I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 230. “We spend 168% of what we make. What are we missing?”

Episode Date: October 14, 2025

Amy (32) and John (40) are raising two young kids in Canada, earning a solid $155,000 a year. But with $768,181 in debt and fixed costs at 168% of their income, every month feels like a losing battle.... Two years ago, John hid hundreds of thousands in business tax debt from Amy—what she calls “financial infidelity.” Since then, trust has been fragile, money is tight, and they often feel like they’re fighting on “two separate life rafts.” Amy’s trying to rebuild their future, but when more than HALF of their monthly income goes immediately towards debt, they’re struggling to find a path forward. Can Ramit help them bridge the gap between good intentions and hard numbers—and finally get on the same team? In this episode we uncover: • How their fixed costs rose to 168% of their income • Why John hid his business tax debt, which shattered Amy’s trust • How years of financial strain forced Amy to shoulder household finances alone • How Amy’s volatile income and John’s shrinking business payouts created a $4,000 deficit • John’s Dreamer attitude collides with the harsh math of his monthly debt payments • The emotional impact of having no safety net • Amy’s plan to launch a new business vs. John’s struggle to keep his afloat • Why managing risk isn’t about optimism • Amy’s frustration with carrying the mental and emotional load of finances while John “focuses on income” • Ramit’s direct call for decisive leadership and clear planning to get out of financial free fall Chapters: (00:00:00) “He spent two years hiding his debt from me” (00:18:03) Ramit breaks down their numbers (00:26:27) “I was humiliated driving that Tesla” (00:39:52) “We’re flying blind” (00:54:47) “I feel like I’m carrying this weight alone” (01:02:13) “Hope is not a strategy” (01:24:56) “This is what happens when we finally get specific” (01:42:25) Where are they now? Amy and John’s follow-ups Links Mentioned In This Episode: • Join me Monday, October 20 to learn How To Nail Your Dream Job Interview. Reserve your spot at https://iwt.com/interview This episode is brought to you by: LMNT | Right now, LMNT is offering 8 single serving packets FREE with any LMNT order. Get yours at https://drinklmnt.com/RAMIT Rocket Money | Cancel unwanted subscriptions and reach your financial goals faster at https://rocketmoney.com/ramit ZocDoc | Download the ZocDoc app for FREE at https://zocdoc.com/ramit then find and book a top-rated doctor today #sponsored Facet | Facet is waiving their $250 enrollment fee for new annual members, and for my audience, Facet is offering $300 into your brokerage account if you invest and maintain $5,000 within your first 90 days. Head to facet.com/ramit to learn more about which membership option is best for you. 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 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.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 If you and your partner have ever talked about changing jobs so you can earn more money and finally live your rich life, this is for you. Join me Monday, October 20th for a free live event called How to Nail Your Dream Job Interview. You're going to learn how to calm your nerves, how to tell natural stories, and how to show hiring managers exactly why you are the best choice. And this is with my guest Michael Gendler from Ultra Speaking. Your dream job could transform your money and your lifestyle and your relationship. So reserve your spot at IWT.com slash interview or click the link in the show notes. I handle all of our finances and I can see that there's no savings.
Starting point is 00:00:41 I can see if John gets hurt tomorrow on a job, we're f***ed. You have 168% on fixed costs. You're broke. I feel we're so strapped for money that I am just trying to bring in as much as I can. You are spending more than you make every month, that's for sure. It's not sustainable. This is an unbearable amount of stress, and I feel it every day, all hours of the day.
Starting point is 00:01:04 I am carrying this weight over here on my own when it comes to how our household is being run and what our monthly finances look like. That's on me. We've got nothing. There is no cushion if we fall. We lose everything overnight. I mean, it feels more and more like I'm just getting attacked here,
Starting point is 00:01:22 so I'm starting to feel defensive, to be quite honest. This is directly from Amy's application. Quote, we're in a combined $400,000 Canadian of debt, not including our mortgage or car loan. I don't know how to create a CSP when there is no money left at the end of the month, even after cutting out every single extra cost we could. Today I'm speaking with Amy, who's 32, and John, who's 40, and they are struggling to come together as a team to manage this mountain of debt. I'm looking at their CSP or conscious spending plan.
Starting point is 00:01:57 You can download the same thing for free on my website. If you're in the same boat as this couple and you're struggling to figure out where to even start, I go through that in detail in my money coaching program, which you can get at IWT.com slash money coaching. Let's take a look at their key numbers. Assets, $900,000. Investments, zero. That's a big red flag.
Starting point is 00:02:20 Savings, $2,160. very low, especially for a family with kids, debt $768,181, total net worth $133,979.79. They earn a combined income of $155K, which is very healthy. Their fixed costs are at 168%, which explains everything. They are spending 68% more than what they earn every single month just to keep the lights on. That's the whole ball game right there. Investments are at 1%, no surprise. Savings at 1%.
Starting point is 00:02:55 Guilt free spending is at negative 70%, which of course is impossible. I have a lot of questions, so I say we get right to it and meet Amy and John. Amy, in your application, you wrote something to me that really caught my attention. You wrote, he spent two years hiding his debt from me while I thought we were financially good and we were spending as normal, even going so far as to buy a new car. What was your reaction when you finally heard the truth? So much rage. We luckily didn't have our kids at home that night.
Starting point is 00:03:30 They were over at my in-laws, and he sat down on the couch and just very kind of nonchalantly mentioned that he had gotten a call from the CRA Canada Revenue Agency here, and that they had talked to him and given him some numbers, and there was debt. Without giving me specifics, all this debt has a key. accumulated from his business. Did you know at that point how much the debt was? No, and it took a few weeks of me to really pull the answer out of him, and it took a few more weeks for even him to know the final numbers, because it still hadn't been completely tallied up on the CRA end either. Did you have a sense of $5,000, $50,000? Do you have any sense at all?
Starting point is 00:04:19 None. If you had to guess at that moment, what would you have guessed? I mean, probably $50,000, maybe 100 tops, but I'm not in the business. He had started it before we were together, and I've never had a role in it, and I've always just trusted that it was managed. And so I wouldn't have had a good idea or even a guess of what kind of numbers that debt was. When John told you in that conversation that CRA had contacted him and there was debt, how did you feel, hearing it. I was fed up. I was so defeated because it felt like this business had continued to take so much from us. And he was working so hard and he had never not been working hard
Starting point is 00:05:11 and we were never once financially doing okay. Just to hear this, it was like that kind of one last blow. Like, I was just so done. I wanted it to just be gone completely. John, how does it feel hearing Amy's recollection? I remember it a little bit differently. I thought that in that night, we talked about the numbers, but I could be wrong. But I felt ashamed and defeated that it was such a huge number that I had been trying to chip away at this for a time and it was finally at the point where like my last option fell out from under me. I had some big jobs I was looking at getting that was going to be a big payment towards this debt. And I thought I had plans to tackle the debt. How much was the total amount? Was it 240, 280, something like that?
Starting point is 00:06:06 Wait, which one? Those are different numbers. Yeah. Well, it continued to grow as the months were going on and it was kind of finalizing interests and penalties and everything. So it took a bit. All right. So 240 to 280. Okay. Can we walk through the debt? So this is business debt. What type of business, John, and how did you accumulate this debt? It's a cabinet business. There's personal income tax and then the business is source deductions which is like here in canada we have to pay unemployment insurance as an employer i have to match my employees contribution as well as canadian pension plan cp so i have to match those for the employees i have at the time and i fell behind on those payments. I'd pay myself everything we needed to pay for the mortgage here
Starting point is 00:07:05 on our personal side of things. And they're doing that didn't leave anything on the business expenses side. So all those accounts suffered because I had to basically pay ourselves like 12,000 a month to pay our bills. That was true up until a certain point because then money was so tight on the business, that he wasn't able to bring money home either. So money was getting redirected at a certain point into the business only and not coming home, in which case, that's when I started to work. And it was my income was keeping us afloat. His income was keeping the business afloat.
Starting point is 00:07:43 How many years did it take to accumulate this amount of debt? It was three years now. Okay. At what point did you start to say, uh-oh, this is a problem? About a year and a half ago, I guess. That's when the CRA reached out, and we started talks, and I had to start paying them, which is where my income on the personal account started to drop off, because I had to start committing to payments to the CRA.
Starting point is 00:08:09 So it was $3,000 a month at first, then it grew to $5,000, then they're asking for $7,000. When you stopped taking home an income, I assume the two of you had a series of conversations about that. Did that happen? Not a lot of detail to my recollection. Wait, if one partner stops bringing home income, that seems like you'd talk about it. Where am I missing it? I would ask this payday coming this week, and sometimes the answer was yes. Sometimes it was late, sometimes it was half of the payday.
Starting point is 00:08:40 And then I started working, and I wasn't really planning on it, was at home with the kids. And I was expecting that money to be able to go into savings, paying off whatever other debts we had. And then rapidly it started to shift into John wasn't able to have a payday. So I would bring my money in instead and use that to cover bills in the mortgage. And then that started happening more and more where his payday wasn't coming in at all. And mine was taking over everything. Could you make it on one income, on your income alone, Amy? Yes.
Starting point is 00:09:14 Yeah, we could. We were doing okay. There was definitely some times where I remember having to help cover. the rent for his shop one month help cover extra wages of one of his employees one month that was coming out of our personal income. A bit of a boiling frog metaphor.
Starting point is 00:09:34 You know, just like the temperature went up, just one degree at a time. How accurate would you say that is? Absolutely. Yeah. All right. What about the ramifications of this secret debt? What have they been? Our relationship has probably gone through its roughest year because of it. It's cold.
Starting point is 00:09:52 financial infidelity, I believe. And it was 18 months to two years of not knowing that he was accumulating this debt and he had a plan. He thought he could handle it until he couldn't. And then that was one I found out. John, what have the ramifications been for you? Well, after the conversation last year, the idea was that I was going to close down and work for someone else. So losing the business was pretty depressing, but also I know that I did a lot of damage in her marriage and the trust. So I lost a lot of that. And so it took a lot to build that back and just show her that I'm here for us and our family. I'm not choosing the business over our family. Yeah. Since this came to light, the secret debt, how did you stay together, stay connected,
Starting point is 00:10:48 What did it take? Well, credit to Amy for being the one to always spark the conversation, the hard to have conversations. They're uncomfortable, but as we got into them, we got through them. And we went to bed together still at the end of each of those nights and being willing to put in the work for our marriage and our family, all of those things was what was driving me to get through it. Amy, what about you from your perspective?
