I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 232. “My husband gives me an allowance. I feel like a child.”
Episode Date: October 28, 2025Edward (38) and Ellen (30) live in Hawaii with their young daughter and a new baby on the way. With a net worth of over $2 million, their finances look strong on paper, but behind the scenes, their ma...rriage is strained by control, fear, and trust issues around money. Edward manages every dollar, while Ellen has to ask for “permission” to spend, even on basic everyday items. He believes tight control protects their future, making her feel more like a child than a partner. As Edward grapples with his deep fear of losing everything, Ellen wants to step into her own financial power. Can they learn to trust each other and build a partnership where both voices are heard, or will control and fear continue to drive their financial decisions? In this episode we uncover: • Why Ellen calls their financial dynamic “like asking my dad for permission” • How Edward’s fear of poverty leads to hyper-control over their money • Why Edward compares their finances to the top 1% • Ellen’s $8,000 home birth decision • How Ellen avoids learning their finances to sidestep arguments • The emotional legacy of Edward’s childhood poverty and Ellen’s early financial security • Their definition of a “traditional marriage” • Why they fight about $20 face cream despite earning $28K/month • The weight of Edward’s “provider” identity • Their Hawaii “dream home” vs. the financial pressure it created • Their shared craving for safety and control • Ellen’s realization that she’s been playing financial defense instead of building real skills • Edward’s hope to teach their daughter financial independence Chapters: (00:00:00) “It feels like I’m asking for permission” (00:16:10) “I’m in charge of the budget” (00:23:09) “I had just come into a million dollars” (00:34:29) Ramit breaks down their numbers (00:51:41) “I don’t think he trusts me at all” (00:56:49) “I will never be poor again” (01:07:01) “When do we get to live like we’re wealthy?” (01:17:38) “I shrink myself to please him” (01:39:10) Where are they now? Ellen and Edward’s follow-ups This episode is brought to you by: Shopify | Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at https://shopify.com/ramit Factor | Get 50% off plus free shipping on your first box at https://factormeals.com/ramit50OFF with code RAMIT50OFF Facet | Facet is waiving their $250 enrollment fee for new annual members, and for my audience, Facet is offering $300 into your brokerage account if you invest and maintain $5,000 within your first 90 days. Head to https://facet.com/ramit to learn more about which membership option is best for you ZocDoc | Download the ZocDoc app for FREE at https://zocdoc.com/ramit then find and book a top-rated doctor today #sponsored Leesa | Go to https://leesa.com for 20% off sitewide PLUS get an extra $50 off with promo code RAMIT, exclusive for my listeners Links mentioned in this episode • If you want help with your finances, join my Money Coaching program at https://iwt.com/moneycoaching 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 make good money but you haven’t taken a real vacation in years, I want to talk to you. I'm casting couples for a special episode of the podcast. Apply this week only at iwt.com/apply.
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He actually just told me yesterday that I wasn't going to receive any money this month because of the money that I went over budget is fully coming out of this month.
I want you to be satisfied with what you get for that money.
I don't think he trusts me at all and it makes me not trust myself.
If she blows through all of her money, then she's going to blow through all of my money too quickly.
My wants never go away and if I don't have access to it, I just hope that he'll give in.
I would like to face no financial hardship, yes.
You make $28,000 a month.
What hardship?
He always thinks like worst case scenario,
and I just don't think that that's healthy.
I will never, or I will rob banks and do what I got to do
to not put my family through what I'm through.
I hope that he understands me and my feelings
and that at the end of it, I get what I want.
I want her to know how to control her spending,
but without being at that point yet,
the second best thing that I could hope for is that she allows me to control it.
Edward and Ellen are in their 30s. They just move back to Hawaii, her hometown, with a toddler
and a new baby due any day now. They flip houses, they're high earners, they live in what most
people would consider to be paradise. Everything sounds pretty good, right? But as you will soon
hear, their different worldviews on money are driving a wedge between them. He thinks their money
problem is strictly a numbers issue. She knows they have a lot of money and she's confused why they
fight over it. Why can't they both spend more time together? The layers in today's episodes are
very revealing. Trust me. Right now, let's look at their numbers in the conscious spending
plan. Assets, $3.9 million. Investments $250,000. Savings $40,000. Debt $1.8 million for a total net worth
of 2.4 million. Fixed cost 68%, investments 2%, savings 0%, and guilt-free spending, 30%.
So they've got millions of dollars in assets, a house in Hawaii, a growing family. Why is money
a problem? I want you to tell me in the comments, when was a time that you looked successful
from the outside, but beneath the surface, you were worried about money? Now let's meet Edward and
Ellen. As you always say, it's not the number in the bank account, right, that is going to
change the way that you view money. We are pretty financially well off and my brain does not
compute that, right? Everything for me is a fire, you know, a blown tire that's two, three hundred
dollars is a huge deal for me. Ellen, on the other hand, you know, when we first got together,
I managed money pretty much immediately.
So she really hasn't had to.
So the way that I think of it is that she doesn't put a time parameter on how long it takes to make the money.
So she is more frivolous than her spending.
I think that there is always actually wiggle room, that there's more money.
I don't take it super serious because I just think that there's more.
then he's leading on.
Okay.
And it's probably not very respectful of me, but that's how I feel.
Do you end up getting the thing you were thinking about?
I don't have access.
I mean, I can have access to the money if I wanted to spend it,
but I would never do that without making sure he was okay with it
because I do respect him in that way where I'm not going to just spend money.
He said we can't spend.
I'm curious if you can think of a time in the last six months or so where the two of you were not on the same financial page.
Yeah, I can think of one.
So I had a hospital birth with my first, and after that experience, I really wanted to have a home birth for my second.
Once we moved back to Hawaii, I thought this would be the perfect place to do it.
My family's here.
There's a very experienced midwife that does it on island.
And it's not cheap, especially when you already have health insurance and can just have it costs nothing out of the pocket at the hospital.
But he definitely left the opportunity for me to decide.
Ask him, as if I'm there.
Babe, I really want to have a home birth.
Can you support me in that?
And are you okay with that it's going to cost $8,000 and above?
I understand that you really want to do it.
and I can appreciate why.
I personally don't think that it's a good idea to spend that much money on something that's elective when we have insurance that will cover that cost.
But I know how important it is to you, so I'll let you make the decision.
Okay, well, that's a lot of pressure for me to make that kind of decision for our family when I know the money could be going towards other things.
And now it just feels like I'm being selfish to spend that kind of money because I want a different experience.
Those are the kinds of decisions that I make with, you know, most of the stuff in our life every day.
And, you know, they're not always easy.
So, you know, if it's important to you, then we'll do it.
I've just never been in the position to be the one to decide to make that big of a purchase.
I just don't want you to have any resentment towards me if I choose to do it.
Okay.
How did it end?
Like that?
It ended like that.
When's the baby due?
Uh, the 28th of this month.
Yeah.
The baby is due in four weeks.
What?
Yeah.
What'd you do?
What'd you decide?
I think a few hours later, I was like, this is something that's very important to me.
It's a memory.
I might never have the experience to do this again with another child.
I'm going to be selfish, I guess, in this moment and make that decision to go ahead with it.
How would you analyze the dynamics of what happened in that conversation?
Definitely parent-child.
She's coming and asking for permission and, you know, I say, yeah, go ahead and make the decision.
and she's second-guessing and she feels bad about it.
And, you know, it's, she's looking to me as the person that's in charge of everything.
And, you know, I'm letting her look at me that way and I'm taking that, you know, that leadership goal.
Okay.
I see it totally differently.
Tell me.
I see it as him trusting in me in that moment to kind of understand more of our finances and
giving me the opportunity to make the choice and for him to let go of the control.
Oh, so Ellen, did you find that conversation positive and productive?
I do tell him emotional.
It's okay. Take your time and also there's nothing wrong with crying. Money is emotional.
Yeah, I do tell him often that it feels.
Like, he's my father in ways where I'm asking permission, and it doesn't feel good because
I know that we've gotten to where we are financially because of the both of us.
And I feel like every time I ask for anything, no matter if it's more face lotion,
I have to
over-explain
why I need it
for him to
say yes
and that constant
let me ask
let's see what he says
let me go in detail
about why I need it
is not a good feeling
can I ask you a tough question Ellen
yes
you asked him about the homebird
and he essentially said you decide when he said that you didn't say yes i want to do it done
end of discussion then you put yourself down by calling yourself selfish why do you think you
did that i don't think that his word sometimes that he means for it to come across the way it
does, but it does make me feel guilty all the time and question myself.
