I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 220. “I carry the baby, the bills, and the stress”
Episode Date: August 5, 2025Monica (36) and Michael (33) have been married just over a year and are navigating the pressures of new parenthood—but Monica feels like she’s doing it alone. She pays the rent, covers childcare, ...and works a demanding job, while Michael juggles three jobs and carries shame about his income and past financial mistakes—including an eviction he never told her about. Despite a recent 50% salary increase, Michael didn’t share the news, reinforcing Monica’s sense that she’s carrying the emotional and financial load. Can Ramit help them rebuild trust, communicate transparently, and step into a true financial partnership? In this episode we uncover: • Michael’s quiet shame about earning less • How an eviction early in their relationship shattered Monica’s trust • The $95K salary increase Michael never told her about • Why Michael’s “Swiss Army knife” mentality is sabotaging their relationship • What Monica really means when she says she wants a financial partner • Why transparency is still a major hurdle • The emotional gap in their relationship, and how it’s showing up in everything from birthday celebrations to debt payoff plans • What finally shifts when Michael shares his debt-free timeline Chapters: (00:00:00) “I feel like a leech” (00:18:28) Ramit breaks down their numbers (00:25:56) “I got a 50% raise…and didn’t tell her” (00:33:24) Why she’s always the last to know about his money (00:42:59) The secret that shattered her trust early on (00:46:26) He paid off half his debt—but still struggles to celebrate it (01:00:03) Torn between faith and financial goals (01:04:38) When earning more still isn’t enough (01:26:25) Are they finally rowing in the same direction? (01:35:17) Where are they now? Monica and Michael’s follow-ups This episode is brought to you by: Fabric by Gerber Life | Join the thousands of parents who trust Fabric to protect their family. Apply today in just minutes at https://meetfabric.com/ramit. Masterclass | For unlimited access to every class and 15% off an annual membership, go to https://masterclass.com/ramit Factor | Get 50% off plus free shipping on your first box at https://factormeals.com/ramit50OFF with code RAMIT50OFF Netsuite | Download the free e-book 'Navigating Global Trade: Three Insights for Leaders' at https://netsuite.com/ramit OpenPhone | Get 20% off your first 6 months at https://openphone.com/ramit 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
Discussion (0)
What do you do if your partner is cheap?
What do you do if you and your partner do not see money the same way at all?
What do you do if you have been fighting about money for a month, a year, or even 20 years?
Whether it's the third date or the 13th year, this September I'm going to break down how
these tiny questions about money can reveal
big clues about how you and your partner think about money.
Join me at Money and Couples Live in Atlanta September 14th, and I'll be at Love and Money
in Los Angeles September 26th with special guest Matthew Hussey.
Reserve your seat at IWT.com slash events.
I'm paying literally all of the rent,
all of the utilities for a while,
was working these crazy hours.
I would be home with the baby overnight.
Like, okay, this is all on me.
I would say to myself that I do feel inferior at times.
I feel like a leech.
You'll probably see Michael shut down at some point.
It's being defensive, protective,
and hiding behind the weight of everything
versus being able to ever come up for air.
I was like, do I want to marry this person?
Am I ready?
Can I trust him?
I have no idea how this guy really manages his money.
I just feel like I'm always still trying to catch up
to be part of the table
and not always feel like I can be at the table.
My bigger issue is not paying anything
towards rent and utilities for so long.
Is this working for you?
No.
Listen to this line from their application.
He feels like a non-partner.
And I'm starting to get resentful
about how uneven our finances are
for supporting our household.
Michael works three jobs,
yet Monica earns more
and she's paying for all the household expenses,
including childcare and vacations, everything.
And today I'm speaking with both of them.
Monica's 36, Michael is 33.
They've been together for two years, married for one, and they just had their first child
together.
Now, I am not a parent, but I have spoken to many, many couples.
And we all know that when there is a new baby at home,
money becomes stressful.
I read that application and the first thing I thought was, of course she's frustrated.
Of course she's exhausted.
Of course any new parents would be.
Let's look at their conscious spending plan, which you can download for free at IWT.com slash CSP. Household income, 200,000 plus. Investments, 88,000. Savings, 11,000.
And debt is 145,000, mostly student loans. Their fixed costs are nearly 70%. That number
really jumps out. When your fixed costs are near 70%, I already can tell that you are
overwhelmed. It feels tight because 70% of your money is already spoken for before the month even begins.
And yet Michael is working three jobs.
So here's the question.
Why isn't he contributing more to the household finances?
I want to understand what's going on.
Let's meet Monica and Michael.
Monica, in your application, you wrote something that caught my eye.
You said, quote,
I am paying for all our household expenses,
as well as daycare, vacations, and other things.
Caring the finances has been tough,
but not terrible over the last year.
However, I am concerned that resentment
may start to creep in soon.
Would you say that's an accurate description of how you feel today?
Yes.
Okay.
Okay.
Can you think of a time in the last few months where you were not on the same page about
money as Michael?
Probably two days ago when we did a CSP when we were preparing for this, I found out in real time that he had a couple hundred bucks that was going toward, I think you categorize it as a stock bait.
And then you said it was savings. The dollar amount is not the problem. It's that there was surplus I didn't know about. As the person paying for everything right now, like really feeling the pinch. I'm like, oh, so you do have an extra 200 or whatever the number was.
And I didn't know about it.
And you just, you made a decision about it without speaking to me.
So that kind of sucked.
Okay. If I were sitting there with a clipboard and I were writing down the feelings that I
could observe happening in those conversations. What would I write down? You'll probably see Michael shut down at some point.
Isolated, guilt, shame, defensive,
and not a feeling, but it's in there.
For me, I started off feeling optimistic.
Like, yes, make a plan, let's talk,
let's see where the money's going.
And then about midway,
I feel like I can't ask him any more questions.
So I start to get super selective about what I'm saying, how I'm asking it.
It feels like I'm walking on eggshells.
And then I eventually shut down.
So we both end up in silence and it's awkward.
Okay.
How does that conversation end?
Well, maybe we should talk about this another time.
If I'm honest, sometimes I'll say, am I even allowed to ask you more questions?
Or I'll say, well, I was just asking about row eight, eight, because I don't
understand what the formula is or the column wasn't labeled and I'm truly
just asking for understanding, but he takes it as I'm picking apart the numbers.
So it ends with like, well, this isn't working and we both kind of go our separate ways and then eventually come back to each other.
Do you talk about it?
Like you suggested.
The future is usually a few weeks later, it turns into a month.
So for example, it's June.
We haven't talked really about money in a formal way since maybe April could be March.
I think neither one of us really want to have the conversation again because we're scared
of how it's going to go.
But yet we still hold that optimism for change.
Michael, did anything that Monica just said surprise you?
No.
Can you think of a time in the last couple of months where you didn't see eye to eye
with Monica when it came to money? Yes, mostly, I'll emphasize about childcare or things that
is related to our daughter, whether it's Pampers formula,
things of that nature, maybe like groceries is another thing
because it's a collective but it's still very individual,
meaning she'll have $150 $ dollars allocated for groceries for this month
Mine is about two hundred two fifty and she's like well. I'm out. Can you supplant the rest or?
vice versa so it feels
Collective as an umbrella, but individual underneath of it
Hmm. Do you like talking about money with Monica? No, that's me as generally not the feeling
Okay, would you say that that happens every time you talk about money with Monica? No, that's that's generally not the feeling. OK, would you say that that happens
every time you talk about money or
sometimes?
Pretty much every time the
nitpicking because I do use an Excel
sheet and I was able to
start to be able to see all the
numbers.
So it kind of gives me that frame of,
OK, what's on my budget
that's actually important to me by
the scene of those percentages on
paper? Does it work? It does. It's definitely shifted the what's on my budget that's actually important to me by the scene of those percentages on paper.
Does it work?
It does. It's definitely shifted the way I have viewed money and viewed getting to this point because
I had very, very rudimentary level of budgeting.
I kind of just was able to get by each paycheck and then with Monica's help, it's become more of a actual system.
But let me ask you, if it works, then why are you feeling defensive when you talk about money?
Oh, it's pure ego.
It was such a deficit for a while.
And then when it finally got to be in a surplus, the surplus is maybe $3, maybe $7.
And that hard work, seeing that little bit of a green number is a very **** feeling. Why? Because in my mind, I would love to see it be
a hundreds, it'd be a thousands, thousands at some point of a
surplus versus you just got by. How would you describe the two
of you and your relationship with money today? I've said it
to her, I feel like a leech. I feel not equally yoked at asking permission or looking for approval before doing certain
things when it comes to money that might impact us.
What does yoked mean?
Coming to the table as equal partners, not being a roommate or a child that she has to
be responsible for,
but actually being her friend, her partner.
Can you think of another example?
Monica, what was another time in the last few months
where you disagreed about money?
So we have a one-year-old. She turned one on Sunday.
We had to find a new daycare for her,
and we disagreed on if she should be part-time in daycare or full-time.
For me, the conversation boiled down to the cost, right? for her and we disagreed on if she should be part time in daycare or full time.
For me, the conversation boiled down to the cost.
Right. So Michael said, well, I really would like her to be full time eventually.
And I literally said, well, who's paying for that?
And daycare is not cheap.
It seemed to me like if it were up to him, he would make the decision and figure out the finances later.
Can we recreate this conversation right now?
Sure.
The person who brought it up, bring it up now
and just run the play, run the tape like you did
just a few days ago, okay?
Go ahead.
Okay, babe, I found this new daycare person.
Her rate is pretty good for two days a week.
So I think we should start with that for the month of June
and then we'll see where it goes from there.
So what are we doing for the other three days of the week?
Well, my mom can probably wash her for those two days,
and then I work from home on Fridays
and can have her with me then.
