I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 219. “He’s so cheap it’s killing our joy”
Episode Date: July 29, 2025Angela (52) and Brian (52) have been together since they were teenagers and have raised four kids. Now as they approach being empty nesters, they’re stuck in a sitcom-style standoff: Angela loves b...argain shopping and dreams of traveling the world, but Brian clings to a decades-old belief that they need $1 million to retire and panics over every pantry purchase. Their net worth proves that they’re actually financially stable—but Brian can’t shake the fear of not having enough. Can Ramit help them rewrite their roles, align on what retirement really looks like, and find connection beyond coupons and control? In this episode we uncover: • Why Angela believes they’re ready to retire—and why Brian is convinced they’re still broke. • The decades-old advice Brian can’t shake—and how it’s been quietly dictating their entire financial life. • The performance dynamic they’ve fallen into—and how it’s masking deeper emotional needs. • The stark difference in how they define a “Rich Life”—and what’s missing from both visions. • How Angela uses frugality to feel responsible—and the cost of that invisible labor. • The moment Brian saw their actual net worth, and why it didn’t change how he feels. • What happens when couples keep score with their sacrifices—and how it erodes connection. • How fear of losing control is stopping Brian from building the life he actually wants. Chapters: (00:00:00) “I’ve been chasing that number since I was 18” (00:04:11) The emotional cost of saying no to everything (00:19:08) Ramit breaks down their numbers (00:29:21) “Why do we need eight jars of peanut butter?” (00:40:57) Trapped in the “justifier” and “decider” roles (00:50:34) Frugal lives, empty spaces (00:58:01) “I think we’ve just kind of… drifted” (01:06:04) How much is enough to retire—and what would make us feel safe? (01:18:42) Where are they now? Angela and Brian’s follow-ups This episode is brought to you by: LMNT | Right now, LMNT is offering 8 single serving packets FREE with any LMNT order. Get yours at https://drinklmnt.com/RAMIT Leesa | Go to https://leesa.com for 25% off sitewide PLUS get an extra $50 off with promo code RAMIT, exclusive for my listeners. Upwork | Visit https://upwork.com/save to get a $200 credit to put towards your next freelancer to help grow your business. Shopify | Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at https://shopify.com/ramit 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. Links mentioned in this episode • Get tickets for my next live events—September 14 in Atlanta and September 26 in Los Angeles—at iwt.com/events 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
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If you're on a date, when should you bring up money without it being weird?
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We're living too little of a life is the problem.
He just says no all the time.
I just cringe.
That's not about her.
It's about the spending the money going out.
I don't want the experience.
I don't need it.
One of my hobbies is also bargain shopping and it drives him crazy.
So he'll say, why do we need eight jars of peanut butter?
And I'll say, because they were a dollar 99.
So I'm actually saving us money.
How often do you talk about this?
Oh, almost every day almost every day.
Why are we wasting money on ridiculous food that no one eats?
So finally we went and we had a really good time.
And then when we left, he said, okay, that's off your bucket list now.
Right.
Jack, mark that off.
What was with that comment?
Stop adding things to your list of things
to go out and spend money on.
I need the controls, and that's what it comes down to.
Listen to this line from their application.
I just worry that life is passing us by
and we can be doing and spending more on life.
We never eat out.
Vacations are once a year.
He always thinks we are poor.
I need someone to tell him that we are OK money wise so he can live life before it's too late.
Today, I'm speaking with Angela and Brian.
They're both 52 years old.
They've been together since they were in high school and they've
been married for 28 years.
They've raised four children together and soon they will be
empty nesters.
But right now money is pulling them apart. Angela is saying, is this all life is going
to be? Now let's look at the numbers on their conscious spending plan or CSP. You can download
your own copy of the CSP for free at IWT.com slash CSP. It's the exact tool I use in every episode.
Income, one hundred and eighty eight thousand dollars.
Assets, nine hundred and sixty one thousand.
Investments, eight hundred and ninety thousand.
Debt, two hundred and ninety four thousand.
Total net worth one point five seven million.
Fixed costs, 72 percent.
Investments, 35 percent.
OK, at 52, we have some good progress here.
They're investing aggressively.
They've built real wealth, but 72 percent on fixed costs is a red flag,
especially at their ages.
I imagine they are feeling very tight with money.
And it also sounds like Angela's ready to enjoy life,
but Brian thinks they are broke, which looking at their numbers, that is clearly not the case.
I have a lot of questions.
Let's get into it.
Angela, in your application, you wrote, I think we are totally fine and can retire in
five years.
He thinks if we don't have 50 grand in the bank, we can never retire.
True.
Tell me about that.
I know our money. I know what we spend. We're very frugal.
And I just want to start living life a little bit more now, where Brian on the other hand
worries about every single penny and I think feels like we need to have a billion dollars
before we can retire. So my fear is that he'll be working till he's 80 and I'm ready to retire when I'm 55.
Is it a billion or fifty thousand dollars exactly?
Probably both combined, a billion and fifty thousand dollars.
How do you feel hearing the application that Angela wrote?
I don't know what the magic number is.
So in my mind, I have no concept of what I need to live whatever life it's going to be.
And I don't even know what that looks like.
You talk about the rich life.
I've been going through it all week in my mind.
What's my rich life?
I have no idea.
Okay.
And I'm trying to get grips on that to figure out what I need to say, okay, I'm
done, or I'm going to part-time or whatever I have
no concept of this. Is it a number? Years ago my father-in-law said well we need a
million dollars to retire I don't even know where that number came from. I'm still
trying to figure that out. Have you believed that number? I have believed
that number since he told me probably when I was 18. I mean I've been dating her since I've
been eight you know. Long time ago So many, many years ago when you first met, you heard your father-in-law say,
we need a million dollars to retire.
And so you took that to heart as an 18 year old.
I did.
Let's talk about where you are today.
So what is your current retirement plan?
We have a lot.
We both fully fund our Roth IRA.
I have a 403B because I'm a teacher.
I also have a pension and then Brian fully fund our Roth IRA. I have a 403B because I'm a teacher.
I also have a pension and then Brian has a 401k.
Okay.
Do you know your numbers?
Yes. I do.
Wow.
Okay.
I love that confidence.
Amazing.
I just cried the other day.
Is that true?
Yes.
I teared up inside because it had lost 50,000.
I didn't even want to look at it. I knew with the market was just crashing.
I'm like, I can't do it.
I only looked at it because we had to prepare for this.
Why do you think you both see retirement differently?
I think she feels that we're at a comfortable place financially right now,
or our plan going forward.
I don't see that.
I think we just need more.
I wish I would have started much earlier, obviously can't get that time back.
So we're just trying to max out what we can now, but I just think I need to keep
working until I feel we're ready, I guess in my mind and she's ready or sooner than.
We're living too little of a life is the problem.
We really are not spending any money.
Like we just don't spend money.
We tried to talk about when the last time we went out to eat, and I think it was two years ago.
Is that right?
Yes.
Where'd you go?
Third and Ferry, just a little restaurant that had like fun seafood specials.
We had a day off of work and we went like a Wednesday afternoon for lunch.
No occasion, just you both had the day off.
Yeah.
I probably begged him to go. What was that like? It was really fun. We enjoyed ourselves. We afternoon for lunch. No occasion, just you both had the day off? Yeah. I probably begged him to go.
What was that like?
It was really fun.
We enjoyed ourselves.
We enjoyed the lunch.
We walked around the little town afterwards.
We said, we're going to do this more often.
And it was probably two years ago.
What happened from that day till now?
Why have you not gone out to eat?
He just says no all the time.
We have food here at home.
Oh, paint the picture.
I have to hear this conversation. So do you bring up going out to eat? All the time. We have food here at home. Paint the picture. I have to hear this conversation.
So do you bring up going out to eat?
All the time.
Walk me through it. Let's recreate the last conversation.
Yes.
I said the other day, the melting pot has this special where we can do half-price fondue.
That would be really fun. Do you want to do that one night?
That's really nuts.
I have no interest in going out.
But it's fun and it's half price. Like I said, she has a
short bucket list of or a long bucket list of things she likes to accomplish, whatever it may be.
Restaurants being one of them, right? I have been out recently, like I'll take my kids out to Chinese
buffet for their birthday. Have one-on-one time. And how come you take your kids out but not your wife out? Um... Don't.
He feels like it's a requirement.
I feel like I owe them something.
