Love Life with Matthew Hussey - 201: How Does Money Complicate Love? (With Ramit Sethi)
Episode Date: January 25, 2023We all like to think that love transcends all other issues, especially that of money. But our BELIEFS about money say a lot about what we value, our fears, and dictate the way we choose to live e...very day. Do you believe in saving every penny? Would you stay in a fancy hotel on a vacation? How would you feel if your partner bought themselves an expensive car without talking to you first? In this episode, Matt is joined by money expert Ramit Sethi (host of the hit podcast “I Will Teach You To Be Rich”) to discuss how money affects our relationships and how we can have a healthier partnership when we have better communication and control around the topic of our finances. --- Join my Virtual Retreat before January 31st and get $200 off your ticket + some amazing limited time bonuses! Go to MHVirtualRetreat.com and book your spot today!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome Welcome everybody to the Love Life Podcast.
I am here today with a dear friend of mine, someone who is an inspiration to me,
someone who has created an incredible world of his own with, I will teach you to be rich,
the website, I will teach you to be rich, the book, and now the podcast by the same name.
His name is Ramit Sethi. We go back years now, and this is one of many collaborations that I'm
excited about where I get to bring him into our world,
especially because Ramit, if you don't know him, is a personal finance advisor, someone who has
made this incredible path teaching people about finance, about money, about their relationship
with money, and now the relationship they have with their spouse
as it concerns money. And that brings him into our world and something that I know a lot of
people are going to be really interested in because early dating is a time when we don't know
how and when to bring up money or if we even should, or even if we should care about it at all.
And then relationships, of course, bring a whole different world of issues when it bring up money or if we even should, or even if we should care about it at all.
And then relationships, of course, bring a whole different world of issues when it comes to money and our relationship with it, both as individuals and as a couple.
So I would like to welcome Ramit to the show.
Thank you for having me back.
You know, I love this.
I mean, we see each other for fun.
I think we had coffee just a couple of weeks ago.
And so to be here is great.
And I'm excited because you and your community talk so much about dating. And I love that. But
ultimately, it's about relationships in whatever form. And the work that I've been doing with
couples, often couples that have been married for 5, 10, 25 years, the dynamics shift. They may get deeper. Like if you're
worried about money when you're dating, you're definitely going to be worried about money when
you've been married. And I want to talk about that. I want to start shining a light on money
and love because it's one of those things that we have strong feelings about, but we don't know how
to talk about. Well, it's interesting because I'm always dealing
with people who are looking back going,
oh my God, I could have seen the writing on the wall
for this much, much earlier.
And I ignored the red flag.
I ignored that warning sign in the beginning.
We often say relationships end the way they began.
You know, whatever was bothering you in the beginning, we often say relationships end the way they began. You know, whatever, whatever was bothering you in the first place often is the thing that five, 10 years later is
the thing that ultimately sends you over the edge. What I almost want to do is take the work that
you've done so far on couples and the problems you see and see if there's a way to trace back to the very beginning of their
dating. How could they have avoided these in the beginning? Or in certain cases, how could they
have even avoided that relationship if it was going to end in turmoil later on in the area of money?
Yeah, I love this. I love this topic because, you know, there's all these very daunting stats about money in relation. Money is the number one cause of divorce, etc. But it's rarely money as a general topic that might start with, you don't load the dishwasher right. And
then it escalates to, you don't listen to me. And then 20 years down the line, it's, we don't talk
anymore. I'm not connected. And that's the same thing in money. Some of the common problems people
have with money are, my partner doesn't want to talk about money at all. They just avoid it. Or my partner's a spender. I'm a saver. My partner worries about
money a lot. Or I worry about money. Those are the common ones. But the way that they
typically present it is a very specific problem. And this is how it goes always. They go,
why does my partner always spend so much at Target?
And they really believe that the problem is about Target or about video games or whatever.
And I go, okay, tell me about it. And they, you know, people feel very viscerally strong about it.
But it always is the case that Target is not really the problem. Target is just a symptom.
The real problem is much deeper.
It's about how they think about money, what their parents taught them about money,
their knowledge of money. Do they even know how much they make and how much they owe?
Those are the real issues, but we narrow our field of vision to Target or he or she spends too much
when they go out and buy an extra dessert. Do you think there's an appropriate time for people to be having those conversations
early on versus kind of running into them later on?
Yeah, we all should. And I'm going to put myself on the line here because I violated my own rules.
Okay. In the first edition of my book, which I wrote in 2007,
chapter nine, I was like, have a conversation early on.
It was like, so good. And then I met my wife and we were dating and we started to talk about
becoming engaged. And at one point she said to me, you know all about my financial situation,
but I don't know anything about yours. And it's true. I did know because she had asked me some 401k question. I was like, read my book and show me your numbers and we can
work through it. But I had not volunteered my information. And that was a problem. That was
my problem. Because in a relationship, the higher earner has the obligation of having uncomfortable conversations about money. And that is
something that's not really talked about. In relationships, there's often a disparity in
earnings. There's naturally a power dynamic that emerges. It doesn't mean it's right.
I don't think that the person who makes more money should necessarily have more power.
But that is the culture we live in, that we value that which is quantifiable. We value, can you see it in a spreadsheet?
And does it show up? But we don't value other things that are less quantifiable,
which are equally valuable. So again, it's not right, but it's just the culture we live in.
Therefore, it is the obligation of the higher earner to say, hey,
here's our financial situation.
This is how I think about it, but I want to make sure that you feel included, that you feel you
have a voice, and I want you to know that money is not the only important part in our relationship.
Okay, nice in theory. I didn't do it. And so that was what my now wife was saying when she said like, I don't really feel
comfortable. I don't know anything about your money. So we had that conversation and I like
to reframe from the conversation to a series of conversations. You're going to talk about money
for the rest of your life. Get used to it. It's actually fun when you get on the same page and
you stop seeing it as something to walk
on eggshells around. You go, what is money for? It's a source of joy and adventure. It's like a
puzzle. We can create our rich life together. That's where you can get to. But you first have
to crack the egg and start talking about how much you have. How do you see money? What do you think
your rich life is? And what does your partner think their rich life is?
I always think if you boil it down, it's like, it can be that you could always look at it.
If it was between friends, the discomfort of the person going out to a fancy restaurant with their
friend and feeling like, oh, the bill's coming and I just can't, I'm not able to pay this bill
or I'm not able to contribute on that same level.
And so there's just a, there's a awkwardness at the table.
So first of all, you said the C word,
which comes up time and time again,
the lower earner is obsessed with contribution.
How much am I going to contribute?
How do I contribute to this relationship?
And again, why?
Why is the lower earner consistently obsessed with this? Because we value what's quantifiable. So we believe deep down,
we have a deep invisible script that my value is determined in a relationship in part, or for some
people in large part, by how much money they bring to the relationship. And I'm not going to lie,
money matters. Absolutely. Money is
a small but important part of a rich life. But you'll notice that in couples, the lower earner
always says the word contribute. How am I going to contribute? How much? What happens if I decide
to stay home with the kids? What happens if this, that? And there's just nervous energy about it. What's fascinating,
I love your example of friends. It's very apt because I have spoken to couples on my podcast
where the income flips. One person used to be the higher earner and then it flips. Guess what
happens? The person who used to be the higher earner is now the lower earner. They become
obsessed with contribution. So while there are very real gender
issues, you often find that there are other dynamics about the higher earner and the lower
earner. And we have to just acknowledge those. How much do you find the situation that's almost
the reverse of that, where the higher earner is resentful because the lower earner has no real desire to contribute or just sort of stays quiet
on the subject? And this person now who's spending a lot more or feels taken for granted,
feels like they become resentful because they don't feel appreciated. How do you deal with a
situation where, or have you come across many of those
situations? Less than you would think. Less than you would think. We all have this idea that the
higher earners sitting there like analyzing every number and going, you're not pulling your weight.
But that's largely in our heads. Of course, I've spoken to higher earners who say,
like there was a couple where he was earning more and she was trying to
start a business and the business was not going well. First of all, it was an MLM scam. I was
like, why are you doing this bullshit? But it was not earning a lot and it had been years.
So what we did was we talked about why was she resistant to getting a job? And in her mind,
she had had a bad job with an abusive boss. So she
just thought all jobs are bad. And we analyzed that and realized that's not necessarily true.
But he also played a part where he was not being clear about what he wanted and needed in this
relationship. It's not that he needed her to make 50% and make the equal amount that he made. It's that he wanted to see
her succeeding at whatever she was doing. And this was not working. And sometimes we got to call the
ball. It's not working. Again, rarely do I see the higher earner being openly resentful.
You don't see the kind of that stereotypical gold digger situation where someone's just like,
wow, this person's just happy to spend my money
and they're not grateful.
This is one of the biggest surprises of the podcast. No, you rarely see that. But funny
enough, we all have this kind of ideal or this thing that people talk about in relationships
and money, but that's not really the problem. The problems are misaligned on spending. In a recent episode, one person said,
of course, I want to save for our kids' college fund. Of course, that's what my parents did.
And he was like, no, we don't need to save for them. In fact, if they want to go to college,
they can go to the military and get it paid for. And she was like, what? And that was a difference
in class, how they were raised, again, something we don't talk about a lot, and a difference in class how they were raised again something we don't talk about a lot
and a difference in knowledge of money like how does compounding work why does it make sense to
start a 529 when your kids are young things like that but uh the spending differences are real
absolutely the psychology is real but that that one example happens less than we think. In that situation, did you find that the guy,
was there some resentment from the guy's side that he would have to compromise on his life now
for kids? And it was like feeling like it was taking something away from him. Did he want kids
as much as her? I'm curious. Okay. So you basically read right into it. He said something that blew me away. I've spoken to a lot of people about money
and he said something like, why do our kids need to take my money so they can party in school?
And I'm an Indian guy. We pay for our kids to go to any level of education they want. You know,
my parents had no money. They're like, we'll find it. We'll find a way to go to any level of education they want. You know, my parents had no
money. They're like, we'll find it. We'll find a way. And so to hear this totally blew my mind
because I never would have come up with that phrase in a thousand years. But that's what I
love about couples. Every couple has deep similarities, but unique special differences.
