ramit and experience the powerful, easy-to-use Notion AI today. Facet | Facet is waiving their $250 enrollment fee for new annual members, and for my audience, Facet is offering $300 into your brokerage account if you invest and maintain $5,000 within your first 90 days. Head to https://facet.com/ramit to learn more about which membership option is best for you. Shopify | Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at https://shopify.com/ramit If you're enjoying the Money for Couples podcast, I'd love to hear more about you and what you think of the podcast. Take this five minute survey at https://iwt.com/audiopod. Links mentioned in this episode • Fill out my listener survey • 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.
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He's like this money we make now we spend now.
I think she might be low key a bit of a shopaholic.
I told her that this is not going to fly going forward.
I feel like he's my auditor.
She went a little nuclear.
I've accrued 20,000.
Was served a summon from the court.
Somebody sued me.
She is the one that I feel like needs a little bit more help.
The way you're spending is like you make $450,000 a year.
I started contemplating,
it's probably better if we're not together,
because I don't want to have to deal with this my whole life.
I've resulted the other avenues of trying to make more money gambling
and more on the collection side.
What the f***? Gambling on what?
Sports betting.
Is this a joke?
Well, we're still here.
Still alive, still above the water. Haven't drowned yet.
I'm about to speak with Clara and Devin.
They're married with three kids and Devin is a self-proclaimed numbers guy who works in finance.
Clara wrote in and said, quote,
My dream is to bounce back from credit card debt and to be responsible enough so I can gain my husband's respect and trust.
That's quite a striking thing to say.
If she's dreaming of earning her husband's respect,
I have to imagine there's a lot beneath the surface.
I'm looking at their conscious spending plan right now.
You can download your own at iwt.com slash CSP
and a few things immediately stand out.
Their total net worth is around 350K,
which is good for a 29 and 34 year old with three children,
but their investments are only at $16,000.
That is a red flag,
especially for someone who works in finance.
They earn $170,000 a year, but their fixed costs are
pretty high at 74 percent.
Now, yes, three kids can make fixed costs temporarily high, but I want to look into
that. I also noticed that they're investing just one percent.
They're saving nothing each month and they are spending twenty five percent on guilt
free spending.
When I hear Clara say that she's in credit card debt,
it's easy to assume that she's the problem.
But the more I dig into their story,
the more I start to wonder if I'm getting it all wrong.
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I feel like he's my auditor.
For example, I swipe $2, like 250 pacifier for the baby.
I'd get a text, what is this 254?
Or what is this 950 purchase?
And you know, it's become a joke, even into my own family.
Like, what's the joke?
The auditor is here.
Like I have to be careful
or I have to tell him first what I'm gonna get
because my auditor is gonna audit me again at night.
So there's that dynamic.
I would love to check in with the auditor himself.
Mr. Auditor, what do you have to say about it?
Look, he's been waiting the whole time.
He's like cracking his knuckles right now.
He's like, he's like, my time.
Yeah, man. Go ahead, tell us what's going through your head right now.'s like high time yeah go ahead tell us
what's going through your head right now it's something that I don't have a lot
of faith in my wife she's great at everything else she does it's just not
her forte when it comes down to handling money how often do you talk about money
every night I think I have all the access I can on my phone to look at the
accounts I keep a spreadsheet on one of those one of those what does that mean
just making very sure that I have all these things under control,
because I feel like this is my forte, and with my wife not really being hands-on with it,
I can handle it a little bit more comfortably and that I'm confident in.
So I just want to make sure that doesn't go down the drain.
How would you describe your relationship with money?
I'd say it's pretty good. I've gotten pretty far in my career with it.
Something that I take pride in, too.
What about in your personal relationship? Yeah, definitely is a struggle. That takes pretty good. I've gotten pretty far in my career with it. Something that I take pride in too.
What about in your personal relationship?
Yeah, definitely is a struggle.
Okay.
Claire, I want to start by reading some moments in your application that stood out to me.
You wrote, we have differing views on money, not enough financial literacy.
My husband is very anal with our finances and I lack self-control over my spending habits.
We argue a lot in terms of how much I spend. There's a lot of yelling,
which is unhealthy for our little ones to witness.
What comes up for you when you hear that application out loud?
That's what I feel whenever I talk to my husband about our finances.
I would like for his tone to change, right?
I would want to be able to gain his respect.
I want him to view me as a responsible adult who knows how to have self-control and be on top of
finances.
Devin, what about you hearing that?
It's a little unfortunate.
I know I tend to have a lot of control.
I'm coming from a very finance, accounting heavy background.
So in regards to my wife, she is the one that I feel like needs a little bit more help.
I've already exhausted a lot of my avenues with her as far as being gentle, being understanding, being firm.
And then when you've pretty much exhausted all the options, it's a little hard and annoying to have these conversations over and over.
This is the part that sucks. Devin could get a bit condescending in terms of this topic.
And that's what I hate about the dynamics of our relationship. He talks to me like I'm
a child. There's that you follow what I say and you can't spend anything if it doesn't
go by me. And I don't like that. I just don't respond well to that.
If I felt like my partner was talking to me as a child, I wanted to stop. And if I feel
like my wife doesn't know anything about money, I want her to learn.
Okay, what do you notice? Immediately, I can sense the tension and it's clear that they're
operating under some version of the parent-child money dynamic. That dynamic is where one partner
starts to function as the responsible parent
when it comes to money and the other starts behaving in a childlike way. In this case,
Devin is the parent and Clara is the child. And this dynamic is no good. It's absolutely
toxic to relationships for two reasons. Number one, your partner's not a child and you're not
going to get them to act like an adult by treating them like a child. Number two, this dynamic is absolute sexual
kryptonite. If you have a similar money dynamic in your relationship where one
person acts as the parent and constantly teaches the other, does everything for
the other, and the other is in many ways helpless and delegates everything and
says you handle it, you may be in the parent-child dynamic with money.
You don't want that.
I cover more in my new book, Money for Couples.
Now, the good news is we can change this dynamic,
but first I need to understand how they got themselves here.
And their backstory is pretty interesting.
Devin, why don't you trust Clara with money?
Oh boy. Where do I begin?
There was one instance she went a little nuclear.
