Money For Couples with Ramit Sethi - 226. “She’s chasing FIRE. I want to enjoy life now.”

Episode Date: September 16, 2025

Laura (34) and Cameron (38) earn over $200,000 a year and save thousands each month, yet every decision feels like a crisis. Laura, a first-generation Mexican American, grew up in financial chaos an...d now enforces strict rules, from tracking every purchase in YNAB to keeping Cameron on an allowance. Her dream is to hit Coast FIRE in five years. Cameron, meanwhile, just wants to enjoy life today—take a trip, fix the car, maybe even expand their family. Their daughter is four, and the question of whether to have another child looms large. Can Ramit help them break free from fear, build shared goals, and find a balance between saving for tomorrow and living fully now? A special thanks to DeleteMe for sponsoring this episode. If you want to get your personal information removed from the web, go to https://joindeleteme.com/ramit for 20% off. In this episode we uncover: • Why Laura enforces strict financial rules yet still feels unsafe despite saving half their income • How Cameron’s “passenger” role with money leaves Laura carrying the weight • Why their $228,000 household income doesn’t feel like “enough” in an affluent Chicago neighborhood • How childhood experiences shaped Laura’s scarcity mindset • The emotional toll of living as if they are still poor, even with nearly half a million dollars in net worth • How FIRE gave Laura a sense of control and safety—but at the cost of enjoying life today • How chasing control keeps them feeling perpetually “behind” and unable to thrive • The stark contrast between Laura’s authoritarian role and Cameron’s passivity • How they can move beyond survival mode and start thriving by defining a shared Rich Life vision Chapters: (00:00:00) “I keep my husband on an allowance” (00:09:58) Ramit breaks down their numbers (00:25:05) “We feel poor… on $228,000 a year” (00:41:37) “My parents racked up debt in my name without me knowing” (00:54:48) “I keep us living small” (01:10:21) “CoastFi says we’re fine—so why doesn’t it feel real?” (01:24:06) “What would make the next 10 years magical?” (01:33:54) Where are they now? Laura and Cameron’s follow-ups This episode is brought to you by: Wildgrain | Get $30 off the first box - PLUS free Croissants in every box at https://wildgrain.com/ramit ZocDoc | Download the ZocDoc app for FREE at https://zocdoc.com/ramit then find and book a top-rated doctor today #sponsored SonderMind | Go to https://sondermind.com to get matched with the right therapist in less than a week Facet | Facet is waiving their $250 enrollment fee for new annual members, and for my audience, Facet is offering $300 into your brokerage account if you invest and maintain $5,000 within your first 90 days. Head to https://facet.com/ramit to learn more about which membership option is best for you Links mentioned in this episode • Get tickets for my next live event—September 26 in Los Angeles—at iwt.com/events Connect with Ramit • Get my new book, Money For Couples • Get Money Coaching with Ramit • Download the Conscious Spending Plan • Listen to my book—now on Audible • Get my New York Times best-selling book • Get my no-numbers journal • Other episodes • Instagram • Twitter • YouTube If you and your partner have a money issue and you want my help, I occasionally select a couple to work with, free of charge. Apply for my help here.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 If you or your partner has fallen for a scam, I want to help, especially if you've recently fallen for an email or text scam, or you've gotten bad financial advice from someone who did not keep their promises, or maybe you just have not even told your partner because you are embarrassed. If this is you, I want to talk. Apply for free coaching with me by being on my podcast. Apply today at IWT.com slash apply. That's IWT.com slash apply. Let me share some of the coolest ways that my community has recently used money to live a rich life. One member did a month-long honeymoon in Europe after deciding she didn't want a big wedding. Another member bought a VW SUV that was their dream car that they've wanted for years.
Starting point is 00:00:48 And another member made a rule that any time she buys a ticket for an event, she always buys a second so that she can bring a friend. These are just a few examples of how my money coaching members have built systems to use their money. Notice that there's no more anxiety, that they have a smooth running system. They know when their debt's going to be paid off. They can feel comfortable spending on the things they love. They can actually spend less time on their finances while living an amazing life. In my money coaching program, members also get access to live events every month, including topics like money with aging parents and how to create
Starting point is 00:01:26 amazing vacations. That was one of my favorites where I shared how I spend my money on travel, plus Q&A directly from me. If you want to start building your rich life today, join us and get instant access to our back catalog of years of live calls. Check out IWT.com slash money coaching to join now. That's Iwt.com slash money coaching to join the program right now. I found out about the fire community and to hear that you could save half your income and retire in seven years was like magic. I would get overwhelmed. And mostly it was just watching Laura move numbers around.
Starting point is 00:02:04 And it's so hard for me to have the interest and to follow it. I feel like I keep us living very poor. Like it wouldn't matter how much our money grew. We are not allowed to spend anymore than we're spending now. I'm saying, hey, loosen up, spend this. She's like, well, of course it's easy for you to say. You don't know what we have coming up. You don't know any of this.
Starting point is 00:02:24 He wants to have fun. wants to have a good time, he wants to enjoy himself. And I'm over here like stressing all the time. Fun is a future thing you can do if everything else gets taken care of. I don't you allow yourself to enjoy your money. That's not what it's for. It's for the future. Like I really don't even feel like the money I have can be spent. What would you do if someone stole your identity? And what if the people who stole your identity were your parents? That's exactly what happened to today's guest. In her words, My parents took out lines of credit in my name. In the process of uncovering how they wronged me,
Starting point is 00:03:02 I vowed to always be able to take care of myself. Today I'm speaking with Laura and her husband Cameron. You're going to hear how this betrayal shaped Laura's entire worldview about money. But that fear and that lack of trust is now affecting her marriage. For this episode, I partnered with Delete Me, because identity theft can happen to any of us. And when we think of identity theft, we think of the annoyance of having to close a bunch of accounts. But today's conversation shows how identity theft can go way deeper. It can change the trajectory of your entire life. I use Delete Me myself. I even got an account for my parents because I don't want their personal information floating around online. So if you want to protect yourself and your family, go to join Deleteme.com slash Ramith and use
Starting point is 00:03:48 code Rameet for 20% off. All right, I'm about to open Laura and Cameron's conscious spending plan, which breaks down their net worth income and where they spend their money, you can download and create your own conscious spending plan for free at IWT.com slash CSP. Here's the numbers. Assets 319,000. Investments, 335,000. Savings, 29,000.
Starting point is 00:04:11 Debt, $245,000. Net worth $438,000. Monthly income, 19,000. Fixed costs, 47%. Investing 20%. Savings, 22%. Guilt-free spending? 11%. Honestly, these are some pretty impressive numbers considering Laura and Cameron are in their 30s,
Starting point is 00:04:30 but I have a lot of questions. So let's get started. Laura, application was quite haunting. You wrote, quote, I created a parent-child dynamic where I enforce money rules for the household, keep my husband on an allowance, and ridicule all of his purchases. Laura, is it working? No, it's not. I don't want to be the only person making decisions about money. I don't want to feel like I'm looking through all of the bank charges and I get the dings on my phone, like Amazon purchase Amazon. I'm like, what is this game he ordered?
Starting point is 00:05:12 Why is it more games? It's always games. There's like frequency in purchasing that really bugs me where our spending is different in that way. He makes small but free. purchases for things that he enjoys. And I make infrequent, but big purchases towards family improvements, professional development, health improvements. So I know I have a problem with how I view the money is being spent, where his money is being spent on his enjoyment and my money is spent on improving our lives.
Starting point is 00:05:47 Was that you trying to explain how it's not working? And then explaining how you're actually right? I'm not right. Oh. What part of you not right about? I don't want to be judgmental about how he spends his money. I've already agreed this is his money and this is my money and I should not be judging what he spends it on. Okay. Do you believe that as you say it out loud? I believe I should not be doing it. I haven't stopped doing it. Okay. All right. How long have you been together and how long have you been married?
Starting point is 00:06:18 Together 13 years. Married nine years. Okay, okay, nine years. All right. Kids? Yes, one daughter. How old? Four. Four, okay, great. When you think about money in your relationship, what is the one or two words that come to mind? Cameron? Stress, planning. Laura? Fear and future.