I feel bad that she feels guilty.
Like, I don't, I don't want her to feel bad about money.
I don't want her to feel guilty about money.
I don't want her to fill anything negative.
I just want her to be cognizant of, you know, our budget and what we have to spend on any
given month.
And it's like, go buy whatever the hell you want.
I don't care.
Just don't spend more than this.
in your application you wrote something that caught my eye and I'd like to read it back to you the question was
what would be your ideal outcome from our conversation and your answer was I'd like to be less
stressed about our money and I'd like her to be a little more stressed about it tell me more about
that answer I want her to worry definitely not as much as me right but definitely a little bit more
I want her to say, hey, this thing that we might not necessarily need that I just wanted
spur of the moment is going to cost, you know, an hour or two of, you know, our life to be able to
get.
What does that word worry mean?
Just just thinking through the purchase a little bit more, not necessarily worrying about it.
I worry a lot, right?
Like, I don't want her to worry.
Like, I worry enough for, you know, you, me, her, both of our kids.
Do you do a little?
You want me to worry a little.
I don't want her to be stressed about it. I want her to be comfortable and confident in our financial position, but also understand that we can't buy every single thing that we want. We have to prioritize our money on what's important to us. To me, it seems like she prioritizes a lot more than we can actually, you know, afford. I'm sure I do, but since I don't really know our money situation, I have no real idea of what budget we have.
So when he tells me we can't go over the budget, I don't really grasp what he's saying at all.
Gosh, this is so interesting for me.
Why?
Because I really don't have a relationship with it.
I don't even know what that looks like.
I don't even watch my husband do it.
How do people learn about money?
I don't know.
If I felt like I knew that, maybe I would have.
started.
It's on screen right.
What is that, everybody?
If you're not watching on YouTube,
I just held up something black, orange, and yellow
that could certainly help educate Ellen.
Yes, it's my book.
I will teach you to be rich.
You can get it anywhere,
including all public libraries.
And if you're not sure,
you can check out the 22,000 reviews on Amazon.
Let's break down what we just heard.
Ellen wants a home birth.
Edwards says, it's your decision.
But somehow she ends up calling herself selfish.
Oh, and they're not fighting.
about whether they have the money because they do. The $8,000 was there all along. She asks,
he approves. Do you notice the pattern? In fact, do you catch the other pattern that's simmering
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auto-renewing subscription purchase. Yeah, I don't see those numbers. And I know that he is so good
at saving and not overspending that sometimes he'll say to me, we make around this amount.
And I'm like, oh, whoa, well, in that case, I just start thinking of things I want to buy. But usually
he's like, we can't afford that.
We can't, don't get the $5 subscription like whatever TV streaming service.
So, yeah, I feel very confused about what money we actually have.
What do you say when he says, don't go over the budget?
I'll listen to it for a moment, but then I start thinking about the things I think I need.
And I think that there's like a hidden, not necessarily hidden, but like another layer of savings that we do have where it's not actually affecting us.
My outlook on it, right?
But it's stuff that we don't need.
And then our discretionary budget is gone halfway through the month.
And then, you know, I don't want to say I'm on the hook because it's our money, right?
but I'm on the hook to find an extra X amount of dollars to carry our discretionary budget
through the rest of the month.
For example, right now she's pregnant, so she's taking vitamins, pre-nittles, whatever.
That comes out of discretionary because that's not something that's going to be something
she takes after the baby's born, right?
Like it's in this timeframe.
And instead of using the money for that, you know, we'll go to Target and she'll buy
our youngest daughter toys that she doesn't need or she'll buy something for the house that we don't
necessarily need and avoid the things that we do need. There was, I had a, it's called a blessing
way of a ceremony celebrating the mother and baby instead of a typical baby shower. So that was
another expense of food and drinks and flowers. And he expected for that,
come out of my monthly amount. And I said that's not possible, you know, that it should be part of
our food budget if there's food and drinks. And I ended up getting what I needed, but because of
that, we went over budget. And he actually just told me yesterday that I wasn't going to receive
any money this month because of the money that I went over budget is fully coming out of this
month. How did you feel when he told you that?
silent.
Usually I would want to try to defend myself and explain myself, but I knew that this time around
there was no way to really win, and I was too exhausted to try.
So now she has to come to me, and I got to pull that from somewhere else.
Because, you know, I run our budget, you know, fairly tight.
Huh?
What was that word?
Who runs the budget?
I run the budget.
Oh, I.
Absolutely.
yeah does it work generally if you didn't have all this stress quote stress or things to manage
what would you be who would you be i would be a slug man like i don't have you know yeah that's it
the man works man has his purpose is to what it starts with a p provide provide providing is
you know, what I am, and I'm happy with that. Yeah, it's what he's told me in the past is like,
I, my whole purpose on this planet are the only thing that motivates me is like providing
and for my family. Well, if it works, what are we doing here? We're here for the emotional part,
which I suck at. Oh, okay, okay. The budget works. The math is math. That's black and white. No
problem with that. But the emotional part, that's different. Okay, got it. Edward, in your
application you described yourself as, quote, neurotic and anxious. Okay. How does that show up for you?
I'm like a walking Monte Carlo. You know, every, every decision is just 10,000 different outcomes and,
you know, trying to figure out which is going to be, be the best. And, you know, out of those outcomes,
which one is going to be the best financially, which one is going to be the best emotionally for my
family. Because if it wasn't for, you know, Ellen and my kids, I would be like a dragon man. I would
just sit in this tiny little cave and I would afford all my money and I would go swimming in it
like Scrooge McDuck. Are you in the fire community? I am, yeah. Yes. Yes. Yes. Okay. With money or
with other things as well. His entire life. Okay. Oh, so this, is this like a known thing?
Okay. Okay. Edward, have you talked to a therapist? Oh, yeah. Oh, good. And you work with one now?
I work with two now. Excellent. Okay. All right. Have you talked to them about money? Oh, yeah.
Great. Wait. Okay. So I'm very happy to hear that. I love that.
Well, I assume that you are, you know, probably in the forefront of people that are
capable of, you know, making change with couples when it comes to money.
And so if I have to trade, you know, looking like an asshole in front of a million people
to get that level of care, I'm happy to do it.
I have to jump in here because this is such a huge moment of clarity.
It feels like I've been reading a map, not knowing what direction I'm looking at,
and suddenly I understand.
Edward admitting that he suffers from anxiety and he is a member of the fire community,
really helps to clarify a lot. What initially appears as a pure need for control almost always
has something beneath the surface. It's not a justification, but at least it helps us to understand.
And to his credit, Edward is aware he's in therapy. He came on this show and he's being very
honest. I applaud him for coming here and for trying. But it's one thing to know that something
needs to change. It's another to actually act differently. And this is a real problem.
Edward sets the budget.
Edward makes the decisions.
Ellen is basically living inside someone else's system.
She has to ask for permission.
She has to justify small purchases.
She has to carry the emotional weight of someone else's anxiety while being told,
it's all about the numbers.
I'm not okay with this dynamic.
Would you be?
Let's see what happens next.
What was the first time you talked about money?
When I met Edward, I had actually just come in to,
some family money and I had no idea what I was doing with it. How much was it?
A million dollars. I knew that I wanted security and to feel like I had a home that wasn't going
to be taken away from me. So over half of it I spent on a condo and I definitely was spending
not in a very responsible way.
And that was the first introduction he had to me,
was just kind of shopping and buying whatever I wanted.
And he proposed to me in the first month.
And when that happened,
he was like, listen, you need to be smarter with what you have
and not lose it all and spend it all too quickly.
So I want to help you set up.
a budget for yourself. So did he set that budget? He did. I wasn't super strict with sticking to it
because, you know, at that point it was still my money, but I was trying to be more aware of what I was
doing and realizing, hey, yeah, he's right. Like, let me be smarter with it. Let me learn from him
in ways, which I was more willing to do and talk about money in the beginning of our relationship.
Why did it change?
Once our money merged, he was a lot tighter with it.
And we started being smarter with our money and investing in a bunch of different ways.
And that was just a very overwhelming to me to try to understand it that I would rather just not talk about it.
So when we first met, she was, you know, spending extravagantly, right?
She was, you know, buying YSL bags and designer clothes.
And I didn't really give me because, you know, I didn't have long-term plans or goals with her in my life.
And, you know, that quickly changed.
And, you know, I quickly realized, oh, you know, I want to marry this girl.
