I Will Teach You To Be Rich - 262. "We make $167k. Why do we feel poor?"
Episode Date: May 26, 2026Ramit Sethi of I Will Teach You To Be Rich talks to Drew and Amanda, a married couple earning around $167,000 a year with a net worth of over $800,000. On paper, they look financially successful but... behind the scenes, their fixed costs are dangerously high, their savings are low, and their spending decisions are causing tension in the relationship. Drew admits he struggles with spending, while Amanda finds it difficult to say no, leaving them stuck in a pattern where money feels stressful instead of empowering. In this episode we uncover: • Their household income of around $167,000 a year • Why they still feel financially stretched despite a strong net worth • Their surprisingly low savings compared with their assets • How fixed costs reached around 89% of their gross income • Drew’s struggle with spending and impulse decisions • Amanda’s difficulty saying no without feeling like the “bad guy” • The hidden relationship dynamic behind their financial stress • Why eating out 6–8 times a week became a major spending leak • The role of bonuses in justifying bigger spending decisions • Amanda’s childhood experiences with financial instability • Drew’s “you only live once” money mindset • How their daughter is learning from their financial behaviour • Ramit’s challenge for them to stop making emotional money decisions • Why vacations may need to pause while they rebuild savings • Their plan to create a family money philosophy and emergency fund ⏩ CHAPTERS (00:03:15) Why Drew applied to the podcast (00:07:00) The hidden decision-making problem (00:10:30) Why they don’t feel like a team with money (00:16:15) Their financial numbers revealed (00:21:15) The reality of their household income (00:29:25) Fixed costs are the real problem (00:33:10) The truth about eating out (00:35:50) How bonuses fuel spending (00:39:30) The couple who struggle to say no (00:45:30) Amanda’s childhood money story (00:56:30) Their inherited money beliefs (00:58:20) Starting their Rich Life vision (01:04:00) Pausing vacations to rebuild stability (01:10:00) Drew practices saying no (01:16:30) Amanda’s role changes (01:20:30) Cutting subscriptions and eating out (01:29:30) Redirecting money toward savings (01:36:00) Creating a family money philosophy (01:44:30) Ramit’s final advice THIS EPISODE IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY Shopify | Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at https://shopify.com/ramit Gelt | Book a tax consultation with Gelt at https://joingelt.com/ramit. As a member of my community, you can skip the waitlist DeleteMe | Get 20% off all consumer plans when you go to https://joindeleteme.com/ramit and use promo code RAMIT at checkout Wispr Flow | Try Wispr Flow for free at wisprflow.ai/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 Calling LA couples: Apply to be coached for free on this podcast at https://iwt.com/apply
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I have a secret that I have not shared publicly before.
For the last three and a half months, my wife and I have been on sabbatical.
We have been traveling around the world and we did it with no budget.
I want to share some of the details of the places we went and what we chose to spend money on.
We started in Barcelona, then Paris, then Morocco, then we spent two months in Tokyo.
And because I know so many people love travel as part of their rich life,
I want to tell you what decisions we made.
Where did we decide to splurge?
What did we eat?
What did we actually decide was not important?
And I'm going to share all the details on a live call on Wednesday, May 27th.
Now, this event is only for my money coaching members.
However, as you can tell, I love this topic.
And I want to show you how to create magical travel experiences.
So I'm opening up a one month free trial for anybody who wants to attend the event.
plus you can see all the amazing playbooks and coaching that we have in my money coaching program.
Go to IWT.com slash money coaching and use code Rich 26 to attend this event where I will share
all the details of how we created this magical travel experience for us.
I'll see you there.
$167,000.
What do you all think of that income?
I'm super proud of the work that we've put in, but we don't have enough.
It's kind of like always a struggle.
and it makes me sad.
I am the one with the spending problem,
and I have asked Amanda to make me stop.
I have a hard time saying no.
Money's just not my thing.
You have a crisis right now.
You're spending more than you make every month,
and you only have $13,000 in savings.
Yeah.
What do you think is going on?
I know what to say to eventually get what I want.
With like money, we've seen how each other maneuvers with it.
And so we need each other to do the bad thing.
If I keep spending like this, are we going to have enough to retire at a comfortable age
and enjoy my life with Amanda moving forward?
How are you going to do that?
I don't know how people just turn that switch.
Why is it that you make good money, but you still worry about it?
Today we are going to get into that very question that plagues millions of people.
I'm going to speak to Drew and Amanda.
They're married.
They're in their mid-30s.
They have a six-year-old daughter, and they make a combined $167,000 a year.
But with low savings and high fixed costs, they're basically one emergency away from being
in serious trouble.
Let's take a look at the numbers.
I'm looking at their conscious spending plan, or CSP.
If you want my help with your CSP so you can understand your four key numbers, join my money
coaching program at IWT.com slash money coaching.
Assets, $925,000.
Investments, $454,000. Savings, $13,000.
Debt, $568,000. Net worth, $824,000.
Now let's look at their fixed cost, 89%.
Right there, that's the ballgame.
That explains so much. Investments at 4%, savings at 2%,
that also is very explanatory,
guilt-free spending at 5%,
which I pretty much don't believe
without even talking to them, but we'll see.
Drew writes,
if I lost my job tomorrow,
life-altering negative results
would happen immediately.
Drew's right to be concerned.
They have a net worth of close to a million dollars,
but at the end of every month,
they still feel broke.
And the question is,
what is going on here?
We're about to find out.
Let's meet Drew and Amanda.
Andrew, you wrote something
in your application,
that caught my eye.
You said, quote,
I am the one who handles the finances,
but I am also the one who has the spending problem.
I hold resentment towards her
that she never looks at our bank account,
yet I am the one who says,
let's go out to eat.
I have asked her to tell me no,
but honestly, that is not her job.
If I lost my job,
we wouldn't be able to survive
a couple of months
with our
fixed costs. Is that a pretty accurate representation of why you are here today? Yeah, absolutely.
It's a representation of why we're here today. And Amanda, did you also participate in the
application, or was it just Drew? It was just Drew. Ah, that's interesting. Drew, what made you
decide to want to apply to speak to me? I wanted to speak to you because I feel like I am the one with
the spending problem. I need some help and guidance with how I should spend my money. And I have
asked Amanda to make me stop. But again, it is not her job. Amanda, what's your take on this?
I wish I was more involved. And I've tried, but it always is just like a day or so. And then I'm like,
oh, he handles it so much better than I do. And I know that I have a hard time saying no.
because I like the idea too.
And then if someone else is signing off on it, I'm like, sure, because it wasn't coming from me.
Because I'm not a spender.
And so I find it harder to make those judgments on my own.
And so when I'm like, oh, someone else is on board, let's do it.
And so, like, Drew is the planner for vacations.
And I'm always so thankful because if it was up to me, probably wouldn't go.
In a heterosexual relationship, it's almost always the woman who applies.
So this is quite unusual and I really appreciate it.
How long you've been married for?
Almost 13 years.
Kids, one daughter.
How about making decisions around major purchases?
As a married couple with a daughter,
how do you go about making those major purchase decisions?
Drew gets an idea.
I'll start with a little bit of hesitancy of like,
are you sure?
Like, this seems expensive or,
because I tend to get very comfortable.
Even when we lived in an apartment, he was like, we should buy a house.
And I was like, oh my gosh, no way, we can't afford this.
Let's think of a time in the last six months where you were not on the same financial page.
Does something come to mind?
Yeah, absolutely.
I kind of like to look around the house to see what could use improvements.
I had this idea that we needed more storage with our daughter and why don't we put in some cabinets.
in our living room.
We could have easily bought two things off of Amazon to put on each side that has cabinets,
but I decided I wanted to go all out and give a business a call where they would build the cabinets.
We had them come to our house, price it out.
I expected it to cost anywhere from 2000 to 3,000.
Amanda was probably shooting in the bar park of 1,000.
it ended up being about 5,500.
When I was going through the decision process,
I looked at Amanda and I just gave her the head nod
and a little wink and said,
let's do it.
And she said,
okay, sounds good.
What's that move?
I'm married too.
I didn't know that move.
I could just get my wife to agree on everything
by just winking at her.
Is that it?
Get in tight on this.
I could wink on both eyes.
Who knew?
And I got to give a little smile.
That's a little bit.
difficult for me, but let me try. Hold on. I'm imagining I want to buy an antique ceramic
from Kyoto and it costs $9,500 for a tiny thing in this side of my hand. And I need it. I need it
to put right here. Hold on. My wife is looking at me like, are you sure? And I go like this.
That's it? Yeah. Yeah.
I learned something new on this podcast every day.
All right.
Amanda, what was it like from your perspective?
What do you remember him saying?
Actually, should we just recreate the conversation?
Yeah.
All right.
Let's do it.
All right.
So, you know, the person is coming over the vendor to give the quote.
Pick it up from there, Drew.
Amanda, I think that these cadets will look great.
Might add an extra little value to the house if we ever decide to sell.
I think that we have a little bit of money from taxes that are coming our way.
why don't we pull the trigger and have these put in?
Are you sure that we really need those?
I mean, I think I've seen something like that, like Amazon or IKEA.
Like, maybe we could just do it ourselves.
That is true, but they are going to be built-ins and they can probably do it in a day.
And we do have a little bit of cash on hand.
And we're not very handy.
So it would probably just be a pain and uneven.
So, okay, maybe we'll just have them come and we'll, like, talk to them and see what it is.
But, yeah, it's going to be like $1,500, right?
I was thinking more in the ballpark of $3,000.
Okay, let's pause right there.
Okay.
Great work.
Actually, really helpful to see.
Thank you.
Would you say that was pretty accurate as to how the conversation went?
Yeah.
Mm-hmm.
Okay, all right.
Zoom out.
What role was each of you playing in that conversation?
Amanda?
I was trying to be like the level-headed.
Okay.
Against what?
Against the spender.
And so it's like, oh, I did my part, like to say no.
So then I can kind of go back and be like, I tried to say no to this thing.
For me, I almost kind of feel like the big bad wolf.
When she's saying no, her house is made a straw.
If I blow and blow, I eventually blow that house down and kind of get what I want.
I think there's a really good description.
