I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 215. “He wants a house, I don’t want to go bankrupt.”
Episode Date: July 1, 2025Athena (31) and Arie (30) are newly married and dreaming of buying a home, starting a family, and traveling the world. But their finances—and philosophies—don’t align. Athena’s upbringing was ...defined by instability and strict religious messaging around money; Arie’s was middle-class and frugal. Now, they're realizing that love alone isn’t enough—they need a shared plan. Can Ramit help them define their values, shift their dynamic, and start building a future as true partners? In this episode we uncover: • The subtle financial tension that’s been building—and how it’s showing up in everything from gift-giving to debt. • Why Arie is laser-focused on buying a home, while Athena worries about losing her freedom. • The real reason Athena keeps her finances separate—and how her upbringing shaped that decision. • How Arie’s savings mindset clashes with Athena’s more flexible approach to money. • A surprising admission about holiday spending. • What it really means to feel “safe” with money. • The power struggle hiding beneath their shared bank account. • How financial shame from childhood still influences their present-day relationship. • Their unspoken fears—and how Ramit pushes them to define their shared Rich Life. Chapters: (00:00:00) “It’s a dream”—but what if your partner doesn’t share it? (00:08:30) They don’t fight—but is that actually the problem? (00:21:19) “I don’t know if I can say yes if I have debt” (00:24:44) Ramit breaks down their numbers (00:37:36) Dreaming big while avoiding the details (00:45:32) “What kind of person doesn’t own a house?” (00:55:33) The moral script keeping Athena stuck (01:14:39) “If you want something for yourself, you’re greedy” (01:22:57) Getting honest about a future they can’t afford (01:33:15) Where are they now? Athena and Arie’s follow-ups This episode is brought to you by: DeleteMe | If you want to get your personal information removed from the web, go to https://joindeleteme.com/ramit for 20% off. Leesa | During Leesa's 4th of July Sale, get 30% off plus an extra $50 off at https://leesa.com with promo code RAMIT. Factor | Get 50% off plus free shipping on your first box at https://factormeals.com/RAMIT50OFF with code RAMIT50OFF. Rocket Money | Cancel unwanted subscriptions and manage your expenses the easy way at https://rocketmoney.com/ramit Trust & Will | Protect what matters most in minutes at https://trustandwill.com/ramit and get 10% off plus free shipping. Links mentioned in this episode • Get Ramit’s 3 Step Guide to Buying a House Connect with Ramit • Get my new book, Money For Couples • 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)
If I don't own a house by the time I'm 40,
I will have felt like I've made a mistake somewhere.
The house dream, I just feel like if I don't do that for Ari,
it's going to let him down.
So I feel like if I'm not scrimping, then I'm going to feel bad.
There's got to be more to life than just saving for some utilitarian thing
that your parents did 50 years ago.
We also were a part of a different sect of Christianity that some would consider to be like a cult.
Really?
Yeah.
The love of money is the root of all evil.
It's something I'm working on rewriting in my mind, but it is hard when I have felt
so constricted financially.
I feel like we're so honest with each other.
Huh?
Definitely not.
You two are incredibly polite to each other.
So polite that you are not honest with each other, huh? Definitely not. You two are incredibly polite to each other. So polite that
you are not honest with each other. This episode is going to be a little different. There are no
dramatic fights or emotional outbursts. In fact, it's the quiet tone that makes it stand out.
Today, I'm talking to Athena and Ari. Athena applied because Ari wants to buy a house and
she can't see a path towards making that
dream a reality.
And as we talked, I noticed their answers felt almost too polite, like they had practiced.
And that made this conversation really hard for me.
And when that happens, which is very rarely, I start to pay attention.
Because sometimes the hardest part is not just fixing your spending.
It's actually being honest with each other.
So as you listen today, ask yourself this question.
What are you avoiding?
What are you avoiding bringing up?
What are you avoiding talking about?
What are you avoiding sharing that you're holding in deep down?
Now I'm going to look at their conscious spending plan, their CSP.
You can download your own for free at their conscious spending plan, their CSP. You can
download your own for free at IWT.com slash CSP. It's the exact same tool I use in every
episode. Their numbers, well, their combined income is roughly $100,000. Ari earns about
$6,500 a month or almost four times as much as Athena, who earns about $1,650 per month.
Their fixed costs are high, 77%. Post-tax investments at $0. Savings are at 11%. Guilt-free
spending is at 12%. It's a pretty tight plan, which you will know if you've filled out your
own CSP. It doesn't really leave much margin for anything unexpected.
But here's what really stood out.
The top of their conscious spending plan has four columns,
not one, not two, four.
It's broken out into combined, partner one,
partner two, and joint.
This is not how the CSP is supposed to look.
It's way more complicated than my template.
And that is a very big clue.
It suggests a lot of over-complication and maybe some separation of the finances like
mine, yours, and sometimes ours.
Now let's meet Athena and Ari.
Athena, on your application, you wrote, my husband's dream is to buy a house.
He mentions it almost every day. I don't see how we will ever be able to buy a house and
have kids, our dream, and travel, my dream. We can work hard, but I'm not sure what we need to do to
make both dreams a reality. Do you remember where you were when you were writing that?
Yes, I was in my home office and we had had another discussion about how we weren't
saving enough money, how I wasn't earning enough and Ari wishing we didn't have to live
in our apartment. What's the origin of the house? Why is it so important to you, Ari?
A house always represents to me a great place to raise a family. A family is something that Athena and I
both really want one day.
It represents freedom, privacy, a safe place.
The house represents freedom and privacy to you.
Can you tell me more about those?
I love my car.
So I would love to have a garage where I could fit my car
and ideally, Athena's car too.
I love fixing things and working with my hands when I can and doing that in an apartment
is severely limiting.
So there are a lot of physical reasons I want a house.
I've also always believed it to be a great investment.
All right.
And do you feel the same way?
No. who always believes it to be a great investment. All right, and do you feel the same way? No, I think I want to support Ari's dreams.
And I think a house could be really great
for children and a family and all the things
that Ari mentioned about modifications
and having space and privacy.
I don't think that those things should outweigh
other things like being house rich,
but also poor with other things.
I feel like sometimes when you buy a house too early,
you feel so restricted in every other area.
And there are so many things that are out of your control.
So again, that kind of powerless feeling like stuff could break at any time
and you're going to have these big expenses.
So so no, I don't feel that way.
Have you two had this conversation like 100 times?
50. So, no, I don't feel that way. Have you two had this conversation like a hundred times? Fifty.
What did each of you feel in this conversation?
I remember feeling like there's just so much against us.
The market being won, Athena's income, which I know she's working every day to get to some kind of stable situation.
During most of these discussions,
we're like feeling pretty troubled
because we don't know how to reach these goals.
So who's the one bringing it up?
Me.
Okay, so you're bringing it up.
Yeah.
And Athena, what were you feeling
when this conversation gets brought up over and over?
Powerless.
I look into the numbers and think about where we are now,
what our dreams are,
and I don't see how it can all happen even when I earn more or he earns more. So I feel like I have
no ability to help change our situation.
Got it. How long have you been married?
Almost nine months.
Oh, congratulations.
Thank you.
Awesome.
Yeah.
Okay. And had you been talking about a house before you got married and now after you've gotten married?
Mm-hmm. Okay. Is it the same thing? Like I want a house because it's freedom, it's for a future
potentially growing family, I want to be able to repair things and then you,
Athena, say like, but what about repairs and what about being house poor? Is that how it goes?
I would say for the majority, 75% of the time,
they have been in that cadence.
And then what happens at the end of the conversation?
Ari normally says something like hopeful,
like, well, maybe when you earn more,
these things will be possible,
or maybe the market will take a turn
and we'll be able to afford a house on one income.
We don't like fight, so it's very amicable,
our differences.
You did say he mentions a house almost every day.
Yes.
That's a lot.
It is.
It's a dream.
Yeah, I can hear that.
I have a lot of dreams.
I don't know that I bring them up every day, especially if my partner doesn't agree with
the dream.
What do you think about that?
Yeah, that would probably get old.
I think Athena wants a house one day in the future.
I just don't think that time is right now.
And like I said before, over the last year, nine months,
I've been trying to grapple with that reality.
We are on the same page that a house is not worth filing bankruptcy over.
Yeah.
A house is not worth stressing out every two weeks over groceries.
It may be a dream, but that dream could turn into a nightmare really quickly.
The way Athena and Ari communicate is a major clue.
Here's what I noticed.
They clearly disagree about buying a house.
But then Athena says, we don't fight.
Our differences are amicable.
But you can amicable yourself into 50 years of not having an
honest conversation about money.
What she's really saying is we don't see eye to eye, but we're
polite about it.
This is one of the biggest clues in their dynamic.
The way that they are overly polite, overly careful.
You know, sometimes it's okay to disagree.
Sometimes it's even okay to fight.
Because when you spend all your time
focused on the other person's needs,
never your own, never being honest
about what you really want,
it doesn't actually create connection.
It creates resentment.
So listen, as I start to dig deep, when was the first time you had a substantive
conversation about money?