And if she blows through all of her money, then she's going to blow through all of my money.
my money too quickly. So yeah, I took more control than I should have. But at the time,
that was me trying to mold her into someone that was financially savvy enough to share a life
with. Did it work? Yeah. I mean, we're, you know, we're eight years in and there's things that
need to be changed, right? But she's not out buying coach bags and, you know, blowing all of our money
like because she wants to right she is you know allowed me to stay in control and to manage it and
she's been you know a wonderful partner and just in every way other than you know managing money
herself but she isn't going behind my back and spinning money and she's letting me take the reins on
our budget which is you know obviously not what i want i want her to be involved i want her to know
our numbers. I want her to know how to control her spending. But without being at that point
yet, the second best thing that I could hope for is that she allows me to control it.
I'm grateful for him stepping in at the beginning of our relationship because I look back and
I'm like, oh, if I didn't meet him what I did, who knows where I would have been now?
Mm-hmm. Hmm. Okay. Are the two of you, would you describe your relationship
is a traditional relationship?
Yes.
Okay.
Wow.
That was a quick response.
So traditional, how do you define traditional?
I do like consider him like the head of the house and I like that.
I think we both have our rules that we do.
I like to be at home and taking care of the household and our children.
It's what I think I excel in and enjoy doing.
And, you know, for him, he's very good at making money and keeping things in line.
And so we've been good with the dynamic that we have with each other.
Edward, do you agree?
Oh, absolutely.
I'm very, I prefer a traditional relationship.
And I'm glad that, you know, that I was able to find Ellen and she's happy to do it.
Okay, cool.
All right.
That helps me understand a little bit more of how you met.
as it relates to money and where you are today. Thank you for clarifying that. You wrote in your
application, Edward, I fired and I am scared. We're going to go broke every day. My wife has no skills
if I got hit by a bus. Hurtful. Markitable skills. She has, you know, thousands of skills. She's,
you know, one of the smartest people I've ever known. And, you know, she's talented and, you know,
good at everything that she does, but outside of the house, none of that is marketable to make
the same amount of money that, you know, I was making. Isn't that the way a traditional relationship
often work, though? Yeah. And, you know, I have fell safes in place, right? Life insurance for, you know,
everybody in the event that something did happen to me. She could, you know, liquidate assets,
cash out, you know, the life insurance and be able to live a comfortable life for the rest of her life.
but she doesn't know how to do that.
And I want her to know.
I feel that a lot of the money that we have made over the years
has actually been from the two of us working together
because we flip homes and do live-in-home flips.
Okay.
And I'm not leaving the house.
I'm not getting a check written directly to me.
It's to both of us.
But I'm going through two years of my life of designing a home
and living through a home remodel with children and pregnancies, where we make a big profit,
and I know that that wouldn't happen without me by his side as his partner in that.
Okay. Edward, you agree?
Yeah, absolutely. I 100% agree. And, you know, I want it be where I am without her and vice versa.
Okay. I mean, we're going to get to the numbers in a minute.
Do you want to continue a traditional relationship with money?
In a way, yes, I don't want, like, I don't want that rule to go to me.
I don't even want that role to be like half of mine necessarily, but definitely way more
involved than I currently am.
I mean, like I said, I want to be able to, you know, at the beginning of every month,
just say, okay, you have our discretionary money.
Go do whatever you want with it.
Just don't go over that, that amount.
And, you know, I would be more than stoked with that.
That's it.
And that's what you want and you'll be happy.
That's it.
Okay.
Make it last the month and don't go over that amount.
I'm, you know, a pig and...
Okay, that's a good answer.
I think probably there are much more effective ways to do it.
Like, not giving like a little allowance and not having the parent-child dynamic and really
discussing what traditional means.
Because traditional, I don't have a problem if you both choose to be.
be traditional, that's fine. But is it traditional, but we are equal in this way? Is it traditional
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Okay, let's take a look at the numbers.
All right, let's go.
Edward, can you read the word in bold
and then the number in full?
next to it for this entire box, please.
Assets, $3,910,000.
Invest, $250,000.
Savings, $40,000.
Debt, $1,800,000.
Total net worth, $2,400,000.
All right.
What do you think about those numbers?
You're in your 30s.
I know that it is significantly better than the standard, you know, person.
But mentally, it doesn't, I'm going to say,
say the I'm going to use the word feel. It doesn't feel like enough because I don't
compare myself to a normal person. I hold myself at a higher standard and to me for my
standard it's not good enough. So who do you compare yourself to? You people like you. You compare
yourself to me? Yeah. And why? I'm I'm failing compared to you. And that's how I think about it.
You know, and that's just how my brain processes. And if I'm not doing as good as the top one, two percent,
that I'm failing.
All right.
We're going to talk about this.
But anyway, $2.4 million.
Ellen, what do you say about those numbers?
I think they're great.
I am very happy and satisfied and surprised.
And, yeah, I don't compare myself to others or people that have more than me.
Do you find it a little confusing that you have constant debates about $20 face cream
when you have a net worth of $2.4 million?
Yes, I do.
And those are the times of why I don't stop badgering him about the things that I want.
when they're simple things like that.
Do you two trust each other with money?
I trust him 100%.
That's why I don't know much about it.
I put all of our money fully up to him
and what he thinks we should invest in and spend on.
Yeah.
I trust her in not spending it.
But if I were to die,
I think she would spend all of our money in a couple years.
I could understand that if I, say, for example, just used our cards and was just spending money, but like, I think I'm pretty trustworthy that I don't spend a dime unless I speak to you.
I don't want you to have to do that. I don't want you to have to ask me. I don't want permission on stuff. I want you to know what our budget is. I want you to know how much we have in our budget for you and what other ever bullshit we need for the house.
want you to stick to that. And I don't want to have to look over your shoulder and ask you
once a week how much you're spending. And if you're going over and if I need to move money over
from a business to pay for the other two weeks of groceries because you spent all of the money
on a shopping trip at Target. Ellen, you agree with that or disagree? That is a worry of mine
because I am not good at making the budget that I'm giving last.
Okay, what's the number for discretionary on a monthly basis?
Between discretionary budget and eating out,
which are kind of our, you know,
our play money is around 1,200 a month.
And I think that's where we get lost a lot in me thinking about
when I'm spending money is this part of that.
I went, oh, okay, all the pills that,
vitamins that my midwife wants me to take, they are pretty expensive. It's if like $200 a month.
And I asked him, hey, do I need to use it out of that money? Or are you going to pay for that
from the rest of our budget? And I'm a very detailed person and he's not. And he doesn't say much
words. So to him, it was, oh, yeah, I have it covered. So at the end of the month, when I'm like,
hey, we need to restock all my other pills from my midwife.
He goes, you didn't save money for that.
Does everybody on this call know what discretionary includes?
Thank you.
That's how I feel.
I feel very confused of what that all entails.
Have you two ever talked about it?
I've talked about it several times.
Who did you talk about it with?
Apparently the ghosts in the house.
That's quite an interesting use of words.
Like, you didn't say we've talked about it.
I've talked about it.
Well, who'd you talk to?
I talked at Ellen.
Oh.
And then I watch her eyes glaze over.
And I get that.
But what I'm trying to get at is that there should be more trust in me.
The fact that I do have access to our cards, but I don't use them.
With a net worth of $2.4 million in their 30s,
There should not be badgering going on in this relationship.
To put it bluntly, a $20 face cream should not be a topic of discussion for a couple like
this.
Now, I don't think this means one of them is irresponsible.
I think they've set up their structure incorrectly.
Ellen has to go over, please, please, please, can I have extra money?
And then Edward goes, it's up to you.
Or, no, you already blew through the money last month.
Now, when most people hear this dynamic, the first thing they jump to,
is bad people. Edward, you're bad. Ellen, you need to take control. Maybe, maybe not. More likely,
it's bad structure. On one hand, they are aware of discretionary spending, which is a positive
because most couples don't even know about that. But on the other hand, I don't think what Edward
qualifies as discretionary really fits the definition. Did you catch what he said earlier?
He said Ellen's prenatal vitamins come out of her discretionary spending because they're
temporary. What the fuck? How are you going to tell your
wife that prenatal vitamins come out of discretionary spending. It's like saying that dentist
appointment to remove three cavities is discretionary because you only have to do it once a year.