Happy we found somebody on such short notice,
but I'm also not a fan of having mom who has retired
have to be one of our main daycare
providers on a weekly basis.
Yeah, I get that.
And I also want her to enjoy her retirement and she really enjoys being with our daughter.
It brings her joy and it's only two days a week.
If we go full time, I'm just not clear on where that money's coming from.
Understood.
How much would it be for five days a week?
Because I think the routine of having her go every day
is something that I actually would want.
Yeah, I don't know the number off the top of my head,
but it was probably at least 1,500 a month.
So what about if I worked a couple extra shifts
to make up that difference?
Love that you are willing to step up and do that.
And I know we've also talked a lot about work-life balance. You've worked so many jobs and so many hours
for the last two years, but at what cost?
We're already two shifts in the night.
It's hard to imagine you picking up
a few extra shifts a week.
Definitely understand it, but I actually don't mind
just picking up an extra shift or two
if it means that we have a routine for her
and then can utilize mom on that unique basis that something crazy happens.
And scene.
This is probably when I just changed the topic.
Thanks for taking me into that conversation.
Very helpful.
What do you notice about that conversation now that you just heard it for the second
time?
My priority was creating a solution
that allows us to have a routine
and not thinking about the money.
Whereas Monica's focus was, where's the funds come from
and let's just keep leaning on what has worked thus far.
Okay, that's a pretty good assessment, I agree.
Monica, what do you notice?
Yeah, kind of this ping pong back and forth.
Just try to like validate and understand where he's coming from.
And also like, thank you.
Thank you for wanting to work more.
Thank you for wanting routine.
And also, where is this money coming from?
If we did come up with the money,
could that go to savings or emergency fund or a down payment?
So I'm always thinking about, yes,
you can always get more money,
but can we invest that somewhere else instead of letting my mom have a five day a week retirement when
she actually loves being with our daughter?
Can I go out on a limb and guess that you've had dozens, hundreds of conversations like
this about some random expense?
Yes and no, because we have actually only been together for two years as a couple.
We've been married for one.
Okay.
And so how often you talk about these kinds of decisions?
It does happen, but not as frequently as you would think, because I think we're both still
like not trying to offend the other person.
What's that gesture you just did with your hands?
What is that? This is how I feel on the inside.
It feels like my voice is carrying louder than his sometimes.
Not only because of the income discrepancy, but just, I don't know.
I am also very new to this.
Like I just started making this salary a year, a year and a half ago.
It just feels like there's a discrepancy between us.
And so sometimes I try to shrink
so that I'm not overpowering him
because I already know about the money difference.
This is shrinking.
Yeah.
Never thought about that before.
I mean, I saw you shrinking just now in the role play.
Did you catch it?
Did not.
Several things happened.
Monica, you came with a proposal.
Michael, your reaction was
What about the other three days not wow like that's a huge relief. Oh my god great work. Who's this person?
I'd love to meet them. Just what about the stuff you didn't accomplish
So right there. What does that kind of dynamic does that set We actually saw it in the rest of the conversation because it quickly developed
into Monica proposing something.
Look at my body language.
Hey.
And then Michael going, I don't know about that.
You got any facts?
And that was basically how that conversation transpired.
Do you all notice that?
What the breakdown that you just said, yes, I can see that.
And they're like, I'm going to go out on a limb again and guess maybe that happens in
different conversations about money.
That's not the first time these conversations happen.
And there's never like a true resolution or like a true like way of path forward. Yeah.
It's actually a tough way to live because y'all didn't come to a conclusion at the
end, nobody really feels good about it.
It's kind of the worst of the worst.
You know, like you talk about it, you disagree.
It's not really clear why, like, why are we actually disagreeing about this?
We both have a daughter.
We love our daughter.
We want her to be taken care of.
Why, why aren't we like, why is this so hard?
And then she's got to go to daycare no matter what.
So if we're going to go through this discussion, why not have a positive one instead of one
where it ends up negative and then she goes to daycare anyway.
Monica, you mentioned shrinking sometimes because of an income disparity.
Do you make more than Michael?
Yes.
Okay.
And what is the income discrepancy?
The discrepancy is probably around 50 to 60k.
I say 50k.
Great. So, Monica, you make approximately $50,000 more than Michael.
OK. What do each of you do for a living?
So I work kind of nine to five as an operations director in a nonprofit.
And then on the side, I have a small private practice and mental health.
OK, great. Michael.
They job work for a financial firm night time.
More or less, I work for airline.
And then on weekends, I work for my church.
So three jobs.
And how many hours are you working per week, Michael?
Sixty four to seventy.
Wow. That's a lot.
That's less than what I used to.
Really?
I used to work close to ninety to a hundred and ten hours a week when it was just the airline.
Why'd you cut down?
Well, I said I want to see you more.
I need to see you more. This relationship doesn't work if I want to see you more. I need to see you more.
This relationship doesn't work if I don't see you more.
So decrease the hours for us to spend more time together.
Got it.
Okay.
Michael is working 64 to 70 hours a week.
Now, the first thing that comes to my mind is what do I get?
I'm putting my hand out up to the sky.
What do I get? If I'm my hand out up to the sky. What do I get?
If I'm working 70 hours a week at three jobs,
how much money am I bringing in?
Is it enough?
Would it be better for me to go work at one job that pays more?
Now, I understand that this is all easier said than done,
but that is exactly why people come on this podcast.
That is why people choose to work with a coach
or a therapist or a consultant. Because when you can get somebody looking at your situation why people come on this podcast. That is why people choose to work with a coach
or a therapist or a consultant.
Because when you can get somebody looking
at your situation from the outside,
sometimes that person can ask the questions
that someone who's deep in this situation
can't even think of asking themselves.
So back to Monica, who brings him this clear,
thoughtful plan for daycare,
but he doesn't celebrate the work that she's done.
The first thing he says is, what about the other three days? It's just like, what's missing? Oh,
you did that? What about that? I kind of understand. I don't think he's intentionally
trying to shoot her down, but this is a very common pattern. It's the equivalent of backseat
driving. And especially when you are working 60 hours a week, you're deep in the weeds,
you have a young child,
sometimes life becomes a series of logistical questions.
And sometimes those questions come out as skeptical
or even untrusting.
Notice, by the way, that when his questions result
in answers that cost more money, you know what he says?
I'll just work more.
It's this idea of I'll just fix the problem
by grinding harder instead of let's figure
this out together.
This is a really common way of dealing with problems, especially for men.
Men we are taught to handle money problems by just working more, buckle down, take on
another shift, do it alone.
If I'm tired, whatever, that's what men do.
They provide, don't talk about it, just fix it.
But that is not actually a healthy way of dealing with these problems
It actually doesn't solve the real issue, which is how the two of them are making decisions and that leaves Monica feeling alone
She's not actually asking about daycare
What she's really saying is can we make decisions together as a team and Michael whether he realizes it or not is saying
I'll handle it. Just stop
asking questions. This pattern is so common. I see it so often among straight couples.
It's also a very lonely dynamic. If you are struggling to talk to your partner about money,
I put together a free guide with word for word scripts that you can follow with these
difficult topics and you can download it for free at
IWT.com slash partner.
I still have a lot of questions about where Michael's money is going.
So listen in as we go through their conscious spending plan.
What do you say we look at the numbers?
All right.
What was it like creating the conscious spending plan together?
Wild.
Wild?
Whoa. How come? creating the conscious spending plan together. Wild. Wild?
Whoa, how come?
Well, because I actually, I thought it was gonna be a breeze.
So I use a budgeting app regularly.
Like it's my jam.
Love mapping the transactions.
Gets me going.
So I thought it'll be a breeze.
Like, oh, no, we couldn't get past the first line.
Why is that?
Because I guess it's a different way of framing finances.
That app is very much like day to day literal transaction
by transaction.
But the CSP is very much like, what are your assets?
And we just don't talk in those big picture terms.
For us, as a couple, and thinking about the future
and how do we meet our goals, we're
clearly going to have to come out of the nitty gritty
and think big picture. Seeing the net worth was tragic.
How about for you, Michael?
What was it like going through the CSP?
To me was the first time we had done something financially together, like seeing our finances
together for the first time, which made me excited.
Wow.
All right, Monica, can you read off the word in bold and then the number in full next to
it?
Assets, $22,000.
Investments, $88,000.
Savings, $11,000.
Get $145,700.
Total net worth, negative $24,700.
Okay.
What do you think about those numbers?
Womp, wom dollars. OK. What do you think about those numbers? Womp Womp. OK, she's putting her thumbs down
and making a like a depressed sound.
Why do you say that, Monica?
Because I want to say that most of his student loan debt, of course, but
it sucks. And like you heard him say, he works mad hours.
We both work.
I don't have many hours, but my job is extremely stressful.
Very demanding.
So for us to put in all this effort and to have very little to show for it, it
sucks.
Okay.
Michael, how about you?
What do you think of these numbers?
Not surprising given where we entirely are.
Yes, of course, seeing the net worth as a negative number is not something to be
excited about, but knowing that majority of that debt was student loan debt
with a little bit of credit card debt,
to me isn't the end of the world
because we still both have about 20 to 30 years
of earning potential.
When you talk about money, what is it more like,
how are we finding money for daycare, groceries, travel?
Is it that type of conversation?
Our monthly conversations are more budget focused
in like a spending accountability tool.
They're Michael's numbers, only his numbers
are in a spreadsheet.
So we definitely haven't had a collective side by side
asset debt conversation, part one.
Part two is a little bit more deep.
You're married, right?
Yes.
Yeah.
Do you two see yourselves as financial partners?
Yes, in theory. No.
Okay. So we have one no and I'm sorry, was that a yes or a no, Monica?
A yes.
