I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 257. "We really want a house - but have $0 in savings"
Episode Date: April 21, 2026Molly and Jason are 45 and 46, living together with a 2-year-old daughter. They earn $142,000 a year combined. They have $0 in savings, $46,000 in debt, and a net worth of just $4,842. They dream of b...uying a house, investing in real estate, and retiring early. But when Ramit opens their Conscious Spending Plan, the picture is stark. Fixed costs at 77%. No savings rate. $25,000 in credit card debt in Molly's name that Jason can't fully account for. And a financial system built entirely on Venmo transfers, separate accounts, and crossed fingers. What Ramit finds underneath the numbers is a relationship where one person is managing everything alone, and the other has quietly checked out. Molly researches, opens accounts, tracks the bills, and covers the overdrafts. Jason works, pays rent, and sends Venmo transfers when asked. Neither of them planned financially before having a baby. Neither of them has seen what a real financial partnership looks like. But something shifts. When Ramit shows them that working together they could reach $1.75 million by retirement, something clicks. They stop explaining why things are the way they are and start talking about what they are going to do. In this episode we uncover: Why two people earning $142,000 a year can have $0 in savings and $46,000 in debt The Venmo money transfer system that has kept them financially disconnected for years What it looks like when one partner manages everything alone while the other disengages How $4,000 in annual subscriptions disappears when nobody is looking at the full picture Why dreaming about real estate investing is the wrong move when your own finances are on fire The moment Jason admits he feels resentful and apathetic about money The plan to sell the truck, wipe the credit card debt, and combine finances for the first time What Ramit means when he says the biggest savings anyone can make is on housing costs The follow-up update from Molly and Jason Chapters: (00:00:00) "We wanna be rich. We have $0 in savings" (00:03:01) Meet Molly and Jason (00:10:00) How often do you talk about money? (00:14:00) Jason completely disengaged (00:19:00) No decisions are ever made (00:30:00) Dreamers who won't save $250 a month (00:34:11) Opening the Conscious Spending Plan (00:40:15) Fixed costs at 77% (00:46:50) Separate accounts, Venmo transfers, no shared vision (00:59:20) "Resentful. And apathetic." (01:03:00) Money psychology and upbringings (01:17:46) "You're gonna sell a truck and pay off debt" (01:41:13) Follow-ups This episode is brought to you by: Gelt | Book a tax consultation with Gelt at https://joingelt.com/ramit. As a member of my community, you can skip the waitlist ZocDoc | Go to https://zocdoc.com/ramit to find and instantly book a top-rated doctor today #sponsored Leesa | Go to https://leesa.com for 20% off select mattresses PLUS get an extra $50 off with promo code RAMIT, exclusive for my listeners Fabric by Gerber Life | Join the thousands of parents who trust Fabric to protect their family. Apply today in just minutes at https://meetfabric.com/ramit MasterClass | For unlimited access to every class and an additional 15% off any annual membership, go to https://masterclass.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 or your partner get stressed spending $150 on dinner, or are covering up spending, I'd like to help. Apply to be coached for free on this podcast at iwt.com/apply
Transcript
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I think we both want to like really make some money.
Like I will teach you to be rich.
Like we want to be rich.
We want to buy our first house.
I'd like to retire early.
I know that sounds crazy once we look at our numbers.
Zero dollars in savings.
And you have a daughter?
We just spend money and then figure it out afterwards.
Do you ever actually go and look into your spending
and find out what happened?
Not very often.
We should make enough money to not be in our position that we're in.
And that's why it's just a confusing web.
I don't even know how to like unravel it.
You spend over $4,000 a year on subscriptions alone.
Right.
I just knew it was bad, but I did not know it that much.
You feel very disconnected on money.
We've been together for three years, and it seems like we just never get ahead.
We're always kind of living paycheck to paycheck.
I feel resentful in the fact that I feel like I'm working really hard all the time so that we have money.
I sometimes look around and like, this is what I wanted.
I got what I wanted, and I'm still unhappy.
How many times have you talked to someone who has big dreams?
They want to retire at 45, they want to buy a 20-acre property,
they want to travel all the time.
But when you look at what they are actually doing to make that dream a reality,
they haven't taken any concrete steps.
We know people like this.
They talk about all the things they want to do,
but often they don't have any idea where last month's paycheck went.
It's like people who talk about all these advanced weightlifting techniques,
but they're not even consistent about getting to the gym three times a lot.
a week. Today's guests, Molly and Jason, are 45 and 46 with a two-year-old daughter. And they have big
dreams. They want to buy a house. They want to invest in multifamily properties, and they want to retire
early. But when you hear what they are actually doing with their money, you're going to realize
it doesn't add up. I'm looking at their conscious spending plan. This shows me a very simple overview
of all their numbers. And if you want help with your own conscious spending plan, you can join
my money coaching program at IWT.com
slash money coaching.
Here are their numbers.
Household income, $142,000 a year.
Savings, zero.
Debt, $46,000.
Net worth, $4,000.
Let me put it in another way.
They make nearly $143,000 a year,
and they have $0 in savings.
They live together.
They have a child together,
but they keep completely separate finances.
In fact, she,
asks for money, he decides and sends it to her. She manages everything alone while overdrafting
to cover bills, and neither of them can explain where his paycheck actually goes each month.
They're stuck in the same cycle month after month, wondering why nothing ever changes.
Now, I have a quick favor to ask. Molly and Jason were brave enough to come on money for couples
and share their story with us. As you listen and you watch, I'm going to ask that you keep your comments,
respectful and constructive. That is the type of community I want for my show. Let's get started now
with Molly and Jason. Molly, you wrote to us in your application, quote, we live paycheck to paycheck,
have virtually no savings, and I'm trying very hard to get us out of this hole. What do you mean by that?
Spent a lot of time researching what we can do to what we need to do, because after having a child in our
40s and looking around reading the room, I was like, we're not doing well. The price of daycare
went up in the fall. And two out of the three months that we, it's since it's gone up, it
overdraws my account. Why? Money's still very tight, but we always paid every month. We've always
been able to pay it. But then, like, it's a little scary every month. It comes out on the first,
so it's like, there's just never enough. And so the excess goes, comes from my credit card.
I got you. A couple of questions about just account structure. Do you two have combined finances or not?
No, they're not combined. I send her money multiple times a month.
What does that look on Molly's face? Molly?
It is combined. Like we spend everything together. We're a unit that spends money,
but the fact that like most of the bills come out of my account, but the money goes into his account
and then he sends me money. Hold on. What in?
the hell. Try that again with me. Most of the utilities and other expenses like medical are all
in Molly's name. They go through her account. I just send her money for most of it and I paid
the rent myself. Questions. How do you send the money? Venmo. Okay. And you two are married,
correct? No. No, we're not married. Not married. You live together? Mm-hmm. Yes. And kids? How many kids?
One. She's two.
Okay. When did money become a source of tension for the two of you?
When I stopped working and had a baby.
And was that when your daughter was born or was it while you were pregnant?
I basically worked up until she was born.
Okay. Because of financial reasons or were you just enjoying work or were there other reasons?
I enjoyed work. It was physically active, which I like. But also I was trying to,
build up an egg, a little nest egg.
Because we didn't really have a plan.
I see. Did you two talk about the financial
part of having a baby?
No.
I don't think we really did.
Molly, why did you laugh when I asked that question?
Because do you think that would be like an important conversation we have
with you have nine months to have it?
But we definitely did not.
Okay.
How did you come up with the system that you have developed
where you have separate accounts?
he transfers money to her, how'd that come about?
I'm the responsible one in the couple that does the, you know, let's open the energy account,
let's open the water bill, let's do all, like, and I'm home, so it makes sense for me to do
that to the admin, if you will.
Got it.
What's the thing about her daycare that comes out of your account?
Explain that one to me.
Again, this is all the things that I have set up.
So I found the daycare, for instance.
I am the one who's communicated with them.
I signed us up.
I'm the one who goes out and, you know,
I got our health insurance signed up for that.
I get all of her stuff.
I pretty much take care of those things in our household.
That's all me.
How would you describe each of your roles with money?
My role with the household money is trying to make,
it all work. It's like almost flying by the seat of my pants.
I guess my role isn't that large at this point. I go to work. I work full time and
basically send as much money as I can above rent. Are you the primary earner?
Yes.
Okay. That's your role then, right? I mean, if we're going to simplify it.
Yeah. So you're the primary earner, but it sounds like you do not track much of the money
or organize or manage most of the money. Would that be fair to
say? Yes. All right. So you make the bulk of the household income and then do you send all of it to
Molly or some of it? Definitely don't send all of it. I send what I think is as much as I can afford to
send. Does it come up when Molly you need Jason to transfer money over and he says, I don't know if I
have that much? A couple times a month. Okay. And then we'll negotiate and maybe change the amount.
How do you decide that?
based on how much is in my bank account.
You're checking, right?
Yes.
Hold on. Explain.
So you get paid what, like every two weeks or four weeks?
I get paid every week.
Every week.
All right.
So what do you do like on Friday?
Do you log into your checking account?
And then how does it work?
Sure.
Yeah, I log into my checking account.
I look at how much money I have.
Yes, that's true, when I get paid.
And at that point, it's always time to send money.
There's always a need for money.
Often he doesn't just send me money.
I have to ask, hey, I need more.
money. We have all these bills coming out at the beginning of the month. And it's just kind of like
literally counting days to being like, when can he get money, that he can then send me money.
And it will take this much time because it's Venmo. And then I have this many days before it's
absolutely late. We get a fine, like a fee. I guess that's what I mean. It's like very much
living in this moment of scrambling. You like it? No. And I don't like, I, I've tried to do
budgeting software, but it's too confusing. I just give up because
I have no idea how much is coming, money is coming in.
I just end up being really like, yeah, confused.
It's too hard to figure out by myself.