December, 2021, right after we started dating, we met in August and started
dating in November and then we worked at the same company and I like talking about
money and so I said this is what I make what do you make because I wanted to
have us rotate who pays for dates because I think it's important for there
to be some back-and-forth in a relationship I don't want the man paying
for everything. And what was your reaction to the question? I was I was
fine with that. It's pretty impressive.
Honestly, like you talked about money earlier than I talked about it with my wife.
And I love the way you were so forthright about it.
Hey, here's my vision with money.
I like to talk about it.
I want to put a light on it.
And I like your response to it.
Yeah, let's talk about it. I saw a future with Athena pretty early on.
So I was prepared to talk about things
that would represent a solid foundation.
Wow.
Okay, that's cool.
What were the next couple
of substantive conversations about money?
We talked about how much we each had in savings,
how we'd like to make decisions about money.
Ari had bought one of his dream cars and paid it off in three years and had worked really
hard and I thought that was really cool.
So I was curious, how does he have two cars?
How does he make that work?
So we kind of talked about actual decisions.
I was starting graduate school, how I was going to pay for that came up.
Normal conversations about your living expenses, when we go out, who picks up the tab?
And then kind of we started having more discussions about a house and down payments and debt and
that kind of thing.
Hold on.
What's with the tone talking about down payments?
I noticed there's a little voice that came out there.
What's that?
When we were starting to talk about this, he felt like if I wasn't able to match him
on a down payment, my name should not be on the house,
even if we were married.
So that would not be a joint asset.
I was stuck in this like 50-50 mindset.
I related 50-50 to being fair.
Everything down the middle, that was wrong.
Athena and I didn't have equal incomes.
Were you making more? Yeah. Okay. It wasn't by an astronomical margin or anything, but
Athena was still in school, paying her way through school and accruing debt.
Got it. So you had a belief until then that fair is 50-50. And then it sounds like the two of you talked about it a lot.
We spoke about it.
We had some disagreements about what does fair
actually mean to us?
Because it might not always mean cutting things
down the middle.
Yeah.
Because I was kind of like, okay,
so are you going to have half a baby?
Like there are certain things that you can't do.
There are certain things I can't do.
And if we're going to be fair about all of this,
then it's important that we understand the bigger picture
of what that looks like.
Wow.
It's a very mature conversation.
Athena's very forthright in nature.
It's pretty cool to hear because 50-50,
that's kind of an invisible script that many people
grow up having.
50-50 is fair.
Where did we learn it from?
I don't know, but it just kind of got absorbed.
And to hear somebody challenge that view, are you going to have 50% of a baby?
It's like, oh, you probably never thought about that.
I don't think most men grow up thinking about the logistics of having a baby, especially as it relates to finances
and childcare and all kinds of stuff. How long did it take you to adapt your view?
Nine to 12 months, at least. You think longer? Yeah. I was going to say it's hard to answer
that because still doing that every day.
How so?
Athena challenges my views on a healthy, consistent basis.
Maybe like a year and a half ago, it started becoming less prevalent because we were having a lot more serious discussions about getting married and our future and those kinds of things.
So I would say when we moved in together, that became a little bit more punctuated, our differences and my criteria.
What happened?
We were talking about how to split rent. 50-50 sounds fair to me.
My rent was less than half what our joint rent was going to be together. And I didn't see why I would have to move and pay more and be in school,
even though at that time we were making the same amount.
Why would I want to do that?
If anything, why doesn't he move to you and then he can save money?
But I'm guessing you didn't want to move to probably what was a smaller place.
Yes.
Apparently.
This sounds very familiar to me, honestly.
This is exactly what the conversation was with my wife.
And to do 50-50 would not have been fair to her
because the place I was living in was more expensive.
But to your point, Ari, 50-50 sometimes can be fair,
but other times is not.
So are you currently 50-50 splitting rent?
No.
No, not even close.
Okay.
Should we take a look at the numbers?
Yeah, let's do it.
Let's put them on screen.
As I throw them up there,
what was it like to do the conscious spending plan together?
We were talking about what our rich life would look like
if we had this amount of money.
Nice.
What were some of the ways in the last year that we really enjoyed spending money?
Like when was a good time that we loved spending money?
So like those sorts of things.
So like what could we see money doing for us?
Honestly great job because oftentimes when people do the CSP, the first mistake they
make is they don't do it together.
So right there, that's a mistake.
The point as a couple is to do it together. The second mistake people make is they think the goal
is to do it as efficiently as possible.
It's kind of weird.
It's not really the way it works.
We wanna take time, sometimes actually slowing down
is the most powerful thing we can do.
So I love what you did where you said,
hey, what did we enjoy spending money on?
What if we had this much? Yeah.
That's the real point of it.
The numbers are just the output.
All right.
And we can always change the numbers.
OK, let's take a look.
So let's see here.
Athena, can you read the word in bold?
Sure.
And then the number in full next to it?
Assets at $63,000.
Mm hmm.
Do you want me to read over to the side or?
Actually, why are these numbers split out? I have never seen this before. What did you do to my CSP?
So Ari and I don't have fully joint finances right now. We have very much his and hers and theirs.
So in the joint money is money that we have saved together or money from our wedding.
money is money that we have saved together or money from our wedding.
And then partner one is Ari and partner two is Athena.
And so everything that you see in those partner one and two columns are separated.
Why have you not combined your income?
Great question, Rameet.
That's what married couples do.
I want to get to that point.
What's stopping you?
Athena has debt and I want to help her pay that off. But if I start paying off her debt now,
I'm convinced we'll both be in a worse position
because I'll have drained my savings.
To me, that feels like starting from zero.
And how will she be in a worse position?
If we were to then combine,
then our savings would be so much less.
I would love for Athena to secure some kind of stable income before I start helping her
pay off her debt.
Can I ask you, do both of you want to combine incomes at some point?
Yes.
Yes.
Okay.
Does anybody want to combine it right now?
I don't.
Okay.
You don't because of the debt.
Athena?
I think it would streamline a lot of our discussions
if we had joint finances.
But I also think that it's kind of nice that we don't
because we avoid certain conversations
by not having a joint.
There are certain purchases that we can make
independently of each other
that we don't have to confer about.
And that is a nice thing.
I really appreciate the vulnerability in this moment.
Ari admits that he's hesitant to combine finances
because of Athena's debt.
And that is not easy to say, especially sitting in a studio
on a podcast, knowing that I'm going to ask a lot of questions
to dig in. I could tell he didn't want to hurt her,
and I respect that. But what stood out even more was how Athena responded.
Remember, she has repeatedly said she wants to combine finances.
But the moment Ari hesitated, she backed off, saying, well, it would streamline our discussions,
but it's also kind of nice that we don't.
That struck me as not being honest. I would rather she said, no,
I really want us to combine our finances. Here's why. What I'm seeing is agreeableness taken to an
extreme where you rewrite your own needs to fit someone else's comfort, to make sure that nobody
rocks the boat. And I've seen this before.
When someone is used to walking on eggshells, when they have been trained consciously or
unconsciously to keep things calm, they often start to lose track of what they themselves
really want.
There's a reason that Athena responds this way.
I think you're going to be surprised by her why.
I will tell you, I was shocked.
For now, let's get back to the CSP.
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Let me go through the rest of the numbers
so that I can understand the entire picture.
So assets combined are 63,000 and they're roughly equal. One has
36, one has 26. Investments are $136,000. Here we see a disparity. Partner one, I believe
that's you Ari, you have 84,000 invested. Partner two, Athena, you have 50,000 invested. Okay. Savings, $50,000. Ari has $28,000. And Athena, you have $3,000. Okay.
Another disparity there. And then finally, debt. Ari has zero and Athena has $20,000.
Notably you have $18,000 in joint savings. First of all, does any of this surprise you
seeing it? No.
What's the story here? It sounds like Ari has more money.
I think you have a higher income and Athena, you have been in grad school.
So you have some debt and relatively less investments.
Yes.
Although $50,000 still solid.
I've worked full time up until August.
And so for three full years of graduate school,
doing full time of both.
And so I slowed down investing to pay for school.
So school total has been about 60,000
plus or minus some fees.
So 14 of my debt is school and 60,000 is a car.
Wow.
So just so I understand, you've been working full time
while being in grad school full time as well? That's car. Wow. So just so I understand you've been working full-time while being in grad school full-time as well
That's correct. Wow pretty impressive very well done
Thank you, and you mentioned that your grad school in total will cost approximately 60k. Yes, but you only have
$20,000 of debt so you've been paying it off as you've gone through
So I've paid like 45 towards school out of pocket and then 14 in debt.
What do you make of this? Do you think that you are good with money?
I don't know if I can say yes if I have debt.
Because debt is?
Bad.
Is it?
Yeah.
Oh.
I grew up that way, but I don't know how I feel about debt now. I feel bad having it.
I feel like it holds us back to have it
It seems to come up a lot. I feel very proud of how little debt I've gone into and
Worked so hard to pay so much towards school and my living expenses and all of that plus we've been able to travel
Some so I feel proud of that. I'm very thrifty. What do you make of it?