Part of living a rich life is we have to be honest with ourselves and with the people around us.
It's actually okay if you do not have every single thing dialed in with your money.
That's actually totally fine.
But we have to be honest about where we are.
That's why I'm asking questions like, what do you think about your net worth?
Some people will look at that and they'll be like, this is horrible.
Michael said like, hey, it's understandable, but we have like many years.
And other people will go, yeah, like this isn't good.
There's no reason for us to have credit card debt.
On the other hand, once we started saving,
we made a big dent in our numbers.
Therefore, we know we have a plan to execute, right?
There's different ways to look at it,
but we have to be honest with ourselves.
So you are both married.
I would say just from our brief conversation so far,
doesn't seem like you're behaving like financial partners.
And it seems like you're behaving like financial partners
and it seems like you're both here because you want to change. Would that be accurate?
Yes.
Monica?
Yep.
Okay. Let's continue. I'm curious about the income. This time I will ask Michael to share
the combined gross monthly income number, please.
$19,417.
Okay, the two of you combined make $233,000 per year.
Did you know that number?
There's no way.
Okay, that's a no from Monica.
Michael?
No.
Thank you.
Keeping my statistics running.
50% of people I speak to don't know their own household income.
In your case, 0% know it.
Why am I seeing two faces of complete doubt?
It's not surprising for me only because of knowing the new job is now added into that
versus what it used to be as of February this year.
To this point, maybe because it's new.
So we haven't seen the fruits of that yet.
It's, we might be a month or two in,
but in my mind, it's way less than that.
Oh wow, in your mind.
Did you ever celebrate when Michael,
you got the pay increase?
No.
Just another day, huh?
Yes.
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Yes, when you first reached out to us,
Michael, you were earning roughly $60,000.
Correct. And now you're earning $95,000.
Correct. You had like a 50% increase in salary.
Correct. What happened?
The new job that I started in March is salary,
so that allows me to know at least every twice a month, what my net pay will be.
In addition to any hours or extra hours that I work with the airline.
This 95 K number is fresh to me.
I got me hearing it for the first time live.
That 95 K is your new annual salary.
first time live that 95 K is your new annual salary.
I thought it was more around 65 to.
75.
Did you all never talk about how much the salary increase was going to be?
No simple answer. No.
Okay.
Why not?
The reason we didn't talk about the salary increase because to me, it was
almost a swap at the airline. I could have made 60,000,
but the new job is salary 60,000.
And then anything I work in addition to the airport
can range from.
What's happening right now?
You're using a range and it's actually not serving you
at all because you have this super confusing thing.
You actually just skipped over the most important part
of this, which is telling my wife,
I got a 50% increase
in pay. That's like the only thing that matters out of all of this. But you skipped over it
because you overwhelmed yourself with ranges and details. How does that strike you?
I'm over strikes me. I guess, like you said, I'm always focused on what's next. Can't celebrate
being on a plateau or a mountaintop?
You gotta still know,
I feel like it's still more of a climb to go.
What is your role in this relationship, Michael?
I feel like a Swiss army knife
to be put to use on whatever's needed for the family.
Whatever role that can look like,
I can morph and be utilized in multifaceted different ways.
And how does it feel that you are a tool?
Actually feels good to be needed.
I like that.
It's kind of an interesting metaphor.
I like the value you said that you are wanted,
you are needed.
I like that.
Personally, I don't think I would want to be seen
as a tool that is picked up when it's needed.
And then, all right, nice to see you Swiss Army knife,
throw him in
the drawer and shut the drawer for another month and a half.
The reason that Michael didn't bring up this massive salary change is exactly what we are
exploring right now because of the way that he sees himself.
So if Michael, if you see yourself as a tool, then the implication is you can, number one, never zoom up to
see the full picture of what's going on because you live in the weeds. And number
two, it's actually not fun. You're just a tool, a tool that gets used to advance
the family to the next thing. Do, do, action, action, tactical, tactical, and then
you die. Kind of a dark vision but actually one that a
lot of men actually embrace. It's quite appealing because as men we see other
men doing it and men will even tell each other to say like you don't complain
you just get to work. You have a family your job is to protect your family and
provide for your family. Right? We've all heard that in some way Michael from
whether it be a movie, a
parent, relative, whatever.
And I don't mind providing for a family.
I don't mind protecting.
I like that.
That's great.
I also think there's got to be more to it.
And I think that this example is a perfect example of you being so in the
weeds that you're actually missing the big picture.
Your salary increased from sixty five to ninety five thousand dollars.
What did you do when you found out your salary increase by about 50 percent?
Went to work.
Yeah. What's next?
Didn't bring it up with Monica?
No.
Didn't bring home some balloons?
No, probably just ordered the email
that showed the salary increase before signing the paper. You got a 50% salary increase and
you didn't even talk about it? Correct. Do you hate your birthday? Absolutely. Yeah.
You don't like the attention. You don't like anybody like making a big deal of you, right?
You don't like the attention. You don't like anybody like making a big deal of you, right?
Yes.
Do you see how that relates to this?
100%.
I don't like being in the spotlight.
I don't like to be celebrated just like the Swiss Army.
I like to be useful.
Right.
Let me be useful.
Don't make a big deal of it.
Just put me to work.
I can work.
I can grind and that's it.
We don't need to make a big deal of it, right? Correct. I want to jump in quickly because Michael just gave us a huge clue. He sees
himself as the Swiss Army knife. Did you catch that? Useful, adaptable, quiet. Just give
him a task and he'll get it done. But I think what he's really saying is, I'm valuable if I'm useful, and therefore the implication
is if I'm not useful, I'm not valuable. The way of course that he sees himself being useful
is by working. The higher the number of hours, the more useful I am. Now a lot of people,
men and women, believe that they are only valuable if they're adding value. It's a
common script. It's one I grew up with too.
But what happens when you get older?
What happens if you get sick? Are you suddenly not valuable?
The script has a lot of implications too.
Don't share your wins. Don't talk about money.
Don't celebrate a 50% raise.
Just keep your head down and keep being valuable by being a Swiss army knife.
That's why Michael got
a massive salary bump and didn't even tell his wife. Because in his mind, it wasn't worth
celebrating it was just expected. That's the bare minimum. Because you got to keep working.
I want to encourage you to rewrite that script. You are valuable being alive. You are valuable just sitting down and relaxing.
You don't have to be up cleaning the house, scrubbing the toilets, cleaning up everything
on the kitchen counter, taking the kids to school, working 64 hours a week just to be valuable.
Sometimes you can just be. Now this is a skill I am working on myself. In the recent past, whenever I launched some book or program, my instinct was, what's next?
What's next?
It's just how I'm built.
What's next?
I never stopped to celebrate.
I never stopped to appreciate.
My wife, Cassandra, has really taught me how to slow down, how to acknowledge the win,
and even to say, I'm really proud of what I did.
I'm proud of Money for Couples. This book is amazing. It took a long time. It includes
things that no one has ever said about money and relationships. I'm proud of it and I'm grateful
that I could write the book for you. You are not just a tool. You are a partner and partners celebrate when things are good and they experience sorrow
when things are not.
But you can't connect on that level if your only thinking is what's next.
We're going to talk more about what it actually means to be a financial partner and not just
a provider next.
Imagine you had come home and you had said, babe, I did it, I'm so happy, I'm so proud,
I got a 50% increase.
What would Monica's reaction have been?
She would have been overjoyed.
She probably would have hit a high pitched squeal
or some extra, I've been over the top.
And I still would have just been like, that's cool.
And I'll be at work tonight later as well.
Right.
Like she's sort of like doing all these celebrations
and you're like the Indian spelling bee winner.
You know what I'm talking about?
The spelling bee winner beat one.
He won the entire scripts, national spelling bee.
And there's confetti falling on his freaking head.
And he's just standing there
with his arms by his side like this.
When I saw that kid, I was like, I love this kid and I deeply understand this kid.
I deeply get him because as a kid, that's exactly how I grew up.
I didn't know how to show feelings, not even joy.
Like when I win, everyone might be like, oh wow, A plus clap or whatever.
Just standing there like this.
Like, when's it going to be over?
That sound familiar?
Yes.
Okay.
So we can see this is about money, but it's about more than money.
And Michael, do you see what your view on the world?
I'm a Swiss army knife.
I'm here to work.
I don't like attention being drawn to me.
Do you see the effects that is having on Monica and your relationship?
Yes. If there's something to be celebrated, I'm not usually matching the energy that she has or brings to the table.
It's just business as usual or just another day.
And that can be a damper especially when she wants to celebrate meal wants to be that she later for me and I am closing that door of making it so she can't do that.
Great great great analysis you're playing at this level of energy which is okay there's benefits to that to you probably calm usually things don't face you as much but you're playing here and then when there are times to call for a higher level of energy.
You don't match it at all.
You actually kind of bring her down with you.
Okay.
I agree.
That's, that's problem number one.
Also, because how many, you said you have two daughters?
Yes.
Okay.
So I'm sure your daughters will pick up on that as they get older.
So that's one thing, you know, mom's the excited one.
Always got to work to excite dad.
Ooh, we got dad to smile once, but you know, dad's dad excited one. Always got to work to excite dad. Oh, we got dad to smile once.
But you know, dad's dad, that kind of thing, right?
I'm sure you can future pace and see how that affects them
in their future relationships.
But two, you're simply not effectively communicating
because your wife just found out about your actual salary.
That's a major problem.
Yes.
Like forwarding an email is not acceptable when it comes to a new job with a major problem. Yes. Like forwarding an email is not acceptable.
When it comes to a new job with a major salary.
That just doesn't work.
And it's actually causing some of the issues here.
I want to now turn to Monica.
Now that he makes 95, does that solve all of our problems?
It doesn't, but it makes me feel a lot.