Here's one. He goes, why does my kid need to party with my money? And I go,
okay, that's an interesting way to look at it. But I kept digging. It's not my job to tell them you're wrong, except in rare cases, which I relish. And so I said, okay, let's keep going.
Why? What does that mean? How much money do you actually need? And I kept digging. It's like
peeling an onion. And at one point, they love to travel. I said, what kind of trips do you take?
Well, we go to Disneyland. We do this. Oh, in a few years, we have our 10-year anniversary. Oh,
where are you going to go? Japan. And his face is just lighting up. I go, wow, I love Japan too.
What do you love about it? And he goes, kid-free vacation. Big smile. I go, really? You like to
travel without your kids? He goes, of course. I go,
oh, so what if we put some money aside so that every quarter you and your wife could do a
staycation or a nice trip and the kids can be with the in-laws? He goes, oh my God, I would love it.
For the first time in that conversation, he got engaged with money. He was active. He was sharing
his perspective. I think we should do this.
We should create a subsames account.
And that was a way for the couple to bond.
So we get so wrapped up in their argument presented as,
why doesn't he want to pay for our kid's college?
But that's not really the problem.
That's not even the field of battle.
It is what is important to both of you
and how do you create your rich life
together, a shared vision, and then the kid's thing will work itself out, which it actually did.
So what about if you then rewind to the dating phase, you're looking for a partner,
you're going on dates, maybe you've started kind of, maybe there's one person that you've now been
on three or four dates with, you know, you like them. It seems they like you. Maybe it has
potential to become something. One of the most common things I come across in early dating is
people just are sick of wasting their time. They don't want to go down the rabbit hole with someone
who has different intentions than them. And it could be different intentions mean't want to go down the rabbit hole with someone who has different intentions than them.
And it could be different intentions mean they want to fool around and I want a relationship
and I want to find that out sooner rather than later. Another conversation of difference in
intentions is kids. You know, I'd rather know now if they don't want kids. Um,
and another one is money. I'd rather know now what their position is, how much debt they have, if they're in a position to be able to contribute at the level that I would like a very difficult thing to bring up early on. We would love to know on a first date
if someone was like us and wanted a family one day, but it feels like a very intense thing to
ask someone on a first date. We would love to know if they want a relationship, but we're worried that
by asking them if they're in the market for a relationship, we're already
somehow signing them up to a relationship with us. And similarly, I can imagine it feels for people
like talking about money early on has a whole set of what feel like kind of stereotypes they want to
avoid, which is why I don't want to seem like I'm asking because I need someone to be rich. I don't want to seem like I'm asking because I'm money oriented or that that's what I value
more than anything else. And yet, as you say, money plays a very crucial part in, you know,
there's a great moment in the aviator where, um, uh, Leonardo DiCaprio, Howard Hughes, is sitting at the table with this very old money family.
And one of them says at the table,
we don't talk about money in this family.
You know, we don't think it's important.
And he says, that's because you've always had it.
That's right.
And anyone who's ever experienced a relationship
where money has been a problem
knows that it becomes a very big
part of the relationship very quickly. So we know these issues do matter on some level,
but we're also afraid to bring them up. Have you got into the world of like,
when in dating should this be brought up and how should it be brought up?
Yes. And that's also why I'm excited to talk to you because I want to see where we both stand on this. Okay. First off, I think we should all acknowledge that it's difficult to talk about
money in dating for a variety of reasons. First, we're operating with one hand tied behind our
back because of these gendered and cultural invisible scripts. If I bring up money, am I
being seen as a gold digger? I don't think so. I don't think so,
but I can understand that that is a very real concern. If I ask a couple of questions,
am I being seen as aggressive or too domineering? That's one. And then what about if you flip it?
If you happen to be a particularly high earning person, or if you flip the gender, there's so many different
scripts that are not written anywhere, but they're nonetheless real. And we have to acknowledge
those. I'm not going to come on here and be like, just say these 10 questions and then
pull out their financial statements. It doesn't work because we live in reality.
The other reason that we have another arm tied behind our back is that
most of us are not particularly savvy with money. Do you know most people I know who are in debt,
90% of them do not know how much they owe and 95% of them do not know when their debt payoff date is.
Most people watching and listening to this do not know what the average return in the stock market
is. This is something
that's not taught. And that's why I get passionate about it because I find money to be incredibly
inspirational. It's also woven into our life. It's where we live. It's what we eat. It relates
to our children. It's even who we are. And so I want to be able to sort of shine a light on this and say, hey, there's no shame
in talking about money.
We all have it.
We all want to know how to use it.
We should all be able to spend guilt-free on it, be able to be generous.
And so if we start from that frame of, yeah, money is important to me.
It's going to allow us to travel, take care of our families, maybe send kids to tennis camp.
That is going to allow for our security. Then suddenly it takes this like less of a,
I have to ask this odd question. And this is an important thing to me.
Just as I would ask a potential partner, what kind of food do you like? And then if they said,
you know, I only like to eat boiled potatoes and no spice, I'd be like, get the hell out of here. This is over. In fact, if I found out
I was dating someone for like a year and then they told me they like boiled potato, I'm like,
we got to go.
Wasted a year.
Yeah. But just the same, money is important. Now, how do you talk about it? That's a separate
question. But I just want everyone to get comfortable with the
idea that it's okay to care about money. I care about it. I'm not obsessed with it, but I care
about it. And just like food, children, living situation, travel, it's an important part of life.
I absolutely agree. And they are 100% going to be the questions that come up later if they don't
come up now. Are there particular things that I'm almost wondering, like, A, is there a certain
date by which it's worth having these conversations? You know, do you want to be six
months in and have not had any of these conversations? Is that too long? And which are the ones that you think are the kind of almost a baseline questions? Like, yeah, like,
you know, there's always going to be very particular nuances in the way we do things,
which are not going to be deal breakers for either of us. It's just a difference in
what you like to do with your money versus what I like to do. And as long as they're not completely and utterly clashing in our values or in the amounts of our
joint money that we want to spend on those things, then we can negotiate and navigate those. But
are there any that you're like, these are the deal breaker questions that you really need to
ask about money in the early stages and what do they relate to?
Okay. So is there a specific date? No. Just the same as I wouldn't say there's a specific date
where you want to be physically intimate. You want to feel that out and what's comfortable
for you and your partner. But for me, when there are natural moments in a relationship to talk about this, that is a great time.
So certainly at a one-year anniversary, obviously that's like, hey, this is like an amazing,
let's take stock of where we are.
What have we loved about the last year?
What do we want to do in the next year?
This is a moment.
Certainly when you are considering a serious step, whether it be getting engaged or moving
in, and then of course, engagement and the
lead up to marriage. Those are obvious ones where it's a given. Nobody's going to think it's weird
to talk about money. I think sometimes people fixate on that first six months because as you
pointed out, they don't want to waste time. And that's totally fair. I get that. I think there
are ways to ask questions there that don't feel intrusive,
but still give you a lot of insight. Those would be questions like, you know, I was just thinking
like, how did you grow up around money? What did your parents talk about? Mine, they would say
things like, we can't afford it. And that actually, I'm still trying to work through that because I started to
make a little bit more money, but I still worry about spending. How about for you?
Notice that that question, it has nothing to do with what's in their bank account,
but it's really telling you about them and it's meeting them where they are.
And I can imagine a partner saying, oh, we never talked about money. It's like very terse because
people are nervous when they start talking about it. They get very nervous and short.
And so I would go, if I'm the curious partner, I would say, oh, so do you talk about it now with
them? Oh, no, no, no. My parents, they don't. They're Midwestern. They don't. It's a Midwestern
culture. Oh, okay. And how has that seeped into your life today? Like for me, my parents told me this and
it was awesome. My parents are immigrants from India and they taught me X, Y, Z. That's been
super helpful. But I think by the time I was 23 or 24, I also realized I had some other ways of
looking at money. What about for you? It's this beautiful back and forth. Notice that I'm
volunteering a lot of information about myself. information yeah there's a vulnerability to it exactly and a lot of it is me admitting
gosh there's stuff i don't know yet and when you admit that to your partner they're they're
going to receive that they may want to help you or they may just feel open and willing to share
because i guarantee you every single person, including me, has vulnerabilities about money. Whether it's where we came from and what we learned or our
credit card debt today or not knowing how to properly allocate our investments, everybody
on this planet has some vulnerability. What a beautiful place to start.
If you have what you perceive as a major vulnerability, something that
keeps you up at night or do you
just worry someone's going to judge you for, maybe you carry a lot of shame around it.
To what extent do you feel you owe it to someone to volunteer that information? I mean,
you just mentioned a good example, right? If let's say you are carrying huge credit card debt,
that is your kind of like, it's the monster in the closet for you.
Maybe there were bad decisions at some point in your life, or there was a lack of education at
a certain point. And this problem just became, it became bigger than you at a certain point.
And now you meet someone that you really like, it seems to be going well. And there's this part of you that you are afraid of. There's this
part of you that you think someone is going to reject you for. Someone's going to judge you for.
Maybe it's going to send them packing. What do you think someone's approach to that should be?
I feel very strongly that you should be the one to bring it up. If you have what you might consider a monster in your closet,
and in most cases, it is credit card debt. The second most common one would be student loan debt.
And then beyond that, there is a steep cliff, it falls off. I strongly believe that you have to be
the one to proactively bring it up. And I actually think
this is such an amazing opportunity. So a lot of people, they build this thing up in their head,
they spin and spin and catastrophize and go, if I finally tell him or her, they're going to leave me
and they're going to say, why didn't you tell me three years ago? It's a fair fear to have.
But instead, to me, this is such an opportunity to go and have a vulnerable
conversation and say you know what there's something that i've been meaning to tell you
and it's really been on my mind you know when i was in my 20s i was living in new york i didn't
have a lot of money and i was going out with friends and i just didn't learn about money
nobody taught me my parents didn't i didn't learn it in college. And I ended up racking up $12,000 of credit card debt. And by the time I was 30, I realized I need to get this
under control. And I started paying it off. Now it's down to $8,000. I know exactly when it's
going to be paid off. It's going to be paid off on this month of this year. But it just feels bad.
And it feels really bad that I haven't told you because I know we're starting to talk about our future together. So I just want to put
it out on the table and admit and tell you what I have. And I also want to let you know that this
isn't something you have to worry about. I have a plan. And that to me is one of the most, that's the relief for the other person is that there
is a, there's a, there's a, you've thought about it.