Starting point is 00:06:44 Stress and planning, fear and future. Kind of similar. Like quite parallel, right? Yes. Okay. Do you both see money the same way? No, I don't think so. Oh, Laura? Probably not. Interesting that your words were quite similar, right? Are the two of you decisive about money?
Starting point is 00:07:06 No. I have a lot of analysis paralysis. I prefer to research a lot and gather information and put off a decision. And it feels good to me like I'm educating myself on it. Okay. Cameron? I avoid almost all money talk and basically let Laura handle it. So if she's, you know, circling around on a decision, then we both are. You guys like that? No, no.
Starting point is 00:07:36 How come every couple I talk to is like, no, I hate this thing that we have kept doing for the last 15 years every single day of our relationship? Like, uh, am I the only one who's like, if maybe we can change it then? Is that why you're here? Yes. There you go. Okay. You guys expecting me to wave the abracadabra wand and then like suddenly you become decisive? Oh yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:59 Both of them nodding. Okay, great. Well, all right. Should we take a look at the numbers? Sure. All right. What was it like creating the CSP together? It was actually enjoyable, I think.
Starting point is 00:08:11 It was one of the few times we've sat there and had to work together on a budget, financial-based project. And we didn't get upset at each other. I think we agreed on a lot of things. I liked it a lot more than I expected to. That's cool. I will say we've come a long way. If you asked us like five years ago to go through our money, it would have ended in a fight. You both sounded surprised that the conscious spending plan was enjoyable.
Starting point is 00:08:40 Why is that? I was surprised that he would enjoy it because he usually shuts down or I will literally like take the phone and the camera and the spreadsheet and the computer. I would do it myself, but I really had to hold back and say, you're going to do this job and I'm going to do this job. And I tried not to grab the phone out of his hands and do it myself. Cameron? Yeah, I definitely felt that this time. I felt that we were both working towards something. I run my own net worth spreadsheet, but it's just numbers on a spreadsheet.
Starting point is 00:09:10 It's not any numbers that we feel or see. We save a lot of money, but we don't get to enjoy it. What is the cost of that? It's stressful. It's a negative view of money leaving our hands. Cameron? Yeah, I agree. There's a lot of times Laura specifically will be looking at this stuff or going over it.
Starting point is 00:09:32 It's nighttime before bed and it just, you know, kind of starts like a spin on what are we doing? Was this like at 10.30 a night? Yes. Yeah. Like I'll be falling asleep and then she'll be like, hey, hey, guess this is what I think we should do with this emergency. And I'm like, I can't talk about this. You know, I don't like a lot of, like, directive rules for people because I don't know, I treat them like they're smart.
Starting point is 00:09:58 Maybe I need to make a rule. No talking about money after 8 p.m. What is going on here, America? Everybody's sitting around and it's always one person. It's the person who is obsessed of spreadsheets. And they're like, hey, hey, look at this spreadsheet. I ran this calculation yesterday. But if we add a variance of 6.5% over the next 45 years, it actually turns out.
Starting point is 00:10:18 out, we might be able to afford to take two extra vacations. And the other partner's like, I was sleeping. And then it never goes well. Any of this sound familiar? How were you in our room last night? How did you know that? Rameet Seiki coming out with his first and only prime directive. It's simple.
Starting point is 00:10:36 No talking about money after 8 p.m. You freaks. Nobody. Nothing good is happening after 8 p.m. talking about your finances. That's it. That's my rule. Hold on. I need... Okay, I'm back in the game. I'm here to help. Can we just look at the numbers? Yes. All right. All right.
Starting point is 00:10:56 Laura, can you read the word in bold and then the number in full next to it, please? Assets, $319,000. Investments, $335,814. Savings, $29,338.0038.004.004.000,000. Okay, $438,000. What do you think of those numbers? Why is it so silent in here? What's happening? Because it feels like fake money on a spreadsheet that's not ours. It's money we've been stocking away for a very long time,
Starting point is 00:11:32 but we don't see it or touch it. I have a goal of hitting coast fine. I feel like maybe someday we'll get there, but those numbers don't mean a whole lot to us right now. It doesn't make us feel safe or wealth. or anything. Let me translate. These numbers, which are quite substantial,
Starting point is 00:11:51 they're almost half a million dollars, they don't feel real to me. Therefore, I'm going to dedicate the rest of my working life to making them even bigger because surely then they will feel real to me. That's right. Laura is pursuing something called Coast Phi, which is part of the fire movement
Starting point is 00:12:11 or financial independence retire early. Let me break this down really quickly. There are variations of fire. There's lean fire, which basically means you save aggressively and live on a small amount like 25,000 a year. Or there's fat fire, which is saving and investing enough to live on hundreds of thousands or millions per year. There's also CoastFi. CoastFi means you save really aggressively, typically early in your career, that you can stop contributing to retirement altogether later in life. The math says as long as you don't touch the investments, compounding will grow enough to fund your retirement. You're basically coasting. Mathematically, it makes a lot of sense. But one of my critiques of the fire community is that they often overfocus on the math and under focus on psychology. In my experience, fire tends to attract people who want control. And it often also attracts people who already have a scarcity mindset, like Laura. Think about it. She admits running spreadsheets at 10.30 at night. She's obsessing over every Amazon charge
Starting point is 00:13:13 and dismissing her husband's spending as frivolous compared to her own. Fire gives her an outlet to double down on that need for control. It gives her rules, charts, formulas, and the promise that if she just saves a little more, then she'll finally feel secure. In my opinion, what would be dysfunctional behavior in other circumstances is now blessed because she's working towards Coast Five. But guys, it doesn't work that way.
Starting point is 00:13:41 People who are hyper frugal really think that they will one day feel safe with their money. It almost never happens. They save more. They still feel afraid. So what do they do? They double down to save even more. The very system that was supposed to create freedom often locks you into a prison of deprivation. Now, there's a lot of good when it comes to fire.
Starting point is 00:14:03 In fact, I've created an entire YouTube video on fire. But I want you to understand the math part is bulletproof. It's just math. But the psychology can become a problem unless you actively work to improve your money mindset. If you want to improve your money mindset, I built a free mini course to help you. You can download it at IWT.com slash mindset pod. It's free IWT.com slash mindset pod. Now, Laura believes more savings will finally make her feel safe.
Starting point is 00:14:36 I don't really agree. And I'm going to explain this to her right after this. Okay, I want to know if I'm the only one whose algorithm is showing me pizza and sourdough bread on my for you page. Like, that's it. People just sitting there pulling stuff out of the oven. And all I do is look at it. I just click it and I look, oh, that cheese looks really good. I know I'm never going to make it myself, but I just love to watch it.
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Starting point is 00:16:37 Don't miss their seasonal products. What's going on with guys in their 40s? Not seeing a doctor. Haven't been to one in over 10 years. I thought this was just a joke. I thought it was a stereotype, a caricature. No, it actually turns out to be true. I know a lot of guys who will quietly admit,
Starting point is 00:16:54 oh, yeah, I haven't seen a doctor in 10 years. I go, what the fuck wrong with you? Why not? And they have a lot of different things. Oh, I haven't gotten around to it. Oh, really? You've been busy for the last decade? Oh, I don't know.
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Starting point is 00:18:15 Go to Zocdoc.com slash remit to find and instantly book a top-rated doctor today. That's Z-O-C-D-O-C dot com slash remit. Zock-D-C-com slash remit. It doesn't feel real, so I'm going to work even harder because then maybe someday it will feel real to me. It doesn't make any sense to me. Like just if the numbers double, you think that's going to make it feel real? No.
Starting point is 00:18:42 So what would make it feel real to you? Spending some of it. Why don't you take out like $5,000 and spend it? Well, look at that face. What was that? Can you describe that face? Hold on, Cameron, can you describe that face that Laura just did? Look at this face.
Starting point is 00:18:55 Yeah, that's fear. Oh, fear. Yeah, fear, like bewilderment, horror even. Laura, how would you describe it? That goes against everything I've been doing. Right. Spending money, the money you've been accumulating goes against everything you've been doing. Now I see sadness.