And when you ask Jason for help, or do you ask him for help?
I have, yeah.
I've asked him for help, but often when we talk about money
or like even just getting into details,
it never, it's just not fruitful, it doesn't ever flow well.
I admittedly sometimes come in hot.
Sometimes I'm already upset, right?
I'm not preemptively being like,
hey, we're both in a chill mood, let's talk.
You don't do that?
No.
We talked about trying to set that up, but it never happened.
How often do you talk about money?
Once a week, but it's not like a productive way of talking about money.
We just spend money and then figure it out afterwards.
That's true.
How much visibility do each of you have into each other's,
spending and finances.
I have limited into his, but more than he probably does into mine,
because I have access to his account.
And like when I was trying to figure out different budgeting software,
I've gone into his account, but he's never looked at mine.
Right.
Do you care to, Jason?
Honestly, I haven't cared that much.
No, haven't.
Do you ask Molly questions about money?
As far as our day-to-day expenses and monthly,
or just day-to-day life, no.
Do you ask Molly questions at all?
Sometimes.
Not a lot of questions.
Molly?
I don't know why that makes me emotional.
Yeah, it's a lot of me, I feel like, trying to, I guess, be curious about this.
I suspect it's not just this.
Yeah, like, I mean, like I'm in charge of all the things.
thinks. And he's like, trust me with that, but it's like a lot to constantly figure out,
like finding the pediatrician or like even when she was born, like figuring out what she's
going to sleep in or where she sleeps or what she eats or what we do. Like that's all on me for
sure. He works also a lot and he has since day one. So I was, he was home for one week
when we had our daughter. And then I was in the middle of nowhere.
with a newborn.
And then we moved into a new state
and like some things would have been better
with community, but now he's gone even longer.
He's gone like 60 hours a week.
And I've just learned to like deal with it,
but it's, it just feels like
a lot of the responsibility of like our family is on me.
Are you all familiar with this phrase
emotional labor?
Have you heard of this?
Mm-hmm.
A little bit.
When we think of work in America, a lot of times we think of like who's going out to mow the lawn or go to work or things like that.
But there's like a lot of emotional load that is often invisible.
What do you notice about the emotional labor in this household?
Jason?
I think it definitely falls mostly on Molly.
Did the two of you agree on that?
No.
No, I don't think we agreed on that.
It just usually falls to mom.
That's part of the reason that you're crying, Molly, is that.
it doesn't feel fair and it's not fair.
I know it's a lot.
And I feel bad.
I know I can do better.
Why haven't you?
I have offered to and I still would like to and I haven't done enough with that.
I'd like to take over more of the bills to take care of that as well.
But I haven't done anything about that.
Why?
Because I've been, it's not been a focus.
I haven't focused on it and I should.
Jason says he hasn't focused on taking over the bills.
But notice what just happened. Molly described their entire financial system.
Daycare overdrawing her account, Venmo transfers, negotiating amounts, multiple times a month.
She is tracking when bills are due. She's tracking when his paycheck hits, even how long Venmo takes to transfer.
And Jason's response? I haven't focused on it.
That's not very satisfying. In fact, that's not acceptable.
Here's what I'm seeing that they can't see yet.
Jason completely disengaged.
And not just from the money, but from Molly and the family responsibilities,
I think in some ways even from himself.
Meanwhile, Molly has fallen into the trap that is so familiar to many of my guests,
especially women on this show, of carrying the mental load,
of assuming the role of someone who has to ask permission of their partner
and of being okay with a partner who doesn't actually act like a partner.
And I actually hate that.
I hate when people play small with their money, but especially women, because I want all of us to be able to live a rich life.
That is why I spend so much time talking about the taboo topics of money and gender and social class on this show.
I want you to know just because your parents didn't teach you about money, you can still get very educated and live an amazing rich life.
You can redefine how traditional responsibilities and roles go in a family.
Just because one person earns more doesn't mean they have more power.
You can decide what your rich life is.
And that is what brings me back to this couple.
Not only do we see this very common and, in my opinion, dysfunctional dynamic,
but she's not actually good at managing money either.
This is a very common toxic cycle.
One person, the avoider, opts out,
So the other person compensates by controlling everything.
But actually, most of the time, neither one of them is very competent at money.
You cannot live a rich life in this dynamic.
You can't even manage a paycheck.
So if you recognize yourself in this dynamic, whether you are the avoider or the one
who is trying to carry everything on your shoulders, please understand this.
An unequal partnership with money always reflects something much deeper.
This is not just about money.
this is about something way, way deeper.
In fact, the money is simply a symptom of much deeper beliefs.
And today, we are going to find out what those beliefs are.
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Can we go back to a recent time where you remember the last time that you were talking about money?
It was basically in the kitchen and...
Do it as if I'm there just watching. Go ahead.
Okay. So after we pay rent, then what's left?
I just paid the rent. I barely have enough money to get to the next paycheck. I'm not sure where it all went.
but I felt like I was lucky to have rent this month,
which is strange because we had an extra check this month.
Yeah, this was supposed to be a bigger month.
Not only do we have an extra check,
but we had an extra,
we got our deposit back from our last rental.
So this should have been a huge month.
I thought in my mind,
which is crazy that I was like,
oh, we could put a lot, you know,
a certain amount of money towards some of our credit card debt.
Like this would be the month.
Yeah, I kind of,
I did too. I don't know what happened. I'm not sure. You just have no idea. Not really. I mean,
the money just kind of went. I don't know what happened to it. I mean, you can look at your account.
Right. Yeah. And you can see. I will look at it. I'll check it out. I'll see.
I'm pretty sure it's no different than any other month, which doesn't help, but I don't know what
happened to it. Okay. So what happened in that conversation? If you
both zoom up and you almost look at the two of you as players, how would you assess what just
happened in that conversation? Molly? What happened and what happens a lot is I just, I get really
mad. I kind of give up halfway through the conversation because I already know that I'm not
going to get any clarity. And he just gets mad because I'm
feel like he thinks I'm pestering him about something that is trivial.
Somewhere in him, he knows it's not trivial.
But the fact, like, I'm questioning him and that he knows I don't trust him,
he gets then defensive and mad.
I go into, like, a fugue state almost,
but I'm just like, this is pointless.
Yeah, like he can't do what I need him to do.
All right, Jason, what about you?
If you zoom up, how would you assess that conversation?
What happened?
I think, like many of these conversations,
just put me in a defensive state of mind,
and I just kind of shut down.
I'm like, well, it is what it is.
The money is not there.
I don't know what else to say about it.
They got spent on something.
And I think part of it is being caught off guard
with something I wasn't prepared for.
I'm not always, I'll admit,
I'm not always in the mood to talk about money.
So I think, because it never seems to go anywhere,
that is a very typical cycle of how the conversation goes,
typical example.
She'll bring it up.
You'll be defensive and then it will dwindle off.
In other words, no decisions are made.
You just spin and then it comes up two, three, six weeks later again.
Right.
That happens quite often.
Does that feel good?
Seems frustrating.
Very frustrating.
Yeah.
I feel like it's a big part of why, for whatever reason, our finances, like we should make enough money to not be in our position that we're in.
and that's why it's just a confusing web.
I don't even know how to like unravel it.
Jason, do you ever actually go and look into your spending and find out what happened?
Not very often.
Downloaded Rocket Money and added that to my account.
And where did the money go?
There's still a lot of spending that's unaccounted for.
So I need to dig deeper.
A lot of average daily spending.
Hold on.
That doesn't work on me.
If you downloaded Rocket Money, which is a great tool, then it shows you.
you line by line where the money went. So where'd the money go? Daily spending, whether it was groceries
eating out. Definitely subscriptions. Can we just look at Rocket Money? Do you have it? I have it on my phone.
I suppose I could. Pull it up. He has, which he didn't mention. He says a lot of it goes to subscriptions,
but he has like double subscriptions. All right. What do you got, Jason? I do. I do have some doubles.
So for subscriptions, I have, let's see, one, two, three, four, about 12, no, 14 subscriptions.
How much is the total?
4368 per year for 18 subscriptions?
4,000?
4,368 per year for 18 subscriptions.
I just knew it was bad, but I did not know it that much.
not even close.
Okay. And Jason, did you know?
No. No, I did not.
So far, we know that you spend over $4,000 a year on subscriptions alone.
Right.
What does that tell you?
Seems like I could cut that amount, but I could, I would hope.
How would you describe your familiarity with your own spending, Jason?
Not great. I think I could be a lot more familiar with it.
All right. And Molly, how would you describe your familiarity with your own spending?
I mean, I guess I know pretty much what I'm spending, yes.
Okay.
So good.
All right.
I'm about concise answer for you.
You wrote something that caught my eye, quote, I don't fully trust him about how and where he's spending money because he hasn't been super forthcoming in the past about investing in the stock market.
Can you tell me more about that?
I knew he was using Robin Hood and doing, you know, day trading or options and things that I'm not super familiar with, to be honest.
I didn't know how much money he was funneling into that because that's just not how our accounts work.
How much money are we talking about?
I don't know.
It was 100 times 200 a week.
200 a week, so 800 a month.
Yes, that's right.
I just wanted to make sure, yeah.
And I didn't know that.
Jason, what was going on with these investments?
So what Molly is referring to with the automated withdrawals,
that was just a long-term investment account.
I wasn't actually doing any of my own option trading or anything like that.
What was the options trading about?
So the options trading was on a different platform.
And I had a friend that was actually very successful last year.
So I started getting some tips from him.
and I put a little money here and there.
I started with probably $500,
and I think I only ended up adding another $1,000 on top of that.
Either way, not as successful as him.
Still had a lot to learn, so kind of up and down.
Did you loop Molly into what you were doing?
As far as the options, I didn't explain it a whole lot.
As far as the money I put in there, I probably wasn't that specific.
Why?
Not how much.
I guess I probably thought I was going to do better than I did.
