Life Kit - Can you afford to make a big life change?
Episode Date: September 30, 2025Longing to quit your job and follow your passion? Or perhaps take a break to travel? Or move to a new place? First, you'll need to look at your finances. In this episode, Jill Schlesinger, a certified... financial planner and business analyst for CBS News, walks through her five steps for assessing your financial situation before a possible life change. This episode originally published Feb. 28, 2023. Follow us on Instagram: @nprlifekitSign up for our newsletter here.Have an episode idea or feedback you want to share? Email us at lifekit@npr.orgSupport the show and listen to it sponsor-free by signing up for Life Kit+ at plus.npr.org/lifekitLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Have you ever found yourself toiling away at work, feeling completely burning?
out and thinking, you know, what if I just quit? Could I do that? Or maybe your work situation
isn't dire. Like, it's fine, but you're ready for something new. You want to try another kind
of job or start your own business. Or maybe you want to leave a marriage or move from your
cold, dreary home state to a tropical climate that also happens to be more expensive.
So often these callings feel impractical and out of reach.
And you might feel like, how could I leave something I've invested so much into?
This is called the sunk cost effect.
It's actually like behavioral economics.
And it's actually pretty dangerous because just because you've sunk some time, energy, and money into something doesn't mean that's the best thing for you to continue doing.
That's Jill Schlesinger, a business analyst at CBS News, an author of the book The Great Money Reset.
She says, if you're considering a reset, it helps to crunch the numbers.
see what your finances look like, what might be possible for you, and when.
And so part of the idea of taking this good, hard look, and accounting for what's going on,
is to allow yourself the freedom to think beyond where you are currently.
Slesinger lays out a financial framework in the book,
a set of steps you can use to make these decisions.
In this episode of Life Kit, we'll walk you through it.
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Okay, let's talk about the financial reset framework.
There are five steps, right?
I know, and it's kind of kitsy, so you'll forgive me,
I get a little kitchy. I'm a little campy. If I could have put this to music, I would have,
but I'm not that talented. I call it the Fabulous Five. So number one is you calculate the resources
that you have. And that means, like, what you own, those are your assets and your income and
really everything. You know, like when I say what you own, a lot of people will say to me, well,
I don't own anything? And I say, but don't you have a 401K? Oh, yeah, I have that. So it really is
a real calculation of kind of what you have and also what you might be giving up.
So, you know, for example, I have a lot of friends who are teachers and they'll say to me,
well, I don't have a lot in retirement.
I said, yes, but you have this amazing pension plan.
So if you're entitled to a pension, you might include that as something you don't have today,
but you would be entitled to in the future.
So under income, there's obviously your paycheck, but then there are also other benefits you get,
like subsidized health insurance possibly through your job, does that go under this category?
I think it really does because imagine what it would be if you had to do it all on your own.
I imagine if you were saying, I'm going to reset. I have to go now into the Affordable Care Act and buy my own coverage.
And you just want to know what is the difference. Maybe you have kids and you're using a dependent care or flexible spending account and you would lose that.
Maybe you've got a match in your 401K. So all that has to be taken.
into account. Yeah. And then in terms of assets, you mentioned one, which is like, okay, so you have
a lump sum of money in the bank or you have money in a retirement plan. What other kinds of assets
might people consider in this step? Anything that you would want to actually sell and that would
make a difference. I'm much more concerned or much more focused on what you could convert to
something easily to cash without any lag time without you know paying a big tax bill that's important so
I think it's more of your savings account if you're in your like sort of middle age you have some
investment property and I think that a lot of people look at their home and they don't actually
think of it as an asset but it is usually people's largest asset right when you have a home there is
usually something locked in there that's kind of amazing, and that's called equity, the difference
between what the house is worth and what you owe on it. So I'm not saying you have to do anything
with it, but it's really important to just at least count it as an asset. Yeah. And it's
interesting. That sort of leads us to step two because your house can be an asset and it can also
be a liability because you owe maybe a mortgage every month, right? Right. Right. Exactly. And
Step two is calculate your debt and your other liabilities.
Yes, of course, a mortgage.
Maybe you're partnered and you say, you know, we took this line of credit to build an extra
bathroom because, you know, we're a young family and, you know, three kids, one bathroom,
not cutting it, and you have a line of credit.
That's also a liability.
Maybe it's a credit card.
Maybe you didn't quite pay everything off.
It could be a car loan.
education loans, either for yourself or for your kids, all of those things come under this category
of liabilities. And, you know, what happens when you're looking at these things, don't throw in
the towel in that moment, okay? That's what I want to say. I think that some people say,
oh, I can't do it. I have all this debt. Okay, calm down. We may be able to still do something.