Starting point is 00:19:13 Why is that? We work so hard. It doesn't feel like we can enjoy our money right now. I actually don't know when we will. Or if we will. Meaning you might just accumulate, accumulate, and then what? No, meaning that I've set our financial plan to coast-fi on a very small budget. which means we would have to be living on less than we're living now in order to achieve that.
Starting point is 00:19:43 So our life is not going to, we're not going to retire and then spend money. Like, this is our baseline to make it a reality. Like, it's only going to get worse. Yeah. Why'd you do that? Why'd you set that goal? I set this goal before we were married, before we had a kid, and that goal is not realistic for the life that we've created.
Starting point is 00:20:07 And I should probably let go of it. Let go of it, adjust it, adapt it. Make a new plan. Coming back to the numbers, not feeling real. What if I challenge you to spend $1,000 of the money? That would be. Cameron's like, yeah, let's do it. I'm like, oh, on what?
Starting point is 00:20:26 Pay down debt? Like, what if it's it? I don't even have the muscle to spend money. When I get money, when we have a surplus in our paychecks, like, what do we do with it? Like, well, what bill can I pay? What debt can I put down? When there's something you really want, though,
Starting point is 00:20:42 when there's something you really find that you feel is important to you, like you were talking about the larger purchases earlier, you will spend it on there. Yeah, I could. If I had to spend $1,000 today, yes, I could figure out what to do with it. Where you've got to spend $5,000? We have something in mind that we could spend $5,000. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:01 Really, what utility-based purchase would that be? Lawn mower? A couch. Oh, that's so nice. How did I know? How did I know that it was functional purchase? Go ahead. Let's look at the income next.
Starting point is 00:21:14 Cameron, can you read off your combined gross monthly income, please? $19,000. 19K a month means you make a household income combined of $228,000 per year. Did you know that? Roughly, yes. No, I don't know anything. I don't even look at my paychecks when I come in. I show up, I do my job, but I do not look at these numbers.
Starting point is 00:21:39 And that's one reason why even talking about this is out of my comfort zone. Like, I don't know the basics of what we do as a family. And it goes back to that relationship, Lauren I have, is I avoid it and she takes it on. I mean, he asks, like, how much can I spend? And that's why I have an allowance for him. Do you give him an allowance for the purchases of games and stuff like that? Yes. And I will say that allowance has changed.
Starting point is 00:22:02 It used to, do you want to tell them what it used to be? Well, when? I remember it was $100 a month. Oh, it used to be $5. It was $5. I don't remember that. Yeah. No, but I will say we both carved out fun money per month that we can use on our own for
Starting point is 00:22:20 anything that each of us would want. And even that little change, what, six months a year ago, at least for me, has made a big difference. What did it feel to you to have that fun money? It felt like I could make my own choices about what I wanted to purchase. And before everything was so joint where it was like, I'm thinking of doing this. I'm thinking of doing that. And as Laura said, if I'm looking at multiple $30 purchases or going out to a baseball game or whatever it is, you know, having that ability to just make those choices is obviously a lot easier, I think, for both of us.
Starting point is 00:22:59 So that's been definitely an improvement in my opinion. That's good. Everybody should have their own individual guilt-free spending money. I like that. Laura, what do you spend your individual guilt-free spending money on? Probably make two big purchases a year. So I don't spend the monthly. I actually just remove my monthly money and put it in towards whatever else the family needs. Oh, that sounds familiar. And then I'll make two or three gigantic purchases. I'd say in the last couple years, big purchases have been fitness and nutrition program that I committed to. And then I re-signed, and I'm so happy I did that.
Starting point is 00:23:36 And like a personal styling session that actually got like really into like inner child healing and, like, future visualizations. And I was very happy to do it. Okay. That sounds awesome. Actually, I love both of those things. Did that come from your individual money? Yes. Kind of.
Starting point is 00:23:56 Like I didn't stockpilot or anything. I just said, this is the thing I want. And it comes like very spur. Like I do the research and I tell them like, this is a thing. It's a big ticket thing. I really want it. And he's like, yeah, you should do it. But you're using the money in your individual account to pay for it, right?
Starting point is 00:24:14 It's typically more than that. So we give ourselves like $150 a month and I never spend mine. But then I'll come to him and say like, this thing is $3,000. I really want it. Oh. So we're actually doing the, doing the, um, the, um, the, The CSP, we found that my average that was spending was $450 a month, and his was the $150 limit. That's kind of interesting, because you're the one who's anxious about his spending on $2 game.
Starting point is 00:24:44 What did that make you feel, as he realized that? Like a jerk. Like, I'm over here hounding him for his Amazon games, and I'm the one making the big purchases. Yeah. Yeah. That was a surprise. It was a surprise that your average was high, and it also made me feel like, okay, it's not just me who's spending the family's money.
Starting point is 00:25:08 This moment is so revealing. Laura has trained herself to believe that spending money is almost dangerous, that it goes against everything she's been doing. She even admits she doesn't know when or if they will ever be able to enjoy their money. This is scarcity. And yet the numbers tell a totally different story. When they looked at their spending, it turns out Laura actually spends more than Cameron on guilt-free spending. She makes big, infrequent purchases on things like coaching programs, and she's happy with those choices.
Starting point is 00:25:40 But because Cameron spends smaller amounts on games, on things she deems frivolous, she judges him for it. This is how scarcity can distort your relationship with money. It convinces you that saving is good, spending is bad, and the only way to feel safe, is to keep saving more and more, because of course, you're a good person. But in reality, they already have close to half a million saved. They make over 200K a year. This is a very healthy income, especially for a couple in their 30s. Listen as I ask them how they feel about their income.
Starting point is 00:26:17 You know, these conversations are kind of interesting considering the income that your household makes. How would you describe your income? It is the most we've ever made. together at the same. So that's the income. However, our expenses are the highest they've ever been. Just talking about your income. They're the highest they've ever been. Okay. Is your income high, low, medium? What is it? I think it's average to low for the area and the age group. You think your income is low for your age group? And area, yes. Okay, hold on. You two are 34 and 38 years old.
Starting point is 00:26:57 Where do you live, general area? Chicago, North Shore. Who the f is earning? What? Yes. Everyone on our block owns a million dollar plus home. We live in a condo and we own the garden unit and we joke that we're our street is the Titanic and we're the people in the bottom deck like doing the Irish jig.
Starting point is 00:27:22 We live in a very affluent area and we make. significantly less than the people around us, the people in, for me, the people in my industry. Okay, then you're going to be really surprised at the number I'm about to give you. Do you know the median income in your neighborhood? No. No. You said your income was low. So $228,000 should actually be like, what should it be?
Starting point is 00:27:50 Five, six, seven, $800,000? Yeah, three, four, five. Yeah. The median household income in North Shore, Chicago. is $127,000. Well, I don't know if that's true. There's almost no neighborhood in America, certainly not around there,
Starting point is 00:28:08 where the median income is $400,000. What are you realizing right now? I still think that for the industry that I'm in, I'm not making as much as other people, and for the neighborhood that we live in, we definitely do not make as much as our neighbors. All right, so you want to feel for the rest of your life? No.
Starting point is 00:28:27 No, I think we are making a, I think, so this is the most we've ever made. And I recognize that. We're not trying to keep up with anyone. Like, we are on our own path, but we do recognize that we don't make as much as other people that we're around. The reason I'm asking is that it's very hard to feel appreciation, to feel grateful, to make decisions on offense with your money if you constantly feel behind. Your numbers and the way you feel about them are completely at odds. with each other. Making $228,000 in your 30s in Chicago is a lot of money. And the fact that you, you know, the first thing both you say is like, oh, like we actually don't make that much. Our income is
Starting point is 00:29:09 low compared to other people is grossly out of touch with reality. Grossly. And by perpetuating the narrative that you have told yourself, oh, we're actually poor. We're not necessarily, not even close to as affluent as our neighbors. Then you will go the rest of your life feeling behind. You see the exact same thing when you talk about your net worth. It doesn't feel real. Same thing. You're grossly out of touch with your own numbers. What do you get out of that? It feels like we're chasing something that we're never going to have. Yes. And why do you do that? What do you get out of that? I think I get satisfaction in knowing I'm doing all these little things. And I can control a lot of little things, but I'm not, I don't ever feel like I'm in control of the big picture. Yeah. I think you get significance.