She went to the Taylor Swift concert, Aeros Tour, got the floor seats, the whole shebang.
And, you know, that set her quite back.
I'm just laughing because it's embarrassing. I spent $4,600.
Is that one seat or two?
No, that's just one. He didn't come with me. I was happy to call her for his ticket, but he's like, no, no.
So from what I'm hearing, she ran up a bunch of debt.
Yeah, pretty much.
I immediately told her that this is not going to fly going forward and I'm going to manage everything.
What was the total amount of debt that you accrued?
So for my credit card, I've accrued $20,000.
That's a combination of five credit cards.
What did you charge on those cards to get $20,000 of debt?
So I did that, and then I furnished our backyard with new furniture because it was almost summer.
And then I thought to myself, oh, it'll be so cool if we could have the gazebo and outdoor dining and stuff.
So I furnished that
out of my own credit card because I know that the auditor would never approve that kind of
purchase. Also, I charge a lot of stuff like for the kids, like clothes, toys.
See any commonalities among those three purchases that got you into 20k of credit card debt?
No.
No?
Let me summarize the ones you told me.
Taylor Swift, floor tickets, furniture for the backyard, and stuff for your kids.
Any similarities?
No.
Okay.
I don't know.
Devin?
I think she might be low-key a bit of an addict shopaholic.
I also work hard, and I would love to feel the fruit of, you know, what I work hard for.
And to ask somebody permission to spend $2.
That just, I feel is very disempowering.
It's like, I'm a kid again and I'm asking for somebody who has authority
over me, if I could spend this and I don't feel good about that.
Yeah.
How have you resolved this at all?
You talk about that. Yeah. How have you resolved this at all? You talk about it.
So when I couldn't pay back all my credit card
already on time, then it started piling up
and it was harder for me to get caught up with the payment.
At first I was doing the typical thing,
oh, I'm not gonna open my mail.
I'm just gonna ignore it, blah, blah, blah.
And then I was served a summon from the court.
Somebody sued me like one of those collection. I was like, okay, wow, this. And then I was served a summon from the court. Somebody sued me,
like one of those collections. I was like, okay, wow, this is like a call for me. I can't
really be jeopardizing my family's finances for this. I don't want our wages being garnished.
So that's when I started saying, okay, I'm going to open these mails and then I'm going
to learn how to get out of this debt. So I was able to renegotiate some of those
debts. I was able to lower them down and then I started talking to Devin about it
and said, hey I want to confront this problem and I want to start paying them
off. Alright, okay hold on. How much debt do you still have? I still have about 9,000.
9,000 that's down from 20? Yes, yes Okay, and what's your plan to pay it off?
So I'm doing the payment plan every month
So I've been paying two hundred dollars for each of those cards. Okay. Yeah. Okay. All right
I'm sorry
It's hard for me to tell are you crying right now?
Yeah, I am because I feel very embarrassed
About the situation that I got myself into and the more that you ask questions about this and the more that I talk about it
I can see now that okay, like he's not a bad person after all
It's not just about him trying to control me
He actually has a point because now I can see we're actually on the same page trying to achieve the same goal.
We just have differing ways to communicate.
But had I been more willing to see the goodness out of it to give him the benefit of the doubt that he's coming from a good place,
we would have probably made the huge improvement by now.
That's pretty moving.
You want to tell them that directly?
Devin, thank you for being patient with me
when I was very irresponsible.
And I really appreciate you being on top of our finances
because in a way I'm also learning a lot from you.
And it's amazing how you deal with so much
Self control in our finances. I appreciate that. No, I appreciate that so much sometimes just talking out loud helps you
Empathize with the other person, but when we're stuck in our own heads
We get entrenched. It's like we're digging a ditch that we are putting ourselves in.
But when we just talk out loud sometimes,
that's why therapists really help other trusted people.
It can actually just naturally make us more empathetic.
I'd like to look at your numbers.
Okay, assets are $811,000.
Can you break this number down for me?
Yeah, sure.
So we have our house, I think it's now $450,000.
We also have another property in the Philippines and now it's appraised at 250,000.
Okay.
And then we have the values of our cars.
How much total?
We got three cars.
That's going to be like 25 plus 42 plus 7,000.
So that's what?
74.
Okay.
That's 774,000.
Did we put your collections?
No, I wouldn't say it would be that material.
What's that? I do some collecting like you can see in the background
and do some collecting with like cards, toys.
It's a little bit of a hobby of mine, a little bit of a ROI there.
And it's fun for me. So.
Oh, how much is your total collection of everything worth?
Oh, I wouldn't say again, like maybe like 5,000, 6,000.
Okay.
So we're at like 780, 30,000 short, kind of surprising.
Right? Yep.
What do you say, Devin?
Cause you know, you mentioned like,
this is your line of work a lot.
Yeah, I'd say that's kind of in line.
I think we did a pretty good job.
I think it could be worse as far as what we have as a total asset value.
But just given the situation that we were in a couple of years ago and then with Clara
not really having a great sense of just how to control finances, maybe set us back a little
bit.
Yeah, I guess I'm talking about being $30,000 short in the asset value.
Yeah, that's a little concerning.
You know what? We did this like 12 midnight. $30,000 short in the asset value. Yeah, that's a little concerning.
You know what?
We did this like 12 midnight after we put the kids to sleep.
So I don't, where do we get that other number from?
Well, you know what I'm gonna do?
I'm gonna go ahead and change this.
Okay.
To $779.
I personally think that's a bit generous
for a couple of reasons.
One is a Zillow price is not the price that you will get. I personally think that's a bit generous for a couple of reasons.
One is a Zillow price is not the price that you will get.
Okay.
Even if you sold it for exactly what Zillow says, you're going to get tens of thousands
of dollars less once you factor in transaction costs, moving costs, etc.
The same is true for cars, although not to the same level, but there's a lot of transaction costs with selling, cleaning, etc.
I think this is probably a little over, but let's leave it as is.
All right, let's go down to the income.
Claire, can you read off this combined gross monthly income?
It's $14,400.
And that means that the two of you make $172,800 per year combined.
Did you know that?
Good.
That's really good to know your basic numbers.
Remember, 50% of people don't even know their household income.
So that's very good that you both know it.