And so I expected to have better news.
Can I ask you guys a question?
Like just in just speaking to you just for a little bit so far,
you feel very disconnected on money.
Oh, yeah.
Extremely disconnected.
On each other or from money?
Both.
Yeah.
We were having a conversation about this a little bit the other day.
And we were talking about how we went
from being two single people in our 40s, three years ago, to basically married with children.
And both of us have traveled a lot when we were younger and just kind of lived a single life.
And I feel like I'm still spending money that way.
And I haven't, you know, haven't been able to switch gears in the way that I should.
Basically living as if we're single.
And I think that's part of the problem.
Yeah.
I feel like in some ways, like the way I think about like our finances together is.
like it just feels like a disaster and I just like every time I like put a lot of energy into
figuring it out or unraveling it. It just seems like it goes nowhere and I just like don't,
then I just kind of get, I just like tune it out or something. I don't know. That's actually
very common. That's very common. All of us, me included, we like to pay attention to stuff
where we feel competent, where we feel good.
And so for some people that's parenting or cooking or fitness or money or even cleaning the
house.
But conversely, we don't like to spend time on stuff where we feel incompetent, where we feel
out of control.
Yeah.
Honestly, if there's something in your life that you avoid because you're just like, I don't
like this.
And it's like I don't like using pledge on this wood table.
Who cares?
Right? It's not going to hurt anybody to a large extent. But relationships and money and safety for the family, those are things that are actually important. So avoiding them, it's going to get you one way or another, whether it's today or tomorrow. Right. Molly, you also wrote in your application, quote, we have similar goals, but for some reason when we talk about our present money issues, there's hurt and frustration.
What are the similar goals that you both...
We don't want to be poor.
Are you poor?
No, no.
But we are probably pretty low middle class.
I feel paycheck to paycheck is borderline.
We're probably pretty poor, I guess.
We don't want to just be like a little bit over living paycheck to paycheck.
I think we both want to like really make some money.
Like I will teach you to be rich.
Like we want to be rich.
Absolutely.
We like to be well.
I would like to be well off. I'd like to be successful.
Okay.
Like to actually retire early. I know that sounds crazy once we look at our numbers.
At least to me, it seems like a, you know, long hill to climb.
But, yeah, I would like to figure out ways to make good money and, you know, just be a lot better off than we are now.
Okay. Molly, you agree or see things differently?
Yeah. We want to travel.
We want to spend time with our daughter.
And we want to, we have a similar goal in like how we want to get there with real estate and stuff like that.
Like we have a shared vision on what that looks like, I guess, but not on how to get there.
We have a shared vision of like, what would be great.
And I think on how we get there, there's similarities.
But like, it's like, but the literal brass tax of.
of the daily work it takes to get to even next year is where we, like maybe next year we have a similar goal we want to buy our first house.
But how to get that is where things I think are different.
What we would want to do first, we'd be looking at multifamily units that need to be remodeled,
some sort of state of disrepair that's not too far gone where it would make sense to make improvements.
eventually resell or rent. Okay. And like have you, where are you on this process? Have you run numbers? Have
you purchased a property? Where are you on that? Basically, we're at the like, this, I mean, the kind of
research stage, I've looked into different ways of like how we would get a loan, like FHA, 203K.
I'm kind of like, that's been my fun project to research. Is that a goal?
Or is that just something that one day you'd like to have?
Sounds like a dream.
I guess it hasn't moved from dream to goal yet, to be honest.
I kind of like the way you put that, Molly, that's a good way to put it.
We've talked about starting with some sort of real estate investment, maybe next year.
But as far as actually putting any kind of plan together, very little.
And what does that feel like?
it feels like we're not going anywhere.
I mean, we're just still stuck in the same place.
Yeah, I keep having this thought where it's like free beer tomorrow.
It's just like always tomorrow.
It's always next year.
The goalpost is always moving, I guess, if there ever was one.
This reminds me of an email I sent out to my readers years ago.
It's one of the favorite responses I've ever gotten.
I asked the question to my email list,
what is something you claim you want to do,
but you actually don't do it?
And one woman wrote back saying,
I claim I want to run three times a week, but I don't.
So I replied to her.
I talked to a lot of people on my email newsletter,
and I said, why don't she just go for a run once a week?
And she wrote back, basically incredulous.
She's like, why would I go for a run once a week?
That doesn't do anything.
And I thought, what a perfect example of human behavior.
She would rather dream about running three times a week
then actually go for a run once a week.
How many of us do the exact same thing
in different parts of life?
We would rather dream about living this multi-millionaire life
rather than actually read,
I will teach you to be rich and money for couples
and take control of our money.
That's Jason and Molly.
They would rather dream about real estate investing
rather than save $250 a month.
They'd rather talk about retiring early
then figuring out where Jason's last paycheck actually went last month.
I like dreams.
I encourage people to dream bigger.
I want them to tell me what they really want.
But I always go one step further.
I want a plan to reach those dreams.
Without a plan, you're just fantasizing.
That's not my job.
This isn't the Ramit Sati fantasy show.
My job is to help you engineer a rich life.
And that's what I'm doing with my own life.
I'm here to engineer a rich life while I'm alive.
If you want to go to Japan, tell me when.
Tell me where you're going to stay.
Tell me what you're going to do, how much it's going to cost,
and how you are going to set that money aside.
Fantasy is something that feels good to think about.
But a plan makes it a reality.
Children fantasize.
Adults plan.
If you want to learn the skill of turning your dream into a reality,
you don't have to do it alone.
You can join my money coaching program.
I will show you exactly how.
This is one of the most valuable skills you will ever develop.
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And now let's look at their numbers.
All right, let's take a look at the numbers here.
I'm going to throw them up on screen.
Let's go with Molly first.
Molly, can you read the word in bold
and the number in full next to it
for this entire box, please?
Sure. Assets, $28,000,
investments, $23,482,
saving zero, debt, $46,640,
total net worth 4,842.
What do you think about those numbers?
I was mainly focused on that debt number.
I don't like that number.
You don't like it, okay.
Way higher than I realized, and it seems like a lot.
What did you think it was?
I thought it was closer to roughly,
and this is mostly guessing,
because I haven't really looked at a lot of numbers,
about 18.
I knew that.
You were going to say that.
18.
So it's more than double what you thought.
Quite a bit higher.
Yeah.
I think we should mention here, too, like, part of my problem is that, like, I had better credit.
And, like, so both of our vehicles ended up being in our name, in my name.
Like, in my credit cards that we have, I use that I've used for our family for big purchases or big things is all in my name.
So, like, a lot of the big debt, it's all in my name.
So that's why I'm aware of that.
You're aware of that?
That's why I'm aware of the numbers more than he is.
the amount of debt.
The amount of debt we have.
It sounds like Jason has bad credit,
so Molly took on all the debt,
and now the debt is in her name.
Yeah.
And by the way,
all the emotional labor
and having to manage it
is all in Molly's name,
and Jason's like,
cool, I get a vehicle
and I don't really have to worry about it.
I agree.
I don't think it's fair.
Yeah, it doesn't feel fair.
And it's probably why I am angry.
Tell me more about that.
Well, I just feel like I've had to process.
I feel like a lot of my resentment and anger alone because I don't want to be that person
and I don't want to be that for our daughter.
But I am.
I'm just kind of mad.
I'm just feeling it would be great if like one of these big things was not on me.
But I also don't know if I can, it's never, he's never stepped up to like change it.
I would have to be the one to get him to change.
You know, like, okay, now you're going to do this.
Like, it's still me guiding him through it, I guess.
Maybe, maybe not.
Maybe not.
Maybe there's other ways.
Maybe.
But I think we can all sense your resentment.
Jason, I can sense your detachment from this.
It's kind of like, I'm not connected to the money.
I send over money once in a while.
Can't send over what she wants.
So I negotiate.
But, like, she deals with it.
and like I should probably be better, but like, I'll do better.
I'll try to do better.
That's essentially the conversation so far.
Would you both agree or disagree?
No, I agree.
Yeah, I agree.
Guess what it's been.
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Jason, can you read off the combined gross monthly income, please?
Gross monthly income combined is 11,900.
What do you both do for a living, Jason?
I am a project manager slash site superintendent for a residential construction company.
Okay. And Molly?
I work remotely doing HR benefits. And then I work for my friends Deli on the weekends,
just and then I stay home with our daughter.
Got it. The HR role, is that part-time?
Yep. It's remote part-time.
Cool. All right. Combined on an annual basis, the two of you as a household make one
$142,800.
What do you all think about that household income?
I think it, considering where we live, it's average.
What part of the country do you live in?
We live in like Tahoe area.
Yeah.
Oh.
All right.
But not on the expensive side.
But not up on the mountain.
Can I go out on a limb and just guess that you all make a lot more than the median salary in your area?
Would that be fair to say?
I bet we do.
Maybe we do.
Okay.
All right.
No, for sure.
So you make 142,000.
What do you think about that number, Molly?
It's like a total that I had never thought I would make personally.
Like, I didn't think that would be attached to me.
Yeah.
What's further confusing is that the two of you don't combine your money.
So we have Jason making $9,500 a month gross, or roughly $120K a year approximately.
And then we have Molly making $2,400, which is considerably different.
thing is every month you can see the dynamic that has been set. Mali has to go to Jason, please transfer
this money, and then what is Jason's role? Look at my account and send what I think I can send.
Like how do you know what you can send? Well, based on what I think I'm going to spend the rest of the
week, which is hard to say. I can't even get a straight answer myself. How do you think Molly feels?
Oh, I know. I don't like it either. I wish I,
need to change. We need to change our setup. You do need to change your setup, but what is happening
here is, Jason, do you believe that you have control over your own behavior? Yes. Oh. So then why do you
say we need to change our setup versus I had changed my own setup last week? That's a good point.
