I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 243. "She inherited $171K…but it’s already gone."
Episode Date: January 13, 2026Ramit Sethi of I Will Teach You To Be Rich talks to Mike and Noel, a young couple who are both 34. They married just 6 months ago, but financial fights have become a daily occurrence, even after recei...ving a $170K windfall. Mike blames Noel for overspending, but admits they both struggle with money, while Noel views the windfall as "guilt-free" spending. With $244K in debt, zero savings, and 82% of their income going to fixed costs, Ramit helps them uncover the root of their money woes. Will they finally get on the same page, create a financial system that works, and learn to trust each other with money? In this episode we uncover: • How Mike’s money anxiety leads him to check his bank account 20 times a day • The shocking truth about their $170K windfall • Why Mike’s anxiety worsens when he makes more money • The one money rule Mike and Noel both broke • How Mike’s upbringing shaped his money habits • Why Noel feels like she's "drowning" and has no control over their finances • The spending categories that reveal their money psychology • Why Mike's "money is mine" mentality is holding them back • Noel’s struggle to “hand over her paycheck” • The credit card debt that keeps piling up • Ramit’s radical approach to cutting fixed costs • The “Glade Plug-in” budget that explains everything • Noel’s difficult decision about tithing and faith • Why benchmarking against past mistakes is a recipe for disaster • The truth about their approach to money Chapters: (00:00:00) “We just kinda like get whatever we want whenever we want it” (00:07:02) “I was stressing more than ever before” (00:14:04) The one money rule they both broke (00:24:29) “You treat me like a child” (00:32:39) Ramit identifies their “money leaks” (00:39:34) “I don’t want to hand over my paycheck” (00:47:30) “My goals are not being met” (00:55:38) The “Glade Plug-in” budget (01:00:03) “I do wanna have a Glade budget” (01:06:50) How Mike’s upbringing shaped his money habits (01:15:10) Ramit shares his radical advice (01:21:10) Preview for part two This episode is brought to you by: Bilt | Join the loyalty program for renters at https://joinbilt.com/ramit Wispr Flow | Try Wispr Flow for free at wisprflow.ai/ramit Gelt | Book a tax consultation with Gelt at https://joingelt.com/ramit. As a member of my community, you can skip the waitlist Netsuite | Get the free guide “Demystifying AI” at https://netsuite.com/ramit Fabric by Gerber Life | Join the thousands of parents who trust Fabric to protect their family. Apply today in just minutes at https://meetfabric.com/ramit Connect with Ramit Get my new book, Money For Couples Get Money Coaching with Ramit Download the Conscious Spending Plan Listen to my book—now on Audible Get my New York Times best-selling book Get my no-numbers journal Other episodes Instagram Twitter YouTube If you and your partner have a money issue and you want my help, I occasionally select a couple to work with, free of charge. Apply for my help here: https://iwt.com/apply
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This year we are launching a brand new series called the Rich Life Expert Series.
I'm going to be inviting people who I trust to teach you an important skill or a habit or a mindset
that's going to help you live a rich life.
First on deck this January, nail your next interview with Michael Gendler.
Michael is the co-founder of ultra-speaking, the fastest and most effective way to prepare for
high-stakes speaking situations. Think pitches, interviews, executive meetings, presentations,
all those things that we often freeze up around.
He's worked with Fortune 100 execs, bestselling authors.
Personally, when I met him and talked to him,
and we started going back and forth on how to prepare for an interview,
I was very impressed.
You can watch live one-to-one coaching as people go from rambling to compelling in real time.
So if you have a high-stakes approach that's coming up,
landing a new job, starting your own business,
appearing on TV or just wanting to be better at communication,
you want to attend this.
You can join us January 27th at 12 p.m. Eastern to learn more,
and you can register for free today to reserve your seat at IWT.com slash interview.
That's IWT.com slash interview to lock in your spot.
We just kind of like get whatever we want, whatever we want it.
I think it's been twice where I've had a $20,000 for the credit card debt.
I'm literally spending $150 to $200 a month on Glade Plugins for our house.
Is this going to be the first time I violate my own rules?
Deep down, I want security, and I just haven't been able to find it.
I've very much treated the money that I've made as mine.
Truly, like, I've never considered it our money.
That's when I just kind of realized we're like, oh, we are super screwed.
You've mentioned a windfall.
It was $170,000.
How much of the money is left?
None of it.
You have no savings.
You don't have enough to even get.
one day without an income. My dreams are expensive. What happens when you inherit $171,000 and blow through it
in less than a year? Today I'm speaking with Mike and Noel, both 34 years old. They're married,
they earn six figures as a single income household, and yet even after inheriting 171K,
they have a negative net worth. Their spending has caused a lot of tension in their marriage. Just
listen to this line from Mike's application.
Quote, my wife would
appreciate if I stopped blaming
her for our money problems.
Fights are started almost every day
and if we keep spending like this
we will have no future.
That's a tough line
to read. I'm going to look at Mike and Noel's
conscious spending plan right now, which breaks
down their net worth, income, and where
they spend. If you want my help
with your own conscious spending plan,
you can join my money coaching program at
IWT.com
slash money coaching. Here's where they stand. Total assets, 29,800. Investments, 28,200.
savings zero. Debt 24,000. That gives them a net worth of negative 200,000. But what's really worrying to me
is their fixed costs, which are 82% of their take-home pay. They've got debt. They've got high fixed
costs. It's not sustainable. And if they don't change their relationship with money now, they will be
stuck in this financial quicksand forever. Not surprisingly, they both think a second income will
fix everything, but they already have a high income. So I suspect that more money will not solve
their problems. My question today is can they break out of this cycle of overspending and debt?
We're about to find out. Mike, in your application, you wrote something that caught my eye.
you said, I overly obsess about money and blame my wife when we live paycheck to paycheck.
Take me back to the exact day that you wrote this.
Where were you and what was happening?
That sentence came from me literally obsessing about money when I wake up until I go to bed,
whether it's checking my bank account 20 times a day, whether it's checking my bank card account 20 times a day, my 401k.
None of them are high, by the way, just to make myself feel better.
and know that there's something in the bank.
And it's been a, it's been years for me.
It's, it's been years.
And Noel has gotten the blunt end of it a lot of the time
because we're a one income household,
you know, I'm supporting her in graduate school,
which I totally signed up for and want to do and love doing it.
It just came to a point where I was just so sick of the feeling that I felt
because I make a decent income and I know we shouldn't be.
limit you
make a paycheck.
Why do you blame your wife?
Well,
I blame her.
That's a great,
but I blame it because I think
she overspends from time of time.
But then I always take it back
because I do try to see
where I'm wrong in the situation
and it turns out
when I look at it,
we both spend too much.
But I just react to her
in the moment
and then I had to go back
and say,
I'm so sorry,
Noel,
I,
you're not the problem.
I'm the problem.
I'm the problem.
problem. And I just, I can only imagine how sick she gets to that.
Just so I understand a little bit more, Mike, when you mentioned logging into your Vanguard
account and other accounts, how often are you logging into these accounts?
Literally 20 times a day.
Turn out, well, Vanguard probably once or twice a day, but the bank account several times.
Will you walk me through that experience for just a second? So multiple times a day.
Yeah. Are you logging it on your phone?
Yes.
Okay. And right before you click that icon, what do you feel like?
anxiety how does it show up is there a voice in your head what does it say maybe it's a feeling
it's more of a feeling comfort i get a lot of comfort just clicking into it it's almost like an
addiction and you click into it and it opens up and are you hoping to see a certain number or are
you treating it like um you know like a baby treats a bottle or a blankie or something like that
like you're looking for that sense of relief a baby treats a bottle yeah okay and then what do you do
I log out.
That's it.
It's like a five second thing.
Yes.
Okay.
You know, I think a lot of people listening, they might go like, this sounds crazy,
but I think a lot of us listening probably do the same thing with social media.
And do you think that this is a healthy behavior?
No.
No.
It's one of the big reasons I wrote that.
I reached out.
Okay.
I appreciate that.
And have you ever gotten help, you know, log in in 2010?
a day, seems like maybe there's something deeper there. What do you think? Not for this. No, but
yeah, I definitely something deeper. Absolutely, but not particularly like this. No. Okay. Would you be
open to like seeing a therapist or somebody else about it? Very much. Yeah. Cool. Great. All right.
I appreciate that. Noel, any surprises in what Mike just shared? No, not too much. I mean,
I see him, this is something that's like consistently come up. So seeing him get a large amount of anxiety,
We had a windfall happen about a year ago where we got 170,000 from a family member.
And Mike has never been more nervous.
And we've never had as many fights.
He was really stressed out about where the money was going to go.
We need this giant savings account.
And, like, I was maybe too, I saw it as a gift.
And, you know, looking back, I regret the way I treated the money.