I was thinking when you were talking, I was visualizing it.
I kind of saw it like, I'm getting pretty.
I'm coming at you.
Hey, what about this?
What about that?
Try this.
No, we need it.
It's going to raise their value.
Like lots of arguments.
And Amanda is playing her part.
Okay, now that we're kind of agreeing to all these things,
We're seeing it in a different light.
What do you both make of the role that you're each playing?
I don't like it.
I don't like my role.
I don't like the idea of like a big bag of wolf either, though.
No, and I didn't mean it as like, I'm angry and you want something.
It's more like I know my way to blow that house down.
I know what to say to eventually get what I want.
What do you think about your role, Drew?
Do you like it?
No, I feel like we, I need to work.
more on being a team, but I feel like I need to do a better job of knowing my wife and listening
to her instincts and kind of taking on that role where we are doing it more together
than just me coming up with something up in my head and trying to move forward.
Can I ask you both, do you know other couples with this dynamic?
I feel like my parents have a little bit of this dynamic.
Like my dad usually is the spender and kind of gets what he wants as well.
Amanda?
Yeah.
My mom was in charge of the money and my dad was the spender.
In a way, it already explains so much.
If the only dynamic you have ever known is that one person is trying to convince the other to spend money
and then the other person has this kind of not particularly strong counter argument,
in. And so basically the person who brings it up pretty much gets what they want. Is it really any
surprise that that's what you're going to do? No. Can I ask you something? Do you think that my wife
and I have that dynamic? No, I would assume you to discuss big travel, big purchases.
What's different about us versus the dynamic that you have? Nothing really comes to mind
what difference is.
You're in a loving relationship with your wife.
You've made a conscious decision to do it together.
Yeah.
Amanda, what do you see?
I'm wondering if it's like both having confidence in where you're at, where you stand,
and that's like you don't have to convince the other.
And you're not like waiting for the other person to give the green light.
I like that. Yes, you are totally right.
Is there a part of your relationship where there is no convincing one or the other?
It's we are both knowledgeable. We are a team.
I think in every other aspect.
I couldn't agree more.
Yeah, we are like such a team like parenting with friendships.
Like we're always on the same page.
So it's really just with money.
What made you get on the same page with your daughter
that has not happened with money?
Sounds cheesy, but love, I guess.
Like, we love our daughter,
and maybe that love of money isn't necessarily there
because money's hard to understand fully.
Okay.
Amanda, any other perspectives?
I was thinking, like, the respect
with how, like,
what we want for her and we like respect each other in that regard.
But with like money, we've seen how each other maneuvers with it.
And so it's always been kind of this, we need each other to do the bad things.
Oh, mm-hmm.
We need each other to do the bad thing. Give me an example.
Like kind of going through how we went through the cabinets, it's like,
Drew needs me to say okay so that later he's going to say,
you said okay too.
Like you didn't say no, you didn't stop me.
And then I do the same thing on the opposite of like, I gave all the, I said no.
And you did it without me.
In a way, it's like semi related to flirting, as I'm seeing, flirting.
Like you send a signal, but you're not too aggressive about it.
There's plausible deniability, but the right person can pick up on the clue, et cetera, et cetera, right?
It's not written in black and white.
It's very murky and gray by nature.
And you've been married for a long time and you have a six-year-old daughter.
It seems like things are fine.
So why is it a problem now?
As we are getting into our 40s, we are getting closer to the age of retirement.
And it's becoming like, oh, my goodness.
If I keep spending like this, are we going to have enough to retire at a comfortable age
and enjoy my life with them?
Amanda moving forward.
So I kind of think that's where that came from.
Yeah.
And I feel like to maybe for the first time we realized the pattern of like, oh, we get some money.
And then we have fun.
And don't get me more.
I benefit from this.
Like I love it too.
But it's just like we can never just let us have money.
It's not a good dynamic.
to depend on your partner to say no, especially when you know they're not really good at it.
It basically just allows both partners to create the charade.
Hey, I'm going to kind of ask you what you think.
You're going to kind of say, should we really do it?
And then we're just going to do it anyway.
This is not real.
If we want to live a rich life, we need to live in reality.
We need to be honest about where we're spending our money, what we can afford, what is important to us.
And right now, there's a lot of tap dancing around the truth.
When I was talking to them, I started to realize, I don't think they know any other way.
I think this is what they know.
And that actually makes me feel a little bit more compassionate to them.
Because if they have never seen another couple's dynamic, how could they ever do it?
It's actually one of the reasons that I started this podcast because I wanted to know how other couples talk about prenups.
Because we were doing it.
It's all behind closed doors.
None of this stuff is public.
And I'm like, I can't even figure out how people are talking about this.
And I'm supposed to know all of this stuff.
So when couples struggle with money, I feel a lot of compassion because you can't find
this material out unless you listen to these couples on this podcast.
We're going to take a look at the numbers right after this.
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All right. Let's take a look at the CSP. I'm excited. Why don't we start?
with the net worth box. And I would like Drew to read off the word in bold and then the number
in full next to it for this entire box, please. Assets, 925,434. Investments, 454,580. Savings, 13,000,
debt, 568, 285 for a total net worth of 824,7,000.
What do you think about those numbers?
I am very happy and privileged that we've had jobs where our companies have matched our 401K,
and we have taken advantage of that.
So I'm extremely happy with our total net worth.
The only thing that makes me a little taken aback is about half of that is a home.
And I don't know, like, how do you ever get that money without selling it?
And Amanda, what do you think about those numbers?
I think they're pretty good based on the limited knowledge that I have.
I'm very happy with where we're at.
I mean, I know it includes my student loan debt in there, and that makes us uneasy.
But overall, I think it's pretty good.
What do these numbers mean to both of you?
I feel like we worked really hard to get where we are, getting jobs right out of college in the corporate world,
and kind of working
working up the ladder
and putting away our money
and our 401Ks,
the only number that really jumps out to me
is that savings being so low.
I think that would be a month's worth of fixed costs.
So that number really jumps out at me.
What about for you, Amanda?
What does it mean to you?
I think the biggest piece is like,
oh, we might be able to retire
at a reasonable age.
age, that's kind of where my mind goes.
I'm guessing you have not, like, run the numbers carefully on your retirement, compounding,
that kind of thing. Would that be fair to say?
I've looked at like a projection.
Okay.
And seeing where it's headed, I feel pretty good about it.
Oh, that's good. Wait, you have this, I'm quite surprised right now.
The way you're talking about it was like, I feel like maybe we can retire.
I think I'm waiting for someone to say like you're way off.
And so that's why I kind of approach it that way, I guess,
because I'm just trusting, you know, projection in my Charles Schwab,
like, you know, portfolio manager.
Do you find yourself minimizing your own knowledge a lot?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I hate it.
I don't like it.
I really, I'll give you an example.
So there's this thing.
When I take pictures.
with people. It happens when I'm in pictures with women. And you know what women will often do when
they're in a group photo? You know Amanda. Tell me, what do you do sometimes when you're in a group
photo? I just like turn to the side. Yeah. And the sorority squat, the squat down, right? It infuriates
me. I never allow it. I always say no squatting, stand up tall. And very, very commonly,
Someone will say, well, what about the people behind me?
I go, let them deal with themselves.
They'll figure it out.
They're adults.
So I have vivid memories of this photo we just took.
I was on tour last year.
And I was with my team.
And we were taking a beautiful group photo.
And what do you know?
People start to squat down.
I'm like, stand up.
We have room for everybody.
Stand up.
Take up space.
So Amanda, I'm going to ask you on today's conversation to take up space.
I think you might be a lot more knowledgeable than you're letting on.
And if that's okay, if not, that's okay, tell me.
I never, never come down on anyone for not knowing something.
But if you know, like you're like, oh, I happen to run a compound interest projection
for both nominal and real returns for the next 45 years.
Tell me, I love it.
Cool?
Got it.
All right.
So you all have a net worth of $824,000.
You're in your early 30s, correct?
Mid 30s.
All right.
We're going to look at what it means.
Yeah.
But first we need to understand more about income and expenses.
So this time I'm going to ask Amanda.
Amanda, can you read off the combined gross monthly income number for your household?
Gross monthly income combined is 13,911.
Great.
for a household income, annual income of $166,932.
What do you all think of that income?
I'm super proud of the work that we've put in and our careers,
and I couldn't be more proud of Amanda.
Who's the one who makes $8521 per month?
That's Drew.
And $5390, this is gross, is Amanda.
And that's with a new business?
Yes.
And I think the part that has been hard for us is we used to be more equal.
Mm-hmm.
And it's not, we don't care about like breadwinner, but it was like mine took a dip.
And so it was like adjusting to that.
Yeah.
That makes sense.
When you took a pay cut, Amanda, to start your own business, did you and Drew cut your household expenses?
Overall, I would say, no, we did not change our monthly expenses.
Okay.
They never do.
They never do.
Let's continue on with the fixed cost.
Here we go.
This is where it gets fun.
All right.
Let's see here.
I'm looking at the fixed cost number.
Whoa.
What's that number you see, Drew?
I just called 89%.
89%.
That's the ball game right there.
That means that you are not having much money afterwards.
Yeah, exactly.
It means you're spending more than you make every month.
Because fixed cost is just one component of expenses.
So we will drill down into fixed.
costs in a minute, but first let's look at investments, 4%, and noting that you are making
a monthly contribution of $1,500 a month total to your 401k, and then we go down to post-tax
investments, and we have $4%, or $350.
Let's go down to savings at 2%, that's $200 a month, and then finally, guilt-free spending
at 5%, but I don't believe that number.
I wouldn't either.
Absolutely not.
It's probably more.
But that's concerning because you're spending more than you make every month
and you only have $13,000 in savings.
This is a real problem.
Yeah.
So what do you think is going on here?
I think we have gotten comfortable with going to events, going out to eat.
I've also gotten comfortable with telling Amanda that,
we're good. We don't need to cook dinner tonight and we can go go out. We just decided to turn a
blind eye to our commitments on our monthly fixed costs and our guilt-free spending overall.
What about you, not we, but you, Drew? With me, it sounds like an excuse overall, but I do work
from home 24-7, five days a week, where I feel like I want.
want to go out after after work.