I'm like, okay. Like the 233 number you shared earlier, the 95 K there's a different
energy associated with hearing that number.
Promising, optimistic.
It doesn't feel as broke.
Again, we have not seen the fruits of this new income and maybe we won't
for another year or so, but it just lightens the energy for me.
Still need a plan, but it just, it feels more promising.
All right.
Let's keep moving.
Okay.
So you're making $233,000.
Is that a little bit of money?
A lot of money, middle of what is that?
It's certainly not bad, but knowing that I carry 120 or 130 of that, you know, from
an income describing to level a lot of our financial monthly talks are focused on
Michael's financial spending.
They're not these big picture conversations.
And there's history there.
But I will pause.
Let's look at the spending so that I can understand a little bit more about where you're coming
from.
Okay, your fixed costs are at 68%, a little high.
We like to see that below 60, but especially with a high income like yours
So let's go ahead and take a look at what we have here. Are you renting?
Renting, I'd like to okay. So your rent is
Quite low relative to your income. You're at about
13.7 percent. That's great
Insurance is high. We're gonna come back and talk about that. That's at
1200 bucks car payment High. We're going to come back and talk about that. That's at one thousand two hundred bucks. Car payment, seven twelve. Debt payments at seven hundred. I want to talk about that. Groceries are at four fifty. That's fine. Better than fine. Clothes at one thirty.
Okay. You have two kids. Fine. Tithe at a thousand dollars a month. Okay. We'll talk about that.
Daycare at six ninety. Okay. Phone at two 227 and subscriptions at 204 what do you think
about these expenses the insurance being high definitely eye-opening and then my
debts always our next thing that comes to mind all right let's talk about them
you have a hundred forty five thousand seven hundred dollars of debt what is
that debt I would probably say about 130 is a student loans and then i think it's four thousand for her car and
then the remainder is eleven to twelve k of credit cards whose credit card debt
is that just my she has no credit card debt what did you charge on credit cards
to go into debt mostly was food like spending money to eat while at the airport
so probably somewhere between
I would say 30 or 50 dollars a day eating at the airport to be doing those hundred and ten hundred and hundred hours of working a week
Let me ask you when you were working a hundred or 90 hours a week
How much were you making per shift?
Gross, so let's say 150. Let's break it down. So 150 minus taxes. How
much you think you would take home from that? 95. 95. And out of 95 you spent how
much on gas to get there? $10 a day. So you have 95 then you down to 85 and then
how much would you spend on food including coffee, lunch, dinner, whatever
it is you would buy on the way to your shift on the way there or while there or on the way back?
Let's say 60.
Okay.
So you came home with like 20 bucks basically?
Pretty much.
Yes.
If that.
That's not a very effective Swiss army knife.
Sort of doesn't make sense, right?
Correct.
Did you ever realize that before just now?
When it led to me being a vicar, yes.
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And I've told you, I happily pay for anything that saves me time
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I can't tell you how good it feels to open up the fridge
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They're even portioned out.
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I gotta tell you, one of the best things I have ever spent money on is making food easier.
It means I don't have to think about it.
It means I can stay on plan and it means it can taste good.
Again, not everybody's ready for a personal chef.
If I needed quick, healthy, heat and eat meals, Factor is what I would use.
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netsuite.com slash Remy that's netsuite.com slash Remy so you came home with
like 20 bucks basically pretty much yes if that sort of doesn't make sense right
did you ever realize that before just now When it led to me being evicted yes
Whoa, what happened?
2022 was working two jobs working at the airport and then was working in a mortgage company
we got laid off from the mortgage company and
Pretty much just working working just to keep getting by and it was never enough couldn't afford the place anymore
What did you do when you got evicted?
I moved in with a friend.
Were you two married at the time?
No, we had just started dating.
OK.
And Monica, what was your take on learning
that Michael had been evicted?
My heart is racing just hearing the story.
Why?
A lot.
It's a lot.
We started dating in July 2023.
Things are going great.
We've known each other for 20 years.
He had already said, I want to marry you, all these things.
I went to go surprise him one day at his place.
Like, hey babe, I'm downstairs.
Didn't answer, didn't answer.
He pulls up to the apartment and he says,
you look beautiful. I don't live here anymore.
And that's how I found out.
When I tell you I had no idea,
I had zero clue that there was
any financial struggle,
that he was behind on rent.
Probably two weeks prior,
we had a conversation by
the pool about finances.
Really for the first time, seriously,
we're like, oh, I like to track,
track my expenses.
You like to track their expenses. you like to track your expenses,
and he told me he had spreadsheets,
and I told him I just had been getting more
into personal finance more and all these things,
so he was of the Bloomberg all the time.
So the impression I had in our early dating stages
was this guy's on top of his finances.
I knew he wasn't rich financially,
but I thought he was on top of things.
And so I was shocked to pull up and learn that he was evicted.
I had no idea.
He had moved out the night before.
I had no clue.
So it was shocking and it was early on in our relationship and it betrayed trust really early on.
So once trust was broken, what did you do then?
I had to reevaluate.
I was like, do I want to marry this person?
Am I ready?
Can I trust him?
He was extremely apologetic, obviously. He said he didn't want to burden me, but it felt like I
have no idea how this guy really manages his money. Once we started talking more, he shared
what he shared with you about the food spending. I think we had calculated at the time, it was like
thousands of dollars a month on food. And I was just floored. So I'm like, how does this make any sense?
So it just like really undermined any trust I had at the time.
And then what did you do next?
I cried.
Not in front of him.
I called a friend who was distant enough from our relationship just to ask her
her thoughts, her opinions.
I asked her like, am I dumb to move forward?
You know, I also have a lot of compassion for him,
but I felt I had to do some disturbance on my own
of do I want to move forward?
But ultimately decided, yes, give him a chance.
We all fall on tough times.
To me, it's not about the money.
It's about the lack of transparency,
him not trusting me with what was going on,
and then also him not asking for help
from any of the strong village that we have in our life
No one knew about this not a mom not a godfather not a friend
So it was the questioning of like how does he logically approach?
Life if he got into this pickle without saying a word about it
I'm gonna ask a difficult question to both of you. Do you see any patterns?
Michael with what happened with the eviction and what is happening right now with money?
Yes, it's being defensive, protective and hiding behind the weight of
everything versus being able to ever come up for air.
It's just a consistent, you're not there yet.
You got to keep pushing.
You got to keep going, but it's all about you still that individual
solo mindset for me.
Yeah, I agree.
It's not being candid and honest with what's going on
both when things are bad, but also when things are good.
It's thinking of asking for help as burdening others.
So you don't ask for help.
And it's quite simply not being an effective
communicator. Now, if you want to do it solo, that's one thing. You can do whatever you want
when you're solo. But when you're married, certainly when you're a parent, that just doesn't
work anymore. Yeah. Monica, what about you? What, if any, similarities do you see between
the eviction and Michael's behavior with money and what's happening right now?
The lack of transparency. But also, I think this is general energy is very mellow, kind of like status quo day in and day out.
And it's hard to know when big things are happening, whether they're positive or negative.
Right. Right. And what about for your behavior, Monica, your behavior when you heard about the eviction and your behavior now as it relates to money?
Super protective of him. Like very few people know our financial dynamic. I was so scared to tell anyone at all about the eviction, but then I needed to just for my own sanity.
So I think I go into protector mode, but not wanting to let other people know what's going on out of sake of protecting him.
I agree with that. What about to Michael? When he mentioned the eviction, what, if anything, did you say to him?
Oh, sorry, you're going through this. I'm here. Do you need to stay with me? Like trying to figure out the logistics of it all?
And then, of course, I shared, like, I'm hurt that you didn't tell me. I was tearful. How did you get from my boyfriend got evicted and didn't tell me it to like, what, a year later,
we're getting married? How'd that happen?
Yep, lots of work. It was more so like pre-marital counseling, pre-marital coaching. I've said to him,
the spending has to change. You ask why our conversations are so dry,
why they're so transaction focused is because for a while,
we just had to make sure he wasn't spending
thousands of dollars a month on food.
How come I'm only finding this out right now?
This is really impressive, I didn't know this.
Yeah, he's made a ton of progress as far as,
yeah, staying within budget.
Monica.
Yeah.
The way I feel right now is the way you felt about
discovering he made 95 000 Michael do you see what your approach to the world how it's affecting
other people now including me yeah I see by one not sharing the good and or the bad it's like
coming in to a book on chapter four versus actually
getting the preface and everything before it. Nice, nicely put. I agree with that. And
actually, I'm hearing things about spending close to over 50% of what you made every shift
on food. Okay, and I know airport food, it sucks. And then I'm finding out, oh, wait,
actually, you're really good at spending, you actually dramatically change your spending
after your now wife said like, hey, this you
really got to change this.
And you did it.
Yeah, I can't get a full picture.
Nor can your wife.
If you are not open with the good and the bad.
This is not just about money.
Michael was evicted.
He didn't tell a single person, not Monica, not his family.
He did not ask for help. He just kept going because in his mind, that's what a provider does. You handle it
yourself even if it breaks you.
Do you guys see how so many people, so many men in particular are living these lives of
quiet desperation? They don't ask for help. A lot of times they don't even realize they
can ask for help. And what's even worse is that the silence doesn't just affect you.
It affects the people around you, like Monica, whose trust was broken.
And a lot of times those people who you're not telling would actually be happy to help.
But Monica also played a role.
Michael hides.
Monica absorbs.
He avoids these hard conversations.
She avoids pressing him and asking for details.
Both of them are almost walking on eggshells instead of working through life's difficult
situations together. Now, I will say Michael has made some really good progress. He stopped
spending thousands of dollars on airport food. He's earning more, but he didn't talk about
it. And Monica noticed the change, but she didn't ask or push to learn.
