I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 234. "We have $100k+ in debt. Will we ever enjoy life?" (Part 1)
Episode Date: November 11, 2025Imani (52) and Michael (65) have been married for 24 years—and they’re drowning in nearly $126,000 of consumer debt despite earning over $250,000 a year. Imani, a disciplined attorney who tracks... every dollar, feels trapped by Michael’s unchecked spending on electronics and his laid-back approach to money. She dreams of travel, freedom, and a life that finally feels generous, while he insists everything’s fine as long as the bills get paid. With resentment growing and Imani nearing her breaking point, Ramit challenges them to face the truth: Can they pay off their debt, rebuild trust, and start enjoying life again—or are they too stuck in old patterns to change? A special thanks to Facet for sponsoring this episode. 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’ll add $300 to your brokerage account. Head to facet.com/ramit to see which membership—Core, Plus, or Complete—is right for you. (Ramit is not a member of Facet, and he has an incentive to endorse Facet as he has an ongoing fee based contract for cash compensation based on this endorsement. All opinions are his own and not a guarantee of a similar outcome.) In this episode we uncover: • Why Imani regrets combining finances after 20 years of marriage • How Michael’s promise to “put the money back” reveals a lifetime of avoidance • The stark contrast between Michael’s military discipline and total lack of structure at home • What happens when one partner outgrows the other in ambition, discipline, and self-development • Why Imani admits she’s embarrassed to be in massive debt at her age • Michael’s habit of buying cars and electronics to celebrate milestones • How their $268,000 income still leaves them feeling broke, anxious, and behind • Why Imani clings to control and spreadsheets while Michael tunes out completely • How both partners confront the question: Can they rebuild trust and create structure before it’s too late? Chapters: (00:00:00) “Did you go to Best Buy again?” (00:17:34) “I don’t think I’ve ever planned anything in my life” (00:24:43) “Every time we had a kid, he bought a car” (00:36:48) Ramit breaks down their numbers (00:44:33) “We make way too much to be this stressed about money” (00:56:21) “I don’t want to do life by myself” (01:10:51) Can a couple this far apart still find common ground? This episode is brought to you by: Gusto | Try Gusto at https://gusto.com/ramit and get 3 months free when you run your first payroll DeleteMe | If you want to get your personal information removed from the web, go to https://joindeleteme.com/ramit for 20% off Notion | Try Notion, now with Notion Agent, at https://notion.com/ramit Wildgrain | Get $30 off the first box — PLUS free Croissants in every box — at https://wildgrain.com/ramit LMNT | Get a free 8-count Sample Pack with any LMNT order at https://drinklmnt.com/RAMIT 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 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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here at IWT.com slash money coaching. What do you think about this debt? It's terrible. It's frustrating
and sad, and it makes me want to cry and scream and fight. Are you angry? I'm angry at Michael.
I'm angry at myself. My relationship with money is not a good relationship. He's at point now where he
should be able to retire, but you can't.
I don't think I've ever planned anything in my life.
I don't want to work till I'm 75.
I also want us to be able to travel and live our rich lives.
At this age, I thought we'd already be there.
Do you believe that you'll die with your debt?
It's going to be a stretch.
There was a time, one time where I consider taking my purse and my keys and walking out.
I'm at my wits in.
I don't want to keep doing this.
Imagine making great money, but still being in debt.
where's the money going? Why are we in this situation? Why do we feel trapped by our debt?
Today we're going to dive into a story that is very familiar for millions of couples,
high income, high stress, and no real plan. Listen to this line from the application. He has run up
credit cards buying electronics. He has little to no retirement saved and we make way too much
to be so stressed about money. I do not know how much longer I can keep doing this.
When I see phrases like, I don't know how much longer I can keep doing this, that is a sign
the stakes are very high.
Today I'm speaking with Imani, 52 years old, and Michael, who is 65.
They've been married for 24 years, but they have not spent a single one of those years aligned
about money.
What's interesting is that they've worked with money coaches in the past, yet they keep
finding themselves stuck in the same cycle.
Michael, overspending and avoiding, and Imani trying to take control.
of their finances. I'm about to look at their numbers, but first, I want to hear from you
when was the last time you were not on the same page with your partner? And tell me the specifics.
I want to see them in the comments. I read everyone. Was it not agreeing where to eat out or how
much you should keep in your checking account? Let me know in the comments the last time you
were not on the same page with your finances. Now, I'm looking at their conscious spending
plan, which breaks down their key numbers, including their net worth income and where they spend
their money. It's the same tool I use in every episode. Assets, $603,315. Investments, $770,000. Keep in mind,
Michael is 65 years old already at retirement age. Savings, $8,523. Debt, $601,000, and over $100,000 of that debt is high
interest debt. Net worth $780,000? All of this is raising a lot of questions.
So let's get started with Imani and Michael.
Imani, you mentioned in your application that you've been married for 24 years, and you said
something that really caught my eye.
You said, I want to separate our finances.
In fact, I am so upset that I suggested we combined them four years ago.
Why do you feel that way?
I feel like we spoke better or related better when we were.
the finances weren't combined.
I feel like we are both, like, all in the account all the time.
Like, it'll be like, well, why is there a $7.95 charge?
And he'll ask me, well, did you go to the spa?
You know what I mean?
Like, part of it is taking away the autonomy of the other person.
And so it feels like I'm being, I'm monitoring an adult.
That's not fair for me to try to be his mother.
Originally, we did have separate accounts, and then we had a joint account for bills.
About four years ago, I was like, we just need all the paychecks to go into one account,
and that way we can monitor and get control over our finances.
And then what I saw was out of control, and so it stressed me out.
Wow.
Okay, I have lots to unpack there.
Michael, what's your reaction to what Imani just said?
It seemed to be less complicated when they were separate,
because it was always like, well, I know certain things.
have to be taking care of so I can't spend somewhere else.
So I had to make sure that the money was there.
When it became a joint account, it's like, well, yeah, I can go here and buy this and buy that
because there's money in the account.
Would you say that when you combined your accounts that the spending got sloppy?
Very, very sloppy.
Yeah, it did.
Okay.
So, I mean, just to ask the obvious question, why don't you just separate it?
We've discussed that, separating it.
And?
But we didn't come up with a concrete plan as far as where we're going to do it, how we're going to do it.