And I'm I'm the one that kind of pushes to going to events and going out to eat.
They feel some resemblance of being outgoing and talking to people.
And I've created that issue on a monthly basis.
Okay.
Amanda, what do you think is going on here?
We don't know how to say no.
We just do what we want to do and get what.
we want to get. And I think, I mean, maybe it's a lot of me not saying no. While I agree,
there are definitely relational dynamics here with the two of you. I'm interested in what do you
think is going on here from Amanda's perspective. What is your role in this? Maybe having no
vision into what's going on. And so I'm just, I'm not taking action. You're not participating in the
finances.
agree, that's probably a problem. Is there a vision of like what your family finances should be,
money rules or policies, philosophies in your family? Do you have those? I'd say no. Okay. Do you
have them for parenting? I would say yes. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. It's very common. Every parent or
a couple of parents has some sort of philosophy. You know, um, in our
house, we take off our shoes, or we eat dinner together, or we don't use curse words and we
clean up our toys, whatever. Every parent has some philosophy. It is peculiar to me that very
few people have an explicit philosophy on money. Part of the problem here is that there's no
philosophy. It's just like, hey, what do I want? And when you live in America, you are the
downstream recipient of trillions of dollars worth of marketing,
being spent to get you to spend more money.
You have very little shot of trying to brute force your way
against these companies unless you have a philosophy.
All right.
What do each of you do for a living?
I'm a marriage and family therapist associate working towards licensure.
Great.
And Drew?
Yeah, I'm a senior onboarding analyst for an insurance company.
Amanda, as a soon-to-be licensed therapist, do you bring any of that skill set to bear when it comes to money and your relationship?
Probably more so the relationship.
Not bringing it to the money aspect.
Do you think you could bring those skills when it comes to money?
Yeah.
I bet you could.
Why haven't you?
If you had to guess, why haven't you?
I think it's maybe a confidence.
Peace. Yeah. I feel way more confident with relationships. Money's just not my thing.
Money is just not my thing. I like when people say that. It's like you never hear someone saying like food.
It's just not my thing. Like money is what allows you to have that plant and that doorknob behind you. It's what allows your daughter to have a roof.
So maybe when we think about money a lot of times, like the word and the concept of money, we immediately jump to all these like arcane concept.
But when I think about money, I think about you all taking a family trip.
And I think about the ability for you to go on a hike and get an ice cream on the way home.
Like money can do those simple, beautiful things.
I think about if one of you gets sick or injured or a tire pops on your car.
to be able to go and get that fixed.
Mm-hmm, without stress.
So maybe there is something here
about the way that we envision ourselves.
We have Drew who says,
I work from home and I need relief.
I need some semblance of being with people.
Well, if that's the way you view yourself and money,
then you're going to spend it, right?
You have now automatically given yourself justification.
There's Amanda saying,
I don't know, I'm not really as confident.
Oh, I'm extremely confident when it comes to the relational skills.
But money, no, it's just not my thing.
But actually, it has to be your thing.
It actually has to become a core competence of your relationship
if the two of you want to live a rich life.
Simple as that.
Yes. And I think that's exactly why we're here.
Good. Good. I'm glad you are.
I like being told you need to get good at this.
You need to.
I don't think anyone in our adult life tells us this.
Like, you know what?
You actually need to get good at this.
That's it.
There's no other way out.
So if we go forward in today's conversation with that in mind,
would the two of you be okay with it?
Yeah.
I think it's needed.
Great.
Let's dig into your fixed costs.
I want to put these back up on screen.
And let's talk about the actual numbers here
because your fixed costs are 89%.
And this is it right here.
If we can fix this,
we can fix a lot of other things.
If we can't fix this,
game over.
Okay.
So we're looking at your rent or mortgage.
Is it a mortgage?
It's a mortgage.
Okay.
$3,235 or 23% of gross.
That's not bad.
We like to see that number,
you know, at 28% or lower,
even though in high cost of living areas, that's difficult.
So the fact that you're at 23 is nice.
That gives you some margin to play with.
So then I go like, hmm, what else are they spending on to get to 89% of a very high income?
Your utilities are 580, insurance 400.
Car payment is $914 a month.
How many cars is that?
That is two cars.
Two cars.
And does that include gas and stuff like that?
They are electric.
Oh, okay. All right. Debt payments are 600 bucks for a student loan.
Groceries 800. That's pretty reasonable.
Clothing and kids activities, 400 bucks a month.
And then we have this big chunk here. Your phone, which is 30 bucks, but you're 15% miscellaneous, including kids' birthday parties, Amazon purchases, and random items.
That's a lot for $1,120 a month.
Yeah.
And then finally, subscriptions for $312 a month.
What do you notice about all these expenses?
Besides the miscellaneous, they seem like they are actual fixed costs that can't go away.
Yeah, maybe.
Some of it can go away.
Subscriptions at 312, we could knock that out right now.
What else?
What do you notice, Amanda?
I don't.
Nothing is like jumping out at me.
What about the cars?
One car is a lease.
You're leasing.
What are you leasing?
Tesla Model 3.
Are you doing it because it was,
super cheap. It was super cheap. Yes. And then we have another Tesla that we bought. Can I ask you something?
When you went in to make a purchase, how did you know how much you could afford? I think we just looked at how
much it was a month. This is exactly how fixed costs get higher and higher. I don't mind if people go
and buy like a bag of candy or they go out and eat once in a while.
I really could not care less.
That has very little material effect.
That's asking a $3 question.
That's why if people want to have coffee, get the coffee.
Yeah.
But I am extremely protective of fixed costs.
Because once something becomes a fixed cost, it is nearly impossible to get rid of.
Like there is no real easy out for these cars.
There just isn't. A house is the ultimate. It's very, very difficult to get out from that.
And so while I am super loose and relaxed about candy, buying a drink, or whatever, that's a one-time expense.
But for something that is either recurring or large and fixed, you have to be very protective.
Like in many ways, the default should almost be no unless we plan for it. And we know exactly that making this purchase, plus all of the maintenance that we need to fact,
in is going to keep our fixed cost below 60%.
All right?
Yeah.
You didn't do that.
Most don't.
And that is how most end up with really high fixed costs.
Okay.
I'm not here to beat you up.
I just want to explain how we got here.
Yep.
Absolutely.
Makes sense.
All right.
Down to your guilt-free spending.
What else are you spending money on?
Mostly dining out.
I would say 80% of that is dining out.
How often?
Three times.
No, bump that up.
I was going to say six.
Keep going.
It's probably nine.
Probably nine.
I don't know.
There's some magic number.
If we factor in buying a coffee, that counts as eating out.
Because sometimes you buy a coffee and a pastry.
If we factor in lunch out or breakfast occasionally, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Yeah.
We're talking what?
Six maybe more times a week.
What do you think?
Yeah, six to eight times a week, absolutely.
Yeah, that's a lot.
It's a lot.
Vacation?
We just got back from vacation two days ago.
Oh, wow.
Where'd you go?
Well, we went to Boston.
Okay.
Let's talk about how you planned the financial part of that.
We had a free place to stay for the weekend.
So we did have a little bit of extra money from Amanda's taxes as she puts away a certain amount and she had left over.
So we were able to purchase the plane tickets.
And then it happened to coincide with when I usually get a bonus.
and we put a certain amount of money away for the trip itself.
How much did the tickets cost and how much for the trip?
The tickets were $1,200, and the money I put aside was $1,000.
So the bonus money gets spent pretty quickly.
Would you say that happens regularly?
It seems like it.
Yes.
You're kind of catching us at the perfect storm right now,
as this is tax season and bonus time for us.
And this is usually our.
timetable of where things go send our money yeah yes so you get tax money you spend it you get a bonus
you spend it when did this start happening ever since our annual bonuses when we started corporate yep yeah
and i used to get a very similar bonus and now we don't get now i don't get that anymore do you
spend less because you don't get the bonus no do you know any other way i don't think so because i think a lot of
It comes down to like, we worked really hard.
Like we deserve a treat or we deserve like something with this.
Because this bonus is like you worked really hard all year.
You work hard so you deserve a tree.
Who taught you that?
I might have learned that from Drew because I did not grow up going on vacations.
Yeah, I mean, we went on as a family.
We went on yearly vacations that I can assume,
from my dad's bonus and taxes, and we went on vacation every single year, and I wanted to
provide that for my family as well.
Did your dad ever explain the finances of these vacations?
He never did explain them, but I, on good authority, I would believe that they came from
his yearly bonus, that he probably, I'm following in his footsteps.
You're going to explain this to your daughter?
I would like to get some tools and help explain it better and say that we changed our ways.
So she has a better understanding of money and savings.
So when she's old enough, I will explain to her the patterns that me and me mostly and Amanda had.
And I think we can explain to her what we changed and the tools that we learned and how we move forward after this.
You talk to her about money today or no?
We do a little bit.
Yeah, we do.
What do you tell her?
Save as much as possible.
I think trying to...
Well, I need to put this CSP back up on screen.
Let's just...
Everybody take a look.
I love seeing cognitive dissonance happen.
Hey, what's that number right there?
What does it say next to savings?
That's a big old 13,000.
13,000 on a $166,932 income.
God, I love my job.
Mm-hmm.
Does she see mom active with the money?
No.
Yeah, that one hit home a little bit.
Mm-hmm.
Because I don't want her to follow what I'm doing.
Yeah.
And I don't want her to be wishy-washy.
Yes.
Yes.
I love that you said that.
Mm-hmm.
I want her confidence, which can only come from your confidence.
Mm-hmm.
And the two of you being confident.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
What I would love is for her to build that confidence.
For example, by mom saying, money is really important.
Here's why.
Here's what it means to us.
Here's the choices we make.
Here's our philosophy on money.
She should hear that.
And she should see mom and dad talking about money and smiling them and giving each other a hug
after they talk about money.
And of course, you can make it age appropriate.
But she should see that.
It should almost be theatrical.
cool. Mommy and dad are going to go over here. We're going to talk about money for 15 minutes.