Starting point is 00:11:18 We've been together for 10 years, and I really love him. But also really trying to hammer home to John that we're a team. That even though that's his business, it still impacts me. It impacts our family. And the choices he makes over there have the potential to risk everything for us. And to do that by himself, like that's a huge weight for him to be carrying on his own, not fair for him, I'm his partner and his teammate, that that's supposed to be something that we carry and we figure out together. And because he had made a choice to continue carrying
Starting point is 00:11:56 that way by himself for so long, it took such an extra toll on him that it didn't need to and it prevented this huge timeframe where we could have been figuring something out together. That was really frustrating and something that I really tried to get through to him as well. Got it. Amy, in your application, you wrote, I don't know how to create a conscious spending plan when there is no money left at the end of the month,
Starting point is 00:12:25 even after cutting out every single extra cost we could. Both of you are nodding. What was it feeling like confusion, helplessness? What? All the above. Yeah. Okay. If you know, mine, I'll jump in.
Starting point is 00:12:42 There's some curveballs. So we were in the process of me switching gears. I had something lined up and realized that that income that I was going to bring in was going to be significantly less than what I could do with the business. And at the exact, well, nearly the same time, Amy's pay got cut quite a bit as well. What did you guys do? What I want to know is what'd you do when you discovered this massive gap? Well, so I'd turn down the job and I stuck with the business.
Starting point is 00:13:12 and I laid off some employees and now bringing them a consistent paycheck. And that's where we're at right now. And Amy's got some schooling that she's in the works with to boost her income. Okay, sorry, let me just pause you right there. So I'm trying to understand if when couples see numbers that are staggering and stark and not the direction they need to go, sometimes, in fact, most times they do. do nothing. They simply like bury the piece of paper under the couch cushions and then they just like, they go, ah, whatever, it'll work itself out. This sucks. It's like learning to live
Starting point is 00:13:52 with a toothache. In a rare, rare number of circumstances, like maybe three to five percent, they go, what the f***? And it's a red alert. It's like they do a spring cleaning. Which one was it? We did the spring cleaning. We did. And I'm one who manages all of our household finances. What? Whoa. You did the spring cleaning? We did the spring cleaning. Okay. All right. We cut out everything. We spend hours sitting down and adding up every single number. And I know you don't like the semantics of the spending, but it was like, okay, how much are we spending a month on groceries? If we're eating out, how much are we spending on that? So getting kind of the lump sums and where the money was going and then being like, okay, we need to cut that down by this much hour.
Starting point is 00:14:35 We did. So there's no eating out at all. Well, what matters is you actually were quite responsive. You did cut your spending, which is great. That tells me when circumstances required it, YouTube both said, we got to make a change. Yeah. Great. Amy used the phrase financial infidelity. She thought that their finances were fine.
Starting point is 00:14:57 They were going out to dinner, buying a new car. But turns out that John was hiding hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt for years. And we can fix a little overspending. but it's a lot harder to fix broken trust, especially around a topic like money, which is one of the most intimate taboo topics there is. What do you think happens when one of you is not honest about your finances with your partner?
Starting point is 00:15:22 Right after this break, I'm going to walk you through their numbers, and you're going to see just how deep this hole really goes. Here's a DM I got from one of my listeners about this episode sponsor, Element. I love it after my sauna cold plunge sessions. I do two rounds of sauna, then cold plunge. I love drinking Element after my sessions. Another person said,
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Starting point is 00:18:18 Let's look at the numbers. Amy, can you read off the word in bold and then the number in full next to it, please? assets, $900,000, investments, zero, savings, $2,160,000, $760,181. Total net worth is $133,979. All right, what do you think of that? We were happy that we weren't in the negative when it came to the total. That was the astounding part. All right, that's good. John, what do you think of the numbers? Yeah, same. I was expecting that to be a negative, but to be slightly in the positive was a nice surprise wow all right so far so good net worth is a moment in time it is a snapshot we want to get a little bit more information so that we understand monthly what's going on so this time i'm going to ask you john to read off your gross combined monthly income please
Starting point is 00:19:19 that is 12,940 okay great and that means that combined the two of you make $155,000 per year? Did you know that number? Amy says yes. John just took a deep breath. I did not. John did not. All right. Wow. I don't want to be a statistic. No. Everyone take a deep breath and recognize statistics matter. 50% of people I talk to do not know their household income. And here, right on the money, 50% on this call, do not know. John, how do you feel to be a statistic? Do I have time to defend myself? It's not defend. It's just, it's a fact. You don't know your number. Now you know your number. You make $155,208 a year household income. Great. Let's get
Starting point is 00:20:09 to the number that's giving me, I don't know what this feeling is in my body, but it's giving me some kind of feeling. Hey, Amy, can you read off the fixed cost number, please? Oh, our fixed costs are 168% 168% fixed costs. What does that mean? Well, it means that we're basically screwed at the end of every month and rely on some credit card debt in order for us to get by. You are spending more than you make every month.
Starting point is 00:20:38 That's for sure, right? It's not sustainable. I agree. John, what does it mean to you? Well, okay, so Amy's income was basically halved. I set my income at $7,000. and we're projecting her income to be 4,000. It's less than 2,000.
Starting point is 00:20:55 Well, it's 2,500. We'll fix the income, okay? Is it going to matter? 168%, 134%, does it really matter? No. If her income had a drop, those numbers would be in a lot, much better shape. So this is a snapshot of where it is, and it's a horrible number, and it's not sustainable. Hold on, hold on, hold on. Let's fix it. Let's fix her number. So let's, in a hypothetical world where her income did not drop, what is her take home pay? Tell me.
Starting point is 00:21:26 It would have been the same as Johns. 7,000. Yeah. Okay, watch. What happens to your fixed costs? Still higher than it should be, but it would still be manageable. It's 72%, which is way better. That's totally manageable. Okay. So now the question is, how come you are not making $7,000 a month take home, Amy? Because in the world of doing the kind of content creation stuff that I part-time do, it's it just volatile and wasn't all in my control. Fine. All right. So that's a good exploration. I agree 7,000 net would change things considerably, but you don't make that.
Starting point is 00:22:03 It would have been great. It doesn't exist. Right. You have 168% on fixed costs. You're broke. Yeah. Yep. We all agree?
Starting point is 00:22:13 Yep. All right. Why don't we go through the rest just to get. a good gauge at the high level. So investments are at 1%. $40 a month to a registered RRSP. All right, fine. One percent going to savings, which is $50 for gifts. Always funny to me. $50 to gifts and $20 to a registered education. Please tell me this is not for your kids. It is. You get tax exempt. It's a positive thing to do if you're making a lot of money. It's a good thing to. That's so nice.
Starting point is 00:22:45 wonder what your kids will say when they have a $1,800 in their college plan while their parents are homeless. What do you think they'll say about them? Well, we'll be living with them. Isn't that supposed to be the joke instead? I know. That's a good point, though. Maybe aside from the jokes, we can look at where the money's going. And then finally, we have guilt-free spending, which is negative 70%. So obviously that doesn't work. In fact, there's some numbers on here that just point-blank do not work mathematically. One of them is that you are. missing $4,190 a month. That means you're overspending, obviously. And if we go back up to your income, it indicates, I believe this is you, your net income is negative $1,000. Yeah. How can that be?
Starting point is 00:23:30 So she gets the $2,400 a month and then makes a payment to the CRA for $3,600, let's say. So that's where the- Once a year? Every month. Every month. That's where, like, if you look at the negative that we're in a negative over $4,000 every month. It's because I have to send the CRA 3,736. But that's not because of your income, right, Amy? Yes, it is. That's my income tax debt. That was a previous year. So it's last year's total income tax debt that we weren't able to pay. And that's the same thing on my end that's accumulated. So she's also got a number that we're paying off as well. I see. Okay, got it. Let me tell you how I would recognize that differently here. Okay, I think this is a good key, important point. So what you did was you
Starting point is 00:24:19 basically skip to skip. You're probably making $1,000 a month here on your net. Ballpark, okay? What you just saw is your fixed cost drop down to 126%. Okay, that's good. But your debt payments are actually higher. They're probably $2,000 higher. So instead of this, I'm just going to, I'll add it 5,888. and now your debt payments are up to like 151%. Roughly in the same genre. But it is more properly represented here. Do you see what I did? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:54 Yeah. It doesn't substantively change anything, but it's important to understand nobody really is taking home less than $0 if they're working it. We've got to understand the basic stuff correctly. So fixed costs are at like 151% approximately. Debt payments are. more than 50% of take-home pay.
Starting point is 00:25:17 Way over. They're $5,888 versus $8,000 of take-home pay. I would describe that as unsustainable. Let me just be direct. When over 50% of your take-home pay goes to debt, it is a massive red alert. I ran the actual percentage of what their debt payments are compared to their take-home pay,
Starting point is 00:25:40 and it's an astonishing 73.6. percent. That's it. Game over. You cannot build any kind of financial future, much less a rich life when nearly three quarters of your income is gone the moment it hits your account. And within the debt, we still have layers and layers of debt. We have business debt, personal tax debt. They mentioned a car loan. I suspect there's even more. This is a major clue that tells me they've built a financial system that guarantees they're going to stay broke. It doesn't matter how hard they work. structurally set themselves up to fail, and no amount of hustling will ever change that. It's like building a freaking house out of popsicle sticks and then putting your house right next
Starting point is 00:26:24 to a fire factory where all things do is just light on fire every single night. What do you think is going to happen? It doesn't matter how many sticks you use for your house. It's going to burn down every single night. Now, they've already mentioned a few of the debts they're carrying. I think it's time to get specific. Listen now as I ask them to break it all down. Amy, can you explain the $768,181 in debt? What is underneath those numbers?