But, like, I kind of saw it as like, oh, this is a gift.
like more than normal of this should be guilt-free spending.
And so, yeah.
Let me make sure I understand.
Mike, in your opinion, Noel, you're saying Mike seems anxious about not having enough money,
but when there was a surplus of money, he became even more nervous.
Yeah, he gets worse when he has more money.
Like the months where he has, when he makes the most, because he's in sales, so he has a variable income.
But the months when he makes the most money, the anxiety gets almost worse.
So.
Mike, you were covering your face just now.
What was that about?
Sorry.
She's absolutely right.
I've just had times where, you know, I've been in sales a couple of years and I had
the biggest paycheck ever.
And I was talking to my, a good friend of mine who got me in sales.
And I was telling how miserable.
With when I made that.
Yeah, at one time I'd made the most amount of money in his paycheck.
And it was just bizarre.
I just don't get it.
When she's talking about the windfall, I was stressing more than ever before on his
beautiful gift that we got.
Okay.
Noel, what's it like to live with somebody who, as he describes it, obsesses over money?
I think it used to be worse.
I think he's kind of suppressed it in a way, like tried to keep it away from me recently.
In the past, I mean, like, the past year.
But, like, I think earlier on it made me feel like a child, I guess.
That's what I would, I felt small.
Why?
Because it would be, because I,
I have to ask permission for everything.
Like if I want to get my nails done, I have to ask permission.
If I want to go to the gas station and buy something, I have to ask permission.
Like, if I want to, you know, maybe change the thermostat more than I should.
Like, I have to ask permission.
But he'll do things like, but he makes the money.
So it's like I have no room.
So I feel like a like a second class citizen.
Uh-huh.
Because like he could go and spend $200 on a Pokemon card on eBay.
You know, he'll do something like that, right?
And then I didn't get asked for permission, right?
But it's because there's this quiet understanding that he makes the money and I don't.
And so now it's kind of, I feel like I started fighting back by saying, well, I work just as hard as you, if not harder sometimes because law law school's hard.
So you will say, I work just as hard as you.
And then what happens?
I work just as hard as him.
I see myself as an investment sometimes.
You know, I want to like stick up for myself a little bit. Like I'm not, I don't want to live in a 1950s
relationship where one person has all of the power and the other person is just deals with it,
you know? So, and I think early in our relationship, we were just figuring that out, like,
what that looks like. And he took it as like, well, I'm just going to stop telling her no.
but I didn't really know
our financial situation
so like I'm spending more willy-nilly
and I would ask him for bigger things
and he would usually just
let me buy whatever I wanted to buy
and you know like we had a $60,000
wedding which we are not $60,000 wedding people
to be honest
let's one step at a time
I want to understand
I'm sorry Mike you wrote in your application
we agree
to spend less, and then inevitably we both spend more than we mean to and end up living on
credit cards until I get paid. Can you walk me through typical payday to payday? What happens?
Typical payday to payday. So biweekly is my payday. What we usually do is, or what I've been doing
is just getting a decent amount of income
and then telling her I got paid
and then I usually have enough to pay off
at least enough of the credit cards
not to accrue interest for that
paying up a statement balance or something
so I get a rush of feeling good about that
but then we both end up spending too much
because she doesn't know
I've never been transparent at all
about our finances. She just thought I had it taken care of. Why? Because I never invited her in. I never
told her I needed help with it. Can I speak to that real quick? Sure. Like last night, well, we were
when I was like realizing how bad we were financially and I was like, I wanted to sign up to do,
to drive Uber like one night a week because I was like that could bring in a little bit of extra
income. And he got so upset. And I think he was like, he was saying it was because of,
It's dangerous, but like what it came down to was he, and at the end of the night, he admitted, like, he feels like he failed me that I have to go dry with her.
But I don't have to.
It's just like, I think it would free us up a bit.
Noel, do you see where that's coming from?
Yeah.
Where?
I don't know, like, maybe some old ideas about, I think it has to do with, like, maleness and being a provider, but.
Okay.
Mike, what do you say about that?
I think she's right.
I felt like I felt like the filter.
The fact that she thinks she has to go Uber.
Right.
I totally agree.
This is a pretty interesting example.
And I love how open everybody's being.
I wish everybody were this open.
What were your financial lives like before Noel went to law school?
A lot better.
I'll say this.
So I switched from an office job, a desk job,
to sales job and it completely changed our lives financially. So rather than getting into a bunch
of debt, I was able to pay off all of our, just, I was just able to pay off a lot of debt.
So I felt like we were getting a footing. And Noel, what about from your perspective?
What was it like before law school? I assume you were working.
I'm going to compare law school with undergrad because I literally did all of that just in one
foul swoop, like during our relationship. I did it all too. So I've been in school like our whole
relationship. Got it. But prior to that, I was a waitress at a diner, like making minimal
income, living very much paycheck to paycheck. I think I avoided a lot of responsibility when it
came to like money historically. I've never like paid a, I've never paid a bill other than like,
yeah. What does that mean? I've never like I've never like paid a phone bill. Everyone else would have like I
lived in someone's, I lived in a room in someone's house, so I would just give them money.
Or I lived, my grandma, I'm on her plan, so I just give her money.
Like, I never actually had my own bills ever.
Okay.
So, like, I never really had that kind of responsibility.
And so I think stepping into that relationship, I just gave him my income and he paid the bills.
And that's, like, how we functioned, like, immediately.
Hold on.
Sorry, is that crazy?
It's not me. It's not my role to say what's crazy or not, but my antenna go up sometimes and I have to follow them.
Remember the first time it happened?
I don't. I feel like it was just natural because you made more money than me. You were the grown-up. It felt like you had the nicer car. I had the junker. You had the 401k. I had a job at a diner.
So finish the sentence. So what's the conclusion? How does that connect to handing over your paycheck?
It maybe felt like he was more equipped.
I don't know.
I think maybe I put myself in a position to be a second-class citizen right away.
I think I developed self-esteem over the course of our relationship
and have kind of adjusted how I view myself.
And some of that stuff has just changed over time.
What do you mean by that?
You've changed the way you view yourself.
So I'll share something.
I wasn't sure if I was going to share this.
But so I'm about 10 years sober.
I'm like approaching that date.
And so it took me time to kind of get to a place where I was like, like I had to be pushed into getting a job, right?
Like my sponsor was like, go get a job.
I had to be pushed to get a job.
I had to be pushed into getting a car and a driver's license.
I had to be pushed into getting out of my grandma's house and getting into someone else's house.
And so I was always very reluctant to like think that I was capable of doing anything on my own.
And I think in a relationship, I was able to gain a lot of self-esteem, but also just having time and sobriety.
And through our relationship and through just sobriety, like, I just kind of started to learn, like, what I deserved and what I'm capable of.
And that a lot of the stuff that went wrong before isn't because I'm not capable.
It's because I was in a situation, meaning alcoholism, that was really just, like, making me incapable.
of doing certain things.
Wow.
That's very powerful.
And congratulations on your sobriety.
That's incredible.
I'm just processing that lesson myself.
There's a lot there.
I can see how that can affect every part of your life.
Relational, financial, career, everything.
It actually really provides a whole new lens
for me to look at this through.
Thank you.
I want you to notice the layers here.
On one hand, Mike controls all of the finances, almost obsessively, checking his bank account
balance 20 times a day, but he admits he's not particularly skilled at managing money.
On the other hand, Noel has avoided any responsibility around managing money.
She's never paid a bill herself.
She literally handed over her paycheck because she didn't think she could manage it.
And understanding her history with addiction is illuminating.
Noel doesn't trust herself, and as Mike mentioned earlier, he doesn't really
trust her with money either. When you don't trust yourself or your partner with money,
you've now set the stage for a vicious cycle. One person often takes on the role of a micromanager,
the other willingly gives up control, almost feeling carefree, but this raises lots of problems.
If the couple ever separates, the non-money person has no functional financial skills.
But what's worse is this dynamic isn't even working. And trying harder or just earning more money
will not fix anything, it will just make them more frustrated with each other.
We're going to get into what happened with the inheritance right after this.
Think about the benefits that homeowners get simply for paying their mortgage.
Sure, they build a little bit of equity fine.
They also get credit score increases and occasionally tax benefits.
But what about renters?
Renters pay, and besides the roof over their head, what are the structural perks or benefits
that we get. Not much. I found a way for renters to actually get something back, and I want to introduce
you to it now. Built is a loyalty program for renters. You pay your rent through built, and you can
earn points for it. Think about it. You're now earning points for your biggest expense every single
month. And you can redeem those built points towards flights, hotels, lift rides, or even future
rent payments. Built has evolved into a complete rewards ecosystem,
you get rewarded for the first time as a renter.
And it's easy.
Almost any payment method is compatible so you can start earning right now.
I wish I had had this when I first started living in New York.
Plus, Bill recently announced that homeowners will be able to get rewarded the same way
on their mortgage in 2026.