All right.
Let's look at the rest of the numbers.
Devin, can you read off the word in bold and the full number next to it?
Right. So that's investments.
That's including 401k non-retirement, all investments, 16,000 savings.
Nada.
Zero.
Debt, student loans, credit card debt mortgage, 477,000.
The debt would be my student loan, her student loan to Karnos, all the credit
card debt that she's racked up, the mortgage.
Two mortgages for the New Jersey property.
We haven't paid that off yet.
And then one is for the Philippines property.
So that's it.
That's your $477,000 of debt?
I believe so.
Total net worth?
Total net worth of $318,000.
All right, let's keep going.
Investments are at 1%.
Huh?
I'm directing this at Devin, who has repeatedly told me he's in the finance world.
Devin, can you explain this?
Yes.
Yeah, just given our situation, I just don't feel like we have that cushion that we have
in order to go ahead and invest.
So what little money I have to, you know, some gambling and some more on the collection
side.
What?
What? What the f***?
What'd you just say?
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What little money I have to, I'm, you know, some gambling and I'm some more on the collection
side.
What?
What?
What the f***?
What did you just say?
Yeah, you heard me.
I had a feeling you were going to be disappointed.
I didn't really see a big enough cushion for me to go ahead and invest.
So I've resulted the other avenues of trying to make more money.
If you gave me $50, I'll try to go ahead and double that triple that gambling on what sports betting. Is this a joke?
Hang on a second. The numbers guy has their finances set up to contribute only 1% to investments
So he can gamble and it's not even gambling for fun. It's gambling to make money
And it's not even gambling for fun, it's gambling to make money? What is happening right now?
At first, I was led to believe that Clara's overspending is the real issue.
But the deeper I go, the more surprising this story gets.
Honestly, this gambling thing is blowing my mind.
I'm literally sweating.
And it's a good reminder that seeing someone's numbers on paper does not tell you the real
story.
No.
Please, Rameet, speak sense to him.
I keep telling him, so when I started reading your book, I started doing the 401k.
I started.
So that 16,000 number is mine.
But I keep telling him, put some percentage of your paycheck, even though it's a little,
to your 401k.
Can I just be really blunt with you?
Clara, no advice you ever give him about money,
at least not right now, he's not gonna receive it.
Because do you know how he sees you with money?
Yeah, unfortunately.
So the two of you have co-created a dynamic
where you, Clara, are the irresponsible one,
the one who needs to be saved,
and he is the one on the pedestal the one who works in finance
But then it turns out
Devin you're gambling
Because you believe you don't have enough money. So it's a little disingenuous suddenly after hearing you tell me over and over
Oh, I'm in finance and I'm responsible and then it turns out
You're gambling on what sports does it work?
I'll answer my own question. The answer is no, it doesn't work.
And you got $5,000 worth of baseball cards
while you're telling your wife like, what's up with this Starbucks?
Exactly. Thank you, Rameet. Clara, this is not just him.
You dropped $4,600 on one seat. When you don't have the money
then you're here claiming,
oh, I want a buffer and I want savings.
No, you don't because I'm looking at the next row,
which is savings and it says zero.
And you have three kids under the age of four.
That's correct.
That's correct.
Therefore you always feeling behind,
your feelings are based on total inaccurate understanding of
money.
It just doesn't make any sense.
That's why we have to both master our money psychology and know our numbers.
Let's keep going down your numbers.
Looking now at your fixed costs.
Devin, what is this number here?
74%.
Your fixed costs are high.
Did you know that you're spending a lot, probably too much on your fixed costs?
Clara?
I just really learned that when we did the conscious spending plan, we would probably
spend $100 like eating out.
How often do you eat out?
In one week a lot because we both work and
We don't bring lunch to work.
We don't bring lunch to work.
That's five times plus what else?
Sometimes I sneak in a breakfast, you know, when I drop off the kiddo.
Let's say that happens.
Uh, what?
Four times a week.
Yeah.
Four times a week.
Yeah, that's okay.
Nine.
What else?
And then, uh, Clara goes ahead and she, she sneaks in some breakfast there
because her commute is painful because it's New Jersey, New York.
Four times as well.
That's 13.
What else?
Dinners? Yeah. Dinners. New Jersey, New York. Four times as well. That's 13. What else?
Dinners?
Yeah, dinners.
When we come back, yeah, we usually like split a meal.
So that's maybe like three or four times.
Okay, that's probably like five times.
So that's 18.
And then coffee, things like that?
Yeah, pretty much.
Every day?
Both?
Yeah, excluding the weekends.
We sleep in, we play with the kids on weekends, we kind of like tone it down on the weekends.
28, 30 times, you eat out 30 times a month at least.
Every day.
Yeah.
What do you think about that?
Yeah, that's not necessary.
That's not necessary.
That's too much.
Are we ready to get honest with each other?
Yes.
You have thousands of dollars of credit card debt.
You have almost of dollars of credit card debt, you have almost no
investments, you have zero savings and you're spending thousands of dollars a
month on guilt-free spending. Devin, how, as the money person in this relationship,
how did you let this happen? Just having that serious conversation with my wife
and instead of maybe just breathing down her neck, try to go ahead and engage her
a little bit more as to what's going on and try to teach her
even though everybody kind of exhausted because she just doesn't get it.
How accurate would it be for me to say Devin you don't know what to do to fix it
so you text your wife about every little five dollar expense that she has because
that gives you a small temporary sense of control.
How I communicate I know it can be better, obviously.
The way I see it, the risk is off the charts here.
The two of you were married with no kids,
I would be alarmed because one of you could lose your job,
especially now, you would have a week
that you'd be able to coast
and then it would all begin falling down.
With three kids
This is ten out of ten risk ten out of ten
What would be the chances of one of you getting laid off in the next twelve months?
Hi possibility. I'm a glass half full kind of guy. We're in America, baby
Get to work
I'm a glass half full too and what they say trust in God
But lock your car.
Right?
Be optimistic,
but have a big fat savings account just in case.
Yeah.
Have you guys ever experienced poverty?
Yes, I grew up in a very not privileged household.
We were struggling every day
and I've always felt like it's not something
someone has control over.