I'm extremely impressed. Really? Oh, thank you.
Very. To hear, you know, first of all, you have $50,000 in investments.
That's not an accident. Nobody trips and falls and gets 50K.
You obviously did that consistently.
You had 60K of grad school debt plus cars and
Your current debt is only $20,000 and that's while being in grad school and working full-time. That's incredible workload
I understand that there's differences of opinion on what is fair, but just looking at this
I'm very impressed and also I note that you have this reflexive feeling about debt being bad.
I'm not so sure.
In general, okay, I don't love debt,
but it's not the worst thing in the world.
I'm trying to rewrite some of the scripts
that I grew up with.
That's a big part of what I believe
is important in life, is growing.
I love that.
Let's take a look at the income.
Ari, can you read off the combined gross monthly income?
$8,158.
Okay, great.
And what do you make of that number?
Well, it's gross.
So it's a little surprising to see almost six figures
combined income while our accounts are static in terms of growth?
Ah.
Let me just be clear.
Ari's personal account is static in terms of growth.
We have a joint savings account that's specifically for a house that has been consistently growing
since we moved in together.
That's what you'll see in the savings account for like the $18,000.
That grows because that's automatic.
We don't touch it. But Ari's personal savings account doesn't grow like it used18,000, that grows because that's automatic, we don't touch it.
But Ari's personal savings account doesn't grow like it used to
because some of that money is being put specifically towards a house.
What you're saying is very common.
A lot of people, they feel anxiety about their money,
and often people derive their feelings about money
from what's in their checking account. Literally, that is where the vast majority of people get their feelings about money from what's in their checking account.
Like literally that is where the vast majority of people
get their information.
What's going on right now?
Is that true?
Is that what happens in this relationship?
Yeah.
And that could be why I bring up my goals
and my dreams so often.
So your savings account is growing by a lot.
The one for the down payment,
which you want to get a house one day. Your
checking account is fairly stagnant and your conclusion is our finances are stagnant.
Yes.
Okay. This sounds very familiar. Like 90% of people I talk to, they don't take the whole
picture into account. What do you think about that?
The feelings are different than the facts.
Filling out the CSP was a really great process
because it did shed light on the gross income, for example.
Higher than you thought?
Higher than I thought.
Athena's investments higher than I thought.
Net worth for what it's worth higher than I thought.
Your net worth combined is $229,000 in your early 30s.
What do you guys think about that number?
That's impressive.
Ari's worked very hard.
Just Ari?
Not just Ari.
I think the majority comes from him.
Yeah.
Interesting.
If my wife and I were talking about our net worth,
I would say we've worked very hard.
We, we're married, we.
We.
Do you all see that with your money
Or is it we or is it my partner and me? We want it to be more from me to we okay? Yeah
It's not there yet. No, all right. Let's keep going so you make
$97,000 a year fixed costs
77% what do you think about that very high very high okay? I agree. It will come back to that
Investments are at zero.
Are you taking any deductions, 401k?
I'm not right now, Ari is.
You are.
Okay, how much?
6% plus employer match.
Okay, great.
Savings are at 11% and it looks like a house fund
makes up most of that, 500 bucks a month.
That's where the savings growth is coming from.
And then guilt-free spending is at 13% you know when I looked at this first I
wasn't sure I believe that number but talking to you I actually kind of do
believe it is that number accurate yes yes okay yeah because you are talking
about money frequently you are not surprised by some of these key numbers in
here you know that your fixed costs are high. That's why I'm getting the conclusion. So let's talk about your fixed
costs. 77%. This is right here explains a lot of the feelings of stress and
constant conversations about certain things. So why is it so high? Because I
make so little right now. Okay. I think we've done a pretty good job of keeping most of our expenses reasonable
I make very little right now because I am interning and I work only part-time
I graduate in three weeks and then I'm currently interviewing for jobs. Okay, so you make
$1,650 a month. We know that that is temporary. Yeah, how much are you gonna make when you get a job?
Realistically in the next two years, it'll be between 45 and 60, probably right around
53. And then after two years, it'll bump from 70 to 90. And then from there on out, it's
as much as I want to work.
For planning purposes, what's the number?
53.
Okay, great.
Yeah. All right.
Y'all looking forward to making some more money?
I don't know if it's going to change that much because I mean, it's going to be
going to debt repayment and savings.
So like, we're not really going to feel that different.
Damn, so depressing.
You're going to quadruple your income.
It's like, oh, I don't know.
I don't want to be that way.
I'm sorry.
Maybe another reason Athena's guilt free spending is so low is because it's hard for her to
not feel guilty spending money right now.
Yeah.
Fair enough.
Thank you.
Yeah.
So you said that the fixed costs are high because your income is low.
I agree.
Is there any other expenses that are disproportionately high? I don't think so. I agree. Is there any other expenses that are disproportionately high?
I don't think so. I agree. Your rent is within parameters. You have insurance and a car payment.
Those two are a thousand dollars. In a higher income couple, you could make that work. That
disproportionately affects you because your income is less than 100k. Then you have groceries, normal 550.
You have a 270 for therapy and 211 for subscriptions.
So look, we could cut some of this down.
Let's just play for a second.
We'll drop the subscriptions by half.
We'll drop it to 100.
Your fixed cost drop from 77 to 75%.
It's not a huge difference.
Really, the key driver here is income.
Ari, what's your take on this? When the income increases in a matter of weeks, what's going to change?
First and most importantly, our outlook and our attitudes will change because I'm really hoping that we feel a lot more freedom, a lot less burden.
Where would that freedom come from? If the money's all going to savings and debt,
how would you feel freer?
The fixed costs are around 77% right now.
If we can get that down to like 40%.
40%, okay.
That would add a lot of relief.
Ari also in the last two weeks, very proud.
He got a 9% raise at work and that is not reflected
on the CSP right now.
I forgot to update that last thing.
That's okay.
Should we do it right now?
That would be great.
All right, so what's the net gonna change?
Right now it's 4,060.
You can just add about $550 to that.
All right, watch the number.
Wow, that's a big drop from 77% to 70%. That's really good. Great job.
Thank you. Okay. Let's add the rest of this. What's the net going to be on your pay?
Yeah, it should be 33, I think, after taxes. 3300? All right. Let's take a look. Whoa.
What did that number drop down to? 55%. First of all, congratulations.
Amazing work.
Really shows the power of a dual income couple, especially as your income start to increase.
That's amazing.
You went from 77 to 55%.
It's incredible.
What will change on a day-to-day basis for you?
The debt payments are also going to kickstart in six months.
That will be important.
Now, bare minimum, which I'm not going to do, is $250.
Mm-hmm.
You can do more?
Yes.
I want to do $800 a month for that,
and then the same for our house fund.
And then I'll cut back on other things.
How do you both feel about this?
Well, it's heavy.
It's a lot of work to continue doing.
It doesn't feel like there's going
to be a break anytime soon.
But in order to reach goals, you work to continue doing. It doesn't feel like there's going to be a break anytime soon, but in order to
reach goals, you have to work hard.
So you kind of sacrifice now for the future.
Okay.
So it feels like purposeful.
It feels gratifying because you both have a goal.
It feels like the right thing to do.
Oh, you agree Ari?
Even though a house is what I really, really want is it doesn't feel right.
If Athena is contributing
that much more than I am.
Back to that 50-50.
Hmm.
What do you make of that?
Like, does it need to be 50-50 for it to be fair, even though years ago you talked about
that?
No.
Okay.
So she's paying more or saving more towards a house.
What's the problem?
Do you feel like I would make you feel a certain way
if I was contributing more to our savings?
That's a lot of money towards the house.
Yeah.
We'll be saving approximately $15,000 a year for a house,
which is great.
And we'll still have guilt-free spending.
And I'll be aggressively putting over a thousand dollars.
So the 800 going to the school loans and 250 like I have been doing for my car.
That'll be taking care of debt and we'll get through it now.
Sounds good.
I want to jump in here because something about this exchange just
doesn't sit right with you.
Athena has said clearly, I don't think we can afford a house.
She feels guilty spending money.
But now she's doubling down on making Ari's dream happen.
And then Ari rightfully gets uncomfortable with her trying
to contribute even more.
She admits it'll be hard, that she won't get a break.
And then they both smile and agree, it'll be fine.
Do you see how they are not arguing?
They're actually doing the opposite. It's like two magnets repelling each other.
This pattern where one person downplays their struggle and the other person pretends to accept it just to keep the peace
is actually exhausting to watch. It's not politeness anymore. It's actually contradiction.
It's inauthentic and it's actually making it really hard for me to understand what anybody
in this conversation really wants.
Listen now as I challenge them to stop avoiding the real issues.
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One thing I noticed is that the two of you
are very considerate of each other,
almost overly considerate.
I don't actually know what each of you wants for yourself.
Have you noticed that?
Oh, yes.
Have you thought about what you both want?
Like wave a magic wand.
What would you want?
I want to be with Athena.