Right.
Okay.
Yeah.
All right.
So it's still on the table to separate your finances.
Yeah.
But, I mean, you know, when you talk about, well, people, when you hear about marriages, right,
it's like it's supposed to be a coming together and you're supposed to have things together.
And I have friends who have joint accounts and everything goes well.
in with us, it is not.
Yeah. And of course, you know, if you were to separate your finances, I suspect things would
not magically fix themselves. I suspect it would open up a whole new can of worms because
a lot of ways it's a symptom probably. We'll figure that out a little bit more. So,
Imani, you mentioned that sometimes Michael will say, he's looking at the expenses. He goes,
did you go to this spa? What is the next sentence after that?
from him or from me
you'll say yes i went to the spa right
and then what does he say
nothing
oh so it's just a question like hey did you go to the spa
did you buy this thing that's it
yeah and it usually comes when i'm asking him
about did you go to best buy again
oh oh okay let me flip that then
so you asked did you go to best buy and then
Michael what do you say to that
uh i said yeah i want to best buy
okay and then
and i can't i leave it there
Okay, and then how do you respond?
Why am I doing this?
Just have the conversation in front of me.
Go ahead, Imani.
What's this 152 of Best Buy?
I went to Best Buy to buy some SSD drives for my computer.
Did you need more SSD drives?
I needed one with more capacity, so I bought one that was on sale, and I got a bigger.
But don't you have like 10?
Yes, I do.
Most of them are filled up with different documents and data.
Yeah, but that wasn't in the budget.
Yeah, I know.
But I'll get the money back in there.
How are you going to get the money back in it?
The budget is based on the budget.
You can't put the money back.
I'll make sure it gets back.
Okay.
Whoa.
Okay.
That was quite interesting.
What just happened in that conversation?
Michael?
I would say that I probably deflect it.
I said that I was going to make sure the money get back into the account,
but I didn't tell you money how it was going to get back into the account.
I agree. And did you actually have a plan for how to get the money back in the account?
I had a good range of dates that I could put the money back.
Okay. And did the money get put back in the account?
I think it did.
What?
I can't say for sure.
What? Right.
That doesn't sound like a plan to me.
I agree.
All right. All right, fine.
And then what else do you notice about the conversation, the chess pieces?
What was each person's role in that conversation?
I felt like I was under a microscope.
That's an interesting metaphor.
So if you're under a microscope, then what is Imani?
She is the investigator.
Oh.
Wow.
That's powerful.
Okay.
So you have the investigator and the investigated in that example.
Right.
Okay.
All right.
Thank you very much.
Imani, how about you?
Zoom up.
analyze it for me it's frustration with michael spending particularly at best buy right and he told me
that he needed more of something he already had so it was my frustration at michael for buying
something that he already has multiples of that i don't see the need for that wasn't in the budget
here we go again buying things in excess and to me there's no such thing as putting money back
Okay. What would you say each person's role was?
I felt like the mama, the parent, honestly, or the one who watches over the budget,
and then you have Michael in the role of I'm going to get what I want, you know,
I'm going to spend and get what I want because I make money and I'm going to spend it.
Is that true? I mean, he does make money.
He does.
So if he's making money, just out of curiosity, can he spend it on an SSD drive?
Sure. He could spend it on, but does he need 12 SSD drives?
I don't know. I don't particularly care either. I'm just, I'm asking, is this a joint issue?
Like, is it coming from joint money or is it an individual issue in which case, if he wants to spend it on garbage, he could spend it on garbage as far as I'm concerned? What do you think?
It's a joint. In my mind, it's a joint, right? Because we decided that we would each take a garbage.
a certain amount of cash out of the account,
and he takes the cash out and spends the money out of the account.
Oh, wow.
That's my issue.
Okay, I got you.
Can I tell you what I observed from your conversation,
which I thought was very revealing?
So many things happened in, like, 60 seconds.
That's why I love seeing the actual conversations.
First off, the fact that Imani, you were like,
what's this charge?
Like, already red flag number one for me.
that one partner is looking over the other's shoulder.
Not blaming you at all.
I know that it happens in reverse as well,
but if one person has to spend money unexpectedly from the joint account,
it's their responsibility to actually bring it up.
So that's already kind of like, hmm, that's an interesting thing.
Next up, it kind of turned into like some kind of inspector gadget type of,
like Imani became the SSD investigator.
You know, are you sure?
How many terabytes are we talking about?
It's like, I don't really think that's what we were going for here.
You know, I get the sense maybe, like, I don't think you're an SSD investigator.
And then we had Michael who quickly was kind of like, you could kind of see the tone, Michael.
It was a bit of like a young boy who's got caught doing something.
And it was like, you know, yeah, I did go there.
No further explanation.
Just going to stop and hope that nobody pays attention.
And then I'll put the money back.
What's that?
Again, it's a very boyish sort of answer.
You know what I mean?
We're talking about a grown man here.
Basically, that's how our conversation kind of go.
Yeah, I know.
Right.
That's what I'm here.
Right, exactly.
Yeah, and that's why we're here too because it's like the same conversation.
What we just saw play out was the parent-child dynamic,
which, in my opinion, is one of the most toxic patterns in a relationship around money.
In my new book, Money for Couples, I break down exactly why it is so toxic.
You know, your partner is not a child.
Treating them like one will never get them to act like an adult.
The parent-child dynamic also creates resentment on both sides.
The parent feels burdened and exhausted.
The child feels controlled and infantilized.
And this dynamic creates ripple effects.
The dynamic almost never stays just in the financial realm.
it seeps into other parts of the relationship.
It erodes trust and intimacy.
I even call it sexual kryptonite
because it's very difficult to feel
attracted to your partner
when you feel like you are parenting them.
If you cannot get on the same page with money,
I recommend you pick up a copy of money for couples
and use the word-for-word scripts in the book.
It's also available as an audiobook.
But let's zoom out now.
This isn't just about roles or dynamics.
there's also real numbers to consider. Michael is 65. They've amassed $600,000 in total debt,
and 100K of that, over 100K, is consumer debt, like credit cards, personal loans, car loans.
That type of debt typically carries higher interest rates, which means it can really snowball fast.
We're going to untangle the specifics of their debt when we get to their conscious spending plan,
but here's what I can already see.