Starting point is 00:26:50 Our mortgage at $514,000. Our credit card debt at $7,000. John's income tax debt at $53,500. My income tax debt at $43,680. And our car loan debt at roughly $50,000. All right. Fine. $7,000 of credit card debt. What's that for? That's what's been filling in the gap. All right. And a car loan of $50,000, what's that?
Starting point is 00:27:20 Wow, Amy looks very scared right now. Go ahead, Amy. You should be. I know how you feel about this stuff. What'd you get? Well, okay. This does require a bit of backstory. Not really.
Starting point is 00:27:32 What kind of car? Tesla Model Y, 2012 23. That's even worse than I thought. I'm the one who applied for the approval of even being able to get a car loan. And I was under the assumption we were in good financial standing. This is a part of that financial infidelity. At no point during any of this conversation that we were looking at getting a new vehicle for the first time in our lives, did the information come up that we had this debt sitting there?
Starting point is 00:27:59 I thought we were good. There is also a government initiative program where you get money for buying an electric vehicle. So we actually didn't pay anything out of pocket to get it. And yes, in hindsight, once I found out about everything, I was humiliated. I was humiliated that we're driving around in Tesla with this much debt sitting in our back pocket. It was definitely a huge part of my anger because I would not ever have made that call. Yeah. All jokes aside, I understand what you're saying.
Starting point is 00:28:32 And I have to ask, John, as Amy was going through this diligence process of finding the car and, you know, that's an expensive car. Why didn't she say anything? Because at the time I was paying the CRA and they were happy. I was making regular payments and I thought that's just how it was going to continue. All right. So you thought it would be okay, John. You had the plan and you were paying and then things got worse. Well, so the collections officers, they changed so frequently.
Starting point is 00:29:01 So the next one I got was starting to lay the hammer down and he said, no, you need to come up with all the money right away, which was not going to happen. So I had to meet it halfway and up the payments. And so that's where my personal income started to dwindle. And the payments increased over there. So that's when it hit the fan. Okay. So you said, okay, I'm getting a lot of pressure from the government to pay more. I'm going to cut my own income to the household.
Starting point is 00:29:28 It's okay because Amy, she's covering it. That worked for a while. And then it got even harder. She had to step in and help with the business rent and a business employee. and that's when things started to, it sounds like, spiral. Am I reading that correctly? Yeah, I was in the process of getting larger jobs and more of them. So the outlook to look promising is kind of like a carrot being dangled in front of me.
Starting point is 00:29:54 It's like, okay, you know, it's going to get better. It's going to get better. It's going to get better is what I was seeing on the business side of it. John, how good are you at managing risk? I'd like to think I'm pretty good at it, but I can't. control timelines on projects. Yeah. Amy, what do you think? I think that he is an internal optimist,
Starting point is 00:30:17 and that is the side of that that I really admire and love about him, but that is also why we are where we are. My colleague recently got a physical, and her doctor asked her, did you ever see that eye doctor we talked about? Last year, it had been three years since your last eye checkup. Take one guess at her answer. Nope. She got busy.
Starting point is 00:30:38 She didn't feel like searching for doctors who take insurance, didn't want to waste time on the phone, seeing if there was an appointment available in the next six weeks. I get it. This stuff is annoying. But here's a better option. She could use Zock Doc, search for a doctor, and book that appointment that she's been putting off today.
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Starting point is 00:31:38 Zok-D-D-C-com slash Rame. It's fascinating to hear what people worry about when it comes to costs. We have a friend who once made her husband return the frozen French fries he bought because they were 25 cents more expensive than the generic brand. Yet these very same people have a net worth of multiple millions of dollars and they are paying a big fat percentage to an annual financial advisor to manage that money. Over their lifetime, they will pay hundreds of thousands of dollars,
Starting point is 00:32:12 actually probably more like a million plus dollars, to that advisor in fees. But it's a lot easier to worry about the cost of tater tots than to pay attention to what is quietly leaving your portfolio every quarter in exorbitant fees. There is a better way. It's called a flat fee. That is why I recommend FASIT. FASID charges a flat membership fee for financial planning, not a percentage of your portfolio. You get access to a team of CFP professionals, always a CFP, always a fiduciary, who help you create a personalized financial plan and actually keep it updated. They help with investment management, retirement planning, tax strategy, estate planning so that you are not doing it alone. And the plan, involves with your life, whether you're starting a family, changing jobs, or planning for retirement. Right now, Facet is waiving their $250 enrollment fee for new annual members, and if you invest and maintain $5,000 within your first 90 days, they will add $300 to your brokerage account. Head to facet.com slash remit to see which membership, core plus or complete, is right for you.
Starting point is 00:33:23 Again, that's facet.com slash remit. I'm not a member of Facet, and I have an incentive to endorse facet, as I have an ongoing fee-based contract for cash compensation based on this endorsement. All opinions are my own and not a guarantee of similar outcome. If you shut the business down today, what happens to the tax? Is it still owed? Yeah. And what's the bankruptcy laws in Canada? We have to pay off the source deductions before we can file a bankruptcy or a consumer proposal. How much is that? The source deduction is 180,000 right now. Let's say you paid that off somehow.
Starting point is 00:34:04 Would you be able to declare bankruptcy? It does look like once the source deductions are paid off that banks and the consumer proposal, other options would become available, like consolidation debt kind of options. So we would be able to at least look into those before we had to assess for bankruptcy. So it sounds like maybe, but not for sure.
Starting point is 00:34:27 Yeah. Yeah. All right. What do you guys think the solution is here? Well, we thought the solution was to sell the house and use the leftover to pay off as much of the debt as we could. I think we calculated there's still going to be some left, depending on where we ended up in a house situation. We looked at buying somewhere across the province. So we actually explored that quite a bit to sell the house. We thought about refinancing the house.
Starting point is 00:34:57 So I got to work and put in a rental suite downstairs to increase the value of the house so that we could get it appraised or a higher amount. Somewhere around 850 is what we're shooting for. And that difference of about 300,000 would be significant. I think we could only refinance 80% of the difference. So it's not an actual 300,000, but 80% of 300,000. But we couldn't go that route. Right.
Starting point is 00:35:30 No, wait. Why couldn't we go that route again? Because our lender with a mortgage, policies in place. At the time, yes, right. At the time that you are not allowed to use the equity in your home to pay off CRA debt. That's right.
Starting point is 00:35:45 Specifically, CRA, they would not lend us money. Same with banks. Same with the same thing. We'll not lend you money if it's to go towards a government debt. What if you just do? the house. We looked to see what we could sell the house for, where else we could move. And ultimately, we decided to try to hold on to the house to see if we could Airbnb or rent out
Starting point is 00:36:08 the basement suite, have any supplemental income as well as just an ounce of happiness. We really love the community that we're in. It's a small community. I'm involved with the school here, and there was that piece of it as well. And all of our family is where we live and the only option for us if we sold was to move away. We wouldn't be able to afford to stay here at all. It wasn't going to be an option and we would lose every single piece of our village. So that was a factor that we had to consider as well. You thought about the first option about building something. First floor didn't work. You thought about selling based on your decision. That didn't work. Where are you today? What's the solution? The solution that far is that I am
Starting point is 00:36:53 taking courses to become a nail technician and open a nail studio with the space downstairs and looked at the projections around income in our area. It's not an oversaturated market out here and I would be able to make between $4,000 or $5,000 a month, which would be significantly more than a rental suite. Airbnb is becoming an option in our area. They're really trying to just kind of act completely. You're going to start a nail technician business. Okay. And John? I am I'm trying to come up with ways to boost my income as well. I don't want to do the same thing I did with the business and pull every dollar out of it and then the business over again.
Starting point is 00:37:35 So I am trying to tread carefully with the projects I have right now and use that money wisely in the business and pay what we need on our household. But I'm looking at possibly boosting my take home soon. Do you currently make a gross monthly income of $10,440 a month? Net would be $7,000. So after tax is $7,000 a month. Okay, okay. How much does a business make in total?
Starting point is 00:38:06 Like revenues? Yeah. It fluctuates so much. The problem was I was pulling every dollar. So in the past it's been 130, some years it was 70. I mean, I believe the 2023 or 2024, it was literally $30,000 that you had made the entire year. So it's very, very inconsistent. So the business is not making enough to pull out $7,000 a month net.
Starting point is 00:38:32 That's what I'm hearing. Well, so far, since I've made changes and I have laid off staff, there's more money left over at the end of the month. So I'm now able to pay myself that wage now as of January. So this next calendar year, the profits are going to be much better for the business. and I'll be able to sustain 7,000 a month every month. Okay. So long as I hit my sales number, that's the caveat there.
Starting point is 00:38:59 And that's the tricky part with being in the industry of trades. You know, it's feasts and famine. We've probably heard about the trade war going on. We may or may not see some price increases and people not want to build anymore, in which case I am now vulnerable again. You know, most people don't wake up in the market. morning like me and say, today is a risk management day. But you do manage risk every single day. You manage risk when you wear your seatbelt, when you lock your front door, when you take a
Starting point is 00:39:32 vaccine, unless you're an anti-vaxxer, in which case, get off my podcast. You manage risk when you set up automatic savings for a rainy day. Even though there may not be an emergency now, you know that one could come. Managing risk means planning for things that haven't happened yet, but John didn't do that. He kept on pouring money into a business that was already failing. He took on CRA debt. He cut his income without telling Amy. And when I asked him, if he was good at managing risk, did you catch what he said? He said, yes. This is very common with dreamers. They will tell themselves, if I just try hard enough, it'll work out. They will often point at all the work they're doing, all the hustling, all the deals that are just about to close. I want to know
Starting point is 00:40:16 where these patterns of money came from. So stay tuned as I dig deeper. I want to understand. I want understand more about how the two of you think about money. So, Amy, when you were growing up, what do you remember your family saying about money? My situation is a little bit more complicated. I have a household that I grew up in. My parents divorced when I was a baby. And more often than not, my mom was a single parent. She hated money. She didn't like talking about it. She didn't like that it existed. She said that. My dad said that about her. She was a single parent, her off. But in hindsight, I was able to gather that she wasn't very good at handling her finances. And there was some months that our power got shut off. And I as a kid, she very much
Starting point is 00:41:03 kept that from me. It wasn't my burden to carry. But we lived in an old house. I just assumed that maybe the power ended up in the neighborhood. And I never knew. But we had to go to the laundromat. And there was some weeks where I would have to pick through and decide which of of my dirty clothes, I wanted to wash because we couldn't afford to wash all of them. So that was that side with my mom. The other side at my dad's house was him and my stepmom, and he worked a very average government job, consistent paycheck, pension, all of those details. And he lived off credit cards. And generationally, his dad had never said no to him ever and ended up dying without a penny to his name. And my dad continued that mentality with himself that if he ever
Starting point is 00:41:57 wanted anything, he bought it, including cars to work on, motorcycles, whatever toy he wanted. Everything new and shiny and pretty. And yeah, last I'd heard, it was over $90,000 in credit card debt with multiple different credit cards. 90,000, yeah. What lessons do you think you brought from your childhood money messages to this relationship with John? I feel like it is a very chaotic mess. I moved out at 18 and I didn't save a penny ever. By a 20 bucks in my account, I was stoked because I could still go get Starbucks. I worked hard and I should have had money and I never did.