I want above all for us to feel comfortable, whether that's in house or renting.
I also, I want a garage for my car.
I want a yard. I want to continue to invest and I want our
accounts to grow
steadily
Great. What about for you Athena?
What I really want is if we're gonna have a house to not feel tight
So I want to be able to like buy socks buy a throw pillow not have it to all be like
Microscopically looking at prices, which
is currently what I do.
I would like to have a little bit more flexibility.
I think money can be great when it gives you more options.
I would like to have a family with Ari, a house would be great if we're able to afford
it.
And then I would like one international trip per year and one trip stateside.
Love it.
Both powerful visions. I like it.
Do you think that the way that you are planning to allocate your new incomes
matches what you both just said you want?
The short answer is no.
Okay. Ari?
I would say yes. Just need to add a plan for a debt.
Isn't the plan for her to pay it off? 800 bucks a month?
Yeah. Hmm. All
right. I'm not sure what's going on right now. What do you guys want out of this
conversation? We want to make sure our next step when Athena finds an income
can be our best step. We took a lot of adjustment and conversations and it was
difficult to get to the point where I accepted that a house isn't
possible
Right now. Mm-hmm. So if a house isn't possible, then what can we change?
What can we learn from today's show to make sure that the future is?
The one that we both want even if it doesn't include a house
This is about how far our conversation goes if this is not going to be the way that gets us there
What do we need to do to build the infrastructure for that bridge to get to the place where we want to
be? And then specifically for this conversation here, we wanted to talk like one year, two year,
five year. So where would we like to be financially? Ideally, we would like to have kids in the next
five years. Ari has asked that I stay home with the kids for the first couple of years.
So there are like certain things that would need
to be anticipated costs with that.
I'm not saying that we need to put 800 down to my loans.
I know that they are ranging from 6.38% to 8% interest.
So like there's no point in putting off paying them down,
in my opinion. Does it feel like there's like a lot of different variables that you're talking about? It feels a little overwhelming
Yeah, very much. It feels like you both spin
Yeah, we have this but we but then there's debt but we have our finances separate but we want to combine them
But there's a 6% all the way up to a 12% and also kids
But then he wants me to stay home and I'm gonna be doing training We want to combine them, but there's a 6% all the way up to a 12% and also kids.
But then he wants me to stay home and I'm going to be doing training.
Yeah, it's a lot of different things happening.
How do you make a decision when you have that many things floating in your heads?
We definitely still working on that.
So I think that's where we're trying to do what's the next right decision.
And so that is me getting a job and us incorporating our finances together.
So what would it look like for us to have more shared finances?
Simplify the process there.
Do you like complexity?
Yes, of course.
Do you?
No.
Sure.
It's pretty complex to me.
Okay.
Athena, you mentioned microscopically looking at prices.
What's an example?
Yesterday, I was grocery shopping for us and I noticed the price of lettuce was $2
at one produce store and then it was $3.29 at the other one.
And I was so grateful I bought it for $2
because I had a thought that it would be cheaper there.
So I saved like $1.40.
You grew up religious?
Yes.
Which religion?
My family is Protestant.
And so we grew up in Baptist and Presbyterian faith.
We also were a part of a different sect of Christianity that some would consider to be
like a cult.
Really?
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah.
Are you a big family?
There are seven children and two parents. Wow, interesting.
Okay, are you still religious?
No, I'm a faith-based person,
but I don't attend church regularly.
Got it, okay.
How do you think that your religious upbringing
and cultural upbringing affects the way you see money?
Very moralistic.
So many rules about money. Very moralistic.
So many rules about money.
I was going through different Bible verses.
I was taught how they apply to debt.
Like what's an example?
The borrower is servant to the lender.
That's in Proverbs.
And then whenever someone asks and you're able to give to them, you should out of the
abundance of your heart.
And that's in Matthew.
The importance of tithing, putting yourself last.
I can see direct correlations to so many of those right here.
Yeah.
Okay.
Now things are starting to make more sense.
Up until this moment, the whole conversation has felt a little foggy.
Like I've been trying to find my way through a haze.
Athena tells me that she grew up in a religion that has been compared to a cult.
Now I'm starting to understand. Every so often I talk to someone
who grew up in a very conservative religious background and you can see the clues in how
they handle money, how they talk to their partner about money, how they even think about
money and feel about it themselves. As Athena said, it shows up for her in the smallest
ways, shopping for groceries, buying a cup of coffee, even just talking about buying a house.
And the message that we're seeing is, don't stir the pot.
Be quiet, be polite.
There are rules and you have to follow them.
Now in a minute, we're gonna come back to Athena's story.
But first I wanna know a little bit about Ari's background.
How did he learn to think about money?
Ari, what do you think?
Well, we probably couldn't have had more different childhoods.
What do you remember about money as a kid?
What did they say?
Just save.
If you get money for your birthday,
just put it in the savings account and just let it grow.
Okay. Did you like it?
As a young boy, no, because the money in the card just disappeared to me.
Yeah.
But when I was older, I was able to trust my parents
and listen to the lessons that they were trying to teach me.
And one day it paid off.
Would you describe them as middle class or lower, upper middle class, poor?
How would you describe it?
Upper middle.
Upper middle. Okay. That's interesting.
And what lessons do you bring from your childhood into your financial relationship today? Saving. That
was the biggest one and I think that could be why the checking account
number is so influential towards me and my marriage. What if you just put like
$5,000 more in your checking account? What would happen? That would be a bad
idea. Oh really? How come? Because the 5k from our
HYSA has higher interest. Higher interest! Yeah. We'd be losing interest. We'd be losing interest.
5,000 times 0.04 divided by 12. That's how much we'd be losing every month.
Thank you. Even though you would open up your checking account and feel so much
better every single time you looked in it, that would be unacceptable to you
because of the 15 bucks a month
that you'd be losing in interest.
Yeah.
Okay, so you bring that into your financial relationship,
which is save a lot, optimize your money, anything else?
I think I said house.
A house was ingrained in, back in 2005,
a house was like the greatest asset that you could own.
Plus most of the times if one person had a decent salary, then a house was a
possibility and could be a reality.
Times have changed.
What does it mean if you don't own a house?
If I don't own a house by the time I'm 40, I will have felt like
I've made a mistake somewhere.
Okay.
Rather not go further down the line, like 50.
What kind of person is 50 and doesn't own a house?
Someone who's perfectly content with maybe living alone.
Maybe they prefer smaller square footage.
Anything else?
Like what kind of person are you if you don't own a house?
That's a great question.
Like I said before, a house is a material thing. So? I like
material things, don't you? I do. I prefer if they didn't affect how I view myself. What does that mean?
Well, I don't like to put material things over my wife, for example. I don't want to do that to
myself out of respect. Didn't you talk about a house every single day? Yes.
A house is a material thing.
Isn't that talking about a material thing every single day?
Yes.
Yeah, it is.
You know what?
I don't mind the contradictions, okay?
I don't mind.
Humans are contradictory.
That's one of the joys I get in talking to us.
It's like, I'll talk to people, they're like,
I want this, this, this.
And then I look at their numbers
and they're literally doing none of those things.
That's happening here as well.
You mentioned you want travel.
There's almost no money put aside for travel.
There's all this money put aside for a house and potentially thousands and thousands more.
But Ari is saying like, oh, I've realized we actually can't have a house like anytime
soon.
So there's a lot of incongruence happening.
Think of the scripts
that you're both sharing from childhood like materialism is bad, but getting a house is
good. We have to be honest with ourselves. I want a house. Not having a house makes me
feel like a failure or it makes me feel poor.
Or like people are going to judge me. Yeah. I'm not going to be as much of a man. I'm
not going to be able to provide for my family family and there must be some of that because there was a conversation about you staying home
With the children which is a very traditional perspective and in a traditional perspective
Where you are earning the money Ari then surely you must be able to provide a house for your family
How much of that is happening here? I'm growing into that role, starting with rent.
Meaning you're paying more rent?
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
I'm curious, sometimes the partners know best.
They can read each other better than we can read ourselves.
Yeah.
Athena, what do you make of the way Ari was raised and how he brings those messages into
today's financial relationship?
I think that Ari was raised very comfortably.
Both his parents worked and are very hard workers.
And I think even though his mom stayed home
for a bit when they were younger,
he was given a very hopeful, idealistic view
of what could be, how great it is to own a house,
how manly it is to own a house, how manly it is to own
a house.
I think his parents worked very hard and a house was one of the ways that they were building
well.
And I think that when you're growing as an adult, you want to kind of show that to your
children and you want them to follow that path, even if each person's path might be
a bit different.
So I think the differentiation of what path Ari chooses to go on is where we kind of are.
You know, oftentimes we will follow our parents' scripts.
Think about the kind of advice that parents often give it.
Go door to door, hand out your resume, get a job,
stay there for like 30 years, get a pension.
And you're like, none of those things exist anymore.
And buying a house, I'm not saying it's a bad thing,
it can be a good thing.