Starting point is 00:29:59 It's me or it's us against this unforgiving world. And in order for us to win against this crushing weight of the world, we need to be so aggressive. We need to save. We need to put aside this money. Invest aggressively. And if we make any extra money, what do we do? We invest it.
Starting point is 00:30:15 Oh, and by the way, we retire at 40 and live a worse life every day for the rest of our lives. That's the way that we win. How does that strike you? I think this sounds accurate. Awful. Exhausting. Yeah, but it actually gives you some meaning. It gives you something to wake up and do.
Starting point is 00:30:32 Like, how many spreadsheets have you created to manage your money? A lot. You were still working on the one you made like 12 years ago. I've done one since 2012. I just keep adding new tabs. How many? I should have asked, sorry, sorry, my mistake. How many tabs have you created?
Starting point is 00:30:49 I don't know. Probably 30. Okay. In my opinion, that's about 28 tabs too many. And what do you get when you create a new tab? It's a thrill. It's exciting. It's like, oh, what am I going to do this year?
Starting point is 00:31:02 Like, hey, what am I going to beat? How do we level up? Like, how do I make this number get big? That's right. Significance. It's almost like playing a game. It's almost like that new tab is your new reality. What if we get a car?
Starting point is 00:31:14 What if we go on vacation? What if we send our kid to college? And you can spend the rest of your life in your freaking spreadsheet instead of actually living life. That's what so many people do, particularly people who have found them themselves slipping down into the fire community without an actual purpose. Yes. Yes. All right. I got to look through the rest of these numbers here. Fix costs. What's the fixed cost number combined?
Starting point is 00:31:38 47%. Okay. That's pretty low. Well below the 50% that I typically talk about, right? Just under it. Okay. All right. Good. If you're below the number, you could spend on whatever you want, in my opinion. Just so we know, you make $228K, your rent or more. mortgage is 2100. You have child care of $1,960 a month, okay? Yes. Just for kicks, can I just like strip that out and see what would your number be if you didn't have child care? Can we just take a look at that, hypothetically? Oh, we'd be rich. We talk about that a lot. We feel so poor. Sorry, what did you just say? You'd be what? We'd be rich. We'd have so much money. We feel so
Starting point is 00:32:18 poor having to pay this. Laura, look in my eyes. You are rich. Do you not understand. understand that you are rich, you're in your 30s, you make $228,000 a year, you have $438,000 in net worth. You are wealthy. Did you ever realize that? Neither of you. No. If you just keep this up and just allow the money to compound, you know how many millions of dollars it turns into.
Starting point is 00:32:45 You know you've run the calculations, right? Yep. What does it turn into? If we coast by in four years, we'd have enough to have like two to three million at traditional retirement age. That means you stop working in the age of roughly 40 and you would still be multi-millionaires at the age of 65. That doesn't strike you as being wealthy.
Starting point is 00:33:07 That never occurred to you? That is our plan. Yes. That's not what I asked. I feel like we still are general talking about this. We feel like it's still not enough or will it cover. There's still that fear of, you know, how long do people live? how long that lasts us.
Starting point is 00:33:26 I think you guys like to worry. Yes. We are both warriors. I think you love it, actually. I think it gives you a lot of meaning, gives you a lot of purpose. I think that if you didn't worry, you're not sure who you would actually be or what you would do. Yeah. So you worry about a house.
Starting point is 00:33:42 You get the house or the apartment. Then you worry about retirement. You make a plan for retirement. You knock that out. Then you worry about your kids college. Then you make a plan and knock that out. Then you're like, what else are we supposed to worry about? Oh, heat-seeking mode, let's find something else.
Starting point is 00:33:57 Long-term care. Nobody knows how much it can cost for long-term care, so therefore we need to plug in tons and tons of money. There's actually no ceiling on it. Oh, and if we still end up with money, God bless our kid or kids, they can have some of the money and begin the cycle again. How does that sound?
Starting point is 00:34:12 Not good. It's a good way to spend the rest of your life just being scared. Is that why you guys are here? Survival mode and scarcity mindset got me here, but it's really holding me back. A lot of people don't know, but when my wife and I were having really challenging discussions about money,
Starting point is 00:34:32 we went to see a therapist. And it was transformative, just to have another person in the room who could ask us questions and for us to give ourselves the time of talking about this stuff openly changed everything for us. That's one of the reasons
Starting point is 00:34:47 that I love speaking to couples on this podcast, and one of the reasons that I encourage a lot of them to speak to a therapist as well. But it's hard to know where to start. You Google a bunch of therapists in your area. You're not sure who's right for you. Do they take your insurance? That is why I'm very happy to partner with Sondermind. Sondermind makes it easy to start therapy fast. You answer a few quick questions online and you get matched with a licensed therapist in less than 48 hours. The sessions can be done in person or virtually and they don't just toss you to the next available therapist. they actually ask thoughtful questions to match you with someone who fits your situation and your style.
Starting point is 00:35:26 Plus, they take most major insurance so you're not paying 300 bucks out of pocket. And if you're thinking, I don't even know what to say. I don't even know what to talk about yet. That's actually okay. A lot of people start therapy without one major issue, but just a feeling that they need somebody to talk to. They want to feel more like themselves again. So whether you are totally new to therapy or you're getting back into it, think about fast, thoughtful, built around you access to therapy.
Starting point is 00:35:57 And they also offer psychiatry. If that's something you need, it's available in all 50 states. Go to saundermind.com and start mental health care in less than one week. That is saundermind.com to get matched with the right therapist, saundermind, sond, d-m-d-com. Such an interesting twist of human nature to see how people spend freely on some of the largest purchases of their life, but then obsess over tiny little things like pudding cups. I just spoke to a couple that has a house, pool, three cars, a jet ski, yet they buy discounted lunchmeat that's close to expiring.
Starting point is 00:36:40 Just think about it. These are the very same people who have a financial advisor who charges a nominal fee. What do you think that nominal fee is? probably around 1% of the portfolio every year. But if you're paying that type of fee, you don't notice it because you don't actually get a clear invoice that you have to pay, it just quietly comes out of your account every quarter.
Starting point is 00:36:58 And that fee can end up costing you over 25% of your total lifetime returns. Now, if you want somebody to look over your financial plan, to help you build one, to help you look over your investments in asset allocation, no problem. I recommend it for people who have a complicated financial situation or they're nearing retirement.
Starting point is 00:37:16 just make sure you find someone who charges a flat fee, not a percentage. That is why I recommend FACIT. FACC charges a flat membership fee for financial planning, not a percentage of your portfolio. You get access to a team of CFP professionals, always a CFP, always a fiduciary, who help you create a personalized financial plan and actually keep it updated. They help with investment management, retirement planning, tax strategy, estate planning, so that you are not doing it alone. And the plan evolves with your life,
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Starting point is 00:38:12 Again, that's facet.com slash remit. I'm not a member of Facet and I have an incentive to endorse Facet as I have an ongoing fee-based contract for cash compensation based on this endorsement. All opinions are my own and not a guarantee of similar outcome. Can you share an example of how it's specifically holding you back? I will say I have like a food hoarding mindset. Like I, you know, I grew up poor spending usually only happens at the grocery store. like that's my big spending area and I'm in charge of the grocery so I'll go and I'll
Starting point is 00:38:45 find everything that's on special and I'll stock it in our cabinets and sometimes it goes bad before we can even use it but I get a thrill out of finding the sale and stocking up our cabinets and knowing we've got months of food like we will survive why am I wasting all this time thinking about survive like food you can tap your phone and food will come to your door like I don't need to spend time going to the grocery store and hunting down deals like it is costing me time. Do you spend more than you planned when you walk out? Always. I go to the store with like 20 items on the list and I walk out with like 50. What's the approximate amount you would spend on a grocery shop? Like 120 per store per visit. How many times would you go per week? Like at least four.