I feel like I could initiate way more than I do. But you don't. Why? Because I feel too tired of the
of the day. I don't take enough time. I'm sure I have a lot of excuses I could say, but
bottom line is, I think you just don't do it because you don't have to. Maybe that's it.
Molly's just going to come beseeching, oh, please, please, please, please, the role of the beggar.
That is the role that has been established. Please, please, please transfer over money for our household.
And then Jason is the decider. He crosses his arms and he says, I can do this much, but not this
much. That's the way it's going to be. That's the roles you've established for yourselves.
rest of the CSP. I'm going to move through it quickly here. Your fixed costs are at 77%. Typically,
that number should be a 50 to 60%. At 77, you can immediately understand why you feel stressed out.
Bottom line, which leaves less for the rest of your money. Let's see where it's going.
Investments, 3%. That explains why you have relatively low investments for your age at a total of $23,000.
Savings at $1% or $125. Well, we know that's not true. I bet you set that up in the last two weeks.
True or false?
Well, that's a fun one is that that actually, it's an automatic transfer, and I always end up spending it.
The reason that you don't have any savings is that you don't save money.
And you have a young daughter.
Yeah.
Okay.
And finally, let's look at guilt-free spending.
25% or $2,200 a month.
Is this number accurate?
I actually had to adjust it because I went back over everything the last three months and, like,
We've had some big months because we moved and for a lot of reasons.
But it does change.
But it was on average of the last three months, probably at least that, yeah.
You all find that when you talk about money, you don't give each other a straight answer.
I don't think we know as much as we should.
I think that's part of the problem.
I think we both operate in a similar way, which is not in like hard, like not in like specific details.
It's a lot of feeling.
A lot of feeling, a lot of guessing.
Guessing.
I think I'm going to spend this much next month.
I'm not sure where the money went.
And on and on and on.
You all know why you are able to do that, right?
Like a couple that's making a third of what you make,
they don't have the luxury in operating the way you are.
They track it.
Right.
They have to know.
They can't be like, oh, I didn't realize I'm spending $4,000 a year on subscriptions.
That's just not an option.
Exactly.
Yeah. So your income, in part, has allowed for you to become sloppy with your financial setup. But that's not all because y'all could make double or triple and it would still be the same dynamic here. The two of you do not talk about money regularly. You certainly don't do it proactively. It's not positive. I want to understand a little bit more about how you were raised, but I'm going to guess that you did not have great financial role models for thinking ahead, planning long term. Okay, Molly's Smy's
indicates that I was right about that. Jason?
Definitely not.
There's no worry about failure.
I don't think that basically, to put it bluntly,
I don't think you felt the pain of actual failure,
like running out of money and not being able to feed your family.
Yeah.
I don't think that's happened.
No. No, you're right.
I would like to just pause for a second.
What are you noticing already in this conversation?
We're not aligned in our finances in the way that we should,
and that we need to spend a lot more time working on them together.
Okay, Molly?
I don't know.
I in some ways feel like more hopeless right now than I did at the beginning.
Tell me more.
I just, I guess I feel like, yeah, like I, we're just so not aligned.
And neither of us, we're both bad at the same things.
Which is?
Which is being, I think, responsible.
in when it comes to our finances,
being responsible when it comes to having boundaries
and making sacrifices and like just,
we could have gotten ourselves out of this situation much sooner,
but neither of us did.
And almost combined were like even worse.
When Molly said she felt hopeless looking at their numbers,
notice what I did not do.
I did not try to make her feel better.
The truth is that they've dug themselves into a really serious,
financial situation. And I don't think that either of them have truly suffered as a result of that.
Let's take a look at the facts. Jason thought their debt was 18,000. It's 34,000. He was off by basically
half. All of that debt sits in Molly's name because he has poor credit. He's spending $4,000 a
year on subscriptions he didn't know about. And he was secretly day trading, hoping to surprise her
with gains that never came. This is not acceptable. They don't need.
someone to tell them it's going to be okay. They actually need the gift of consequences.
Remember, in life, suffering is not always something to be avoided. Any Asian or Indian person here
is like, yeah, what are you talking about? Life is suffering. That's why I suffered studying so hard
in high school. I was telling my nephews the other day, I took him on a college tour at Stanford,
and they are in the midst of SAT prep, and we were talking about it, how's it going? And, you know,
I asked him and they have it tougher than I did because they have the allure of these addictive phones.
I did not have that back then. But one thing I shared with them was I worked really hard on my SATs.
I took it multiple times. I took a class. I really studied. And when I think back to all the work
that I put in, it was hard. But I don't remember all those hours. What I do remember is getting a good
score, getting into Stanford, meeting friends who have become lifelong friends, getting these
amazing career opportunities, and all of the things that came with working hard. Did I suffer
studying for the SAT? Yeah, it was hard. Did I suffer getting really good grades? Yeah,
it was really hard. But sometimes suffering is not something to be avoided. It's actually something
to be embraced. Do you know why Molly and Jason have not
embraced suffering. Do you know why they haven't even faced consequences? Because their income of
$142,800 a year has actually enabled this dysfunction. They make enough that they've never
really felt true financial pain, so they've never really been forced to change. As I always say,
if you still have a roof over your head, an internet and your phone, most people think,
it's fine. That's why they operate in vague feelings. Like, I think I spent this much. I'm not sure
where it went because they can afford to stay sloppy. A couple making a third of what they make
does not have that luxury. They have to track every dollar. But Molly and Jason do not. In fact,
they're living like two single people who happen to have a baby together. Separate accounts,
Venmo transfers, no shared vision. Deep down, I think they know this isn't sustainable. And that is
why they dream rather than plan. Now we need to find out if they are willing to do something about it.
I will say that the good news is any couple can change their dynamic.
Any couple can.
I've seen it happen in a lot of places.
Molly, I actually don't mind that you feel even more hopeless now.
I don't mind it.
And that's why I'm asking you to tell me a little bit more.
I want to hear you understanding the depths of the challenge here.
Like, there's no easy math fix where I go abracadabra and everything goes to the
way it should be. Do you get that? Yeah, I think realities has been setting in. Okay. There is no magic
want. Good. That's great. That's actually the key lesson of life. There is no magic wand. It actually
takes a lot of work and sustained consistency. Would you say that the two of you are good or bad at sustained
consistency, realism holding each other accountable? Good or bad? Bad. Bad. I could work
with that. Okay. I can work with a couple that is honest about their shortcomings and open to making
radical change. Actually, one of my favorite things to do. Okay, good. I looked at your housing costs.
Your mortgage, $2,000, utilities $425, which is a percentage of 20.2% of gross. That's not bad.
We actually recently, we moved in September to a lower rent. It's rent. It's not mortgage.
we actually moved to lower our rent.
Great, really?
Yeah.
Yes, we did.
You specifically said, we got to get a lower rent,
so let's move to a smaller or less desirable place.
And we were talking about that for several months before.
I'm pleasantly surprised.
How did you decide to do that?
Most couples don't.
I think it's probably because it's the biggest glaring number
that faces us for our expenses.
Truthfully, the biggest savings that anybody can have
is reducing their housing costs.
It's also the hardest one because moving, whether you're renting or certainly owning,
is a big challenge.
It's uprooting everything.
Sometimes there's kids involved with school districts and on, I don't know, no.
Though almost nobody does it.
So I'm pleasantly surprised because it tells me you can do hard things.
It's actually giving me more confidence about your ability to change as a couple.
Great.
All right.
You have debt.
I want to understand this debt.
you have $46,640 of debt.
What kind of debt is that?
Let's see.
21 of that is two vehicles.
What's the interest rate?
The interest rate on the truck.
I don't, oh, I think it's like 4%.
I actually don't know that one.
Fine.
And what's the other?
The van is like seven.
Okay.
All right.
What else?
The rest of it is credit card debt.
$25,000 of credit card debt.
Why?
Great question.
First one was moving across the country.
Yeah.
Then we bought some furniture.
I mean, we did have to res—
When we moved, we did have to buy some stuff because we got rid of so much,
and we didn't want to, like, move it across the country.
So getting reestablished, I guess, cost money.
But then a lot of it was, like, unexpected bills.
Like, we had to get a new transmission.
In our vehicle, we had to get tires.
we've had dog teeth pulled.
And then a lot of like, you know,
I have spent money on my credit card
to cover like daycare costs.
What?
Why?
Because it's like it would withdraw for my account
and then it just goes to my credit card
if there wasn't enough in there.
What the fuck?
Why not get Jason to transfer the $9,500 per month
gross income that he makes. Great question. It just doesn't. I've told him before we've had this
conversation, Jason and I, where I'm like, just transfer the money to me regardless when you get it.
I'll pay the rent. I'll do it all. And he's like, we should do that. We should. And then that's it.
That is a great question. I want to be able to transfer more. And I need to spend more time figuring
where all the money is going. I know I can do better day-to-day spending.
but the money is not always there.
There's a lot of food spending.
How much?
I might spend as much as 20, 25 per day.
All right.
So it's a lot of money.
That's where some of it's going.
Not all of it,
because you make $6,950 a month net.
All right.
Your debt payments are $1,375 a month.
And did you tell me that's a minimum?
Probably should be.
I think we should.
Why can I get a straight answer?
Well, because I don't know what he spends.
What he spends.
Then Molly, why are you answering for him?
I don't know.
You've done this several times.
Hold on.
When I ask about the debt, you answer for him.
When I ask about the vehicles, you answer for him.
Why is it that you feel that you are taking on so much emotional load?
But when I ask questions, you are the first one to answer it.
Because I feel like he doesn't know.
Well, why don't you let him try, let him fail?
what's the worst that would happen?
You're right.
And in how many other places of your relationship
have you stepped up to save the day
because you're afraid he doesn't know the answer?
A lot.
Do you see that you are perpetuating the very dynamic
that has caused you to be stuck as we are talking?
You guys know it's okay to say, I don't know?