The numbers are vastly different
and the economic systems are vastly different than when our parents were growing up. We're often on
one income, they could comfortably afford a middle-class house. Do we all agree that
financial situation is different for our generation than for our parents? Wholeheartedly. Okay. Yeah.
Great. So we may be able to follow the vision, maybe even the values of our parents, but copying
their exact approach probably doesn't work the same way.
I want to go back to you, Athena.
I want to know how did your parents treat money when you were growing up?
My parents never went into debt except for a mortgage.
My dad was the only person working.
My mom took care of all of us kids and homeschooled us.
And how did they handle money?
Very strangely.
That's a really hard question to answer.
One of my sisters used to do all of their downloads
for financials when she was 10.
My sister, when she was a teenager, did their taxes.
My mom tried to use cash for most of the purchases,
but was usually tight.
She'd go back if she was overcharged a dollar,
so she's very good at mental math.
She would borrow money from us kids.
She's also very thrifty. My parents,
I give them a lot of credit.
They raised seven very hardworking,
everyone is a hardworking kid, and they did it on one income without debt. And they never have had a credit
card, thank goodness. So.
Were they transparent with you?
Too transparent, I would say. Yeah, we always knew that we were tight with money. We knew
that we had to wait until Friday to get groceries or certain things.
How do you think that that upbringing shaped your view of money today?
I think sometimes I am concerned that I have a very small mind when it comes to money and
earning potential because not only was it really tight, it was also seen that like,
where your treasure is there, your heart will be also.
So you didn't love God enough if you were like materially wealthy or you had possessions.
And if your heart isn't with the Lord and you're not saved and then you're going to
have.
I see.
Very moralistic.
Very.
Yes.
Arguably values based.
You know, if you put your money here, we can see who you are and what you value.
I get that.
The love of money is the root of all evil.
You know, that kind of stuff.
Yeah. So do you bring that to this relationship?
I think I do unintentionally.
It's something I'm working on rewriting in my mind,
but it is hard when I have felt so constricted financially
because I have chosen not to go into more debt.
I'll second guess if we can get coffee.
First thing I do when I look at a menu
is look at all the prices.
You know, I want to make sure I get the cheapest thing
because I'm worried we don't have enough.
You clearly have enough to order a hamburger or something.
But we also have bigger dreams that we need to cut back
in order to save for because they are not possible
unless if we make sacrifices now.
And I am concerned that that is like a script of mine, that sacrifice is required for anything
good.
You know, I'm struck by the way that Athena talks about her upbringing.
It shines a light on her relationship with money and her relationship with her partner.
I can understand many religions are patriarchal.
So it's not a surprise that she is perhaps overly considerate of Ari's wants and needs.
But I'm also struck by the way she so casually speaks about her experience as a child.
These are obviously some pretty unusual experiences.
Since I'm focused on money, I don't really think it's my place to probe more.
But I want to say one thing.
When she shared her story, in some ways I could relate to it myself.
Specifically, the part about growing up in an Indian family.
Indian culture and my family, not a cult, but there is a strong cultural belief of keep
it in the family.
No matter what happens in the family, somebody gets a bad grade or gets suspended or there's
an illness, you keep it in the family. Somebody gets a bad grade or gets suspended or there's an illness. You keep it in the family. Many of us grew up with some type of cultural value that is never
written down anywhere, but it is nonetheless incredibly powerful. And they affect us. They
can affect us decades later. I'm wondering, does she realize how deeply her upbringing
has affected her? Because I don't know if I even fully understand the ways that my culture affects me to this day.
So when I hear Athena talk about her childhood, you and I realize there is something very, very unusual about it.
But I'm not sure she truly gets it.
And from the way that she walks on eggshells around money and in her relationship,
I really hope that she can continue exploring her
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Ah, wow, it goes layers and layers deep.
Yeah.
It's kind of a powerful admission, honestly.
The idea that you're proudly comparing the prices of heads of lettuce.
Which is so silly, yeah.
In the grand scheme of things, what difference does three dollars on your bill make?
But I was brought up that it would make a difference.
Mom did need the three dollars.
We didn't have that to spare.
Do you know?
Does three dollars make a difference?
I've thought of you every time I allow myself to buy coffee.
Oh, allow myself.
Wow.
Like as if you have a cage around you and once in a while you have to reach outside
and unlock it and say, I'm free to buy a $5 cup of coffee.
Yeah.
Wow, that's quite a metaphor.
Allowing yourself.
Is that how everybody buys coffee?
I hope not. Like I once ordered espresso. I didn't know what it was, but it was the
cheapest thing on the menu. Wow. So I thought it's 250 and regular coffee is 315. And so
someone else was treating me and I didn't want to be an imposition.
Right. So where's the reward? Because surely you must be doing something good if you order
the cheapest.
No, I'm just not doing something bad.
That is something that is still a challenge for me because I'm thinking through the filter
of what is right, what is correct, rather than like, well, what do I want with Ari?
What do we want to build together that maybe isn't going to be that kind of correct, perfect
morally? going to be that kind of correct, perfect morally. When we talk about what we want with each other, we try to speak in
positives as in I want to have this.
I want to have that compared to I don't want this to happen or I
don't want this outcome.
Yeah.
If we go down this path.
That's good, but it can also become very like airy fairy.
I want world love. Like specifically what do you want? I want to stay at a hotel where we have a
view of the ocean. Whoa. Have you all ever said anything like that? I've said I want
a garage like a million times. That's a good one. Yeah. I want a garage. I want to put my
cars in there. But that's so utilitarian as well. It seems like there's an
invisible script that materialism is bad, that wanting more is bad,
and that we have to take all the money we make
and we have to do X, Y, Z, A, B, C
before we can live our rich life.
We gotta earn the life we live.
Yeah, well you do earn it.
You make 100K and you're about to make 130 plus K.
So what's the day where the heavens open up and says like, okay,
you have earned it. Now you can buy a $5 cup of coffee.
I don't know if seeing the numbers will allow the heavens to open up.
Agreed. So what causes it?
Communication and honesty about what we what it is we want.
I think knowing what we want making a plan to get there.
So for instance, we had a very clear idea
of what we wanted for our honeymoon
and we ended up going scuba diving, which was so cool.
It was like being in outer space and that was expensive.
And we had the cash, we had planned ahead
so it didn't feel bad to spend it
because it had a pre-designated purpose.
And I like doing that.
And I think that helps us the same for Ari's birthday.
I wanted to do something really special for his 30th.
So he's always talked about wanting to fly.
I got him a flight lesson and we flew to his parents.
And so like that, I knew how much it would cost.
I was able to save it up.
And then we used that.
So that felt good.
I love that.
I do want to reflect that
in your savings goals right now you are currently saving $60 a month for vacations and $50 a month
for gifts. Meanwhile according to the CSP you're putting aside $1,300 a month for a house which
will take you at least five years probably longer to save for. We really focused on more of like the saving for the future rather than looking at like
what trip we want to take next year.
And I think that's something that we want, but it just feels less important.
Athena, a lot of religions are patriarchal.
Would you say that that was a situation for you growing up?
So much, yes. In the subsect that in which I was raised, everything goes through the dad and then the
leader of this group.
And so like what you wear, what you eat, like a woman couldn't cut her hair without her
dad's permission.
Your dad was going to pick out who you were going to marry.
My dad told us we weren't going to get married till we were 25, at least.
So like no dating, no boys, no interaction with a lot of other people.
Wow.
But we were still all musicians and we still performed a lot of places,
but we didn't like interact with peers.
Were you homeschooled until college?
Yes. All of us were.
Would you homeschool your kids?
Probably not.
Okay, got it.
And reflecting on how you grew up, it makes it to me even more remarkable that you sat
down and talked about money early on and said, hey, you know, how much you make, here's how
much I make, I want us to talk about who pays for dates.
That seems like quite unusual for somebody raised
in a patriarchal culture.
What do you make of that?
I have really great siblings and I went away to school,
which was very uncharacteristic.
All my other siblings lived at home, except one,
and paid their way through college.
I got to go away and live in Canada for a year,
and I went to a program that was about critical thinking
and really having those beliefs for yourself
and making those decisions independently.
And so because I was away from my parents and my family
and pretty isolated there,
I got to be challenged in a new way.
And then I was kind of like, I need to take more charge, wanted to be proactive.
Plus, my sisters weren't too keen on the whole patriarchal thing.
So even though parents may have a certain view that they want to have, there's only
so much you can really do in forcing the thought police.
Okay.
Let's go back to the CSP for a minute.
You've been leaning on your husband, financially
speaking, as you've been in grad school. How has that felt to you?
Terrible. I hate relying on other people. Financially, specifically.
Even your husband?
Yes.
Okay. That's interesting. And what about one day if you have children and you even mentioned
potentially staying home, you would be relying on him financially, right?
Yes, but that still is a little shaky.
In the back of my mind, I'm like, how am I going to work while I'm pregnant or when the
kids are little?
What am I going to be doing to make sure that I'm supporting us, but also having some autonomy?
Yeah.
Okay.
And your mom stayed home, right, with the kids?
Yes.
So you don't want to do that.
Is that the reaction to how your mom was financially?