Starting point is 00:42:40 I spent it. All my bills were covered. My rent was always covered, but I just spent whatever I had. What about today? Today, I am the worrier. I am always stressed and fearful and wondering how to make more money and how to make what we have go further, how to make our groceries last longer. Is your financial life chaotic? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:07 I feel like we're flying by the seat of our pants every single day. No matter how frequently you sit down and budget and spreadsheet, I feel like no matter what at the end of the day, we're just flying blind. Okay. John, what do you remember your family saying about money when you were young? My parents asked us never to talk about our finances with other people. Oh. Because it was private. You grew up in Canada? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:32 You grew up in like the equivalent of the Midwest of Canada? No, no, I wouldn't say that. What the fuck? All right, that's a very Midwestern thing. Is it? Okay. Yeah, like money is for adults and like that's not for the children type of thing. Okay, go on. Well, so what I mean is they would mention, we don't have money for that, we don't need, we don't have money to do that. We're saving our money. We'll, you know, this month we're a little, like, cinch the belt was a term they used to, uh, when they needed to, like save up for a trip or, were you poor? That's what they made it seem like when we were growing up that we were not well off. But I think that they, now that I'm in a position that they were in, I think they were, they did quite well. We went to Disneyland.
Starting point is 00:44:17 on ski trips. They drove cars, but that's because they didn't prioritize buying fancy cars. They bought a four-acre hobby farm, which nowadays is worth a lot of money because of the location. So they said those things growing up, and they said, keep it between us. So that's what I mean. What happened as you got older? When I had a job, I was always living paycheck to paycheck, especially in my younger years because I was just out partying too much. But I had an apart. I was paying rent, wasn't prioritized in buying groceries, but I was just blowing my money at a young age. What did you tell yourself at this time?
Starting point is 00:44:56 Let's say, what are we talking, early 20s? Yeah. What did you tell yourself about money back then? I wanted to earn more of it. I wanted to be financially stable one day. I don't believe that. I don't believe you told yourself in your 20s, I want to be financially stable. I simply don't believe that.
Starting point is 00:45:15 No 20-year-old... One day. No 20-year-old guy says that to himself, ever. I was looking at buying investment properties on the East Coast. Yeah, but that wasn't to be financially stable. What was it to be? Yeah, for passive income. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:45:30 What else did you tell yourself in your 20s when you were out partying, spending my... I'm not judging. I don't care. I spent a lot of money in my 20s, too. But what did you tell yourself? I wasn't worried about the money I was spending because I was making pretty good money. Mm-hmm. So, like, if you log in your checking account and it was like, I don't know, 50 bucks or
Starting point is 00:45:49 100 bucks or something, what did you tell yourself? Save that until next payday. Okay. And then in my mid-20s, I started saving money and actually, like, taking my paychecks and dividing them into sub-accounts to not be blowing my money all the time. Where's the savings? What's that? Where's the savings?
Starting point is 00:46:08 It's 15 years later. Well, we bought this house. Okay. It's very fascinating to me. So, like, a lot of people, they save, you know, like, very thoughtfully. They save for decades. And then they buy a house, and then they feel house poor. And I go, like, I just said, where's your money?
Starting point is 00:46:28 Where's the savings? It's been 15 years of savings. Show me where it is. And your answer was kind of like, you know, a little mopey. Well, I didn't get this house. Okay, well, where's the savings? I didn't finish, actually. It wasn't 15 years of savings.
Starting point is 00:46:43 I didn't say that. mid-20s, you're 40. Yeah, but I wasn't saving this whole time. Okay, carry on. I spent it on items. Like, I bought myself a Jeep, paid it off early. Bought myself a bunch of equipment for my business. I'd aid up a lot of money.
Starting point is 00:47:00 I was having fun with that. I was doing what I wanted with it. Right now, I can't do what I want with money because it's not there. Well, it's there, but you just owe a lot of debt. Yeah. It's like when your five-year-old falls down. It's not that big of a deal. When a 40-year-old man falls down, it's a much bigger deal.
Starting point is 00:47:14 I handle all of our finances and I can see that there's no savings. I can see that there's no retirement plan. I can see if John gets hurt tomorrow on a job, we're f***. We don't have life insurance. We've got nothing. There is no cushion if we fall. We lose everything overnight. We lose his business. We lose the house, the car. We lose literally everything because there's nothing. And I have tried to have these conversations and not that I get a blank look from John, but I don't get this sense of like believing that that could happen or believing that there's an urgency in these things. John, do you agree with Amy that you're one injury away from major, major problems, including no life insurance? I honestly don't feel like there's any
Starting point is 00:48:04 money for that. I feel we're so strapped for money that I am just trying to bring in as much as I can. So I'm focused on trying to earn as much as I can. But it's been years. It's not like it's only been in the last six months where things have been excessively tied. And I've had moments where it's been terrifying. It's kind of scary to hear when two partners don't see money the same way. And we're not talking about having five or $10,000 of debt. We're talking about having hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt with two kids, with no life insurance, with less than than a month's worth of expenses in your savings account. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:45 This is a major problem. What's the future? At this trajectory, it's not looking good. Be specific. We cannot hold on to this house. We can't have two cars. We could sell and hopefully pay off a large amount of money and rent. I don't know if we could afford to buy in a different city.
Starting point is 00:49:08 but yeah something at this trajectory we're sinking extremely fast that's not the worst case to me that actually sounds perfectly fine to me oh we sell a house and make hundreds of thousands of dollars and then go rent somewhere oh boohoo what do you mean that sounds fine
Starting point is 00:49:23 I don't really consider that actually that's like good case John what's bad case I don't think jail time is in the cards but what's worse I guess bankruptcy would be worse credit takes a huge hit. I think you just answered my question because that's not the worst case. Like I said, that's actually ideal. Worst cases your business gets knocked down tomorrow because of
Starting point is 00:49:48 tariffs or whatever. Or you get injured or something happens to Amy's thing and you all have one week's worth of money and that's it. And now your house is going to get taken. Your kids can't go to school where they go to school. Who knows what's going to happen to a relationship under this kind of financial stress. That's bad. You guys don't talk about this a lot? I've tried. I have tried the tactics of scaring into action, I guess. Is it work? No, we're here, so no. Okay. It feels like you two are stuck. I actually felt like we talk about our situation, or money quite often, especially recently, we are talking about like, you know, we can't afford to do that. We shouldn't be spending money on that. You know, we got to stop doing that.
Starting point is 00:50:44 The long-term savings, yeah, maybe we have a different vision of where we're at, what the plan is with that. I feel like we don't even have a dollar to put towards savings right now or retirement. Hold on. You've used the words feelings a lot about money. I don't feel we have and uh do you know well yeah so what i mean by that is i we don't have the money for that i don't see it i don't see it okay okay fair fine amy looks skeptical but this is beside the point john you're surprised that you and amy don't see eye to eye on the acute severity of the problem and you're saying like hey we have a plan actually like i think we're on top of it day to day okay fine maybe you are maybe not i take your word for it but the day of day is not really what
Starting point is 00:51:33 concerns me. My question is, what's the plan? When is the debt going to be paid off? How are you going to increase your savings so that if something happens to one of you, your children are protected? What would be your answers to those questions? Mine is about... I'm not talking to John, please. No. See, that's where I feel like we're stuck. I don't see like how we can come up with more money until we earn more money. Let me say something I think a lot of people feel, but rarely say out loud. John is trying. He is showing up. He's having conversations. He's working hard. And in most areas of life, that counts for something. But when it comes to money, effort doesn't always matter. The world doesn't care how many hours you've worked if you're not driving actual
Starting point is 00:52:18 results. Your credit card company is not going to give you a round of applause for updating a spreadsheet. The CRA doesn't care if you tried your best. They just want their money. Like it reminds me of the spelling be when I was a kid. I didn't do it just to have fun sitting there reading two hours a day with my mom, this freaking Scripps Howard yellow book of words. I did it to win. It was not just about effort. It was about results. And I think John is confusing effort with results. The tough part is when you're putting the effort in and still not seeing results, it can be very demoralizing. I want to tell you the difference between, in my experience, people who stay stuck and people who get unstuck and win. The most common reaction from people who get stuck is they try all this
Starting point is 00:53:01 stuff, it's not working, and then they go, what's the point? They start making up excuses, they blame the world, or they just keep doing what they're doing and hope that somehow magically things will work out. The people I know who are successful do not do that. They are very honest with themselves. They take a hard look in the mirror. They go, okay, this isn't working. What am I doing wrong? Where can I improve? Let me switch it up. And that's where I think John is. He's confused, overwhelmed, frustrated. and certainly not adapting, even though this clearly is not working. And in addition, there's another problem here. They're not working as a team.