This is part of your birthday gift, so to speak, and they enjoy going out.
Pack a meal.
Where are we going to go?
That kind of thing.
Just wait.
Yeah.
You feel like you owe your kids something for their birthday.
Right, right.
Okay.
What about your wife?
I guess I'm screwed on that one because I owe you
same level respects. What if it's not her birthday? Probably
we're not going out. Because I don't want to spend the money.
Okay, because we have food here. I just don't want to go out
as taking away from our relationship. if that means so much to her
Yeah, I'll make it a priority going forward
Maybe just quarterly will go out. Well, come on. I don't I don't believe that
You all been married 28 years, you know, it's a priority
She's been asking you like every week for the last 20. I know it's just I don't see a point
Can we do something else? That's my thought if we do do do something on my bucket list, then it's like a check mark.
So like I wanted to go to a happy hour recently and it was on a Tuesday night
and he was like why does it have to be a Tuesday? Why does it have to be a Tuesday?
So finally we went and we had a really good time and we enjoyed it and then when
we left he said okay that's off your bucket list now, right?
Check. Mark that off. So...
Okay, let's zoom in on that. What was with that comment?
Stop adding things to your list of things to go out and spend money on.
I know this was only six bucks. It was a flight of beer. It was a craft brewery type thing.
It was ambiance. It was us talking, connecting one-on-one type of thing.
I just cringed. It's not about her. It's about the spending the money, going out.
I don't want the experience.
I don't need it.
Maybe I don't need the alcohol.
Maybe I don't need the extra food.
I need the controls.
And that's what it comes down to.
Can we do this exact same conversation,
but can we just flip roles?
So in this scenario, Angela, you don't want to go out.
You don't want the calories.
You don't want the drinks.
You just don't want it.
And Brian, you have been wanting to go out for years.
Yeah.
You want to connect.
You don't care how much it costs.
It's not the point.
It's not even an expensive place.
Right.
You just want to go out and spend time with your partner.
So everybody get into their role expensive place. Right. You just want to go out and spend time with your partner. Yeah. So everybody get into their role.
Yeah.
I'm going to be Brian.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
And I would like for you to have that same conversation as each other.
Go ahead.
Yeah.
I can't wait.
Tonight we're going out to the proper brewing.
I'm not going.
What?
We planned on this.
No, no.
I decided I want to spend the money.
You know they have happy hour five to seven, free munchies, they have a band that's coming in.
Too crowded, I don't need the calories, we have food at home. We've been planning this for months.
I know but money, we don't need the food, we can just stay home, maybe next week.
don't need the food, we can just stay home. Maybe next week.
Cut.
Okay, that seemed to come very easy to both of you.
What did it feel like?
It felt great.
It's just excuses, making excuses.
There's always excuses.
To me, it felt like a bit of a performance.
And to me, also when I see you acting as yourselves, it also feels like a performance.
How does that strike you?
I feel as though like, okay, when we retire, officially whenever that is, we have time for that stuff.
Right now it's about, you know, you relax when you come home from work, I'll do my thing.
And it's kind of like, I don't know. What about the performance
aspect? Yeah I don't I don't know what you mean by that exactly. Like too
dramatic? Like like excuses? Like each of you is a caricature. Like Brian you are
the grumpy older guy who is like, we don't need that.
Yeah.
Like, we'll do it someday.
Just kind of a reflexive no to anything that's asked.
And even when you are begrudgingly dragged there by your wife,
then you have a comment at the end like, God, check it off the list.
That's 100% who he is.
OK, maybe.
Yeah.
That's, in my opinion, playing a character.
And then we have the wife who desperately wants to connect
with her husband, wants to spend time.
It doesn't matter how much it is.
In fact, when I asked to do something,
I'm going to emphasize how little it costs.
It's only a happy hour.
It's only five to seven.
And they have a live band.
Let me please convince you to do this with me,
please, just this one thing.
Exactly. Yeah.
A performance.
What if you just didn't do it?
What if you just chose to play different roles?
What if?
I'm not saying you have to, but what if you did?
What would happen?
You mean if I flipped the script and I started wanting to go out, just what we role play?
That kind of thing?
Maybe, that could be one, or maybe it could be a different role or maybe whatever.
But what if you just play different roles? Is that possible?
Yeah, I'm not going to say impossible. Likely improbable.
Okay. What about for you?
For me to change my role?
Yeah.
I feel like I already have because I don't ask as much anymore.
Or I will do the
things that are on my to-do list with a friend or one of the kids. We spend a lot
of time together it's just not those going out experiences. Yeah. Yeah. You can't
change that right? Can't change your roles? Anything's possible. Yes with you.
What's the vision for your retirement? I would like the travel. We've talked about getting an RV and
traveling across the country, but I also want to travel internationally. I just
really want to travel. Okay, all right. And Brian? I would say capital T travel is
as well as the top of my list, but it's gonna be on the cheap I think. What was
it like to do the conscious spending plan together?
I think the free work was a lot.
Like that overwhelms me.
Like we need to pull these numbers.
We need to look for this, go find this number, go find our last car insurance,
things like that, but putting the numbers on paper, I felt good about it.
And I think we worked good as a team.
Yeah.
She had it all set up, Grand Central station on the table there and just gave me a test.
How long did it take you?
Couple of days at least.
What it felt like because there was just numbers she was asking for that I couldn't
find right away.
We just wanted to make sure our numbers were super accurate.
By the way, Brian, when I asked, how was it filling it out?
I noticed you let out a big sigh.
I was relieved at the end.
Yeah.
But what about the part before the end?
Yeah. I was just on edge. Why? relieved at the end. Yeah, but what about the part before the end?
Yeah.
I was just on edge.
Why?
I'm getting better.
No, why?
Why was it irritable?
I don't want to see them as much the numbers.
Because?
Anxiety, fear.
You know, the back to that whole situation that, oh, is this all we have?
We don't have enough?
How are we going to do this?
My father-in-law said a million.
Are we going on the right track?
Are we going to get there?
There's no way we can retire.
I mean, these are the things that got me on edge.
This interesting, this reference to your father-in-law.
So you're 52 years old.
Yeah.
So you heard that like roughly 30 years ago.
Oh yeah. High school. How
interesting. These phrases that we hear when we're younger and they stick with us.
Yeah. They can alter the trajectory of our life. For sure. Of our relationship.
Mmm. That your dad making this comment can echo in time. Yeah. 30 years later
when you're talking about going to a happy hour. Yeah. And I don't even remember him saying that.
Is he still with us?
Yes.
Yes.
What does he say now?
I just dropped him off at the airport today. They're heading to Florida.
But what did he say about a million dollars?
The thing is that 30 years ago.
I did not ask him.
You brought it up once. You've never brought it up again.
Never again.
You let it guide your life?
Never again.
Hello, what is happening right now? Should we get him on the phone?
But I said, what I said to Brian this morning was,
why are you even thinking about his financial advice when he keeps his money under his mattress?
So he's not.
Dear God.
Yeah.
Isn't this fascinating?
Brian has been holding on to a single number for his entire adult life.
One million dollars.
That's the number Brian heard when he was 18 from his father-in-law.
And he just absorbed it.
He didn't question it.
He adopted it as gospel.
And that single number, that single offhanded comment has shaped how he sees money
and retirement and even his marriage.
This is the power of one offhand comment. It's not a spreadsheet. It's not a budget.
It's just a sentence that he heard that calcified into a deeply held belief
that decades later is now affecting every relationship about money with
his wife.
Sad truth is if Brian still believes that number is the goal, but he can't define what
retirement looks like or how much it costs, then no amount of money will ever feel like
enough.
That's why he can't enjoy a $6 happy hour.
You know, the most ironic part of this whole story, his father in law isn't even someone
he admires when it comes to money.
It's like taking dating advice from your uncle who's been divorced three times and lives
in his grandma's basement.
Just because someone says something with confidence when you're 18 years old does not mean you
should let that shape your entire worldview.
And yet Brian's been living by that million dollar myth
for over 30 years.
After this, I'm gonna dig into their numbers.
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Does he enjoy his money?
No.
Does he live the kind of life that you want to live?
No.
I don't even know what that is, it's not that we should definitely follow his advice
Let's look at the numbers, let's see here Angela
Yeah, can you read the word in bold gosh can I and the number in full next to assets?
No, I actually can't is it too small. I'll make it bigger. I see it. Okay, go ahead.
$961,000.
Great.