So stay tuned.
Join the loyalty program for renters at joinbilt.com slash remit.
That's j-o-in-b-b-l-t.com.
com slash remit. And make sure you use our URL so they know that we sent you.
My team members and I have been talking about ways to keep moving when we are working,
standing desks, walking meetings, some people got desk treadmills.
The problem is it's hard to type while you are moving.
That's why I love this episode sponsor, Whisper Flow.
It's basically a modern version of voice recognition with AI built in, and it works incredibly
well.
You can dictate whatever's in your head, and it will give you a clean,
version that works really well. Whisperflow turns your voice into clean final draft writing inside
whatever app you're already using, email, Slack, docs, even text messages. And it works on
Mac, Windows, and iPhone. So instead of spending all of your time responding to messages,
especially while sitting at a computer, you can hit a hotkey, speak, and the text appears. It's
accurate, it's fast, it's all formatted so you can get back to work. Here's what my friend said
about it. Whisper is amazing because it learns the way you speak so you can send this rambling
note as a text message and it kills all the filler words and it perfectly formats it for you.
They said it's much better than using the Apple voice to text feature. The spelling is way
better. If you want to buy your time back and get back to what matters, check out Whisperflow.
Try it for free at whisperflow.a-i-i-slash-Rameet. That's whisperflow.a-I-I-S-R-M-Eath.
PR flow.aI-a-I-slash Rameet or click the link in the description below.
You've mentioned a windfall.
Noel, can you explain what this windfall was?
So my dad passed away about a year and a half ago,
I believe it was a year and a half ago.
So he had been caught up in a lawsuit
because he was actually inheriting the money himself
from his older brother,
but there was a huge dispute. It lasted years and years and years. And then my dad died right before the
payout came, so I actually got his share. So that's how we came into it. And it was $170,000. And then
about a year later, we got another $13,000, just like right around tax season when we needed it, too.
Wow. How did you feel when you receive the money?
I think there was a mix of emotions, right? Because it is like my dad died.
right, for me to have the money. And I didn't have a great relationship with him. He was an
alcoholic and addict and was really not in my life. And so I had a lot of guilt, like weird feelings
where I'd like be mad at him, but also feel guilty that I wasn't supporting or playing enough
over a role within his life. And so I was afraid, maybe a part of me, the afraid, like, would he even
want me to have this money? Wow. So I think I treated it like a gift. Like I really tried to just
treat it. I didn't treat it like I should have, like income. I just.
treated it like, like, okay, well, we don't really deserve this anyway. So let's just spend this on,
you know, different things we spent. We like, we obviously paid off her debt, but then I spent
$30,000 at Crate Barrel to furnish her house. Like, I really went for vacation style. I wanted to come
home after work and feel like my home was my vacation. I spent 10,000 at, uh, on clothes and another 10,000
And on Mexico, Mike spent, it got 20,000 as well for his own stuff.
I don't know if Mike, you want to share about that, but that's like your thing.
And then we put like a good amount of savings, but that got depleted as soon as we wanted to do IVF.
So like the money went away fast.
Like we were in, this just was, we literally got the money a year and three months ago.
How much of the money is left?
None of it.
Mike, where were you in this?
Where were you in the spending of this?
You know, I did a, I spent a lot of mine too.
What'd you spend it on?
I guess we're all, you know, we've been all honest.
I got a hair transplant.
A what?
A hair transplant.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
Yeah, we can't all have hair like you.
And did that.
And then I, you know, I spent 10,000 on just some clothes.
And I have this love for her.
you know, nostalgic
Pokemon cards,
spent a lot of money in those.
Okay.
And I justified,
oh,
this is an investment.
No.
So, like,
I had a huge part in this as well.
Like,
honestly,
so much of that
should have just been invested.
Like,
like,
more than 50%
should have just been invested.
That's pretty powerful.
I agree.
If you had taken
$100,000 in your 30s
and invested that money,
that would turn into a,
and just let it sit there,
never touch it again.
It would have turned
into a tremendous
amount of money.
money. What I want is for both your monthly spending and any unexpected income to have clear
rules. What am I going to do? Like my wife and I have a set of rules. If we make unexpected income,
this percent goes here. Something like 50 or 70 percent goes to investments, guilt-free spending,
etc., etc., etc. I want everybody to have that because then you can just run your playbook and you don't
have to make these arbitrary decisions. When you make arbitrary decisions in that he
of the moment. Sure, you might get some very nice furniture or a nice trip to Mexico, but you're
not following your rich life plan. Do you have a shared vision of what your rich life is?
Like a specific shared vision? I think we have a tendency to like this, to like go and want the
same things. If you had no debt, what would you be doing? I would be able to, I think to a reasonable
degree, spend some money on my parents, we would have a large savings. I would like to,
I would like to own a house, but not one in the U.S. I would like to buy a house in Costa Rica and,
you know, rent it out and one day go and retire in Costa Rica and like maybe do like a little
bit of remote legal work and part time and just enjoy our lives and set our kids up for
success where they could do whatever they wanted and go to school, whatever school they
wanted to go do.
Okay.
Mike, what about you?
Raising kids, having fun raising kids.
I mean, I love the idea of the Costa Rican house.
In my rich life would be security, which is such a low bottom, as I'm saying.
But that's hard for me to think of much more than that because I just never felt like I've
had it.
I love it when couples share their rich life with me.
For Noel and Mike, it's Costa Rica, freedom and security.
But I can guarantee that when we get to their CSP, I will not.
see anything that points to that stuff in their spending. They haven't mentioned saving for a house.
All they've mentioned so far is $30,000 worth of crate and barrel furniture, cosmetic surgery,
clothes, and Pokemon card. And I'm not judging any of those purchases, but they are not aligned
with what they claim is their rich life. In addition, when you inherit money from someone,
especially someone you had a difficult relationship with, it can stir up a lot of conflicting
emotions. It's very common to see people treat an inheritance in peculiar ways. Some people struggle
to spend it. Others see it as a gift to be spent quickly, sometimes as a way to distance themselves
from the emotions tied to the money and the grief. But what you choose to spend your money on
leaves clues. And I can tell you right now that their rich life vision is completely out of
alignment with the way that they spend money. The good news is we can change that. But first, I need to
understand a little bit more about how they got here. How often do you fight about money?
Well, when he didn't include me, it was actually a lot less. Since we've gone on this,
since we've gone on this podcast, he had, you've included me in it, and I ran all the numbers
and I kind of took over. We got Monarch money, and I just kind of started budgeting things down
and realize what we can actually, what our actual income is if you average out the variable
and what we've been spending, and I, like, realized we were, he had every reason to be worried,
and we were a very bad position. And I kind of panicked. And, like, I yelled at him, like, two days ago
for buying a $20 pack of chicken when I said small pack of chicken and you got the big pack of
chicken. Oh, wait, wait, wait. Can we recreate this? I love a good chicken fight.
Yeah. All right. So take me back. Where were you?
when this happened. Okay, so I'm at home, I'm hungry, I've been trying to not buy any groceries at all,
so I've been just like living off of whatever's in the house. I tell Mike, go, I need you to go pick up some
chicken, a couple of other things, and I say specifically in there a small chicken. And he brings home
a large chicken, it's $20. I see on the price label that it says like 17 something, and
I'm immediately angry.
What do you say?
I yelled,
this is not a small chicken.
I said small chicken.
Did you not read my text message?
Like,
I immediately start
accusing him,
trying to back off
because I know that I'm being aggressive,
but I like,
I cannot help myself.
How do you do that?
Like, what exactly did you say?
I'll apologize
and then I'll bring it up again.
And then I'm like,
well,
I'm going to eat the chicken.
Like, it's not a big deal.
I'm going to eat the chicken.
I'm going to put in the freezer.
and we're just going to eat it.
Okay.
But the one thing he doesn't remember is that we actually already had chicken in the fridge.
I wanted chicken thighs.
We already had chicken breasts.
So like we have an overload of chicken.
But I actually did remember.
Yeah.
I just like chicken.
And I'm just angry.
It's so stupid.
I know it's stupid, right?
Like, I know it's stupid.
Why do you think that this fight came up?
You know, you're saying it's stupid, but it happened.
Why do you think that the fight actually happened?
Well, I keep getting irritated because I feel like he's not, he doesn't pay attention.
into like the details or he's not conscientious about little things. And I think that's part of what
put us into this position sometimes. Like I think you just weren't conscientious of just the list,
but also like didn't think like, okay, like we are seriously budgeting. We've already spent
more than our budget for the month on groceries. So every bit of money we're spending right now is
borrowed. Can I ask a couple questions? Noelle, did Mike know that you had already exceeded your
grocery spend for the month?
Well, I keep, did you, did you know?
I actually don't, I assume you knew because it's on Monarch.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's, it was, it's difficult.
We still need to eat.