One day my parents have money, we're fine, they're not fighting and then the next day,
oops, we don't have money. What do we do? It's hard for us to figure out what we're going to eat for
the next meal or there's so much insecurity in terms of how do I get to school.
Isn't that happening in your relationship right now?
of how do I get to school? Isn't that happening in your relationship right now?
Clara, you wrote, there is a lot of yelling,
which is unhealthy for our little ones to witness.
How much are you willing to change in order for them
to not go through that same experience?
Oh, I'm willing to do whatever it takes.
Because right now they are growing up in that. Similar to how you grew up, they're growing up the same way. Oh, I'm willing to do whatever it takes.
Because right now they are growing up in that.
Similar to how you grew up, they're growing up the same way.
That's scary.
Devin, what about you?
Where'd you grow up with money and what do you remember your family saying about it?
Yeah, it was definitely a struggle.
My mom was separated from my dad, so it was just herself and us two boys, me and my brother.
So I definitely knew how important money was because it was always a little tight.
But I also celebrate when you have money available.
When the two of you got together,
when was the first time you seriously talked about money?
Only when I got pregnant.
That's an honest answer.
That's pretty much how most Americans talk about money.
So you talked about it then.
Yes.
What was that conversation or conversations like?
It was bad.
I almost started contemplating what if I just do it by myself because I don't want to have
to deal with this my whole life.
I don't want to try to explain every purchase that I make.
And I started contemplating of it's probably better if we're not together because I just
can't handle this type of dynamics anymore.
Did you tell them that?
I think so.
Devin, what was your reaction?
I held strong.
I tried to tell her,
look out the bright side.
I can go ahead and handle it.
You have to trust me on this.
I can do this.
Let me just reiterate what I just heard.
She said, I thought about separating
or doing this on my own
because I didn't want to be looked over my shoulder
for the rest of my life.
Question.
Your response was, I held strong.
I told her to look on the bright side
and then I took over the money stuff.
Well, we're still here, still alive,
we're still above the water, haven't drowned yet.
How come so many men always reassure their wives,
like, it's fine, it's fine, like, I'll do it.
And then they actually don't do a good job managing the money.
This is a classic example of what I call the ignorant reassurer.
Devin doesn't actually know how to manage their personal finances, but he thinks it's
his job to keep Clara calm.
Men do this all the time.
For example, when she panics, he jumps in with,
don't worry, I've got it.
But he doesn't got it.
He's gambling, he's not investing,
and they have zero dollars in savings.
This dynamic might sound familiar
because it happens so often on this show.
One partner gets anxious,
the other steps in with reassurance,
it's gonna be fine, instead of a real plan.
And very often, I mentioned that men do this. Men often have absorbed the message that their
job is to keep their partner calm, to be the provider, to make sure that things are running.
But often when I ask them, do you even know how money works? They will finally admit,
no. How can you reassure someone when you don't even know what's going on?
It feels comforting, but it's not.
Because while one person is anxious and the other one is playing the hero,
nobody's actually doing the work of creating a plan.
So basically, two people are running in place, becoming more and more exhausted,
but neither of them is actually moving anywhere.
If one of you is constantly reassuring the other, you might be
embedded in this money dynamic. Do you have financial goals? Definitely. Yeah, of
course. Oh, you do? What are they? Getting other streams of income, saving more out
of debt. Those are really kind of the goals that I would highlight right now
that are just on
my plate that can easily be achievable by the end of this year.
For sure.
And Clara?
Yeah, it's the same thing that Devin just mentioned.
And I've been really encouraging him to contribute to his retirement savings because he's not
like a believer of that.
But I've been telling him that, hey, you know, one day we're going to be old and what do we do?
What's our backup plan?
It's not like we want our kids to support us.
We don't want to put that burden on them.
So I keep convincing him this is important.
Ramit says that, you know, you should be paying your future self and this is the
way you pay your future self.
Hey, Clara, he's not a believer in what?
In retirement savings.
He's like this money that we make now, we spend now.
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He's not a believer in what?
In retirement savings. He's like, this money that we make now, we spend now.
Devin, what is your occupation? You mentioned being in the financial world.
Yeah, I'm a senior tax associate.
Your senior tax associate who does not believe in retirement planning?
Okay, explain it to me.
I'm sort of a believer of get the money, spend the money now, or try to see what you can
go ahead and achieve with that money and maybe go ahead and throw it in somewhere else just try to get a quick return as far as
retiring like when I'm 60 70 luckily by then I'm just going off the hunch that
I'm gonna make it big I sort of like betting on myself and yeah it should be
okay. Can I be really candid your bet on yourself has not paid off? Yeah it's not
going the way I want it to, yeah.
Notice that, yeah.
What does that tell you?
It tells me that I'm doing something wrong
and that I should really consider retirement savings for my future self, of course.
Even if it means cutting the gambling, collecting things,
that I think can make me a couple quick bucks here and there,
but in the long run, it's not going to be there when I hit 65 or the retirement age.
I think that was a good answer, but I don't think you really believe that.
Yeah.
Right.
I may need to get out of my own ways and I need to really focus on how important it is and open a book pretty much.
I think that's what I need.
You haven't read my latest book, right?
Money for Couples.
I believe my wife wanted to read it together and I was busy doing something else which
was probably watching the game, to be completely honest.
I appreciate the honesty.
I don't think you two actually have financial goals.
I don't believe you.
Most couples don't have financial goals.
Financial goal is just a weird word that people throw around of what they are supposed to
have.
You have no goals.
I could see it.
Your CSP shows me no financial goals.
The only goals I see is that you like to buy cars.
That's it.
That's the only thing that shows up for me on your CSP that I can immediately identify.
You don't have financial goals.
The words you use are words that you think you should be saying.
I don't see anything about retirement because at least one of you doesn't believe it.
Had you read the book your wife asked you to read, you would have recognized yourself as the dreamer.
Now I gotta tell you, I don't get a chance to talk to a lot of dreamers.
Dreamers don't come on this show.
You know what a dreamer is?
Please, indulge me.
A dreamer always believes that success is right around the corner.
It's one of the four money types in money for couples.
They believe that the next deal, the next gig, the next collecting item or bet will
pay off big.