Maybe not.
I guess not.
I guess not.
Yeah, that's an honest answer.
Yeah.
I actually find that the smartest people I know
are very comfortable saying, I don't know.
Think about the dynamic that's happening right now.
You guys came to me because I've written books on money
and I know this stuff.
It's okay that you don't know this.
It's totally okay.
That's why you're here.
Do you see what I meant when I said
that money is just a symptom
of how you feel about yourselves and your relationship?
When Molly keeps answering questions for Jason,
she's actually not helping him.
She's protecting him from having to admit he doesn't know.
And Jason is letting her do it.
it because as long as she's the one managing everything, he can wash his hands clean of responsibility.
She manages the money. She answers questions for him. It's not the dollar amount here. That's not
the issue. It is their dynamic. Molly gets to feel competent and in control. In fact, she has this
virtue of I'm protecting Jason. Jason gets to stay disengaged. He gets to avoid discomfort. I don't know.
I haven't thought about it. I don't know. Do you know this dynamic? Have you ever seen this dynamic?
in this dynamic. This is really common. Where do you think they learned it? We're going to find out
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Going back to your childhood,
what do you remember your family saying about money
when you were young?
Very little talk about money.
I had kind of a unique upbringing.
I grew up in essentially what you might call a cult,
a community where a bunch of family lived together,
shared pooled all their money wow uh was a whole farm so had our own livestock massive gardens
fed her own livestock from the farm as well some of the fathers worked in a town nearby and
basically pooled all their money together though just about all of it and uh never really a lot
of talk about money i was always outdoors on the farm never really had to think about it that much until
I was about 15 and then moved away.
I got my first job working for a contractor and started to realize what money was all about.
That was the same year that my dad actually passed away.
At 15?
At 15, yes.
So I never really got to see him in the real world, never got any advice from him as far as how to use my money, what to do with it.
As far as I remember, I think he only ever saved my money.
I don't think he ever invested it.
He just had a savings account, saved whatever he could.
I didn't grow up with a lot, but I never felt like that.
Was this a say you called it a sort of cult?
Was it a religious cult?
It was.
You can look it up on Wikipedia.
What's it called?
It's called the move.
It's all over the world.
It's still in existence?
I guess it is in small pockets.
I don't think it's as big as it once was, but it definitely is around.
Was it normal for people who grew up in this cult to lead?
and to not go back?
I think during my generation,
because it was multi-generational,
it definitely became quite a norm.
Many people my age left and never came back.
Did your mom stay in it?
My mom stayed in it in spirit,
but once my dad passed away,
she wanted to be close to her relatives,
so we moved back to the Midwest from Canada.
Got it.
Yeah, she still very much keeps in contact
with many people from there.
Oh, okay, all right.
Yeah.
understanding that money was not talked about when you were a kid. I get that. How much focus was there on
like thinking ahead, long-term planning? I have a very clear memory of this because I was very surprised.
When we moved down to the Midwest, I was my last year of high school. And I went from a tiny little
private school within our own community to a public school with 460 fellow graduates. And I lived with my aunt and uncle.
because my mother and my two sisters only had enough room in their apartment for them.
My aunt and uncle lived right down the road.
And the very first thing I started doing was you need to go to college.
You need to get all these.
You're very bright.
You can get all these, you know, advanced education classes while you're in high school, blah, blah, blah, start applying.
This is what you need to do.
You're going to do it.
And I got scholarships.
I got a full ride to school college that year, just from that last year of high school,
which I don't know how that happened.
Wow.
What do you take away from that?
It's pretty interesting.
Pretty impressive, too.
I felt pretty good to get a scholarship,
full ride at college.
I honestly, like I said,
I felt pretty good.
I wasn't probably as excited as some people would be
because I just didn't have that in my upbringing.
Do you get excited in general?
Like, excited, physically excited?
Not often.
Yeah.
Do you smile in pictures?
I don't smile often.
Molly, I notice that you're nodding
and you're noticing this, right?
Yeah.
What are you taking away so far?
He gets excited, but not like, yeah, like there's, it would be hard pressed to know that he is.
Jason, why do you think I bring this up?
I think a lot of this financial issues that Molly and I have had brings up talks that never end well.
And I think that by me not showing emotion, I often show that I don't care.
Yes.
and I think that has an emotional weight and effect on her.
I'm jumping in quickly because sometimes when couples are this disconnected,
they need a visual tool to help them identify what they're actually feeling.
So I wanted to try something.
I pulled up this beautiful visual called the Wheel of Emotions.
I learned about this in therapy.
It's a color-coded chart that breaks down feelings into specific categories
that go beyond happy, sad, or angry.
There are hundreds of emotions on this wheel.
You can find it, just search for wheel of emotions.
And I asked each of them to pick two or three words that describe how they feel about money in their relationship.
Let's listen as they go through the exercise.
It's very illuminating.
Can we just do a quick exercise right now?
How do you both feel about money in your relationship?
And be really honest.
How do you feel about money?
You could pick two or three.
Feel free.
Jason.
Embarrassed?
resentful and apathetic. Thank you. Molly? That's interesting. That's really interesting. I have two of the same of yours. Embarrassed, resentful, and then overwhelmed. Wow. I almost picked that one too. Now, I would love for the two of you to discuss what you just learned. I think the resentful one is interesting.
Yeah.
Why do you feel resentful?
I think resentful in the fact that I feel like I'm working really hard all the time so that we have money.
And I feel like I also want to improve in a lot of ways in our financial stability and our financial life together.
So I feel like I'm being attacked sometimes and I resent that.
Hold on.
Now toss the ball back to Molly, Jason.
And what about you?
Where does the resentful come from?
I guess I feel resentful that there was never like a decision made that this is the
roles that we would play.
It was just assumed that because you make more money, this is where you would be.
And that I would be the stay-at-home mom and we're two years, two plus years in,
that I would still just have to take the brunt of if there's no school or if there's she's sick
or like that this,
that it would be just assumed
this is where I would be.
Okay.
Can I ask you guys,
did you think you would end up
in this dynamic
with your money
when you were younger?
I don't think so.
And what's weird is that like
I am,
and I guess it's not weird
because it happens all the time,
but I am like living
my mother's role.
It's just so bizarre.
You don't say.
Tell me,
Let's go back.
What do you remember about your family?
What did they say about money when you were younger?
I had no, I did not even really think about it until my parents got divorced.
I knew we were not as well off as some of my friends because we lived in the neighborhood next to the rich people.
But when we moved out with, I moved in with just my mom and I, that's when I knew we were struggling financially.
And she had to take, because that's why she had to work nights on top of her day job.
Ah, what did she say?
She told me she didn't want to take any money from my dad for alimony,
and that's why she has to get a second job.
Why did she not want to take alimony?
Because she wanted to get divorced.
What do you make of that?
Now, I think that was the first time that she could have control
over something she didn't have control of at all in their relationship.
So her deciding not to take money from him was almost like taking her power back or something.
And when your parents were together, when you were younger, was your dad the primary earner?
And if so, what did your mom do?
Did she work or not?
He was a primary earner, and she was at home with us, but I don't, she went back to work when I was pretty young.
Okay.
Then she remarried, and I had to move out of the state.
Yeah, she ended up marrying someone that is, you know, had a little.
a lot of money in a way of, like, land and he never spent very much. She's very frugal.
What lessons do you take away from her relationship with money? She has a very weird relationship
with money. I don't like it. She told me that with my father, she had no control. And so he said,
don't worry about it while he was, like, racking up debt and kind of ruining his own financial
picture and ours as a family. When she remarried, she kind of took this role on as like not wanting,
she doesn't want to spend too much money. She hides like she like squirrels away money that she can then
like give to us. She doesn't want to tell him, although I don't think he would care. But that's how
she feels about it. Why does she do that? She doesn't want to appear to be like a gold digger,
I guess, if you will.
Or that she's after his money.
He doesn't want to appear to be greedy.
What image do you think you might be trying to uphold as it relates to money?
I think for me, I try to uphold an image of like, we're doing fine.
We're doing okay.
And then you mentioned to me that you said it's ironic that I'm living my mother's life.
What did you mean by that?
I have somehow gotten myself like in this dynamic where I don't know.
where money's coming from and I don't know what's happening. And I just have to be okay with it or
be silently resentful of it. Do you? I probably am like, yeah, I'm maybe not as silent as she was,
but I am resentful of not having control of more of our finances. Do you have a relationship with your
Oh, yeah. No, he's passed away three years ago, four years ago.
I see. Okay. Oh, sorry to hear that. He was in love with Disney World. And we would go almost
every other year. And it was never with money that he had saved up. It was always on the credit
card and he would just go all out. Oh. All out. He would just spend, he loved spending money that
he didn't necessarily have, although I didn't know that at the time. And then did he
rack up credit card debt? Yes, a ton. And that means he kept borrowing against his home,
my childhood home. And then that got foreclosed. And then he had to file for bankruptcy on top of that.
Luckily, he had a pension from, he worked for the government. So that was what kind of saved him in the
end. But he went bankrupt and never really planned for the future. Lived with my brother for the last,
like, eight, 10 years of his life, had dementia.
Yeah. So when he died, I got like a small check from his life insurance, and that was actually
part of our moving costs. But that went into us moving. When you look back at money,
young childhood, until you graduated from college, what are the lessons that you take away from
your experiences? I had a very, like, negative view of money. Like I said, the neighborhood I grew up in
was a little bit more, like, lower class to, like, the really expensive houses were very close
to where we lived. And that's where all my friends lived. So I knew I was not there. And I think I
internalized that into being like, I don't care. I don't care about money. Like, I don't want it.
I know in my 20s that then translated to, like, living very much by the moment.
and living experiences and spending everything I had to go out of the country and then coming back
broke and thinking that I was like winning because I was like, all these people are in the rat
race and I'm like living these experiences, you know, I'm living life. That's very perceptive.