And I know, because we just combed through our finances two weeks ago, that's when we created this budget.
And we are already $3,000 over our budget two weeks ago.
So is the confusion, like, we're already over it.
So like, might as well just.
Totally.
Absolutely.
And I know I'm going to eat the chicken, but also, I could be more conchievous.
chances. There's no doubt about it. I was being crazy. I just want to put that out there as not normal to
freak out over $10 of chicken. But I grew up in a situation where like $10 made the difference.
Like I like have a vivid memory as a child of sitting at the at our like little kitchen table
and my mom doing the budgeting and saying we had an extra $20 and that we could go to the movie
theater that month and thinking, oh my God, that's so exciting. Like and here we are just throwing
away $20. You know what I mean?
So one of my favorite parts of my job is hearing people recreate tense conversations they have
about money. I love being able to sit here and listen in. And this fight about chicken
is incredibly revealing. Remember, until Mike applied for the podcast and they actually
had to do a conscious spending plan, Noel had no idea what their financial situation
was. They had never had a substantive conversation around money.
you've got to understand that most couples have never had a truly deep conversation about money,
even after being married for 25 years.
That is why I wrote my book, Money for Couples.
Because when you dive into these money conversations, years into a marriage,
it can be like opening up a Pandora's box of unspoken expectations and past decisions
and differing money philosophies.
Noel vividly remembers that $10 meant something special to,
to her as a kid, the ability to go see a movie with her mom.
So it's no surprise that they're having a heated discussion about chicken
because they've never really talked about what money means to each of them.
Without that foundation, there's very little curiosity, very little empathy in these discussions.
It just goes straight to being defensive, each partner in their own corner of the boxing ring.
Listen as I show them a new approach.
Noelle, I don't love hearing people describe their own behavior as crazy, especially women.
It's not good.
It's like got a long history of not so great origins.
In addition, you called yourself crazy and then you referred back to your mom having $20.
I'm not sure that's a healthy relationship with money.
As an example, here's what I think a healthy relationship might look like when it comes
to this decision. Both partners would be involved in the key numbers. Both partners would understand
the four key numbers, fixed costs, savings, investment, gil-free spending. Each partner would own a
certain number or numbers, like groceries. One person is the grocery person and is their job
to own that number and to make sure you don't exceed it. Sometimes life gets in the way and the
partner brings back some larger whatever chicken order. The question is like, is, like, is
Is this going to destroy our financial future?
And a healthy relationship with it is really about being able to ascertain the difference
between a $3 problem and a $300,000 problem.
Similarly, I would say that the person who's going grocery shopping should probably
press for specifics.
Hey, this is what I'm planning to do?
Are you cool with it?
And this is the number I understand we can spend?
Are you cool with that?
Okay, good.
otherwise we can't police everybody's every decision
it just becomes laborious
how does that strike you
and it strikes me as healthy
okay noelle
I think it sounds healthy
I think I need to work on control issues
because my instinct is I don't want to let go of it
but maybe both of you
interestingly have different types of control issues
I would like to take a look at your numbers
I think it's going to help me understand what's going on
what was it like doing the conscious spending plan together
It was eye-opening to me.
I'm going to be honest.
It was very relieving for me to Adderin to get some help.
Even all of our financial conversations,
the last two weeks has been stressful and just not fun.
But even with all that,
it's like I just feel like I got some relief.
I think it was just shocking initially.
So like initially looking over the numbers,
realizing like how much money is making,
how much money we're spending,
and how much we'd gotten ourselves into debt.
And, like, I just had no idea.
I think that was where I was really shocked.
The conscious spending plan that, like, you had us do,
like, right prior to that, like,
we had kind of looked through some of our finances at that point,
like, and just realized, like,
that's when I just kind of realized they were like,
oh, we are super, we're super screwed.
So was it depressing or was it connective?
How would you describe it, Nuel?
It was scary, I think is the best word for me.
I think it was scary because I'm realizing like, okay, we have this credit card debt specifically
and that was really mounting.
And I wasn't expecting that to be so high.
And then to look at the interest rate on it and then, you know, to really take a look at like our student loans even like recently and to see like, oh, wow, these student loans, especially like our graduate loans, like have such a high, some of them have such a high interest rate that I'm just.
like, great.
Like, it just felt very overwhelming.
I'm like literally to the point where I feel like all my dreams run,
and I have to start, like, as soon as I get a job,
70% of my income needs to go to debt.
Like, that's how I feel.
Okay.
Let's take a look.
Mike, I'd like to ask you to read the word in bold
and then the number in full next to it for this entire box.
Go ahead.
Assets.
15,534.
Investments, 28,202.
Savings, zero.
Debt, 24,774.
Total net worth, negative 201,338.
What do you think about those numbers?
The net worth was embarrassing.
I'm embarrassed, very much so.
Tell me more.
Why embarrassed?
Well, I didn't think it was that bad.
The living day-to-day was paying off everything and the money I make, I didn't think it was that bad.
But then when you essentially make us look at this number specifically net worth, and it's like,
no, I always thought there was a grayer with student loans, and there's not.
It's like, we owe that money.
We're in debt.
Like, this is real.
So negative $201,000 of net worth.
Let's take a look at the income.
Noel, can you read off your combined gross monthly income, please?
Our gross month
income is $13,000.
Okay.
13K a month,
which means your household income
is $156,000.
And I want to note
that this is a one-income earner
family for right now
because Mike is working.
Noel is in law school.
Presumably when you graduate,
get a job.
Your income, Noel,
will go up substantially from zero.
Cool.
Let's continue.
So your net is 10K a month.
All right.
Right? Yeah. And now we're going to look at the four key numbers of the conscious spending plan. First off, we have your fixed costs. Mike, what's this number here? 82%. 82%. It's pretty high. Like to see it between 50 to 60. We'll come back to that. Investments, zero. I know you have a little 401k contribution. Yes. Well, it's more than a little, $780 a month. All right. So that's pretty good. We have savings of zero and you have $0 in savings. And then guilt-free spending.
at 18% or $1,844. Is that number accurate? Yeah. Okay, Mike says yes. Noelle? That's, I mean,
that's the number of our ideal situation, right? Like, so in reality, this month alone,
we've already spent over $3,000. So in that category. What'd you spend? Extra beyond 1844.
Doggy daycare, going out to Waterworld, going out to eat.
I bought shoes that were over $100.
Keep going.
It turns out I'm on the road,
almost, I drive about 50 to 60,000 miles a year for my job.
It turns out I was spending over $350 just at the gas station,
energy drinks and lottery tickets.
When I looked at the numbers, I was like, this can't be right,
but it was, unfortunately, it was.
Okay.
Can I ask a little bit about the debt?
So $244,000 of debt.
Can you break that debt down for me?
Yeah, I think I could.
I think right now we did about $180,000 in student loans.
We have $22,000, $23,000 of credit card debt.
We own my mom, $19,000.
We took a loan from her.
I think you're short about $20,000 on this debt.
Do you think that your student loans are $20K higher?
It's got to be student loans.
So 200K of student loans.
I mean, you've got 60.
Yep.
You've got 60.
And then I've got the rest.
I just pulled out 52,000 just for this year.
There's a lot of numbers.
I just want to know how much you owe.
That should be right.
200K in student loans,
23K, credit card debt, and 19K
mom.
Now my question is,
do you have a plan for this debt?
Yes, now we do.
Tell me.
I wish we could pay it off faster.
But right now we've been paying his mom $500 a month.
And that's just standard every month we're giving her that.
We have an automatic transfer set up.
And then now we've set up an automatic transfer for credit cards.
We're paying $1,661 every month.
Okay.
Towards the credit cards.
When is the mom debt going to be paid off?
We do the math.
It was like 30 months, I think.
Yeah.
Okay.
Ideally sooner.
Ideally sooner.
And what about credit card debt?
Credit card debt is like, I think 15 months is what I think I calculated.
Good.
Great.
And student loans?
Oh, look at the reaction.
Everybody hold on.
I got to describe this.
They both just like visibly deflated at the same time.
Like they blew air out of their mouths, you know, like a cartoon.
And what is the idea like it's so big?
like we can't even begin to fathom it.
Is that the way you feel about it?
I mean, we can't.
We've talked about it.
Like, I know how we're going to do it.
It just, it sucks.
Okay.
It's when I get a job, I'm expected to make probably between, I mean, take home maybe 80 is what I'm imagining.
And then put 70% of that towards student loans, literally every paycheck, just 70% of it is going straight to student loans.
specifically we're going to target the 8 and 9% numbers,
and then save the lower numbers, the 2, 3%,
and just kind of make minimum payments on those while we...
If you do that, how long will it take you to pay off?
I think I'm looking at like 2.5 years.
I think that's right.
I think I'm looking at for like 2 and a half years
because I'm not...