We're just in the phase, the earliest stage of taking a good, hard look at what you have and the position
you're in today. So this is not a step in your book, but I'm feeling like step two and a half is
take a deep breath. You know, it's funny. I think that might be step zero. You know, when you're
contemplating something in your life and it boils down to a question of, you know, can I take,
it's not can I get this new job. It's literally, I need to take a deep breath and need to ask myself a
hard question. Is this the way I really want to live? And the money part is the vehicle. Yeah, I think that's a
really good point. I mean, the numbers are here to help you build a life that you want, right? It's a
framework to help you get there. It's the framework to give you the permission structure to see what's
possible. You know, there's a lot of people who go through a process and they think about doing
something different. And when I lay out the choices, they may come back to this and say,
you know what, I'm actually good where I am. This happens a lot.
happens a real lot and sometimes you need that reality check with yourself and it sometimes can
actually make you feel a little bit happier or more fulfilled on the path that you're on rather than
having that longing because maybe your reset would force you to make a decision that you actually
don't want to make you know I've had people who call me up and they say to me you know I want to
do something different I'm making decent money and we lay this out and I said okay but you know
how do you feel if you make this choice not being able to help your kids get through college?
Because you can do what you want to do, but you can't do everything you want to do.
So let's move on to step three.
We've been talking about housing, and that's what this step is about, right?
What do you tell people to consider here?
I think first of all is if I were to sell this house right now, what would that mean?
How would I feel?
Would I feel unburdened?
Would I feel untethered, right?
Those are two opposite poles of something, right?
Would I feel like I could have more freedom to consider something else in the future?
For a lot of people, selling their homes, makes absolutely no sense.
A lot of people say to me, well, I have all this equity in my house.
I said, yeah, but you also have a 2.85 percent, 30-year fixed-rate mortgage.
And that's pretty amazing.
Maybe you could use this house in a different way.
Maybe if you want to move somewhere else or do something else, maybe you could rent the house.
But again, I think the biggest question to ask is that, you know, what is it that I'm looking to reset?
And how does my housing play into that?
Does this step only come into play if you own a home?
Or it's also, what are the questions if you rent?
The renting is, you know, have I really looked at what it means to like tally up the cost.
of where I am right now, and, you know, when rents were going crazy. And a lot of people said,
I hate renting. I hate that my landlord has all the power. I would really encourage you to
understand that owning is also really hard and that you might have a better deal than you think.
There's plenty of very happy renters all over the country. It's just that the Internal Revenue
tax code favors people who buy, which is an annoying thing that always bothers me day to day,
but it doesn't mean that renting's a bad choice. So most of the people who are renting
and are considering a reset have way more freedom to reset than those who own.
I feel like we've been talking about expenses here when we talk about rent. And that is
step four, right, to consider your spending habits and what you have to spend. Yeah. This is one of
those strange steps that you have to take regardless of how much money you have.
It really is because, you know, you can be somebody who's just starting out and living
really lean and then saying, well, if I actually want to be able to spend more money in the
future, I'm going to have to make different choices about maybe a career.
You know, I'm really, really stressing that this is not about living like a monk.
this is just accounting for what your needs are and then what you actually are spending your money on.
In other words, you don't necessarily have to say, I'm going to cut my expenses by blank.
And the other pieces, it is hard to lower the amount of money you spend sometimes.
So if you're on this track where you've been spending a lot of money and you say, well, you know what,
I'm going to leave corporate America and be a teacher.
And you think your whole family is going to reset to a lower spending.
You have to be sober about that analysis.
Maybe they will, but it is a lot of hard work to get there.
Yeah.
I mean, part of step four, part of analyzing this, I guess, right, would be considering
whether your current lifestyle is actually sustainable.
Absolutely.
So also, a lot of this is like, you make plans, plans change, and you have to be open
and honest about this.
Like, this is not sustainable.
And so part of considering your spending habits is understanding that we make choices throughout
our lives.
You can change your mind and you can make different choices going forward.
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change. Pathbreakers is available on podcast platforms. So what's step five? So this is a little
bit more of the emotional part. Step five is consider the obligations that you might have to
others. And so it's very hard to have these conversations.
So have you made an obligation to your siblings that, you know, well, I make a bunch of money and, you know, I'll take on the care of mom.
Do you have a sibling who's likely to need help down the line?
Yeah, you just want to know about that.
And so when you consider those obligations as you're looking at your own reset, you know, that could actually have a real impact for you.