I think money can give you a choice in your life.
And I want to have choices.
I tell this to Ari, I choose him each day.
Even though we're married, you still have a choice to stay with your partner.
So I think having the money gives you choices.
Got it.
And do you today feel squeezed with money?
Yes.
Yeah?
Yeah.
How does it show up?
You mentioned, you know, you go to the grocery store and you look at every unit price.
How else does it show up?
I'll call places for refunds.
I'll make sure that like we get student discounts on everything possible from like our internet
to any kind of media that we're watching.
So like being very meticulous about every dollar spent.
Yeah.
Does it feel good?
No.
Does it prevent you from feeling bad?
I don't know.
I also don't know how else I could feel
because I've not ever not felt that way.
Yeah.
I've always felt this kind of like squeezed,
like can you buy a new pair of socks?
Mentioned socks twice now. Yeah, how many socks do you have? Probably ten pairs? I run so I need to have like two pairs a day. Okay, so you have ten socks and if you if
We were at the store and you saw like a pack of socks. What would go through your mind?
You could sew up the ones you have at home
Yeah, or like socks aren't that important.
You can use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without. You know what I'm saying?
That's a more realistic mindset because it lets you just close that option off pretty quickly and
move on. Something kind of psychologically rewarding about telling yourself, I don't need that.
They feel like you scratch a bit of an itch.
Like I'm not like them.
I can make do with less.
I can be thrifty.
I can call around.
I can sew it up.
I'm resourceful.
I'm seeing a lot of nods from both of you.
Independence.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Knowing that if everything went south, you would still be fine.
I think you could probably go through life exactly as you are right now.
I think that the two of you, oh, shaking your head already.
I don't want to do that.
That's not much of a life.
That's why we're here.
It's such a survival mechanism though right now.
And I don't want that.
I love when people are generous.
I love being able to like treat my friends to a $45 brunch.
What if I told you you could?
I'm not sure I'd believe you.
That's a great answer. I love the honesty. Well, the two of you make $100,000 a year.
If you wanted to treat a friend to a $45 brunch once every three months, you could do it.
You don't even have to look at the numbers to know that it's possible.
Okay, frequency. Yep. Would you do it. You don't even have to look at the numbers to know that it's possible. Okay, frequency. Yep.
Would you do it?
Yeah.
Okay, walking through the situation.
You don't have to tell me the name of the place, but visualize the brunch place.
It's super cheap, but yeah.
How much is it?
Yeah, like I spent 11.13 for my breakfast on Saturday with them.
So you go in to this place for brunch.
You take your friends. on Saturday with them. So you go in to this place for brunch, you take...
Your friends, yeah.
Two friends, and they're each ordering like $7 for something.
Yeah, like $15 for like a breakfast platter
instead of like a $5 breakfast sandwich.
Mm.
Yeah.
And then the bill comes in, what would you do?
Oh no, I'd go to the bathroom in the middle of the meal
and I'd tell the waiter that I'm taking care of it.
So they wouldn't even bring us the check.
And then when we're ready to go, we just leave.
But your friends would ask, hey, we got to pay the bill, right?
What would you say?
And then I get to say, it's on me.
Let's do this again sometime.
Wow.
Yeah, I would love to be that.
I see people who do that and I want to be like them.
Okay, you could be.
So that was nice and theoretical,
but let's now make it real.
Okay, yeah.
So what would it take for you to do that?
I feel like the house dream,
I just feel like if I don't do that for Ari,
it's gonna let him down.
So I feel like if I'm not like scrimping,
then I'm gonna feel bad.
Like let's say only putting $500 a month
to the house.
Versus $800.
Right.
And so that $300 would go towards taking our friends out.
Ari, what do you make of that?
The house isn't worth it if Athena had to sacrifice so much more than just part of her
paycheck to get it.
And once we're living in the house, it's not like her mindset would
necessarily change towards money.
But more costs.
We have an AC thing that might break and our roof one day is going to break.
So let's keep scrimping and then we'll feel better when we have this much in
savings and that much in investments, which the day never comes.
And now that we're living in a house, we can have children.
Right.
Which will cost even more.
Yeah.
What's the pattern that you notice as you talk about money and these purchases?
Keep trying to look into the future that I think we both want.
Moving the finish line.
Yeah.
Moving the finish line.
Yeah.
So the number always increases, the goals always increase, you move the finish
line, you're never there. And like I said, you could go through life doing that. That's
actually how most people go through life. They go through life feeling bad about many.
I really don't want that for us.
I don't want that for us either. Seems like we're there right now.
Not only are you there right now, you've actually created a structure, like a crystalline
structure where when anything happens, it pulls tighter and it makes you even more scarce
with money. Oh, we saved up this much for a house. Let's buy a house. Now we have to
be even more scarce. Oh, we had kids, more scarce. Oh, now you're going to stay home
with the kids because more scarce. Do you now you're gonna stay home with the kids because more scarce.
Do you see how the more you succeed,
the more you actually lose?
We've designed a very sad trap.
Yes.
Hence the idea of unlocking your own cage.
I can open the door for you,
but actually you too can unlock it yourselves.
So let's step out of the crystalline structure you've built for yourself.
Let's just erase it for the time being.
What would it look like to have the most amazing memories created over the next 12 months?
Where I used to live was in the center of town.
And I think our dream, if we didn't buy a house, would be to spend a little bit more
on where we live and actually enjoy it.
So part of the reason Ari brings up a house so much is because he really doesn't like
our current apartment.
And if we were to move to an apartment that we liked with a garage that maybe cost more,
we'd have so much more fun.
Cool. What's next?
I would love to travel.
Where?
To Greece.
Okay. How long you want to go for?
I don't know. Two weeks.
Sounds good. What are you going to do there?
Eat.
Nice.
And look at the ocean and have dinner together.
We could have a room that looks out over the water
and beautiful with the sunrise.
Great.
So we got move a very vivid trip to Greece
and you're going to eat and look at the ocean.
I love it.
So we're talking about rewriting the script,
the narrative for what our money's going to look like
in a year.
Sometimes I think it would be beneficial for us
because we're both long-range thinkers
to be more in like the present and be like,
what would make us more satisfied in today?
Trust me, I know.
Right now, you are only living for the future and your future orientation is highly utilitarian.
It's pay off debt, get a house, kids logistically stay home for two years.
You could check the box on all those things and you won't feel any different.
That's life for so many.
And like I said, you're on track for that
to be the life for you.
On the other hand, you mentioned going scuba.
Like, you saved for it, it was incredibly memorable,
you both lit up.
We could do that.
The trade-off is some of the check boxes
you want to check off as quickly as possible
might not get checked off in the way you thought.
Sometimes I think that maybe for you, life is about efficiency.
The faster we pay off the debt, the better people we are.
The faster we buy a house, the more successful we are.
And if you want to, you could, we could put every single dollar you make towards buying a new house.
You can do it.
You can put every single dollar you have towards paying off student loans.
You could knock them out fast.
Is that the life you want?
I don't think so.
I think you could put a good chunk of money towards debt
and still live a good life.
I don't think that it needs to be at the detriment
of all these other wonderful things to like have no debt.
Debt does not make you a morally bad person.
I think you can be extremely successful
and live a rich life today with debt
and a richer life tomorrow.
There's only one catch.
You just have to have a debt payoff plan.
Yes.
I like to take feelings about money,
especially negative ones, from hot to cool.
Hot is anxious, worried, like I'm behind,
like I feel depressed. I like to'm behind, like I feel depressed.
I like to cool those down.
I have debt.
I went into debt purposefully so that I could pursue this career option, which I love, I'm
good at, and I'm going to increase my income.
I've made a debt payoff plan.
This is the right reasonable amount, which allows me to become debt free, us to build
up our savings and investments, and to live life.
What's the difference?
I love what you're saying because it also gives us time
to start reprogramming some of these scripts
about always being tight and always moving the goalposts
farther and farther and farther away.
So let's map that out because somebody making $100,000
to be $130K as a young couple, no kids,
they probably don't compare unit prices at the grocery store.
Look surprised.
Because I've never not done that.
Yeah.
So what would it be like?
I start experiencing what it is to want something, maybe choose organic over something else,
you know, and not feel so limited in our options and maybe even try cooking
something new with something that's a little more expensive.
You know, you could probably
accomplish all this by adding $50 a month to your grocery expense. $50 a
month would allow you to get an organic packet of crackers and a couple of other
things and you would spend marginally more on some produce.
Yeah, it's shocking that we're worried about crackers
when our gross income is so healthy
compared to our spending.
It is healthy, but the way we talk about it
is like, it's so bad, and we have no money
because we don't have a house,
and we don't have a growing checking account.
This is becoming painful.
It's been too vague for too long.
So imagine my surprise to find myself talking about the price of crackers.
Now normally this would be a special moment in hell for me, but I'm actually okay that
we are here.
That's because I'm trying to find a path, any path that gets Athena and Ari to let me
in. In every episode, I'm trying to find a path, any path, that gets Athena and Ari to let me in.