Investments?
$891,873.
$891,000, yep.
Savings?
$15,718.
And debt?
$294,342.
Perfect. Total net worth?
$1.574,000.
$1.5 million.
Okay.
How do you feel about those numbers?
I think they look great.
He never saw that 1.5 before.
I didn't want him to see that net worth before he saw it here.
To get his true reaction.
Wow.
Are you from the TV industry or what?
That's a classic producer move.
Get it on camera.
Well done.
And Brian, what do you think?
One point five million dollars.
Looks good on paper. Is it real?
Wow. A depressing answer to an otherwise seven figure number.
Let's not even take a second to celebrate it because we don't celebrate it.
We just worry about what's coming next.
Oh, doom and gloom.
Sound familiar?
Yeah.
It does.
Absolutely.
Well, the thing is, you're in your 50s.
You can keep living this way.
You can.
Or you can change the entire way that you individually relate to money and you collect it.
To realize that for your entire adult life, you've been working towards having $1 million. Yeah.
And you actually have 50% more than that.
You were worried 20 minutes ago.
Yeah.
We just discovered that your financial life is way different, probably better
than you thought, right?
It did not change a single feeling, not even for a second.
It did.
It was the second and internalized it.
You didn't see it.
It hit the goalpost always moves.
I don't even mind goals moving. I don't always moves. I don't even mind goals moving.
I don't.
I don't mind goals moving.
I mind if they're moving without reason.
If it's somebody who is just picking a number, holding their finger in the air, and then
I go, why?
They go, I don't know.
My father-in-law said it 30 years ago.
I go, that's how you're making decisions?
And like literally, we're not talking about just a couple of small decisions like happy
hour.
We're talking about what retirement looks like.
So today actually really excited to get a chance to add a little bit of intellectual
rigor to the way you're thinking about money.
Okay.
Let's look at the rest of these numbers.
Income, Angela gross monthly combined income?
$15,674.
Cool. So you have a household income of $188,000. What do you think about that income?
I actually think it's great.
I'm thrilled.
Who's the person who makes double the other? Brian makes double what Angela?
Absolutely.
Got it. Okay, cool. That's a very good income.
Great job. Fixed costs, alright 72%. Yeah. It's a bit high. Very high. Shall we take
a look? Yeah. Your mortgage is $3,500. Okay, we have a car payment of $641. No debt. Groceries
of $500 a month for two kids at home and two adults. Wow. Yes.
Nice. Nice work. Phone at 107 and subscriptions at six dollars a month. That
can't be right. It is. What's six? What are you getting for six? Two dollars I pay
extra for Apple storage. Okay. And four dollars he does the MLB app. Okay. That's
it? Only in baseball season.
Like I'm like, did you all leave a couple zeros off this?
No, no, it's literally six dollars.
No.
Do you have Netflix or something like that?
No.
None of that.
I do like Discovery and we have Hulu, but we put that up with our TV or something.
Yeah, exactly.
Cable. We did that with Cable.
OK.
Honestly, this is the lowest subscription number I've ever seen that is correct.
Like I have to give you a round of applause. This is actually amazing.
Thank you. Thank you.
I've never seen it. Look at the numbers. They look fake on the page.
Two, four, six. I'm like, what is this?
They do look fake.
No, it's accurate. I can't believe it.
You mentioned in your application, like we are extremely frugal.
We don't spend money on anything. And I think six dollars for a family of four
and two kids out of the house. Yeah. That is very frugal.
Thank you.
Okay.
And yet your fixed cost is 72%.
Yeah. Why?
It seems crazy.
Why do you think that is?
I often think is our mortgage too high,
but there's nothing we can do about that.
We actually pay extra in that mortgage.
So we pay 400 extra into that.
What's your interest rate?
3.3%.
Oh, okay. That tells me a rate? 3.3, 3.7 or something.
Your housing cost is okay.
It's 27% when we factor it all in.
Usually we like to see below 28.
It's very difficult to get that.
You have a very low interest rate and you're paying extra.
So it's probably more like 22 or something.
You do have $750 in utilities and you have insurance for $600.
You have car expenses for $641.
All that stuff adds up.
Even with a high income.
It's not horrible.
And actually we could drop this number right now.
Like I'll just drop it right now.
Instead of $3501, I'll drop it to $3101.
Yeah, you're at 67%.
Which is okay, it's not bad.
Investments at 35%.
Okay, so we have your post-tax and pre-tax.
So you're investing 3,000 bucks a month, that's good.
And your investments are $891,000.
Okay, very good.
As you get older, particularly if people started late
in life, that number needs to be high.
A lot higher than most people are comfortable with. So this is nice. Are you saving money for anything at all? Any savings?
Both of our checks just automatically get deposited into our savings and that's...
Then you use it from there?
Yeah, we just use it from there. Sometimes if our account gets high, high,
we'll take some out and like throw it into a CD.
Huh?
It's because I don't want that money locked up for a long time,
so I'm like, I could throw it in for six months and make four percent.
Yeah, don't do that.
Okay.
Who taught you that?
My dad!
My dad had taught me.
Get your dad. You know what?
We have your dad here.
Roll on the c-ball on.
Why is your dad imposed in this relationship?
And your dad who doesn't really use money effectively?
What is happening right now?
Oh no, I don't know.
Dad is telling you in 1968, you gotta buy a CD.
It's so good.
It's a liquid, but it's good.
What the f***?
CD make no sense anymore.
Do you spend any money guilt-free?
You don't really go out to a restaurant?
Maybe you go out to the happy hour place, you know, every month or whatever.
Couple of months.
Not much.
Anything else?
Needs, you know, if I need light bulbs,
the mower breaks and I have to fix it.
That's a rich life.
Yeah, I know, totally, right?
I love my light bulbs.
If something breaks, I need it to fix it.
He's going to your concert Friday night?
Yeah, that's the only,
that's one of the few things that I would do.
Hold on, hold on.
You're going to a concert.
Yeah.
I love that.
I noticed that when she said he's going to a concert, your immediate reaction was to defend it. Can you try it again and this time accept it? Yeah, I'm going to a concert. And? Oh, that's definitely guilt-free spending for me. I usually go by myself because I enjoy it. And so a band from the 80s is going to be playing in the Poconos.
Which band?
Winger.
What are they singing?
Hip Winger.
What did I know?
17, Madeleine.
This is from the late 80s.
Okay.
So you are having some guilt-free spending.
Yes.
It's just not properly classified as such.
It just kind of comes from this slush fund.
Exactly.
And that's why we don't necessarily put anything to savings, but all of our money goes in savings.
Yeah. But I do want to point out that if one or both of you got laid off, you have two
months worth of savings. That's risky.
Yeah.
Yeah. It's typically not that low. But we bought cars and then our financial advisor
told us because...
What? We were trying to time the market.
What the f***? I didn't know about this.
Tell me.
Well, this has just happened recently.
So typically we would pull $600 out of our checking account each month for both of us
to fund the Roth.
So he just said because the numbers dipped, why don't we just max it out?
So we took...
What is this guy worth for...
Hold on. Does this guy work for Northwestern Mutual or was he your high school buddy?
Which one? Which one is it? He's from my school district.
So he's preying on you and other school teachers?
These ****. Yeah.
Okay. So this is your financial advisor. Yes.
Colleague?
Not a colleague. That's like his job. He serves teachers.
Yeah. He He serves teachers.
Yeah, he just serves teachers.
And I did just find out because I hear you say it all the time about paying a flat fee
versus the percentage.
He definitely charges the percentage.
So he charges me 0.8% and he charges 0.9% to Brian because he doesn't have as much money
in that I do.
Do you think that's good or bad? I don't know
It's bad. Is it bad? Yes, it's bad. So you're paying to get horrible advice. I guess you're right
We trust because we pulled sixty six hundred plus sixty six hundred out of our checking account last week and fully funded our raw through
The end of the year. Well, that's fine. Okay, so that wasn't bad advice. No, it's not necessarily bad.
It's the principle of trying to time the market.
Yeah.
No credible advisor would tell you that.
Whether it's up, whether it's down, we want to do it consistently.
So I don't like that.
I don't like a 0.8 and 0.9% fee, which over time would cost you a lot of money.
I don't like that you got this guy through your school district.
I don't like a lot of this.
Okay.
How long you've been paying this guy?
Please don't tell me decades.
10 years.
But I mean, the positive about that is it started me investing from the day I started working.