Okay. And did that change at some point? It kind of changed in my mid-30s. It was like kind of when
I started to focus more on my career and kind of saw the writing on the wall. I wanted a family. I wanted to
be more responsible. And that's when that kind of shifted. And I was like,
whew, maybe I should have invested a little more into, you know, not just living for the
moment. You ever go to therapy? I have, yeah. Oh. Like, do you still go? I haven't gone
recently, no. Okay. And it was definitely when I was still single and I didn't have any kids.
What's occurring to you right now?
Actually, I'm thinking about I really wanted to have children, and I didn't see that happening
because I was in my late 30s.
And I remember my therapist being like, you know, be careful what you wish for.
She's like, just getting a partner and a kid isn't mean you're like going to suddenly
be happy.
It's a lot of work and a lot of that sometimes makes people really unhappy.
I sometimes look around and like, this is what I wanted.
I got what I wanted and I'm
and I am still unhappy.
That's quite profound.
I'm appreciating you
letting that moment sit here
for just a second as we
both of us and I think Jason as well
all three of us just grapple with the enormity
of what you just said.
The idea that
we can really set this big intention
we can even make it happen
and as the old saying goes,
wherever you go there you are.
Yeah.
And it's not about having a daughter.
I'm sure she's beautiful.
It's not about being in a relationship,
but it's about like,
am I getting what I wanted and what I needed?
And perhaps even more deeply,
do I even know what I want?
Do I even know what makes me happy?
I don't think I know what would make me happy.
Mm-hmm.
I don't know when there's like the moment when you're like,
And I know this to be true, but like where I'll feel like I can take a breath.
And just kind of like, okay.
It's interesting.
I notice you're crying at that.
Yeah.
Why?
Because I feel like I'm just been holding on really tightly for a while.
And I'm like waiting for the other shoe to drop.
Molly says she got everything she thought she wanted and she is still unhappy.
I appreciate the honesty.
Actually, I think that might be the subtitle for,
the American dream. I got everything I thought I wanted and I'm still unhappy. So I asked Molly
after hearing that if she could tell Jason directly what she needs to him. Listen to her response.
To me, it feels like you think I kind of spend money all willy-nilly. And if I were to get all of the
money, say I was the one that was receiving all of the money that we spent throughout the month
that I would just spend it all. But I don't think you understand.
understand like how hard I try to stay within certain lines. And like, I think you actually spend
a lot of money without consequence. I think you spend a lot more money than you think you do
without any thought to like us as a whole. I need to have control of our finances.
I need to be in charge of it. It's quite interesting, Molly, that you said,
I feel like I've been holding on really tightly, but you also said, I want more control over the money.
How do you reconcile that?
I think I want to have more control because I don't trust him to have some of that.
You know, coming up right now, it's like, and this happens a lot.
I'm thinking, I think about my mom and the way she was with money.
And then my dad just gets a pass.
Oh.
When I think about that dynamic, a lot of, my mom,
mom would get a lot of the brunt of like my bad feelings about that time.
And my dad would just get a path because he wasn't someone I actually looked at as being
responsible.
Make the connection to this relationship, Molly. Go ahead.
God.
Make it.
Say it out loud.
I'm trying to.
It's all coming to be right now.
It's all.
Yeah, I guess I don't expect my partner now to make responsible decisions.
I can't trust him to be responsible with their money
because I've never seen that before.
I guess it's never been modeled
and I don't see it in him now.
Jason, what would you say to Molly
if you knew that she would listen
when it came to money?
Molly, I think if I were to
take over more of the bills
which you talked about,
which I've never done,
I would like you to know
that I would be willing to take that off your plate,
reduce the amount of finances
that you have to control,
and also share actual accounts where you have access to all the income.
I think that would be something that you could trust me with.
Okay.
What do you both think of that, what you just heard from each other?
I think it's a little conflicting views on how to do the money management in our home, like, daily.
I just know in the beginning you said you have everything in your name,
which is a lot of responsibility.
So I feel like I could share that responsibility more.
What I'm hearing on a positive side is that you're both willing to change the way you've set it up.
That part is good.
I think you perhaps are not thinking about the ramifications of some of these things.
Like if one person is in charge of the money and then they get hit by a bus,
the other person has no idea what's going on.
True.
And you have a daughter, so that's not a good position to be in.
You also have zero dollars in savings.
So just to be very blunt, Molly, if you got hit by a bus tomorrow,
what do you think would happen with Jason and your daughter?
There'd be a lot of scrambling for him to figure out, yeah, a lot of passports or who to talk to
about literally all of our debt. And so, yeah, there needs, we're playing, we're each playing,
like, I feel like a really individual role. Like this is, that's how, yeah, I'm realizing. And
it's not like this group decision making or group dynamic when it comes to our finances. We're both
just doing our own thing. Why are you not married out of curiosity? No judgment, just curious.
For me, it was financial to be honest. Really? Yeah. Tell me more.
We had really bad credit and my credit was really good. And when we had talked about like combining
stuff, I was like, and I kind of told him at some point, maybe this was before we had the baby,
but I was like, I don't seem having like a contract together being the best decision for me.
like you're not a good financially speaking it would not make sense for me to do that can i ask a personal
question feel free to not answer this how were you uncomfortable getting married for financial reasons
but you were willing to have a kid together i think i didn't think it was going to happen i didn't think
we were going to get pregnant i would be happy to get married i just never thought of it as a huge
priority i didn't think of anything in regard to financial by the way my credit is a
prove quite significantly since we met. That's good. That's true. On my own, because we don't have
anything combined. But I don't have any other reason and just didn't feel like it was one way or the
other about it. I didn't feel like we needed to. All right. So if this were to happen, if you were to be
able to start to achieve some of these goals, working hand in hand, it would feel great. What's
stopping you from doing that now?
I just, I need his help.
I just don't want to do it all on my own.
Okay.
Jason, what's stopping you from accomplishing what you want?
Not taking the time to make a plan and actually sit down and do it.
I've done some of the things, but I could do a lot more.
What if you don't, Jason?
What if I don't?
Then I feel like we're just going to keep going with the same cycle.
And then what will happen?
Then all of a sudden we're 50 and then all retirement is looming around the quarter.
daughter is going to graduate and we're going to be stuck in the same situation but much of
And then what?
And then we're looking forward to an uncomfortable later life.
Could be any number of things.
Not good.
Like?
Moving in with relatives or not having money for their daughter to go to college
or having no retirement fund.
Not doing any of the other things that we'd really like to do, like travel and actually
have a rich life, you know, an enjoyable lifestyle.
What about for you, Molly?
What if nothing really changes?
To be honest, I just, I don't see how we can, how we would be able to, like, stay together.
It's super harsh to say that, and I don't want that, but I wouldn't be able to live like
this forever.
How long could you go?
Until it felt like there was, like, no hope left.
That sounds terrible.
No, until, I guess, I don't know.
until it really felt like
the partnership is not partnering.
Well, it's not today.
No, it's not today.
And you've tried many, many times to get him involved.
So the partnership is not partnering.
So what else?
I don't know.
I don't know when would be the point of no return.
Okay.
I don't expect an answer to that very difficult question.
but I do think that it is valuable to ask,
what if nothing changes?
And I think that that is worth discussing,
probably more with the therapist.
It's not working because I can see your CSP,
but more importantly, it's not working between the two of you.
You're totally disconnected about money.
Let's talk about where you are today and where you want to go.
When you think about your money situation,
as we've discussed it today,
what part feels like the hardest part to face?
The retirement and savings.
Okay.
Like literally, as far as like numbers go,
we're trying to pay off our debt.
That's our biggest first thing,
which we do have a plan for just to sell our truck.
It's almost paid off.
And I think we could get about $15,000 for it
and then put that all towards our credit card debt.
You're going to sell a truck
and put it towards your high interest debt,
this is the greatest day of my life.
I never hear this.
Never!
I can't believe it.
Well done.
All right.
Now, if the two of you can start to move forward
in things like paying off your debt,
what would that feel like to do it together?
Incredible.
I would feel, yeah, I would think that would be amazing.
Such a, like...
Like I could just feel like the weight off my, I mean, it would just be really great.
Great step.
We have talked about some of that in a way where we up our daughter's staycare to full-time
to where she could, to where Molly could possibly at least get a closer to full-time remote job, perhaps.
Great.
I think that's an option.
What about your work on the family finances, Jason?
I think I would like to take over more of the bills.
I think I could easily help with that.
put them in my name, so I'm the one that has to keep track of them.
I mean, that would be huge.
Molly, what would it take for Jason to regain your trust?
I think it starts with weekly meetings and showing up for that.
Like, picking a day that works for him where he's not too tired because it's true,
he does come home midweek and he's worked a long day and maybe not the best day to do that.
So, like, setting a schedule, sticking to it for the next six weeks would be huge.
And what happens in these meetings?
We can see how we are on paying off our debt.
We can discuss any number of changes we made, such as dropping subscriptions,
what bills we have for that month, just basic things like that, too, even helps, I think.
Just to know what we have months a month.
So we're not always wondering like I am what I have in my account and what I have to spend.
Can I add something to it?
We don't operate on a weekly basis.
That's not how we think about money.
That's too short term. You'll never actually achieve anything consequential if you're thinking on a
weekly basis. Second, you don't think about how much you can afford to send to your partner.
The money goes there first. And then what's left over after hitting all of these other goals is
what you can afford to spend on things like eating out. Total recalibration of the way you think about
money. Right now, lunches and all this other stuff is coming first. It's actually the
opposite. How does that strike you? No, I agree. I think that's the way it needs to be.
All right. I would love to set up a joint account. Yeah? I think that would be the easiest way.
I mean... I agree. But yes, how come it's so easy all of a sudden? How come you haven't already done this?
Tell me the answer to this question because that is the real thing going on here.