Yeah.
You've started to generate a plan.
You're also communicating to them.
I'm not making you responsible for it.
Now, what if when communicating that your further insecurity is okay all of that's fine i'm not
making them responsible for it i have a plan but it's gonna take years potentially for me to get
there yeah and in the meantime this person has a certain lifestyle they do different things than i do i'm quite happy having you know it's
it's you could even say in this example okay the person's not even doesn't even need to live some
lavish lifestyle but the other person has a different expectation yeah and so now you feel
uncomfortable going to the restaurant or you
try to take them into a world where things cost less, but they don't want to be in that world.
So how do you navigate that? Okay. This is so relevant. And this is one of the most common
questions I get because invariably in couples, there's a difference in income. And as the relationship gets more serious, you start eating out more.
You start taking vacations.
You start potentially living together where the lifestyle is different.
This happened with my wife and me.
So I'll just tell you what happened with us.
When we got married, she moved into the apartment I was living in.
And we were going to split our rent proportionally.
Okay. So I made more than she did. So I was going to pay more. But even with that proportional
split, which I recommend to people, you split your joint expenses proportionally based on income.
It still was a huge additional expense from where she was living. In other words, I had a higher lifestyle.
And even though we were splitting it proportionally, it was still too expensive for her.
And to her credit, she brought it up. She said, look, this is really expensive. I love this place,
but I don't need to live here. And it's beyond my means. What a great conversation. What a great conversation
to broach and to be honest about it. Because we're about to spend the rest of our lives together.
We have to be able to talk about this. This is the smallest thing we're going to talk about.
And so we talked and talked. And eventually, I, again, the higher earner has the obligation
in some of these scenarios. I had the obligation to help figure out a solution. She had brought it up. Now we got to talk about it. And it was
my obligation to help figure out. And so I paid extra, which I thought was totally fair.
I didn't want to go to a less desirable apartment. I thought our apartment was awesome,
our apartment by this point. But it wasn't fair for me to say, well, I chose to live here 10 years
ago and now you need to pay more than you can comfortably afford. So I paid an additional
amount on top of my proportional amount. That worked great. And so that's not the only solution.
We could have moved to a less expensive place. There are lots of other options, but these are
the kind of answers that you and your partner
will have to come up with. Was there on her part, residual discomfort that even though you had said,
I'm happy to pay more, there's still some part of her that is like, Oh God, but somehow I still
feel like I'm not doing enough or I'm not contributing enough. And how do you, you know,
do you, do you see that? That strikes me as me as an area where over communication is a good thing.
Yeah.
You can keep reinforcing this idea that I don't need you to contribute 50% and I contribute
50%.
Well, here's what I, so, you know, my wife and I, we ended up signing a prenup and that
was a multi-month process, which actually
started off like pretty easy and then became very challenging. And we had to see a therapist and we
had to really have conversations that we probably would not have had. And I learned through that
process that I can say there's more to this relationship than money. Your contributions are very important,
financially speaking, and also in other ways. I can say that once, but it's not enough. I've got
to say it twice, three times. I've got to say it for the rest of my life. And I have to show her
as well. And that is, again, this difference in the dynamic of the
higher earner or the lower earner. You cannot communicate these things too much. And similarly,
the other partner cannot communicate enough as well. They can say, I really appreciate it.
Thank you. I love how we can talk about money. I love how we can come up with a shared vision
together.
At a certain point in a relationship, you're probably not counting pennies.
If you are, I think there's probably something wrong. I don't even mind if couples are, you know, some, some couples, they have separate accounts.
They actually Venmo each other.
Fine.
It's not my personal take, but what works for you?
Great.
But I think at a certain point,
you get away from literally checking every single penny and you should start to focus on a bigger
picture. What's our rich life together? What are our values together? What do we care about? What
do we not care about? So if you were to ask me now now the type of conversations we have, they are about where should
we travel next year? Who should we bring with us? Do we want to spend more in certain areas or less?
That's like a very broad topic. To me, that's really creating the fabric of a rich life.
And in order to get there, to have those high level conversations,
you have to have a really good foundation of how you talk about money and how you manage your money
jointly. It's, you know, one of the things that it seems to me there's a theme of here is there
are certain moments that provide really good stopping points for, hey, let's, you don't even
have to have it explicitly or directly. You can
find those moments, whether it be a one year anniversary, whether it be you're about to move
in together. And so there's the question of rent, whether it's you're about to get married. And
there's the question of a possible prenup. These are all moments where the money conversation
becomes possible. And to that extent, even earlier, I think when you're eating out at restaurants, it's a great moment to talk to someone about,
you know, their relationship with eating at nice restaurants. And do they enjoy also eating at home
or do they enjoy, you know, are they just as content eating noodles on the side of a street as they are in some five
star restaurant? You know, I feel like those moments are just as valuable in starting to get
an early sense. Yes. I love that example. Eating out, perfect, perfect way to create an opportunity
to talk. And I think what you're really revealing for people is that we often think about money as
this separate topic. So there's our relationship and
then there's money and money is this really nervous and we're all insecure about it. But
the way I see it is it's all woven together. Money is a critical part of your life together.
So when it comes to eating out, yeah, absolutely. You go out for the fifth time, you go, oh my gosh,
I love this place. I remember when we grew up, we went to India, we'd eat street food. Sure, we'd get sick once in a while, but it was
amazing. And the first time I had sushi was in my 20s. What about you? And you're actually learning
a lot about, oh, well, we grew up, we ate at a hotel every Sunday. That was a very fancy,
oh my gosh, do you like that now? And you start to connect over those things. So money is not this separate thing.
It's actually deeply woven.
And there's nothing to apologize for when it comes to learning about how your partner
sees the world.
Because it's exactly that.
It's how you see the world.
And the volunteering information about yourself in that way is a way of explaining your journey i know early in my and audrey's relationship i
quickly realized oh this is not someone who goes out and spends a ton of money on shopping like on
you know going out and buying fancy clothes and this and that i was like oh that's really
interesting it was one of the things i really loved about her is that she wasn't materialistic. And I know I had had phases of my life where I splashed out
more than I do today, like where I bought myself a nice watch and I joke with her and I'd be like,
I can't, you know, even now I can't believe I bought that watch back when I was 27. I would
never do that today. You know, I laugh about it, but even that is a kind of that signaling my
values that my values have changed in that time. There was a time when I was first earning a little bit
of money and I started going, oh, I want that thing I could never afford before. And then I
went through the other side of that and went, oh, I just don't really care about that.
I did the same thing. I remember we were talking during the pre-net process,
really going deep on how we thought about
money and spent it.
And I remember saying, look, you see my lifestyle.
You see the way I spend my money.
We grew up very similarly.
My wife and I, both our moms were teachers.
We grew up sort of close by to each other.
And by virtue of my business and luck and hard work, I was able to
accumulate assets. But I said, look at how I spend my money. There's zero risk of me going out and
buying a Lamborghini tomorrow. It's just not my thing, you know? But I do like nice apartments.
I like nice clothes. And I like to travel. I like hotels. Those are basically my things.
But I also like a really high savings rate.
I love my compound interest.
Okay, I love my Vanguard account.
And that's what makes me happy.
So when we talk about our money together,
you know who I am by what I do.
Do I show up on time? Do I say I love you? Do I support you in
the ways that you need to be supported? Now, this took work as a formerly single guy. I was like,
now I have to work with you to create our rich life. Because she doesn't care about hotels as
much as I do. I love them. She's fine with
whatever level of hotel. And I think that becomes this beautiful conversation. Here's a question
that you can ask your partner at any stage of the relationship. And the question is,
what is your rich life? So I asked couples this or people, and they almost always give me the
same answer. They go, I want to do what I want when I want. I go, oh God, not this again. I go, wow, that's so interesting. What do you want? And then
it starts to get real. So they'll often give me perfunctory answers. I want to travel and have
the freedom to blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. I say like travel where? And what I'm really looking
for are these vivid details. So imagine doing this over a cocktail with your partner.
You want to travel where?
I don't know, like at some point in the future,
probably like Europe.
Cool.
Notice the excitement.
Cool, that sounds amazing.
Where would you go in Europe?
If you could go anywhere, aggrandizing their vision.
Sometimes you need to believe in them
more than they believe in themselves.
Well, I'd really love to go to Italy, I guess.
Oh my gosh, that sounds beautiful.
I could see us having wine, this sunset. And like like if you could bring anyone who would you bring boom tears
i would bring my grandmother she's always wanted to go in fact she's from italy
wow what would we do together and you can see people dreaming.
And when you get to that point,
money is simply the means to get there.
But money is such a beautiful entryway into accessing your partner's dreams.
That is how you can start connecting.
I've always loved that idea,
that phrase you've said of,
you know, what is your rich
life it gets to the heart of it's different for everyone and in a couple especially
understanding what's wildly exciting to you is has got to be one of the greatest ways that you can support your partner in helping them
achieve that i remember doing um ed my let's podcast and i remember ed saying to me he asked
me something i think about like a relationship where one partner is an entrepreneur and doesn't feel
supported doesn't feel like the other person is the cheerleader they want them to be
and i i gave an answer that he loved but i don't think he expected okay and i said the
the problem is that being an entrepreneur there is something inherently selfish about
that you know there's something that's very much like this is what i want to do and create
and this is my dream and it tends to affect the people around you yeah now it may affect them for
better if it all works out the way you want it to,
but anyone who's been an entrepreneur knows that it also is extremely consuming.
The people around you have to be insanely patient, not just with the fact that it takes a long,
long time to get anywhere, but also with the fact that sacrifices have to be made a lot has to be said
no to your moods are probably gonna fluctuate significantly between good days and bad days or
despair at times it can be incredibly hard on the person that's with a person like that and there's
this kind of rhetoric especially with men on social media it's like i want a person like that. And there's this kind of rhetoric, especially with men on social media, it's like, I want a person who's like my cheerleader, who supports me, who gets behind me.
I want like the woman who stands behind her king and like encourages him to go out there and conquer
the world. And I've seen what that looks like when it mutates into something bad. And I've seen it in
many different situations and it can become an incredibly selfish and narcissistic path that you take where you just expect the world to kind of
revolve around you now that you've decided to pursue this dream. All the while saying, no,
no, no. But when this comes off, it's going to be good for you too.