Coming out of the five steps, you have all these numbers.
written down and all these factors, what do you do with them? Like, what questions do you need to be
asking yourself once you know these things? We have to have a premise, right? I don't tell people
where they're resetting to. I presume that you come into this having thought that you want to do
something else, right? So if you think about, let's sort of kind of be like the very basic
kind of reset, you know, if you say that I want to change careers and what would that mean? So
One of the things that you can do is you can look at those five steps and then look at, say, the next
three years and say, what would that mean in the next three years if I were to change careers?
Would I need to spend down some of my money?
Could I meet my obligations?
So all I'm saying to people who have a reset in mind is that you have to start with the
endpoint, right?
So the first five steps are to figure out where you are today.
And then the scenarios that you build out or for maybe the first, say, one, two, three here is to say, what happens to these five things in a year from now if this is the best case, if it's a middle case, and if it's the worst case?
You yourself made a big career change.
You wanted to go from being a financial advisor to working in media.
Can you walk us through your worst middle and best case scenarios at that?
that time. When I thought about my reset, it was the financial crisis, okay? So I went through 2008
with my clients and it was brutal. And in 2009 is when I thought, okay, well, my, you know,
my contract's up. What the hell? I'm going to do it. And so what I was trying to do was trying
to figure out, you know, like what is the best and the worst case scenario. So you know me.
I'm starting with the worst case.
So my worst case was it just wouldn't work.
No one would ever put me on the air.
And also maybe I was like, oh, I'm moving back home to New York with my family.
And maybe I was like, there was a reason I was there out of that family for 10 years.
Like, I didn't know because I hadn't been living in New York for 10 years.
So then I said, okay, what's the middle case?
The middle case would be that maybe I'd make a career transition.
but it would not be as much money as I really wanted to make.
And maybe it would be, you know, I wouldn't be like blissfully happy.
I would be okay.
But I would really have to hustle a lot more.
And maybe I would have to eat through some of the savings that I had, right?
So, you know, not terrible.
And maybe I'd have to like sort of also part-time be in the financial services business.
So then I was like, okay, best case, this works out.
I can get a job or string together enough income in the media industry.
And so what I thought really was, I thought that really the middle case scenario was
most likely that I'd be fine money-wise, no big deal.
It wouldn't be like the thrilling career.
And I'd probably end up going into some other career.
It would be okay.
The worst case, you know, I would just figure out that.
you know, I could, I could be a financial plan or go sell something. And, you know, you don't have to
really worry about the best case. And as it turns out, you know, the best case really did work.
That's great. That's what we love to hear. But, okay, so let's say that someone does go through
this framework and, you know, they walk through the five steps and the worst, middle, and best case
scenarios. And they decide, actually, I can't afford to do this right now. Or I don't want to make the
sacrifices I would have to in order to do this right now. What are some ways they can build a bridge
to the future that they want? You know, it's funny. I write about this guy Ross, which is really,
he's like a composite really, because he, in this, I get a lot of questions from people who are
in their 50s and they are exhausted. And, you know, it's interesting to me because a lot of people
who have acquired a lot of money sort of feel like, well, I have the money. I have the money. I
should be able to retire. Well, you know, again, you've got to run through all these numbers.
And one of these conversations I had with this guy Ross is that, you know, he's like, I want to
retire. And I said, you know, if you do that, it is like literally a high risk bet. Because in my mind,
even if you quit right now and you went to work at a lower paying job, you could potentially
blow through a lot of your money. And what I said, would it be okay?
if we gave you a real interim game plan and we and I could say to you, could you work for five
more years, you'll have some money coming in and then you'll build the pathway to your off-ramp.
And I don't think that in the moment he was so psyched about that, but he did call me back and
say, actually, I think that actually makes me feel more comfortable.
Like I have a time horizon.
I know how much more time I have to do this.
I can kind of suck it up.
And once I have my game plan,
I actually feel better about that middle case scenario.
Yeah.
Well, and it feels like you're doing something
as opposed to nothing.
Absolutely.
I mean, look, you don't know
if this money reset is within your grasp
unless you actually stop the, like, fantasy land
and do the math.
You just don't know.
And so one of the reasons that, I mean, I love the idea of thinking about the big picture and thinking
about what you want, but I also like the idea that it's only by going through this very clear
process and using a framework that you give yourself the permission to do it in the way that
feels most comfortable to you.
Well, Jill, thank you so much.
This has been super helpful and actionable.
I appreciate your time.
I thank you so much for having me, really.
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This episode of LifeKit was produced by Mia Venkat.
Our visuals editor is Beck Harlan and our digital digital.
editor is Malika Garib. Megan Cain is our senior supervising editor, and Beth Donovan is our
executive producer. Our production team also includes Andy Tagle, Claire Marie Schneider, and Margaret
Serino. Engineering support comes from Carly Strange. I'm Mariel Segarra. Thanks for listening.