This is where a lot of you should make a list of your core values and one of your core values
should probably be generosity. Because if you're generous to your partner, you would never
ever make her buy prenatal vitamins out of her personal discretionary money. God, I'm getting so
f*** bad right now. From a system's perspective, we need to address some fixes in their financial
infrastructure. Come with me. Let's look at their numbers together. Investments are at 2%. I think that
kind of makes sense if you assume that most of your investments are real estate. So you're probably
not putting a lot into the market. Is that correct? Correct. All right. Savings are at zero.
What the f***. You have $40,000 of savings, which is like a little over too much.
months. Why are you saving no money? I have a couple different lines of credit. I have a business
that I can tap into. I have a lot of different ways that I can access money and I don't like
money sitting in an account. I do it. Welping on the vine. I knew you were going to sit. I don't
like letting my money sit and only earn 3% interest. Fuck that. No. God damn it. My little soldiers
are going to go out and bring friends home and go make money for me. Is this your mortgage? Yeah.
It's 41%. That's pretty expensive.
It's $11,000 a month.
Is that your primary residence?
So we have an interesting setup that's different than most people.
This property is our primary residence, but it also has a couple rental units on it.
So while that, you know, the mortgage is high, it's offset by income that it's producing.
Okay.
So you pay $11,000.
How much do you make per month?
56.
5,600. Correct. Okay, great. So you're paying like roughly half of that, and then you're getting some of it in rent. Okay, fine. Debt payments, 800. What's the debt for the properties? So, yeah, right now we do live in flips. I am using a heat lock to finish this one off. We just finished it off. So I'm going to be paying that back down aggressively going forward. How many properties you own? Three properties with eight doors.
Okay. Cool. Well done.
Clothes are at zero, phone 210, subscriptions 200.
So really, we're talking about the mortgage, which is expensive, but the one thing that's a little
confusing to me is that it says at the bottom, the amount you have left over $7,000 a month.
We all agree that that's not accurate.
So it's been difficult because since we've been in this property, we moved out here in
March.
And since March, we've been in an ongoing project, right?
So 95% of that money has been going to pay, you know, material.
labor, everything that we need to
fix the property up. And now that we're
effectively done with that, we have
three, four more weeks of
exterior work. Once we're done with that, that money
is then going to be reinvested to paying
off the line of credit that we took
because that line of credit is
almost at 11%. Oh, that's the
$800 a month that you're paying off? Yeah, 80K.
How long will that take to pay off?
I mean, if I'm aggressive about it, probably nine to ten months.
Okay.
All right.
Ellen, all the stuff to Edward just told me, are you in the loop on that or no?
Yeah, I would say enough so, the big amounts I'm pretty aware of.
Okay, got it.
I'm going to ask Ellen to read this combined gross monthly income number.
What's that number there?
28,000.
28,000 a month gross, which means.
means that your household income is $336,000 a year. By a show of hands, who here knew that
number? Around. How much is around? How much did you think it was, Ellen? I thought it was
like around maybe 200. Stop right there. If your number starts with a different first digit
than the actual income, you don't know your income. Okay? What does it make you think that you did
not know your income within $80,000?
That I'm not caring enough to learn more and be more involved when I'm an equal partner
with my partner.
Why?
Because I don't want to have the discussions with him of getting an argument.
Because I feel like we already talk about money often in ways of me wanting things that
I don't want to talk about it in any other way.
yeah it's a it's a problem you know i i recognize that i've almost set up a system of hoops that i make
her jump through to be able to get to the finish line and you know get what she wants and i think
that i've done that intentionally over the years because if those you know those stopgaps
weren't in place those hoops weren't there it wouldn't be you know a $20 face cream it would be a
$20 face cream and a $20 bag and a $20 bottle and a $20 candle and so on and so forth.
And our discretionary money would end up killing our budget, right?
Like it would, you know, I want our money to grow.
I don't want our money to slowly dwindle because we're spending more than we have.
And I feel like if I don't stop her from spending on dumb little $20, that's what's going
to happen.
Ellen?
Well, it's hard because.
in his eyes, anything I spend money on is not a necessity and it's dumb. And that's because
he doesn't need anything. Like, he will use the same soap to wash his entire body. That's
all he needs. He'll wear the same clothes that have, are covered in holes and paint stains. He
doesn't need any more clothes. You know, he loves sports cars, but he won't buy himself one. Like,
I'm the one who makes him get things for himself.
So for me, being like, okay, I need face cream.
That is a pretty basic necessity in my opinion.
I don't buy the fancy ones anymore.
I'm very natural and buy the cheaper versions of things.
But if I'm out of something that I use on a daily basis,
I don't want to have to bicker with you on how my skin's going to dry out.
Yeah, and I want to get to a point where I can give you a budget to go do
that and you don't blow through that budget halfway through the month. I agree, but the budget needs
to be more than what it is. Or you need to spend less or somewhere in the middle. But say there's some
things that get crossed in our communication. And that month, I end up spending $200 more. And I don't
talk to you about it. In my opinion, from our net worth, like we should be fine with that.
And that is me trying to stay within it.
I'm not blowing thousands of more dollars.
But then we don't have to talk about those small little nitpicking things.
And in my mind, what that will become is after three months of doing it, you're going to say, we're fine.
So if I go 200 over that, it won't be a big deal.
And then that's going to continue until, you know, we have this outrageous outflow of money that we really can't.
afford that's eroding our savings. It's not, you know, an emotional thing for me. It's like,
this is how much we have. And, you know, I just want to be able to, you know, this starting this month,
right, we're recording this on the second of the month. I want to be able to give her the budget,
hey, this is what you can spend this month and have her do that. Do you have to be so, so in the box,
though, like, and that's what I'm trying to say is that if I am trying to stick to the budget,
but I go a little bit over.
Say it's only, say it's $30 more that month, you know, do I really need to like talk to you
about that?
No, $30 isn't a big deal, but I would also like to see you go under the budget $30 one month.
And like that's the problem that I have is that you have historically never done that.
You don't go under budget, right?
Like you figure out, I have this much money to spend.
I am going to spend every penny of it.
And that's the problem that I have.
What's it?
Wow.
There is a lot going on here.
Ellen didn't know their income within $80,000.
She has become a voidant, in part, I suspect,
because anytime she asks anything about money, she gets shut down.
And then Edward admits it.
He's built a system of hoops to test her.
If she passes, she gets face cream.
If she fails, no money next month.
And because of this, Ellen has never been taught, or importantly, she has never learned herself how to
manage money. She plays financial defense, only avoiding getting in trouble, never engaging with what
she truly wants and needs. This cannot go on. This is one of the dynamics we work on in money
coaching as well. If you're in a relationship where money means asking for permission and feeling
guilty and constantly fighting over what counts, this is what we can help with. You don't just
need a better budget. In fact, you probably don't even need a budget at all. You need a better
system that is built together. You can apply for money coaching at IWT.com slash money coaching.
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Can't step in for a second?
Yeah.
I love this conversation.
I love the honesty.
So thank you both.
I'm not kidding.
If you zoom up,
what's happening in this conversation between the two of you?
What's the role that each of you is playing?
Ellen?
I feel like he's being the father and I'm being the child and trying to get across why I need this for school or whatever it is
and that there's no trust in that I could do it because we haven't even tried it in this way
where if I went over to trust that I'm not going to go crazy over and be okay that it doesn't
need to be the strict down to the dollar amount that I stayed within.
You said there is no trust.
That's a very passive phrase.
Who does not trust the other?
I don't think he trusts me at all.
And it makes me not trust myself.
Edward, what do you see as you zoom up?
I mean, the same dynamic.
And, you know, I agree with her.
and you don't, I don't trust her with money, you know, because there isn't a time that I can remember
where she's spent under her budget, right? Like, there's never been a time where I've seen her
save money. There's never been a time where I've seen her make, you know, smart financial
decisions when she has the opportunity to do so. I want to be able to trust that she's going to
stick to what our budget is. But I realistically, right now, don't see that as feasible.
Will it ever be feasible?
Hopefully.
I'm scared.
Why?
I'm scared because I haven't done it.
I don't want to let him down when it's a larger list for our family.
I don't know.
My first thought is that she doesn't want to have the responsibility and she doesn't want to have the control and she doesn't want to admit to that to me.
And, you know, I think if my gut shot reaction is that she would.
just rather have me maintain all the bills and, you know, do all the discretionary money
and just have me give her $1,000 a month to go do what she wants to do with it. And she would be
happy with it. And, you know, I've considered that, but I won't be happy with it. Why? Because I want
her to, like, be able to be, you know, sufficient if I'm not here. I want her to, like, be able
to teach our daughter and, like, be a role model to, you know, our daughter that, you know, I can
managed numbers. I can be good with money. Oh, have you told her that before? I don't think so.