I think we follow the same people on Twitter. There was a guy who posted this huge thing about
here's 13 ways I've been successful
and built a multimillion dollar with all these kids. And he did not mention his wife once.
And of course, Twitter was like, dude, are you married? Who's taking care of these kids?
And then he goes, oh yeah, shout out to my wife. And he just got so roasted, he deleted his account.
I did not know that.
Oh, that's great.
When you're dealing with couples and one or the other is saying, I don't feel supported,
but what they're doing is like taking a big risk.
How do you navigate that?
Okay.
So I've spoken to couples where, I've spoken to straight couples, gay couples. In these cases, I've spoken to couples
where he was the entrepreneur or she was the entrepreneur.
And inevitably, you're right,
the partner of the entrepreneur, regardless of gender,
goes through things because being an entrepreneur
is its own unique situation.
In the best case, in the best case, the entrepreneur over communicates to their partner.
They talk about how they feel, how the business is going. They provide as much of a semblance
of stability as an entrepreneur can, especially in the early days. But in the best case,
they build a bridge between the work they are doing as an entrepreneur
and the relationship.
Here's what this deal would mean for us.
Here's why I'm working to write this book right now.
Because when I do, it's going to provide X, Y, Z.
Here's why I'm doing this.
It motivates me.
And if I'm excited, then my readers get excited.
Things like that. I think in the worst
case, it becomes this maniacal, singular focused on one person and also delayed gratification.
Just wait, just wait another year, just wait two years. It'll happen. And then we're all going to
be happy. And I just think what a terrible way to live, to wait to be happy. The journey is where we get to be happy.
There is no destination.
So I've seen both and I've seen it on all sides of the equation.
And I do think that, again, the obligation is with the entrepreneur in that case.
I agree.
I 100% agree.
And I will say that the partner also has an obligation. They should probably seek out other partners of entrepreneurs
and have a support community.
There is a lot of partners of entrepreneurs
and it's really helpful to engage in that.
So we shouldn't just put it on one person,
but a lot of the burden should probably fall to them.
So I'm wondering now,
if we take a step into kind of some of the gendered
nature of this conversation yeah just two bros talking about gender yeah well okay let's acknowledge
because we are we are we wanted to know like what are people really interested to know from
this conversation with the two of us and a lot of women brought up the same thing which is
how do i deal with men feeling emasculated by me earning more by me being the the primary
earner in the relationship and by me coming into the relationship with a different lifestyle than
he can afford how do i deal with situation? Because a lot of women feel like
it is driving men away. So what, have you come across that dynamic between the couples that
you're working with in the podcast and what's your advice in those situations?
I have come across it. It's almost always brought up by women. I rarely hear a man saying, I feel emasculated.
In fact, I've never heard a man say, I feel emasculated.
It's not a phrase that in my experience,
a man will articulate.
He might feel it, but he won't come out and say it.
Okay, got it, got it.
So-
There's a huge level of vulnerability to that.
It goes as deep as you could possibly go for a man.
But he will
use other methods. Why are we doing that? And other methods that somebody would use when they
feel uncomfortable, but can't quite articulate why. Passive aggression. Lots of all that.
So a couple of examples come to mind from recent couples I spoke to. This was amazing. So there's a couple.
She's an entrepreneur.
And she came on the show saying, I would like for him to pick up the check once in a while.
He said, great.
I would like to too.
I pick up the check.
But when I pick up the check, she tells me, I don't want you to pay for that.
I want you to invest your money in your Roth IRA.
And I'm like, this is juicy.
I got to talk to this couple.
So I get them on the podcast.
You know, I love this stuff.
I'm sitting there asking questions and eating popcorn.
I'm like, what'd you say?
No, you didn't.
And I'm like, keep talking.
But the amazing thing is we've never heard couples behind
closed doors actually share real numbers, which is my next question. So I ask him, you know,
what's going on with the check? And then I go, so how much are y'all making?
So he recently quit as a welder to start his own business. He lives at home with his parents
and he pays himself $2,000 a month, a very modest amount so he can
invest more in the business. He's doing fine. And he's got a big contract and he's on his path.
She is an entrepreneur as well. And she makes $200,000 per month. She makes 100 times what he makes. And she grew up since the age of five,
sitting around the dining room table talking about Roth IRAs. She has a very savvy family.
He did not. He's like, I don't know what a Roth IRA is. But I really loved their conversation.
I loved his attitude, especially
because he was like, yeah, I know I need to learn this stuff. Nobody taught me, but like,
I need to learn this stuff. And they obviously loved each other. But her expectation was that
once in a while, he should pay. Okay, we'll leave it to the listener to decide if that's fair or not.
But when he offered, she said, no, put in the Roth IRA. So there was this feeling
of, I want you to pay, but then no, I actually want you to do, I want you to manage your money
the way I would do it. And the fact of the matter is he is starting his financial journey at roughly
the age of 40. She started at the age of five. How can we expect someone who started their financial
journey 35 years later to be at the
same level we can't doesn't matter if it's a man or woman and so um i want everyone to live a rich
life but i also know that we start at different places i wish i could deadlift 600 i didn't start
deadlifting at age six i wish i had all right we don't do that in my type of family. So in that case,
with the gender issues were absolutely riveting. She made a hundred times what he makes.
He was very willing and potentially has high earnings in his future.
But there was a difference in level of savviness about money, also in gender expectations.
And so what I did with this couple was we acknowledged it.
Why do you want him to pick up the check once in a while?
We talked about it.
Put it out in the open.
And in the end-
What did she say when you asked that?
It's always an uncomfortable conversation, but people are quite perceptive when you ask
them the right questions.
People, they all use the same words. I would like to be taken care of. I would like to not have to worry
and things like that. And then when I talk to men, it's often like, I'd like to make her happy.
That's very interesting. I'll ask them, what's your rich life? They go, I just want to make
her happy. I go, that's great. I'm glad you want to make her happy, but what about you?
And often, especially the older men get, they, like we all know a dad who has no hobbies
whatsoever.
It's that.
He's sort of put it into his family.
We also know moms who give it all to their kids.
And I asked, you know, what is your, what do you love to do with money?
They go spend it on my kids.
I go, okay, I love your kids too, but what about you? And so in their
case, believe it or not, I wanted to find a way for them to both feel good at this pivotal moment
of going out to dinner. And so it seems unromantic. And this is a very important thing. A lot of
people don't like scripting things out because it doesn't feel romantic. It feels weird. And I go, you think
that's weird? How about going the next 45 years of your life fighting about who's going to pick
up the check? That's weird. So let's script it out. Let's follow a script. And if it doesn't
work, we'll change the script. And after a while, we're actually going to start to feel better.
So in their case, they sat down, they looked at their spending, and they said, how often can we
go out to eat? Two times a month. Okay, great. How much are we going to
spend each time so that we don't feel constricted? We want to get a couple glasses of wine, et cetera.
Okay, great. We're all good. I go, who's paying? Remember, she makes a hundred times what he makes.
And we talked about values. One of the values that a lot of people want to be but do not live is being
generous. If you're making a hundred times what your partner makes, who should pick up most of
the dinners? Seems pretty obvious to me. Not all. There's certainly an opportunity he wants to pay.
But I said, how are you going to do it it because she did not feel good with her putting the credit card down she just didn't feel good
and i was like why and she talked about i go okay fine that's how you feel we're not going to argue
with it you feel the way you feel so they agreed that before they go out to dinner they're going
to have an exchange of credit cards she's actually going to give him her credit card on those nights and then just like she saw her
parents when the check would come her dad would pay for the credit card bill even though her mom
made more than her dad isn't that interesting so overall um when it comes to these gender issues
they are absolutely fascinating they're very real real. We can't dismiss them.
We grow up with these coded messages.
Men, women, what does it mean to be a man or a good woman?
And I don't ever want to try to tell people you're wrong about how you feel, but I do
want them to shine a light on it because it's not written anywhere.
And once you understand what those messages are, what did my mom do? What did my dad do? Who paid for the check? Who said this about money? Who did
I observe paying the bills? Suddenly you can say, is that what I want to replicate? Or do I maybe
want to change some of that for our future? Do you have a stance on who should pay on the first
date? Well, I want to know your answer. I know your answer. I saw your YouTube video. They crushed it. First of all, let's just talk about that video. Okay. So I see that video
like every 10 days on Reddit. I'm like, this goddamn guy goes viral every week wearing that
dirty shirt, that shirt with a stain on it. You know what I'm talking about? Why?
Why? It was because a woman with makeup on who was significantly shorter than me hugged me right
before i went on stage this is the real bts of that viral video yeah i want to set the record
straight tell us because there's a lot of trolls in the comments they go why can't this guy afford
a clean shirt that's what i said right with a video that viral you'd think he'd be able to buy
at least one clean t-shirt i It was clean until I showed up at the
venue. And then, and I've had to, on tour now, I have to be really careful because like if a hundred
people hug you in a row. Yeah. Wow. What a story of heartbreak. If a hundred women hug you in a row,
then all the trials and tribulations you have to undergo to make sure you have a clean shirt.
How do you deal with it, Matt?
Listen, I think we're learning how bad it can get.
Yes.
Because I'm dealing with thousands of comments calling me out for not even being willing to wash a t-shirt before I go on stage. I had washed the t-shirt. A lot of people hug me.
I hug them back.
Wow. But I get lots of faces of makeup on my t-shirt. A lot of people hug me. I hug them back. Wow.
But I get lots of faces of makeup on my t-shirt.
Wow.
Because I give proper hugs, Rameet.
Wow.
I don't phone it in.
Wow.
So we all have a lot to learn from Matt's extremely difficult life.
My rich life, I think, is bringing two t-shirts to a tour event.
Doing the gaudy thing of bringing two t-shirts.
Wait, I always do that.
The same, exact same t-shirts.
So I've never done that.
I should start doing that.
Who irons your clothes?
Do you have an iron here?
Yeah.
But I don't.
I get them.
If they're like nice, really nice t-shirts, I get impressed.
Okay.
I occasionally will iron a t-shirt, but most of the time I just hang them so they don't
get creases because I can't.