In every episode, I'm like a detective.
I'm trying to poke down different paths
and open up doors and see what's behind the curtain.
And usually people let me in.
They invited me here, so they genuinely want me to come inside.
And this actually happened a couple times today,
like when Athena talked about her religious upbringing and when Ari talked
about wanting to own a house, but it hasn't happened a lot today. For a couple that applied and went
through screening and came to New York from out of town, this all feels very unsatisfying.
It feels like I'm being blocked at every turn. And at this point, my feeling is they actually
did come here genuinely wanting help, but
they can't get over their own dynamic of being polite to really talk about the real issues.
You can polite yourself into a conversation where everybody says very nice things.
And then three days later, you realize you didn't actually ask the things you wanted
to talk about.
Truthfully, I love working with guests on this show.
I love what I do.
I've actually enjoyed talking to Athena and Ari,
but I can't help people who won't let me help.
So I'm gonna try something different.
I'm gonna stop taking the burden on myself
and I'm gonna shift that burden back onto them.
Watch what happens.
I don't own a house.
Yes, I love that. back onto them. Watch what happens. I don't own a house. Yes.
I love that.
And so can you tell me all the things
that you tell yourself about how behind you are,
how bad you are?
Also, I don't compare the price of Ritz crackers.
So I want you to tell me what goes through your head
because I do all of those things wrong.
You don't earn enough to have this,
and you could do better with less.
And you need to make more room for the other things
that are more important in your life,
because other people want them more than you want
this special cheese or this particular coffee,
because other people's needs are more important than yours.
I would never endorse someone thinking that way to themselves.
I think some of the thoughts that I think
or the way that I talk to myself is very twisted
and comes from a darker spot.
And I would hate for someone else to have that.
So it's painful for me to say it out loud to you
because I don't want you to hear that.
You shouldn't have to hear that.
You are important.
Your wants and needs are important.
If you want the cheese and you can afford it, go for it.
What else do you tell yourself that you didn't say to me?
If you want anything for yourself, you're greedy.
I kind of cut it off there because I don't like anything more.
And the sooner I shut something down in my head,
I won't go through all of that.
So you kind of put an end to those conversations
and you're saying, I don't wanna go into that dark place.
Yeah. Okay.
How often do you do that with yourself?
Well, I don't always cut it off.
I've gotten the ability to travel
and I've seen people who live in far worse conditions
than I do.
And I think about them.
And I think, what am I doing?
How am I not grateful for this?
Why is this not enough?
Athena, is there anything that you hear me saying to you
when you're looking at the crackers?
If I were more than you, I wouldn't have to think like that.
That's why sometimes it surprises me when you come home
with so many groceries that we don't technically need.
They're not a part of the meal plan
Like I got two packs of chicken. Yeah, or you got like chips and cookies
What's the culture in your household around money scarcity? Okay scarcity. Yeah, is it worry or joy?
worry worry is it utilitarian or
Beauty
Utilitarian. Okay. Yeah.
You've created a culture. Yeah.
People create a culture whether they do it intentionally or not.
It happens. Is that the culture you want?
No.
No. It's not the culture.
It's not a happy culture.
And the one that I really want.
For us.
And the kind of culture I want to raise a family in.
Let's fast forward say 10 years.
You have one, two, however many kids.
They're five years old, six, seven years old.
Who knows?
I ask them, what kind of culture around money have your parents created?
What would they tell me?
I would want them to say that we don't really think that much about money.
But when we do,
we get to choose how we spend.
We get to have some autonomy with that, even though we're young.
And money is a part of life.
It's not the only thing.
Do they see mom and dad fighting about money?
No.
No.
No, they see mom and dad discussing money and planning money and having kids be a part
of some of the discussions.
But yeah.
They see mom and dad smiling and laughing over money.
Yeah.
Celebrating money.
What was the last time that you celebrated money?
When I got my raise.
Oh, recently.
I took them out two weeks ago.
Oh, good.
Yeah.
Used some of that like $33 for a happy hour.
And we went out and made cheers to Ari working so hard. Ah, great job.
Okay.
So they see mom and dad celebrating money, talking about money, discussing it.
That's awesome.
What else, Ari?
They've seen mom and dad invest money intelligently.
Mom and dad have rules around money that they both respect and they trust each other.
I think whether or not you have a lot of money or not a lot of money, it's so important for
children to know how you can stretch a dollar and what it's worth.
Great.
What's different about the way you want your kids to understand your money culture versus
your actual money culture today?
A lot. culture today. I'm not. It's not. It's so much more focused on positive hope and making
those things a reality than it is about guilt, shame, control, fear. Kids like to win, but
so do adults. And the map that you have given yourself is that you are losing today.
And actually you can never win.
You sound like my therapist.
The key is to apply it to the money.
You can never win if you must have a house
and every day that you don't own a house, you're losing.
You must pay the minimum at the grocery store
and the minimum at the coffee shop
because if you don't, you're losing.
You must take all the money from this considerable amount
of raise and new income that you're gonna make
and you must commit all of it to paying off your debt
and to saving for a house because if you don't,
you're losing.
Oh, and even when you do all these things,
you're still losing because you didn't accomplish it
five years ago.
Adults like to win, so we have to change the way you look at money and behave with money to ultimately
change the way you feel about money so that you can win today and win even more
tomorrow.
I feel like you were able to accurately identify where our hangups were and where
they are right now as a couple.
And it wasn't necessarily in the CSP that we made.
CSP is just the output.
The numbers just reflect how you both feel
and don't communicate effectively about money.
I'd also think there's a lot brought
from both of your childhoods
into the application and the CSP.
Can you see that?
The idea of we need a house,
we need to put everything we have towards a house,
we need to be debt free.
Maybe, maybe not.
You choose if a house is your number one goal as a couple,
especially when it means putting aside
most of your discretionary income
and saving for years and years and years to get a house.
Also the idea of how you were raised, Athena,
in a religious family and the idea of, you know, how you were raised, Athena, in a religious
family and you kind of alluded to your mom borrowing money from kids. How do you think
that that shows up in your relationship today with money?
I don't want to ask Gary for money.
Yep. What else?
I don't want to rely on him.
Yes. Yes. Although you two are married, he's not your financial partner. You don't see him like that
No, actually vice versa as well. She has debt. I wish she didn't have debt
She needs to take care of her debt. We can combine income later. So operating independently. What else?
How much of the patriarchal culture that you were raised in do you think shows up today? I think I'm
culture that you were raised in do you think shows up today? I think I'm resistant to letting that become the norm and I'm concerned the
more reliant on him I am the more that that would ring true.
Mmm okay that's interesting. I don't think that Ari you're necessarily trying to control things.
I certainly don't think you're telling her when she can cut her hair. I don't think that's happening.
I do think probably Athena probably deferring a lot
to what Ari's desire for a house entails.
Like have you ever been explicit to say,
okay, if you want a house,
it means that I have to spend hours every week
examining the price of cheese
and we can't take a trip for another X years.
And when we do, I'm spending all this time
preparing lunches, et cetera,
and we're not gonna be able to do X, Y, and Z.
You ever said that?
No.
Would you?
I don't want him to feel bad.
Right.
What about you feeling good?
That's really hard.
It's really hard.
Yeah.
When I ask somebody like you, what do you want?
A lot of times the answer is I don't know
I know I want him to feel good and not be worried and to get a house
And part of that is the way you were raised and probably the way your parents were raised
Yeah passes down but in order to live a rich life
Together both of you have to know what you want if your money is separate
of you have to know what you want.
If your money is separate, especially because one person has debt, then you
already have a wedge between the two of you.
So at the deepest level, Ari, you don't feel it's fair for both of you to have this burden of debt.
Do you notice that?
Look at the layers, even in that sentence.
Debt is assumed to be a burden.
Why?
Aren't you going to make more
with this debt that you incurred? So is it a burden or is it a way of increasing your
earnings and learning something new? And then the idea that your money can't be put together
while there's debt. That's just not true. You could combine your finances and one person,
the one who incurred the debt could still pay for that debt, but you can simplify it.
It's very difficult to create a healthy culture of money in a marriage when your
money is totally separate because it was naturally his and hers.
I found the same thing in my own relationship.
We combined our income, but because we have a business, two businesses,
pre-nop, all this stuff, we had all these different things.
When we finally combined much more closely, just literally that night,
everything felt simpler.
Putting your money together would be super helpful.
If you both believe it's fair that Athena took on the debt, so Athena should pay
it off, I totally respect that.
I don't mind that.
And Athena would have the money to be able to do it.
It would be Athena's call on how aggressively to pay off that debt.
You could do it over a course of two years.
You could do over the course of eight years, 10 years.
It's up to you.
In terms of your savings, I find the savings are all very one dimensional.
House or nothing.
That's because the question you've asked is how do we buy a house?
But I'm not so sure that's the right question.
If you ask the wrong question, you're going to get a very smart answer to the wrong question.
There's got to be more to life than just saving for some utilitarian thing that your parents
did 50 years ago.