Starting point is 00:39:35 Four times. She's spending 500 bucks a week roughly $2,000 a month? We're spending about half of that. some stores I just go in like I get a couple things. But it's a lot. And food prices have gone up. So it's where I used to spend less than $100. It's like $120. Like what is happening here? Cameron, have you ever noticed this? Yes. Definitely she. What did you say about it? I don't know. I would say that I've told Laura like you bring home a lot. We don't need all this. But it's also an activity that she really enjoys to go out and get all this food. I don't think I realized some of the hoarding stuff, you know. You didn't realize that until just now?
Starting point is 00:40:17 You didn't realize that our fridge is packed to the gills. Yes. And I go to the store when we don't need anything. We have talked about that. Like, we don't need this much. But I don't know. It's kind of like this whole, it's part of this whole general thing, I think, that we've been talking about.
Starting point is 00:40:31 Which is? Which is living in a way that maybe isn't our present situation. You know, living like maybe it made sense. 10, 12 years ago, but it's different, but we're still doing the same things that we had done. Lori, can you tell me a little bit about how you grew up with money? I'm so curious. I'm first-gen. My parents immigrated here from Mexico, and I remember that we were quite four. We'd move every year. Wow. There was one house that had a mouse infestation, and we just had to lip with mice.
Starting point is 00:41:06 My parents had to work, sometimes two jobs. But also, they, They wanted to give us a better life than they had. And by many accounts, they did. They truly came from nothing. We were able to buy a home. But the bank also took the house. So like, they weren't very good with money. And I can see that they wanted to spend the money on nice new things. My mom wanted every new gadget. Like, we had spinners on our van when spinners were a big thing. Like, why do we have spinners. Brand new soccer shoes for my brother anytime he wanted them. They liked stuff. They liked pointing to the things that they were working for. Because that, you know, to their credit, they did give us a better life than they had. However, there was no other financial
Starting point is 00:41:54 education. Like, they still, they don't know anything about investing or saving. I'm their retirement plans. They don't have one. I learned to, you know, get a job and to work and the messaging I got for my parents was, you know, at least graduate high school. Neither of my parents did. And they worked manual labor jobs and they still do. So any job that you can do with your body for as long as your body can work is a good job. I work in software development. Like there's no way to say, like, I work on a computer and I, like, you see things on your screen. It's like, that's not a real job to them because you're not using your body. It's not manual labor. My parents taught me, I don't know if they ever said this directly, but there was this idea that, like, if you graduate high school and you become a secretary in a big fancy building, that's all we want.
Starting point is 00:42:48 Everyone they know is like a janitor in a building. So I would say my family had very low expectations of me. And I was never surrounded by people who were doing more than that. Wow, that's quite a story, especially for where you have ended up. When you tell that story about your upbringing, especially the mice infestation and your parents, their dreams for you being a secretary, I can see you getting emotional. What are you feeling when you think about their lessons? They wanted me to be small. Wow.
Starting point is 00:43:22 Small, you mean in your job. The highest you could dream is a secretary. Yeah. But also I think they were limited to what they had been exposed to. Yeah. So their world's view was very small. They didn't know how to support me or encourage me because in their defense, they'd already given me a better life than they had. Are they still alive?
Starting point is 00:43:51 Yes. Are you still in communication with them? Not real. Okay. Okay. Would they understand your lifestyle today? No. No.
Starting point is 00:44:03 I think my mom still makes fun of us because we drive the same car we've had since like 2014. Wow. Where my mom still gets, you know, she'll lease a new vehicle every couple of years. She's always showing up to the house and like some brand new that. I'm like, holy, how are you doing this? You have no retirement plan. You have no savings. She wanted to retire a few years ago.
Starting point is 00:44:27 And she asked me, like, could I help her? And I'm like, well, how much do you have? And she asked me, is that enough? And I said, well, you know, you can, like, do a simple calculation. Do you know how much you spend in a year? Okay. And then divide how much you've saved by that. And like, you can retire for two years and then you have to go back to work.
Starting point is 00:44:45 And she did not like that. What did she say? She's like, oh, I wanted to be done. You're saying I need a million dollars to retire. I'm never going to get that. And to be honest, she won't. she at her age and with her income and her spending she will not have a million dollars yeah it sounds like your parents liked to spend money and still liked you what happened to you that in your own
Starting point is 00:45:13 words made you hoard money i would say it's it's because of my parents when i was 18 i found out i pulled a credit report for myself and found out they had been using my social to take out lines of credit. Wow. What did they do with the money? One was a furniture store line of credit, so I guess they bought furniture. One was like a general credit card. One was in like already debt collection. So I was in college. I was first person to go to college, only person in my immediate family. So getting no support there and dealing with debt creditors, debt collectors. I felt so. much shame because other people get to go to college and have support from their families. And I was getting dragged down by mine. And they used it for furniture. Yeah, other stuff. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:46:10 So when I found that out, I confronted my mom. She was like, oh, well, you know, it was just to get this or just to get that. I was going to pay it off. You were never going to know. Like, no, not sorry. Not. Like, like, it was so chill. Yeah. How much do you remember? they took out? That was like 10 to 15,000 maybe, which is a lot when I'm 18 and I'm in college and I don't have a job and then debt collectors are calling me. What happened with the debt collection? I made my mom pay that one down, the immediate debt collector. I closed the other accounts and told her, like told her she had to pay the balance first and then I closed the accounts. And then I vowed to like almost cut them off to never go to them.
Starting point is 00:46:57 Not that I ever could. I was never going to go to them for money, but like I vowed that I would take care of myself. Wow. Now, can you trace that for me? How did that experience shape who you are with money today? Right around that time, I found out about the fire community. And to hear that you could save half your income and retire in seven years was like magic. It was purely like, how does that happen? Like, how do you just invest? money and then you don't have to work anymore. I'm like, this is the ticket. And when you say magic, why do you feel magic? Because I came from a family that, you know, money is what you used your body to,
Starting point is 00:47:38 you exchanged your body and your effort in exchange for money. And here I was like, no, you just have to put the money in this account and let it grow. And like, you exchange time for money. And while you're doing that, like go and, you know, figure out other career paths. Like you, I don't have to use, I don't have to work in the same. ways my parents did to make money and to have money. When you put it that way, it does seem quite magical. It's like, let me get this straight.
Starting point is 00:48:03 I don't have to go work long hours, sometimes overnight hours, not see my family, beat up my body, work when I'm old or older. Instead, I can just be really aggressive when I'm young, make some tough choices, but I'm fine. I can actually live on less. I don't need all that stuff. And then I just put it in there and let it compound for years. and suddenly I never have to work again, sign me up.
Starting point is 00:48:30 Did it give you a sense of control? Definitely. Control and safety. Tell me about the safety part. That I wouldn't have to move around as much my family did, that I could create a safe and loving and stable home that I never had. And I did that. That is really tough to hear.
Starting point is 00:48:52 And it explains so much about Laura's relationship with money. At 18, she discovered her parents had open credit in her name, total betrayal from the people who you're supposed to be able to trust the most. And she was left with debt collectors and this residual fear around money. So what do you do when that happens? A lot of people find ways to control it. And around that same time, she found fire. What a perfect fit for someone who wants more control.
Starting point is 00:49:19 In fact, it can even feel like magic. A system with rules and formulas, a system where you can. win, a way to finally feel safe. Now, most of us didn't have our parents steal our identity. But identity theft is on the rise and the numbers are truly staggering. Last year alone, the FTC received over 6.4 million reports and more than 12.5 billion was lost to fraud. You can't stop every scam out there, but you can make yourself a smaller target. That is why I personally use Delete Me. They clear your info. off of all those creepy sites that sell it,
Starting point is 00:49:57 and they actually send you a report so you can stay totally up to date with what they have done. I can see exactly where they found my information online and proof that it's been removed. And if something strange ever pops up, I can talk to a real person on their team to get it removed.
Starting point is 00:50:12 For someone like Laura, that means fewer spreadsheets, fewer things to control. You just sign up and that's it. Delete me works in the background, constantly scouring for your personal information. This is exactly why I want to help Laura and Cameron change their mindset and get over their fear of money.