That's fucking revolting that you said that.
I was going to say.
Wait, what do you do?
Do you iron?
Fuck yeah, I iron.
Indian people all iron.
I have the best iron.
I have the best technique.
If I ironed, I would listen to a lot more podcasts. do you want me to show you how to properly iron yes no that's no i think we should
make that video that that will definitely not go viral i want to make that video uh i would love
that okay we get the whole setup we get the starch indian man teaches white guy how to iron yeah
we're gonna start there that's not the only we're not gonna stop there but we'll start there it goes viral as who should pay on a
date uh i mean if it beat that i would live i would die happy speaking of deal breakers i told
um you know speaking of money deal breakers um i asked my wife last night, I said, if I died, I love these death-related questions.
They're very morbid and fascinating.
I go, if I died, and-
If I died.
Yeah, when I die.
That's too real.
That's too real.
If I died, and you got in a relationship with somebody else, and you found out that he paid
a 1% management fee to a financial advisor, would you stay in that relationship?
And I was looking at her like, better get this answer right. Really judgmental. And she said, no, I would break up
with him. And I said, thank God, because I would come up from hell and I would snatch this
relationship. It would go really bad. And you said this over a nice dinner somewhere.
Yeah, we're sitting...
Oh, it's beautiful.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
If you're paying 1% to a financial advisor,
that's a deal breaker right there.
Okay, everybody,
you could ask that on your first date.
Do you have any financial advisor expenses?
What's your expense ratio?
And if they say anything above 0.45%,
cut them off.
Game over.
If you and me were on a date,
I wouldn't have known the right answers.
I could have blown it.
That's the point.
There and then.
I love the idea that you,
the two of you are on like a really romantic holiday somewhere
and you're sort of on, you've like,
she's booked like a candlelit dinner on the beach for you
and you're out there.
And then I pull up my questions.
And midway through this beautiful dinner,
you go, if I died.
Oh, I have a, I love these questions.
And you were with someone else.
Here's the questions, like,
this is the questions you want to ask,
which tell you a lot.
Because when I'm with couples,
I just like to fuck with them sometimes.
So I go, I go,
what if one of you decided to give it all up
in beautiful LA or New York, and you decided you wanted to move to a farm
and live on a subsistence farm?
What would happen?
And then I just sit back and I go,
discuss among yourselves.
Sometimes I say,
who would be more likely among the two of you
to go QAnon?
I asked my wife that.
I fucking love that question.
And she's not going QAnon,
but I'm definitely not going QAnon.
She's more basically QAnon.
No, she's not QAnon.
My wife is not QAnon.
Let's get the record straight.
But out of the two of us.
She's deep in QAnon.
Fuck.
So I'm like in trouble for this one.
None of the prenup stuff is like all good
she's like why are you going on if the caption on this major podcast is saying i'm q anon if this
if this is titled ramit's wife went q anon i'm in real trouble i love you babe ramit's wife
q anon no question mark but we'll say no no but when they watch it we'll say she's not oh yeah
that'll be great right but obviously we'll plaster it everywhere as a way in i'm in real trouble now
so what the hell are we talking about uh oh you're a dirty shirt you were saying you were
gonna answer who should pay on a date um so here's how i think about it i think that and should it
reflect how you act later on or you know if know, if you think, no, I want to always
be able to contribute, should it reflect that? Or should you let them have it because it's the
first date and you just want to let them have it? I think that's perfectly valid to do either one,
but should it reflect later? No. Might it reflect? Definitely. So I live in a world of what is, right? Reality. And we can argue about how things
should be a lot, but I think that I always love when somebody offered to pay when I was single.
It meant a lot. It actually meant a lot. And for me, one of my core values is generosity.
And so a lot of people go, yeah, I'm generous. I like that. And when we're talking on
the podcast, I go, how would I know? If I were an anthropologist with my clipboard and I observed
you for two weeks, how would I know you were generous? People get real quiet. I go, let me
give you some suggestions. Would I know it by how much you tip? Would I know it by did you offer to pay or did you even just pay? Would I know it by how
much you donated? How would I know? And so I guess I would encourage us all to reflect on what are
our personal values and the offer goes a long way. It goes a long way. I want to switch gears for a
moment because I feel like this is, this is a question that
is a very common one, but it's one that you are uniquely placed to answer.
The idea of a prenup is something that is, it's like a very taboo subject in a lot of
relationships.
Yeah.
And as we've already talked about, there's a lot more women these days that are interested
in having a prenup than, than there used to be. And then of course you have a lot of guys who
want to talk about a prenup, but you usually have one half of the couple for whom it's not something
they would have ever brought up. One person is more interested in talking about it than the other. And it absolutely feels like the most unromantic thing you could do for a lot of
people. Like this feels like a, I'm already putting the kind of curse on the relationship
by even talking about what do we do when it ends? Uh, in, in the case of marriage, of course,
how do you coach people who either aren't having that
conversation at all, or one of them wants to, but they're scared of offending their partner by
bringing it up? How important is it really? And how is it something that both parties should be
interested in, even if it only, even if it disproportionately benefits one?
Okay. I'll just share my own experience.
The biggest thing is knowing who should do a prenup and who should not. If you're coming to
a marriage and you both have roughly the same amount of money, there's probably no reason to
sign a prenup. If you have a business, one of you, you probably should consider a prenup. Okay. That's because
what if you were to get married and then God forbid separate, if your partner owned 50% of
that business or whatever it might be, and suddenly they want to sell off the business
and you have employees who you're responsible to, it becomes a big mess. That's one. If you have a large amount
of assets, stocks, cash, maybe you were an investment banker for the last 10 years,
that would be a reason to consider a prenup. Why? Because that money is premarital. You made it
before you got married. And when you get married, anything from then on typically is jointly accumulated.
But if you were to separate, that premarital asset would remain yours.
There's also examples of if you were going to get an inheritance from your family.
That's one.
A lot of people kind of don't think about that.
But you may want to say, hey, if I were to get an inheritance and we were to be separated,
it kind of makes sense it would stay with me.
That's from my mom and dad. And also debt. If you have a large amount
of student loan debt, in fact, a couple I spoke to yesterday, one has roughly 80K of debt or so,
the other has 450K of debt. Prenup, talk about it. Because you can both jointly pay it off if you want to, but if you were to
separate, you want to have a clear line of delineation. So I realized that when it came
time for us to get serious, I had accumulated a lot of assets and I have a business as well.
And so I started talking to my friends and this all happens behind closed doors. I wish it happened more openly. Because it doesn't
happen openly, people have these very nefarious views on a prenup. They think somebody in a ski
mask and a richy rich hat is driving around a limo like, yeah, I'm going to get my partner.
I'm going to get him. It's like, that's not how it works. Both partners have a lawyer.
Both partners should be protected. One person should not be taken advantage of.
That's not how prenup, that's how it works on TV.
But in reality, both partners really should be engaged
if a prenup makes sense.
So I started reading all the advice
about how to talk about it.
Man, this advice sucks.
It's fucking awful.
It's like-
What was the worst thing about it?
The worst was, tell your partner that I don't really want a prenup, but my lawyer's insisting
that I sign one. How disempowering is that? To walk into a relationship lying and saying,
I don't actually want a prenup, but my mom and dad insist that I do it. Take some ownership.
So when I spoke to my wife, I was really nervous like i had scripted it out i
had talked to a lot of friends and but i i knew that this was important to me and i also knew
that it should be important to us because i plan for a lot of stuff in my life i plan for our
engagement engagement ring wedding honeymoon I planned for a lot.
So does she now. And it makes sense that I would plan, we would plan for this huge financial
decision. We have to remember marriage is not just about love. Only in America in the last
few decades is marriage only about love. But historically, it's economic, it's financial,
it's political. There's lots of reasons. And so marriage is also a financial arrangement. It's an agreement. And because
I'm not ashamed about money, I want to talk about it. So I went to her and I said,
there's something else I want to talk about. Because of the business I started and because of a lot of luck and work, I've been able to accumulate a lot of assets. And you know me, you know I'm not going to go buy a Lamborghini, but it is important to me because I would like to decide on what the
financial rules look like. And I want to plan for the best. And I expect to be with you for the rest
of my life. But I also want to plan for, God forbid, something bad happens. And we can plan
for that so that we make decisions when we are both at our best, not at our worst.
And I was like, so I sat back and there's like sweat dripping down my face.
I'm like, oh my God.
And I have to say to my wife's credit, she was incredibly receptive and kind.
She, when somebody brings up a prenup, the other person typically has never thought about
it or expected it. And that was the case for her. When somebody brings up a prenup, the other person typically has never thought about it
or expected it.
And that was the case for her.
And she reacted as absolutely masterfully.
And she just said, wow, that's not something that I've thought about, but I would definitely
be willing to look into it and learn more.
And that was all I needed.
And that was all we needed to start that conversation.
So that's how it went.
I think that's really powerful. And
when people go into situations like this, it almost feels like there's a separation of just,
oh, it's each for their own. And the sense of teamwork is kind of out the window. And when we're talking about planning for a financial future,
one of the questions we got was,
how does it work when you get into a relationship with like a joint account?
And should you each put money into it?
And it's funny, I'm, you know, at the point in my life
where I'm for the first time ever, I have a joint account.
I'd never had a joint account before my relationship now. And there's something very
beautiful about it because it's exciting. The idea that you're both putting money into this place.
You're a team.
Exactly. And I feel like I'm on the very beginning of
that journey and it's like, oh, it's all new to me. There will be people who are hearing this
for whom no doubt it's like they've been doing it for years and their old hat at it. But,
you know, for me, it marked something really lovely. It marked the beginning of, oh,
you're doing something together and you're both contributing to
it yeah i could you speak to the kind of nuances of that like how that works for people that have
decided they want to go in you know they want to have a future get together they want to spend
their lives together but they've never really thought about how that works and yeah you know
they thought it was kind of almost all or nothing.
It's either it's all ours or-
Or it's separate.
Or it's separate.
And they don't realize that there's actually
a lot of room in the middle for two people
to contribute to the same place,
but to different degrees.
Could you just speak to that?
Let me give you an overview,
a very tactical answer on how I would recommend
setting up the accounts. And then we'll talk about some of the nuances, the details and the
emotional nuances. So if I were to get a couple in front of me who say, Rameet, what should I do?