We need a little bit of quiet time. Pull out a clipboard, talk about whatever. Have a serious
conversation, smile, give each other a kiss. Great. She should see that. Yeah. These are the
kind of things that let her know. And of course, when you do this, it's actually not just an act.
It actually is mom getting involved and it is dad getting involved and talking together and smiling.
And guess what?
The more you do this, the more real it becomes and then kids see it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Whenever I talk to parents on this show,
they almost always tell me that they have a philosophy about parenting.
They have certain beliefs about sleep or feeding their kids or reading books at night.
But when it comes to money, very few people have a philosophy.
Like, what are you talking about?
I spend on stuff.
I have money in my savings.
I don't know.
philosophy what and i think there's one crucial reason why and that reason is that when you have a baby
you have a very urgent need to learn how parenting works you have to learn it and you have to do it
now but with money there's no such urgency even on this show i have people who come on they are a month
away for running out of money and they're perfectly calm about it but with a baby you have to learn i want you to have
just a little bit of that urgency for money because it is so important.
If you get it right, you can live a very, very rich life.
That's why I'm pushing for them to develop a philosophy on money,
just like they have a philosophy on parenting.
I don't think he realizes how dangerous of a financial situation they're in.
Amanda definitely does not because she's pretty disconnected from the finances.
But he, the one who logs into the accounts every day and is in charge of the money,
doesn't understand how close they are to financial ruin.
That's what I want him to understand.
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I want to understand a couple more things, the debt.
So we have $568,000 of debt.
How much of that is the mortgage?
How much of that is student debt?
Yeah, $470 on the mortgage, $68,000 on the student loan, and then $28,000 on the car.
All that sounds reasonable to me.
I notice there's no child care.
How are you managing that?
Elementary school, public school system.
Great, which amazing.
Have you thought about what expenses might have?
happen from now until later. I do see that you're putting money aside. I believe it's a 529.
Yeah. What about between now and college? Are there any big expenses that you're thinking?
Me and Amanda did discuss a private school. So that would be a big expense. And also as
children get older, the sports and activities also get more expensive. If you kept things going
the way they are now, you know, and we just fast forward like five years. How would you
you handle it? I think Amanda and I would just pay for it to the detriment of our own finances.
Has anyone ever told you no? No. I had a very privileged life. I was able to, my parents were
very generous and gave me an amazing childhood. Nike employee store, shoes, vacations.
So overall, I am not used to hearing no.
Do you ever tell yourself no today?
Not often.
Not often.
How about your family?
I do not tell them no.
No.
There are no-nows in your life.
What has the result been?
The result has been reaching out for help because I couldn't do it on my own.
Put me and my family in a predicament that.
we don't have enough savings if something were to happen, and it's not a good feeling.
You would run out of money in under two months.
That's correct.
Yeah.
Do you think about that?
Yeah, it's something I think about often.
To push on that gently, like if you think about it, it's one thing.
But, you know, you have this tax refund.
Thousands of dollars.
You have this bonus, thousands of dollars.
Why not go, let's take that money and put it in a savings account?
We try to have fun in the moment, which is sad to say. We try to go out and go to events and
materialistic items just to kind of feel good in the moment. It feels like that's something that
I should do is take them out, even though putting money away is probably showing more love to my
family. What do you think, Amanda? It makes me feel like what is missing that we're just trying to
fill with either stuff for food or I know we are very bad at being bored.
Really?
Very bad.
And so like the weekends, it's like we can't just sit here.
We got to go take our daughter to Top Golf or something like we got to get out of the house.
That's quite interesting.
What else?
We are both terrible cooks.
Yes.
Yes.
So what's the conclusion?
You go out to eat?
Yep.
Correct.
Okay.
We just love being with each other out and about.
It gives us joy to go out.
Drew, you mentioned that you grew up privileged.
I'm curious if you can take me back in time.
What do you remember your family saying about money back then?
I don't recall my parents ever talking about money in front of my sister or
myself, I just remember asking for an item. And that answer was usually yes. What'd you ask for?
Jordans, almost every month. My parents would always get me the new Jordans,
snowboards, all that. And so, it's like none of my hobbies were cheap. They were always expensive.
What else do you remember your family saying about money?
They just didn't talk about it.
We just did stuff.
We just went on vacation.
We just bought the items.
My dad bought the new cars.
But no ramifications of me or my sister hearing it.
Are your parents both still alive?
They're both still alive and still together.
Okay.
And how are they doing with money?
My dad is 69 and he does still work like a couple days a week.
I don't feel like they're maybe as well off.
as peers around the same age.
How do you know?
Because my dad always tells me to save now
because he doesn't want me to be in the same situation.
Your dad tells you to save, which he didn't.
You tell your daughter to save, which you don't.
Yeah, definitely a pattern I would love to break here and now.
I like that.
I think that one of the joys,
one of the responsibilities that we get, especially if we grow up educated, we grow up privileged, is that we can
dispassionately look at our family upbringing. And we can appreciate the things that our parents did
that were awesome. And we can also say, hey, you know what? I didn't love that. Or there's a different
way now that I think I would like to integrate better. Maybe it comes from my spouse, maybe it comes from a
different culture. Maybe it's from a religion. Whatever. There's something I want to do differently. And it's
going to be hard.
Because it's easy to glide into doing exactly what your parents and their parents did.
But we are going to make this change as a family.
To me, I think that's actually one of the most powerful philosophies and visions that you can
have.
We are doing this as a family.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Amanda, would you be on board with changing that pattern that has happened?
Absolutely.
Okay.
Cool.
Drew, anything else you want to highlight about how you were.
brought up. Yeah, I think the biggest thing that I've taken from them is the yearly vacations,
which I don't know how expensive they were back then, but I've been tending to do the same thing
with, oh, wow, we need a yearly vacation. Because what? You work all year round and you feel like
you deserve an escape, but maybe it doesn't need to be an extravagant vacation. It could just be
a weekend or camping or anything like that.
It doesn't need to be a $10,000 Disneyland trip.
This is why I really love having a diverse group of people to hang out with
and actually talking about this stuff.
So for example, my upbringing with my parents who immigrated from India,
you know, we grew up with a lot of Indian friends.
And a lot of the parents had come at the same time.
and so they were like making their way in a new country,
but bringing a lot of their upbringing from India.
It was really common that we all ate at home for months at a time.
Like going out was a really big treat.
I think that is very different than how we are all now.
Yeah.
I'm saying all this to say that in the,
if you only index on the upbringing you had,
which was fairly, let's call it privileged.
Yeah.
then it becomes totally normal.
It's abnormal to not take an annual vacation,
but for millions of Americans, that's totally normal.
Yeah.
Now let's go to your upbringing.
Amanda, take us back in time.
What do you remember your family saying about money when you were a kid?
Money was always a stress.
Always talking about bills and how we're going to make it
and refinancing the house several times.
needing grandma and grandpa to bail out.
So there was just a lot of unease.
I did get a lot of stuff.
And, you know, I didn't feel like I was going without.
I did hear a lot of like not today, maybe next time.
I heard that a lot.
And I say that now to my daughter a lot.
And I'm like, oh, I remember being like,
it's never next time.
So I don't want my daughter to feel that way either because it was just kind of like you're just lying to me.
My dad was a spender and couldn't really be allowed to have like a debit card or my mom would give him like an allowance because he would just spend it if he had it.
And so I think maybe my mom kind of got forced into the role of managing the money.
but my grandparents were like well off.
So it was kind of confusing because it was like, oh,
and we're with grandparents, things are great.
And then it'd be like at home struggle.
And then it would be like, oh, we refinanced.
And so they would get like a big chunk of money through the refinance.
And then that would like save us, you know, like,
oh, we're going to pay off all our debts and we're going to start over.
And then so it kind of mirrors a little bit.
We don't like do that.
But like if we get a chunk of money, it's like, oh, okay, we're good.
Now we can do the right thing.
But then you kind of fall back in the old patterns.
Yeah.
When you took me on that journey, if you just notice how you're feeling right now,
how do you feel describing your child?
Uncomfortable.
Inchase.
Yeah.
You feel that way today about money as well?
Yes.
Yeah.
Are they still alive?
Are they still together?
Yeah.
Okay.
And what's their financial status now?
No, great.
Not great.
Yeah, it was kind of like always a struggle and I think it's still a struggle.
And it makes me sad.
And I don't want that for my family or for me.
And it's not like I'm making these like big, great decisions.
I think it was just kind of like snowballed for them
and it's been hard to get out of.
Look, we can't control our parents.
They are their own adult people.
Yeah.
But how do you think that that affects you, Amanda,
and the two of you in your relationship with money?
I'm scared and I approach it with that.
And then also I didn't get the luxuries like Drew did.
And so when I have, now I have an opportunity to go on vacation, I'm like, I want to go on vacation.
Because we didn't, we did one vacation like my whole childhood.
And so to me, I'm like, oh, this is possible.
Like, I can do these things.
And so I think there's that novelty.
Do you ever say no?
I, yes, to myself.
Oh, okay.
To your daughter?
Yes, I do.
I'm working.
on it, actively working on it, yeah.
Do you ever just point blank say no to her?
We are not going to get that or that's not something we choose to spend our money on.
No.
I usually prompt, like have a, it's like a sentence.
It's not just no.
Do you say no, we'll get it next time?
Or do you say, no, that is not something that we spend our money on?
I probably say, oh, no, we're not buying that today.
Yeah.
So there's maybe hope for.
There's hope.
Yeah.
You ever had like a creep hit on you and they're like trying to get you to go out on a date or whatever?
And then, you know, like sometimes somebody will say like, oh, I'm not really looking for somebody right now.
And the only thing that that guy hears is like, she said right now.
Yeah.
Are you talking about me again?
Are you talking about me?
Yeah.
But like sometimes it actually just pays to just be like definitive.
No, I'm not interested.
It is about both of you and your relationship with money and the ability to actually close certain doors.
Yeah.
No, we are not going to leave every door open.
No, we are not going to take this vacation.
Or no, we are not going to spend our bonus money.
Just no.
Because right now, at the level you're at where you are spending more than you make every month and you are winnowing down your savings account,
to have a whole bunch of nuance, you are only tricking yourself into going right back to your old ways.
In your situation, the most helpful thing you can do is have extremely clear, thick lines that say yes or no.