From my understanding, it's not smart to pay them all off
when it will grow faster in investments
than it will depreciate in.
So the interest rates that are like 2, 3%,
Like those ones are getting minimum payments.
Where's the depressing part of all this?
This sounds like a great plan to me.
Where's the depressing part?
Well, the depressing parts comes in like my dreams are expensive.
I have expensive tastes and I wish I, I wish we could have a different, you know,
we've got IVF going.
I, like this is, so what I'm specifically thinking about is I really want my kids to go to a really
nice private school.
I've literally already picked out the private school nearby here.
It runs like $38,000 a year per kid.
That is my dream for my kids to be able to go to a school like that.
That is just going to set them up for success for the rest of their lives.
But I would literally be working for them to do that.
And I'm literally to the point where I'm like, well, I wanted to have three kids.
Now maybe I should just have one kid.
Okay.
Let's take a step by step.
Okay.
$200K of student loans.
Paying that off in approximately two years.
maybe a little longer, but approximately.
Do you think that that is above, like faster than average, average or slower than average?
Very fast.
Very fast.
I agree.
Extremely fast.
I don't want to sit with it.
I don't want to sit with it.
Okay.
We can talk about strategies, but I just want to point out that you're making a choice to pay them off extremely aggressively.
Mike, where are you in this?
I've honestly just been grateful for Noel's help on everything,
and I think it's a great plan.
I feel like for the first time I actually have some help of getting out all this stuff.
It's just so funny I had invite my spouse into,
and I'm just surprised that I never did it before.
Mike, you know how many men come on this show,
and we'll talk for like two, three hours,
and then I finally realize something.
I'll go,
you ever ask your wife about money?
And they'll be like, no.
And then I'll be like,
you ever ask your wife anything?
and they will literally say no.
And I think you are showing us an example
where that doesn't work
of envisioning yourself as the provider, protector,
especially when you need help,
but by opening up that communication conduit
and just by inviting them and saying,
look, I need help.
We got to do this together.
Two people as a team,
there's no way one person can pay off $200,000
of debt. It's not going to happen, especially if one person doesn't know and they're spending,
what you did and what both of you have started to do is to start to talk about money openly.
Now, sure, there are some things we need to iron out and we can work on that, but the fact that you're
doing it together is way better than one person being in the dark and the other not really
leading them in the right way. You see that?
Yes.
All right. I think you should both be recognized for how far you've already come.
I've got to give them credit.
I'm really impressed that Mike and Noel have created a debt payoff plan.
That's a big deal, especially since Noel just got involved in their finances.
But I'm a little concerned that their debt payoff plan is too aggressive, maybe even unrealistic.
And it's interesting because the relationship we have with debt in America is often all or nothing.
Many of us will ignore debt for a long time.
We don't open up envelopes when the statement comes.
We pay the minimum.
We don't really understand how.
debt works, but we just know debt is bad. I have debt, therefore, I am bad. In rare cases, I will
see couples like Mike and Noel, and they'll finally go, oh, all right, all right, we got to pay down
this debt. And then what they will do is they will go all in. They will literally put every
single dollar they have towards debt. They think they're doing the right thing. But really,
they are operating by the invisible script. It's all or nothing. But that all or nothing relationship
with money is very unhealthy. Remember, just a minute ago, they said they've already spent $3,000
on guilt-free spending this month. That's nearly double what they've accounted for in the CSP.
That alone tells me that unless they're able to drastically reduce their fixed costs,
this plan's not going to work. I appreciate that they want to attack this debt. I wish more people
felt that aggressive about paying off debt and about building their retirement instead of buying a
freaking commodity that they don't even really want. But the question I have is, are they actually
prepared to make the choices that go along with this plan? Are they willing to make significant
lifestyle changes? Or are they basically setting themselves up for failure? If you are looking at
your own spending and you are realizing that something is not working, if your plan looks good on paper,
but for some reason it never sticks, I want to help. You can join my money coaching program and I will
show you what your sticking points are and how to get unstuck so you can start moving towards
your rich life. Go to IWT.com slash money coaching. Smart business owners know that $3
questions are not where you should be focusing your time. The lattes that you buy every morning
are not the problem. It's the $30,000 questions that can make or break you. And for example,
taxes are a major consideration for business owners. Have you optimized your tax strategy? Are you
aware of the appropriate tax deductions. The truth is, the biggest savings happen before you even
file. And that's where our friends at Gelt can help. Gelt is a modern CPA firm that helps you
take control of your tax strategy ahead of time. They'll help you think strategically,
like how to structure your business, where to maximize key deductions, and how to use the tax
code to your benefit. Plus, their platform makes it easy to stay organized, working with your
tax team year-round, not just when deadlines hit. So, where
whether you are a business owner, whether you are self-employed,
this is the proactive move you can make now to save thousands next April.
If you want this tax season to actually work for you, not against you,
go to join gelt.com slash remit to get started.
As part of this community, you'll even get to skip the wait list
because this year it's not about catching up, it's about getting ahead.
Entrepreneurs, let's talk about systems.
This is the year you can give yourself the gift of,
sorting out your business systems.
Tons of small businesses are held together by duct tape and 15 different platforms and
tiers, but it does not have to be this way.
You can simplify your business systems, save time, and streamline your workflows in
26 with NetSuite.
NetSuite is the number one AI Cloud ERP.
It's trusted by over 43,000 businesses.
It simplifies your business into a single platform.
That's your financials, inventory, commerce, HR, and CRM all in one place.
Plus, it uses an AI-built system to automate your routines, deliver actionable insights,
and help you cut costs with confidence.
Whether your company earns millions or even hundreds of millions, NetSuite helps you innovate
and improve.
If I'd had a system like this, back when I was building IWT, it would have changed everything.
Right now, get the free business guide, demystifying AI at NetSuite.
suite.com slash remit. That guide is free to you at netsuite.com slash remit. That's net suite.com
slash remit. Can we look at the, um, the fixed cost for a second? Yeah. Your fixed costs are at 82%. That's high.
That explains a lot, not all, but a lot of why you are stressed out about money. Can I say that since we
filled that out, we had to buy Mike a new car? Oh, good. So that.
Good.
It's not new.
What kind of car did you get, Mike?
I've been waiting to say that.
Tell me.
So like I said, I drive through 60,000 miles.
And I've probably put in about $3,500 into my 240,000 Chevy 2009 Cobalt.
How much did the car cost?
Out the door, 14-8.
Okay.
All right.
I respect that.
Used car.
Great.
Love it.
All righty.
Let's take a look at the fixed costs.
Here we go.
So we will update the car payment as necessary, but let's take a look. Your rent and all that is
22 or 23 percent. Not bad, not bad. And how about your car payment total? Gas, all of it.
So add 265 to that number. Okay. We're going in a direction that usually we don't go on this show,
but all right, we're at 87% fixed costs. Let's look at the rest of it now. So we have
car payments of $1,213 a month, debt payments, $2,000.
$161 a month, groceries, $800 a month, clothes 100, phone is 88, pets 316, charity 500,
and subscriptions, 183 per month for a total fixed cost of 87%.
What do you think about that?
I don't know what to think, but it seems high.
I did everything I could to try and bring that down and make it reasonable, but it just seemed
impossible. Like, we were spending $600 a month on doggy daycare. It was like literally the same as
child care. And I've switched to going on Rover and getting a dog walker to come by our house
during the day. And that saves a lot of money. Do you guys think that this is sustainable,
financially speaking? What do you mean? The fact that you are spending 87% on fixed costs,
that you have zero in savings, roughly zero invested.
I mean, I think some of this is temporary because we are spending 20% on debt, right? And like, ideally in 15 months, once the credit cards go away, that number is going to go substantially down. Some of these are choices that we've made, like the 5% of our income goes to charity. Like, that's obviously something. And we've negotiated that because I initially was really hard-nosed on that being a 10% number. And we have negotiated.
that down to 5%.
Is this sustainable?
Because it sounds like you're
like comforting me.
I think it's possible.
I don't think it's fun.
What's not fun?
You have a relatively new car.
You have a place you rent.
Looks like a nice place.
You have a dog walker.
You have food.
What's not fun?
I don't know.
I think the way we lived before
was so nice.
I would love.
to have a little bit more of that back, which is part of the reason I want an alternative income.
Mike, tell me a little bit about what you do for a living. So I do in-home sales. So I go to people's
homes and I sell them on bathroom remodels and showers. Okay. And is your salary, is it commission-based?
100%. 100% commission-based? Yeah. The good news is the trajectory has just gone up.
But monthly is the bigger swing than yearly, I'd say, right now.
You know, our lowest month, I think, in January was, I think I brought in five or six thousand.
It was like $4,500.
It was the lowest month.
And the highest was $27,000.
How do you plan around that?
I made a plan.
She did.
Hold on.
I want to come to you, Noelle, one sec.
But I know you only recently started getting involved in the finances.