Just tell me what to do. I would say one joint checking account. If both of you are earning,
both of your paychecks go into there proportionally.
So if one person makes double, they contribute double to the joint account. From that joint
account, you pay your joint expenses. Rent or a mortgage, groceries, transportation,
holiday travel, all of the things that you do jointly, whether it's every month or once a year, all of that. But there's a couple of
wrinkles. You should each give yourself some percentage for individual no questions asked
money that you can both spend. So if one of you prefers to go to the racetrack and race cars once
a month, fantastic. The other one prefers to get a massage twice a month, fantastic. That's your
money, no questions asked. That is almost like a release valve. Each partner knows that they have
some money they don't need to answer to anybody for. And within the joint amount, you want to
make sure that you are paying your fixed costs. And the point that you don't have to justify,
that's from the
joint account, right? It's like what you can spend from that without no questions asked.
Correct. Correct. And you can either have it come from the joint account or you can just
have that sent directly from the paycheck. It's totally up to you.
Oh, I see. Got it.
Now, let's talk about the nuts and bolts of day-to-day management because I think this is
where people get way too in the weeds.
Let me tell you my idea of hell. Two things. Number one, wearing a wrinkled shirt. Number two,
having to spend the next 45 years looking at the price of asparagus. Oh, did you spend too much on
asparagus? Why'd you do that? It's like, just end it. I don't want to live on this planet if I have
to track asparagus. So people really need to track four numbers and that's it.
Number one, your fixed costs. That would be rent, car, anything that is fixed that you,
like insurance, debt payoff, the thing that is always you're paying every single month.
That should be 50 to 60% of your take-home pay. Next would be savings.
That would be money you don't need anytime. It's basically money for one to five years from now.
Could be an emergency fund, could be a trip to Thailand, could be saving up for a new car or
a down payment. That should be roughly 5 to 10% of your take-home pay after tax. Investments, roughly 10%. That's where your real wealth is
created. Investments. And where do you invest? We can talk about that in a second. And finally,
my favorite one, guilt-free spending. This is money that the two of you are going out to a
nice restaurant. You're going to take a trip. Whatever you want that is guilt-free for you,
you're going to hire somebody around the house to help.
20% to 35% of your take-home pay.
If you track those four numbers,
when you go out to a restaurant
and you decide to order an extra glass of wine,
it's irrelevant because your fixed costs are covered.
You're saving your money.
You're investing for the long-term
and you've planned for everything.
You don't need to track asparagus. Everything is handled by- It's already accounted for.
Yes. And what were the percentages? Just because I'm a stickler for those details.
In general, what do you suggest those percentages should be in your after-tax income?
Fixed costs should be 50% to 60%. Savings, 5% to 10%. Investments, 5% to 10% or more.
And guilt-free spending, 20% to 35%.
Now, let me just highlight a couple of things.
Number one, I have this all in this conscious spending plan that I created.
We can link to it or something.
Yeah, we'll link to that.
Okay.
And the second thing is the place most people get into trouble.
This blows my mind.
They come to me, they've been fighting
for 25 years about Target. I go, who gives a shit about Target? It's $50. You guys are drowning
because of how much you're spending on cars. The biggest place people get into trouble is their
fixed costs. It is first, their housing. And I get it, housing is expensive. But there are some
numbers we can share. Your housing should typically be less than 28% of your gross income. If it's way more than that, you're screwed.
And the second place they get in trouble is their cars. I talk to all these guys. They're
almost all these guys. They make $75,000 a year. They drive an $85,000 truck. I'm like,
what the fuck are you doing? And they're driving it on flat concrete to go one mile. They go,
Rameet, you're so stupid. Of course I need a truck. I go, why? They go to pull my trailer.
I go, I'm going to kill you. That truck, when you factor in all the phantom costs,
is not $80,000. It's like $105,000, not to mention the additional gas, blah, blah, blah.
It drives me crazy because my car, you know, look at at me you could tell the kind of car i had
honda accord four-door very sensible great car that thing my car payment was 350 a month
very reasonable fine but when i factored in all my expenses it was over one thousand dollars per
month wow so just imagine how much a house costs the phantom costs on that are bonkers. Or even a car
where your car payment is like 600 bucks a month. So people come to me, they go,
why are we fighting over how much I spend at the grocery store? Why? And they think it's about the
groceries. It's almost never about the groceries. I look at their conscious spending plan and you
can zoom right in because there are instant ratios.
Like, you know, people look at the spreadsheet, they see numbers. I see a life. I see why the
fights are happening. And I also see how with a couple of changes, they could be multimillionaires.
So these are the types of conversations where you have, in order to be confident with money
together, you have to be competent. And that's what this allows you to do.
I love that. And I love, it only highlights, going into that level of detail. For some people,
maybe it's not very interesting, but for me, if you and your partner don't have that kind of
detail or you're not thinking about it in those ways, then there are going to be arguments that happen that
become bigger than they need to be because you avoided the detail.
Yes, the details and just setting up the structure right.
Yes.
You know, it's like, it's funny when it comes to money, I often hear one partner will say like,
well, my partner is the one who manages the money.
I don't do that.
And I go, uh-uh.
Money is not like mowing a lawn where you just pay somebody or getting your oil changed
in your car.
Money affects everything.
So you are a partner.
It's more like parenting than like emptying the dishwasher where one partner can do it.
And so although almost always one
partner is a little bit savvier with money, that's fine. But both partners have to be a team player.
So in my relationship, it would have been super easy for me to just be like,
babe, I'll be the money guy. I was like, nope. And it was hard. It was hard, but I insisted that we both get on the same page
and it's taken years, but it's been, now it's awesome.
And I have to say that idea of being a partnership
in that and educating yourself is profoundly important
because I've seen so many times in life where it goes, it's all very well
designating someone as ultimately like the money parent in the relationship until it goes wrong.
Yeah. You do not want that parental dynamic.
Well, then you're, then if, if something happens in the relationship or if all of a sudden you find yourself on your own.
Yes.
You know, that's a really dark and scary place to be controlling, who wants to make life difficult for you, who wants to
manipulate you, who wants to blind you to things that are going on. Because if you're not educated
and you're not a partner in that process, all sorts of things can be going on that you don't
know about. I hear it all the time. All the time. We got divorced and I discovered that he had taken
out $100,000 of loans and I had no idea. And I don't ever want that to happen. So, you know,
we all, we fall in love, we get married. We always think like, this is forever. And I love that
optimism. I love it. I'm actually the last guy to come on and be like, here are the 50 things to worry about.
No, I actually think I'd rather spend more time talking about a rich life.
To me, a rich life is also being partnered and engaged on the three or four really important
things in life.
And that would be physical intimacy, maybe travel if that's one of your things, certainly
parenting and money. you know, physical intimacy, maybe travel if that's one of your things, certainly parenting
and money. And so it only makes sense for me, the way I set it up and I recommend for couples,
one hour a month, you have a rich life review. You get together, you always start it off with
a compliment. Here's one thing I really appreciate about you, you know, you always
arrange our travel, you pick the best flights. It just
makes me feel comfortable that I know you've got that handle. And your partner starts,
says something nice. What a beautiful way to start talking about money. And rather than like,
why'd you buy that? It's just like, let's start with the positive. You do a quick review of your
numbers. You really only need to focus on two or three numbers every month. Those would be
variable numbers. Like, did we spend too much eating out
according to our conscious spending plan? How are we doing on travel? Whatever your variable number,
but like, you don't need to check your rent every month. It's the same. And if you made more money,
like if one of you got a raise, wow, awesome. Congratulations. High five. I make it very
theatrical because money should be theatrical and fun. And what are we going to do with the money?
Gosh, let's talk about it. This is amazing. That kind of thing. We always check in on our
long-term goals. So, you know, our bucket list, do we have money going towards it? Do we have
any open questions? We have a Google doc. We'll just add stuff to it throughout the month and
then we can bucket it. So you don't have to always be like nervous about money. You know, once a month we're going to have a chance to talk about it.
And you end with, I love you. It's a beautiful way to talk about money. And if you can do that,
that is a very promising sign that the two of you can be aligned on money. You're managing,
you're starting with positivity. You're managing the most
important numbers. To me, out of all that, the compliment matters most and the investment rate
matters the most. Those are the two things I really care about because that's where we connect
and that's where wealth is created. The rest of it, I can be a little loosey-goosey on.
And that's a simple, beautiful way of managing money together.
It's great, man.
I love it.
And I love that to me, and we'll go for some questions as well,
because I know our audience sent in a ton of really good questions.
To me, this whole conversation is about bringing these things into the light,
having real conversations, being able to actually plan
a future. And by the way, someone who's not willing to have these conversations with you
is there's either an immaturity to it. There's a, there can be a darkness to it. Cause it's like,
well, hang on, why are you unwilling to have these kinds of conversations? And it also can
be a sign that they're actually
not interested in building a future with you. And so the inability to have these conversations,
I would argue, can in itself be a major red flag. I think the red flag. I don't mind if two partners
have differing or even vastly different views on certain things. I don't mind it. That's normal.
You and your partner do not have to agree on everything, but do you have to agree on the
few important values? Should we be able to communicate about anything? In the case of
my wife and me, I'm in self-development. That's my field. So it was really important to me that
she was also interested in self-development. Because at one point or another, we're going to need to improve ourselves and us together.
And that decision right there, the focusing on self-development as a value, has been one
of the best things that I ever interpreted our relationship through.
So for you, it might be communication. It might be
sense of adventure, whatever it might be, but money has to fall onto one of those things.
I remember a couple, she wanted to renovate the bathroom and that's what they came to me with.
Again, it's always a specific thing. And I started talking and he was a Canadian guy, raised middle or lower middle class, just kind of gruff dude, never
wanted to, didn't want to talk about money. We don't talk about money. I said, okay, I'm going
to crack this guy. I know how to talk to everybody. And I asked him, what's your rich life? He goes,
they're like 30 years old. He you know save a little bit put the kids
through college and then retire i go what the fuck 30 you just skipped 30 years what kind of
boring ass life is that and and he didn't even crack a smile i'm like oh i gotta pull out some
other techniques on this guy you know i get him going and i could tell the guy the guy was pretty
built i go you like to lift he goes yeah i go what if we could you know get I get him going and I could tell the guy, the guy was pretty built. I go, you like to lift? He goes, yeah. I go, what if we could, you know, get some cool lifting stuff,
trainer? He goes, not interested. I go, okay, check that off the box. He likes football.