Like there's no question, no equivocation, no negotiation whatsoever.
Yeah.
And when you do that, which I'll help you do, it flows to your conversations for something as simple as, should we go out to eat?
It's Friday into larger things like, hey, you know, this vacation, we got these good deals on flights, and even down to when you talk about money with your daughter. It goes everywhere.
But the only people who can decide that are the two of you. I love that. Yeah.
I think it's really easy to come on a podcast and get blasted for saying something dumb or having an inappropriate belief about money.
But for me, the more I have done this and the more.
more successful I have become with my own money, the more compassionate I am in terms of, like,
if I were in their situation, might I be doing exactly the same thing? So when I hear Drew saying,
I never said no, I never got told no. I'm like, well, if my parents never told me no,
I'd probably be doing exactly the same thing you are right now. Doesn't excuse it.
Helps me understand a little bit more. Drew's parents did not do him any favors by not talking about
money. They definitely did not do him any favors by giving him everything he asked for. What happens
when you go 10 years, 20 years, 30 years, never being taught about money, never being told no,
is that you simply do not develop the capacity to make carefully nuanced decisions about money.
You see it, you want it, you get it. That might work if you make a ton of money. But it stops
working when you have a family. It certainly stops working when you have kids. For Amanda, money is
anxiety. It is a source of tension. It is chaotic. It's also a source of control that came from her
grandmother to her mom. If you have the choice of being around something that causes you anxiety
and stress makes you feel incompetent, what would you do? Most people go, oh, I'd read a book and I'd learn
about it. No, you wouldn't. You would just avoid it. And that's exactly what Amanda's doing. That might work
if you're 12 years old. It does not work when you are a mother and a wife. You have to engage with money.
You have to turn and walk straight into the fire and learn how money works. It can cause anxiety right now.
That's okay. But it also is a source of your rich life. That is why I'm pushing her to stand up,
to take up space, to acknowledge. She actually knows some of this stuff. It's pretty impressive what
she's doing, but she needs to go into it full force, not depend on her husband.
What money messages do each of you bring from your upbringing to this relationship?
I think the money message that I've brought to this relationship is you only live once,
just do it. Wow. And I mean, I've heard like my grandfather would say it's only money. I guess that is easy to say when you
are a grandpa and you're retired and you have money to spend.
You can't take that when you're 35.
It's only money.
Really good insight.
Amanda?
That money is scary.
What money messages are you passing along to your daughter?
That you only live once and spend it.
But overall, we do only live once.
And I want my retirement to reflect that.
So I need to save so we are happy and in a great place for me and Amanda as we move forward into that chapter.
Okay.
Amanda, what money messages are you passing your daughter?
That you have to be buying stuff or doing stuff to enjoy life.
Nice.
That you get everything you want.
And that's not life.
No.
I think you actually get whatever you want and you don't look at the numbers.
all. You also don't have a vision. Do not have a vision of your money. If you want to change the money
messages that are passed on, you could blah, blah, blah, talk all you want. But the only thing that
matters, as you know as parents, is... Action. She's got to see it. And she's even got to see
mom and dad not getting everything they want. But more importantly, having a powerful vision that
they are getting. Yeah. Okay.
I'm actually curious what that rich life vision is for both of you.
Have you ever talked about what your rich life is?
We've had conversations of what we'd like to do when we're older,
but I don't think we've looked at each other in the eyes and said,
here is my rich life.
Should we do it right now?
Let's go for it.
Okay.
Who wants to go first?
The question is, what is your rich life?
Amanda, my rich life is one, being with you,
no matter what.
Even though I know we just talked about vacations,
but if we could limit those
and me and you are together on vacation,
providing our daughter,
the life that I know that we would love for her,
which is to grow up as a confident woman
who doesn't necessarily depend on money,
would be amazing.
My rich life also include being able to do the hobbies that I like without having to think about money
and then limiting going out to eat but still being able to go out to eat with you.
Okay, thank you very much.
Amanda, what's your rich life?
For me, it's definitely doing this together and I think creating that philosophy
where it becomes like second nature to us of making those easy decisions
to take out that decision aspect of.
like, oh, maybe, maybe not.
It's more of that confidence, I think, without fear.
And knowing that we can handle the life experiences that are bound to come without it wrecking us.
How do you both feel expressing what your rich life is for the first time?
It does feel a little weird.
Like, expressing what you want in life, it's not usually a dinner conversation, but it's a great one.
And it's one that we should continuously have, to be honest, as life continues.
Amanda?
It felt really good because I could see how well they intertwine and that they align really well
and that we're wanting to do it together to create that different outlook.
I guess change a cycle.
I like that.
What I noticed is without this type of discussion, what is our rich.
life. What's our philosophy on kids' activities or eating out, et cetera? Without any of that,
you simply look down at the day to day. And the day to day is stressful and busy and often
filled with materialistic escapes that are not even part of your rich life. Like somebody
sitting here buying $500 worth of freaking crackers. I go, are crackers part of your rich life?
If so, I don't mind. If you can afford it and you love it, God bless. They can
go, I hate crackers. I don't even lie. I just eat them because they're buttery and they're in front of me.
Then why are you buying it? Because you have no philosophy. Drew, you made a really good point.
We don't really talk about this stuff. We probably should. Yeah, it's actually probably the first thing
you should talk about. And you should talk about it regularly because it elevates your purchased decisions
and your relationship to a much higher level than where should we eat out this Saturday.
Okay. Now I want to point something out. Knowing what you both said, do you know specific
what you would not spend money on now.
I would probably need to limit the amount I go to nicer golf courses
and limit our eating out.
Okay, dining out.
Amanda?
A lot of it is eating out and just like random, like more expensive things,
like maybe tickets to a show or like those random, like...
How come none of these things showed up on the CSP, by the way?
I haven't heard the word golf before.
Haven't heard the word concerts.
I haven't heard any of these words.
What is this?
89% fixed costs you cannot afford to golf.
Simple as that.
End of story.
There is no discussion.
I don't know what to tell you.
It's it.
That's it.
It's over.
What I really want to get to is I like your rich life vision.
I think it's a good first step.
But when I am hearing somebody describe an effective personal rich live vision,
it cuts like a knife.
It is sharp.
Sometimes it's a little abrasive.
Sometimes it is bewildering.
That's what I want to hear from you on your rich life.
I want you to be so tuned in to what your rich life is,
so specific that it could only be yours.
So if you were to say,
I am going to play golf once a month,
okay, I can work with that.
But I didn't even hear golf.
until just now. If you want to say
we are going to take our daughter to
art classes three times a month,
great.
But right now what I'm hearing
really general.
I actually don't know how to take
what you told me and change the CSP.
So can you try it again and tell me what your rich life
is? What is important to you and what is not?
Definitely
activities for our daughter.
That's definitely on there.
I like to get my nails done.
He's absolutely correct that I do not need to do golf that much.
It is a very expensive hobby.
But for my rich life is with working from home five days a week,
I would like to at least go out once a week with you and our daughter is a family.
I like that.
I want to go out once a week with the two of you to do some sort of activity.
Yeah.
We can make that work.
So then can I extrapolate that vacations are not part of your rich life?
I feel like they are because the experience with our daughter.
Oh, wow.
Okay.
Then if that's the case, what if I were to say,
I feel like you have to double your income?
That's the cold.
Could you put a hold on vacations until you do that?
Yes.
I think that it makes complete sense.
Now we're talking.
Now we're talking.
See, part of your rich life, there can be many things in your rich life.
You can't afford all of them today, but they should still be listed.
I want to stay at this hotel.
I want to go to this, whatever.
Put them there.
But you also have to know what is the moment where we can afford to do that.
And this is where you start to get honest.
And this is where you start to say, okay, we can't do this until that.
that actually I find for high achievers is very, very motivational.
And I actually think that the two of you can do that.
I can tell the way that you talk, you can achieve.
So if you were to be like, all right, we're not taking a vacation until X, Y, and Z are reached,
then I bet you would reach X, Y, and Z pretty fast.
Yeah.
Which is incredible.
I still set financial milestones for myself.
Yeah.
It motivates me.
And then when it happens, it feels like.
incredible because I know how many years of work I had to put to get that.
All right, so we have a rich life vision.
And then the last question before we go back to your CSP and change the numbers is,
how are you going to make sure that you do this together?
Absolute communication.
I think me and Amanda will set a schedule to talk at least twice a month.
Sunday evening, we will have that conversation.
I love where you said having our daughter not be present in the conversation, but seeing that conversation happen.
So we will set up two days a month where we go through our finances.
And I also love the setting those future goals.
So we will write down our future goals, talk about our finances, finances, and our goals.
and show that that affection in front of our daughter.
Drew, what do you think is going to be the biggest challenge in these conversations?
I need to do a better job at listening.
Yeah?
Where no means no.
Who's going to say no?
I need to come to the realization that we can't afford it either.
How are you going to do that?
You've never done it in your entire life.
I don't know how people just turn around,
like turn that switch,
I need to do a better job
investigating tools
to turn off that switch.
I don't like the word tools.
When people use the word tools,
especially guys,
we're looking for some magical AI solution.
Those tools don't exist.
I'm talking about you, Drew.
You are the big bad wolf
as you yourself described it.
Which, if we can bring it back down
to earth, what that means is
you don't know how to say no.
You've never had to say no.
You hate saying no.
You actually hate it.
you know exactly what to say to convince Amanda to agree with you.
She is not knowledgeable about money in the way that you are.
Drew Candlely, I don't think you're that knowledgeable about money either.
You're 89% fixed costs.
You're not doing a great job.
But in your relationship, you are, quote,
the knowledgeable person in charge of money.
And you basically, as you put it, can maneuver
to get Amanda to agree with whatever you want.
How are you going to change that?
Have a collaborative conversation with your spouse and come to an agreement.
I need to learn to hear the word no and let that sink in.
I need to say no to myself.
And overall, I just need to do a better job.
And this self-reflection has really helped.
That's good.
The most important thing you just said right now was you need to say no to yourself.
Best way to change the dynamic of your relationship is for you to take the first step and change it for yourself.
So tell me what could you say no to today?