First time I'm hearing it. Ellen, have you heard that before? No. What's going through your mind
right now, Alan? It makes me sad. It makes me disappointed with myself. It also makes me happy to hear
that he wants that for our child, our daughters, or any of our children.
Edward's getting up.
He's giving Elman a kiss right now.
Sweet.
Yeah, I'm just realizing that I
complain a lot about what I don't like
and I'm realizing that there's
ways to change it
and that he's willing to.
But am I truly willing to?
I kind of love the rawness that they are showing here.
Yeah, it's uncomfortable.
and it's kind of rough around the edges,
but they are being honest with each other.
I will say I'm not sure they are even in the same financial universe, though.
The word coming up for me here is control.
Edward has all of it when it comes to money.
Ellen has none.
I suspect a large part of the way they got here
is that they have chosen to model the traditional relationship.
Now, when they told me they have a traditional relationship,
I wasn't surprised.
Personally, I don't have a lot of friends who are in a set,
kind of relationship, but if that's how they choose to do theirs and they both agree,
perfectly fine with me. In fact, lots of our parents grew up this way. But it occurs to me that
it is very hard to be in a traditional relationship in an untraditional world. For example,
when my parents got married, the entire infrastructure was set up around one breadwinner. It was
expected. For example, in the 1960s, nearly 60% of families only had one earner. Nowadays, less than
20% of families have one earner. The world has changed a lot. Back then, being in a
quote, traditional relationship was the default. Now, if you want to be in a traditional
relationship, you almost need to discuss it proactively. Hey, what are our expectations? How do we
think about kids, school, vacation, chores, child care? You can choose how you want to set up
your relationship, whatever you want. But you have to be aligned. And as we are seeing in real
time, Edward and Ellen are not aligned with their money. The question is, what shaped their
worldviews on money? Well, we're about to find out. Edward, what did your family say about money
when you were growing up? Nothing. So my mom was on like Section 8 welfare food stamps. She never
mentioned money. When she would get a surplus of it, she would spend it on, you know, herself and me
and just like blow through it immediately. And then we would be poor again for, you know, until the next
time and you know she spent her money on um what's called lotto tickets and like scratchers
and you know frivolous she didn't need and hmm i heard that word before
prevalent yeah any relation not i don't compare to my mother and her spending habits by any means
but i mean it is similar in the way that you know there is stuff that is objectively not
needed in our life that, you know, we get. And I also acknowledge that I am, you know,
very Spartan in my life, right? Like, when we moved in together, I put all my shit in box
and put it outside for someone to take. Like, I just, I come as I am, I go as I am, right? So it's,
I don't know, I don't put value on stuff. Was dad in the picture? No, my dad left when I was a
baby. So I came into contact with him when I was a teenager. And then like three months later,
he died in a freak roofing accident.
So, yeah, so I never really developed a relationship with him.
So ever since I was young, it was always important to me to, you know, be a good dad.
When we were talking, there was a lot of focus being placed on what happens to Ellen if you,
Edward, die.
Like, not a little, because I love a good morbid planning session.
I love it.
Let's talk about death all day long, but there was a lot.
Where does that come from?
Is that from dad passing away?
I mean, you know, just family health stuff, right?
Like, I've had a couple people in my family with heart attacks, a couple with cancer.
You know, we had a, you know, family members that have just died unexpectedly like
happens, right?
And like, that's just one of my, you know, obviously several of the Monty Carlos that I die
and she's in charge of everything.
You ever have those conversations?
Yeah, absolutely.
And I mean, I have a, you know, after death financial plan.
And, you know, she has a binder of like, look, this is who you call.
This is who's going to manage our money.
If you die too, if we die in a car accident, you know, this is Mexican.
This is who they call.
This is who's going to manage our assets.
Okay, well done.
Distribute them.
And, you know, we have that plan, but it's also another one of those.
We've had the conversation several times and she's avoided it because she doesn't want to think about me dying.
She doesn't want to think about her being fully in charge of the money.
And so she just shuts down and doesn't accept what I'm saying.
I'm glad that we are talking about this.
I now understand a little bit more
about why we were speaking so much
about Edward's premature death.
Yeah, deaths in the family, okay.
But also just a fear that Ellen
is not taking on
the mantle of being a financial partner.
Like, it's going to happen one day.
It's going to happen.
God forbid Edward goes first.
Ellen, you would be the one.
Right now, would you say it's fair?
I don't think you would be equipped to handle the complexity of the family finance. Is that fair to say?
Yeah. Okay. And it's a lot of my issues with money and talking about it is because of death and because of my childhood.
Can you tell me? Oh, my family. My dad never discussed money.
But I feel like that was because he was pretty well off.
My parents weren't together.
Long story short with this part, I lived in a home that was two homes that my father had built.
My mom lived on one end.
My dad lived on the other.
Since I was born, they weren't together.
My dad was the wealthy one.
My mom was not.
My dad never talked about money, never worried me about money.
He would have nice surprises for me with splurging on me, but overall, like, I, I didn't get just whatever I wanted.
My mother struggled and was way too open with me about just everything in life, but definitely money, telling me all of her concerns and worries.
And as a little girl, that scared me.
so I had a very different relationship with money from the both of them
that's pretty much how my childhood was until my father passed away when I was 12
when he passed away there I pretty much lost all of that security that I felt with
not only having my father but with money and knowing that I'd be okay
so for years I was just with my mom knowing about her money struggles and being worried and stressed about it and like him passing it is something I have brought up in the past too because it's a big worry of mine of losing loved ones and then knowing how kids can be affected by that financially as well and now being at my mind.
own being a mother. I want to make sure that they have everything they need and that I can understand
and take on that role. I do not like talking about it because I am a big believer in manifestation
and your words and what you put out there. So that's a huge reason also why I don't like to talk
about it with him is because he talks about not being here so often. I don't want, I don't want
him to, I don't know, put that out there and make something like that actually happen when
day or sooner than it should.
Wow. Thank you for sharing all that. I had no idea.
When you look back and you share your story, I mean, you immediately started crying.
It's just mainly losing the person that was my rock and my security and meeting my husband.
He became that for me.
Very early on, I felt very long.
loved and protected and looked out for and taken care of and had that person to, I don't know, take on that man, even father-like role, I guess, in a way.
Do you still want that?
Yes, very much so. But I just want to be more involved and understand it.
All of that stuff is truly on Edward. It's a lot.
You know, hearing both of the way you grew up with money, the puzzle pieces start to fit together.
What lessons do you take from your childhood that you are bringing into this current relationship with money?
Edward?
Most children either go the exact same way or exact opposite way of, you know, the childhood.
And I take the example of, you know, my upbringing as a cautionary tale.
And, you know, I go the opposite way.
And I have since I was a child.
and you know I definitely carry that into now and I I recognize that my childhood is most likely why I don't feel secure and probably why I you know it'll be very hard for me to ever feel secure no matter you know how much I have yeah because you know I've heard you say it before other people on the show that oh I've been poor before I can be poor again not me I'm like I will never be poor I will be you know I will rob banks and do what I got to do to you know not put my family through what I'm through the idea that people
either go exactly the same way or the opposite way is generally pretty true. The only
shocking thing is you cannot predict which way they're going to go. There's no predictive power
whatsoever, but I think you you kind of nailed it. Okay. Ellen? Probably when my father would
let me go on a shopping spree or whatever and just fully, you know, living in that moment,
let me get as much as I can. I love this. And
the satisfaction that it does, like, bring me to buy stuff and, you know, my husband sees that.
And obviously, that's when he sometimes does too much in that way because it makes him feel that I, that that's the way he shows his love.
And that was kind of a way that my father would show his love for me.
I would be willing to bet you did not know how money worked back then.
True or false?
Not at all.
Yeah, true.
Yeah.
And yet here we are today.
You have millions.
You still do not know how money works.
You have recreated the very situation,
the traumatic situation that you yourself went through.
I've seen it a million times on this show.
I just think you too smart and too successful to be playing this game.
Hearing how people experienced money when they were young is always amazing to me.
You can almost draw a straight line from their childhood to today.
It's part of the reason why I love my job so much.
Edward fears leaving his family unprotected because no one ever protected him.
Ellen craves safety and care because she saw what happens when they disappear.
What's interesting to me is that they both grew up in non-traditional family settings.
I'm not sure if that's why they have both found themselves in a traditional marriage,
but it is very fascinating to me.