Neither of them wants to rock the boat.
So Michael, who sees himself as a Swiss army knife, he's always ready to be deployed.
Send me where you need to send me.
I'm a tool.
But tools don't build relationships.
Partners do.
Monica wants a teammate.
Fine.
I appreciate that.
But in a team, you also have to have honest, direct conversations.
So if they want to build something real, both of them need to face their financial challenges head on.
Let's keep going. We still have a little bit of credit card debt in part because of spending that was going on a while ago.
There was an eviction. There was a lot of work done, pre-marital counseling discussions. That's why you track spending. Michael, what was your credit card debt at
the peak and what is it now?
At the peak, it was probably close to almost 26. I've knocked it down thanks to Monica.
I say thanks to Monica for carrying the rent, carrying some of the heavier things that were
where we live, that I've been able to put more money towards paying down debts and not putting anything else
on these cards.
26 to 12K.
Correct.
All right, pretty good.
I wish I hadn't gotten that high,
but that's a good trajectory.
Yes.
Now let's continue through the rest of the CSP here.
We talked about debt payments at 700.
How long is it gonna take you to pay off
your credit card debt, Michael?
I see it being done in this year.
Great.
Yes.
Did you know that Monica?
That was our last shutdown, but the finance talk was exactly.
What?
I remember he was like, I got defensive ego and then I said, I didn't want to
ask any more spreadsheet questions.
Wait, how can you get defensive when you have a great answer?
What's to be defensive?
It's like everybody applaud.
I'm great. What's the problem? Michael? It's like everybody applaud, I'm great.
What's the problem?
Michael?
As Cole we say, job's not done.
So she was like, you still, I still have work to do.
Your inability to celebrate anything is going to be one of your downfalls.
What do you get out of it?
I think it's a, it's definitely a protective thing.
It's a chalice way that I've learned how to live life.
That's very perceptive.
Something good happens, who knows?
Might be here tomorrow, might not.
Something bad happens, gotta work on it.
No matter what.
Some use the word mellow.
I don't like that word.
That's, in my opinion, overly charitable.
Mellow is one thing, but not showing any affect,
that's a whole different one.
I give a lot of smiles and energy to my daughters.
That's where my, I guess my most vulnerable part of me is.
Love that.
Love how you describe that too.
You give any of that energy to any adults?
There's a decent amount I try to give my wife.
I try to let her know she feels loved,
that she's beautiful and saying that,
like I'm always at all with her
Hmm
We have we have our moments where it's definitely like lovable moments
I just keep going back to this metaphor you had for yourself of a Swiss Army knife
You know what a Swiss Army knife doesn't do?
show emotions
Cuddle be playful flirt
It's just there to do a job and then get the f*** out of here.
So the more you see yourself as a tool, the less able you are to actually connect in the way that is, as you put it, vulnerable.
You can do it with your daughters.
Almost everybody can do it with their kids.
But it's not happening here.
OK, debt payments.
They're going to be paid off by the end of the year.
That's awesome.
That's amazing.
You want to practice sharing that news with Monica because she didn't know it.
Hey, babe, by the end of 2025, there will be no more credit card debts.
Balance will be zero.
That's crazy.
That's awesome.
I didn't even know by the end of 2026 they would be paid off.
So this is shocking, but in a positive way.
Okay. First of all, round of applause. That was awesome.
Great job. Great job with the debt. That's awesome, too.
Can I make a gentle suggestion?
Michael, the way you delivered that was like you were telling me which zone of the parking lot my car is in.
Look at it. Now, that's a smile.
Here's what I'm going to say, Michael, a little tip.
OK. And again, I feel very connected to this topic because, again, you look at videos of me back in the day, not a freaking smile.
Not one. I want you to do two things when you tell Monica the news.
Number one, you got to work in a smile.
And then number two, you got to tell her not only the information, but you got to tell
her what it means to you.
Go ahead, take a second to think about it if you need to, and then go ahead and share
it again.
Hey babe, at the end of this year, 2025, it will be zero credit card.
That meaning the balance will be zero.
And for me, that means a job well done.
And I accomplished something up in my mind towards,
okay.
Michael, how did that feel?
I guess still struggling.
Cause Oby still echoes loudly,
but at the same time,
great to be able to communicate with my partner
and share good news with her
versus not sharing anything with her.
What did that feel like for you, Monica?
Yeah, more energy, more excitement, more levity.
And yeah, it's a positive shift
in how we talk about these things.
Michael, I thought that was really good.
A couple of things that I noticed.
First of all, you have a great smile.
Like when you smiled, it made me smile.
And this is a good sign that we signal to other people with our body language.
Like if your daughters are about to touch the stove, no, you signal to them, right? They learn from that.
But we also do that as adults. We signal when we're, and sometimes it's incongruous. Like if I'm
going around and I'm like, I am making 50% more than I used to, people like, what the f- this guy's
a psycho. There's something off. And actually, they don't receive the message. You could actually tell them something quite great.
But if you present it without the appropriate affect,
people actually will not even hear it.
The other thing is when you talk about what it means to you,
it actually made me feel more connected to you.
And I suspect Monica also felt that way.
Monica?
Yeah, definitely more connection. It feels like something I can also felt that way. Monica? Yeah, definitely more connection.
It feels like something I can also get excited about.
Because he's proud of himself.
We can celebrate that.
And then there's also a part of me that is feeling like,
wow, he's a leader in this way.
Exactly.
He set a goal. He met it.
I know where we're going.
I can hang on for six months.
Like there's a plan. Everybody wants their partner to have a plan.
The plan can take two years, three years, five years,
but they want them to have a plan and they want them to update them.
Michael, one last thing you do this thing,
which is very related to you not wanting attention on your birthday.
Anytime I ask you to talk about yourself, you talk about the grand us, our relationship.
You always talk about like, what's going to be good for Monica,
what's going to be good for us. And you really struggle to talk about you. Almost as if you
don't believe you're worthy of anyone like listening to us hear about you. I think you
are. I bet that shows up in a lot of places in your life. That will be a skill I will
encourage you to work on is talking about you and the both of you.
You try.
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She followed up, no response,
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All right. Back to the fixed costs here. We have $1,000 a month on tithing.
Are you both religious? Yes. How do you feel about the tithing?
I'm excited to talk about this because I go back and forth almost every day in my head about it.
Biblically, the Bible says 10%. I get want to have a house. We, you know, the list goes on and on.
So there's a constant conflict.
Yeah.
And you don't want to write church as pressure as us.
It's not this weird thing, like a spiritual call to do, but I also
be like, God wants me to have nice things.
God brought that white man to the house.
And I was like, I'm going to go to church.
I'm going to go to church.
I'm going to go to church. I'm going to go to church. I'm going to go to church. I'm going to go to church. I'm going to go to church. I'm going to go to church. thing like a spiritual call to do. But I also like, God wants me to have nice things.
God brought that YSL bag in my Instagram feed.
God knows.
I think about it driving to work like all the time.
In the Bible, it says like, if you have to begrudgingly give, don't give.
Then I'm like, well, I'm giving all this money and it's not even in the way
that it was designed to be done. So it's a struggle.
That's interesting. How do you feel about it, Michael?
I fully believe whatever God puts on our heart to give is what we give. But I also don't
think it has to always be financially.
That gives me some flexibility. Just want to show you a quick calculation here. If we
just took that thousand dollar tide down to 100, just to show you, keep an eye
on this number up here, this fixed cost number, okay?
It's going to go from 68.
You want to guess what it's going to go to?
62.
Okay.
What do you say, Monica?
60.
All right.
61!
Wow, right in the middle.
That's quite interesting.
Okay, let's keep going.
I'm going to keep your tithing at where it is for now.
You got daycare at 690 and you could theoretically spend more on this if you wanted, correct?
Okay, good.
Phone is 227.
All right.
And your subscriptions at 204 makes no sense.
Spending 204 bucks when you have credit card debt of thousands of dollars over $10,000.
It just doesn't make sense to me.
Cut it down by half. What do you want to do? Michael?
Who goes away? Great. We'll take that down to 100. You're
still at 68%. But it sends a signal to yourselves. We're in this. We're taking this seriously
as a team. That was cool. All right, let's keep going. Investments are at 5%, which is
$600 post-tax retirement. But we actually know that you're investing more than that because Michael,
you're putting away more every month, correct?
The jobs is total 16 percent of my income going in.
OK, so you said 16 percent of your income.
Correct. Gross income.
That's one. So 16 percent of your gross income is one thousand two hundred six six dollars a month.
Correct. Great.
Did you know that Monica?
No, I didn't.
Look at that smile on Monica's face.
Go ahead, Michael.
Let's do the same exercise again.
Get that big smile queued up.
Go ahead.
Hey babe, every month I put $1,200 into my retirement account for the future.
Wow.
This is awesome.
And is the plan to continue doing that each month?
Or is it like a one-off?
The idea is to continue doing this.
And as our finances changes,
we can talk about different other avenues
that we could go about just making sure
that we're getting the full match
and getting the free money from the companies.
Okay.
Great work.
Love that.
Nice job, Michael.
Nice job, Monica.
Let's take a look at how much it's actually going to be worth.
So I'm taking that I'm going to Google I'm searching Ramit calculator.
Here I am at the investment calculator on my website.
So right now, I'm going to approximate this but it's pretty close.
You got about 1200 bucks in there.
Let's just say you're adding 15,200 annually.
How many years are you going to keep investing for?
At least another 30.
Good. And we got a 7% annual return rate.
That decision alone is going to give you $1.4 million.
Wow.
Michael, I think you can see this is just another example where it really pays
to communicate. I'm not just talking about financially. Your job as a partner is to keep
your partner informed. You would do that on a soccer team. You would do it on a relay team.