Starting point is 00:53:35 Amy's worried about risk. John's focused on income. They stopped trusting each other with money. Remember Amy's phrase, financial infidelity is a huge deal. So before we start fixing numbers on their CSP, I want to talk about trust and what it would take to rebuild it. Listen as I ask Amy what that phrase really means to her. I recently spoke to a mom on this podcast who furnishes her house with free stuff,
Starting point is 00:54:00 not the stuff she wants, but free stuff, so that she can instead use money to buy toys for her kids. Now, I think in a way it's kind of lovely. You know, she's taking those resources and lavishing her kids. But I also think that we have to give our loved ones the things they need. And if you really want what's best for kids or anyone who depends on you, you will make sure they are financially protected in case for some, some reason you are not here tomorrow. And that means making sure you have the right term life
Starting point is 00:54:29 insurance. Fabric by Gerber Life is term life insurance you can get done today. Made for busy parents like you, it's all online on your schedule right from your couch. You could be covered in under 10 minutes with no health exam required. If you've got kids, especially if you're young and healthy, the time to lock in those low rates is now. Fabric offers flexible, high quality coverage for less than a dollar a day, and it's backed by Gerber Life. trusted by millions of families for over 50 years. Join the thousands of parents who trust Fabric to help protect their family. Apply today in just minutes at meetfabric.com slash remit.
Starting point is 00:55:07 That's meatfabric.com slash remit. M-E-E-T-Fabric.com slash remit. Policies issued by Western Southern Life Assurance Company, not available in certain states, prices subject to underwriting and health questions. I want to understand more a little bit about the teamwork going on here. Amy, you mentioned the term financial infidelity. What does that mean to you? It's making the conscious choice day in and day out to hide something significant and the little lies that go into the decision to buy a car that would have been a good time to bring
Starting point is 00:55:53 it up and instead, you know, the little lies that we should do this. We should, that's a great idea or going on weekend trips that cost money we didn't have. Are you satisfied with John's answer that he thought things were fine? There was a conversation we had at dinner once and I said, okay, we need to get you back into work. I see now that that was not even close to enough information. We really need to get you back to work. I agree. That is not direct at all. Amy, when he said that, what did you think? That meant nothing to me. Yeah. Yeah, I don't know what that was supposed to mean, but that definitely wasn't clear that meant I'm carrying a whole bunch of debt over here and that's how we're going to fix it is by
Starting point is 00:56:40 you going back to work. John, what stopped you out of curiosity from being that direct? I guess I was scared. That was a lot of money. Yeah, I was trying desperately to get rid of it, to pay that debt and just move on from it, but I couldn't get a handle on it, so. I feel like we're trotting water. Like, I feel like the want is there, but that's kind of where it seems to stop. But are we working together, or? Let me ask a different way. Are you working together effectively?
Starting point is 00:57:12 No, because we're still in the negative by thousands every month. And I don't think that it's effective. John? Well, can actually we follow up? I'd like to know why. Well, I mean, even a week or two ago, I had to pay the CRA payment, I had to pay our property taxes, and we had $500 left in the bank account. I was stressed. And so my solution was, I'm going to sell some things on Marketplace. Have $100 to go grocery shopping. Haven't had to do that since I was in my early 20s to make sure that no money was being touched under that account. And I remember messaging you and just, saying, hey, please don't make any extra stops this week. No beer pickups, no extra snacks. And your response was simply, okay, with a heart. And in my mind, that would have been a bit of a
Starting point is 00:58:03 red flag to come home and be like, hey, what's going on with our finances? What's going on this month? So it's just one of those moments that kind of highlighted like, okay, I am carrying this weight over here on my own when it comes to how our household is being run and what our monthly finances look like. Like, that's on me. John? Yeah, I mean, it feels more and more like I'm just getting attacked here, so I'm starting to feel defensive, to be quite honest. I am absolutely stressed out about our finances and the business finances.
Starting point is 00:58:34 Like, it's not like, oh, that's your problem, you deal with it. No, this is our problem that I got us into. This has weighed on me for years. It's changed me as a person. This is an unbearable amount of stress. and I feel it every day, all hours of the day. How can I improve that? How can I make more money?
Starting point is 00:58:59 That's my focus right now. I find that to be an extremely interesting reaction that you just had, John. First of all, I welcome it. I love when somebody can describe how they are feeling in the moment. I never want to attack anyone arbitrarily. That's not my job. My job is to figure out how to get you where you want to go. The reason I called that response interesting was it almost felt like it was one of the first
Starting point is 00:59:26 times that you have literally and figuratively leaned forward. Like, this is how I'm feeling. I'm stressed. I'm feeling attacked. Like, now we're in this. That is the level of anger that I want you to have. Because hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt is actually not acceptable. It's not.
Starting point is 00:59:47 and like this concept of like well we talk about it a lot and it's like fine but your partner says it's not fine and so if one partner says it's not fine it's not fine and then like well what's the plan what's the debt payoff date don't know how are we going to build savings don't know we got to like make more money how don't know like that's not acceptable and i like the anger because it's going to take decisiveness to get out of this situation so i welcome your response and i appreciate that you are able to articulate how you're feeling, that's hard for me. I'm like, wow, that was masterful. How do you feel about continuing our conversation? First of all, I agree with a lot of what's being said, but I feel like I'm being painted as a bit of an idiot and a bit of the
Starting point is 01:00:33 enemy here. Because why? I'm not totally sure I agree with some of the answers. Whose answers? There's just a lot of information that hasn't been accurately. There's so many details to all of this. Okay, tell me. I've clearly made a big mistake, not having a grasp on the business financials. But I feel that since then, involved with the household budget, I feel like we've been doing a pretty good job.
Starting point is 01:01:03 And I thought we're communicating that together as a team. All right, I need to cut in here because emotions are starting to get high. And honestly, I love it. John is frustrated, which makes me so happy. It tells me that he cares. This is the kind of energy I want to see, present, engaged, even if it means frustrated. The worst reaction would be somebody just going, uh, this guy. That's checked out.
Starting point is 01:01:29 I can't help that because once you're gone, you're gone. But to be in it, to disagree with me, I welcome it. To be able to articulate how you're feeling in a moment like he just did, that is incredibly impressive. When we get flooded or overwhelmed or we feel misunderstood, when we're fighting, with somebody. Our body literally changes. We shut down. We can't hear the same way that we normally do. And so we react in these peculiar ways. We project, we deflect, we deny. So for John to pause and say, I feel attacked. I am actually in awe. That is a master level reaction. It is something
Starting point is 01:02:05 that I have tried to learn in therapy, and it is really hard. I also love when someone pushes back on me. It's a good sign. The last thing I want is for somebody to come on this show and nod through the whole thing, all right, and then leave saying, that guy. If you disagree, say it. That's how we actually get somewhere. So I appreciate what just happened. But now I have to push because despite everything we've heard, John still thinks they're doing pretty good.
Starting point is 01:02:30 They're not. You cannot be doing pretty good when you're hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt and one emergency away from disaster. So listen as I push John to really understand the severity of their situation and hopefully start playing offense instead of defense. You have $2,000 in your savings account with two kids. You have no money left. So you could talk together, but it doesn't change the fact that you're not making effective decisions.
Starting point is 01:03:00 And because, John, you are the one who put this level of financial risk on the family, in my opinion, it would be your responsibility to take the lead on getting your family out of it. it. So can I ask you something? Yes. The $320,000 debt is getting a $10,000 payment each month going forward. That is on the side. Our personal, I then transfer $7,000 a month to our personal side, and we're still struggling on the personal side. I don't feel comfortable increasing the $7,000 because that'll just put us back into this problem. I can't pay for the source deductions, the business operating expenses.
Starting point is 01:03:51 So how do we take the $7,000 plus what Amy can bring in and how can we best use that money to keep the house and hopefully keep the car? That's what we're struggling with. I love that you're asking these questions, and I am down to play ball. Let's simulate some stuff. I think we should be a bit realistic with the income.
Starting point is 01:04:16 Honey, what do you think? We were saying like $4,000 a month? I think it was closer to five. If I was to move towards doing the nails. But is that before tax? So we have to take 30% off. Yeah, that was before tax. So 30% off of that.
Starting point is 01:04:31 $1,500 off, so $3,500. So should I change this to $3,500 take home? Yeah. Okay. Take a look at the fixed cost number. That's the number that matters. What is the number now? So 115. That's the trajectory we're trying to get to. And this is maybe our new norm.
Starting point is 01:04:47 115% is not acceptable. Right. That number needs to ideally be below 60%. We could fiddle around with it a little bit above 60, but 115% we're not even in the same universe. Right. So we're still really f***. So what do you do? Good question. Okay. Before we jump into the numbers and start messing around with the numbers, I'd like the two of you to just ask yourselves, have a conversation. The last Several times we've talked about money. How have we showed up? And now, in this conversation, how do we want to show up differently? Go ahead.
Starting point is 01:05:21 I think I always show up optimistic. I think that's pretty clear with all of the conversation so far. I am still optimistic, but I need a dose of reality, and I need to know if we have to go to the extremes of selling our house. Well, the two pieces I am thinking of is that my CRA repayment plan is short-lived. So I know that that puts us in the negative that just screws us every month right now, but I haven't defaulted on a single payment and there is a time frame. And if we can buckle down, make more money in the meantime, and get those payments done,
Starting point is 01:06:07 instead of defaulting or screwing up and letting it snowball into a higher number, that feels like a light of the end of the tunnel when it comes to that one there. At the same time, there's the schooling that I'm doing to be able to make that income right downstairs. And so, yes, obviously, if we have to sell, we have to sell. but I lose that option of having rent-free space downstairs to run a potentially successful business. Like I said, that is not an oversaturated market in our area. I do believe that that will financially be lucrative and will help.
Starting point is 01:06:48 So that's where my brain goes or are those two pieces. It's just how do we navigate the current financial situation until these pieces are dealt with, really. Sorry, can I cut in real quick? First of all, I like this. Back and forth is great. The question was, how have we shown up in past conversations and how do we want to show up differently? I just feel like no matter how good or productive conversations are,
Starting point is 01:07:14 no matter how many calculations we make at the end of every time, it's kind of like, okay, we just kind of keep going back to hoping for the best, and that's it. So how do you want to show up? With a plan, I'd like to stop feeling like we're, just grappling around in the dark. That's generic. I know.