So knowing what we now know, I want to go back to the numbers.
I want you to tell me what you notice as we take a fresh look at their conscious spending plan.
I'm also struck by the fact that the two of you are into real estate.
Perfectly valid.
You've done very well.
But it is striking because both of you crave security.
And real estate is what a lot of people who crave security go towards.
Not much invested.
Barely anything going towards the stock market, too risky.
but real estate safety and we can control it we can control what happens now i don't blame you i think
you've done very well but it is striking to me as an observation i like being more hands-on and
real estate has provided us with you know a better return on our money than dumping everything in
the market what else and you know i've ran obviously the numbers all that too and it's you know most
wealth is hard work and extraordinary so real estate has kind of been our golden goose lucky egg right
And I like houses, right?
It's something tangible, too.
So, you know.
I appreciate that.
As long as you run your numbers and it is serving the kind of rich life you want,
I'm all for it.
All for it.
You choose your path to the rich life.
I would like to talk about why is there $7,000, $7,215.15 per month, to be exact,
left over.
But Ellen feels extremely constrained by discretionary.
What is that?
This last month was the first month that we decided to go back on giving me, I guess, some access to an amount because there was a lot that came up this last month.
I had a photo shoot for a maternity photo shoot that we flew the photographer out from San Diego where we used to live.
And did you have to ask for permission for each of these things?
I did now the photo shoot was already something him and I had discussed prior and we worked that out but I didn't think about outfits I would need or maybe I wanted to get my hair cut before I did it or any of that kind of stuff so when it came down to the photo shoot I had no money to get any of those things done I made it work with what I had and it was fine when do you both get to live like you're wealthy
I don't think ever because he, I don't, I think we could be worth $50 million and he still
wouldn't think that life is about experiences and that those cost money and that he'd rather
just have gold at the end.
I disagree because we were at the precipice of that, right?
Like we had one of our, you know, properties in San Diego fully paid for and that freed up a lot
of money.
And, you know, we had, we were looking at $12,000 to $15,000 extra a month to
do whatever the we wanted, right? We want to go get massages, cool. We want to go on a trip.
Cool. Doesn't matter. You're not going to, like, waste that much money. And I was totally open
to spending it. But then she decided to want to move to Hawaii and pick up a $2 million loan at
6%. So now that's what's always in the forefront of my mind, right, is I got to make, you know,
I got to make sure that all the money comes in. I got to make sure that, you know, all, everything goes right.
you know, stops working. And I have to like process through my craziness to make sure that we
have enough to pay for, you know, $11,000 loan, $1,000 of, you know, daycare, or private school,
sorry. And then, you know, all these other things that we have to come out to, you know,
$15,000, $16,000 a month. Like you, you have the vision. You're the dreamer. You dream,
you point and all go make it happen. But you've got to choose one thing.
What happens when you finish the house and you sell it?
She doesn't want to do this again.
So I don't know if we're going to do that.
I think I might be stuck with a $2 million loan for the next 30 years.
Is that true?
It's her dream home now, right?
Yeah, I told him that I don't want to do live-in flips anymore.
I have been not having the sense of security that I've wanted with a home in a long time.
and now more children that I'm having, I just want to ground myself and be somewhere,
and this is the most special place I've ever experienced. And there's, it's not like it's,
there's not rentals on it, right? I don't want to make, you know, Ellen or my kids sad by giving
this up. And so, you know, I fight with that of, you know, this, this exit plan, this, you know,
the thing that's going to be my, you know, ace in the back pocket is going to make my family sad.
I don't want to disappoint my wife and kids.
And it's like, I know that we'll like survive no matter what.
I know we'll be okay, no matter why, but it doesn't help me sleep at night.
You wouldn't disappoint me, though.
I mean, that's not, if we have to sell at some point, we have to sell, it would sad in me.
But it would be no, I wouldn't feel disappointed in you.
And I don't want to make you sad.
So, you know, I work as hard as I can to prevent that.
How much are we talking about that you would need to feel a sense of
ease per month.
What are we talking about here?
I don't think that number exists for me, and that's part of my anxiety and my being neurotic,
right?
Like I understand that, like I said, every scenario I've ran, we're in good standing.
We're, you know, fire success rate from 10, 20, 50, 60, 80 years, all shows, you know, 95
and up percent.
I don't believe it.
Like, my brain just doesn't believe the.
fact of it. And, you know, it's like because the way that, you know, my brain works is like,
oh, what if person A stops paying the rent, property B catches on fire, income source C disappears
because of government changes, right? Like, I was just always working towards the ability to not
to have you money. Like, I don't, I don't want to listen to what you're telling me to do.
I don't have to. And, you know, that is, you know, remain true. But as I met Ellen and we've had
kids, my main money dial has transitioned into family, right?
So it's family and freedom are like the two things that are just very much important to me.
What? Wait, what's the family part? Okay, you see the house as family because you spent
a ton to be there. Yeah, because she wants to be here. This is where her family and her sisters and,
you know, her relations are. And, you know, she likes a good house. And I want my kids to grow up,
you know, in a different socioeconomic class than I did. And, you know, so I work towards balancing
giving them that good life and creating, you know, legacy for them, right? So when I, when we both
die, all my can get liquidated, put into an account, they can draw 3% in perpetuity forever.
And, you know, then everybody is filthy rich. And thanks, great grandpa, Edward.
Ellen, correct me if I'm wrong. To hear Edward talk about grandkids taking out 3% and him not being
here and you having a binder, that seems like it's very painful for you. Ellen, am I reading that
right? Yeah, it's all, he works so hard and I try to get him to be in more of the present moment.
Yep. Like we have the here and the now and, you know, it's life at the end of the day. It's about the
moments and memories we make together. And with him just being boom, boom, boom, I need to,
you know, provide for future generations. I'm like, well, what about the here and now? So I feel like he's
living way too far in the future and I'm like here I am young pregnant in the now like this is
like the best time of our life is going to be right now. Edward would you be open to adding a layer of
the way you think about money? Yeah and I mean I don't understand because I had you know we had everything
you know on autopilot and in our last place in San Diego and I gave up all of that to come here
for her to like, you know, have her, have her dream life and to raise our kids.
How do you want me to live in the here or now?
Not just being here, but just being present here with slowing down a bit because you're just so
fast.
You're always, you know, on your phone and computer, working, working, working for the future.
And it's just taking those moments to be more present with everyone.
Getting the house done is me building the nest for you, right? So you can, you can nest and you can have somewhere to have our babies. You know, part of what's built into me as a person is working to protect that and working to, you know, make a builder a bigger nest because, you know, at the core of me, I am worried about ever, you know, living life, how I grew up. And so, you know, like the key part of me is fighting a
against ever being back there.
And while it's obviously not healthy, it's how I feel.
Helen, what are you realizing right now?
Just that he always thinks like worst case scenario.
And I just don't think that that's healthy, especially like he doesn't want us to go there.
So why even think about that?
We're not there.
They've both been very successful.
Let me just say that.
I see it in the numbers.
I see it in the way that they show love to each other.
I do think there is a predictable plateau that probably happens, a month from now, a year from now,
10 years from now, but we've all seen it a million times.
In many, many heterosexual relationships, we will see the wife who wants more from her husband,
more time, more presence, more attention.
The husband then predictably goes, I'm doing this for you.
I'm working hard to provide for this family.
That's why I have to work this weekend to close that deal.
The wife says, we don't need that.
We have what we need.
We want you.
This is basically an American story.
It's so common you can throw a rock in any suburban town in America and find 50 examples.
And after years of this, the roles are set.
We're not even really talking about the extra hours anymore.
We're talking about money, our family, our vision.
Pretty soon it's so abstract.
We're not even sure what we're fighting about anymore.
We are just upset.
Ellen and Edward have a chance to change that.
They have the money, that's for sure.
But as you can see, the math does not matter if you've built up an incredibly complex system
that keeps one person in total control and the other asking for permission.
I do want to talk about the structure of how you've set this up.
So typically, like in chapter 9 of money for couples, we have a diagram of how couples can set
up money that is really nice for everybody.
You have almost all your money is in joint.
and then each of you has some individual no questions asked spending.
And that would be stuff like going golfing, getting your nails done, whatever you want.
It's purely discretionary, no questions asked.
That's not happening here, correct?
It's not.
And that's what I would love to have happen is because, like, for example, I haven't had my haircut in a year.