You got to do it on your home team. Let's continue on. Monica, what about your investments? 403B.
How much? She's been 3% of her gross.
3% of gross.
How'd you know that so fast?
That was impressive.
I'm her retirement advisor.
Oh.
Not literally, but.
So he's very financially astute, which is ironic and also enraging.
How can you be financially astute when you're spending $50 a day at the airport?
Yes, that was the frustration.
To have the knowledge is amazing, but to be able to use it in practical time wasn't possible.
Meaning, working all those hours, there was no way I would come home and feel like cooking
or feel like going to the grocery store.
So it was always the convenience over everything else for me. Yes. I knew I was just getting by guess
I was waiting for that next break to happen. But break was the eviction. Uh
What the hell the guy who got evicted is the one driving their investment strategy
How does this make any sense? Michael listens to Bloomberg
He actually knows Monica's 403B contribution down to the exact percentage, and he's putting
$1,200 a month into retirement, more than most people making twice his income.
And yet his financial behavior is not that great.
You know, he's lost his apartment, not because he didn't understand money, but because he was spending $50 a day at the airport, working 100 hour weeks and pretending everything
was fine. This is the knowing doing gap. So many people can tell me what an expense ratio
is and why diversification is important. But when you look at their portfolio, it's horrible.
I remember recently I posted a video deadlifting. It was just a normal deadlift. And I got this comment from somebody who's like, actually, bro, you're
hinging a little bit too much at the hips. That could really affect your lower back.
I was like, cool. Thanks for the feedback. Hey, can you send me a video of your latest
deadlift? No response. You know, I hit him back. I was like, hey, just following up here
two days later, I have a calendar reminder for all internet trolls. I will never let
them off the hook. I go, Hey, just following up. He goes, yo, you know, bro, I've been studying John Jones and I've
actually been learning about posterior chain. McCain writes me this long paragraph. I go,
that's awesome. Show me your form. He blocks me. That guy is the perfect metaphor for people who
know everything about money, supposedly, but they don't actually live it. Now, if you know
someone like that, someone who reads all these money books,
follows all this online news about money,
but they still have credit card debt,
text them this episode right now,
because they need to hear it.
The knowing doing gap is so prevalent.
You could be book smart,
you could know everything in the world,
but until you actually do it, what's the point?
Now, knowing all of this, I have a hunch about Michael.
Let me see if my hunch is right.
Tell me if this sounds familiar, Michael.
It's tough right now, but that next deal,
that next gig, that next job, that next shift,
that will change everything.
It was probably more like the next five shifts
to change a lot of things or the next month
or this will be a little bit better,
but yes, that's the epitome of what I would have to tell myself.
That describes one of the four personality types in Money for Couples, my book,
and it's called the dreamer.
The dreamer does not really focus on consistent investing, saving.
It's more about, oh, like I've got this ball in the air and that ball in the
air and one of these is going to come through and this deal will come through in this gig
and that will solve this problem that I have right now. That's a dreamer.
Spot on.
Yeah. It's really hard for the partners of dreamers. It's really hard because they often
want a plan. Dreamers don't want to give a plan. They try to get specifics, dreamers hate being pinned down.
It feels confining to them.
What's interesting, Michael, is that I think you're admitting to having some pretty striking
dreamer tendencies, but also at the same time, you've massively changed your spending.
You've dramatically cut your credit card debt and you know your debt payoff date, which
is incredibly rare. So I find this to be quite interesting. I'd like to continue on so we can get to the end
and let's look at the CSP here. Monica, you're putting 3% of gross income away every month,
is that right? According to my advisor.
Yes. Okay, how come you don't know your own numbers, Monica?
Agreed. So no other transactions, but't know your own numbers, Monica? Agreed.
So know all the transactions, but retirement 403Bs, there was a stretch for many years
where I was grinding and not really having a ton of extra money.
So ever since I left corporate America, basically I stopped contributing.
So this all feels new again.
I am married to someone who has great financial acumen, even if it's
not put into practice. And so I let him just tell me what the best thing is.
Okay, that's not the way we do money. We're not going to do that anymore. This doesn't
make any sense, but we'll fix it. That's why I'm glad we're here. How come Monica is only
putting away 3% when she has such a high income?
So just to get the match to the employer and she was just starting out.
So the salary before January that she was actually only 100 K from her.
Yeah.
The raise of another 20 K was still shocking, but we never adjusted.
You all know about like NFL players, they retire and then they don't change their diet.
Yes.
And like what happens?
It catches up them really quickly. Really quick.
This is exactly the same thing, but in reverse with money. So your income has gone up dramatically,
but you haven't changed your allocations, nor have you actually changed your feelings about money.
You're making $50,000 more than you were a few months ago.
That's crazy.
But the way you're acting with money, you have not changed a single thing.
And that's a problem. Because at your income, there is zero reason you should have credit card debt.
Zero. I find it actually unacceptable. A family that's making $233,000 with two
dollars has credit card debt? Unacceptable.
But where is the room to cut it down?
Let's look at the numbers here.
Your savings are at 7%.
So you've got 600 bucks a month for an emergency fund.
You've got a hundred bucks a month for gifts and 150 for regular.
What's regular?
Oh, regular savings, meaning not allocated for an emergency fund.
No, we're not.
You all got to understand when you have credit card debt, that actually
necessitates.
In my opinion, it is an emergency.
People who have credit card debt, they really get used to living with it.
It's like it's not living with a paper cut.
It's in my opinion, living with a bloody open wound.
If your daughters had a bloody open wound on their arm, what would you would
you be like, oh, that's cool. Let's have
dinner tonight. No, you'd be like, we're going to the
hospital. That is the equivalent for having $12,000 of credit
card debt. Like shut it down, shut down all discretionary
spending immediately redirect everything, get this debt paid
off quickly. And in the meantime, once the automation is set up, we're going to talk about how did
we get here.
We're not going to blame each other.
We're going to talk about it because we're a team.
How did we get here?
What decisions did I make?
Did you make?
What did we make?
And how are we going to make sure this never happens again?
That's how we approach it.
All right.
You've got 20% towards guilt free spending $2,370 a month.
How often do you eat out?
Secondly, not often.
We're not going out to have steak dinners.
Like we're not, that's not us.
I would love that to be us.
It's part of my rich life, but no, we're good.
And if we need to grab something, it's Chick-fil-A,
it's this or it's that.
Okay, hold on.
How often are you grabbing Chick-fil-A?
Too often.
Currently, probably four times a week.
I can see by that smile that you're not telling me the truth.
No, this is embarrassing.
Four times a week?
That's crazy.
It is, especially when you have credit card debt and you're telling me two minutes ago,
where does the money come from?
We need to be honest with ourselves.
You're eating out three times more than you thought and you're not even counting other
stuff like that's a I could see a very nice room behind you.
I don't see any furniture.
I don't know if you have your nails done.
Michael, I suspect maybe, you know, there's hanging out with friends once in a while grabbing
a couple of drinks.
I don't see any of that here.
Now, my point is you may believe you are very good at tracking on an individual basis.
And I actually think you're probably both pretty good at it. But you can track every number and miss the entire point of personal finance.
Yeah.
Most of the time, when I find people overspending
specifically on cars and eating out and I go, is that part of your rich life?
And almost always they go, no.
Yeah. Do you all have a shared vision of what your rich life is?
Eating at nicer restaurants every once in a while.
Going to the Miami Food and Wine Festival because I was wanting to do it.
Traveling first class. Having Gordon Ramsay cook for us at some point.
I'm not expecting us to be millionaires, but right now, like I said, I have the highest salary I've ever had.
And I'm tracking every single time I go to Chick-fil-A.
First of all, I love the vision.
I'm curious to hear, Michael, your vision.
Being able to play golf at least twice a month.
Definitely travel.
Eating out with our daughters, go to school,
paying off whatever student loan or whatever they have,
giving them a better base jump off point
than starting at nothing coming out of college.
I like the vision. I like it a college. I like the vision.
I like it a lot.
I like both your visions.
I think they're really beautiful,
specific, complementary.
Are you on track to be able to live
some maybe not all,
but some of those parts of a rich life?
Well, some plans to know.
OK, Monica, I agree.
You make $233,000 a year, Monica.
You said something that struck me.
You said, I'm not expecting to be a millionaire.
Like, why not?
I always expected to be a millionaire.
Why would you not at $233,000?
For me still getting used to even hearing that number
because I'm like, who are you talking about?
Which household has $233,000?
I'm talking about the couple who spends a lot of time
tracking every single expense,
but doesn't actually know their own income.
Yes, you're right.
It feels far off.
One is certainly not having a plan.
Two is not having the joint finances.
And three, we need to get Michael's debt paid off.
Yeah, it just seems like these are far off dreams.
If you both want to make this rich vision a reality,
we can start doing it.
I mean, you have more
chances of accomplishing it than most considering your income, but it will take you probably
rethinking the way that you approach money, approach each other.
They're open to it. Let's do it. Cool. Michael.
100% agree. Michael, you described a quite a emotionally
loaded word, the word leech. I don't want to be a leech. First of all, I don't think you're a leech. Making $95,000 a year. When I was reading over your material
before I came on, I was a little confused because there's a lot of words about income
discrepancy and leech and stuff like that. Now that I hear your story, I can understand
more. You know, having credit card debt, spending a huge amount of money eating out, being evicted
and not sharing it. None of those things are positive when it comes to money
But I don't think anybody making 65k working three jobs is a leech or 95k
I do think you don't communicate about money effectively. I don't think you combine your money
I don't think you have a rich live vision. That's crisp
I'm trying to get to why that is but I just kind of want to shine a light on this big elephant in the room about Monica earns more,
a lot more, and what does that imply for the relationship?