They also believe that consistent investing is almost for suckers. They even have phrases like
that's a nine to five for those poor suckers. I don't need all that. Right. I'm going to hit it
big. I'm betting on myself. I need you to believe in me. How much of this sounds familiar, Devin?
Pretty close to accurate.
Yeah. That's a dream.
Yeah. Yeah.
What I write at the end of that section is being the partner's a dreamer. Yeah, yeah. What I write at the end of that section is
being the partner of a dreamer
is the most difficult of all
because they do not really exist in a reality.
The reality that they've concocted around themselves
is usually only possible
because they are subsidized by someone else,
subsidized by their parents, subsidized by their spouse's income, subsidized so they
can afford to live this la-la land world.
In a matter of weeks, your financial situation would deteriorate to life-threatening.
It would become very bad, very fast.
I also bet you wouldn't be gambling if you didn't have this subsidy.
I bet you would probably look for another job real fast.
I bet you would read a personal finance book real fast.
Yeah, that's 100% accurate.
Yeah.
It's a position that I'm in.
This difficulty of paying off the credit card when it's like over reaching 10,000 plus every
month.
It's the difficulty of just trying to communicate and help someone like my wife understand how
big of a pickle this can be, how fast it can really go really bad.
I wasn't really fond of gambling like three, four, five years ago.
I was going ahead and trying to make a quick buck getting collectibles and getting toys
or anything like that.
It's just the position that I'm in with Clara and then trying to see where we can go and
taking the right step forward to make sure we get out of this funk.
No, that's not true.
You said I wasn't a fan of gambling.
I've only kind of been thrust into that because my wife's irresponsible spending.
Okay.
I agree.
Your wife has had irresponsible spending.
Clara, there's no way you could have afforded $4,000 on a freaking concert seat.
There's no way.
And you're paying for it.
You'll end up paying probably $10,000 for that seat with interest.
But look at this, Devin, if you had been this long-term thinker, you would have more than
$16,000 in your investment account.
Where's the money?
Me and my wife are a big fan of doing all kinds of renovations at our house just to
make it a very nice. Oh, what a surprise. Yeah. So yeah, so um, how much you spend on
renovations total? I think since we got the house in 2021, I have a record of it like
80 grand. 80 grand. Yeah. With three kids and zero savings. The only way for you to
move forward is to actually take a hard look in the mirror and be honest about what is going on in this dynamic. Like each of you has kind of portrayed
yourself as either a victim of your circumstances or I know I messed up in
the past. Okay I'm ready to change now. The victim of circumstances, Devin, is I'm
only doing this gambling because my wife is so irresponsible with her. I've tried
everything. Have you tried reading a book?
No, don't have the time.
Should make the time.
You have the time.
I can't believe I, as a guy who doesn't even have kids,
am telling a parent of three, you have the time.
You have the time if you have zero dollars in savings
and three kids.
You have the time.
Get the audio book, listen to it on the way to work.
Whatever, I'm not here to micromanage. You have the time. Get the audio book, listen to it on the way to work. Whatever.
I'm not here to micromanage.
You have the time.
Then Clara, you're saying like, I know I made mistakes, but I'm ready to change.
Yeah.
What are you ready to change?
I really would love to start saving for our kids an account where we can set aside
money for their activities.
I wish I've always told Devin, like,
hey, let's enroll this kid to swimming,
let's enroll this kid to soccer.
But then Devin would always say,
no, we don't have budget for that.
That's another 100, 200 a month.
And that's something that I would really love
to set aside money for.
How was your first answer about spending money
on kids' activities?
How?
I mean...
Have we not been talking about how you have zero savings?
Yeah.
And your first response is,
I wanna spend money on my kids.
Gotcha.
This isn't a back and forth, Devin.
It's not about one person being right or wrong.
You're both put yourself in this situation.
Until you start looking at yourselves as a team,
you're constantly gonna have a tug of war going on,
which results in exactly this.
I wanna do this, no, that's not gonna work,
and we just stay paralyzed.
And by the way, end up spending all of our money anyway
on cars and renovations and all the typical stuff
that Americans spend their money on
and then go, where did it all go? Where did it go? It went to your house and your driveway.
Honestly, looking back at this, I was getting visibly frustrated and I regret that.
My job is to stay calm and I want to be able to connect with each couple that comes on this show.
What was going through my mind was frustration at how both of them are so entrenched in their money
dynamic that they've created a reality where they're the ones being wronged.
Clara feels like Devin controls her so as a reaction she racks up debt.
Devin uses gambling as a way to get rich quick.
And both of them literally believe they're the ones being wronged.
It's like, I don't have a choice.
You made me do it.
This happened to us.
No, you chose this.
Sometimes I think we go out of our way to account for
all the reasons someone might be acting in a peculiar way.
Structural reasons, childhood, cultural messages, gender,
that we forget about personal responsibility.
Not on this show.
I believe you can simultaneously acknowledge the need for systemic reform
and take personal responsibility.
And candidly, they both need to take that personal responsibility right now.
If they continue pointing fingers at each other, they'll just keep going along this path.
Can you imagine doing this for decades in your relationship?
What do you think happens?
The reason that I was getting so heated is I'm not okay with pointing fingers if you're not going to
make changes, especially when I see how quickly they can make a change if they choose to.
So Clara, what are you willing to change and how can your first answer be,
I want to spend money on my kids? Okay, now that I think about it,
answer B, I want to spend money on my kids. Okay, now that I think about it, what I'm willing to change is the way we spend money. Be specific. Yeah, so you know now that we're dissecting our
habits, it should all start with us cutting on what we spend and prioritizing saving because
it sounds ridiculous that we had $80,000 for renovation, but we have zero savings.
Devin, what do you need financially speaking?
Financially speaking, what we need is a savings account. We definitely need to go ahead and save
for any kind of things that can go wrong. Why?
Because if things go wrong, getting furloughed or getting laid off, and we don't have any savings,
then it's going to be a pretty steep hill to go ahead and try to see if we can bounce back.
You know, part of living a rich life is making decisions before the world forces you to make them.
I'm going to put it up on screen, your conscious spending plan, and you two tell me,
as a team, what you would like to change.
Okay, let's do the car. That's what me and Clara really want to tackle first, because one of the car payments
there is ridiculous, like $1,300.