I looked at his numbers. They could accumulate like a million dollars, a lot more overtime.
I go, what would it feel like if you could actually go to the Super Bowl and watch right
from the stands?
He goes, this is the affect he had.
He goes, that would be amazing.
I go, okay, well, do you know you could actually do that?
He goes, I don't believe it.
I could show you how.
I see the numbers right here.
I could show you exactly how.
And he goes, well, you know, I just don't believe it. He had an inability to talk about money and watching him and his wife
was really tough. It was tough to watch. And it's tough to listen to on that episode because
she's really crying out for some engagement. She just wants him to talk. Even if he disagrees with
what he wants to spend their money, at least talk. I find that if couples are willing to open up and
share, then we can almost always find some sort of common ground. But in cases where they're just
not willing to talk, even from fourth, fifth, sixth date about money, to me, that would be concerning. All right. So let's do some questions. We've had Havna who says,
what's a respectful way to find out a date's salary and spending habits and when to ask?
Just ask them for their income statement. What's the problem? What? That's not... Okay, listen,
sometimes people come with questions. I'm like, that's not a good question. Let me tell you a
better question. Okay, go for it. What is somebody really saying when they ask,
what is this date's salary? I think what they're really asking is,
do we have the potential for a shared lifestyle? And I actually
have no problem with that question. This is your lifestyle. If one person says, I want to live on
a farm, and the other person says, I want to live in a penthouse in Manhattan, that's actually quite
a big difference, potentially insurmountable. It's not like, I prefer sushi and i like sashimi that's not the same so the way that i would really
get to that do we have a similar vision of a lifestyle would be asking them questions like
what's your rich life like if you could do anything where would it be and if their answer is
you know i i just want to sit and wait until I'm 60 and retire and that's it. That's
all they've given thought to. And okay, fine. Some people don't think about this proactively.
I go, well, what else? What about travel? And they go, not interested. Okay. That's quite revealing.
I don't think you need the salary for that. But as you get deeper into the curiosity and you're
talking about like, oh, would we have kids?
What do you think? Yeah, you know, I'd love to have two or three kids. Oh, cool. And like,
I grew up, I went to public school until college. Like, how would you think about that?
What about all these kids? They like to go to camp. That's really interesting. Well, you know,
I don't think kids should have to, should go to private school. Okay, interesting.
You know, there's lots of topics we can talk about like that.
But I don't think asking somebody for their salary is appropriate, nor do I really think
it's the question that you really want the answer to. Very good. We have here,
how to prevent myself from getting into a relationship with a guy who can't handle money?
I suppose that goes into the communication, right? If you're having communication about money, once you know you like each other and are having dates and are getting further down
the line and you realize any time the subject even comes up, there's this huge barrier and
you can't get anywhere. Yeah, that's a problem. I mean, you know that journal I created? There it is on the bookshelf.
Just do that together. And that is the two of you going through these prompts, like what is
your rich life? And what do you see with our family? Who do you admire with money? What would
you spend less on? And then the two of you talk about it. So I did an exercise with my wife,
the bucket list exercise.
A lot of people think, oh, what do I do before I die?
Ours was a little different.
What do we want to do in the next 10 years that would make it a rich and meaningful life?
And so she took her-
I love this exercise.
Yeah, she took a piece of paper, filled out her stuff.
I said, pick stuff that's just for you and some stuff for us.
I did the same.
So we get together after a few minutes.
It's kind of fun.
You know, you're just dreaming.
Yeah.
I want to do it because I remember I came to your event in LA for the journal release
and me and Audrey were sat next to each other watching and you mentioned this and we were
both like, this actually sounds really fun.
Well, we can do this.
We can all do it together.
Yeah.
It would be a blast.
Let's do that.
So we come back and this is really the crux of the exercise.
So we each go back and forth and one partner will go,
oh, I want to learn Spanish in the next 10 years.
I want to be fluent.
And the other partner has got to be curious.
Really?
Oh my God.
Would you do that here or would you go to Mexico City?
Okay.
The other person goes bungee jumping.
Oh, well, okay.
You're on your own for that one.
I'll be waiting at the bottom with a champagne, but I'm not getting up there.
And you're just having fun.
You're flirting.
You're really making it joyful.
We went through them.
Some of them were individual.
One of mine is I want to write a book at a hotel. That's just a thing
that I love. I love hotels. I love that. I love that because it's combining. Yeah. And so she had
her own individual. And then what we did was we said, let's pick one or two things that are for
us. Let's pick a big thing. So ours was 10 year wedding anniversary. Big. We're going to do it
abroad. We know who we want to bring.
It's going to be magnificent.
And I said, let's each go away for just two minutes and estimate how much it'll cost,
and we'll come back.
See, now we're going from just dreaming, which I love, but I'm not a freaking LA life coach
with one of those weird hats.
I want to take it to the numbers, okay?
How are we going to pay for this?
Let's actually make this a reality.
So we come back. She picked a number, in my opinion, way too low. I'm not trying to cheap
out on this 10-year wedding anniversary. I'm like, let's ball out. So my number was many multiples
of her. And my rule is simple. If we got two numbers, let's go with the higher one.
It's a 10-year dream. We can dream big. Plus our earnings
are probably going to go up and we can invest, blah, blah, blah. We picked a big number. She
was kind of uncomfortable. I go, trust me on this. We took that number. We divided it by the number
of months until that date. And we said, okay, this is how much we need to put aside. Can we do it?
And suddenly in your monthly rich life review, you now have a purpose for one of your categories.
And this is the thing you two chose. It's amazing. It's big. It's part of your rich life
that gets you motivated and excited when it comes to your money.
I love that. All right. So the 10 year plan of what are the things we'd be most excited to do
with our money in the next 10 years? That's great. Um, let's see here tarla says and i only copied this one out because i thought
there's there was something in the way she said it but she said how should a woman approach
talking about having way with four a's more money than most men
i'm curious as to to what you think about this this. For me, the emphasis on her question and the way she asks it
is indicative of a way she may be coming across.
I agree.
Let's just take me.
What if I said, how do I communicate with women that I have way more money?
It doesn't sound good.
And it's not a good frame it's not a good there's a tone yeah that
that you know you could have there could have been a phrasing of that question of you know
how should a woman approach um you know coming to the relationship in a different financial position
for or in a you know place of more wealth than the guy she's dating. But that tone plays into so much of this.
It's funny. Yeah. In one line, you can really read a lot. I think that in my opinion,
and I'm the guy who's been writing about money for 20 years, I don't really like to lead with
money. I don't like it. You never see me with a picture of me holding up cash. It's just not my
style. What would I rather lead with? And this would be the question I would ask the questioner. What are your values? If you want to lead with generosity
and you say, you know, I'm planning to take this trip to Spain and I would love it if I could treat
you for you to join me, my treat. First of all, that's very generous. And second of all, it sort
of speaks that you got money. I think we can all infer that. I don't find that it's useful, men or women, to lead with how much
money you have. It's not received well. And really, I think a lot of times it's simply a way for us to
tell people what we're proud of. But you can tell them in a different way. In fact,
I'd rather you just show them in a way that's meaningful to them.
It was interesting. There was a question that came up. Let me see if I can find it.
How do you ask the guy you're dating to not talk about money so much?
That's a good question.
It's over the top.
Whoa.
So that's like a good example of someone
who's leading with money all the time. And that is a great example of what the recipient
experiences. Sometimes I think in a way when you have money that it's almost like thinking about
how to give a gift. Like what if I went to my wife and I'm like, I'm going to give her this gift because it's super cool. It's this cool electronic thing.
But I just forget the point of a gift is not what I think is cool. The point of a gift is
to meet the recipient with what they want. I want to give my wife something she loves,
not that I think she should love. And with money, it's frankly distasteful to sit around and just
talk about how much money you have. I also think it's distasteful. I've spoken to many people on
my podcast who are multimillionaires and constantly agonizing over how little to spend.
They're cheap. And I tell them that. I'm like, you're cheap. And I like it because I always
play it out. I go, do you think you're cheap? And they always say the same thing. No, I'm not cheap.
I'm, insert word, I'm selective. I go, have you ever had a friend not invite you out because
you're cheap? They go, yes. Have you ever agonized over the price of strawberries?
Rich people are obsessed with saving money on strawberries.
Yes.
They go, how do you know that?
And I just list them off and I go, you're cheap.
And they're like, what?
Let me tell you this.
This one blew my mind.
There's a lady.
Oh my God.
This is one of my favorite episodes.
She's a multimillionaire, her and her husband.
And they're great.
I love them.
He said, I have a trip in New York.
I want you to come with me.
Let's have a time in New York.
She goes, okay, but the hotel, the Moxie Hotel in the East Village, you know it,
very modestly priced. It's too expensive. He goes, what? This is a work trip. She goes,
it's $297 a night. I think we should go to Chelsea, stay at a cheaper hotel, and then
move to the Moxie the next day. I go, all right, fine. I go, how much is your net worth?
It's like five or 10 million.
It's some crazy number.
They have millions of dollars.
So then I go, what'd you do while you were in New York?
She goes, we went to Broadway.
We went to Times Square and we stood in line
for the discounted tickets,
you know, where all the tourists stand.
And when I heard this, I was like,
you're a multimillionaire standing in that line so
this was my moment to shine because if it's so fascinating if an indian person knows anything
it's guilt trips i'm like i am fluent at guilt trips but usually i'm the recipient of them today
i get to weaponize it so i go listen i forget her name i go listen beth um i just want you to
imagine you waited in line for two hours
in this fucking discounted ticket line,
even though you're a multimillionaire, fine.
But I think you didn't notice that family behind you.
They had saved up for the last six years
to come to New York.
And they were hoping to get those last tickets
to the Lion King.
But you, multimillionaire Beth, took those last tickets to the Lion King. But you, multi-millionaire Beth, took the last tickets
and they got to the line and they couldn't afford it. How do you feel now, Beth? And she's almost
crying. And I'm like, gotcha. All those 40 years of guilt trips turned into a pure, beautiful weapon.