And I'm like, there's not enough money for me to like go do that with the other things he wants.
my budget to be included on. I'm always finding other things for the household or for our children
or whatever that we need that I don't feel like I have that set aside for myself. Do you want it?
Oh, so badly. So much so. Have you mentioned it specifically? Yes. What was the response?
Well, you get a certain amount, work it out, figure it out. Okay. I do think that having
Some amount is important.
I am personally a little more fluid as income goes up, as net worth goes up.
I find myself becoming more generous, more fluid.
The foundation of the moat is set.
Okay?
If we go over $100, $1,000, hell, sometimes $10,000, is it going to materially affect us?
No.
I would love to not discuss the small little things and buying purchases.
It has no interest to him.
I don't want to discuss it.
So, yeah, if I have enough in an account where I can figure out how to make it last
and what's included in that and having that control of, okay, I can do what I want with
this money, but just don't ask for anything else.
That's what I would love.
Can I ask a weird question?
Yeah.
What if you just...
took the discretionary amount, which is like something like six, seven hundred bucks. And what
if he just tripled it? That's what I was telling him. I said that this morning. I said if the
amount was larger, then I could stay within that. But he doesn't think that that's possible. He
thinks that he could give me three grand and I would still go over. And I'm like, I don't think so.
I can prove it. That's multifaceted in that.
yeah, I could give her three grand and she would go through it in a week. It's just I know that
for a fact. But it's not even that. It's that, you know, increasing the budget threefold would
mean, you know, having to come up with an extra $1,200 a month, which is where does that come from?
So I think there's probably both of you have some valid concerns. I think that having $600 a month
for a wife, a mom, a business partner, all while it includes everything from Target to
haircuts to this, to that is simply not sufficient. Not for a couple making this kind of money.
That's my personal take. Okay. How much would you both like per month for your individual,
no questions asked spending? I feel like 300. All right, 300 bucks. Edward, how much would you
want for individual? And you have to give an answer. It can't be easy.
Zero. Fine, five bucks.
No, that's not acceptable.
You said not zero.
Get a hobby.
Honestly, man, I don't. I don't have hobbies.
Like, I...
I know you don't. You're in the fire community.
Do something. Anything.
I like... I like to hoard my money. That's what I like. That's what brings me joy.
I know. You're in the fire community. We understand.
But you have to do something for this example.
50 bucks.
50. Okay.
Say it's...
Sorry. Say it's 150 and you could actually go and get a...
massage. That's like one of the one things you would love to do, but you would never do that for
yourself. I'd rather have gold coins. I mean, fine, hundred bucks there. Couldn't even go with
150. Had to decrease it by 50%. Quite striking. Yeah. You know, sometimes I think that the partner
always knows best, and I think this is one of those cases, we're going to go with 150. So if the two
of you did that and each of you got everything you wanted, that's less than $500 per month for
individual money. Do you all think you could scrounge around the couch cushions and
find 500 bucks a month? The 300 bucks is whatever. I don't give a fuck, right? You can have
$300 every month. I'll give you, you know, I'll give you $3,600 and you can call it a year,
right? It's not, that's not the point for me. The point for me is managing our budget and, you know,
learning to do that effectively. Okay. I hear you, Edward, but stick with me. Because what you
just said and the way you said it is actually directly related to why Ellen is finding it
difficult to connect on money. Let me restate what you just said. I don't care about the 300 bucks a
month. I don't give a f***. If it's $3,600 a year, I'll give it to you right up front. The point is to
be able to manage the budget. That's what you said, right? Yep. If you were the recipient of that,
and keep in mind, you had not been particularly skilled or experienced with money, how would you
receive that. My response came across as aggressive and non-loving and non-soft and
supportive. You've gotten that feedback before, right? Yes, my whole life. Okay. Yeah. So that's cool
that you're aware of that. And the more I talk to you, the more I sense that you are self-perceptive
and potentially willing to change, which I love. But, Edward, if you are comfortable with Ellen
taking $300 a month for self-care, how can you create the conditions for Ellen to succeed
with money? This is a core way. So I would like you to communicate this in a way that will reach
her because you're actually doing something nice and she's, I think, loving it. Say it in a way
that connects with her. Try it. Baby, I know you've been doing a lot since we've been here and I
know that this has been really stressful for you and you're getting ready to have a baby. And I
think it's important that you have some money to spend on yourself again. So are you okay with
having $300 a month to just spend on whatever you want? Yes. Yes. I'm, I'm, I'm really shocked
because this whole conversation at the beginning was that there was no room for that. But
hearing you say that there is, but that you want me to take more of a role, like,
I've never heard you say those words. So I am very much willing to. Imagine you were really far apart
and you just took one step together. So you're like getting in the right direction. But I want you
to imagine what would your answers have been if you took 10 gigantic size jack in the beanstock
size footsteps together? What would your answer have been? Sure. You can have an unlimited budget
and buy whatever we need for the house
and I will rectify it at the end of the month.
Great. Ellen?
Finally.
That we're doing this.
It's about time.
That's a pretty good answer.
That's a pretty good.
I thought you would have said thank you,
but that also works.
Fantastic.
Finally.
So nobody comes on this show
for me to tell them what to do with their money.
Okay?
That's not my job.
Once in a while,
I'm a little directive.
for a variety of reasons, I am going to tell you how I might think about money in this relationship
if I were in this relationship. And I'm speaking about a couple that has a net worth of $2.4 million,
an income of $336,000 in their 30s. Okay? Number one, if I were the more experienced with money
partner, that would be you, Edward, I would tell myself from day one, I am not going to do this
on my own. I want my partner to become good with money. That is my expectation for this relationship.
The kids are going to learn a lot from how she handles money, how we handle money, et cetera,
so it's very important. Two, we're going to talk about money regularly. And each of us is going to
bring some skin in the game. We're going to own a certain number, et cetera. Three, we're going to
decide on the structure. Each of us is going to have individual, no questions ask money.
We're going to have joint money that we decide on. And we're going to have a few rules in our
relationship, like no debt policy or we spend a maximum of 18 months flipping, whatever the
policies are that we decide. Fourth, when my wife gets pregnant, I'm going to talk to her because
thank God we make all this money. I want her to have the best, easiest, most pleasurable pregnancy
on planet Earth.
I want her to look back and be like,
holy I was taken care of like I cannot believe.
I had nothing that I could have wished for.
I was loved.
Freaking babies popping out
and we're sitting here debating about punitive,
you can't get the money from last month
because you over exceeded it.
What?
Yeah.
I think that he has made a big effort
on his part to spend more
during this pregnancy
to give me things
that I really wanted to have, like the home birth, the photographer, the pregnancy photos, yeah,
the having this celebration, the big moments has been beautiful to experience. But in my day to day,
there has been things that I've wanted to do in pregnancy or healthy things to have that he has
been way stricter on. Why should a wife and a mom set the goal at I'm
capable of not spending our money. What is that? Why is it that you're playing so small? Oh,
I'm not draining our accounts. I'm not going crazy. I don't actually spend money. Why is that the
goal? Why can't it be? We have built up multiple millions of dollars and I am going to spend
money in a way that is reasonable for this family. Until now, I have not been quite as disciplined
as I need. I'm going to change that. But I am not going to play small. I'm not going to shrink
myself. I'm not going to be told, oh, you can only spend $300 a month. That's absurd. We are partners
in this and I'm going to spend the appropriate amount for our family. We can decide what it is
together. Why not that? It's what I've wanted this whole time. I think I just shrink myself
to try to please him. But I guess I've been just trying to figure out what he has wanted this whole
time. And now it seems like... What about what you want? A person who's going to give birth in a matter of
weeks what about what you want i i say what i want but it's doesn't happen tell me he's listening but
tell me i mean i say how i feel and what i want but i feel like with with like i want to feel
like I have more of a say in our finances and to not feel like I'm shrinking myself to do what
someone else wants me to do or what role I've been put in, even though from what I'm hearing
today he wants me also in a different role, but he's wanting things out of me that I didn't
really realize how much he truly wanted.
And, you know, I'm sorry that I haven't been forthcoming enough to tell you exactly
what I want in, you know, a way that we can talk about.
And if I've been, you know, vague about stuff.
And, you know, I just, I want us to be on the same page with your numbers.
And I want to, you know, go over the budget together so we can both see how much.
much money we have to spend on one category, and you can go out and spend that. And, you know,
I want to have the trust in you that you're going to monitor and stick to that number.
Thank you, babe. I'm sorry, too, for not, I guess, realizing how much you wanted me to be involved.