So, Mike, how do you previously plan?
I never did. I never did, which is one of the main I wanted to ask you about it, because I just didn't know.
My buddy always told me to save, safe, save because he's been doing it for so long, and we just never did.
Okay. And Noel, what about when you started participating with the finances, what did you do regarding these swings?
So I made a separate savings account. We have a separate savings account. That's the rollover fund, since the biggest swing.
we saw was 4,500, I wanted enough to make up for that 4,500 in a rollover account. So the way we're doing it is
10,000 goes into the main account, and then up to 5,000 goes into the rollover account. If the
rollover account ever gets above 5,000, that goes into credit card debt. And on the second of every
month, we make the transfers, but we don't make transfers any other times. Okay. That's pretty
good. I like that. I like the conceptually what you're doing. Can I make a quick suggestion?
Yes, please. So the fact that you are building the, you called the rollover fund based on 4,500 is a good
start. I would encourage you to do six times 4,500 because if Mike were to get laid off or
business were to dry up or whatever, one month of the lowest income he ever made is not going to cut it.
Like that will be destroyed very quickly, consumed.
I also want to say, I don't know that I typically don't do the 4,500, the lowest amount he made.
I do the amount that we need to keep the lights on.
That's a key difference.
So the amount we need to keep the lights on means what we need to pay our fixed costs.
Six times your fixed costs, which would be considerably higher, would be six times $8,711.
And that's separate from an emergency fund, by the way.
That's separate.
An emergency fund is totally separate.
This is just for people who have big swings in their income as somebody who makes 100% commission does.
Please remember, though, nobody fills up six months fast.
It takes years.
But is that smart to have that when, like, you have debt that the percentage that it's growing in savings does not equate to the percentage that you're losing,
losing the 27% credit card rate will just, like, destroy you.
This is an excellent question.
And so, yes, if you have high-interest credit card debt like you do,
you should probably paying aggressively towards it.
But at the same time, what if Mike loses his job, like tomorrow?
What would happen to you guys?
I have to find out of the job.
I have to borrow more money.
No, that's not really an acceptable answer.
We'd have to borrow more money.
You guys are up to your eyeballs in debt right now.
Yeah.
We're over $24,000 of debt.
So that's not really great.
You've been in a bad spot.
You don't have enough to even get one day without an income.
You have no savings.
And so that is why sometimes you have to make a trade-off that says,
we need to put some money in savings,
even though it's going to cost us more in the long time.
term.
Noel, you look like either confused or you disagree with me.
Tell me.
You don't have to agree with everything I say.
I don't know.
I guess maybe I'm just looking at it too much as a math problem.
As a very simple, like, this is this percent, this is this percent, just follow the money.
But I don't, yeah.
But if that's obviously do whatever you say, but.
Hold on.
I don't want you do whatever I say.
I want you to take the principles that I talk.
about and adapt them for your own needs. I don't mind if the guests I have on my show,
including both of you, disagree with 30% of what I have to say. I don't mind, but I want you
to understand why. So if this were just a math problem, why come talk to me? That's a great question.
It's not just a math problem for me. I mean, it's, what I deep down, what I want is security,
and I just haven't been able to find it grasp it,
but build a plan for it.
Okay.
And, Noel, if this were just a math problem,
why come talk to me?
Because I'm very new, I guess, to finances,
and maybe I'm just, like, looking at it as a math problem,
but I don't know the realities of, like,
what it looks like if someone loses their job
and what it looks, you know what I mean?
Like, I don't know if that's what makes sense,
you know, not putting, accruing more credit card debt
in the event of a disaster happening,
but instead just having a savings account,
even if it isn't appreciating at the level
that their credit card debt is.
I can give people the perfect freaking money plan,
but if they just hate debt, they just hate it,
they're going to go,
I just want to pay the debt off right now,
just get it off my back, just get it off my back.
And I have to account for that.
I want you to account for that too.
Noel, you could roll the dice
and treat this like a math problem purely.
Put all your money towards credit card debt.
And maybe you will pay it all off in two and a half years,
and that's great.
More likely, here's what I think happens.
I think in the next two to five years,
one of you has some type of career pause, interruption.
It could be a layoff, downsizing, lateral move,
salary decrease, whatever.
That happens.
I'm not saying it's you two.
It just happens.
I think that the two of you may be debt-free,
but if you were debt-free tomorrow,
would you have a healthy relationship with money?
Probably not.
No.
So as soon as you were debt-free
and you're making a lot of money
with the combined incomes, what would happen?
You go right back into debt.
And then you're playing this game
for the next 40 years of your life.
That's why I'm not treating this
only as a math problem.
The math matters for sure,
but there are so many other elements going on here.
I want to talk about the fixed costs here.
You have $800 going towards groceries.
Is that accurate?
Actually, what we've been historically doing is $1,200,
and that's not eating out,
because I'm the big spender when it comes to that,
and I know I can change that.
But what do you buy?
I would get the most expensive.
Like, if I'm going to make capraise,
I'm going to go and I'm going to buy the fancy mozzarella befalowlo
cheese. How much is that? What is that? Like $20? I'm going to get... It's probably like 10 to 15.
For that one? Okay. If I'm going to get, but I'm not looking at prices. I'm always getting exactly
what I want. And I'm just being honest, like that's kind of what it looks like. And then like even like,
sorry, just to give you an idea, but this isn't part of our grocery budget. But I've,
since then we've talked about it and I've worked my way. But like Glade plugins, I would get
the most expensive plugin one where like I'm literally spending like 150 to $200 a month on
Glade plugins for our house.
Did you grow up poor?
Yeah.
I did.
Glade plugins.
Like this is a big tip off.
Okay.
A lot of people are going to get really mad at me right.
Ramit, are you saying I grew up poor because I have Glade Plugins?
Maybe if you have like seven of them in your house, odds are pretty good.
You grew up poor.
I think I thought we have money, and now I don't have to, I wanted to buy all the things
I could never get when I was younger.
And then how much do you spend on these plugins?
You said 100 bucks a month?
Yeah, so I'm probably buying, they're like $30 for a pack of five.
I'm probably going through about four months.
I get the most expensive one.
The vanilla one is like the most expensive one.
We've since switched and I budgeted myself to using five every two weeks.
and I've gotten the cheapest cent.
You know,
Ramit Zati doesn't like to judge, okay?
Rameet Zati wants to create a safe space.
Is this going to be the first time
I violate my own rules
and just tell people
no more buying
$1,000 per year of Glade plugins
when you have $244,000 of debt?
How does that strike you?
I didn't know we had $200.
I didn't know.
When I was doing that, I really had no idea.
Like, I thought that we were making really good money and everything would always work out because it always has before.
I think I used to be, I used to be what, like, you called, I want to say like a dreamer or what is it?
It's the one that like tends to be the get rich quick schemes type.
The dreamer.
I think I used to be, I think more like that.
But that's just because I would call him and I'd be like, hey, I want to get this.
Does it fit in our budget?
and then he would just basically look at and see how much income he made.
Is it a good month or is it a bad month?
If it was a good month, I can get it.
And if it's not a good month, I can't get it.
This is so fascinating.
On your fixed costs, I have questions because we have $316 a month on pets.
What's that?
So he has $180 a month dog food.
I think that's not including we mix two foods together.
One is $180 a month.
The other one is we get two.
bags of this green food that mixes in with it a month, and that ends up being like another
$200 and $600 on, he is our child, I guess.
No, this is for real.
This is, yeah.
So we pet costs will include, I'll include in that.
Like, if we go to the dog beach, you have to spend $15 for parking.
I'm like, that should go into a dog fund because this is for the dog.
If every time we buy him a toy or whatever.
A toy, probably a few times a month.
Hmm?
Yeah.
Damn.
So a lot of money goes to the dog.
A lot of money goes to a dog.
What's the minimum you could spend on your dog?
I know this sounds callous to all the dog owners,
but we have somebody in $244,000 of debt.
I have to ask the question.
Noel?
How much was the Purina that we used to get?
$72.
So, and that would last how long?
Six weeks, I think, roughly.
Okay, so about $70 a month.
just say that to be safe. And then $33 a week for the dog walker. So $105 a month.
Total? Yeah. Yeah. That would be bare minimum. Yeah.
I'm taking this number down because we've got to get the number going in a different direction.
What did you say? 100 and what?
105. 105. Love it. Look at this number. 87%? 85%. That's what I'm talking about. You said you've spent $3,000 on guilt-free spending this month.
Yes, yes, over that.
What'd you spend?
Going out, I bought shoes that were over $100.
We went to get like some board games and spent $80.
We had some friends in town, so we over-extended ourselves.
We wanted all of us to have a really big time at a theme park, so we bought certain things.
What does that mean? Certain things? You bought what?
Well, like we bought a cabana, so everyone wanted to be there.
We had all the fast passes. We got a cabana.