Starting point is 00:50:29 Let's get back to the conversation. When was the last time you took stock and appreciated how far you've come? It's something I'm working on. I'm working right now with someone on inner child healing. As you can see, it's really hard for me to own my narrative about my childhood because it feels like things that were done to me that I had to survive. overcome. I want to get to a point where I can tell that story in a really positive way. I'm not there yet. I totally appreciate that. It's hard. I can even see it in your answer to my question. When was
Starting point is 00:51:07 the last time you appreciated it? And your answer was, uh, I'm working on it. That's code for someone who doesn't appreciate their own progress. I know because that's how I grew up. Like, what's next? What's next? What's next? I'm not really thinking about it. What's appreciating? That's just a waste of time. Let's get on to the next thing. and it's taken a lot. That's exactly the answer I would have said before I met my wife. You work with the therapist? I have worked with a traditional therapist, and I've been doing other things too.
Starting point is 00:51:39 We've gone through couples therapy three times working with someone who's more focused on inner child healing. I'm very interested and enjoy spending time on different types of feeling. Okay. I think I understand more about why, you know, you have this approach with money and why your numbers look the way they do. Thank you for taking me behind the scenes I would have never known. Cameron, can I ask you about how you were raised with money? What do you remember your family saying about money when you were young?
Starting point is 00:52:07 I think my youth is very opposite from Laura's story. I think my family was more, you know, upper class, I guess. You know, I had stay-at-home mom. My dad worked, you know, an executive for big companies. he was doing sales. So he traveled all the time. We always had two cars growing up, and one of them was a company car. Both my parents and my dad especially love spending money.
Starting point is 00:52:34 So growing up, it was just like, yeah, if you need this, buy it. I really didn't think about money. I didn't worry about money. They helped me with most of my college student loans. And then my first job out of college, I also went into sales. And I didn't enjoy it. I wasn't happy. Everything in that job was focused on money.
Starting point is 00:52:56 You know, it's all just goals, money-oriented goals, every month resets. And I was very stressed out. I wasn't happy. You know, I did that for maybe three, four years. And then I didn't know what to do. I didn't really have a plan. So I made the choice right around when we got married in 2016 to leave this sales job, which at the time, I was kind of the breadwinner.
Starting point is 00:53:23 between us and we were relying on my income more than Laura's and I changed to go to a very low hourly rate wage at something I've never done before. You know, a very small company in the suburbs and I still work there today. What do you do for a living? What's your job? So it is, it's a gardening company. We grow and design organic vegetable gardens, mostly for residential. homes, backyard gardens, school gardens, things like that. So when I started a job, I was like physically out in the gardens doing that. Now I basically manage all the operations, the day-to-day, hiring, schedule, client communications, all that. Let me go back to your income here is like 63 or so approximately per year, right?
Starting point is 00:54:18 Yes. Okay. Yeah. How do you feel about that income that you? have now. Well, echoing what Laura said earlier, it's the most, you know, I haven't made, especially in this job. So I feel really good that I've worked my way from what it was when I started here. But I still compare myself to peers and friends my age who are, you know, working other jobs that larger companies, whatever. And I find myself comparing what I think they
Starting point is 00:54:52 make to what I make. And that's still something I struggle with and plays a part in some of my avoidance with all this because I feel like I've never really been successful at making money. Can I make a quick correction? Looking at your numbers, your gross income is actually $84,000 a year. Not 60 something. That's your take home. Did you know that? No. Okay. This is interesting. Can I ask, what did you think your income was if you had to guess. I mean, if I had to guess, I probably would have said 75. Okay. So your income is almost $10,000 higher than you thought. How does that strike you? Like, what do you feel hearing that?
Starting point is 00:55:34 I mean, I feel that's great. Like, I feel happy, but it's also that same where it's just a number on a page. You don't really feel any happier, right? No. What is that going to do here or there? I agree. If it was 95, would you feel any more happy or satisfied? Probably not. Are you guys starting to see this, the number on a page is not going to change the way you feel about it. The way you feel about money is highly uncorrelated to the amount in your bank account. I mean, look, we just, I made an accidental math mistake. I thought your income was 60. You sort of agreed with me.
Starting point is 00:56:06 Then I recalculated, oh, it's actually 84,000. Oh, yeah, okay. Yeah. Zero change. Zero affect change. Like, it means nothing to you. There's a pretty cool TikTok trend going around right now that I really love. It's called admin nights.
Starting point is 00:56:21 Basically, you get your friends together. You get some snacks, maybe some drinks, and you do all the infrastructure stuff in life that most of us skip over. If you're going to set up an admin night, here's my suggestion for you. Use Zoc Doc to book your health appointments and you will be done fast. Zoc Dog is a free app and website that helps you find and book high quality in network doctors so you can find someone you love. They have over 150,000 doctors across all 50 states in 200 plus. specialties, including mental health, dental, primary care, whatever you need. Just filter for doctors based on insurance, location, ratings, even virtual care options. And Zoc Doc appointments happen fast,
Starting point is 00:57:05 usually within 24 to 72 hours. You can look through your options, book an appointment, and you are done. If I needed to find a new doctor today, Zocdoc is what I would use. Stop putting off those doctor's appointments and go to Zocdoch.com slash Rameet to find and instantly book a doctor you love today. That's Z-O-C-D-O-C dot com slash Rameet. And I want to thank Zok-D-D-C for sponsoring this message. What are you all noticing from this? Laura, you look like you're thinking about something. Go ahead. I feel like I keep us living very poor. Like it wouldn't matter how much our money grew. We are not allowed to spend anymore than we're spending now. Would you say that you keep your family living small?
Starting point is 00:57:56 Yes. Can you think of anyone else who kept their family living small? Yes. Who? My family. Yeah. How often do we hear it? People behaving the way they do with money, never connecting it to their family story and the habits and the attitudes that they grew up with.
Starting point is 00:58:14 It literally doesn't occur to them. Did it ever occur to you? Yes. And it's come up before in therapy when I, I don't like who I am when I am this person. And it's like, oh, that is my mother talking. That is my dad talking. I know that I take on that persona when I'm getting really frustrating because I didn't learn how to communicate at a young age. Like, Cameron and I have had to learn how to do that as a couple of, I'm so glad we did.
Starting point is 00:58:40 You're telling me your immigrant parents didn't teach you how to be verbally adept with your emotions. No. I find that hard to believe. Yeah, that TV was always on. Who needs to talk if we're watching TV? That's right. It's quite interesting. It's quite interesting to see these lessons passed down through generations, especially when the lessons that are passed down become less and less relevant due to changes in socioeconomic status. Yeah. We were here because we survived. Survival skills are skills for a reason.
Starting point is 00:59:22 When do you get to move beyond surviving? Probably now, probably five years ago. Because if I made $228,000 a year and I had a loving family, one of the first things I would do would be to stop using the word survive. We're past survival. That's not a question for us anymore. I'm going to make sure I have enough saved up. I'm going to make sure that I create a culture in this family
Starting point is 00:59:47 so that it's not just me. It's my partner as well. we are partners in this venture, in this business of running a household together, and we are going to collectively decide how we are going to thrive. We're not going to use the word survive. We're not even going to talk about it. That's a given. That's what our savings rate and our investments are for.
Starting point is 01:00:05 If one of us gets hit by a bus, of course we're going to survive. I'm more interested in thriving and living a rich life. What would happen if you said something like that, Laura? If I said that, Cameron would be like, finally, like, great, let's do it. He'd be so happy for me. Really? Yes. I feel that in our marriage, in our relationship, he wants to have fun. He wants to have a good time. He wants to enjoy himself. And I'm over here like stressing all the time. Fun is a future thing you can do if everything else gets taken care of. You agree with that characterization, Cameron? Yes, I do. Yeah. And it's not like, hey, I'm just going to blow our money and like go out to the bar. But, you know, it is important. Mentally. whatever, that we take time for ourselves and go do things and loosen up a little.