Starting point is 01:07:33 That's like me saying I want to go to the gym and just like magically get a six-pack. That's an outcome. How do you want to show up in this conversation? I would like to show up as being more optimistic. Oh. I guess that would be nice where I get to show up feeling like there's hope and... Look at John's face. I like that for her.
Starting point is 01:07:55 There's a smile. John's nodding. He was kind of caught off. guard, right, John? Yeah, I like that response from her. I want that for her too. Okay. If it were me from knowing you, the way I would show up is I would say, I think in the past, we have danced around the truth. And the way I want to show up is I am ready to make hard decisions now. And I would almost reframe it to bad news in the short term is good news in the long term. But bad news in the long term is death. Yeah. And that's what you've been doing. Hope is not a
Starting point is 01:08:37 strategy. Fiddling around with numbers is not a strategy. We need to make some tough decisions. Are you all ready? Okay, great. Let's take a look. The goal is to get your debt paid off, your fixed costs down to roughly 60%. I understand that might be difficult. Maybe we stretch it a little bit, but in the ballpark. Now, I'd like to just give folks a quick little understanding of where the money's going and fixed costs. Your housing costs at $2,975 a month plus your utilities are 26%. Not bad for what I assume is high cost of living area.
Starting point is 01:09:14 Yeah. Okay. Insurance 455, car payments at $1,077. Debt payments $5,88888 per month. It's killing you. It's over half your take-home pay. Groceries at 900, clothes at 50, phone at 245, and subscriptions at 55. Nothing else is particularly egregious. It's the debt. That's your primary thing here. All right. So your fixed costs, and this is if we assume Amy is making more money, which I'm not comfortable putting that assumption in here.
Starting point is 01:09:49 I'm putting it back to a thousand. That's fair. Your fixed costs are at 151%. What do you want to do? I mean, you want to talk about making hard decisions. It would be that we have to sell the house. And the money would have to go towards the debt. I mean, it would have to knock off my debt right off the bat. I know that it's not as significant as John's debt, but knocking it out 100% would alleviate that monthly repayment plan. How much would you take home if you sold the house?
Starting point is 01:10:17 Well, we owe the bank 514. So if we got $800 for it, then that goes back, whatever fees and extras and stuff so it would be what roughly 200,000 that sounds pretty reasonable to me yeah 200,000 and just overall you you all owe 53 plus 46 that's 100 plus 150 you owe about 157,000 ballpark do you want to see what happens to your monthly money if you're able to make that change yep all right so In this case, you've sold your house. I need to know how much you are now paying for debt on a monthly basis.
Starting point is 01:11:02 Mine would be down to zero. We'd have to still put 30% aside of every paycheck. But debt, if we sell the house, mine would be wiped. Okay. So that's right here, $5,88 a month? Yeah. Okay. Just out of curiosity, when is this going to be paid off anyway?
Starting point is 01:11:18 How many months? In 2023's debt, it was supposed to be 12 months. paying it. So it'll be January that it would be done. This coming January? Yeah. Oh, all right. That opens up another possibility. Let's take a look. So first off, if we just zero this out, watch what happens to your fixed costs. Whoa. 77%. Um, is anyone seeing what I'm seeing here? What do you all take away from what just happened? So that's the scenario selling the house, right? Let me reframe it. That is the scenario of Amy's debt payments of $5,888 a month being zeroed out, being completed.
Starting point is 01:11:59 Right. How you get there, I'm now seeing multiple possibilities. You could sell the house. That's one. And you all would have a 77% fixed cost. Not great, but do a better. Better. What do you think about that?
Starting point is 01:12:17 It's definitely a contender for options, I would say. Yeah, I agree. I think that's pretty good. it would give us a lot of breathing room, a lot of options. Now, I guess it wouldn't be wise to try to take a bank loan to pay that, would it? You all need to stop dealing with debt is what you need to do. People in debt love to use more debt. And you're like the last people who should be using debt.
Starting point is 01:12:41 None of it. Home equity, refinancing, business loans, personal loans, none of it. It's kryptonite. Stay away. That's what got you into this problem. them. Yeah. All right. I'm seeing nods from both of you. I think you guys get it. If you sold the house, how much would your rent be? We've looked at the rental market and how much we would spend. We probably would look at cost-wise. We'd probably look at having to do a two-bedroom.
Starting point is 01:13:05 Two-bedroom? Yeah, have a kid's share. I agree. Okay, smaller, fine. And would that still cost $2,975 a month, plus $500 and expenses, so $3,500? That would be the high end of what we would find out here, but not totally unreasonable. John, you agree? Yeah, I think the about $3,000, Mark, here's what I'm going to say. The fact that you have a four-bedroom, and if you decide to sell and rent, it is likely that you will go to a smaller location. Yeah, significantly, yes. I, third-party outside observer, don't mind it. Easy for me to say, I don't have two kids, and I'm not going to be the one living there. But sometimes I think it's really helpful to have somebody from the outside, just giving their perspective.
Starting point is 01:13:51 So if you were able to rent a smaller place, even for $500 less, $500 a month is really meaningful to you right now, extraordinarily meaningful. That means every month you're adding 25% to your emergency fund. Guys, it's really important. This is the way you start thinking long term, not just what's happening for four months, but 12 months, 24 months, 48 months, these systemic changes like in your housing costs can really add up.
Starting point is 01:14:26 You take that 500 bucks put it in your savings account by the end of the year. Just that savings alone is $6,000 more dollars. Do you see how I'm thinking about it a little differently? That's how I want you to think about. Okay? All right. Back to the CSP, which is interesting.
Starting point is 01:14:41 We did not factor in any income changes. I think it's time to talk about the income. yeah what do you want to do i am trying so hard i pick up cleaning jobs when i can that's something i've done since i was a teenager what's our theme for this conversation right now hard change yeah i'm not interested in replaying the old stories okay they would have worked they would have worked yeah here's what i have to say you mentioned this nail tech business that you're potentially launching and you said there's not a lot of saturation what evidence do you have that you will make $3,000 per month net.
Starting point is 01:15:22 Conversations with other friends who do this as their current job and looking at the standard cost of services and even lowering it a bit as someone who would be new to it. You tend to do it a little bit cheaper. If I had five clients a day, three days a week, which it would likely be more five days a week, three clients a day type of a situation. How are you going to pay for equipment?
Starting point is 01:15:45 You've got to certainly set up something that's got to come from somewhere, it's going to cost money. Like, there's a lot of stuff involved here. I've already been doing that. Due to the content creation work, I do get products for free. And after the certain amount of time, I've actually been selling those items, there's furniture items, and then using that money to thrift and buy the furniture I would need from marketplace downstairs.
Starting point is 01:16:09 So the setup is pretty well done. It's just going, and so that was less than $150 to furnish. Great. When can you start? The program is 10 to 12 weeks. I've been doing it for a month, so it's completely self-paced. It's at home. So kids are in school in two weeks. I can do much more then and not at midnight. Okay. How long will both of you give Amy, John and Amy alike, to prove that this works before making a change? I think it would take a few months to build up a clientele. My comfortable timeline would be six months. If I'm not,
Starting point is 01:16:46 seeing progress and significant clientele coming in and that income coming in, then changes need to be made. Okay, great. I like that. And what I would say is this. It could be six months. It could be four months. In that realm sounds reasonable to me. But I will also say this. It doesn't happen that you wait until five months and 30 days and then you make a decision. You actually set milestones. This is exactly what we teach in our earnable program, right, to help start and grow businesses. It's like, you set a goal. Let's say you, plan to have, let's just say, $3,000 a month in net income, let's say $5,000 a month gross, well, that means that by month one, you probably should be making $1,000, and then two, and then
Starting point is 01:17:28 three. And look, if your milestone three is to hit $3,000 and you hit $2,600, that's pretty close. Stay on track. But if your milestone was hit $2,600, and you hit $300, that's a major problem. In other words, you should not wait to find out the answer until month six. You already pretty much know by month three, in which case you're already making plants. This is the level of speed that we are operating at, seeing nods from both of you. Are we good on this? That makes sense. John, talk to us about the business. What do we want to do here? Do increase what I take home? Yeah. I have someone who's interested in renting out some space of the Shaw for a short term for 700 a month. I'm in the process of figuring out if I can give up that
Starting point is 01:18:16 space because I might need it for this big job we just got. So that's a possibility. Looking and tracking the numbers closely to see if I can afford to give myself a raise is an option. I can always take on more work and start working extra hours. We've gone through that and if it can be a mutual agreement and a short term so that Amy isn't stuck with all the burden of the household, which was hard on her last time? Yeah, but it's also, this is a dire situation. This is different than it has been.
Starting point is 01:18:51 You know, like you worked crazy long hours sometimes in the past because you were growing the business or that was what you wanted to do. This is, this feels different. And yeah, I think that that definitely requires a plane and a conversation. If more work is an option, even if it's short term, then we'll figure that out. Should we have this conversation right now? Yeah. Yeah, I mean, I could probably sit another job in before Christmas, and it could be an $80,000 job. Yeah, if they're asking you to bid on it or it's an option, then go for it. And yeah, we'll figure it out, we'll plan. I mean, your parents have.
Starting point is 01:19:31 Well, I can go back to 12-hour days and not do my flex day, all does work flex days, and be home for the weekend. It takes a really hard toll on you, though. not even just me and the kids. That takes a lot of on your, on your body and your everything. Yeah, but if it's for a few months, that's fine. When it's a couple, that's 18 months or whatever that was, I don't want to do that level of overtime, but. Yeah, the kids still need to know that their dad, like, lives at home. Can I intercede for just a second?
Starting point is 01:20:07 I love this conversation. It's like the energy is totally unlocked. Like that quicksand that you were in before, that is nowhere to be seen. In fact, what I'm noticing is both of you actually building on each other, which is amazing. It's like an upward spiral. Have you guys noticed it? It's so cool.