Imani has a strong need for control. It's actually no surprise that she's frustrated, maybe even
fed up. Honestly, if I were in her situation, I would want control, and I would be angry, too.
What's more surprising is that this debt is something she's been trying to get control over
for years. She's worked with several money coaches, and yet nothing has changed. So what happened?
Why didn't those approaches work? We're going to find out right after this.
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Okay, I understand that you have spoken to money coaches in the past.
What was your experience with them?
You know, we got, you know, a system, like an Excel file and a system of, you know,
set these things up, but the work to do, to maintain them.
I felt like I was doing most of the getting that done.
We were supposed to set up, like, money dates, right?
like times where we come together and go over the finances and the few times we did it it was me at
the computer Michael sitting on the bed or on the counter or on the couch and you know him looking up
saying what you need right as opposed to us both being engaged and me going through numbers and then
getting frustrated so part of it is you know I'll say Michael where are your numbers we need to we need to meet
and go over budget.
I'm going to get the numbers.
I'm waiting for the numbers for the last eight weeks.
Until we did the contract spending plan,
I have been waiting on the numbers for two months.
Very true.
Very true.
This is a general pattern at home, Imani.
Like, you're driving things at home and you're pulling him along.
Michael?
What do you think?
I would say that I was more reactive, been proactive.
And I don't know that we ever set any rules.
engagement on how we're going to, you know, attack once we went to the council and
session. We never had any rules. So without having any rules, if we didn't do something,
their rule was broken, there were no consequences.
That's interesting. There were no consequences if the rules were, but what would be an example
of a rule being broken? A rule would be like, okay, we're going to meet Wednesday at 6 p.m.,
and we're going to talk about how we're tracking our budget.
Yep. Are you generally reactive in life versus being proactive?
I would say in my professional life, I can't be, I can't be reactive.
I had to be proactive.
When I'm at home, I kind of decompress, and I don't have those same rules or restraints.
Do you think long-term?
I do not.
Okay.
And Imani might find it surprised.
I don't think I've ever planned anything in my life.
Tell me more.
Imani's nodding. Tell me more, Michael. That's quite an admission.
It's kind of like I have a vision or I have an idea, and I just kind of do it.
What does that mean?
There's no step. Well, I need to do this step first, and did I need to do this step second, or I need to do this step third?
In my professional life, I do that. In my personal life, absolutely not.
Imani, would you agree?
Yes.
Okay. And how about for you?
I'm proactive everywhere.
okay all right would you agree with that michael yes definitely with that said it's kind of at the
point well you know i have to be proactive i got to take action or what either she's going to say
you know that's it i had enough or she's going to say or she's just going to turn out and do our own
thing 24 years married yeah money would you agree the stakes are pretty high yeah absolutely i can't
keep doing this. I refuse because, you know, he's at the point now where he should be able to
retire, but he can't because I cannot financially do all of this by myself, right? And I'm at the
age. There's a pretty significant age difference between us. I'm at the age where I want to
look at early retirement. Like, he's already at retirement. Like, I want to look at early retirement.
I don't want to work till I'm 75. I don't. I don't. I don't. I don't. I don't. I
I don't want to do that.
And I also want us to be able to travel and live our rich lives.
And at this age, I thought we'd already be there, right?
Like, I feel like everything I'm behind.
Like, we're behind because, you know, I know you're not supposed to look at other people
in other people's lives.
But we know too much to be in this situation.
Like, this is just dumb and frustrating.
And I kick myself and I'm mad at myself.
because I feel like the loss of control got us here.
Like, growing up, I was so, I was known to be so cheap that I pinched the copper off a penny.
That's what my mama used to say, right?
Like, I knew where everything was.
I never went into debt and all that stuff.
And then, you know, the last several years, it's just been out of control.
And I'm just, I'm so sad about it.
Okay.
Are you angry?
Very.
Who are you angry at?
I'm angry at.
Michael, I'm angry at myself.
Can I ask the tough question here?
What makes both of you think that this time will be any different?
I'm hopeful that it'll be different because Michael has a tendency to listen to the other person advice, right?
If it comes from me, I can say the exact same things that you're going to say, but he's not going to hear him.
If you say them, he'll hear them.
And Michael, please, I'm not trying to be like me.
But that's how it feels to me.
It's like if the Internet says it, or if you see it in a book,
it could be the same thing that I already said.
Who the f***ing listening to the people on the internet?
Have you seen the comments I get?
The first thing I do is I go, whatever you said, I'm doing the opposite of that.
Michael, listens to the Internet.
I take your point.
Michael, why is that?
You're nodding your head.
Why is that?
Man, that's a tough one.
You know, I spend some time in all forces.
That's been a lot of time in the oil forces.
For a long time, my life was very regimented.
I know I was going to be all the time, when, where, how, all of that.
When I got out, that starts to slip a little bit, whereas, like, you know, I've been living
this rigid life, and so now I have some levity to kind of go to the left or to the right,
going, yeah, we tried that, and that didn't work.
We tried this and this didn't work.
So to your point, what's going to be different this time?
For me, what's different this time?
I see the effect on what does it have only money as far as our finances.
What effect?
I can see that she's really stressed out about it.
Michael, do you ask Imani for advice on money ever?
I ask her for advice.
I think so.
Yeah.
Do you ever ask her for advice?
No.
I can only speak for myself on this.
My relationship with money has been.
It's not a good relationship.
It was something that was never discussed when I was growing up.
Even when I was in the military, and I was making a steady income.
It's just something that there was no coaching, no learning on.
So it just kind of carried over from then after I got out of the military.
Take me back.
What do you remember your family saying about money when you were growing up?
Absolutely nothing.
Would you say your family was middle class?
Upper middle, lower middle, what would you describe that?
I would say lower middle.
Okay.
I was raised mostly by my grandmother.
And I didn't have a warrant for anything, even though money wasn't discussed.
I always had what I needed, when I needed it.
When did you go into the military?
I was 18.
Okay.
So straight out of high school, you went to the military.
I actually pre-enlisted before I graduated from high school.
I knew that my heart of heart to where I grew up at that I wasn't going to stay.
If I would stay there, two years, three years, I got caught up in drugs and I'll be dead.
Really?
What part of the country, if you don't mind my asking?
St. Louis area.
All right.
And did you have other family members who had been in the military?
Yes.
My uncle, he served in the Navy.