Starting point is 01:00:56 I agree with what you're saying, Cameron. I agree. Having fun is important. This is a marathon of life. And honestly, it's more than a subsistence life. Like, you're both very, very fortunate to be in a situation you're in. But I'm a little confused because Cameron, you don't seem particularly engaged with the finances in the family. If I'm Laura and my partner doesn't even know his income within $9,000,
Starting point is 01:01:22 doesn't know the household income, doesn't know where the money is going. Basically, it's just like, hey, I just want an allowance and then like, do you do whatever you're going to do? I don't really take him seriously when he talks about money. Yeah, that's fair. And that's some of the arguments we've had in the past, is if I'm saying, hey, loosen up, spend this, she's like, well, of course it's easy for you to say. You don't know what we have coming up.
Starting point is 01:01:42 You don't know any of this. What is the role that each of you plays in the findings? financial arrangement in your household. Laura, you are the what? I would say I'm the parent. I'm the authoritarian. What I say goes, I set the rules, and I make sure everyone's following them.
Starting point is 01:02:00 Okay. And what about for you, Cameron? Yeah, I'm the passenger. Are you the child? I wouldn't say it's parent child. I mean, you do get an allowance. Yes. But it was, we talked through it.
Starting point is 01:02:15 We talked about how much we think makes sense and what it should be. It wasn't directly just here's this. You know, that part there was a discussion about. Okay. So we have the authoritarian and the passenger. Would that be fair to say? Yeah. Does that work?
Starting point is 01:02:31 No. No. Good. I'm glad you both agree on that. That's not a healthy dynamic at all. I mean, you could just see, like, it's so many ways that this could go bad, worse. you know, Laura gets hit by a bus where you all, what happens now to their family?
Starting point is 01:02:49 Cameron doesn't really know what to do with the money. Cameron hasn't been engaged with the money. You have a kid, that's a big, big, big existential generational problem. Or Laura becomes increasingly resentful or increasingly frantic and frenetic about money results in some really bad stuff happening. Resentment builds up into really bad stuff, potential separation, or mental health spiral because it's taken on all this,
Starting point is 01:03:13 stuff and just spiraling. We already talked about food hoarding. Who knows? These are things to discuss with the therapist. You can see that it doesn't, like, there's not really rainbows at the end of that story. Okay, let's, let me understand a little bit more about your jobs, because I think that's a crucial piece of this. Laura, you mentioned you're a software engineer, or you work in software, is that correct? Yes. Okay, do you like it? Um, mostly, yes, it's very exciting. I think technology can be very creative and it's always changing. I would like to work less and I would like to be more aligned with like a nonprofit, like something that is really mission driven.
Starting point is 01:03:55 Well, hold on, hold on. If you like your job, why do you want to retire in five years? I don't want to work as much. You want to work less? I want to work less and I want to work in areas where I know I would likely be making a lot less. Okay. That's quite different than retiring in five years, the very goal that you've spent your adult life working towards. Yeah. We want to co-sify so that we just have to cover our daily expenses without having to put money aside for retirement. So we're front-loading all of our
Starting point is 01:04:27 retirement savings now. And then it could free us up to choose to work less or work in different industries. So you're staying in this current job so that you can front load that, meaning invest a lot and then eventually step to a different company, probably where you earn less, but you won't have to invest at all or nearly as much. Yes. Okay. And when you do that, if and when you step to a different company taking lower pay, what will the effect be on Cameron's career? Hopefully none. Hopefully he can work less too. If we if we, if we, if we, don't need that that's the goal to not need to make as much and work as much to to live off less and and we've set ourselves up really well for that I think we both wish we had more time at
Starting point is 01:05:17 home more time with each other more time with our kid it this is like really stressful times to have a four-year-old and be working to full-time jobs our relationship is like logistics we're just sharing a scheduling calendar I hear you that is stressful like you said when you said our relationship is just logistics. It's not fun. It's just like who needs to be where, when, who's picking this person? What if the kid gets sick? What if this happens?
Starting point is 01:05:43 I can understand that you both want to have more flexibility. How do you think other couples do this, Laura? I think they do what everyone else does, which is save your 10% and spend your money now and hope you have enough in retirement. You don't want to do that? No. You want to invest like max and then quote coast for the next like 45, 50 years?
Starting point is 01:06:12 Yeah. I want to know the money is there. I don't want to hope I can retire someday. I'm actively working to Coast to not need to contribute to our retirement. So if I know the money's there, I know we'll be safe. Cameron, how do you feel when it comes to work and earning money? I think I'm in alignment with Laura that. yeah, if we could get to a point where we're working a little less, that would be great.
Starting point is 01:06:36 I did have a year or two at my current job where I worked four days a week. And I thought that was such a sweet spot. Like, I don't think either of us are going to just not work, you know, especially Laura. Like, we need to be, she needs to be productive. We want to be doing things. I think it's fair to say that we would be making less money, obviously, if we're working less hours and for in a different industry, whatever it may be. So I'm in agreement that, yes, I think we can work less, but there'll always be something there that I think we can somewhat
Starting point is 01:07:10 count on. Is there ever a time in this plan of yours where you can spend more? Before we did the CSP, I would have said no. And now? And no. So we did the CSP and we had two projections. We had been deciding, it took us a few years to decide, do we want to have another child? And to me, that was a decision based in fear. Like, how can we afford another child? How, like, we would have to keep working for even longer. So it is scary to me to think about how we could afford that life. When the only lifestyle I'd been working towards is Coast-Fi. So adding a second child would changed that plan. So it had always been a decision out of fear. Do you see what's happening right now? What was my question to you?
Starting point is 01:08:00 I don't even remember. The question was, is there a time to spend more? Yes. No. Okay. When your entire life is guided by fear, you actually cannot even basically physically hear the question I ask. I think what just happened is you heard snippets. You heard a word, something like plan and future. And your brain, it's almost like your brain is wearing goggles. And it's like garbled. And you're seeing it through these different lenses. And you heard, oh my God, the future might involve a second child.
Starting point is 01:08:35 A second child means a lot of money. Child care is crazy. We got to figure this out. I'm not sure. And you just went down that path. And that is a microcosm or a tiny example of how you have been living your adult life when it comes to money. Yeah, I heard spend more and I'm like, hell no, I can't spend more.
Starting point is 01:08:53 We have to save more only. I thought when we were doing the CSP, we both, after looking at the numbers, we kind of both saw that and said to each other that we are making more than we ever have. And actually, this is more than we thought. And if we are going to do things like have another kid or go on trips and do all this time why we have kids that are living here with us, this is the time to do it. That at least came up during the process of doing the CSP. That's pretty cool. Where did it go? Because that didn't come up in the last question I just asked.
Starting point is 01:09:27 So we ran the numbers. We can afford another child, temporarily afford two kids in daycare. We'd feel a crunch for about one overlapping year as the four-year-old needs one more year of preschool. and then the other baby needs daycare, like that double daycare year would be a lot. And then our four-year-old would be a five-year-old who's in public school and that's free. So that sounds like, I'm not a parent, but that, I mean, that sounds tough for a year, no doubt. Yes. Financially speaking.
Starting point is 01:10:03 But one year in the course of a lifetime doesn't sound like that much. What do you think? Am I being dismissive? Well, one year in the course of a four-year plan to finally achieve something we've been working towards is a lot that's like derailing the plan. I want to quickly jump in because what I see here is more than just fear. It's actually overcomplication. Laura and Cameron have built their entire financial life around tiny details.
Starting point is 01:10:28 Do you see it? Spreadsheets with 30 tabs manually entering every purchase into YNabbit, debating numbers down to the penny. It looks like discipline. It feels like discipline. But it's really just avoidance. If you tell yourself you can't move. forward until you have the perfect number reconciled, then you never really have to move forward
Starting point is 01:10:49 at all. And those tiny details are irrelevant, and they're also keeping them stuck about big decisions like whether to grow their family. You'll notice that the dynamic also reinforces this. Cameron never really had to learn about money since his parents took care of it than Laura. He became the passenger when Laura became what she herself calls the authoritarian. Structurally, the way that they have set up their dynamic guarantees. that they will stay stuck in these same patterns. Guys, this is why I always say fight for simplicity, because the more complicated your system gets,
Starting point is 01:11:24 the smaller your life becomes. Let me try to help them make a change right now. Is this story serving you, Laura? No. Then why are you stuck following it? I don't know. If we had something that we knew we were working towards this would be a lot easier.