What's the thing that each of you is not saying that when you go home and it's two days, three
days from now, you're going to look back and say, I wish I said that.
Ari, would it be possible for us to defer a house
to a set period where we don't even have that
as like the main focus?
What do you think of that?
If we found an apartment that was a larger
that we both liked, that was suitable to your car,
what would that be like for you?
If we do that and make changes in our culture
and the way we view money as a team, we can do that.
We can defer the house for a set amount of time.
What kind of changes are you thinking?
We should combine finances a lot sooner.
Will you feel guilty until it's house time?
No.
Because that's going to be a large part of a healthy culture too.
I think if we found a place that we really liked and you had a garage, I don't
think that you would be thinking so much about a house. I think we'd get to enjoy
more of where we are today.
Not so succeeded on all this stuff.
You know, I think if you had a place for your car,
I think you'd be super happy.
I don't hear you saying you want to mow the lawn
or like install shelves.
I hear, I want a garage.
What if you just tried it for a year?
I love that.
This isn't life or death.
Try it for a year. You don't like it, move somewhere else.
These aren't existential decisions.
You're not buying a house, you're renting.
So lower the stakes.
Very few things in life that are that serious.
Buying a house is one of them.
Having children is another.
Major career decisions are a third.
But these, do it if you don't like a change.
Part of changing your entire dynamic around money will be actually building in opportunities to lower the stakes.
Maybe that means adding $100 to the amount you spend on groceries.
Maybe that means making sure for your guilt free spending, each of you has your own guilt
free spending money and you are required, you have to use it every single month or save
it.
It's up to you.
But that means you have to start developing those skills.
Okay, Athena, I liked your question.
Ari, what's the question that you're not asking that you two weeks from now will wish you
had asked?
What's the thing you're not saying that you really deep down want to say or ask?
I feel like we're so honest with each other.
Huh?
I feel like we're so honest with each other.
Definitely not.
Definitely not.
You two are incredibly polite to each other.
So polite that you are not honest with each other.
Being honest with each other would be Ari saying, I want a house because here's what
it means to me.
It could be, I want a traditional relationship.
I want to be the provider.
My cars are important to put in the garage and I want to be able to decorate X, Y and Z houses.
And I'm willing to work extra to get that.
And I really resent that you have debt.
That would be honest.
That hasn't showed up, but that's a lot of the clues that I've picked up.
I think you're picking up on something that is somewhat true.
I think we are very polite to each other. and Ari tends to be very honest with me. I'm a little bit more delicate in how I
Articulate my wishes. Yeah, you being direct would be Ari. Do you realize I spend like nine hours a week just
finding ways to save money on socks and lettuce and
I keep doing it and it actually drives me crazy.
But I don't know how we can stop
because if I spend $3 extra here,
that's $3 we can't spend towards a house 15 years from now.
And I don't like that.
And the last time I went scuba diving was eight years ago
and I wanna do it again.
But we have no possibility of doing it right now
because all our money goes towards a house,
et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
That would be honest. By walking on eggshells around each other, possibility of doing it right now because all our money goes towards a house, etc, etc, etc.
That would be honest.
Yeah.
By walking on eggshells around each other, you're actually not doing each other a service.
You're basically creating the shadow of truth in your relationship.
And that shadow doesn't usually work out well.
One person or both become resentful, kids definitely pick up on it.
Parents are not being honest with each other.
And honestly, the only way to grow is to be direct and cognizant of what you yourself
want. Here's what I want. What do we want? Tell me what you want. Let's hash it out.
We might not be able to get it all, but let's at least put it out on the table. There's
nothing wrong with articulating desire. There's nothing wrong with that. Okay, Theena, do you resent my dream of owning a house in the near future?
No, but it is a very firm dream.
It's not a close reality.
And I think that you need to recognize that.
Should I stop bringing it up?
That's up to you.
But I've crunched the numbers more than you have.
And if you want a house, you have to do all the things that are required to get there.
What we need for a down payment,
what we need for closing costs,
and then being able to budget each month on one income
for all the things that could go wrong with the house,
plus taking care of kids,
that's a lot to ask.
That's a big thing.
We'd need to like triple your income
and still have like under $400,000 house.
That was direct, I like that.
Yeah.
Also, I would tell my partner if they brought up a house
every day that was not real estate,
I'd be like, stop bringing that up.
There is a time and a place to think about getting a house.
In early 30s, when one partner is still in grad school
with debt is probably not the time.
Can we have a dream, but put it on hold for a little while
while we work some other things?
Of course we can.
And I love that you're so receptive to that Ari.
You know, there's a time and a place we can bring it up at our six month check
in, certainly at our annual rich life review in December, we can talk about that.
Where are we?
You know, I just want to reiterate, here's what a house means to me.
I'm super interested.
I want to put aside a little bit more, but I also understand this isn't
the only part of our relationship.
It's just one part.
It's just one part.
Okay.
In our conversation today, what surprised you?
How open Ari is to adjusting some of his viewpoints and that he really wants to put his money where his mouth is when it comes to making changes in our future and to live for today
and not forget that life is important now.
Beautiful.
Ari, how about you?
What surprised you?
Some of the feelings that Athena still carries
are prevalent every day.
That affects both of us,
but now we can address those feelings.
And hopefully in the six months or the 12 months check up,
those feelings won't be up here.
I hope they're down here.
Yeah, it's really good.
I love that.
Those feelings are probably always going to be there to some extent.
That's okay.
They were how you were raised.
They were what you were taught and observed for decades.
They won't disappear, but you will become stronger.
And what is now a battle at the grocery store will become much calmer and cooler.
What a relief.
And you know it's possible because all of us have had that experience in our life.
Something that was existential at the time.
Now it's a Tuesday, but it takes talking about it a lot and
de-stigmatizing it like, Hey, I understand that a house is
something really important to use.
Nothing wrong with that.
I also want a house one day.
I also understand that going to the restaurant for brunch, like
provokes a lot of feelings and anxiety.
That's okay.
Let's talk about it.
My hope is that we can be cool about these.
We can still feel what we feel, but it won't control us.
The word that I think of when I think of both of you
is empowered.
Empowered individually to live a better life today.
And that could mean moving to a place
where you have a garage.
It could mean thriving in your career and reducing some of the focus on saving one or
two dollars here or there.
Also empowered together to talk about what is our vision, not our parents' vision, not
our religion's vision, but what is our vision, not our parents' vision, not our religion's vision, but what is our vision.
That takes creativity because it means blank slate.
What if we could do anything?
Well, we have these deep beliefs, but what is our vision?
We get to create in ourselves and for our children.
So empowered individually, empowered together.
I wanna thank Athena and Ari for joining me today.
This was a challenging conversation.
And from hearing how Athena grew up, I can only start to understand some of those dynamics
that are still taking place today.
Now they did make some progress, but I think the truth is that the real work here has very
little to do with numbers.
It's about understanding the past and probably shedding some of that past.
That obviously doesn't happen in one conversation, but at least you can plant the seeds for long-term
change.
What stood out to me most was not what they said, but what they couldn't bring themselves
to say.
When I asked about their hopes or fears or dreams or even simple spending choices, the
answers stayed vague and rehearsed and safe.
Now, maybe they have real reasons for staying vague, but I also suspect that when you grow
up in an environment where your desires don't matter or where they are even punished,
you learn to suppress them. You survive by being agreeable.
I'm glad Athena is doing the work. She's seeing a therapist. She's trying to untangle those patterns. That is some of the most important work that anybody can do. I
think that today, even she realized just how deeply those lessons run. And Ari is steady.
He's thoughtful, but he alone is not equipped to help Athena with her journey. The question
I wish I'd asked is, what are you avoiding?
Do you want a house?
If so, do you have the courage to say what you want?
By the way, if you are thinking about buying a house and you want to know if it's the right
decision for you, I put together a free guide that walks you through the numbers and the
questions and the trade-offs.
You can download it for free at iwt.com slash house.
Now let's hear the follow-ups from Athena and Ari.
I was probably a little too obsessed with buying a house
in the near term.
And it was causing a lot of stress in the relationship.
So I'm willing to put that dream aside
if it means that I can live more fully and in the present with Athena.
I got a job and graduated, so our fixed costs go from 77% to I think 58% with changing nothing.
We're looking at apartments that have criteria that we both like for the foreseeable future.
We have a designated account that we'll be putting aside a certain percentage each month
for a trip to Greece.
We are financially literate.
We're doing well together, and we'll
be OK in the future as long as we keep living within our means
and we keep doing what we're doing.
This has definitely been a important step in our relationship and allowed both of us
to feel that empowerment to be more direct, but still in a kind way with money and with
other things.
Going forward, I'm not going to worry as much about just being polite.
I want to be completely honest and I trust that Athena will be able to hear me and we can have more direct, meaningful conversations
about our short and long-term goals moving forward.
So we're very conscious about what kind of culture we want to create and live in the now while still planning for the future.
So thank you so much. We're very grateful.
So all in all, feeling really positive and really confident with the direction that we're heading.
And I just want to say thank you to Ramit and his team. I really appreciate it. Thank you.