Okay, cool.
So you signed up, you go in.
What was your first impression when you got there?
And the first time that I had ever had broccoli.
And what'd you think?
I'm like, oh, this is a neat food.
I never had this before.
It was eye-opening for me.
I bet.
Any military person in basic military training,
you're in basic training with people from all over the world,
all different aspects of life.
So what surprised you the most in those first few?
weeks. The rigor and the discipline. During my career in military, everything was, everything was very
regimented. Nothing could get out of control or you would be disciplined for it. It was very
regimented. You knew where you're going to be, when you're going to be there, how long are you going
to be there. And it was like clobberd. So that was very refreshing. You liked it. I loved it. Wow.
What did you love about it?
I didn't have to worry about where I was going to live, what I was going to eat,
what I was going to put on if I had money.
I know I was going to get paid every two weeks, regardless of the situation.
So in a way that it's kind of like being, I won't say babysit it because believe me being in the military
is nothing like them babysit it.
But there were things that I didn't have to worry about that.
billion counterparts have to worry about.
Right.
And then there was the opportunity to get educated, travel, and make money as I progress
through the ranks.
Okay.
And did you plan to stay for a long time?
I did not.
Whoa.
I did not.
My plan was to do four to eight years.
I saved my money and then go to college, but I got to travel, live in different parts of
the country and live in different parts of the world.
And before I was 30 years old, I had lived in three different foreign countries.
So I saw a lot of the world.
You see it with the money?
No, no, this was before we met.
This was when I was in the military.
At the eight years, I was so, I was in for the long haul.
How long did you stay in total?
I stayed in 20 years and 21 days.
Whoa.
Is there something about 20 years?
That is when you're eligible.
during my period to retire with full retirement from the military.
Great.
Okay, great.
How long ago did you retire?
I retired in 1998, a whole different lifetime ago.
Wow.
Right.
No kidding.
What did you do after you retired?
I went into manufacturing.
Basically the same skills and training that I got in the military.
It transferred over to a civilian sector.
and I went into manufacturing, and I have been in manufacturing since 1998.
Wow.
What did you think about the fact that as a civilian,
you didn't have that structure that you used to have in the military?
It's interesting that you asked that because I remember my first civilian job,
and I won't mention a company,
but I had a manager when he did my performance review.
He said that his frustration with me was that I worked very well off a list.
and I was like wait what
like it's like a fish being told you swim in water you're like huh
right I was like wait I was like wait what
and basically what he was trying to tell me is I need to be more
I guess creative innovative and I got it
would there be another word there he needed you to be more
maybe it starts with a P-R-O
P-R-O proactive
Yeah. What do you think? I think so.
Amani, what do you say?
I agree. I mean, I think that that is exactly right, that he, I could see him coming out being list, list driven.
But he talks a lot about, you know, he had to be so regimented when he was in the military and out of these out, no structure, right?
Like, it's just a hot mess express.
What did you do with the money that you made in the military?
I will tell you that I had a good time
I did buy a couple of vehicles
right after she
would get a birth if I'd go buy another vehicle
this was after I got out of the military
So you had two sons and then you're like
I'm going to go buy a car
Ah yes
Okay
Nothing that was planned
Nothing that was discussed
What did you just like walk in and just buy it that day
Oh basically yes
This is blowing my mind
I never bought a car
When I was growing up
It took us one week to buy a car
And that's when we knew the car we wanted
My dad would take us in there
We'd freaking have breakfast at the dealership
I'm not kidding
We would sit there
We'd negotiate
And then we'd literally go home
And come back the next day
It was a family affair
All of us
The whole week
That's amazing
Because I would
Money would call me and ask me
Where I was at
And I'd be like
I'm at the dealership
And then I were here click
Really?
Yes
so this is like 20 years ago 20 to 25 years ago
yeah yeah
every time we made a major like half a major life event
or like he said every time we had a kid
he drive up in a new car look what I got
what is that what's the connection
is it like a celebration
I don't know
I guess I kind of use it as a celebration
hey we got we got new sign
so I'm going to get a
Yeah, we're going to get a nice vehicle to take new son home, man.
New vehicle.
I prefer a Baskin-Robbins cake.
Yeah, yeah.
$35.
When I was a kid, we could never afford it.
Let's get it now.
Fantastic.
Hindsight being 2020, I agree.
Every so often, I visit a military base and speak to them about personal finances and careers.
I remember one year, they had this incredibly detailed minute-by-minute schedule.
0545, assemble for PT.
0-5-45 to 0-5-55, walk to PT.
0600 to 0700 Pt and so on.
I loved it.
I love the details, the logistics that had to happen in order for it to work that clearly.
But I can also imagine what living in that kind of environment would have done to me long term.
And this is a classic example of how a rigid, structured environment like the military
can shape someone's mindset long after they leave.
You get a steady paycheck, housing is covered, you know exactly where to be and
when there's a system for everything, including your money.
But when you leave that structure behind, there's a major gap.
And a lot of people simply do not replace that structure with anything.
They go from a fully controlled environment to complete freedom.
That word freedom, note how we describe it in America as if freedom is always a good thing.
And that freedom can be overwhelming.
I suspect that's what we're seeing with Michael.
He says he's proactive at work, but at home he checks out.
And because money was always handled for him through benefits and automatic deposits
and the TSP, he never really had to build the skills to manage it himself.
Now he's out of the military, 65 years old, and in financial trouble.
And Michael is not the only retired veteran dealing with this.
According to American Consumer Credit Counseling,
nearly three quarters of military families carry credit card debt,
and they are twice as likely as civilians to owe $10,000 or more.
Meanwhile, Imani is handling all of the day-to-day finances,
and she's looking at her own future, realizing,
I might not be able to retire because he's not stepping up.
This is what happens when someone avoids building a system of their own.
The default becomes, I'll just wait for someone else to handle it.
And in a marriage, that simply does not work.
Or, in my opinion, it should not work.
They're not 25 years old, by the way.
They don't have decades to figure this out.
It has to happen now.
And that is why we're going to get into the actual numbers right after this.
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What was it like to create the conscious spending plan together?
Oh, Remed.
This is what it was like.
It was right here.
This is how we did it.
Whoa, okay, pull that out.
So I'm going to describe it for people listening, not watching.