The point is when you make a lot of money, you cannot afford to do certain things that you
used to be able to do. And it's very distasteful to talk about how you saved $5 when you have $8
million in the bank. It's so fascinating. I heard a story recently of a guy worth
hundreds of millions of dollars who, when he was doing a work trip and the whole team was
staying at the Four Seasons, he would not have it for himself. And he went somewhere else.
And it's lauded because in America, we love wealthy people who pretend they are poor.
Warren Buffett, he's a man of the people. He eats McDonald's
every day. Let's forget about the fact that he has a private jet company. Bill Gates, oh,
he's so relatable. He wears Dockers. Bill Gates' house is like 89,000 square feet.
We love wealthy people who pretend to be poor. And I actually think, first of all, it's truly absurd.
And celebrities know this. They cannot talk about how much they actually spend because the world
hates that. It hates it. Talk about leading with money. But I don't think there's virtue in living
a smaller life than you have to. I'm speaking now to not celebrities, but ordinary people
who still feel proud that they save $5
when they have accumulated tons and tons of money. And I said, there's no virtue in that.
You turn the page, your worry-free number, the number where you stop worrying about stuff like
a pack of gum, your number should be higher now that you have accumulated a lot. And part of that
is to be able to be more generous. If this lady had stayed at the Moxie
and tipped the doorman and tipped the bartender,
that money would have flowed.
In my opinion, that is her obligation.
M says, boyfriend likes to split the bill paying for dinners
but orders way more drinks.
What do I do?
Have the conversation with him and say,
hey, you know what?
I love going out to dinner with you.
I think it's cool that we split it
but I just noticed sometimes when we're going out, you order three or four more drinks.
Doesn't matter to me once in a while, but it's becoming a little difficult for me to afford it.
Is it cool if we set up a little guideline going forward? A lot of people would be very
receptive to that. There's one person that said that they used to pay for everything because their guy
didn't have a job. And now he got a job and she still pays for everything. Yeah. Common. Time to
recalibrate. Really hard to recalibrate in a relationship because once you start a pattern,
that pattern creates grooves. But it's okay. It might be an uncomfortable conversation, but you say,
you know what? There's something that I've been thinking about a lot. I really want to talk about
it and get your thoughts on it. In any relationship, there's going to be times where one of
us needs to help the other. That's normal. I think that's going to go on for the rest of our lives.
I'm excited to be a partner. I know for the last few months, you haven't had a job. I was thrilled
to be able to pay and I'm glad to be able to do it.
Now that you've got a job, I'd really love to talk about recalibrating what it looks like when
we go out for dinner. I think it's a great opportunity. I love it. You know, the thing
that you and I both appreciate about each other is the way to say these things. There's really
an art and a science. love listening to you it's everything
yeah because it's you you know that that's why when people say over the years when people you
know a criticism sometimes of the work that i've done is just be yourself and i always want to go
you know there's such a thing as skill totally such a thing as there's There's such a thing as there's, there's a way to say something that will
actually get you a better result. And what you're talking about, there's nothing, there's nothing
devious about it. It's literally a loving way to have a conversation that will get you a much
better result than yelling at them because they ordered another beer and you're like,
oh, here we go again. That's what I really appreciate about your work too. And I've told you that my whole team really admires you, including the who should pay
first, you know, masterclass in how to answer that question. It's one thing to say like, oh,
just like have a conversation. But I know when I'm in the throes of something really difficult,
like how to talk about a prenup, I needed help. And I went online and I looked and
there was nothing, nothing. And I wish there had been someone out there saying like, this is what
I did. Here's what to look out for. Here's how you should say it. And here's how you should never say
it. It would have meant everything to me. So I want to make sure your listeners understand how
valuable it is that you actually articulate how to say it because we can learn from that.
We can adapt it to our own style.
You know, I don't talk exactly like you,
but gosh, it really feels good
to hear someone model it for me.
Thanks, man.
I really appreciate that.
Okay, last few questions.
So we have, this one's from a guy who says,
if a man is on a dinner date,
how do you interpret it? If she insists
on paying half, is she not keen on you? I think it's great. Maybe it's just because
I interpret everything to benefit me. I'm like, that's awesome. I think she's fantastic.
I think it's very assertive that she would say, I insist on paying half. Personally,
I find that very attractive. It speaks to generosity. It speaks to being confident. It speaks to having a mastery of
her numbers, knowing that she can afford this dinner. To me, I find it very appealing. What
do you think? I think that if you just give it a few days, you'll know if she's not keen on you
because she won't ask you on another. She won't say yes to the next day. So you don't really need to overanalyze it at the meal stage. Go home, see how it goes. And I agree
with you. It could be literally a sign of the fact that she's a team player, that her values are in
the right place. Would you rather she didn't even reach for her wallet and didn't say thank you
when you paid? I actually think it's such an easy way to set yourself apart when dating
to be ultra generous i agree it is such an easy way and what does it cost 20 bucks you stand out
from everybody else i agree is one of the easiest things you could possibly do this is interesting
lexi says if your boyfriend paid for his ex's expenses when they traveled together, but he doesn't do it for you. Doesn't feel good. I mean, that's a conversation, a difficult one where you have to admit,
hey, I don't want to compare myself to a past relationship, but it does make me wonder why
you paid for your ex, but not me. And maybe there's an innocent answer. Maybe financial circumstances have changed.
If so, I'd love to get it out on the table. But right now I know that there's this thing
that's just bothering me and I want to find a way to feel better about it.
And I think a huge part of that is understanding where that's coming from, you know, because you
might learn something interesting like you know i could
imagine a world where he says well i used to do that because to be honest with you i was a lot
more insecure and i felt like i had to you know because that was my value and i had to do that
to get someone to like me and with you i feel safe and i don't feel like I need to do that for you to like me. That being said,
I want to make sure that I'm being generous towards you and so on. And there's still maybe
a recalibration that happens, but I could see a world where you getting to the bottom of it could
provide a good answer or a bad answer, but you need to get to the bottom of why that shift has
happened for you. I agree. That's a very good answer. I don't think 99.9% of people are skilled enough
to say what you said, but I think that's another reason why it's very helpful for people to hear
your, and now maybe your answer is not right for them, but to see that, like, I think for most
people that would have never occurred to them to say what you
said. I think it's useful to know, is he doing this because he likes me less than his ex or is
he doing this because something about his relationship with this has shifted? Yes.
So I had a client recently who was seeing a guy and she was very serious about him he claimed to be very serious about her but he hadn't
essentially left his ex for financial reasons okay in other words he was still in a marriage
hadn't finalized a divorce and his excuse to her was that well my finances are bound up with her. And if I leave, it's going to ruin me. And
that was it. Now, I believe that that's just some, a giant excuse, but as people get older in life
and they have baggage from past relationships and there's been, you know, messy divorces. How, how do you see the kind of, if women are out there and they're
dating guys and a guy is still sort of using finances as an excuse to be wrapped up with
their ex, how justified is it to expect your partner to have had a proper financial divorce from their ex in order to be with them i spoke to two lawyers
he was in his maybe late 50s and she was in her 40s and he had gone through a divorce acrimoniously he owed his ex-wife alimony and quite a considerable amount. In their case,
it was out on the table that he owed her a lot of money. And that was causing its own financial
problems. But at the very least, he was as separated as he could possibly be from her.
I think those are two separate issues. Should a partner looking to
get into a new relationship be as separated as possible? Yes. But sometimes there are things
that are inextricably tied together, children, property, et cetera. But at least to know,
these are the rules, we've written them down, we're not negotiating anymore. It's done.
It might take the next 30 years to pay it, but that's what it is.
Now, the second thing is how much. If you're getting into a relationship where your partner
is writing a $20,000 every single month check, you want to know that. You need to know that
because that's going to affect your finances together. But I think those two are separate
issues and I would think about them accordingly.
I think that's a great answer.
And it, you know, what you said is really important.
Are they separate in all of the important ways so that this is the only residual thing?
And we know in black and white what that means.
Black and white.
It's been agreed.
Yeah.
And you really answered the part of the question you didn't know about which
is that when she came to me this guy was still um kind of visiting his ex and still not telling her
about the new person because he didn't want to upset the apple cart and create a financial mess for himself by essentially pissing her off about
his new circumstances there's nothing about that that suggests that the only residual connection
is a financial one totally it's deeply intertwined it's emotional it's a bad right so i think that
that's an interesting way to sum up that answer is if everything is separate, but the financial obligation, um, then it can make sense to engage with someone like that.
This has been amazing, man. I've really, really enjoyed this. And I know we've covered so much
ground and people will have, I feel like whether someone is first dating or they're deep into a relationship
or they're dating someone that is coming out of a long-term relationship and has some financial
stuff going on, we've just covered so many different chapters that someone could be in.
And I love that you get into the detail of it. You know, you're so educated in what you do and
you've spent so long doing it now that
it's just, it's fun to watch you. Cause I feel like I'm coming into this stuff,
you know, learning from you and new to it. And you and I have conversations offline where I come to
you for advice in these areas. And I talk to you about money and I feel uneducated listening. I
don't know if I would survive three dates with you, but, but, you know,
it's so nice to be around someone who just truly understands their craft and, um, and you're just
such a pro at it. So thanks for being here, man. Thank you, man. It's a, it's a pleasure. It's an
inspiration. And, you know, I love, love, love talking about this, especially with your community.
I mean, you built an amazing community, your, your your answers the depth you go into i think
we both admire each other as crafts people 100 and we're constantly studying to be better at what we
do where should people go i feel like everyone needs to go and listen to the podcast i think
that if they are listening to this or watching this absolutely go to the podcast um podcast, we're going to be having video podcast now where you can actually see the
couples, which is, oh my God, it's amazing to see their facial reactions.
You can follow my newsletter, IWT.com.
And I'm on social media.
I'm on Instagram and TikTok.
So follow me at any of those places.
Amazing.
And do go listen to those episodes because it's so,
when do you ever get to be a fly on the wall
of a conversation that two people,
a couple having about their finances
and airing the kinds of things
that people don't speak out loud
and you're probing in those crucial ways.
There's no other podcast out there like it.
So go check it out.
I will teach you to be rich, the podcast.
And Rameenit let's do it
again soon love you