I was asked to go to a basketball game that would cost a couple hundred dollars for tickets.
And I will say no to that.
I will not be going.
How are you going to say that?
Should we practice?
Sure.
Yeah.
More than happy to practice.
Okay, let's go to a Pacific Northwest basketball game.
Please don't ask me to name any teams because I don't know any of them.
Some Pacific Northwest team.
Would you like to go, these tickets are great and they're pretty cheap?
How cheap are they?
They're 200 bucks.
Where are the seats?
5B.
Oh, those are really good seats.
I'll have to take a look.
So that's how it would usually go.
I would usually say, okay, sounds good.
But for this conversation,
sorry, Ramee, I don't have the funds to do that at the moment.
If you would like to come over and watch the game,
I'd be more than happy to have you here.
Whoa.
Okay, first of all, round of applause.
That was really good.
I love that.
That was great.
And I love the offer.
Hey, come on over anyway.
Like, we can do it here.
I thought that was really good.
Would you actually say that?
I can text them right now and say no.
Really?
Okay, do it.
Text them.
Let's take a second.
I don't mind.
Take a second.
That's fine.
I like this.
I can't show you.
Take your time.
I'm very proud.
What are you seeing?
Amanda, as Drew is typing this, tell us what you're seeing.
What do you notice?
He said no to himself.
Because I know we talked about it earlier.
And I was like, oh, boy.
Hold on.
Was that what you said?
Oh, boy.
Mm-hmm.
Okay, we're going to get to you in a minute, okay?
Hang tight on that.
Yeah, I have fun.
Boy.
Did you send it?
I have...
I did.
Okay, hold it up tight to the camera.
Wait, what are we looking at?
Can you read it out loud?
I can't make it to the playoff game.
Sorry, Holmes.
We should still try and watch it together.
Nice.
Round of applause.
Really good.
Okay, great, great, great.
How did that feel?
honestly it feels this is what I would feel like if I had said no to myself more often
instead of going to bed like oh shoot I spent another $200.
Hmm that guilt that sticks with you after you make a purchase.
Nice.
That's the first time I've heard you mention that guilt.
Yeah.
I don't like guilt with money.
I don't like men to feel it.
I don't like women to feel.
I don't like anybody to feel it.
When I spend money, I feel fucking.
great. I feel awesome. I want you to feel like that. The only way your daughter can learn
healthy relationships with money is if her parents feel good about money. How many people do we
know, including the two of you who grew up with parents not feeling great about money or
confused about money and then you internalize it and you got to make your own way in this world.
No, we have to feel good, which means we need to develop a philosophy.
and then live it.
And sometimes that philosophy means we're not doing that.
And then we start to be congruent.
We start to be living our values.
And it feels awesome.
You know people like this who are living their values.
And you're just like, Jesus.
Like you can just see it in their alignment.
Some people would describe it with their energy.
They are living their values.
That is how you transmit money in a healthy way.
and your kids, your loved ones, they pick up on that.
Okay.
Thank you, Drew.
That was awesome.
Amanda.
Mm-hmm.
Now to you.
Yeah.
Same question.
How I'm going to change.
Yep.
Yeah.
Saying no and being confident in like, no, that's not part of our plan or that doesn't align with our philosophy.
Mm-hmm.
Being able to, I guess, say why I'm saying.
no, without like getting in the nitty gritty, but more of like, hey, we're getting off course.
Ah.
Yeah.
The way you build confidence is deep competence.
That's why I'm confident about money.
I'm very, because I know my numbers.
I know how compounding works.
You can do exactly the same thing.
Okay?
Start with my book.
Then what I heard you say was you said, I got to say no, but what I think I really loved
you say is we've got to say is we've got to.
got to stay on a plan. So you're not, you're not Mrs. No. That's not your role. That's actually
not fair to you. Okay. Neither of you are the no person. Because if you are the no person, then the other
person's the yes person and you're right back to the way you were. Instead, you need to radically
reconceptualize the dynamic here, which is what is our plan? We're going to come up with it together.
Do we both agree? And now we're going to stick to it. We can always reevaluate every six months,
six to 12.
But we are sticking with our plan
and we're going to gently remind one another
if one of us goes off plan.
Yeah.
Not about saying no, you're a bad person.
It's about, hey, we have this plan
that's actually more important
than any individual desire that we want.
Got it?
You're living our rich life plan.
Okay, now with that all laid out,
we're going to go back to the CSP
and you are going to tell me
what changes you want to make.
Are you ready?
Craig, let's do it.
Are you surprised that
they have never talked about what their rich life is. I'm not. Most couples do not talk about philosophy,
about the big picture. If anything, they'll say, one day I would like to go to space. One day I'd like to
go to Bali. But it is so much easier to live in the day-to-day, an endless series of one to do after another.
And hey, that's life. We do have to manage.
the household fine. But what's it all for? This is why I want every single person to put out your
hand, just go ahead and put out your hand right now. Go, what do I get? All this work, all this automation,
all this stuff we're doing with our time and our effort. What do we get? Do we get to go on vacation
for three weeks a year to this very specific place? Do we get to buy a beautiful car or beautiful
clothes? Do we get to put our kids in activities? What tangible specific? What tangible specific
things do we get?
If you don't have a list of the things you want now and at your next milestone and when you turn
45 or 60, what are you doing?
What I'm trying to get across is that you could spend the rest of your life going through
your email to-dos and you're just going to end up with an inbox full of emails.
Or you could zoom up.
Use the questions in my journal.
Ask yourself, what is our rich life?
What do we want?
That would be a 10 out of 10 magical life.
And now can we start adapting our money to be able to get there?
It is an incredibly powerful, counterintuitive way to live.
It also gets you a rich life like nobody else.
Looking now at the CSP, your fixed costs are 89, almost 90%.
Your job is to get this number down to 60%.
your job is to also change the investment savings in guilt-free numbers to reflect your rich life values.
So we're going to start, and the pattern I would like to take is each of you are going to suggest one thing.
Back and forth, like a ball you each have tossing back and forth.
Who wants to go first?
I can go first.
No.
We're not going to do that.
Drew, you know why we're not going to do that?
not only do you need to chill as that former Big Bad Wolf,
but you actually need to give Amanda the space to rise up and take some space.
Amanda, go ahead.
Subscriptions?
Great.
What's the current number here?
312.
What do you want to take it to?
Definitely can cancel Netflix.
That one's.
Okay, 15 bucks a month.
I know.
Can I point something out?
So you're doing what everybody does the first time they do this.
They jump right into the weeds and they try to fill.
And it's rational.
That's what I would do myself.
But I'm going to ask you to think about your vision first.
What is our vision?
If we had a blank page, what is important to our family?
That we're not spending more than we make a month?
Yes.
We are building savings.
That's good.
That's a great philosophy.
Every month.
And what else?
Yeah.
What do you say is important to you for spending?
That it aligns with that plan.
Yeah. What specific things do you want to spend money on?
Our daughter's activities.
Yeah, her activities. And what else?
Healthy meals that we can have at home.
Really? It sounds very aspirational. Didn't the two of you say you hate cooking, you're not good at cooking, etc?
You want to learn how?
Yes.
What the what was that? The way you said it just tells me everything I need to know.
Yes, I want to learn how to cook. Look at my head.
Yeah, I want to let's know.
If we're not eating out, that's something that's not going to be part of that.
Ooh.
Then what are we going to have to do?
Good.
That is good.
Now you're, I like that.
I didn't believe you before.
Now, the way you said it, you're like, well, look, you got to do this.
What's our other choice?
Yes.
Decisive.
Okay.
Now you've told me what's important to spend and what's not.
Yeah.
Can I suggest that when I pop this back up on screen?
I want you to become a little bit more ruthless, a little bit more like a mercenary.
Okay.
We're doing that with your expenses.
All right.
Here we go.
Fix cost.
What do you want to do?
Cut subscriptions.
What do you want to take it to?
Half.
Half of that.
So from 312 to let's just say 160.
Okay.
Look at the number.
What changed here on the fixed cost?
It went down one.
It went down from 89 to 88%.
Okay, it's a start.
But what does that tell you?
I'm not doing big enough.
Yes.
We need bigger changes.
Go ahead.
I know the phone and miscellaneous section is a problem.
Yeah.
And I think this probably points to the issue is I don't know what falls in there.
Okay.
Actually, it's Drew's turn anyway, so why don't we kick it over to Drew?
Perfect.
I know Amanda had talked about healthier meals with groceries.
I do feel like chat GTP has the ability to make us six days a week.
week meal plan. So I think that we would have the ability to cut groceries from 800 to 500 to 600 to
600 if we are able to find a meal plan and kind of shop for what we need instead of going into
the store with no plan. Okay. I like your energy. I like it. And I am going to cut the groceries.
Can I just point out, you all are starting from a place where you don't really cook at all.
and I need you to create a plan
where you don't have to be perfect to win.
You are not going to be perfect at cooking.
Yeah.
25% of your vegetables are going to go rotten
for the first month.
It's just going to happen.
You're going to hate the dish
and you're going to slip up and go eat out.
It's going to happen.
We still need you to win
even though you are humid.
So I'm never going to set you up with a plan
where I expect you to be perfect,
especially the first time you're doing this.
All right.
So let me suggest.
I'm going to take the groceries down, like really, really a little bit, okay?
But what I'm going to suggest to you is that instead you focus on creating a rule of how often you are eating out.
I'm going to take your groceries from 800 to 750.
That's it, okay?
How often you're eating out like, let's just say nine times a week, okay?
Seven to nine, whatever.
How often you're going to eat out now?
We are going to create a philosophy and a goal and follow it of eating out once a week.
Does that work for you, Amanda?
Yes.
Okay.
Ooh, I like that last line.
Drew, good job.
Yeah.
Okay.
So what's the number we're putting down for eating out?
How much per week?
If we're only going once a week, $40, $45 per going out.
Amanda, where are you on this?
Speak up.
I think we would enjoy it.
And it's a break, too, from having to make stuff at home.
So I think once a week at the 50.
50.
Yeah.
So 50 bucks a week on eating out.
That's $2.25 meals.
I wish I could see the face of all the immigrants listening to this.