Imani's pulling out one of these big pieces of butcher paper,
and it's got like a lot of categories and numbers, a lot.
I mean, this is like four feet high.
It's quite large and filled out.
A lot of numbers.
Okay.
I'm seeing gross net.
I'm seeing assets and Apple credit card, et cetera.
Okay, so you did it all on paper.
Okay, I don't mind.
Everybody does it their own way.
And did you do it together?
Yes.
Yeah, we did.
I guess he was going slower.
I sometimes can get a little frustrated.
I don't want things to move faster.
And so I'll just take it and do it.
I'm like, we just need to get this over with.
But I was trying to be deliberate about letting him write the things down and see.
Well, I could tell you how I felt, really.
So if we're putting, you know, all the categories in there and putting the numbers in there,
things kept popping in my head.
So, oh, I forgot about that.
Oh, I forgot I got this coin set over here.
Or I forgot that I have this account over here with this Bitcoin in it.
So at some point, for me, it kind of got frustrated because it's like, I got all this thing,
but I don't have any control over it.
It's just there.
Do you mean you have extra money that you were not accounting for or extra expenses?
I have extra money that, like I have these accounts set up that I have money in until I go
into that account or remember, I was like, oh, I forgot I had money in there.
You know, I'll open up a Bitcoin account.
Yeah.
Or a small stock trading account.
And the money will be there and I'll kind of just put it there and park it.
All right.
Let's take a look at the CSPS.
All right.
Imani, can you read off the word in bold and then the number in full next to it for the entire box, please?
Assets, 603,315, investments, 770, 3131, savings, 8,523, debt, 601,000, total net worth, 780,401.
What do you think about those numbers?
Terrible. Why do you say that?
I feel like the investment number should be higher at our age.
I feel like the debt number should be lower, much, much lower.
I feel better than I felt. I thought it was going to be close to negative.
Quite a big difference between negative and $780,000.
I know.
I had the opposite reaction.
I don't think I vocalized it with the eMani.
When I saw it number, I went damn.
Now, if I get rid of this or if I want to down,
this, we'll be, our network will be of a million dollars easy. How can I get rid of some of the
access that we have in our household to push that number up? Whoa. Okay. This is, I'm already
seeing you're going to make my job easier for me. I like that. Let's take a look at the gross
monthly income. This time, Michael, I'd like for you to give me the combined gross monthly income
number, please. Okay, so gross monthly income number is 22,404. All right. So combined the two of you make
$268,000 a year. That's a lot of money that we could be leveraging better than we have been.
All right. Michael says a lot of money. What do you say, money? It is. It's less than it was.
Oh, uh-oh. You know, I took a pay cut. Are we, are we into depressing time already? I thought we're just
talking about this number. What the hell is happening right now?
Is this a lot of money or not?
It is a lot of money.
Stop right there.
$268,000 a lot of money.
It is a lot of money.
You are correct.
Okay.
Okay.
It's less than we've had in the past, but yes, it is a lot of money.
Any kids living in the house?
Yes.
We have two sons that are actually adults, but they still live here.
How old?
20 and 25.
Okay, fine.
and all right let's continue looking at the numbers here okay i like we have a 401k contribution in here
very nice fixed costs imani what's that number right there it's 83% that is why i feel broke
yeah and that is why i that is why i wrote in yeah that's that's it right there that's the
number that explains a lot of why you feel stressed out about money that's one reason let's keep
going investments at one percent and of course the one percent is a 529
A 529 for 20-year-olds? What? What's that about?
Okay. It has been there for a long time, and I just haven't stopped it.
Why don't you do the same thing for your retirement?
Like, you're right.
Like, oops, I tripped and fall and put $150 a month into my...
How come nobody ever says that to me?
All right. Savings at 7%.
Okay. And we have $600 is going.
towards an emergency fund.
$400 is something called
separate savings.
What's that?
Or separate savings accounts.
Okay.
That's like your individual money?
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
And then your guilt-free spending
suggests it's 9% or $1,400.
I don't believe that.
Do you?
I don't believe that even, no.
It's higher?
Yeah, absolutely.
Where is the math not adding up?
Michael has, you know, 1012 laptops, right?
What the f***? 12 laptops?
Yeah.
I'm a tech nerd.
Do I need 10 laptops? No, I don't.
I would be perfectly fine with one laptop.
It's in the role with none of my electronics right now at this point.
I've got to the point now where I've been able to do what I want to do for so long.
It's kind of got me in trouble financially.
But I still have those assets that I can get rid of it and recoup some of that.
and add back to that net worth.
All right.
That's interesting.
Okay.
So you've had a conversation about could we, you know, could Michael sell some of his stuff?
And Michael sounds like you're actually interested in pushing that net worth number up.
Very much so.
The math isn't mathing.
Oh, I have a feeling it's right here.
$601,000 of debt.
Can you tell me what's in this debt?
Yeah.
Actually, can I ask Michael that?
Michael?
So the mortgage is in there.
Mortgage is how much?
I think right now it's $295,000.
Okay.
$298.
$298, yeah, okay.
298, okay.
What's next, Michael?
There's a HELOC loan.
It might be $50,000.
The HELOC is $65.
Okay, from $50 to $65K.
All right.
Your money is a student loan.
I think that's $85,000.
The automobiles, I would say $10,000.
thousand on a, uh, on a vehicle. I think money owes 35,000 on a vehicle. Okay, 45k total. What else?
My consumer debt. I have a 401k loan. That's 45. No, I'm sorry. It's, uh, it's not 45. It's
37. Okay. Then I also have credit card debt. That's about 11. Okay. Michael, I think has more,
he's got closer to 60 or 70. All right. Let's shoot for the stars. 70. Okay. Let's say seven.
Yeah. Okay, what do you think about all this debt?
I'm embarrassed.
It's terrible.
I'm embarrassed.
You know, I know better.
I know better.
And my debt, you know, was going back to school and I totally changed careers.
And, you know, that's the reason for my high salary.
But I think the 401K loan was to consolidate it.
I did some things around the house.
The HELOC includes a real estate investment that I made with someone.