Starting point is 01:20:25 I can feel it and I can see it on your faces, both of you. I love it. One question that I might ask, because I can hear Amy, you're kind of alluding to it. You know, hey, that took a toll on your body. And then what happening is John is going, well, like, it's fine as long as it's for this short time. I can feel a bit of tension. and what I might flip that to is, okay, John, I really appreciate that you are willing to work longer hours to pick up this extra job. You know, it concerns me that you might be putting your
Starting point is 01:20:54 body under a lot of stress, but I also understand that this is what we need to do for the short term to get us out of the situation. What would you need in order for this to feel good and for us to be successful together. Try to ask that question, Amy. Well, we've done this before, and I feel like the difference here is that this is a joint decision versus this just... No need to explain. Just ask him how you can support him. How can I support you in making this work better than it has in the past? Well, I thought it worked well in the past. You're extremely supportive. Have you made my lunches? I think he even started making the presetting the coffee machine. And, you know, I think the most hopeful is the eliminating the guilt of that I feel when I'm not there to help.
Starting point is 01:21:51 Yeah, I think we've done that in the past. I think we worked well. And it was, that was extreme hours and that was an extreme amount of, extreme amount of months. But if we had to do 12 hours, you know, a day for. four months to unlock that extra cash to put towards your income tax to unlock your income at another level. John, what do you need to feel supported by Amy? That's the question. Yeah, so just that, sorry, I didn't quite finish the guilt. I was starting to choke up. The feeling that she doesn't need me there for dinner, like she's okay to put the kids to bed. And I can just focus on finishing the
Starting point is 01:22:38 shift and get home when I get home. The lunches and the coffee were an awesome touch. You want that? Would that help you feel supported right now? Yeah. Okay. Amy? Yeah, that makes sense because we have done this before, but it's the shifts of it where there's times where you've worked the late nights, but it's not communicated to me that this is what's happening. So the frustration on my end grows that I'm left here doing all of this. And yeah, I'll see when I see you. And so if this is the plan, we can do that. And we've had this kind of inkling of this conversation of if we have to work longer, we'll figure it out, we'll do it, but we haven't actually planned. So that feels like a really feasible option. So if I were to take on
Starting point is 01:23:28 more hours, what would you need for me as far as helping with you, with the kids and being a husband and being available? weekend would be huge. Like if it was a Monday to Friday grind and that's what we have to do, I can absolutely go on board with that. But having the weekends, especially for the kids, because I just can't ever forget the fact that preschool teachers thought that you were in the military because the way that our daughter spoke about you is as if you were never there. And that was heartbreaking. So having you there on the weekends where we actually spend that time together with the family, like if I have that to look forward to, know that that's what's coming at the end of
Starting point is 01:24:06 every week, no matter how hard it is, then I'm good with it. I know it's not forever. There's a reason behind all of this and hard decisions. I can get on board with it. And yeah, that would be huge. I feel like losing the house would be a harder scenario. Yeah. Would you say? Yeah. I mean, obviously that's, if that's where this goes, that's where this goes. And we just need to be able to get on board with that as a whatever plan, you know, CD down the road. But if we have these other plans in place and we work our asses off to execute these plans to their finality and go, well, that that still isn't working. And we're still not where we need to be. Then we move on to the next. And if losing the house selling it is in the cards, then at least
Starting point is 01:24:54 we know that we've done these other plans first so that we're not kicking ourselves later. Yeah. Nice work. First of all, round of applause. That was a phenomenal example of working together. Really, that was fantastic. Thank you. The thing I liked most was that people are capable of pushing themselves way more than they think possible, especially if there's a powerful reason and you know that it's going to last for a limited time. Now, looking at the CSP, what can I change the income, to for John so that we can start to get a sense of what happens to the fixed costs. If I were to be able to afford to give myself a raise?
Starting point is 01:25:45 Yeah. Is it a thousand a month extra? Is it $3,000, $5,000? I don't know if I would go as much as five, maybe three. An extra three. Yeah. Okay. If I were to work towards that, yeah.
Starting point is 01:25:58 Understanding this is just until Christmas, so you would adjust it later, but just to get a sense for what would happen. Let's take a look. Instead of $7,000 take home, I'm going to make a lot. at 10,000. Right there, that number drops of 56%, which is staggering. Oh, and by the way, we should probably increase Amy's take-home pay. Let's assume that things go well. And what did we say the number is going to be 3,500? Watch this. Well, your fixed costs are at 46%. Wow. Candidly, that's amazing. I don't think that's going to happen. Yeah. But that's if every single
Starting point is 01:26:30 thing goes right. That's not how life works. But you know what? I build a life where everything does not have to go perfectly right, and I can still live a rich life. So maybe Amy is making $3,200. Maybe John gets a contract, but it's not $80K, it's $50K, and it lasts X number of months. But you can still take that money and you can utilize it effectively, right? Absolutely. I've given that some thought. I think the obvious one would be Amy's income tax debt. Yeah. And for me on the business, I'm focusing on that. source deduction, so that opens up more options for if, hopefully not, but if we had to do the consumer proposal, or even worse, if we had to do a bankruptcy. But it also opens up
Starting point is 01:27:20 bank loan. I know we don't want to talk about loans and more debt, but it could be a difference of interest rates. Maybe we save a bit. I don't actually know what the CRA is charging interest. I should, that's a number. I'm embarrassed not to know. In your conversations with the government agencies that you're in touch with, what amount of negotiations have you done with over your monthly payments? I tried, like at the beginning, I said, well, you'd be okay with $3,000, or I think it was $2,000. And they said, no, that's not enough. So I said, I can do $3,000. Like, I can't just give you this magical $20,000 a month. So I tried to just do.
Starting point is 01:28:03 give them the full picture and just say, listen, I'll give you what I can. And it grew because the jobs were becoming a bigger contract. So I opted it as I could. And they're okay with that. And the first lady I had was great. And she totally understood it. And then I got another officer who was harder on me. He was saying, I have to go borrow money from my friends and family, like money mart and all this.
Starting point is 01:28:28 So he was. What the fuck? Who knew the Canadian government is like a goddamn loan shark? What is... It was brutal. Okay, John, let me ask you a question. You mentioned something about paying $10,000 a month towards this debt. Is that correct?
Starting point is 01:28:42 Yeah. And are you doing that now? As of my last payment, yes. And so I'll be doing that for the next five months, but four months for sure. Okay. And out of curiosity, are you just doing that because you have extra money so you're just putting it towards the debt? Yeah, pretty much. What's the interest rate on the debt?
Starting point is 01:29:01 I don't know the interest rate, unfortunately. Okay, this is what I suspected. We need to be much more disciplined. For example, if I'm in your situation and I have extra money coming in because of a job that I got, I'm not going to immediately just start paying off extra debt because I'm going to end up in the same position I'm in five months from now. What I'm going to do is sit back, carefully consider what's the interest rate? Hey, I'm not going to have this job after five months.
Starting point is 01:29:29 What am I going to do? This is where Dreamers never look at the negative. They just go, oh, the next deal will come and save me. We got to stop that thinking. We got to say, okay, if they agreed that I can send them $3,000, that is the amount I'm sending them. Next, let me factor in the interest rate. Is it to my advantage to pay a little bit extra?
Starting point is 01:29:46 Could be. But then finally, you want to start building up this cash reserve in your business. In short, maybe it's a good idea to pay extra. Maybe not. You need to factor in a lot more than just, I have that. the money. Would you be able to do that? Yeah, absolutely. You're totally right. Okay, great. Amy, what do you need from John in order to trust him, financially speaking? Full transparency and communication. I don't want to have to ask how money is going, how the jobs are going. Is payday
Starting point is 01:30:23 coming? I want it to be upfront that when it comes home, I got this job. This is what's happening. This is how much the job is. This is how much I got, you know, the initial invoice for. And he has done, I'd say at least half of that, half of the time. I want to be excited for him. I want to, you know, he says I got the job. I want to be able to celebrate that with him for a minute. And I think that he tends to get wrapped up in the business so much that those moments pass him by too. And so to be able to, hey, you got that job. That's amazing. That's really exciting and financially, yes, that's great, but also it's a really great confidence booster of what he's capable of. So I think that through that communication and kind of
Starting point is 01:31:10 that transparency among those pieces would just kind of continue to help gain the trust back. That makes absolute sense. I'm totally willing to continue to be as transparent and keep you informed. Like we talked about, you don't need to know when I'm buying material and I just bought some plywood today, you know. When will you update her? We had talked about like every other month or something. We haven't really. No, no way.
Starting point is 01:31:38 What? No, it was supposed to be every week. We were going to sit down like once every week and we haven't. It's just kind of been, it's happened more just conversationally while you're making, we're making dinner or whatnot. You're sort of talking around each other and you're going right back into the stories. And if I were not here, that would have just happened. The second thing I noticed is that there's a lot.
Starting point is 01:31:58 lot of murkiness, a lot of gray area. I was nodding along because I was expecting, I knew what she was going to say. Yeah. But you didn't. She, she, you thought it was every other month. She said every week. That's not in the same planet. I had asked, we had talks only, I guess, would have been May June, about the transparency specifically around. I didn't want any big transactions be taking place. No big equipment, no nothing to be purchased, no big car repairs on this work like vehicle without discussion with us first. We had sat down and, okay, if he's making this much money a month on the work log, where's the money going? And he'd show me the percentages. And I remember saying the business savings percentage, that needs to be way higher. Great. Now,
Starting point is 01:32:47 I want you to get specific. What does a transparency report look like? Specifically, can you tell me? And I think it should be John who leads this one. John? To explain when I get a check, a big check comes in, and I tell her how much it is, and I tell her how that money is going to be divided. And I can say if I need to buy something other than your odd $100 tool here and there, which doesn't really come up anymore. but like an expensive purchase is a conversation between the two of us.
Starting point is 01:33:28 We've agreed to that as well. What if you don't get a big check for like six months? Then I would be transparent about that. Let her know. When? Because if I were you, I'd wait until month 5.999. And Amy, how do you think that makes her feel? I think if that were to happen again, that we were not going to make it.