I haven't because I haven't felt the urgency or I guess I haven't realized that that's probably the best way to avoid
the constant issues that we have with money when we talk.
Why is it that a guy like me has to come in and tell you this for you to believe it?
I've been used to running my own finances my whole life.
I suppose that's part of it.
And I make money and I put it in my account and then I disperse it and I think it's just been a habit.
And I guess adjusting to family life financially has not, I guess it hasn't been as smooth the transition as I thought it would be.
I had been apathetic.
That's why I picked that word because I know I have been.
And lazy at a lot of ways.
I work hard at work, but I don't take it home as much as I should.
I appreciate that.
That is candid.
That, to me, is the truth.
And Molly, what role do you think you play in this dynamic?
Oh, um.
Hold on.
Are you still, before you answer my question, were you struck by his response?
I, when he said lazy, I was actually surprised he said that because,
I've kind of thought that.
I don't know if I've ever said that.
I've definitely never told him that.
Why?
I think it's scary for me to think that I'm with someone that's lazy.
Wow.
Well, I know.
Y'all are really peeling it back today.
This is honest.
Molly, talk more about that.
It is scary for me to think that I'm with somebody who's lazy.
I think I'm trying to like hold together an image of where I want us to be
or where I think we should be.
And I am not facing the reality of like where we are
and who we are showing up as in this relationship.
Where was it that I heard this word image before?
Who else had an image?
Oh, my mom. Yeah, totally.
Totally.
It's like just ignore what's happening
if it appears to be fine to other people.
Yeah.
I find this to be quite.
startling, quite honest, quite surprising that the two of you have never actually been this honest
with each other before. It's almost like we can be delicate and polite ourselves right into
total disconnection. Yeah. I don't want to operate a relationship on the surface level. I don't.
Not with my wife or my partner. So I find all of these things to be happening here,
but I see you both making progress, step by step, talking about it, using different words than you
used at the beginning of our conversation. That part I like. Yes. All right, I'm going to put
these numbers up up on screen. Your debt payments, $1,375 are considerable. You also have $785 of car payments.
It's doable with your income, but it adds up. You have $1,100 of groceries. Again, it's doable,
but it adds up. What's the vision here? What are you going to try to accomplish? Can we reduce our
fixed costs so we can get an emergency fund?
And some savings.
I would love to do that for a start.
Yeah.
Love it.
And pay off for credit card debt.
Fantastic.
Molly, what do you say?
Yeah, I think the first step I want, I see like I really want to sell the truck and get the credit card debt down.
Love it.
If we sold the truck, then it would be $365 less a month for the car payment.
And less for the insurance.
Yep.
You're down now to 72%.
Good progress.
Well, definitely subscriptions.
I have a couple of doubles that I just found when I looked at it.
Plus, we don't need nearly that many.
Just tell me the number.
Right now, it's $545 a month.
Okay.
I think we're getting...
Go ahead.
No, Jason.
Stop answering for him, Molly.
Sorry.
I could drop it down to 180.
You can drop it to 180.
Okay.
And then what about Molly?
35.
35 bucks?
Yeah, most stuff is in his name.
215.
All right, we're down to 68%.
Not bad. Not bad.
I do have to make an addendum.
Our health insurance is going up.
So the insurance line, it's going to be probably 365.
You're back to 73%.
Looks like we've got to take something else off.
Groceries?
We could go down to 900 for sure.
All right.
900, we're down to 70%.
Still so much.
What are you all thinking so far?
The debt payments is a lot.
Yep.
So let me give you some numbers on your debt payments.
I'm just talking about your credit card debt at $25,000, okay?
If you pay that off at $1,000 a month, it's going to take you 37 months, which is three years,
and you're going to pay $12,000 in interest.
If, on the other hand, you pay off $2,000 a month,
you're going to pay it off in 15 months with $4,700 in interest.
Okay, so you can see that the numbers become quite different.
Now, if you put $15,000.
of that truck sale
towards the credit card debt,
then $2,000
pays it off in five months
with $730 of interest.
What do you notice?
A lot of less interest.
And a lot faster.
A lot faster.
Yeah.
Can I ask you something?
You got anything else
in that garage of yours
that you can sell?
Yeah, a couple things.
Yeah, we have a full garage.
You know what?
70% of the American households
I talk to you have like a bunch
of stuff in their garage that actually could sell for something meaningful.
Yeah.
Is that you?
We do have some things that we've been meaning to sell.
Yes.
This is the easiest thing you can do ever.
Get rid of it.
Okay, great.
The more money you do now, the more you can pay that debt off quickly.
All right.
We got to go to the other stuff on this CSP because it's driving me insane.
Investments are at 3%.
Savings are at essentially zero.
Meanwhile, your guilt-free spending is 25%.
I suspect it's actually higher than that.
What does this tell you?
This is clearly us living in the moment, again, like just how we have always lived.
Yep.
So what do you want to do?
I want to make some sacrifices and really tighten our budget.
And I'm ready to like spend, you know, the next year or so, however long we need to, I guess,
to really like get ourselves into a better spot.
Let's get specific.
I do too.
I'll skip coffee every day and no lunch.
How are you going to eat?
Yeah, I'd have to like probably spend a little more on like lunches stuff for him if I,
if we were to do that.
Yeah.
There would be some change.
We'd probably have to, I think $1,000 would be safer for groceries, like more
realistic.
Mm-hmm.
Just being honest there, yeah.
I appreciate the honesty.
We need it.
And then, you know, we said that you eat out 12 times a week.
Let's just average that because it was like, let's say,
say 20 bucks for lunch, and then coffee is what, like eight bucks?
The ones I get are five, not more than five.
Five.
All right, so we got like 20.
So let's, just for easy math, can we just say an average of 10?
I think it's fair.
All right.
And so that's 120 a week.
So 480 a month.
I don't know.
Are you going to zero?
That feels a bit aggressive.
I don't think you're going to go to zero.
I can definitely go to zero.
I can definitely go to zero on lunches.
I know I can.
I've done that plenty before. I got new a habit recently. I'm 100% sure I can do that. Coffee,
I feel like I'll go off for coffee more occasionally, not all the time. So $240 off your conscious spending plan.
Let's take a look. Oh, that's not going to cut it. Can I show you a different way to do this?
Yeah. What you all need to do is literally pay yourselves first, which means put the amount that you want to save
every month there, start with that. Don't start with like, oh, I got to have coffee. No, if you have
coffee money left over, great. Otherwise, you don't get coffee. Yeah. So how much goes into investments?
The number recommended is 5 to 10%. You're in your 40s and you have very little investments.
You need more than 10%. I'm going to offer the number. 15% it is. That's what happens when you
don't pick a number. Ramit Saiti Pitchie. Okay. Okay. 1100, right on the money. Boom. There you go.
How much you want to do for savings? Five to 10% is recommended. You all need more than that.
10%? Nope, go higher than that. 12%. Oh, we need more than that. Okay, 15%. Good, great. All right, you all have
$135 a month to spend on everything. Now, I don't think that's realistic. Do you? No. No,
maybe not. Actually, until now, I don't even still fully understand where your money is going on a
monthly basis. Do you? Not fully. No. So then why not simply
start over, create a joint account where the bulk of the money, the gross income that
comes in every month is $11,900. The net is $8,650. Why not literally take $8,000 and send it to the
joint account? Each of you can have $300 to do whatever you want with. Go enjoy whatever you
want. But your future is together. $8,000 every month net comes into that joint account and that's
the money you use to decide where it goes. When that money is in one joint account, suddenly it's
going to be very clear where that money is getting spent. I 100% agree. I agree. I think that's the
best. All right. Okay. That's it. That's all we need to do. Just put it in a joint account and we're
golden. Yeah. That's a great start. What's going to happen then?
I hope well yeah thinking about it that way though investment and savings first that makes huge sense to me
and then what we have whatever we have we have I want to add one more bit of good news for you once you
pay off that debt and you pay it off aggressively if you take that $2,000 that you were putting
towards debt and you invest all of it you literally just flip a switch and you send it to your
investment account every single month, you will have not one million, but 1.75 million in 25 years.
That actually starts to be really cool.
Yeah.
That's amazing.
Remember, that 1.75 million does not include any raises that you might get.
It does not include your ability to pay off the debt faster by selling bikes, et cetera, et
et cetera.
It doesn't include any upside.
It also doesn't include any downside, like a layoff, which is why I want you to have a savings.
But do you start to see, it starts to become more comfortable, more achievable if you can operate as a team.
Yes.
What do you think?
Yeah.
I see that.
Yes.
I like that.
Yeah.
I'm looking forward to it.
All right.
I like the reality that you're speaking here.
Yeah.
So let me tell you where there are some holes in your plan, because there are some holes.
Yeah.
And you two are going to need to figure them out together.
Okay. First of all, right now, you still only have $135 a month on discretionary spending. That's simply unsustainable. That is 2%. And from a couple that currently is probably spending more like 30%, that's just impossible for you to achieve. I think you two might be able to realistically achieve 10% if you were totally dialed in as a team. Completely dialed in. That 10% is like, we eat out once a month.
and we basically never go out for coffee or random stuff, everything,
and maybe just maybe we take a very modest vacation once a year.
But like 2%, it's not possible.
So you're going to have to make some adjustments in your CSP.
Okay.
You may have to dial down your investment contributions,
but like that's money you're not going to have later.
So that's a tough one.
You may have to dial down your savings.
I really would not like to see that, but that might have to happen.
or more likely you probably have a bunch of money you're just spending without even thinking about it.
I bet you there's at least two, three hundred bucks a month of random that is just like absorbed into the ether.
Find it, fix it, put it towards your discretionary spending.
Okay.
Next up, just a couple things.
As far as it currently stands, you cannot buy a house.
No time soon.
As far as real estate investing, I don't know where you would get the money.