We just kind of like get whatever we want, whenever we want it.
Do you want to keep doing this?
No, I want to be more thoughtful about it.
I still want to be able to do nice things for myself, but I want to make a choice about it.
But you know what?
I do want to have a Glade budget.
I don't know why I care so much about these Glade Plugins.
Oh.
But I do want a Glade Plug-Pug-in budget.
I do want to be able to get myself nice skin care.
All right.
Let's whatever.
It's your money.
And then charity.
we're coming back to.
That's hard.
Yeah, that's...
I already bent like 5%.
And that's like a religious thing.
For me, it's like
the most important thing.
I'm jumping in here because
this is frustrating to hear.
And I know what you want from me.
You want me to verbally
eviscerate them for the choices
that they are making,
for spending money on things
like theme parks and cabanas
and refusing to give up
Glade plugins,
plus giving 5%
to what she's calling
religious charity,
better known as tithing.
there's a reason I'm not raising my voice and getting frustrated with them, even though it is
frustrating.
Think about it.
If you were locked into something that became part of your identity, maybe it's going to
this specific gym, maybe it's treating yourself to a latte every Tuesday after you drop
your kids off at daycare, if somebody like me came in and just berated you for the choices
you're making, how would you feel?
Really think about it for a second.
Think about something that is near and dear to you and your eyes.
identity. Like if somebody came to me and started yelling at me about my choices to stay in luxury
hotels, I would feel angry, maybe even ashamed, even if I was making a bad financial choice.
I definitely would not want to listen to that person's advice, though. A lot of you have gotten
too used to seeing random financial personalities screaming at people on the internet about their
bad decisions, and you think that's how behavioral change works. A lot of you believe that money
is just about making decisions on things like bagels and what potatoes to buy.
Money is far more complicated than that.
Money is about the systems and structures around you like healthcare and your ability to attend higher education.
It's also about identity, which is often passed on from your parents and grandparents.
And yes, money is also about personal responsibility.
Everything that they're describing spending money on has become a part of their identity.
Me sitting around and yelling at them about spending money on some commodity is not going to change their identity.
It's just going to make them retrench,
agree with me for five minutes,
and then go right back to the thing they were doing.
Think about their identity,
showing their friends a good time when they visit,
having a house that smells good is part of Noel's identity,
and tithing is too.
So now, instead of yelling at them,
I'm going to get more curious
about where all of these hidden scripts stem from.
I want to talk to any parents listening right now.
Are you putting the same amount of effort
into protecting your kid's future
if something were to have?
happen to you. Accidents happen. It's morbid but true. And actually getting term life insurance
through our partner, Fabric by Gerber Life, can actually bring the two of you together. You can actually
say to your partner, hey, it's really important to me that with all this time we're spending at work
and all these things we're doing because we love our kids, we want to make sure that they are
protected. It's a beautiful way to start off this new year. Fabric by Gerber Life is term life insurance
you can get done today. It's made for busy parents like you. It's all on.
on your schedule right from your couch,
you could be covered in under 10 minutes
with no health exam required.
If you've got kids, especially if you're young and healthy,
now is the great time to lock in low rates.
And even if you have life insurance through your employer,
it may not be enough to protect your family,
especially if you leave your job or you get let go.
Join the thousands of parents who trust Fabric to help protect their family,
apply today in just minutes at meetfabric.com
slash Rameet. M-E-E-T-Fabric.com
slash Rameet.
Policies issued by Western Southern Life Assurance Company, not available in certain states,
prices are subject to underwriting and health questions.
Can I understand a little bit more and a well about how you grew up?
Sure, yeah.
Take me back to your childhood.
If you think back to what your family said about money when you were young,
what do you recall?
My mom was always really smart with money.
She had me at 18.
moved all the way across the country.
It was just me and her.
We've at times lived in one-bedroom apartments
where we'd have to share a bed.
We, you know, would live off, like,
the cheapest food you can think of,
like, ramen and spaghetti noodles
and, like, things that were very affordable.
But I was happy.
I felt like my mom kept us feeling safe,
but we didn't have extras.
Like, we would go out to eat once a year.
I'd get to go to Red Lobster on my birthday.
Wow.
And now I thought was so fancy.
And then eventually, you know, you get older and you're starting to see that other people have things that have like brand names or are just like look nice.
And you realize you'll never have those things.
I just feel like lesser.
What was the brand that you first remember feeling envious of?
So I grew up in the abacrobby age.
You know, so like that was the thing for girls, like the girls that were.
pretty and, you know, we're all able to afford and wear Abercrombie. And I'm over here in
two-year-old Gap and frift store clothes, you know. So. Did you ever find yourself purchasing
something from Abercrombie? I have a large part, a large, even though Abercrombie is not what it
used to be, a large part of my wardrobe is Abercrombie today. What does it feel like to buy stuff
from Abercrombie now as an adult? I feel good. Like, I feel like I made it. Like, it's that
feeling of like I made it, yeah.
Okay.
Like, everything's okay.
Is your mom still with us?
Yeah.
My mom is a college professor now.
She was going through school the whole time that I was growing up.
Wow.
So that's why we were so broke.
What did your mom tell you about money?
I don't know if she even told me anything.
Like, I don't feel like it was ever spoken.
I think she was a very stressed person when I was younger.
Sometimes I feel like she might rain on my parade a little bit by telling me when things are
unrealistic in my dreams. Like, if I want to do certain, like, I told her that I really wanted for
a retirement plan to, like, buy a house in Costa Rica and invest in that. And she was just like,
that's not smart. And that, you know, and she'll just tell me when she thinks something isn't
realistic. And, like, she's writing on my parade. Like, I can't have nice things or I can't have,
you know what I mean? Or when I do it, it's like an act of rebellion almost. Talk more about that.
we're the opposite like my mom and me right like she had I love her so much but we are different like we I guess I'll come back to this like I had a $60,000 wedding her wedding she wanted to have as cheap as possible she will get her wedding ring off Amazon I got you know both of us like between us I got a how much were our wedding rings I don't even remember that's Mike 10 grand but for both of yeah so yeah she's
wouldn't even dream of doing something like that, you know. And so when I do things like that,
I think she's kind of like, oh, you're bougie. I don't know where you get that from. But at the same
time, I think there is a slight bit of disappointment. What is your reaction when she says that?
Well, I want to be, I want to defend it. I think part of me just wants to be like, it's, you know,
like, I'm allowed to want to be cute and I'm allowed to want to have a nice wedding. I'm allowed to have my
values and you're allowed to have your values and they don't have to be the same thing.
And neither of us is right.
Mike, I'd love to ask about how you grew up with money.
What do you remember your family saying about money when you were young?
What I learned about money in the beginning, how I grew up is I got everything I wanted.
I really did.
I was in middle class family.
I remember one year I got like a drum set and a PlayStation for Christmas or a Nintendo 64 or something.
that but that's just a lot for a kid um I was the youngest of three I have two
sisters and I truly was the youngest one I just got everything I wanted from what I can
remember so when it came to like financial lessons I just learned that I should be
able to get what I want my dad provided he we were a one income household my mom stayed
at home.
And my dad was
working a lot.
And, you know,
I was too young to really understand
the dynamic,
but the parents got the board worst.
And then,
you know,
my dad,
his business didn't work out
that was providing so well for us.
But I still felt like I got what I wanted.
You know,
emotionally it was kind of a world win,
but in terms of financially,
I always felt like,
you know,
I played lacrosse,
a very expensive sport,
got all my gear,
went in all the trips.
and I was in private school for six years.
Yeah, I just seemed like I got what I wanted.
And then when I got my first credit card,
it turns out there's fees associated with that.
I remember I bought, like, nothing fancy,
but like $2,500 worth of watches
because I just wanted it because I had a credit card.
And then I remember,
going into debt, six more, just not, almost not being able to pay my rent. And my rent was like
500 bucks at the time. And I went and pawned all these watches that I spent $2,500 on, and they
gave me like $200. And so that was my first lesson with credit card debt. What was the lesson?
That's, yeah, I think I'm just lying around my teeth because I didn't really learn anything,
because I got in a credit card debt way after that. But the lesson should have been, you know,
live within your means. But I didn't take that way.
been in credit card debt?
Since I was 20.
That's 14 years ago.
Yeah.
I think it's been twice where I've had over $20,000 with a credit card debt,
but I was able to get out of it.
Being responsible, being paying off,
allocating everything to just credit card debt.
And I was working a 60,000-year job,
and I got out of it in a year.
And, you know, after...
Noel and I's wedding, we, you know, we were in 40, but we were able to get out of that with
my income plus the windfall we got, which is...
It all just feels a little frantic to me.
It is.
Like, it's been frantic for decades, you know?
Yes.
Getting a credit card, going to buy a bunch of watches, pawning them, debt, pay it off, do
this, make this income, pay it off.