It'd be different if it was like all.
travel or something like that, I feel like I don't see the tangible for all the debt, right? And,
you know, I want to be able to go on a cruise or go to somewhere without, you know, having to
put it on credit cards. And we're not in that position. And I feel embarrassed because we have
friends that can do that, right? I was talking to one of my girls, our mutual friends, the wife,
and she was out of work. And, you know, she was like, oh, yeah, we have our savings and this and
and I'm thinking in the back of my mind, I'm like, good God, we would be in a mess, right?
I'd have to like cash out 401Ks to make it work or, you know, take on two or three,
two or three jobs to make up the stagger. And so I'm embarrassed at my big old age,
you know, being in this kind of debt. I don't think debt is a problem, like if you're doing
an investment or something like that, right? But the stuff we have to show for it is,
is frustrating and sad
and it makes me want to cry and scream and fight
to be honest
I appreciate the candor
I would be frustrated too
if I was in my 50s and 60s
if I had a high income
and in fact used to have an even higher income
and
like where is it
where's the money
yeah
and it can feel like insurmountable
It can feel, like, frustrating and hopeless.
If you will give me the time,
I would like to understand a little bit more about how we got here
because when I start to understand that,
hopefully we can figure out a plan to get out of here.
I don't like seeing couples in debt,
certainly not in their 50s and 60s.
So what do you say?
Sure.
Imani, take me back to you as a child.
What do you remember your family saying about money
when you were growing up?
My mama has always been super with always super good with money.
Like she had a budget.
She shopped with Liz.
The dynamic in the house, my mom controlled the finances.
And I remember her saying one time that my parents got married young, that they combined money.
And my mom went in to get money.
And my dad had spent her money.
And she said that was it.
They had separate accounts forever after that.
My mama did not play that.
Mama very regimented with money, sent me to private school.
To me, it was about the budget and about being responsible with money.
So I feel like I know better and knew better.
What did she say to you about money?
She talked about a lot about saving.
We had our savings accounts and she would take us to deposit money.
Like, when we got things, we had to, we could spend some, but we had to save some.
Right? It was always spend and save, spend and save. And we had our little bank books. And she got me my first credit card when I went off to college. She co-signed for it. I used it responsibly initially. So she taught me a lot about, you know, writing down, buying stuff that you pay for, don't carry a lot of debt. You know, she paid cash for everything. She saved up. She took us on trips. You know, for my graduation present from high school, she took us to the Bahamas, my sister and I. And her best,
friend and her daughter. And we went to, for my 16th birthday, I went to Disney World. Right. So,
you know, we took trips and we had money and she taught us to be responsible. And somewhere along
the line, I got lost. Talk to me about that. Where was it that you got lost? I think once I got
married. Like, I did pretty good with my finances when it was just me because I bought a condo when I was
single, bought my first condo, bought my house. The first thing I bought with my first paycheck,
I'll never forget, was a sectional sofa and a coach bag. Nice. How'd you feel? Oh, I felt great.
I still have that coach bag. And my mother just got rid of that sectional sofa last year.
And I bought that in 1997. Wow. So, you know, I hold on to things.
What happened when you got married that caused your finances to deteriorate? I just didn't stay as
disciplined, right? I felt like because Michael was spending, I had to make it up and I didn't want
the kids to have to want for anything, you know, wanted to get them all the things that they
wanted or didn't want or I thought they should have, wanted us to go on the trips and, you know,
Michael was busy buying cars and I'm trying to, you know, do all the other stuff. And so I was
using my money to send the kids to camp and, you know, things like that. And so I felt like I
lost the rigor and the discipline around money.
When did you realize you had a problem?
Several years ago,
there's another financial guru
whose program we were trying to follow
because I was like, oh, we'll get out of debt
and it'll be great.
Wait, who is it, just so we know?
Dave Ramsey.
I'm happy that anyone goes on any financial journey
as long as they end up at the right place.
Yeah.
So you're welcome here.
All right, so what happened
when you started under that plan?
So I couldn't get Michael to go in with me.
Like having Michael stick to a budget felt like pulling teeth.
And it was work for me, right?
Because the kids were young.
So I had, we were working shifts.
I think I was on second.
He was on third.
So we were like, ships passing the night.
We had a baby or a toddler and an elementary schooler.
And so it was a lot to manage.
And I, you know, every day I wake up, I'm like, man, if we'd have followed it back then, right?
We would have been debt-free and living our best life and, you know, all the baby steps and all that stuff.
And we still own baby step number zero.
I'm struck by how Imani describes her relationship with money.
She said, it used to be good when it was just me, then it was us.
I suspect what's behind that is they've never had.
had a series of substantive conversations about their relationship and money. Like many couples,
they probably just slipped into it, dating, living together, kids, jobs, without ever stopping
to establish plans and then to recalibrate them. And now they're surprised it's not working.
Relationships don't run on autopilot. But most of us just slide right into some of life's
most important decisions. Where should we live? If we have kids, what kind of parents do we want to be?
How much money should we save and why?
Most couples don't actually talk about these things.
Believe it or not, most of us just coast until something goes wrong.
So it starts to feel like you are constantly reacting to life because you actually are.
Let's talk about the deeper issue.
One partner grows, the other partner does not.
Imani is clearly into personal growth.
Remember, she said earlier she has dragged Michael to several coaches to tackle the very issue
she wanted to talk about. She's clearly ambitious. She changed careers later in life. So the hard
question becomes, have you outgrown your partner? This is an uncomfortable conversation,
but it's very real. And there's actual data to back it up. A major Swedish study found that after
bariatric surgery designed to help people lose significant weight, married people were more likely
to get divorced. Another study showed that women who won the lottery were more likely to end their
marriages shortly after. This is one of the reasons that when I was dating, one of the top
three things I was looking for was someone who was into self-development. I knew I was and I knew
that over the course of my life, I would change and I would grow. And I wanted someone who
already had built that into their own life. And once you start growing, you want your partner
to grow too. And I see it all the time. The person who has finally learned about money, they start
offering advice to their partner and they get increasingly frustrated that their partner just
ignores it. But be honest. And think back to three years ago, five years ago. If someone had told you
then, you got to use a CSP, you got to automate your finances, you probably would have rolled your
eyes too. That is the side of personal development that very few people talk about. You can grow faster
than your partner, and they may never develop the same interest that you did. So what do you do?
Have you talked about it? Not hinted, not fought. I mean a series of real honest conversations
about how your life is changing and what it means for your relationship.
Why it's important to you?