Starting point is 01:33:47 Like we can't be here again. Like we can't be in a position where he is just like processing him. his fingers, hoping that a job is coming up, but nothing has actually been shown. Anyways, till the very last possible second to tell me, that's why we're here. We've done, we're not. I'm going to show you a different way that I might communicate. I might say on a weekly basis on Saturday at 1130 to 12 a.m., I'm going to look over, I, Amy, am going to look over the document, and I'm going to talk to you about it. John says, I, John, am going to have that document completed by Friday night at 9pm so that Amy has an hour in the morning on
Starting point is 01:34:29 Saturday, whatever, to look it over, write her questions down, then you all talk about it together for a half an hour. In this document, it's going to be a template. It's filled out. And you just plug it in like Madlibs. Here's the amount. Here's how much is in the bank. Here's the current deals in discussion. Here's the deals we lost. All the relevant information. Here are the things planned to be purchased in the next whatever. Guys, transparency is not like pulling freaking teeth out or I will tell you if something happens. Transparency is proactive. When I get my reports on Monday from my team leaders, you think I'm going to them like, hey, what about this? No, if I have to ask, they have failed. So I'm getting a full report numbers I can drill down into
Starting point is 01:35:13 what's going on, how many deals, what's our BPN, all this stuff. They have done the work to manage. And John, you got to do that to manage the communication to Amy. Amy, your responsibility is to look at it, make sure that it makes sense for the household and then for the two of you to talk about it together. How does that strike you, John? Yeah, I like that. Cool. Little different, way more effective, I think, in communication.
Starting point is 01:35:37 And I think, Amy, for you, you mentioned something that resonates with me. You go, I don't want to have to ask. Yeah. Same thing I tell my team. If I have to ask you, we have a serious problem. So I need you to be proactively commune. And the best way to do that, just give them a template. Both of you develop the template together.
Starting point is 01:35:54 I think John should take the first crack. Here's a template I'm planning to report on by Friday night, every night at whatever time. What do you think? Is this going to give you what you want? And then if after a couple weeks, you want to change a couple things, go for it. Yeah. Love that. So Amy then said, for trust, I want transparency.
Starting point is 01:36:13 Was there anything else? Communication. This goes along with it. There's one thing I don't think we addressed, which is the people around you that you need to enlist on this sprint you are about to go on. Wow, nods from both. Tell me, this is about to become very difficult for several months. What people around you do you need to enlist? My go-to is going to be his parents. They're fully retired. They're incredible help. And I did it in January when we were looking at our numbers and I went, we got to make all these cuts. We can't
Starting point is 01:36:46 do anything in the summer with these kids. And I remember messaging my mother-in-law saying, hey, I know it's a long way. Can you help with the kids? Can we make a plan for that now? And how to concrete, these are the exact days, overnights that they are going to have the kids for the entire summer so that I could structure the work and the time that I needed. And so I will do that exact same thing and get the help that we need from them the best that we can. Amazing. Also amazing what happens when you're super specific about what you need. Yeah. Wonder what would happen if you did that here. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:37:20 I think, especially when a family is about to make a major sprint like the two of you are, and we don't know how long this sprint will last. It could be, if everything works out great, it could be December, but it could be that you end up moving to a different place. Or moving in with in-laws, if you really need to save money, which is an option we haven't even entertained. But there's so many different things that you might do. And at a certain point, you need to bring kids in to let them know, hey, we're going to be closer together as a family.
Starting point is 01:37:52 Dad's going to be working more. Mom's going to be working on the way. We want to show you what it takes to pay off debt. We have not been paying close attention. And now we are making a change. Trust me, that lesson will stick with them. Trust me. We learned more about our parenting with them around the money than we expected to with this debt for sure, that we are saving our money.
Starting point is 01:38:14 and we are working harder to make different choices with our money. And this is, yeah. I love it. So we're doing more beach days and more activities that we are doing together that are free. Yes, beautiful, beautiful. I also love that you're kind of like painting the picture. You told them why a little bit, but you are avoiding what so many parents do is just to bottle it up and say, we can't afford that. Yeah, yeah, I work really hard not to do that.
Starting point is 01:38:40 Yeah, great work. Okay, what surprised you most from today's conversation? I think my biggest worry at the beginning, honestly, was like, what if it's hopeless? What if you leave the call for me and are like, oh, they're so screwed, I can't do anything here. I think that was my biggest worry is the fact that there is this feeling of forward momentum and there's some relief in that, that there's visual plans in place. and that feels really good. John? I felt surprised that we weren't as on the same page with our financial planning as I thought we were.
Starting point is 01:39:23 I thought we were doing a good job and a thorough job. I still feel that way, but I need to maybe check in more to understand her stresses because she's got the stress of the household dead on her shoulders because she's worrying about where the money is, where it's coming from, and she's looking at that a lot more than I am, so I need to start being there beside her seeing those numbers at the same time. Great. Okay, I have a couple things I want to mention to you.
Starting point is 01:39:52 First off, there are several things we did not get to, but I know that you will get to them in time. When something is burning, we need to put the fire out. That's why we talked about that. Some things that I would like for you to think about and to discuss in future, conversations with each other would be understanding interest rates for your debt, understanding where your next dollar should go.
Starting point is 01:40:17 Should it go to Amy's debt first? Maybe, but you all really need an emergency fund. So you may need to pay that debt off a little slower and put money in an emergency fund. Okay? Very important to think about. Guilt-free spending, we didn't even tackle. I suspect there's probably some guilt-free spending, although I think you two seem pretty dialed in on your spending so I don't really think that's a major
Starting point is 01:40:40 dialed in meaning I don't think anyone's like eating out 25 times a month or something like that I do think that an emergency fund is critical you don't know how important it is until it happens and don't let yourself get in that position I think your communication with each other is something I would I think it's kind of a foundational like level that I would really think about and I would strongly encourage you to get whatever outside help you want just so you can communicate. I say that because I saw tremendous changes just from the beginning of our conversation to now. Like tremendous. And I think sometimes like including my wife and me, all of us, we have blind spots that unless you have somebody there, it's very
Starting point is 01:41:29 hard to discover them on your own. Very hard. So something for you to consider. A couple of other things that come to mind. Negotiating with the Canadian government, it sounds like you've done it. To some extent, you may want to think about what are the other options. I'm sure you've Googled around and talked to other folks. Maybe there's lawyers to consult. I'm not as familiar with it, but it's a crushing amount of debt. Even the business debt is a crushing amount. In the U.S., often, you can negotiate settlements with things like medical debt, et cetera. I don't know what the equivalent is in your situation, but I would like for you to consider it. It's certainly worth trying because the debt is so huge.
Starting point is 01:42:05 If you could even get a 25% reduction, that is like massive. Yeah. Yeah. Bankruptcy still not off the table. Again, I don't know the local implications in Canada. But those are all things to think about long term, calmly, methodically. But first step thing is get that income up, pay that debt off quickly, and most importantly, talk about it. effectively every single week.
Starting point is 01:42:33 But make the plan. Get specific. That plan should ultimately be as simple as being able to hang it up on the fridge and it tells you everything you need. One page. That's when you know you are fighting for simplicity. You are running a very clean, non-caotic financial household. All right?
Starting point is 01:42:52 Mm-hmm. Love it. I love that. Yeah, love that. John and Amy, thank you so much. I appreciate you both. Thank you. Thank you so much.
Starting point is 01:42:59 Before we get to their follow-up, I just want to share a few thoughts because this conversation really stuck with me long after we finished. A lot of people would hear that their partner hit over $100,000 in debt and think, that's it. There's no coming back from this. And honestly, for a lot of people, there would be no coming back. But I noticed with Amy and John that they had this commitment. John, what he did was a massive breach of trust, but they are still here, still showing up, still trying to figure it out together. And you can notice the love in little things, like Amy making his lunch and John promising weekends with the family, there was a real tenderness in these quiet little gestures.
Starting point is 01:43:39 When this conversation started, it was like they were in opposite corners. They were polite, but there was a lot of tension. You could feel it. Something shifted. They started actually hearing each other. And I don't think this will be easy. It won't. It will probably be one of the hardest things they ever have to do.
Starting point is 01:43:55 They have a huge hole to climb out of. but if they make a full-on sprint and they do it together, I think they have a shot at it. Because when you've been stuck for so long, really stuck, and you finally get a glimpse of what's possible, that might be enough to get something to change. And I think maybe today they saw a path forward. Let's take a look at what happened next.
Starting point is 01:44:22 I was surprised at a few points in the conversation. and really found value. Having an unbiased third opinion, being able to have a different perspective that we clearly really needed and haven't had before. We have been setting up all the steps needed to head into this sprint. Hopefully it will only be for a couple of months, just planning longer hours and what days of the week that works best so that we are both feeling supported in this and not feeling like one of us is carrying all the stress and the weight. And I have a goal of having my courses done and planning a soft opening with the nail studio between December 15th and January 15th. So that gives me a
Starting point is 01:45:21 really good time frame and a good push to get all my course to work. done and really just stay motivated and stay focused on getting this going, getting this opened, and being able to really ramp up my income. I want to say a huge thank you to Remeet and the team for allowing us the opportunity to work with them and it was a really life-changing experience. Hey Rameet and team. It's been about a month since we had our conversation with Rameet and I just wanted to give you a follow-up on how it's been going. John has been working extremely long extra hours, and I am taking over the home front and just chipping away at life over here, working on the course, and just doing the best
Starting point is 01:46:12 that we can to dig ourselves out of this debt and to stop living outside of our means every month. So it's been hard. During our conversation with RoMeet, we committed to making some hard choices. And I think the piece that gets forgotten often is it's not just in that moment, that decision, that plan, but it's having to make sure that we follow it up every single day with actionable steps. So that has been what we're doing and it's a hard season of life. And we understand that. We were prepared for it. Doesn't make it easier, but we are pushing through. So that's where we're at. And thank you so, so much for talking with us and giving us the opportunity to share our story. I'm a little disappointed not to hear from John.
Starting point is 01:47:06 Amy's made a lot of changes. I appreciate that. John, I know working hard. I'm sure John's busy. But this is a team effort. And part of why I want follow-ups, of course, is for me to know what's going on, but it's also for you to hold yourselves accountable and to see that you are both doing this as a team. So Amy and John, I wish you both the best. And I want to remind you the only way out of this is together as a team. And now I want you to listen to this episode next.

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