That's not how I think about my money.
And that's not how I want anybody to think about their money.
I actually want them to be calm and cool.
And sure, get a nice thing, get a couple nice things depending on your abilities and what you love, but calm and cool.
Simple.
Not rushing around and making one-off decisions.
Question for both of you, how do you think your experience is growing up with money show up in this relationship?
So I've very much treated the money that I've made as mine.
And I've really, I've really never, as much as I've told her, as much as I've, you know, said, you can get whatever, I've never subconsciously, truly like I've never considered it our money before.
That's honest.
All right.
Thank you very much.
Noel?
Money is scary, I think is what I learned.
So I avoided a lot of responsibility.
I think it was very stressful for my mom.
It was kind of a very serious thing that was maybe better if someone else dealt with it.
And I think, you know, ever since then, I would let other people kind of deal with the financial situation.
And I would be a supporting player.
I do love hearing how people grew up with money.
But if I'm being honest here, I'm not sure Mike and Noel fully understand the connection between their childhood and how they behave with money today.
Here's what I notice.
With Noel, she grew up not having a lot, and everything she talks about screams, I don't want to go back there.
I'll do anything to not go back there.
And that shows up in how she chooses to spend her money on expensive pet food, on upgraded Glade plugins, on Abercrombie.
It's a quiet way of rebelling against that scarcity that she felt when she was young.
And for Mike, who shared that his parents didn't leave him wanting for anything.
expensive game consoles, sports equipment, drum set, that created some compulsive behaviors.
The same behavior that has had him in credit card debt since he was 20, and also has him checking his bank account 20 times a day.
Now, I think candidly the fact is they will eventually earn more money, and quite soon.
But until they create a shared vision, these behaviors are just going to get amplified.
Glade plugins and impulsive credit card purchases will probably escalate to buying expensive card.
and $40,000-dollar-year private school for their kids.
Let's keep going to see what we can do here.
What will life look like when, Noel, when you start earning money?
How's that going to change the dynamic in the house?
I think it'll free us up hugely when it comes to, like, our savings, our investments.
Obviously, right now you saw we were spending $80,000 on fixed costs.
That will change.
82%. Yeah.
Yeah, we'll get out of debt pretty quickly.
I'm hoping the timing works out nicely because I'm with kids, you know, working on having that currently.
We've been working on that.
And, you know, hopefully that lines up so that when they are ready to go to school, my income is there to provide for that.
Cool.
So your income is on the way.
When do you start earning an income?
So I'm in my second year of law school.
I've got two more years left.
I love that things are going to change for the positive with an extra $100,000 a year.
I agree.
That's going to be awesome.
But we can't wait two years for that to happen.
There's no way.
So we need to make some changes right now.
I'm going to put the CSP up on screen.
I'm going to ask the two of you to help me figure out what to do.
Our goal is to bring the fixed cost number down to 60% or lower.
you're going to have to make some tough decisions.
The reason for this is that you do not want to have to be a couple making $250,000 a year
and treading water.
In my opinion, this is the time to make a change right now.
Before kids, before the second income comes in, fix this problem, do it aggressively,
and set yourselves up for the rest of your life to be successful.
That's my philosophy.
Are you down?
Yes.
Absolutely.
All right, I'm putting it up on screen. I want you to help me figure out how to get this fixed cost down to 60%. Let's see what you can do. Right now, we're at 85%. Noel, you first. Pick a number. Talk about it.
I could probably get groceries down. It's currently 800. You mentioned it was 1,200. You could get it down to 800. It's 800. It's 800 already. Yeah, I could probably get it down further.
Tell me, what number? I think it's possible to do 600. How do you fill out that, Mike?
pretty confident.
$600 a month for two people.
That's pretty low.
I'm going to put $700 because even I'm like,
yo, this is nuts.
We can't do...
Okay.
700, which means goodbye to those mozzarella balls.
Are you down?
Yeah.
Glade?
We're coming for you in a second, Glade.
I know you're not part of the grocery.
Glade plugins is $16 a month.
That's it.
Okay.
It's on a subscription with Amazon,
so it just automatically comes.
Good subscription for Glade.
This is insanity.
It gets worse and I can't even believe the shit.
I have zero things on subscription.
This is crazy to me.
Will you save 15% if you do it that way?
No, that's not how you think about it.
You know, you save 100% if you simply don't buy them.
True.
What else you want to cut?
All right, Mike, your turn.
I can cut all clothes entirely.
Okay, that's $100 a month.
Is that you?
Yeah.
Okay, great.
Zero.
Done.
We're down to 83%.
Noel.
Okay, so we have pet insurance.
We've been $110
a month on, like, health insurance for our dog.
$110?
No, no, 110.
I think it's like,
Oh, no, no, you're right.
Because I'm just, because it comes out annually
and we've got one coming up in a couple months.
So I have us budgeted as $110 because that's what we need to save each month in
order to afford it in a few months.
Can I point out what's happening here?
Yeah.
You're deep in the weeks.
Okay.
You're looking at individual line items and you're like,
is this worth it?
This comes out every four months.
etc. You are never going to make radical changes starting in the weeds. Never. You could eliminate the
entire pet insurance. You could eliminate your pet. It won't change a thing. I need you looking at these
numbers and I need you to focus with me. What's next? Because of our situation just depends on
how you feel well about the charity. I know that was coming up. I think I feel guilty or afraid.
that really scares me.
I think, like,
because the whole point of it is right,
that, like,
it's about trusting,
it's about trusting that God,
trusting in God.
And I feel like taking away that is,
like, telling God I don't trust him.
And by doing that, I feel like,
yeah.
Like, I'm being self-reliant and greedy,
and I don't know.
It feels wrong.
Is self-reliant and greedy
like correlate it?
Like what if you're just self-reliant but not greedy?
I think self-reliant is still bad.
Why?
I guess just being like
I think you need to understand some of the
the background of like being sober
but like you know
working like 12 steps
like the big thing is like
that I'm
I can't handle things on my own
and like trusting that God
takes care of it if I like
you know
work towards reducing my defects, relying on God being of service. And like handing my money over
is an active like service. Okay. And does the amount matter? Like what if it was 50? I don't think
50 bucks seems a little because then it's not really, I don't know. Can I ask a question? First of all,
let me say, if you choose to keep this, I won't fight you on it. It's your money. And anytime somebody
comes on here and they go, I tithe or I give money, I go, are you sure you want to keep it?
They go, yeah, I go, cool, we'll work around it. We can work around it. Okay. Okay. I think I've
already, I literally went from 10% to 5%. So I've already cut that in half. Yeah, I want to, this is a very
good point because I want you to change something that I've noticed that you do, which is benchmark
against where you were a couple of years ago. Can I just be really candid with you? You were
putting yourself into debt. You were in debt. So that's like someone who spends like a million
dollars a month for a few months and they're like, whoa, I'm only spending $100,000 a month now.
That's not the place to benchmark. You need a benchmark starting at zero. I thought I already
cut it down to the bare minimum and cutting it down further. It feels like cutting off fingers.
Right now you spend $6,000 a year on charity and your income is $156,000. You're in $244,000.
debt. So if you tell me,
Rameet, I want to keep it at this amount,
I will keep it. But if you tell
me, Rameet, I want to give
of myself, I want to give some money,
and I know that right now
we're in a crisis, I can give
$50, and as we make more
money, I want that built in the plan
that we are going to increase it to $100,
to $500, to $1,000, to $1,000,
and eventually we will donate more than we ever would have
donated. We can build that, too.
You tell me.
I have a lot of empathy for how
difficult this decision is for Noel. Her relationship with faith is deeply intertwined with her
sobriety, so to her, tithing is deeper than simply being charitable. It represents something you and I
probably don't appreciate, but the fact is it's also hurting them financially, which is why I am making
sure she knows she has several choices when it comes to tithing. With $244,000 in debt, the fact remains they are
going to have to make some serious changes to how they spend their money and how they relate
to money together. We're going to answer this question about tithing and dig into the rest in
part two next week. We will finish the rest of this conversation and I promise you're going to want
to tune in because I invited them five weeks later to come back and show me the changes they have
made. You will not want to miss it. Next time on money for couples. This was not easy. There was a lot
of fights with money. That was my moping for the first company.
I was just not living in reality.
Kids will go wild if they don't have certain constraints.
Well, guess what, as adults were no different.
Debt for me is already a fire lit.
I can't stand it. It tries me crazy.
It took you a while to get into debt. It's going to take you a while to get out.
The way that I was looking at money before was so childish.
It didn't mean anything to me.
We can't set up a financial system that requires us to be perfect.
Because we would always fail.
Like, if we have kids, are we cool with our kids potentially feeling like fully abandoned and being?
just raised by nannies just so that I can have nice things.
I'm terrified of our old situation not changing.
Make sure you hit subscribe so you don't miss part two of this episode.