And taking out a loan, it's all great if it works, but if it does it.
doesn't, then you're really . So would I do that? I know as a GC you have a lot of experience to be
able to do that and save money. I would be extremely cautious about doing that anytime in the near-term
future. I wouldn't even think about it until I had a clear trajectory for my retirement to have enough
until I had at least, at least 12 months of an emergency fund. I'm talking big. That's a lot of money.
And everything was dialed in with the two of you as it relates to money.
So basically I wouldn't think about it for the next five years plus.
Your daughter, you can't afford to pay for her college.
Not now.
And the money you are putting aside for her, whatever that number is,
I would rather have you put that money towards your debt.
She has time.
You two have far less.
She has the opportunity to take out loans or go to a community college or get scholarships.
The two of you have none of those things later in life.
it is possible if you all were to triple your household income, you could do those things, yes.
And you were to get totally dialed in on all the investing and saving and all that stuff.
Yes, you could do it.
But you're in your 40s.
And until not, like, you don't even share accounts.
So I think it's important to start being realistic with what is likely and what is not.
Early retirement, probably not likely.
Could you?
Sure, if everything went right.
But I don't make a life plan based on every single.
thing going perfectly right.
Are you hearing the urgency of what I am sharing with you?
Yes.
Molly, how are you feeling right now?
Bummed.
It's pretty bleak.
That's an interesting word you chose.
Bleak.
Bleak because?
Because I guess I, you know, a lot of our plans to get ourselves in a better situation
kind of feel like they're not going to be possible.
Oh, like the, are you mean the real estate investing one?
I thought that would be a good leverage for us because of our like combined talents.
I just worry now like that's.
And even if it's like a dream we can do in like five years from now, that would be cool.
I just see, I see it as a way to help get us farther along than we can with just, you know,
like you said, if I made $50,000 more a year, that's not going to change things.
Can I make an observation?
Yeah.
So, first of all, I don't mind that you're upset.
I would be upset in your situation as well.
Because this is probably the first time you're hearing somebody just give you some blunt feedback.
Yeah.
First of all, I'm not the ultimate authority with money.
Nobody is.
You too will decide what is right for you.
and if after a few years you go, hey, we actually want to do this real estate investment and we have the skills and we've carefully run the numbers, that's totally up to you. But more importantly, I actually don't consider this bleak.
Bleak is if you don't do anything differently for five years, then your situation is bleak. And I mean it. It gets really bad, really fast. You all still have time.
bleak means you can't ever eat out.
You can still eat out a little bit.
You have to be way more thoughtful about it.
Yeah.
My family growing up once every six weeks or so with a coupon,
I wouldn't call it bleak.
It was a big deal for us to go out to pizza.
So that's not bleak.
You two are going to end up with at least $1.75 million if you are totally dialed in,
possibly more.
And one other thing, if you actually do increase your,
income by $50,000, Molly, after getting all of this stuff dialed in, that makes a massive
difference to the overall financial picture, like gargantuan.
Okay.
That could actually allow things like real estate investing, et cetera.
So don't discount that.
But right now, if you were to do it today, it would be largely meaningless.
Okay.
Fix this.
Fix what is happening.
It's almost like there's a fire in your house.
and you two are focused on building a deck.
F*** the deck.
Put the fire out.
We'll deal with that later.
That is my approach.
Okay.
All right?
Yes.
I love that approach.
Jason, what about you?
How are you feeling hearing this?
I love the idea of getting a combined account and savings and investment first.
I love that whole plan.
I think it's hugely helpful just to my thought process.
It's kind of like a puzzle that we both like puzzles and we have to
figured out together. Totally. We have this much. We know that we have to prioritize paying off the
high interest debt because it's drowning us. So we already have this much taken away every single
month for the next roughly six months. What else can we do now? And then what can we change on
month seven? It's like a puzzle. It's a three-dimensional puzzle. I love the way you describe that.
Can I say one thing? Yeah. I that just thought about it was like if we like our powers combined,
if we're both motivated and working on this together,
like that's where I can just,
it's like I just know that we could get some momentum
that would make us both feel really excited
and want to like, to see the fruit of that labor.
I know we would, like our powers combined.
That's what I think is.
Like we could make some real change
and like real awesome things happen.
I agree. I agree. Do you agree? Jason?
I agree. I definitely agree.
Amazing. The two of you working together?
I would love what they would
I would love it.
I asked Molly
how long she could keep living like this.
She couldn't answer.
She is finally seeing
what we have been seeing
this entire conversation.
Jason's disengagement
goes beyond money.
It's about everything.
And her response,
which is to take on the debt
in her name,
to try more and more
to stack on responsibilities
on our shoulders
and manage everything alone,
simply perpetuates this. But I also noticed that Jason called himself lazy. And that was quite interesting.
On one hand, I appreciate the candor. On another hand, people who are not behaving as good partners
often employ this strategy of admitting something as a way to cleanse themselves of responsibility.
If I can be really blunt, I'm not interested in you admitting you're lazy. I'm interested in what you do about it.
Molly admits she doesn't trust Jason to be responsible with money because she's never seen it modeled,
not in her dad, not in her partners. That's a brutal realization. Neither of them knows how to be
responsible with money. They didn't have role models who could teach them. Okay, fine. I hear that.
If you have never seen what it looks like to be a responsible, loving partner, then it's unlikely
you just trip and fall your way into it. But you've got to be able to learn. There is an infinite
amount of cheap and free information online. There's resources everywhere. They had a chance to talk to
me. Now it's up to them. I will say they moved to a cheaper rent without me telling them to.
They already have a plan to sell the truck and pay off debt. And when I showed them, it's possible
to have $1.75 million if they work together. Maybe they saw the possibilities. Do you think they can do it?
I actually have their follow-ups for you right now. Hi. Hi. Hi.
Hope you're all well.
I think we had a couple day emotional hangover after the...
Yeah, there was a little bit.
It was good.
It was great.
It was a lot.
My biggest surprise from the conversation, I think, was how in-depth we got about our personal relationship.
Yeah.
Versus just talking about money.
Yeah.
And I think that was really important and really eye-opening and very helpful in a lot of ways.
I also brought up a lot of things that I wasn't aware of just not even money related.
But I think it was good.
That was probably my biggest surprise too, is like I didn't expect us to be so vulnerable
and honest about kind of bigger picture stuff that money is a little bit of a reflection of
things than our relationship.
So yeah, I would agree.
The biggest takeaways for me were, I guess, just.
like how urgent it is to start saving. I mean, I knew, I know that. I knew that cerebrally,
but I think just the talking about the conversation about a retirement and like it just made
things very real and having numbers of like what if we want to get to this certain target for
retirement, like how much we need to save each month. I think that was a real big takeaway for me and
like just made it very real.
I guess also the reality of the fact that we need to really stick to that for a while
and not necessarily buy a house.
Yeah.
You know, and just really tighten air expenses.
Stick to what we learned in the, you know, during the interview.
Like I make sense now.
I've been thinking about it.
It's like we just have to get this right for a while and like automate the way our
finances work in the way our savings and our bills and all that stuff like get that just so dialed
that it will make sense it will start i feel like we'll be able to come up for air and be like oh
this is this is what this feels like when you're not just in like survival mode right i think we definitely
want to open a joint bank account yeah all all our money through there first so we can easily
you know yeah see everything together to elaborate too much
on that. That and today's Sunday, so we're doing our first meeting after this video. We're
going to do our first financial meeting. We're going to do it on Sundays when our daughter is
napping and talk about this stuff and then moving forward into the week, you know, take what we've
talked about into the week, which I think will be super helpful. I wanted to give a little update
since we recorded. We've had some steps forward. We've had some setbacks.
But overall, I feel we have a lot of forward momentum in our financial life together.
The biggest change isn't even really about the numbers, but how we talk about money.
And we can have a talk about our finances without feeling judged or getting defensive
or honestly just avoiding it all together.
And that has been a huge shift for us and has changed our relationship completely.
I did lose my job at the beginning of the year, which was a setback, but weirdly it actually
shook us out of a cycle that wasn't working anyways. And I did find a new job recently where I'm
making more money, so that has felt like a big win. We have been holding regular money meetings,
not perfectly but consistently enough to matter. We're selling the truck soon, which is going
to pay off a huge chunk of debt and credit card debt specifically, and then with the goal of
being completely out of credit card debt by June, which is massive for us. I've also took all of my
old retirement accounts from past employers and rolled it over into a new account. So it's not
just sitting idly anymore. We've created new benchmarks for savings for retirement, which was a huge thing.
So that has felt really incredibly relieving.
But more than anything, most importantly, we have a plan now.
And that alone has felt so huge and honestly life-changing.
We're both just so incredibly grateful to Rameet to this experience and to the team.
I started the money coaching program, which has been incredible so far.
And we're still feeling the support.
and that's just been super helpful for us in our journey.
So, yeah, we're just so thankful.
And yeah, thanks.
Bye.
Hi, roommate.
I wanted to share an update since our recording.
Things have definitely improved for us.
We're having financial meetings much more consistently now.
They're far more comfortable, collaborative, and a lot less tense.
I genuinely feel like we're on the same.
same team when we talk about money. I've taken on personally more responsibility with our household
finances to help lessen burden on my partner. And that shift, I think, has made a meaningful
difference. I've been asking more questions so I can be more informed and involved in our finances.
And I think that's helped me feel more engaged and accountable. And it's helped us operate
more like true partners rather than just avoiding tough conversations.
I've increased my retirement contribution by a few percentage points and planned to continue raising it over the next couple months until I reach at least 15%.
Also, I've been using rocket money a lot more intentionally, which has really been helpful in tracking spending and staying proactive.
I think overall we're collaborating in a much healthier way and there's more openness, more teamwork.
And it feels sustainable.
And I think we're really building momentum.
So thank you again for this opportunity.
And thank you so much for spending your time with us.
Appreciate it.
Listen up.
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