You have a $1,300 car payment?
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
That's my bet.
That's my bet.
What was the thinking behind it?
The thinking behind it was when I got this EV car in 2024, it was pretty much, get the
three-row, because we have three kids now.
We can't really have a very comfortable sort of ride if we're going to go ahead and take
the kids to a trip or anything
Like that with just a two-row car. What the fuck is going on right now?
We need a $1,300 car payment. So we have a comfortable now. Meanwhile, you have zero in savings. What is happening right now?
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We have three kids now.
We can't really have a very comfortable sort of ride
if we're gonna go ahead and take the kids to a trip
or anything like that with just a two-row car.
What the is going on right now?
I know.
We need a $1,300 car payment so we have a
comfortable... Meanwhile we have zero in savings. What is happening right now? I think I'm getting
too comfortable seeing as how me and my wife did work hard to get to the jobs that we are right
now. We can always go a little bit more north and kind of... The way you're spending is like you make
$450,000 a year. Exactly. Back to the CSP, tell me what you want to change. You want to sell one car?
You're not going to trade it in.
I'm going to tell you that right now.
These car dealers are not your friends.
They're not going to make a deal unless they're benefiting.
So we're not doing a trade in.
You don't need three cars.
Which car are you going to sell and how much are you going to make or lose?
Right.
So there's this one car that's completely paid off.
It's the car that I've been driving since high school to the Jeep.
That's going to probably be like around 7,000.
Uh, what, what year Jeep is this?
That's a 2004.
You think you're going to get $7,000 for a 2004 Jeep?
I kept it in pretty good conditions.
So I'm hoping there.
That's kind of estimate.
2004 Jeep Wrangler?
Yeah.
Have you looked online to see what the prices are?
Yeah, I believe the market is around there. 76. Okay, you're right. I stand corrected. Let's post it up.
7,000. Yeah. All right, damn. You kept it in good condition. 7,000. All right, 7,000
bucks. What are you going to do with the money? So I'm putting that all on the big car note,
which is the EV car. And then when I get the tax refund, just bring it much, just bring
it down and try to get rid of it.
What's the interest rate on your EV?
It's zero.
I would take that money and put it in savings.
The 7K?
Yes.
That I can get it from my car?
Okay.
Yes.
Straight up into savings.
There's no reason to pay off a 0% loan.
Okay, great.
So 7,000 bucks.
That is amazing.
We have $7,000.
Let's just say in a savings account. Great. Clara,
it's your turn. What do you want to change? I'd like to change that mortgage. It's 2900.
The breakdown for the New Jersey property is 1700. The breakdown for Philippine building is
1200. But our goal is starting in August, that property in the Philippines would start paying off by itself
because we would rent it out.
Okay.
How come you haven't rented it already out of curiosity?
We bought it on a pre-sale, so they're still building it
and it's gonna be finished by August.
So you're hoping that it covers the mortgage.
Is that realistic?
Have you looked at rents around there?
Yeah, so they're big on short term rental Airbnb.
So we can put it up for like $200 a day.
How realistic is it?
Just so I know, like you're planning to finish it in August and then rent it out.
Is there anything that could go wrong here?
Because I like to be conservative when I plan.
Our goal is for just at least to make $1,200 a month from that.
So that'll be like a week of being rented out.
That's our goal.
Just so that we don't have to include that in our fixed costs.
Then that would drastically lower down our mortgage.
And then if we get rid of the two cars, then now we have lower fixed costs.
And then now we have more room for savings.
Okay. Can we talk about the two cars?
Because I heard one car you want to get rid of.
Now there's two.
Yeah. So the second one we want to get rid of, which is the EV is 1300.
What is the car that you're paying 1300 on?
The three row. What brand?
Kia. Kia.
And if you sell it now, you're going to lose money.
How much are you going to lose? Ten grand.
So if you sell it, you're going to lose $10,000000 where's the $10,000 coming from? I thought when I
sell the Jeep to $7,000 and then we have a pretty generous amount of tax
refund coming in so it can come from there. How much? We're talking about like eight
grand. Eight grand? Yeah. One thing I want to point out it's great I want those
cars gone fantastic but everything you've just told me is these one-off,
kind of like free money things.
And this is very, very typical of dreamers.
They treat this stuff like we live in a barter economy.
Hey, I'll trade you some spices.
No, we need to focus on consistently what is being changed.
Living a rich life is about focusing on what's gonna happen
every single month consistently.
Devin, if your strategies were going to work, they would have worked.
Okay, this is a very difficult conversation.
I don't know if I showed up my best here, but I can especially tell how challenging
this is for Clara and Devin.
After talking to tons of people about money, I've become a lot more compassionate.
I see it in my own life.
I used to have this bonsai tree.
I bought it because one day I dream about buying a 6 foot 500 year old bonsai tree for my apartment.
Anyway, I decided to start with a cheap one and learn how to take care of it.
So I had it on my bookshelf.
You probably saw it in previous videos, but I never opened up a single web page on how to properly take care of it.
My wife noticed it and she bought me this tiny little book on how to take care of your
bonsai.
Guess what?
I never even opened the book and I actually loved that bonsai.
Now I say loved in past tense because little bonsai tree eventually died.
See it's not in my background anymore.
That's just an example of how someone can be extremely disciplined in one part of life
and then not follow through in another.
And if it happens to me, it happens to you.
And it's happening to Clara and Devin right now.
Guys, you and I do the same thing.
We don't plan properly for taxes or life insurance or college costs, or we wait until we absolutely
have to make a change
in our relationship.
This is so common.
We do this with our health.
We do this with our relationships.
We do this with changing the oil in our car.
We're not robots.
Sometimes we say we want one thing and we genuinely want it, but we do the opposite.
I share that because with Clara and Devin, I think it's helpful to zoom out
and get just a little bit of perspective.
It would be very easy to judge them for sharing their story.
But before you do, please ask yourself this.
What am I currently kicking down the road right now
because I don't want to deal with it?
You might be surprised at how many answers you come up with.
I know I've come up with a few that I'm doing right now.
Coming up, everything shifts when we talk about solutions, what they should do.
And I can guarantee it's not what you're expecting.