Especially because sometimes women earning more money,
there's a sensitivity around that.
Michael, you alluded to that.
You mentioned a provider, you mentioned,
Monica, you mentioned the elephant in the room.
Is this a topic that you all talk about?
No, we don't say it in those terms.
Okay.
But I will say for myself that I do feel inferior at times because I don't feel
as equally yoked and have to rely on her, especially in early beginning.
I just feel like I'm always still trying to catch up to be part of the table and and not always feel like I can be at the table.
That's pretty honest, I appreciate that.
Monica, gender and money.
Yeah, of course those norms are there.
I don't subscribe to them,
or at least I don't think I don't,
but feel free to challenge me on it.
My bigger issue is not paying anything
towards rent and utilities for so long.
So the dynamic that we described in the application is we're living. Yes, we're both working and I'm paying literally all of the rent, all of the
utilities in it, you know, it's hard, it's hard sometimes to come in to the space
and knowing like, okay, this is all on me.
Is this working for you?
No, our relationship, romantic history is two years.
Yeah.
Right, so we're still kind of early in.
So for these two years, it's been tough.
If he feels like a leech, I feel like we have this load.
I don't want to make him feel bad about it.
Can we get off that?
I don't want to make him feel bad about it.
Yeah.
Nobody's here to make anybody feel bad,
but sometimes in order to reach a shared vision
together, one or both people are going to feel a little bad.
Nothing wrong with that.
Life isn't only about cupcakes.
Sometimes it's going to be hard.
In fact, this stuff is really hard.
When you're coming out and starting out, it's complicated.
I don't mind.
But we're not going to start this by saying,
one of my core visions is I'm not gonna make
my other partner feel bad.
That, nah, then we're walking on eggshells.
That's what it is.
That would be like me trying to run a 400
and I go, I'm not going to wear one shoe.
I'm not gonna start off a race
by saying what I'm not gonna do.
I'm gonna say, my vision is I'm going to win. Same thing with money. And over time, as you become more and more skilled,
you're not going to feel bad. They start to feel okay, and they start to feel really good.
And you're like, holy s***, we're a team. That is an amazing moment. And we can get there.
So can you paint a picture for me? What are the big money goals for the two of you?
Retirement.
Okay.
I'd say travel.
It's not a huge big one,
but just growing up as someone who traveled the world,
I want to be able to pass it on to my kids
and it not be a financial strain.
How often?
That sounds pretty vague.
Michael would like to travel a couple times a year,
one with just us, at least two with the kids.
For me, I'm good with one big trip
and maybe one local trip.
What else?
Whether we buy a home next year or in five years or 10.
That, it does mean something to me.
So yeah, home ownership in some way, investment properties,
those things are of interest to me.
Michael, what about you?
This family.
So being able to be around, not only be around my wife for a long
term, but be around my kids as well.
With dad passing away young, definitely emphasizing the time to spend with the
kids and spend with my wife.
So seeing the family trips excites me because I didn't get to do that. Being able to grow old whenever that really looks like,
excites me because I know that nothing is promised. To say I was there to walk my daughters down the
aisle, but I was there to take them on this trip to gosh, gosh, gosh, wherever they're going to go to.
I think that really hits me in a very special way, especially
because I didn't know how short life can be.
Okay, we're going to go to your CSP and we're going to try to make some changes now.
Yeah.
You both have told me what your vision is.
You even went fast forward to 75 and you look back on your life.
So now we actually get the chance to make those changes.
I'm putting your fixed costs up on screen.
You're at 68%.
Before we get into line by line changes, philosophically, what kind of changes do you want to make?
Eating out.
You want to eat out less?
Yes.
Okay.
What else?
Something else that I want is more of money being put towards investments or in the safe.
Give me like five more.
Let's go fast emergency fine
Emergency fund great travel a travel map. Okay. What else some of the kids whether it's
Education or just they also means
Put that in something as well. Wait a minute. How come no one's talking about their debt. That's real
What's so interesting is?
Michael's debt is very top of mind for me.
It's like every look at it every month because I have different payments for,
again, truly is out of sight, out of mind, which is a problem.
I was thinking about my student loans.
It's just not even signing there.
I'm thinking about that rent.
One hundred thirty thousand dollars in student loans needs to be addressed.
Absolutely.
I am not in favor of putting money aside for your daughters while their own parents can't
manage their debt.
So that needs to go.
What else?
That's a pop of mine.
I mean, that's pretty good.
The changes you told me are pretty effective.
They're simple, but they're extremely high impact. Let me tell
you what I mean. You said we are going to start investing more. We're going to start
saving more. We're going to pay off our debt and then we're going to put some money aside
for travel. Those are high impact. Those are $30,000 questions. What's up with this insurance?
$1,264. What is this? What is this insurance
you're paying for? Explain it to me. Better not be whole life.
No, both of us have long term life insurance policy on each other. Term life insurance.
I think your auto insurance is the higher variable, right?
Yeah, my auto insurance is like $270. I think a month or $280. Yeah, we can find cheap auto
insurance.
Let's talk about your car payment.
You have two car payments or one?
One.
It's mine, it's 3.33 a month.
How long till it's paid off?
It's a year and a half.
Okay.
And then what are you gonna do once it's paid off?
New question, haven't thought that far.
I mean, I would hope to roll it into paying off debt.
That is a correct answer.
The incorrect answer is what most Americans do.
They go, time to buy a new car.
I go, no wonder you're in debt for your whole life.
No, keep that car.
Okay.
Yeah.
The, the time period where you have a car with no car payment is like the golden age.
You keep that and every month you're saving money and that money, just as Michael said,
you, you can treat it as if you're still making a car payment
Sure, take a take 10% and use it for guilt-free spending go out to a nice restaurant every month
But the rest of it you can split just as I talk about in part two of money for couples
You can put it in investments put in savings
You can even start saving a little bit for car repairs, which eventually you will have there's lots of the cool things you can do automatically
Okay, I'm gonna tell you what I see so far. You're at 61% car repairs, which eventually you will have. There's lots of cool things you can do automatically.
Okay.
I'm going to tell you what I see so far.
You're at 61%.
I think there's two things.
One, you need to start paying off your student loan debt.
Monica, you need to run a calculation,
but we're just going to say for easy math,
we're going to put 500 bucks a month into there.
Wow.
Okay.
I mean, it should probably be more depending on the interest rate.
I mean, it's a huge amount of debt
You need to pay that off. Otherwise, you're gonna be paying it till you're 60 years old. Yeah heard gosh
I really want you to take another look at your insurance
Something is not adding up for me on this
Let me just say this is too high compared to what I've seen for other people
It might be the case that just for whatever unique reason that yours is this expensive
But just strikes me as something is wildly off here.
And if you could drop that down even to 800,
which would be really, that would be high,
it would be at 61%.
So I'd like you to try to do that.
Well, the good news is that the credit card debt
will be paid off soon,
and that money can be rolled into other areas.
So basically 12 months from now,
you're gonna have an extra thousand dollars of cashflow. That'll be 650 from Michael's credit card debt and like roughly 350 from
Monica's car payment. That's an extra thousand dollars of cash flow that you will be able
to use. That's pretty good. That's great. You're tithing. I dropped that to zero because
I just can't see you spending 200 bucks a month and it dropped your fixed cost of 63%.
Okay.
God is very patient.
God will wait.
You get your act in order and then you can go back and go to church volunteer.
All right.
Um, phone at 227.
Can you guys drop that?
The 140 is mine and my daughter's together and then just hers.
Let's say yes. Yeah. maybe we can just get a family plan
Smack it out, but I thought 140 was a lot. Yeah, I think that's worth looking into at this point savings
We're gonna drop this 150 is just gonna become 750 here. No need to over complicate it. Okay and
100 for gifts what gifts birthday parties
Someone's bridal shower, baby shower, random acts of kindness.
Why don't you be kind to yourself and pay off your credit card debt.
That hundred dollars a month is actually really meaningful.
I'm gonna give you an example.
If you actually put your hundred and thirty thousand dollars into my debt payoff calculator,
student loan debt, and you put an extra hundred dollars a month towards it, you will shave
off years of the debt.
You want to see?
Sure.
Let's just say $130,000.
Do you know the interest rate?
Let's just say six.
And right now, let's just say for easy math, you're paying $800 a month.
That's 28 years to pay it off.
Okay.
That's a long time.
Very.
Let's just watch this. We're going to pay 900. That's 28 years to pay it off. OK, that's a long time there. Let's just watch this.
We're going to pay 900.
That's 21 years.
We just shaved off almost seven years of payments for an extra one hundred dollars a month.
Am I the only one who's blown away by this?
No, thank you for reframing that way.
OK, got it.
That's 100. Yeah.
An extra hundred dollars shaved almost seven years off your debt payoff. Yeah, got it. The extra hundred. Yeah. An extra a hundred dollars shaved almost seven years off your debt payoff.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Got it.
Got it.
Got it.
Why?
It's 20 years.
It's so long.
You can actually shave that number way down, but the fact is like you haven't
been paying anything on it for a long time.
Yeah.
With these numbers, you feel like we can save it way down.
Yeah.
I'll show you how, but let's work our way down.
But right now there's more changes to be made.
Take a look.
Emergency fund is at 750 a month.
Let's keep going.
So now that we've accounted for your student loan debt,
you still have $2,195 in guilt-free spending money per month.
What do you guys think about that?
That's wild.
You were like, where's the money coming from?
It's just sitting there.
Yeah.
It's meant to be used on your rich life.
So let's go back to what you told me your rich life was.
What did you want to do again?
You wanted to pay off debt right now.
I feel like we're doing okay with debt.
I like to pay it off a little faster because I don't like $130,000 a debt.