I was a stay-at-home mom for 13 and a half years.
So I had no retirement.
I carry the health insurance and I fund
my retirement. And then what comes in the mail or comes into my checking account
every week is literally a thousand fifty nine dollars. That's what I make every
two weeks because they were my goals to fund my retirement. Which you know
it looks pretty good after just ten years. But yeah, that is where I met him. Okay.
Now I think I understand a little bit more about the numbers.
Let me ask about you.
Can you think of a time recently where you were not on the same page with money?
Oh my gosh.
If you want us to talk about the whole food issue, we argue about this all the time.
And I have a very...
I'm always justifying. I justify money all the time and I have a very, I'm always justifying.
I justify money all the time.
You're justifying this answer to me right now.
I am justifying this to you.
So I'm the shopper in the house.
So I do all the grocery shopping,
but one of my hobbies is also bargain shopping.
So in our area, we have lots of like
bargain grocery store type places.
So I just hit them once a week and
if something that I buy regular is on special I will stock up on it and it
drives him crazy. So he'll say why do we need eight jars of peanut butter and
I'll say because they were $1.99 and he'll say but we don't need eight and
I'm like but then next week I would go to the store and they'd be $3.99.
So I'm actually saving us money.
He doesn't like this.
How often do you talk about this?
Oh, almost every day.
Every day almost.
Every day.
It's not always peanut butter.
It's mozzarella cheese.
It's fruit snacks, Pop-Tarts, granola bars, protein bars.
Like how many granola bars?
How many can you count?
How high can you count?
Ten different types.
Ten different boxes?
Ten different boxes, yeah.
So ten boxes of six?
Yeah.
Okay, sixty granola bars.
All right, what else?
Let's move on to nuts.
Okay.
Okay, I don't know, planters nuts, cashews,
some other nut covered in something,
another nut covered in something.
So I just bought them and they were 99 cents.
So I bought six bags of the savory type and six bags of the cappuccino flavor.
And they will be gone.
There's 30 bags of chips.
You name any chip in the world and it's in our pantry.
Why do you get two bags of chips, not 30 bags of chips.
That's just the pantry. Why do you get two bags of chips? Not 30 bags of chips. That's just the pantry. When you see these
large volumes of snacks, what does it say to you? I just want to throw up. Okay. Why? Because it's
just wasteful. It's just it's gonna go stale. The kids don't eat it. She thinks she's eating the
kids or feeding someone. It's terrible. Why are we wasting money on ridiculous food that no one eats?
So I went in there and I just went ballistic. So I got a trash bag, 30 gallon trash bag full of anything
fruit snacks, gummies, fruit roll-ups, pulled that whole thing out like Santa and I threw it in the
bedroom and it sat in the bedroom for about six weeks. That's just one aspect.
If I go to my fridge in the garage, that's our alternate fridge.
There's 30 packages of mozzarella in there.
I don't eat mozzarella.
Sam doesn't eat it.
Larson doesn't eat it.
And she doesn't eat it.
I don't know who is eating this stuff.
Are two kids that come and visit for like two days?
I don't care if they were a dollar per package.
That's a dollar out of my gas tank.
That's a dollar that I'm not funding something.
That's his line.
It's a waste.
What's the line?
It could have been a dollar in the gas tank.
And what does that make you feel when you hear that?
It's frustrating because I have very much changed my ways.
So now when I am shopping,
it's almost like I have handcuffs on.
Like I'll look at something and- Well, how many handcuffs can you have?
You're buying 600 protein bars.
It doesn't sound like they're that strong.
She goes, I got handcuffs on.
I just take them off.
No, you don't.
You don't understand what I mentally go through in the grocery store.
So like I literally will pick something up.
I'll be like, wow, that's a great price.
But then I'll have to look at the calories because, you know, my one
daughter's gluten free and dairy free.
The other one's worried about this
He's worried about calories, so it's a struggle with every single product like this is a great product
I wish I could buy it, but I don't know who's gonna eat it
I better not and then I put it back so I tell you it sounds very dramatic
It almost sounds like we're on Broadway. It's a play
Each person is playing their part. Yeah, we have
Brian oh my god what yeah, right every time every time Each person's playing their part. Yeah. We have Brian. Oh my God.
What?
Yeah.
Right.
Every time.
Every time.
Pulling in a Santa Claus type bag over his shoulder.
And then we have Angela going like, you don't understand.
I used to buy more.
And also I'm saving money because otherwise I would be paying three times more for that peanut butter.
It's pretty funny. But is this the way you want to spend the rest of your life?
No, no. No, why do you do it? You must be getting something out of it
Because I'm set in my ways now with the way I shop Oh
Like I have to buy
Bargain shopping. I do that's who I am. Yeah, it's true.
Okay.
I consider it one of my hobbies.
Okay.
How do you think that this hobby is certain?
I feel like I'm being responsible to our household
because I feel like the four of us being able to eat for $500 is great.
I also think what would my other hobby be
and how much money would I be spending if I chose a different hobby.
And I physically cannot go to a regular grocery store and pay those prices.
Oh, you physically can.
I physically can.
I every other way cannot.
Wow.
Brian just saw his net worth for the first time and it was one point five million dollars.
Did you see it?
Angela had to stage the reveal just to get a live reaction.
And his response tells me everything
about his money mindset.
Did you see it?
Looks good on paper.
This is what happens when you've trained yourself
to worry for 30 years.
Even when you've been working towards a number
and you discover you have 50% more than that number at age 52,
even when you are financially okay, your default worldview is doom.
This is what so many people in the hyperfrugalista world don't realize.
If your entire worldview is about how little you can spend, how risky money is, how there'll never be enough,
then even when you have more than enough, your feelings will not change.
Now zoom out, look at what's really going on here. Arguments about peanut butter, trash
bags full of fruit snacks, spending time and energy discussing the fine points of mozzarella.
It's not just quirky behavior. This is what I call the sitcom dynamic. I write about it
in my book, Money for Couples. Now we all know a couple like this, the couple that bickers like it's their
love language. They jab each other. They finish each other's complaints. Everybody laughs
at dinner parties, but they just keep doing it over and over again. It's like a rerun.
And at first it's kind of funny. Might even be charming. But when you realize they've been doing this for decades, it's actually quite sad. Angela and Brian are playing characters.
She's the coupon queen in the grocery aisle who still somehow buys 600 protein bars. He's
the grumpy guy pulling granola bars out of the pantry and dumping them in the trash.
Both of these are performances.
They both think they are being productive.
This bickering gives them a false sense of progress.
But the truth is they are stuck in a dynamic that feels familiar and safe, but it is actually
eroding their connection.
Do you know anybody who has a sitcom dynamic like this where they both jab each other and they both
joke, but it's not really a joke. When you ask people in a dynamic like this, do you like it?
They go, no. So why does it keep going? Well, it's what we know. Even when something isn't serving us,
doing what we've always done feels more comfortable than change. And deep down,
I got to tell you, it's easy to argue about groceries.
But asking questions like, what do I actually want from retirement is way harder than complaining
about granola bars.
These dynamics are really hard to change.
But if you want to, you can change them.
I talk about changing your money dynamic in my new book, Money for Couples.
And if you want to learn how you can download the first chapter for free at IWT.com slash
MFC preview.
Money for Couples, IWT.com slash MFC preview.
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It's interesting that the hobby for you, the primary sense of joy seems to be how much
value can I get?
In other words, how little can can I get in other words?
How little can I pay and get good stuff?
But on your application you wrote we never eat out or go out
We save money whenever we can
Mm-hmm. It's hard to know we are financially fine yet. He thinks we are poor
That's all yeah, I agree. That's a problem, but
What role do you have in contributing to this?
Gosh, I don't know.
I don't feel like I'm doing anything wrong. I really don't.
Other than maybe the quantity of what I bring things in.
And like I said, I do feel like I have curved that.
But if you told me you can't bargain shop anymore, you need to just go to a regular grocery store and buy one jar of peanut
butter, that would go against every grain of my body.
I would rather not eat.
You mean that?
I really do.
Playing so small that your hobby is shopping in bulk for kids that are grown
and don't even really eat this stuff.
Husband coming in with his ho ho ho bag saying, oh this sucks.
Yeah.
What I really want you to see is the characters you're playing.
If they are the characters you want to play, amazing.
I'll help you play them even better.
But I actually don't think you like the characters you are playing.