I don't get a chance to talk to a dreamer a lot.
And usually for dreamers, it does not end well.
They end up in a really bad situation personally and financially and it's
actually tragic for their families as well. I don't want that to happen. You guys have three
little kids but you cannot seem to stop chasing some magical solution instead of making direct
changes. I'll tell you what I would do. If it's me, I would get rid of one or both cars, okay?
Then I would take a hard look at my spending and I would be extremely lethal with this spending.
$200 in subscriptions? Not anymore. Our family doesn't have money for that.
That's going down to $50 at the max. That's it. Phone? I would be looking for cheaper options.
Clothes? Not going to happen. Not anymore. 50 at the max. That's it. Phone, I would be looking for cheaper options.
Clothes, not going to happen.
Not anymore.
Groceries seem quite reasonable for a family, honestly.
I don't have any changes on that.
Debt payments, I would be taking a hard look at how much I am paying.
What is our debt payoff plan?
Do we actually know how much interest is being charged?
Are we paying the right amount?
Then I go down to my guilt-free spending, which indicates you spend $2,800 a month.
I don't believe that number. Do you?
No. Yeah, I'm not entirely sure, to be honest.
Okay. So you probably spend more than that. Claire, can I ask you, would you be willing
to take on more of a leadership role with money in your financial relationship?
Yes, of course.
Okay. Then I'm putting up to CSP and I want you to tell me what you would do. Go ahead.
Be specific. Tell me the numbers to change. want you to tell me what you would do. Go ahead be specific
Tell me the numbers to change. Yeah, so for a subscription
$50. Okay for a phone. I would like that to be just a hundred dollars
Okay, no more clothes like we can just ask our friends hand me downs
For groceries, we want that to be just five hundred
Okay, fine for debt payments. I would like that to go down to just $400.
Why?
We're negotiating the terms with this collection company and see if I could give them lower
payments monthly.
Okay, fine, $400.
You're down to 67% fixed costs.
Yeah.
Your car payment's going to go down, correct?
Yeah.
For the car, we just wanted to stay at 500.
That's it.
I'm putting it at 800 because you're still going to have a bunch of other expenses with
your car you didn't think about.
But you're now down to 59%.
I think that's a little optimistic, but it's way better than what it was.
Do you see how fast that happened?
Yeah.
Wow.
What just changed for you to be able to make that change that fast just realizing that
We are not doing great in terms of handling our finances that we have to do better. You guys are at a 10 out of 10
Danger level. Yeah, and there's too much talking. What about this? What about that? No
guys if like one of your kids got sick,
how quickly would you turn on a dime and change everything in your life to help your kid?
It's instant.
Oh, immediately.
Immediately!
Everything would change.
If one of you needs to quit, you would quit.
You would figure it out.
That's the urgency I want with this money.
Like, and the fact is you just did it, Claire,
but you did it because you decided I'm not gonna wait for Devin to figure this out.
In fact, why has Devin become the money person in this relationship?
He's gambling!
When I talk about recalibrating your entire relationship with money, I mean all of it.
Who's the one leading the money?
Probably it needs to switch.
You both need to be involved, but probably it needs to switch.
I sense more urgency from you than from Devin.
So next up, I want to ask you about this, Clara.
You currently have almost $4,000 left over
at the end of the month.
What do you want to do with that money?
I would definitely put a majority of that in the savings,
like 3,500.
Okay, fine.
My goal really is to drop my 401k contribution. And I would love my
husband to also do the same and no more money going to draft games or sports betting. I
want him to really up his game in planning for his retirement. Why? Tell him why. Because
one day you're going to be old and you're
going to be able to work and it's unfair for the children, our kids that we're raising,
to be independent individuals to take on that responsibility. And if I prepared for my retirement,
it's not fair to me to use that for you as well, right? Like you should be able to have
your own retirement savings.
Okay, now ask him if he heard you and what did he hear?
Devin, did you hear me?
Yeah.
Okay, what did you hear?
Yeah, totally. I think I need to change how I look at retirement and save for my own retirement
because, you know, obviously you wouldn't want that burden on our kids, on yourself.
And start immediately, that's not a problem.
So that it doesn't become an issue when I get to be the age to retire.
Okay, good.
I like that.
A couple of phrases that I might recommend you use is, here's what I need.
And each of you can say this, here's what I need.
It could be, we're talking finances, couples talk about this in terms of around the house
and emotionally, but I'm talking about financially. I need us to save $3,000 per month. Okay that's what I
need and then the other partner might say hey well look where did that three
thousand come from? What if it means we can't send our kids to swim class?
You know it's a back-and-forth. That's how we talk about money. Another thing is
here's what I expect. I expect you to do X.
It's not like, oh please, I gotta show you 10 reasons
why retirement's important.
No, this is what I expect.
I expect my partner contributes to their retirement
at least $1,000 per month, whatever the number is.
This is what I expect.
We're adults.
That's what we do.
We're teammates.
We'll say that with the amount you make, you could be debt-free.
100%. You could live a very nice life.
I totally see that.
But you would have to make some huge changes.
First, you would have to recalibrate the way you talk about money.
Both of you would have to really examine what role you currently play. And right now there's a bit of parent-child in here.
Devin is the parent, Clara's the child, but it's very unclear why that's even
happening because Devin you're not particularly skilled at managing money.
And Clara you've given up your power and part of it there's a reason for it.
You got into a lot of debt and were very irresponsible with money.
But the fact is, we have to focus on where we are today and where we're going.
I believe people can change.
Totally.
That's why I do what I do.
The two of you would have to come up with a vision of what you want for your family.
In our family, we always save at least 10%.
In our family, we have a target of 12 months of an emergency fund.
In our family, we eat out once a week
and it's a big special occasion where we look forward to it
and that's what we eat out right now, okay?
You would have to change the dynamic
and probably, Claire, you would have to take
a much bigger role with money, okay?
Second, you would have to make some very difficult
and rapid decisions.
The car stuff, it needs to go.
The monthly expenses, that needs to change immediately.
Eating out will probably be one of the hardest things you do
because you eat out every day.
And changing that, for most people,
they have come to rely on it as a crutch
in a way that they don't even understand.
To change that will feel like you're cutting off your arm,
and yet it probably has to happen.