And if I can pay an extra couple hundred bucks towards it per month and it's just a flip
of a switch and I never even see it and then it shaves off years and years,
I want to do it. What do you say? Let's do it. I'd rather play offense with money. You have a high
income. I keep saying it because I want you to both internalize it. Yeah, that you are actually
making almost a quarter million dollars a year. And it's important
for me to say that so that you hear it and feel it and that you begin acting accordingly. A couple
with making almost a quarter million dollars a year can afford to be extremely aggressive about
debt payoff. They can also afford to save a lot of money. In fact, I think you should be saving more
because again, if one of you gets laid off,'re in big trouble You can afford to be thinking expansively on a decades-long basis
I also think that you're not factoring in a few things
What happens to your child care expenses in about three four or five years?
Those now they go to are they gonna go to public school?
Hopefully yeah, I don't imagine private school now's the time honestly to be talking about it
You know again a couple making a quarter million dollars a year plans ahead.
They never make decisions on a whim.
And if something has to be made on a whim, that's already been planned for as well.
Oh, we have to fly somewhere because mom or dad or somebody sick.
That's already been planned for in our emergency fund.
Let's tap it and go.
Okay, that's what a high income earns you. So your childcare costs going to
go way down, which is 700 bucks a month. Anybody going to get a raise in the next five years?
Let's claim it. Yes. Love that love the the great positive answers from both you. Yes,
that money. As with any new income, you should have a decision. What do we do with extra income and it should be split up on a percentage basis. I talked about that in part two of money for couples
My wife and I have a rule any new additional income gets split accordingly
Boom, we never think about it. It just falls the system and flows like water. Yes
so
You are actually setting yourself up for
Having hopefully positive things.
Of course, we want to plan for the negative, like a layoff,
something that somebody getting sick, that kind of thing.
But that's why I think that paying off your debt aggressively,
so that by the time you're 45, you're debt free, you got these young kids.
Wow, you have at least two chapters of life left.
You got a lot.
I really would not want to be sitting around on that till 52.
Just because I just didn't decide to put an extra few hundred bucks a month towards debt.
No, that's why I think like that.
Thank you.
You said you need a thousand bucks in guilt free, which I think is realistic.
I actually think your number is right on the money.
A couple that's in credit card debt should not have the typical 20 to 35% free spending.
They should have less because it's an emergency.
You should be paying that money off.
A couple that has $130,000 of student loan debt
should be having their guilt-free number
reflectively going down.
So 10% exactly what I would suggest.
You still have money to go out,
go out for a couple of meals and stuff like that,
but you're actively redirecting money
to debt payoff, to investing,
and we need to get some towards savings.
So there's one last thing,
which is combining your incomes and your expenses.
I think it needs to happen.
Combining your money into a joint account,
each of you has individual money every month, right?
You each have a little bit of individual, it could be a hundred bucks,
could be 300 bucks, whatever the number plays out to be.
You can spend on whatever you want.
Lunches, self-care, no questions asked.
Your partner doesn't even have access to that account.
They know about it, but they don't have access to it.
It's yours.
But meanwhile, the majority of your life is together. So your rent, your car payment, all of it, kid
stuff comes out of that. And both of you are involved. Both of you own one or two numbers
and each month when you talk, you report on it. All this is laid out in Money for Couples.
That brings you together. Literally
puts you on the same page. How do you both feel about that?
It feels great. It feels like a big step. It feels helpful.
Michael, how do you feel about it?
It's something that we've talked about and I'm liking it because it resembles what the
conversation I had with my mother. So that gives me a place to come from that's comfortable
and knowing that it can work.
And our debt payments would be combined essentially, like that would come out of that joint account.
So we tackled that evenly together.
Totally.
Again, you can always make certain tiny exceptions.
Like I think Michael's credit card debt
should rightfully be his.
And I think he should probably pay more,
way more towards it.
Michael, I think probably for the first X months,
that should be coming out of your guilt-free spending money
because it's your debt that you incurred
and it's discretionary.
It's not even like student loan debt.
It's just like lunch.
Yes.
Sometimes it's important for us to accept the pain of a consequence because then we learn I don't like this.
I'm not going to do it again.
Yes.
That's okay.
Michael saying yes.
Boom done.
Perfect.
I love that.
I love that.
Okay. My feedback to you then is the following number one
Pay down your debt aggressively
you can actually afford to spend a lot of money paying down debt and
You can be debt-free in nine point five years possibly even faster depending on raises
other expenses That's amazing. I think the two of you should give yourselves a round of applause for putting yourself in the position of being able
to do that. That's incredibly impressive. Okay, a few questions for you. What do you notice about
how you communicated about money at the start of our conversation versus now. Definitely more of a we focused, which is wild because it felt like we were doing
that, but we really weren't clearly.
So that's huge.
Also the tone.
I don't sense a defensiveness from Michael.
That's big.
I love that.
Yeah.
Michael, how about you?
For me, it's definitely pressing the emotion of what I'm feeling with things too.
In addition to having our collective vision or things that we value be said and built
towards and not just, well, I had this, you have that.
I think that coming here, first off, we just start off with some distance about like, oh,
I didn't even know you got a race. So, you know, we spend time on that.
But as we start to unpeel it, we realize, oh my gosh, there's so much more here.
What seemed existential was actually just a tiny piece of the overall picture.
And that idea is, you know, Michael, how you see yourself with money affects the way that
you communicate and treat money.
It even affects the way that you spend time,
how many hours at work, et cetera.
Monica, the fact that you were kind of struck and shocked
by the income increase, also it seemed that for a while
you were kind of on your back heels.
Like, oh my God, I can't believe that we make $233,000.
And part of what I love seeing you is to start to embrace that.
Both of you.
Yes, we are actually a couple that makes almost a quarter million dollars.
And what does a couple that makes $233,000 a year do?
Well, let's talk about it.
They don't have credit card debt.
Do they have student loan?
Maybe.
But they're paying it off aggressively.
They have a plan, whether it's five years,
10 years, 15 years, they know the exact number.
Boom, they know it.
Do they stress out about going out to eat?
No, no, they actually have a plan.
And when they go out to eat, they have talked about it
and they've appreciated, whether it's $5
or whether it's a fifty dollar meal.
They appreciate it basically what I saw emerging from the two of you is this realization that money is so much richer.
And and more textured than like should we track this or that that's to me so one dimensional.
this or that. That's to me so one-dimensional. And what we started talking about was appreciation and gratitude and connectedness. And this textures of like, I want to buy a house. Okay,
I can support you on that. I want to eat out. Okay, I want to support you on that. How do
we do it? How do we make all these things possible? That's the beauty of a rich life together.
A huge thank you to Monica and Michael for speaking with me today and for sharing so openly. This conversation took a lot of turns. At the beginning was
all about Michael, his debt, his eviction, how he needed to change. But by the end
Monica realized she had a massive blind spot of her own as well. A hundred and
thirty thousand dollars in student loans she hadn't even considered paying down.
This is one
of the common psychological traps of student debt. Once it hits fifty thousand, certainly
a hundred thousand, a lot of people check out. They compartmentalize. They start saying things
like, I'll die with my debt. That's exactly what Frank said on my Netflix show. That's what Monica
was doing here. Interestingly, people also treat their 401k the same way. When I asked them,
how much money do you have invested?
A lot of times they don't even count their 401K.
They don't even think it's real.
Just like student loans don't feel real to some people.
Newsflash.
Both of those are real and both have real consequences.
Monica could have knocked this debt out years ago.
She makes over $200,000.
She has the money, but she doesn't have the mindset to be aggressive with her finances.
That's why I kept repeating at this income level, you can go on offense. And even if
you make less, this strategy still applies. I want you to stop asking what's the minimum
we can pay. Instead, I want you to start asking what if we the minimum we can pay? Instead, I want you to start asking, what if we paid an extra $500 a month,
$700 a month, $1,000 a month?
How fast could we be done?
That's how you stop treading water
and you start building your rich life.
Now, let's check out their follow-ups.
My biggest surprise was that we make $233,000 a year,
specifically that my husband's income is now at 95k.
I had no idea.
So that was quite shocking.
I don't want her to feel like surprises are happening.
I realize that these things are hurting us more by her just feeling surprised.
So just being as transparent as possible and helping her see the things that I'm feeling
and see the things that's going on, specifically financially as well.
The finances have felt really heavy for a long time.
Just hearing that, hey, his credit card debt
will be paid off by the end of the year.
That, hey, we can have some wiggle room
with how much we are putting away in our emergency fund
or paying off student loan debt.
Those takeaways were really big.
We decided to, how to fund a joint account,
and I've already set up a percentage going into that
on every paycheck
Basis continue to pay off my debt reducing my times temporarily and will continue to keep it
I guess I paid off this credit cards and help it out a little bit more around the house as these credit cards get paid
off to help alleviate some distress for
Monica so I'm walking away feeling just different more inspired
Like changes is on the horizon and my posture is different.
You know, walking around like a couple
who makes almost a quarter million dollars a year,
feels very different than walking around
like a couple who's making it paycheck to paycheck.
Hi, we're checking in to let y'all know
how we're doing with our financial updates.
We went to the library a few weeks ago
and talked about our big picture finances.
It was much more productive
than our typical monthly conversations.
We have been struggling with talking about finances
on a more regular basis.
So that's something that we need to work on.
Our conversations are now more big picture
than just working on focusing on like the small details of
little things that don't matter as much anymore. We have started combining finances as far as
certain bills and joining account. We did our joining account and just piecing together how we
continuously collectively work together financially and continue cleaning up my credit, getting rid of bad debt and just pay us some stakes that is giving a little bit more optimism
and better outlook for the future. And we definitely don't go to Chick-fil-A as much.
All right, thank you.