And what you may not realize is you don't have to play characters at all.
What part were you playing?
The justifier.
Yes.
I need to gather all the information to convince my obstinate husband why to say yes.
Because by default he's going to say no.
And Brian, what role were you playing?
Probably the victim.
Like, do I have to do this again? Wow. It's something
quite chilling about hearing somebody talk about that with their... Again, that's tongue
in cheek. But, but, is it though? Because here I am talking about playing characters,
you guys have been married 28 years and the sitcom dynamic is not working for me. Like
tongue in cheek saying like I'm the victim because I got to spend time with my wife.
Oh, I don't find it funny.
And I think you guys have found a way to camouflage what is ultimately some serious disagreements and pain with laughter and jokes and jabs.
As I would never talk to my wife, like the role you're playing besides the
tongue in cheek role of actually something I think is quite hurtful is the
decider. Let her bring the data to me and I will evaluate it and decree what we will
do. Right. Why do you decide? Why don't you decide? Why have you agreed on this role where
you have to plead and beg? Oh, please let me provide you the data. Please decide in
my way. Why? She could always go.
I'd never stop her.
She wanted to do something.
That's not my question.
Anyone can always go.
Yeah.
You two are married.
She wants to go with you.
Yeah.
Why are you the one who decides?
I shh.
Why?
I'm not saying I'm not saying what should be.
I'm saying why is that role the one that has emerged?
Don't know.
Let's do something that doesn't requires money.
That's how I feel. I don't want to spend the money.
I really want my life to be full of experiences and doing things and going places.
And he more is a home buddy. And like you said, when he comes home from work,
he does want to eat dinner, hang with the kids for a little workout and go to
bed early.
Okay. Can you make it work with both of your visions?
Yeah.
I mean, as long as we book it in advance and it's not off the cuff and
financial piece is justified.
Oh, that it's, how do we tell if it's justified?
That's probably my, oh, so you're the decider.
He's the decider.
I see how you've created this tautology.
Yeah.
Oh, sure.
We can reconcile our mutually disagreed views if we plan in
advance and this thing happens. And also ultimately, I'm the
decider of whether it's financially justified or not. Do I
know about our numbers? No, I don't even know our net worth
as recently as 10 minutes ago. But I will decide. Does it sound
absurd as I say it out loud? It does sound absurd. And yet
you've been doing it for almost 30 years.
Yeah.
You want to keep doing it?
Wow.
I didn't hear a no in that.
That's interesting.
You know what?
Yeah.
Let me just tell you something.
If you want to keep doing it, I don't mind.
Trust me.
I'm not here to change your mind.
Please remember you came to me.
Yeah.
So if you tell me, Ramit, we actually like the way it works.
I won't change you if you don't want to change.
But I don't think you've actually ever thought deeply about the dynamics between the two
of you and money.
That food bill, that is the biggest overarching issue right now a
$500 I'm just saying the excessive purchase of
Fruit snacks what of we'll just fruit snacks
There's 30 boxes of cereal in that pan. I'm just saying why don't you take over the grocery purchases drop it to 250
It shouldn't be too hard, right?
Yeah grocery purchases. Drop it to 250. It shouldn't be too hard, right? Yeah, she wouldn't... it wouldn't fly. One, I don't have the patience for it. I really...
Oh. I do appreciate that she does. She's awesome at it.
Uh-oh. He's awesome at it. But if it could be 250, I mean surely that's a lot of money, right?
It's a lot of gas money, so why don't you just take it? Um...
She'll let you. I bet I could convince her. It may work. There probably won't be too much food.
It would just be the staples in the house
What's wrong? It would make me happy. We don't need waste. So we don't need waste cut the waste
Yeah, 250 a month you'd have 250 extra per month. That's a lot of money. Yeah, sounds good. What do you think Angela?
No, because it's my hobby. Ah
And I don't want him doing it
Sometimes I do send him to the store and I know this is like those three dollar things we shouldn't be worrying about but if I send him to the
store for something I worry about like how much is he gonna spend? Is he gonna
price check? What brand you gonna buy? Like what's he gonna get? So it's just
easier for me to be like I'm really busy but I'll stop at the store and get it.
Yeah. So I do want to control over purchases. The only time I go to the
grocery store would be for say my staples. I'm getting chicken or oatmeal or something that's safe because I've gotten burned.
You know, the dumb, the food husband that comes home, you spent $3 more on that, whatever
it is.
When you know I get it at this price, those days are over.
I'm not making that mistake.
I don't know that when I've done that last.
She's a great bargain shopper.
Awesome. Awesome.
But just slow down on the excessive nature of it that we don't need.
It ends up in the trash can.
It's wasteful.
And it's money that could go elsewhere.
Where would it go?
Go in my gas tank.
It would go in the Roth IRA.
It would go somewhere.
It would go in the savings.
You guys have a lot of good answers for every question.
You're just still not getting anywhere. You notice
that? I totally notice that. I've been fighting this fight for a long time. It's
not a fight. You both walked into a spiderweb of your own making and you
could easily get out at any time easily but you actually enjoy being in it. You
like the cobweb. You like being stuck and trapped.
You like the drama.
There's actually no reason for you to change right.
I mean, look, I actually offered to have Brian
take over the groceries.
And even Angela said, nope.
I know.
Cover me in cobwebs, I like it.
Even right there with an offer where it would have been
quite amusing and interesting to see Brian do it.
And would he have realized you can't cut a family of four down to 250?
He would have realized it instantly.
But you wouldn't allow it.
I feel like that's a role that we just felt.
It's just my job to do that.
Like it's his job to take out the trash, do the dishes.
It's my job to do the laundry and do the groceries.
I just, that would be hard for me to give up.
Okay. Don't. Again, it's totally up to you.
Yeah.
What do you want to do? Because right now, we haven't changed a single thing.
Mm-hmm.
It came out of your way. I want to help. What do you want to do?
I really want to be more on the same page with our future.
I never thought of us playing like these caricatures like you're saying and it freaks me out a
little but.
Why does it freak you out?
Because I feel like I'm a really real person and I don't feel like I'm playing a character.
I mean we've been together for a really long time and we have a really good relationship
and we have fun together.
Do we go out to eat?
No.
Do I wish we'd go more?
Yes.
But I think over time you just adapt and I've just adapted to that's the type of personality
he has.
And like I say, it's not that I don't do things.
I've just not always doing them with him.
Did you catch that?
Angela just told me she wants to get on the same page and then she immediately walked it back.
Well, we have a good relationship. We have fun together. I've just adapted.
When people are thinking about change, they usually experience a lot of resistance.
There's a voice in the back of their head that says, you're actually fine. It's not that bad.
We actually really love each other. Okay. You can love each other and still want to change.
What's really happening here is that that voice in your head
wants you to stay exactly as you are, not change,
because change is scary and uncomfortable.
Staying the same is comfortable.
Now, I'm not here to change a dynamic just to be provocative,
but I am going to push when I hear someone say, I want to change.
And then they immediately start convincing themselves that they don't actually want to
change.
Listen, as I challenge Angela on the very reason she applied to speak with me.
So I agree that you don't have to do everything with your partner and your partner is not
going to like to do everything that you want to do.
I understand that.
That's normal.
But you applied.
Why? everything that you want to do. I understand that, that's normal. But you applied, why?
Because I think we're at opposite ends of the spectrum
with our finances and I really feel like we are okay.
And like I said, I don't think we need to work
until we're 65 to then be able to travel.
So if I told you right now,
you don't have to work until you're 65,
would it change anything? I would believe you.
Okay.
Brian?
I would believe you.
But?
I think I need to work just for my sense of feeling I'm productive.
I don't want to be sitting home watching TV.
Yeah. I feel like I need to.
It might as well be an earner along with working.
I'm just worried that we've worked super, super, super hard
and our numbers are what our numbers are
and that we're living too little of a life.
I also kind of play the role with him
where I want him to live a bigger life. I also kind of play the role with him where I want him to live a bigger life. And
he's very happy being simple, but I want him to live that bigger life. A perfect example
is the other day, Wawa had free coffee day and he loves blueberry coffee. And throughout
the day, he had three blueberry coffees and he was so excited about this. And the next
text to him literally was, you know, you can go get a Wawa blueberry coffee any day you want
but he won't spend the two dollars on himself to get a blueberry Wawa coffee
Wow he's just making his life too simple. Wow. And that's sad for me. Yeah and I don't think I
deserve it just because I can make my own coffee at home.