I feel like I used to just think that you would say that casually.
because you didn't want to seem, I don't know, sorry, but like, all in charge and in control of it.
But I'm realizing that, like, you really do want me to be more involved and to be part of it and to be more of a teen.
I'm happy to go through it with you and I, you know, I want to guide you through it so you know it.
I want you to know our numbers and I want you to know our finances and I want you to, you know, maybe not know as much as I know because I know all the little nuance, right?
but I want you to have a good grasp on, you know, our finance is the same way you do everything
else in the like.
Yeah, I'm just, I'm realizing that this is like the first time I'm really hearing you
and maybe you have done it in the past, but maybe my ears were closed because as soon as any
subject about money comes up, I get closed off.
So I'm sorry if I've, if you've been doing this for a while and I haven't been hearing
you know. Edward, what changes could you make to encourage and celebrate Ellen becoming awesome
with money? Notice that I did not say what can you do to reward Ellen for hitting the budget,
but rather what conditions can you create to recognize and celebrate Ellen for becoming
awesome with money? I can work with her a little bit more, I think, and not just
you know, fully give her the reins of here, do this for a month. And I can kind of go through
the process with her and help out a little bit more as she goes through the spending and not
micromanage it, right? But be there and say, hey, you know, you're at this milestone so far for
this month. You're doing great. You're doing wonderful. I'm very proud of you. I'm in awe of you.
And, you know, continue on until she, you know, fully understands a little bit more of the
complexity of it instead of, you know, I think right now what I've been doing is, you know,
having this the supercar that you're just like, here, drive it, learn and me not actually
doing my job of teaching her, right? Like, I've just been, you know, giving her 100% of the weight
instead of helping out. Yeah, I love his answer. It is kind of like, I mean, if you were to go
to any job and, you know, you're learning something new, like you're going to have like another
worker help guide you in this new this new job and so I feel this I feel that way it would be way
less of a pressure and wait on me if I feel a little bit if I was helped in a more gentler way of
being guided and like he said like being like you're doing a good job okay what else do you need
help with let's talk about these other expenses and if they're part of this budget and
actually talking about this because we haven't we haven't done that with this kind of a budget before
to me the vision here would have to be we are partners in this relationship of course one of us
is going to take over most of this and another's going to take over most of that but we need
to be generally competent at pretty much everything in this relationship and money is really
special. Money is not like emptying the dishwasher where you can have one person responsible for
it. Money cuts across child care, living situation, death, everything. So we both have to be
quite competent. It also informs what our daughter learns and on and on on. So I love the
idea of starting off with the powerful vision of we're both going to become good at this. We're
going to do it in a way that is positive.
We're going to adjust the structure so that we both feel good about this.
It's really scary to think about, but I think because he's so smart with money and is in a
different level of how he thinks about money, it's very intimidating to try to take on
anything he's doing because it just feels like I would fail.
it would feel him.
Would you say you're more emotionally savvy than Edward is?
Yes.
Leaps and bounds.
Okay.
I wonder, has Edward ever said, gosh, it's so intimidating how skilled Ellen is at managing
her emotions.
I can't try because I could never do what she does.
I just simply cannot try.
Has he ever said that?
No.
Has he ever used the word intimidating?
I'm so intimidated by her skills with.
emotions?
No.
It's funny that we use that word with money, but not with so many other things.
It's funny that we use those words with things that tend to be male dominated.
He's so skilled with money, with fix it, stuff, et cetera, et cetera.
But you never heard a man say, I'm so intimidated by how good she is at taking care of our children.
Why is that?
I really don't know.
I mean, he definitely tells me that, you know, he couldn't do what I do.
And even, like, the fact that I'm having a baby in, like, three weeks, I mean, he's going to be taking on way more of the home role with our toddler.
And he says all the time, he's like, I don't know any of this.
Like, how am I going to do any of this?
I'll figure it out.
But it's beautiful to hear when he says it, but never in those kind of words.
Yeah.
Keep going.
You're getting it.
He says, I don't know how to do it.
I don't know how you've done this.
How am I going to do it?
I will figure it out.
And then what did you just say?
It is what to hear those words?
Start with a B.
Beautiful to hear those words.
Yeah.
It's beautiful.
You like hearing him say that.
And I love seeing him.
I love seeing him step into a role that's not.
Wow, you're good at this.
I love seeing him step into a role that doesn't,
isn't the most easy for him.
Is it his traditional everyday role,
but his effort to try and just jump in and do it because I need him to.
is very healthy and good for our relationship.
And so I need to do the same.
What would it look like, Ellen, describe it?
It would be me finally not putting all of these blocks in front of myself
on why I can't do it or it's just too hard or just all the excuses
and just going in and putting in the effort
because that's what you would tell your children is just to try.
Love it. Love it. And tell me about the people around you. What would they see as you got more skilled with money? Let's start with Edward. Then we'll go to your kids.
I think that he would be more more in awe with me and seeing myself in a different light that he had never seen before. Also helping him with, I know it's a burden for him and a lot to carry all of the stress. And I think that's what.
But when he was describing how he wanted me to worry a bit with money,
I think what he really wants is just for me to try and to care
and see what work he's putting in,
and for me to also show the effort since we're a team.
I think that's right.
What about your daughter?
What would she see as you became more skilled with money?
I think she would see me as a really strong,
strong woman that can do anything and show her that she can do anything. And to see my husband
and I as more of a unit and a team that can accomplish things together. I love hearing that.
To me, it, um, it sounds inspirational. We're going to get to their follow-ups in just a second,
but first I want to say a huge thank you to Ellen and Edward for sharing so openly with me today.
Their story is such a great reminder that how you feel about money is highly uncorrelated with the number you see in your bank account.
If you guys don't create a shared partnership for your finances, you will forever feel resentful, behind, insecure, unworthy, misaligned, sometimes even in danger around your finances.
Money is important.
My wish for you is that you give it the attention and respect that it deserves.
Edward came into this conversation almost grappling for control. Edward holding all the financial
power, Ellen unaware of how the system even works. And somewhere along the way, the question of
can I buy face cream turned into the central financial debate of their lives. He wanted her to
be more involved, but only if she did it his way. She wanted to be more confident, but years of
asking for permission made her doubt she could be. After our entire conversation, I'm wondering
are they ready to try something different, or is it just, this is how we do things?
Let's listen to their follow-ups now.
I was surprised by the fact that I hadn't really conveyed how much I wanted Ellen to be
involved in our finances and that I wasn't explaining what I wanted her to hear.
My big takeaway after going through the CSP, like you asked us to do for homework,
was that even though I don't feel comfortable with it, we arguably have enough money to
let her have a bigger budget, have more control. I need to let go of the rain so much, especially
on the small stuff. And a couple of the changes we've made so far is we gave her the $300 to spend
on personal care, whatever she wants, no questions asked, right out of the box. And we've also
gone through and looked at our finances and established that our discretionary budget should be
at least a little bit bigger than it is. So we increased that by 30%. And we're also interested in
starting your earnable program for her. So she does have marketable skills like I touched on that she
can take forward if something does happen to me. Some of my biggest takeaways from our video
session that surprised me was that I didn't realize how involved my husband wanted me to be in our
finances. And that was pretty exciting to hear that he not only wants me to take
more responsibility in it, but that he is open to giving me that role so he can learn to
trust me more. One of the reasons I avoid talking about money with him is because of the daily
small ask that I have regarding money and purchases, that when we can just come to an agreement
on a larger monthly budget that I have control of, I won't have.
to ask him, I guess, permission and over-explain myself on what I want, which will make
me feel better to talk about money in different ways.
Hey, Rameith.
So to start with the big news, baby cash arrived happy, healthy a couple days ago at seven
pounds, four ounces.
It was a wonderful birth story.
It ended up happening at home, and I delivered the baby, which was completely unexpected.
since our filming, the first thing that we did is we booked a few days stay at a local resort just to get a couple days away, flex that spinning muscle a little bit, and just go and spend time with each other and kind of talk over everything after our podcast. Great weekend and after we got back, you know, we sat down and we went over everything. And for me, specifically, it was that I wasn't conveying my needs as adequately as I could have been. And going forward, um,
I'm going to be very precise with what I say in terms of our budgeting and our spending.
For Ellen, while she can't do a video update because of the baby, we did talk and she is excited to get hands on with the budget here in a couple months.
Until that time, her spending budget has gone up to 300 a month for the discretionary.
And mine is at 150 and I am still looking for stuff to spend mine on.