If this sounds familiar, if you are feeling something right now in your chest or in your
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20 years ago, so it's pointless to even start now? No, no, definitely not.
Pointless. As long as you have breath in your body and air in your lungs, air in your lungs and in life, no, there's always tomorrow, right? There's always the best time to start is now. And we're not as far behind. Like, again, listening at all the people that you've talked to on your podcast, I'm like, ooh, we're not in that bad or safe, right? Like, there's a way to turn this around. We just got to. I agree. Both be willing to do it because I'm tired. I'm tired of being the one to feel like,
I feel like I'm pulling, I feel like I'm pulling Michael all the time.
And I am tired.
And I want Michael to retire.
I don't want him to have to keep working forever.
I want us to be like, oh, let's go, you know, let's take a sabbatical.
Like, I want to go frolic around Europe, right?
I want to go, you know, do all those things.
But Michael, are you surprised hearing Imani share this?
We've discussed it before, probably not to this level, but again, I can sense of frustration.
And I remember when she told me, hey, we're going to be doing this with Rameet.
I was actually kind of relieved.
That actually doesn't surprise me, though, Michael.
Yeah.
It doesn't surprise me because this is yet one more way of delegating work from you to somebody else.
this case me. Do you want somebody to just tell you what to do with the money? I'm looking for
advice. Great. I love that. I'm not looking for anybody to do the work. I'll put the work in.
You just tell me which direction I need to be going in versus what I think. Beautiful. You're here to
play ball. That's great. That's what I want to. Okay. This is my vision or my goal is to link or
connect with someone that I can trust to kind of manage the money and make sure that it goes
in the right places, that it has some element of debt reduction, but at the same time,
some element of investment, whereas you're reducing debt, your net worth is increasing.
Like a money manager that manages your household finances.
You want someone who will reduce your debt, increase your net worth, and you stay pretty hands off?
No, I will monitor it, but something,
Somebody knows a lot more about investing money.
Somebody that knows a lot more about what's the best way to reduce an X number amount of debt.
I don't have that knowledge to do that.
Now, let me ask you, Michael, because you all spoke to at least one money coach, if not more.
Presumably they talked to you about debt.
What happened as a result of that?
I would say that I didn't have a discipline and rigor.
Do you now?
Yeah, yeah, because it's affecting my wife.
and I can see that it's affecting.
What about you?
Me?
Oh, yeah, definitely.
And I know we're going to get to this,
but my rich life right now is
if I can sell everything I had
and sit in a room with just a book
and a Mai Tai that would be my rich life.
What? Really?
I never heard that on this podcast.
It makes my life so easy.
Is this for real?
Yeah, I'm serious.
What the hell?
Hold on.
Turn that camera around for a second.
Show me what's in this room.
right now. Well, so right now I'm remote. I work remote. Oh, okay. Well, you send me a picture of like
the 10 laptops and all that stuff. Uh, yeah, and more. You'll be, like you say, you'll be like,
you'll be like, what the fuck. Okay. Boom. I love that. Right. I hope you shock me. All right. That's
good. Yeah. When I look at a, you know, when you say assets, I think there's more there than what that
figure shows, just on what I have in the household. Like computers and stuff? Computers.
One time I was heavy into music, so I have some pieces.
Imani, any surprises hearing what Michael just told us?
Absolutely.
I said, what the fucking you, just like you did.
What surprised you?
The whole, if Michael's saying, if he could sit in a room with just a book,
I absolutely do not believe it.
I absolutely do not.
Unless something changed in the last couple of weeks, I don't believe it.
Because to me, the way you spend your money is what you value, right?
And I get being a tech head.
I understand wanting to have a hobby.
I do.
I get it, right?
Because there are things that I like, right?
I love Converse sneakers.
I have 20 pairs.
But Converse don't cost $1,000 a pop.
Right?
And so, you know, I understand that Michael is concerned about, you know,
me packing up and leaving or he says stuff to like she go you're going to put me out it has crossed
my mind a time of three or four or five hold on is this a joke or is this serious no i'm serious
okay um we've had that we've had that conversation and he'll say that i don't joke about
divorce with my wife ever never ever i just want to understand is this like uh
Has this joke gone on for a long time?
Is there a cultural thing that I'm missing here?
Because, like, I also don't know any Indian couples that joke about ever.
And I just want to understand, because it, to me, is, like, quite serious.
Yeah, that's, that's, that's, that's interesting.
I think part of this is culture.
When you say, Imani?
Maybe.
For me, I mean, I think we're joking most of the time.
But, Michael, there are times where I'm serious.
Like, there was a time one time where I considered taking my purse and my keys and our youngest son and walking out.
I can see that.
I can see that.
I knew it was getting to that point.
Okay.
Which is why I rode in because I'm at my wits in, right?
Like, I don't want to keep doing this.
Okay.
It's serious.
All right.
We all agree something big has to change.
Yeah.
Perfect.
Yeah.
Okay.
Michael, are you at all worried about not being able to retire?
I would be remiss if I say that I wasn't.
Realistically, do I think I ever would retire?
I would say as far as full-time work, yes, moving away from full-term work and going into consulting.
Because at this point in my turn,
career as long as I've been doing it, as long as I've been certified in it, I receive,
I would say that I'm at a certain level of mastery for what I do. So based on my experiences,
my education of the different Fortune 500 companies that I work for, I believe there will
always be a consultant work for me to do. Okay. All right. Do you believe that you'll die with your
debt? My goal is not to. Is it a realistic goal? It's going to be a stretch.
So if I look at my current savings in my 401Ks, if I stay on that trajectory in my 401Ks, they will exceed my debt that I currently carry.
My main concern is, is what do I leave my family?
No.
That's many people, especially men, they.
they see themselves as a provider, and they will often, first, they start off by, you know,
taking on work so they can provide for their family. Often, they might be earning good money.
They spend a lot of money sometimes, too. They're not often, like, tightly interwoven with the
finances. That's what's happened here. Maybe they rack up debt, maybe not. But eventually,
when I ask them questions about their own financial situation, they often appear relatively
nonchalant. Ah, it's okay. Like, I'll be fine. I can consult, etc. But the thing I care about is
passing it on to my kids. I'm actually concerned about the fact that you're passing on an example
that it's okay to be in tons of debt. You could give them a big old check. They'll just burn it
like you've burned it. The point. So the most valuable thing in my opinion you could pass on
would not be $25,000 or $250,000, but rather an example of what it looks like.
to be effective with money? To me, that is generational wealth first. How does that strike you?