That's not the point.
The point is if I need something, a light bulb, heart, piece of
weight equipment to better myself.
That's all I really need.
I don't need to be live more than what I need.
What does your wife need?
She needs more relationship connection, which I'm probably not
providing. I think the older we get, the more part we grow. I mean,
that's clearly what today shows. Tell me. That's money aside. I think until the
kids, and again I'm using kids an excuse, that's a poor excuse, but until the kids
leave, say they leave whenever in a few years, maybe that's where things
come back and it's a big maybe.
But I think we just kind of grown apart over the years for whatever reason.
And not even so much apart, more that kind of live.
More distant.
Can I?
Yeah.
First of all, that's pretty honest.
So I really appreciate that.
It's not easy to say. It's very courageous to say especially as a couple in your 50s and I'm sure you
have friends and others who have approached being empty nesters and that's
a scary time. And then as you think about that with retirement that can be
really scary. One, both changing or losing their identity.
That's not easy.
It's scary for women in ways.
It's scary for men in other ways and for couples.
You said that it's clear you've grown apart.
Maybe that will change when the kids leave.
Maybe, I hope it does, but you probably know couples who it's gotten worse when kids left.
I want to jump in quickly because it's pretty heartbreaking.
Angela sees how small their life has become.
And she's right.
It didn't happen all at once.
It happened two dollars at a time.
This is the hidden cost of decades of frugality.
First, you do it for a reason, then you do it out of habit.
And sometimes you start to believe you don't deserve anything else.
It goes beyond saving money on coffee.
And sometimes in situations like this, you start to realize how narrow your life has
become.
And then Brian said something that really stopped me cold.
He said, I think the older we get, the more we grow apart.
It's one of the most honest things that he says in this entire conversation.
And I think it's one of the saddest.
I see this all the time.
Couples are sharing a home, sharing a bank account, but they haven't actually sat down
and had a substantive
conversation about money in decades. Sometimes they haven't asked each other a
question in years. It's lonely. Money can keep us apart if we let it. When you
don't have a rich life vision, every financial decision becomes reactive. You
cut back, you track every dollar, you
argue over pennies, each of you retreating to your own corner of the ring because there's
no bigger picture guiding you.
Sometimes you might even start to see your spouse as your financial enemy. I suspect
sometimes money is a convenient distraction from deeper issues. If you're listening to this and thinking, we don't actually have a Rich Life vision
either, then I created a free guide to help you create yours.
You can do it fast and it is fun to do.
Download the free guide at IWT.com slash Rich Life.
Now listen as I challenge their perspective.
Such an interesting twist of human nature to see how people spend freely on some of the largest purchases of their life,
but then obsess over tiny little things like pudding cups.
I just spoke to a couple that has a house, pool, three cars, a jet ski, yet they buy discounted lunch meat that's close to expiring.
Just think about it.
These are the very same people who have a financial advisor who charges a nominal fee.
What do you think that nominal fee is?
Probably around 1% of the portfolio every year.
But if you're paying that type of fee, you don't notice it because you don't actually
get a clear invoice that you have to pay.
It just quietly comes out of your account every quarter.
And that fee can end up costing you over 25% of your total lifetime returns.
Now, if you want somebody to look over your financial plan, to help you build one, to
help you look over your investments and asset allocation, no problem.
I recommend it for people who have a complicated financial situation or they're nearing retirement.
Just make sure you find someone who charges a flat fee, not a percentage.
That is why I recommend FASIT.
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Again, that's facet.com slash Ramith.
I'm not a member of Facet,
and I have an incentive to endorse Facet
as I have an ongoing fee-based contract for cash compensation based on this
endorsement. All opinions are my own and not a guarantee of similar outcome.
Is it money that's stopping you from connecting or is that a convenient
excuse? That's a convenient excuse. The only glaring thing is that excessive, you know, smaller purchase stuff.
Can I just tell you right now, $500 a month on groceries is not excessive.
Your family spends half of what another equivalent family would spend.
Like you're not even close to excessive.
I never, I never personally understood why people spend so much.
That's okay.
You don't have to understand.
I don't, I'm just saying for me, I appreciate what you do, getting all the weekly groceries,
you're the best at it.
So I just settle for you being excessive in your own nature with stuff we don't need
and end up throwing away.
Can I ask it a different way?
Yeah.
Settling is one way to put it.
It's a bit of a loaded term.
What if it costs $100 a month for Angela to have a hobby?
Doesn't hurt anybody. She's entertained. She's productive and feels productive.
And once in a while you have some extra stuff you can donate or whatever. Hundred
bucks a month. What would you say to that? Yeah I never thought about it that way.
And that's actually what ended up happening. I took the fruit snacks and donated them to the school.
Great.
Kids loved them.
And within 10 minutes, boom, they were all gone.
I wish you would have just bought the fruit snacks and took them right to the school.
Yeah.
That would have made me happy because I'm donating.
She could have, but she didn't.
But it doesn't change anything.
$100 a month changes nothing out of $188,000 a year.
Literally nothing.
But what I think is more haunting truth is that your admission that you've drifted apart.
If you want to reverse that, I think you really could.
I think there's a lot of things you could do.
This is just one of them.
But it would take totally reconceptualizing your relationship with money, with each other.
What do you think?
Yeah.
Yeah, I think we can do it.
Oh yeah, no doubt.
How would you start?
Going to happy hour next week.
I guess I'm going to happy hour next week.
Can you say that again as if you wanted to do it because it's about connecting with your wife, not losing?
Yeah.
You know, I think the jokes have to stop.
Think of yourself not as characters, but as wearing masks. The mask that you each wear is what? Describe it
in detail. What is the mask that you wear when it comes to money in your
relationship? Probably just a frown. Debbie Downer. Yeah I like that. Keep going.
You know maybe a blank face. Maybe just, no reaction. You're talking to a wall almost.
Yeah.
Just like never getting excited.
What else is under the mask?
Hmm.
Temperatures, they're cold.
You know, they had to put a temperature to it.
Neutral, cold, arms folded.
Yeah.
Operating off an old script that some person said who
doesn't even know what they're talking about, a million dollars, then it turns out
you have more than 50% more, doesn't change a thing. Not particularly
knowledgeable about money. Right. Very perplexing. The decider is actually the
one who doesn't even know that much about money. Yeah. Kind of weird. All of
these things. Now can you flip it? take that mask off? What's under it?
Under it
Exuberant but reserved at the same time. It's almost like I want to do more but
Step on the brakes. Why I don't know. I don't know if it's old ideology
it's not comfortable in my skin as far as
Finances go that's why she handles it. I don't want to know where the money's going
But I yet I don't want to buy something unless it's needed It's kind of like you're kind of like you're a backseat driver
You don't want to grocery shop, but you want her to cut it by half
You don't want to know where the money's going not even to the point of knowing Your net worth, but you know that she's spending too much. Yeah
That's kind of this. Yeah, you're right
It's like if you want to have a strong point of view on the money, okay fine, but you got to get involved. Yeah
Angela any of this sound familiar or you ever tell him that stopping a backseat driver
not those words
But I usually say Tell him that. Stop being a backseat driver. Not those words.
But I usually say, we have the money.
We're fine. You don't have to worry about that.
We can afford that.
Does that ever work?
Sometimes.
Doesn't sound like it works.
He's even saying no.
Reassuring people who don't understand money.
Reassuring them by pointing at numbers never works. That I think is the main reason why I'm here.
Yes.
That is that is the reason why I'm here.
You wanted somebody else who's knowledgeable, maybe a man.
I don't know if it has to do with being a man or not to say, hey, she was right.
You're actually OK.
Hoping that me saying that reaches him and then like happily ever after you can go out
to dinner and take trips.
Maybe.
Maybe.
That sounds good.
Is that what you wanted?
I sometimes play like a mother role with him and like just going back to that coffee.
He's a very hard worker and we've saved a lot and I think we've lived a really good
life even though we've saved a lot. And I think we've lived a really good life, even though we've saved a lot.
So by me just saying we have enough money, we can do that.
And then him just always saying, no, I
never wanted to do it.
I just feel sad that we're not living
a bigger life.
And it comes down, I think, to money
for you a lot of the times.
It sure does.
And you're also a homebody, though.
So that sort of place.
Yeah, that's it's not always about
money. It's not always justifying for him.
Yeah. Yeah, I'm always justifying.