And they're like people who are, especially the people in other countries.
And they're just like, what the fuck is this couple talking about right now?
$50.
Meanwhile, I'm remembering like when we ate out, I can't believe the shit.
Six of us in my family, right?
We go out, we get two Cokes, two.
Okay.
And then we, like, share them.
That will, I know, I'm sorry to all the pizza places that we defrauded.
That was not, that's what we did.
We only ate out with a coupon and we would under order.
And like, we're not getting full.
Like, that's just life.
That's what we did.
So I guess what I'm trying to show you is other examples of what's possible.
Like, you ever see families, it's, it's,
striking with their kids, right? The kids get their own
freaking adult size meal. And I'm looking at them like,
what the fuck? That could feed four kids.
Yeah. Yeah. I'm trying to stretch the possibility,
the imagination of what is possible for you. Yeah. So if you
want to start at 50 bucks, fine. I don't mind. But I want you
to start thinking there are other ways. Let's like look at other people's dishes. What are
they eating. Let's talk to our friends. Where they go? Do they not go? How do they save money? Okay?
Great. All right. 200 bucks. Now I'm going to put that up on screen and show you because guess what? That needs
to go down here. Yilt free spending. That's where it goes. So that's included right there. We're
going to change anything on your fixed costs. Okay. All right. So we're going back up here. Can somebody just
tackle the big expense here, please? Yeah. Yeah. $1,120 for kids birthday parties, Amazon,
and random items? No, fix this.
All right. I would say $6.50.
No way. I'll show you why.
Because watch, I'm dropping it from $1,120 to $650.
Look at this number up here, your fixed cost number.
Ready?
What did the number drop to you?
82%.
Not enough at all.
How are you going to spend $650 a month on random kids and Amazon purchases?
No, we're not doing that.
You all can't afford it.
You realize you're going broke every month, right?
Yeah.
What's happening here, and what I want you to pay attention to is you are, what you're trying
to do is you're still trying to live in the past and just like squeeze out a little bit here
and a little bit there.
No, you actually need to start completely fresh.
In your rich life, did you tell me Amazon purchases were part of your rich life?
No, you didn't.
Did you say kids' birthday parties and getting them all these big ass gifts were part of it?
No, you did not.
You said activities with your daughter.
I haven't seen that anywhere.
Okay.
but you're living in the past and trying to tinker around the edges.
That is a recipe for failure.
You will always hate it.
You will resent it and you'll go right back to spending the way you were.
My job is to help get you where you want to go,
even though you may not want to get there yourself.
Okay?
So fix this.
Let's put it at 100.
Honestly, it's going to require the two of you talking about money every single week.
There cannot be mistakes.
There cannot be like, oh, we should get this thing because it's on sale.
No, it's not happening.
Guys, I'm going to put this, but I have to give you like, this is a red alert.
This is asking a lot from a couple that has not really paid close attention to spending for a long time.
Okay?
Yeah.
All right.
I'm taking this down to 100.
Look at the fixed cost number.
Whoa.
Nice.
That dropped to 76%.
We're going in the right direction.
I really like this.
Okay.
What else we got?
Clothes and kids activities, 400 bucks a month.
Yeah, that needs to be cut in half.
Her art class
She does it with after school
Is I would say it was like
220
That's her activity
Because if so great
220 a month
Yeah
And like do we pay for anything else
Like she's in soccer
But we were
It was like
60 bucks
But it's like one time
But it's like she keeps doing stuff
So
Cheer is coming up
Let's call it 250
Yeah
I think that
because things will fall off and things get, yeah.
Let's call 250. Watch the number.
We're down to 75%.
Subscriptions.
I'm just going to start making changes because you guys are not.
160 for a couple that's losing money every month, not in my world.
Pick one.
What do you want to have?
We will keep the Apple subscription at $45.
All right.
Watch the number.
I'm changing it from 160 to 50.
Fixed cost down to 73%.
Not bad.
We're chugging how long now?
Do you have investments?
at $200 a month in addition to your 401k,
and then you have a $529 at $150 a month.
Yeah.
Maybe we need to hold off a little bit on the $529
because this is our future currently.
I know we want the best for our daughter,
but we need to kind of take care of ourselves at the moment.
And I think if we are able to kind of cut that for the time being,
that would help out.
Agreed. So let's take a look. We're going to drop the 529. I totally agree. Your daughter needs you to be financially stable more than she needs money 20 years from now.
I also want to go back up here to the kids activities because we did drop it. But what about clothes? She's growing.
Yes, she needs clothes. She's getting, yeah. Where do you buy those clothes? We did get blessed with a lot of hand-me-downs.
Can you keep getting hand-me-downs?
We keep getting them.
All right.
So we don't need a lot more, but maybe once in a while we do need something.
Would that be fair?
I don't want to, yeah.
I don't want an unrealistic plan.
It's fair.
What do you want to do for this number?
It's $250 right now.
Probably bump it to $300.
Okay, $300.
Yeah, I think we're pretty mindful with our spending for her because we know how fast she grows.
I like that you're both so mindful about her spending on her, but not for yourselves.
You're like, yeah, she's fine.
Fine. She's sick.
She can wear those.
But we need to go golf.
We need it.
All right.
Speaking of that, where is the golf expense in here?
It was in the miscellaneous.
It got wiped out.
It's really quite peculiar that there's no word saying golf in here.
Anybody notice that?
I took what was there.
Yeah, sure.
All right, fine.
Oh, and then I think that's a good question.
Are my nails in miscellaneous?
They were.
How often you get your nails done, Amanda?
Once a month, but I can switch to
the like press on one size way.
It might be the case that that's what you do.
That's really up to the two of you to decide
as you get more into the nitty-gritty.
But what I want is actually for you two
to have a discussion about it.
And I want you to do it not based on feelings.
Yeah.
You all should not be talking about your feelings
that much right now.
You should be talking about math.
Here's what we have.
We have a finite amount.
of money. How are we going to distribute it? What I notice is that there's been an overfocus on
feelings and your feelings have actually led you astray. Your feelings are why that you don't have
enough in savings and why each of you has adopted this role and we need to make feelings
secondary right now and make the math primary. Okay. Okay, let's keep moving. A hundred dollars a month
for vacations.
Those need to be wiped out.
Amanda, if you feel the same way,
and transferred to emergency or long-term savings.
You good?
Yeah.
Amanda, are you sure?
Yes, because we agreed that the vacation should wait.
Good, yep.
Agreed.
So we're at 200 a month, which is 2%, which is low.
Oh, well, guess what?
We have margin to play with
because look at your guilt-free spending.
those cuts you made at the bottom at the top, they flow to the bottom automatically. So you have
22% to play with. That's $252 a month. Why don't you say we put that money to work? Where do you
want to put that money? Definitely the emergency fund. How much? Make that 400? Okay. If we put 400 more
here, okay, watch what happens to the numbers. So 600 bucks. This turns into six, six
This number, I typically like to see it at 5 to 10%.
But in your case, do you think that number should be higher or lower?
I think it should be higher as I do have a solid contribution to more 401k, but not in our savings.
So it should be higher in our savings to kind of bump those up.
Okay.
And Amanda, why do you think it should be higher?
Because we're kind of behind.
Good.
Yeah.
You have a high income and you've had it for a while.
you don't have great savings. And you have very high fixed costs. So if something goes wrong for one of
you, you're in trouble. So that is why I'm like, guess higher. Right. So at 6%, you're kind of like
near the bottom. I'd like to see that number at like 14, 15%. So let me let me actually try to
like pump that number up a bit. Watch this. I'm going to go to 800. We're now at 9%. And look
how much you still have down here. 15% guilt free spending. What does your immediate intuition tell
you. What should you do? Add more to that. Yeah, I agree. Your guilt-free spending should actually
come down. You've been guilt-free spending a long time. It's actually causing you guilt at how much
you've been spending. So we need to take that down and we need to redirect it into savings. So
let's pump this number up and more. I'm just going to go a little faster. 1,200. Yeah.
Oh, 13% savings. That's $1,200 a month. Guilt-free spending is at $1,052, which is good.
good, I think we could cut that down even a bit more.
It's starting to feel a little bit more rational,
a little bit more aligned with the goal of a couple
that told me they want to spend less every month
and build up savings.
One last thing I want to talk about, which is investments.
Yes.
Have you run a compound interest calculation?
Yes, we have.
What do you find at the end?
How much are you going to have?
I think mine was like one point.
$25 million.
And for you, Drew?
1.4.
1.4.
Okay.
Well, we calculated,
if you continue on the current path you're on,
no raises,
which I suspect you will both get,
that when Andrew is 65 years old,
that's 29 years from now,
you will have,
not $3 million,
like the two of you said combined,
no, $5.58 million.
Oh.
Okay. That says safe withdrawal at 4% of $223,000 per year.
That's a lot of money.
Yeah.
Does that surprise you?
Yes.
It does surprise us, yeah.
Why is our calculation different than yours?
I think I might have put in only half of my paycheck investments in there,
um, instead of a full month's investment.
Why?
Yeah.
I think I looked at one paycheck and I grabbed,
Since that paid by weekly, I think I accidentally grabbed only one paycheck.
You know, I'd rather make a mistake in the good direction, not the bad direction, but that's kind of a big mistake.
That's like $2.5 million wrong.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, like I'm looking at my Charles Schwall with what's in there because nothing's getting added to that because I'm not at that job anymore.
It says by the age of, so by the year 2016, it'll be one.
1.9. Almost $2 million.
Mm-hmm.
That's pretty impressive.
That's good.
And remember, that's if you don't add anything else.
Yeah.
You're going to add more.
Of course you're going to add more.
Can I, in light of all this, what does this suggest to you for your CSP?
There was this big pressure on me mainly because I've been contributing to a 401k this whole time.
And company was matching it.
And so I was worried that like, oh my gosh, I don't have that anymore.
But when we look at the like projection, it's like, do I need to be adding as much or worrying about it as much right now?
These are the questions you should be asking.
These are valuable questions.
So let me share what's going on here.
First, your fixed costs were way too high.