I think it's point oh. Michael, your answer was, in my opinion, not particularly inspiring and not a
great answer because I was like, are you concerned about not being able to retire? You were like,
well, I'll be able to work. What I'm concerned about is like giving something to my kids.
I'm like, wait, so we just skipped over from you being in your 60s to dying. What about the rest of your life?
No joy, no travel, no nothing.
Huh?
I'd like to travel.
I'd like to travel to some of these other.
Where?
Where's the money coming from?
Yeah.
That part.
That part right.
All right.
So there's problems here.
Mm-hmm.
Okay.
And, you know, just to summarize what I saw, we have no, since childhood, no talking
about money.
Developmental years, you know, in your teens and 20s and 30s, it was like somebody
basically handled for me, whatever money I made.
Maybe I'm saving a little, but I'm spending a lot.
Enter the civilian world and just like spending a ton of money.
And after 20, 30 years, I have tons of debt in a very complex system that does not make
it easy to talk about it.
By the way, I also don't really talk to my wife about these numbers.
Okay.
All right.
Imani, you know, I'm curious.
You mentioned wanting to travel.
You mentioned things like a sabbatical.
I wonder for a second if you can just tell me, like, I bet you've thought about your rich life.
What is it?
Oh, absolutely.
It is going to Europe for three months at a time or going to an island, right?
Just say, hey, guys, let's go.
Right.
Let's go spend time frolicing.
I want to go frolic, right?
I have worked hard, damn hard.
Went back to school in my 40s with.
Two kids and a full-time job and a husband and a household went back to law school, right, and did that.
Damn.
And switched careers.
I did that in 2015 to 2019.
That is insane.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
So I'm no stranger to hard work.
But at this time, you know, when I envisioned my life as a child, at this point, I would be.
wealthy, right? I'd be able to own my time and not be a slave and have on golden handcuffs. I want
my investments to work for me and I want to go and travel to all the places and go to the
premieres and I want to go to cons and to Martha's Vineyard and all those things, right? I want to do
the bougie people's stuff. All right. I hear you. I like that. What I especially like is that
you've come on a journey and I like that you have a vision.
It's obvious you've thought about this, which gets, I can tell it's exciting to you.
It gets me excited.
Michael, how do you feel hearing that?
Well, I'm excited for, I think that's a worthy goal.
She's worked hard, and I think she deserved that.
And do you want to go to some of those places, too?
Sure.
I mean, I traveled early in life before I was 30 years.
Oh, I had lived in three different foreign countries.
So I saw a lot of the world.
You see it with the money?
No, no, this was before we met.
This was when I was in the military.
And I did a little trouble.
I thought I got out of the military.
So I think she deserved the opportunity to be able to do that
because I got to do it on Uncle Sam dying.
Yeah.
Right.
Michael, what's your rich life?
My rich life is to declutter
and get some of some of the material things that I have.
I don't believe you.
I'm serious.
I'm so dumb with it.
But wait.
When,
okay,
if this is true,
maybe I'm wrong,
when was the last time you did a semi-serious declutter?
Ooh.
I think we've done too in the garage.
We actually pay somebody to come in and assist us in it.
Okay.
Again, it didn't stick.
So your rich life is to declutter and get rid of this debt.
Okay.
And just have a, just simplify life, just really have a simple life.
I have more than I deserve.
Okay.
I'm going to help you come up with an even more powerful vision of a rich life.
Okay.
Emani, I see you nodding over there.
How come?
Because I feel like everything that he says, I don't know if it's,
because he's looking at the effect of things on me, right?
I want Michael to have a vision of his rich life.
Like, you talked about I want to travel and all that, and he didn't say that, right?
And so for me, it feels like he's like, oh, I've lived my life and I've traveled
to where you go do that by yourself and I don't want to do life by myself.
If I want to do life by myself, then I'll just go do life by myself.
I wouldn't have rode into this program.
I would have just said, you know what?
I'm over it. I'd have cashed out of my 401k, paid off my net, take my children and just go.
Wow. Hearing the contrast between their rich life visions is honestly heartbreaking.
And the layers here are striking. Michael and Imani's vastly different experiences with money
growing up and how they manage it today and mostly how they envision their futures.
Now, I see a generational issue here as well. Michael's backstory reveals an upbringing that
did not encourage him to dream beyond survival.
It was earning an income, landing on his feet,
and I want to account for his background,
but I also don't want to let it distract from the larger issue.
Another striking layer here is the prototypical gender dynamics at play.
Imani, she's got this bold, vibrant vision of travel, adventure,
a rich life full of wants, things that she wants to see.
Meanwhile, Michael's dream is solitary, a book, a Mai Tai,
and leaving money for the kids.
personally as a man in my 40s who has seen other men shrink and increasingly not want to hang out
with friends increasingly only talk about things like a man cave and even say things like
you know I hate people I don't really want to hang around anybody anymore this leaves me
really sad and disconnected I am urgently fighting against that I am creating guys trips I'm trying
to hang with more friends and from Imani's perspective if that were my partner it would
honestly make me feel hopeless. And to make matters even more frustrating, he seems to be responsive
to another man's advice, but not his own wives. Imani has said point blank, she's considering leaving,
and I believe her. If you can't even agree on what a rich life looks like by this point in life,
what are the chances they can actually make the huge changes needed? We are going to answer that
question in a very surprising part two next week. Not only are we going to finish this conversation,
but I sent Imani and Michael away and had them come back with actual changes and you are going
to see what happens. Specifically, where I shared some actual scenarios from our partners at
Fassett around exactly what they need to do if they want to reach their retirement goals.
Will they do it? Will they even come back? What surprising things will they have done?
Trust me, you will not want to miss next week's part two.
FACID is an SEC registered investment advisor. Investing involves serious risk and past performance
is not a guarantee of future performance or success. I'm not a member of FACET. I have an incentive
to endorse FACET as I have an ongoing fee-based contract for cash compensation based on this
endorsement. My opinions are included and should not be interpreted as a recommendation or
research regarding any investment or investment strategy, legal, or tax advice.
If you want my help with your specific money questions, you can apply to be on this podcast
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