Why don't you stop doing?
OK, I should.
What needs to happen is.
Exactly that you're making the case for me.
Yeah, the minute either of you starts trying to advocate for yourself,
you start justifying for the other, especially you, Angela.
Like what this has happened like 20 times in this conversation.
So you end up spinning, spinning, and then you're back like you just run out of breath.
Mm-hmm.
It's not money. You have enough money. It's you have 50% more than he even thought.
Right.
It's not money.
Come on. We have to be honest with ourselves.
And I think you were making some very bold points about taking off the mask. You're exuberant.
But I think the word you're looking for is scared or nervous.
Yeah.
I'm nervous that if I go out to this dinner, I might like it.
Then I might want to do it all the time.
I enjoyed this coffee for free, but if I do it once a week, then I might do it once a
day and that's wasteful.
Yeah.
Yeah, for sure.
But you didn't let him get there and you didn't take the initiative to talk about it.
We're talking around it.
All of us. We've been talking around it for 30 years.
The reason that I'm getting like a little agitated is that you have a long life
ahead of you, many decades together, but also that time goes very quickly.
Yeah.
That's why I keep repeating to you, you can go on the way you've gone.
You'll take one vacation a year.
You'll play this drama in the pantry.
Your kids will leave. And that's it. But Angela, you wrote to me saying, I think we're living too
small a life. What would it look like if you changed your spending to better align with a new,
rich life? What would I do? Yeah. I know it's going to sound simple, but go out to eat.
I would even say just once a month.
OK, sounds good.
Where would you go?
Somewhere on my list.
Would you go solo?
Would you go together?
Oh, no, I would go together.
OK, I like that.
And the RV, if and when you get an RV, would that be your primary home?
Hmm.
I don't know that we could have it as our primary home.
You'd keep this house?
No, definitely not.
We've talked about once the kids move out.
Oh, you'd sell it.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
It's too big of a house.
How much will you make from it?
About 500,000.
Yeah.
And then find a smaller rancher. make from it? About 500,000. Yeah. And then find a smaller rancher.
Rancher. You make 500,000. Wow. You're going to be multimillionaires. Sure you're going to be able
to afford to eat out once a month as having two million dollars? Yes, we can afford to eat out.
Shall we run your retirement numbers? Yes. Let's assume that you retire in five years. OK. Would that be a fair place to start?
Mm hmm. Yeah.
If you retire in five years, you'll have one point four eight million dollars.
We assume a three percent withdrawal rate, not a typical four, three, because
you would be younger.
I want to make sure you don't run out of money.
This number is a little flexible, but just assume it.
Social Security plus a 10K pension,
you'd have about $84,500 in safe withdrawal income.
If you retire in 10 years,
you'll have $2.3 million as it currently stands.
If we assume a 4% withdrawal rate
plus Social Security plus a 10K pension,
you'll have $130,000 in safe withdrawal income.
What do you think about that?
That sounds better.
Yeah, I agree.
That sounds very doable.
What is your natural inclination?
Like right now, hearing these two things, what do you naturally feel?
Brian?
Work two more years than that.
Get to 65. Get to 65.
Get to 65?
Okay.
I would say it's about 63 or so.
So work to 65, you'd have even more.
Maybe it'd be 135 or something like that.
Okay, cool.
That's your natural inclination.
I hear that loud and clear.
Angela, how about you?
Same thing.
Five years wouldn't be doable.
I'll do 10, not 12.
Okay.
So there's a little bit of disagreement here and there.
Maybe one of you retires a couple years early.
Okay.
That's fine.
So I like this.
What we're doing now is we're going from the clouds to the street.
We're like grounding.
Yeah.
It's not just about feelings, these abstract feelings and 28 year old arguments.
It's like, no, let's look at some numbers.
Yeah. Start to get real.
Like time is ticking.
I will tell you that my natural inclination would be first off, I need to run the numbers
carefully because if we sell the house and we don't have a car payment and we're not
paying for kids to eat, but we're also eating out more and traveling more.
Like how much do we actually need? Yeah, because I'm not trying to make my biggest life decision based on vibes.
I need actual numbers.
So that's the first thing I'll do.
The second thing my natural inclination is, is how do we get there faster?
Yeah.
Yeah.
The thing is, you actually could get there faster.
It might mean incomes.
You could take some of your expenses, which are, I don't think, properly categorized.
An extra $500 a month could be found and put it towards investments.
And that could substantially change the outcome.
Do you see that when we're talking at this level?
Suddenly, fruit roll-ups is not the issue.
That's actually like so small and insignificant.
Maybe you need to buy less fruit roll ups.
Maybe. But telling Angela, stop buying fruit roll ups so wasteful won't do it.
But actually saying like, hey, if we're able to cut our XYZ costs by six hundred
dollars a month and direct it to investments, we can retire one year earlier.
Yeah. That's powerful.
Does that reach you?
Yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah, absolutely.
When you play small for too long, that's all you know.
Part of the reason I want to talk to you is to zoom out.
You're like, no, these are big, big life decisions.
Yeah.
Yeah, I hear you.
I agree.
The question I would be asking is how do we make the next 10 years magical?
Not wait.
I'll never wait 10 years.
I agree.
I won't even wait two years.
How do we make the next 10 years magical?
What's the answer to that?
Travel now.
Go out to dinner more.
Make moments count.
And it doesn't always have to include money.
Yeah. more make moments count and it doesn't always have to include money. Yeah, I think money aside, it's got to be us first, you know, money second.
This is the foundation.
This is why we're together for 28 years plus.
You know, this has got to work first before the money that's comes kind of insignificant.
I mean, it's just numbers. So how do you do it? got to work first before the money that's comes kind of insignificant.
I mean, it's just numbers.
So how do you do it?
I think I need to sort.
Say yes.
Yeah, I mean not given but compromise and that's what I need to do.
I think I need to be a better husband and compromise and
I think I need to be a better husband and compromise and you know kind of rebuild the foundation of this relationship.
Yeah.
How would you do that?
Be together more often.
Spend more quality time.
Well I think you spend a lot of time together right?
You go on hikes, you're at home, you see each other.
Probably not enough.
I mean because now we're kind of singular.
You know, we're our own separate islands after work for the most part,
unless we have a function or a date or something to do together.
So we have to build more time or reserve more time to do more together.
Thanks.
Should we just do it right now?
Because I feel like there's a lot of talk.
Yeah. We're here. Break it down for me. You know Sunday through
Saturday. When do you want to spend more time together and what is the time? Let's
go one by one. Go ahead. Pick a day. Pick a day. Wednesday. What do you want to do
on Wednesday? Wednesday is gonna be our designated take the dogs to local park that doesn't have any ticks. What's your reaction? I
think that sounds great. I love walking and the dogs would enjoy going for a
walk. Awesome. Okay Angela your turn. How about if we go back to the brewery on
Tuesday night or try the melting pot?
Let's just try it. We never did fondue.
Yes, dear.
Would you like to do that?
Is that once a week?
Well, we'll try it this week and see how we feel about it.
Cool. How do you feel about that?
Feel great.
Cool. You know what? I really like that answer.
I think sometimes we just have to say yes and our feelings change later.
It's like yes.
In fact, like I'll tell you my philosophy.
I think it is so rare for your partner to be genuinely excited by something.
Especially the later on you are in life.
You know there's like, there's a lot of just dreariness, you know, like life and kids and work.
It's difficult.
Honestly, what a gift that your partner comes to you and they're excited.
Could be the blueberry coffee.
Yeah, could be going to the melting pot.
My general reaction is yes, unless I'm like philosophically opposed to it or some crazy thing.
Yeah.
I'm just like, oh my God, it is so rare to see your partner get excited and lit up.
Yeah.
I want to reward that.
I want to do it.
And I want to see that kind of energy in my relationship.
Right.
And then she instinctively does the same for me.
Yeah.
That's connected.
So awesome.
I love that. Okay.
Brian, what would it take for you to feel safe enough to retire? I want her to
work or stop working whenever she feels though she is ready. I mean I can
continue to work forever if that's what it came down to. But based on the numbers,
very encouraged that maybe I don't have to work until I'm 70 or so.
Today, I feel
a bit relieved, I think a little bit more comforted that I have a little bit of protection.
The two of you have so many different options.
You two could retire at different times.
That's common, but I don't think any of it happens if you're not actually
connected starting right now.
Yeah.