So we went through the fixed costs and we tackled them and we brought them down to a level, I think is really.
reasonable. I actually think these numbers are pretty aggressive. Okay. Like you need to really be dialed in
every week. Okay. With that said, we're still a 74%. Yeah. It's high. It's really high. And so what we did
was we went down to guilt-free spending and we took that to about 11%. That number needs to go down a
little bit more. Okay. Because the money has to come from somewhere and you simply cannot be spending as much
as another couple on guilt-free spending because you have locked yourself into high fixed costs.
That's it.
So we have to accept that.
Your guilt-free spending number will probably have to be something in the zone of like 8%.
And what that really means is there are no more ad hoc last-minute decisions about spending
in E-O.
It just doesn't exist anymore.
That is not the type of couple you are.
Instead, it is planned ahead of time.
each of you will decide how you're going to take responsibility, what is the number allowed,
and you're going to leave buffer in case something goes wrong or, you know, there's a breakdown
or something you need to spend a little bit of money. But the automatic days for now are over.
Cool?
Yeah.
Savings, you have put more towards it, $1,200 a month, which I think is a good start.
Investments, you're at your Roth IRA for $200.
Personally, that's $2,400 a year.
I might just redirect that to savings, boost that savings up.
And then finally, if we look at your 401K, I just want to point this out,
another option you should calculate is do you need to be putting $1,400 a month into a 401K?
I'm not so sure.
That's a lot, yeah.
That's a lot, especially if there's an additional match and blah, blah, blah.
Of course, that's the best place to make a lot of money 20, 30 years from now.
But you have a crisis right now.
And so if it's me and I am truly dialed in with my partner and I'm confident that I can follow a system,
I probably take some of that money and I would redirect it to savings and quickly,
as aggressively as possible, build up that savings account to at least six months of fixed costs.
Okay.
Do you know how much that is?
$42,000.
So you're partially there, but you can see that.
even an extra $100 a month is $1,200 a year.
So like when you put it in that perspective, like finding $300 a month actually really adds up.
Yeah, it does.
Where do you think that the biggest opportunity that this plan falls apart might be?
The biggest opportunity would be having a rough day at work and you're like, we're going out.
we we deserve this i was going to say stress yeah good i agree what's the antidote to that i think
it's me and you sitting in the backyard with uh with a drink and watching our daughter play and
um you know instead of an eight dollar twelve dollar drink at a place it's you know one that
we got at the grocery store that's two dollars you know and i think i mean we go out
to talk to each other in a different environment.
We can
we can still have that same vibe
and conversation together at home.
It's really good.
I love the way you two are
almost coming up with this new way
of relating to each other.
It reminds me of when my wife and I
changed our diet and we didn't eat out as much.
We're like, what are you supposed to do?
What do we do with our friends?
And we had to invent a whole new way of being
with our friends.
And it's like, let's go for a walk.
Let's go check out this new park
in the city we haven't been to,
that kind of stuff.
Different.
Yeah.
But like, cool.
Cool for the phase of life that we're in.
Same for you.
Yeah.
What can each of you commit to
in terms of your rich life vision
to make sure that your plan stays on track?
Amanda?
Writing down or like putting it somewhere like this is our plan.
and this is why,
like this is why we're making these tough decisions.
Nice.
And so, yeah, I think like we're saying no because this other thing.
Love it.
Beautiful.
Get your daughter involved too.
Yeah.
Hell her.
Hey, this is what we're doing.
We want to build up our saying.
We need your help.
Get her involved in the way that is appropriate for her.
Drew, what about for you?
Yeah.
I think making that commitment to talk as a family, listen.
write out those goals, stick to it, be each other's partners throughout this whole process,
lean on one another.
I think as long as I'm with Amanda and my daughter, knowing what we talked about today,
I think our rich life will grow and we'll have that opportunity in the future.
Really good. I want to remind you that the change.
you're making, especially the aggressive changes, first, I don't expect you to be perfect.
You shouldn't expect each other to be perfect either. I do expect A-level results. A-plus,
it's going to take a while. It's going to take some mistakes, and that's okay. You will get there.
But if and when a mistake happens, give each other a little grace and get right back on the plan.
Okay, that's just normal. The other thing I want to point out is that,
as you develop this plan more, which I want to see, by the way, I want to see a full plan with
numbers. You should remember that a lot of this is temporary until Amanda's income goes up.
So you should make a plan for what do you get once that income goes up. And that is a really
fun exercise. For example, we get to accelerate our savings account by double. So that's going to
shorten the time from six years to fill it up to two years. If the salary increases by this much,
we're going to increase our guilt-free spending by an extra $150 a month. That's going to allow us to go
out to a nice meal with drinks. And we are going to start putting aside, you know,
$100 a month for a vacation. Like these are the kind of things where you plan it ahead of time.
You plan for the worst, like term life insurance, savings account, but you also plan for the best.
of the next extra money we get, 50% is going to go to savings, 20% here,
et cetera, et cetera.
And that's how you always have a plan.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
What surprised you in today's conversation?
I think what surprised me the most was how dire situation was.
I didn't know that we were out on the Titanic with like without a floaty or a door.
in secondary was that retirement number that you had thrown out.
Nice.
Amanda.
I definitely agree with the crisis because I think we've always just kind of told ourselves that we're doing pretty good, you know.
And I think, too, how we were bringing each other into the pattern and using each other,
I think that was a big piece for me.
and I like the new, like, take on this is what we really want to do.
So this other stuff, what are we really getting out of it?
Yes, yes.
A rich life is unique and personal.
And it fits you like a glove.
The two of you and your daughter, that's what it is.
And often when we look at where we are spending our money,
it's not reflective of our vision at all.
And that's okay.
That's just an opportunity to clean things up and get back on our vision.
And how are you both feeling now as opposed to when we started talking?
Amanda.
I feel hopeful and actually excited to take action and be like, actually, this isn't part of our plan.
And I think having those guard reels are so helpful and take away a lot of anxiety for me.
I am so excited and appreciate your time and the hard truths that we were told today.
Because I kind of have to agree that we thought, oh, we make X amount of money.
We're doing just fine, like, with our total amount.
But really, when you get into the nitty gritty, it's just not that way.
So I'm super hopeful and excited to take what we learned today, set those goals and talk to each other, and continue to strive for our rich life.
Love that.
Yeah.
And to have our daughter actually see it save, not just say we're saving.
Yes.
Yeah.
That is going to change everything.
I think that Amanda and Drew are really smart.
I think that they're going to make some changes.
I think the biggest challenge for them will be their mental.
vision of what money is. For Drew, this idea that I want what I want and I don't want to say no,
I think it's going to be really challenging for him to see money in a different way. In other words,
money is not just about whatever I see around me that I want right now. Money can be put aside
to get something even bigger and more meaningful. And I think for Amanda, her biggest challenge will be
becoming a true partner,
stepping up into her own knowledge and power,
becoming competent to build that confidence,
and actually saying, you know what,
that might not be part of the plan,
or this is what I want for our rich life.
Those are the challenges,
but I do feel confident that they can get there.
This is why creating a rich life is so important.
It goes way beyond where you should spend your money
on Friday night eating out.
It's about creating a vision for yourself and maybe your partner that fits you individually
like a glove.
If you need help developing your rich life vision and making your money work for you, you can get help
in my money coaching program.
You can join right now within 24 hours.
You will have your vision on the way being developed.
You can join at IWT.com slash money coaching.
And now let's take a little.
look at their follow-ups.
Hi.
So one of the biggest surprises from our conversation was realizing that we were stuck in a pattern
we generally thought was the right thing to do.
Hearing that we were actually in disparate need of a larger emergency fund was really eye-opening.
It shifted the way we see our dating routines and choices.
My biggest takeaway was learning how to say no more intentionally and how using a shared
philosophy can keep us on track.
Now we actually have a reason behind our no.
instead of feeling random or restrictive.
It gives us a sense of direction
and something that can kind of keep calling us back
and see, you're like,
oh, if we follow this philosophy or kind of,
we're going to actually be able to do the things
that are important to us that give us our rich slides.
So we've already made several changes.
We canceled multiple subscriptions
and we called to negotiate and lower our internet car insurance
and even pet insurance.
We also decided to limit 80s,
out once a week as a family, making it more of an important outing instead of just doing it
together. And we're starting daily meeting twice a month to make sure we stay aligned and keep
checking in on our goals, our progress. So overall, this was a great experience. It gave us some
clarity, motivation, and a better path forward that we really needed. So thank you so much.
Bye.
One of my biggest surprises from the conversation was realizing just how much our day-to-day decisions were driving our financial picture.
It wasn't one big mistake.
It was a lot of habits that continuously developed, like eating out too often and our miscellaneous spending.
That added up each month.
That was really eye-opening for me that made it clear that awareness alone isn't enough.
We need clear boundaries.
My biggest takeaways were the importance of being intentional and align as a family.
That includes developing a shared rich-like vision and a family.
and a family philosophy, so our spending actually reflects what matters to us.
I also learned how powerful it can be by practicing saying no in real time.
I did not attend the NBA playoff game, and I have been saying no to invites to golf as well.
For specific changes that we decided to make, as a team, we've been really intentional in our changes.
First, we called and negotiated with a few of our utilities companies, and we were able to lower our monthly payments.
We also went through all of our subscriptions together and canceled everything that wasn't really adding value to our life.
Just those two steps alone cut out a little over $2,000 in bills over the course of the year.
We also decided to temporarily reduce my 401K contributions down to the maximum company match.
And we also put a pause on our post-tax investments and our 529.
The goal there is to really increase our savings right now.
And we've committed to putting $1,400 a month into our...
our emergency savings account.
On a more day-to-day level,
we are limiting eating out to once per week.
We know that there might be a few slip-ups,
but we are trying to set up ourselves for success
by using chat GTP to create weekly meal plans
and keeping that grocery budget to about $150 per week.
Finally, we've set aside a specific day and time
twice a month to continuously talk about our rich life vision
and our family's philosophy.
We plan to include our daughter in those conversations
FEC grows, so this really becomes something we're building together as a family.
Overall, this conversation gave me clarity, competence, and a clear plan moving forward.
Thank you.
Listen up.
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First, you can apply to be on this podcast at IWT.com slash apply.
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