And I think you could make it happen.
You could make it happen if you have a vision.
We want our kids to be safe.
We want to stop fighting about money.
We actually want to rebuild our entire financial life.
And that's going to require some sacrifices,
but we can do it.
We're strong together.
Clara, I want to hear from you.
I'm not saying you have to do all of that.
I'm telling you what I would do if I wanted to get out from under this.
But it's ultimately up to the two of you.
Well, right now I'm still trying to process
all of the information.
You've clearly identified what's wrong
with the way we spend,
of the things that we prioritize,
and what we need to do urgently.
And I agree with that.
I really, really agree with that.
I like the fact that you encourage me to step up
because that's like me taking back my power of,
hey, you know, we're actually co-equals.
You can respect me because we just have the same role in this.
So that's exciting for me.
That's something that I really look forward to moving forward.
And at the same time, that is also giving me that kind of pressure to be really better
because I don't want to be stepping up and just like messing it up again.
I really want to be a mature person, responsible, and just be able to tell Devin in his face,
hey, look, like this is wrong.
We're going back to that same old pattern that we said we're not going to go back into
and remember what we talked about that day with Rameen and we have to be back on track.
I love hearing all that.
That's a very astute assessment of what we just covered.
Can I ask one more question?
What do you disagree with?
Maybe I disagree with when you mentioned once a month to eat out like as a family. That's
just a bit hard for us because our kids are being left with the nannies Monday to Fridays
and we rarely see them. Our family time is to take them out and eat. I mean, instead
of doing that every week, we could probably do it twice a month, but I don't think we
can decrease it to once a month because it's something that we value a lot and it's hard not to spend
when you're outside.
Can I say if you wanted to go twice a month instead of once a month, that's fine.
That's the difference of one versus two times.
I don't mind that.
That's up to you as a family.
I want to point out that you currently eat out over 30 times per month.
Yeah. No, really. I will do better in terms of meal prepping for our family.
Is it only you that's going to do better in terms of food for the family?
We're both going to start this weekend. We're going to do it together.
Oh, I like that. Devin, what do you say about that?
I agree. I think that would be fun. Nice. that. Devin, what do you say about that? I agree. I think that would be fun.
Nice.
Okay.
Devin, what about you?
What do you think hearing my feedback, my observations?
My reaction is it was pretty shocking.
I didn't know I had a classification as a dreamer.
So that was like a wake up call.
I also agree with you as how these dreamers act and how they feel like just banking on
it every day.
Like, oh, something's gonna happen.
Everything. I'm just gonna to find money somewhere else.
Stuff like that.
So that whole outlook, that whole persona that I've taken on needs to change.
I don't think there's anything I do disagree on, especially when it comes down to
cars, that's something that I wanted to get rid of and that I've been working towards too.
How about the baseball cards and the other collections?
Understand that you probably want me to get rid of it all.
Um, but I guess maybe, yeah, I yeah, in that sense, I'll disagree.
That's what I'd like to do, you know, to go ahead and collect and try to see what's going to give me a profit in the next couple of years.
Kind of like my own little investment thing.
But there's definitely some leeway in that and I can tone it down and not just go like bananas.
What do you think about that, Clara?
That's very great to hear.
I rarely hear my husband admit something like that.
I love it.
I love that he's open and he's willing
and that he's taken in the feedback.
I like that too.
Now I'd like to ask both of you,
what surprised you about this conversation?
Clara?
What surprised me is the fact that
I wasn't being aware how irresponsible I am as a parent
by not really identifying the urgency of the issue.
Why are we so YOLO with our lives?
Like, you know, like what if something happens?
I don't want our kids to be traumatized like that.
So this is a really great wake up call.
And I love that we have this action plan in place.
We've always worked together as a team really well
when we have a common goal.
Like, we love achieving things together,
so I think that this is gonna be great.
This is gonna be doable for us.
I love that.
It's funny, sometimes we need permission from somebody
we don't even know to do the
thing that is right and the best part of it is once you recognize that
permission and then you start doing the thing you realize I never actually
needed permission the entire time and that really opens up a lot of
possibilities. Devin what surprised you? I thought this was going to be a very
fluid easy call.
It was pretty tough.
And I think that's good because it presents a sense of seriousness to the matter.
And realizing that I just can't be in this sense of control.
It's tiring. It really is.
I don't want to be yelling. I don't want to be fighting.
So it's good now that Clara has like a little more sense of authority.
With me and her together working as a team, I think it's going to turn out very smoothly.
Really looking forward to getting started.
I want to thank Clara and Devin for sharing so openly with me.
This conversation was frustrating.
It was challenging, but it was also honest.
Clara and Devin came in with years of resentment and secrecy and even dysfunction around money.
Yeah, I think they have a long way to go,
but I think something shifted a little bit today.
You saw Clara step into a leadership role.
You saw Devin confront some hard truths.
And by the end of our conversation,
they started acting like a team.
Now, is that enough to undo years of bad habits?
Honestly, probably not.
In one conversation, it's very difficult,
almost impossible to change a lifetime of habits.
But sometimes to run a marathon, we have to take the first step.
Unfortunately, I never heard back from them.
My team reached out several times to Clara and Devin
because we genuinely want the best
from them and we want to hear their follow-ups.
But they never replied.
And that's hard for me.
I spend hours and hours with the couples on this podcast.
I get invested in their success.
I want them to live a rich life, even if it's hard.
But when I don't hear back from them, it's frustrating.
What I ask is that they show up in our conversations
and then they follow up with me.
That's it.
The followups aren't just for me, they're for them
so that they follow through on the things we discussed.
And when I talk to couples who don't follow up,
sometimes the hardest part is not our conversation.
A lot of times I think they realize it's what comes next.
Clara and Devin, I hope you took something meaningful from our time together.
And wherever you are now, I truly wish you the best.
My invitation for a follow up is an open invitation.
I would love to hear back from you. In money coaching, you get access to monthly calls where I answer your questions directly
on a private call, and I get the chance to go much deeper on the concepts of money that
have made a huge change in my life.
Plus, you'll get access to a community of other people like you who will inspire you
and push you to live your rich life.
Check out money coaching at iwt.com slash money coaching.