Like you already mentioned, Brian, you've drifted apart and you continue
to drift apart as kids leave.
So unless that comes first, and that involves spending time together, which we just mapped
out, that's a great first drop.
It also means spending money meaningfully.
I agree.
Right?
And I think actually getting to where Brian is suggesting something.
Literally it could be we're going to Wawa and we're going to get two blueberry coffees.
It literally could be that. It actually does not matter what it is.
Yeah.
You're right.
You would be excited, right?
I would be, yes.
I'm in!
Yes, absolutely.
So getting those adventurous feelings back and whether it's joining a group together or trying some new stuff,
like that brings you way closer.
Yeah.
And if it costs 10 bucks or 50 bucks,
you will have millions.
Right.
Yeah.
That feels good.
All right.
What surprised you most during our conversation?
Angela?
I have a little anxiety about you saying us wearing masks
and being characters, because I feel like we're
very real with each other.
So that does concern me.
I have anxiety about that.
OK. Concern, anxiety, these are all things with each other, so that does concern me. I have anxiety about that. Okay.
Concern, anxiety, these are all things that I think are good to explore,
not hide away, run towards those, don't run away.
Brian, what surprised you about our conversation?
Just kind of peeling the layers away and kind of getting down to what's significant
and what is insignificant.
And we've determined that my concerns are there, just in a grand scheme of things.
When we zoom globally, we see its insignificance, that all my angst, anger, rage,
anger, rage, it's all for nothing when it comes down to it. Because 25, 50 years from now, whatever, it'll be just like,
why did you waste that time?
The mental anguish on that.
Just giving her more pain doesn't get us anywhere.
I think you need to peel back some of these layers
and get things a little closer or in touch with how you really doesn't get us anywhere. I think you need to feel back some of these layers and
get things a little closer or in touch with how you really feel and not just
put the wall back up and just lash out, which is the easiest thing. You know, to go to.
Yeah. How do you feel now versus when we first sat down to talk?
I feel a sense of relief. All right, we got this. We're kind of on the right path.
Let's shore things up.
Let's get them tighter.
And then things will just fall into place.
How about you, Angela?
What I'm happiest about is I think when I approach Brian with ideas
that I'll have more yeses now.
Nice.
Yeah.
So I think that's a really big thing.
It's part of us living too little of a life.
But yeah, I see things going definitely in a positive way
I'd like to give a little bit of homework if I could yeah, so you suggested Angela the melting pot for me
I think next week. Yeah
Brian I'd like for you to plan a date night within two weeks. Okay, so
it's
You to decide within two weeks but Brian it's up to
you. It's got to involve a little bit of money. Okay. And that's it. Keep it, keep it as
simple as that and as broad as that. You do whatever you want. Whatever is
meaningful for the two of you. But bring it up. Same way that Angela does. She
comes to you. She's got a plan. Same thing. Okay. What I want to do is balance a little bit more of these conversations about money,
about life.
I know, Angela, you've been doing a lot of, you know, like tracking.
Yeah.
And my hope is that you can zoom out and focus on the numbers that are meaningful.
Yeah.
I talk a lot about getting into $3 questions versus the $30,000.
Absolutely. These $30,000 actually matter a matter a lot, especially because you want to retire
earlier or have the option to.
So I'd like for you to get tighter with your numbers.
That means going through the book together.
I will teach you to be rich book and the money for couples book.
Talking about that, you can have a book club.
One of you can run one book, the other can run the other. I'd like for you to really absorb what happened
today. There's a lot of things. Conversations about roles and masks and
going together and going apart. It's pretty deep. I want that North Star. What
is our rich life? Do we have the ability to retire? Is one of us retiring? Are we
going part-time? Are we doing the RV? Okay, let's start there. Then we can figure out how to make the money work. In order to do that,
you got to start with what you felt today. Okay? Yeah. All right. Yeah. Thank you so
much for coming. I appreciate it. Thank you for me. You know, Angela and Brian didn't
come here for tips on grocery budgeting. They came here because their life feels too small.
Ironically, they have the money. If they wanted to retire in five, six,
seven years, they probably could. They could pay less on their mortgage. They could redirect
that money to investments. They could find an extra 500 bucks and accelerate their timeline.
That's just math. But our conversation has not been about math. A lot of us hide behind
complicated math because it's easier to say, I don't understand how a solo 401k works than admitting you and your partner
might not actually share the same rich life vision.
Or worse, you're afraid to even ask what theirs is.
And yet until you create a shared vision,
a shared goal, a shared why,
you're gonna keep repeating the same old arguments.
And you're gonna keep up the same performance
of the sitcom dynamic, which honestly is very difficult to change after
30 years of marriage.
And if you don't change year by year by year, you drift a little bit further apart.
That's the real cost here.
I don't care about granola bars.
I care about time and intimacy.
If they both decide to take a totally fresh look at their relationship with money and with each other, I actually think they could make dramatic changes in just a few months.
It'll be hard, really hard, but I think it's worth it.
Angela and Brian, I want to thank you for being so open, for coming on, having this
vulnerable conversation and being willing to stick with it for the entire time that
we spoke.
You've already proven that you can have these difficult conversations.
Now my encouragement to you is that it is time to build something better for the next
chapter of your life together.
Now let's check out their followers.
My biggest surprise that a retirement projection is estimated close to 1.5 million.
This number provides some comfort and relief as we prepare for retirement years from
now. The lesson I learned was that ultimately our relationship stability
is far more important than our financial stability. Another takeaway is the
importance of open communication and shared financial goals. In addition to
investing our money we need to invest into time spent with each other. Don't
sweat over the small stuff like fruit snacks.
Although this conversation was difficult for me, it taught me to emphasize personal responsibility,
mindset shifts, and the pursuit of a rich life beyond wealth.
Specific changes I've made thus far.
I'm in the process of moving both Roth IRAs over to Vanguard.
I am striving to be more respectful and kind to my wife to be a better husband by reducing negativity and open to sharing more life experiences and creating lasting memories. Much gratitude, Rameet. Thank you.
Our biggest surprise by far was that 72% of our expenses are fixed expenses. That's crazy to me. I thought we were really doing good with fixed, but that's just a crazy number.
I thought we were really doing good with fix, but that's just a crazy number. The other surprise was the way our relationship was portrayed.
I know it was just a snapshot of two hours, but I did have a lot of anxiety about it.
But then I realized that that was not really us.
We spend a lot of meaningful time together.
Maybe it's just not going out to eat and maybe that is actually not important.
My takeaway is I can't retire in five years, maybe I don't have to wait ten years.
My other takeaway was maybe it's not about the money.
We spend money on things that are meaningful to us, but maybe we're just simple people
that just don't spend a lot of money.
I think we're very conscious on the money that we spend and deliberate about it. So it's not that we're cheap.
It's just if I don't want to spend money on something, I'm not going to spend money on it.
I am setting up a meeting with my school to see if my pension, if I'm being charged for that,
if I am, I'm going to change that.
So I'm no longer charged.
And I decided to bump my $700 up to $1,000 per pay period.
So where am I getting that extra $600? I'm
picking up extra shifts at the amusement park, which is my bonus draw, because I actually
enjoy that. And if I can work and I enjoy it and make the little bit of money, why not?
The only other thing that we're considering is not paying extra on our mortgage and instead
just putting that into our emergency fund so we can build that. I received this email from Angela and Brett.
We're feeling stuck.
We've been intentional, but it's hard to tell if we've done enough or what comes next.
At one point, we thought we wanted to retire in five years.
Now we realize we enjoy our work.
We can take more vacations without giving it all up, but we still don't know what the
next step should be.
We feel like we've done our homework.
Now we're just waiting for our next assignment.
First of all, I really appreciate the follow up.
I want to gently push back.
I loved our conversation and I am here to be your guide, but nobody can design your
rich life but you.
Nobody can overcome your financial challenges, but you, and nobody
can live your rich life, but you.
I think that right now you are looking at this as an assignment, as if you are
waiting for somebody to tell you what the next step is. But the entire point, the podcast, in fact, the entire point of 21 years of my work is
that your rich life is yours.
I don't think you need help with the difference between a traditional and a Roth IRA.
If so, you can get it in my book.
I think you need to make decisions about what comes next.
You both of you together.
And when you do that, you're going to suddenly discover the difference in going passive,
which is so common for so many of us, to actively designing the kind of life you want.
Thank you again.
Please keep me updated and I wish you both the best.