Starting point is 01:11:42 We'd know where the money was going, and we'd be excited about it, but we don't. And I spin and I ask for things and I swing. Cameron says I'm a pendulum. Like, that's why he's like, yeah, whatever, whatever you say. Like, one day you say we're moving to Spain. And then one day you say, like, we should, like, I don't know, buy another property or start a business here. Like, I don't know what I want, but I know I want something big and I want it to be different.
Starting point is 01:12:08 And I don't want to keep doing what we're doing now. You sure? Yes. Sure. I mean, you're pretty good at it. You're pretty good at saving a lot, minimizing expenses, getting the $1 plums. Why would you want to give up the competence of saving money and walk into an area where you are incompetent? I'm not using that pejoratively, but people who don't know how to spend money are literally incompetent. They're not competent at it. Why would you want to do that? Because I was, you know, 1820 when I made this goal and it doesn't actually fit the needs of our family now. If I were on my own, like, great, I would have achieved it already. I could do what I want. That's not my life.
Starting point is 01:12:54 We've got a kid. We want more for her. Yeah, I don't want her to hear these conversations that we're having. Like, that wasn't on the list. We're not getting it. No, no toys. Put that back down. Like, that's what she hears from us.
Starting point is 01:13:07 She hears that now? Yeah. Okay. This coastfire plan of yours, CoastFi, can I take a look at it? Yes. Okay. All right. Let me describe what I'm seeing here. So we have a spreadsheet. CoastFi calculator. And let me just read the inputs here. They're quite interesting. Current age is 35. Target retirement age is 67. Okay. Safe withdrawal rate, 4%. Inflation adjusted growth rate, 7%. That's 7% returns. Annual expense, 84,000. Annual passive cash flow is zero. FI number, or the number you need to be able to live off of is $2.1 million, and your Coast FI number, which is how much money you need to have invested today, to be able to reach your FI number is $240,000. Okay, keep that on screen.
Starting point is 01:13:59 Okay, well, that's the inputs, and then the next page is the projection. Hold on. All right, so we're clear, it says you need $248,000. 335,000 invested. Yes. Let's go to the next sheet you were going to show me. Timeline calculator. Okay.
Starting point is 01:14:16 What is all this? God, this is confusing. Those inputs and then down here it is. What the fuck? What is this? Row 20. You've already reached Coast 5. What are we talking about?
Starting point is 01:14:25 If we only want $84,000 a year, which would be less than we have now. So it's about how comfortable we would want to be in retirement and then do we want to keep working? Will we keep working? Just hold on a second. This is crazy. So just take this off screen.
Starting point is 01:14:47 So your buy number is you could have $84,000 a year. Basically safe income. I'm skipping over a bunch of stuff, but basically you could make $84,000 off your investments. You spend $99,000 a year. Yes. If we subtract your savings and your investments. That's not that big.
Starting point is 01:15:08 of a difference, right? Right. Why does this whole conversation, it's felt very existential to me? That's assuming we stay with one kid. We would want to have one more. Okay. Are we going to keep working or not working? Are we going to need to buy health insurance?
Starting point is 01:15:25 Health insurance would go down and health insurance would go way up if we, like, camera doesn't have any of his place. I feel like I would have to keep working. It wouldn't be part time if we wanted health insurance. Is this literally the country? conversation that I told you people have, they're like, first we got to save for the kids, then we got to save for coffee, then one day we got to save for long-term health care insurance. Is this not literally what I just talked about? Okay, so do you see what happens if you approach the world through this lens? Let's keep worrying, like whack-a-mole, we'll just keep worrying about one thing after another. Why? Because it allows me, when you play whack-a-mole, you actually feel like you're in control. One thing pops up, I can fix it. It's a very transactional way to go through life. Yes. You make tiny wins along the way, but you actually lose the war. Yeah, I agree.
Starting point is 01:16:12 We're playing small, and I like that so far I've been able to control these little things. But, like, now it's real. Like, now what are we going to do? We're going to hit this number that I've been working for over a decade towards. We've got this little girl. We've got this great family. Like, now what? Saying now we can enjoy it.
Starting point is 01:16:36 You know, I think we both kind of. somewhat feel this way is that I said before there's this window of time why we have our child or maybe you know another one where we talked about we want to travel we want to show them the world we want to spend time with them you know that's a limited amount of time and that's something that's really important to us is taking them places going on trips taking time away from work like I feel like that is one of the major goals and I think you're right like we look at it these tiny little, you know, we just, we have two, in two years we'll be here. And then the kind of the gold sticks keep getting moved back or something else pops up. And we never really feel like,
Starting point is 01:17:18 okay, we're there. Now let's book this trip and go here and do this thing. Laura, you must be well-versed in the downsides of the fire community. Yes. What's the number one warning or horror story that the fire community talks about besides running out of money? Oh, that's, That's the big one. That's like 90% of it. What's the other 10%? Yeah. I'd say more recently what I've been hearing is what?
Starting point is 01:17:46 So you retired? Like now what? You never, you never strengthened that muscle. You scrimped and saved for so long. When do you stop doing it? How do you stop doing it? Exactly. And only recently have they even started to talk about that.
Starting point is 01:18:01 Yes. Yes. I think it's great. But I think that if you only start talking about something decades into it, Meanwhile, other people have been honing that muscle for years and years and years. It's very difficult to learn that skill. And in fact, you're reinforced by a community that actually keeps you playing small. Look at your life.
Starting point is 01:18:19 You are living your life through a series of spreadsheet cells. You started a plan using a Coast 5 plan however many years ago. 15 years ago, dutifully filled in these cells. Every day updating, every week, every month. Oh, my gosh. Life is not lived in that linear of a way. and actually life is not lived in a spreadsheet. You can win at the spreadsheet.
Starting point is 01:18:41 Your spreadsheet looks really nice. It's really well done. It's filled out well. I'm happy about that. I'm not joking. I actually am impressed that you have taken the time to be as diligent and as forward-looking as you have. And in part because of the way you were raised,
Starting point is 01:18:56 that is what you have to do to put that attention and thoughtfulness into a spreadsheet. But I'm afraid that you have missed the point of a rich life because you can win at a spreadsheet and lose at life. Yes. To me, when you talk about your kid or kids, when you talk about time that you have together, when you talk about taking a trip or going to a zoo or a museum,
Starting point is 01:19:22 like that gets me excited. And I go, talk to me about that. I'll help you figure out how to use the money to make that work. There's 10 different ways you could do it. But this dogmatic approach to, I picked a spreadsheet when I was 18 and now I have to win at this spreadsheet, it's actually closing the world off to what life is. And it's forcing you to live in the confines of a spreadsheet. Yeah, which is why these numbers aren't real to me. These are numbers I've been staring at and working towards for over 10 years.
Starting point is 01:19:53 My life isn't any significantly different. This is the most we've ever made, but it's also the most expenses we've ever had. to have with the mortgage and childcare. It feels like we have not yet been able to enjoy our money. Like we got together. We were making pennies. We got married. I used all of his savings.
Starting point is 01:20:12 Why don't you allow yourself to enjoy your money? That's not what it's for. It's for the future. Like I really don't even feel like the money I have can be spent. What would you need to ask in order to get clarity? I would ask Cameron, what do you want us to spend our money on? If really we're already here at Coastifying, And we can pump the breaks on all of the retirement investing.
Starting point is 01:20:37 What would we spend our money on? To me, I think it's travel. You've talked for many years about, you know, if your life went in a different direction and you didn't have kids and the job, whatever, you would be traveling the world. You want to show our daughter that stuff. So we have places we've talked about where we want to go and things we want to do. And again, it seems like it's always like, oh, and next year we can do that. two years we can do that. We can start doing that now. We can book some trips and plan. And that
Starting point is 01:21:06 could be a goal still that we're working towards, but it can be a real thing right now. Where do you want to go? Well, we start with, we talked about Yellowstone as a big one. Start with that. When do you want to go? This fall. Okay. Okay. That was awesome. Round of applause on that. That was so cool to watch. Cameron, you stepped up. You were like, hey, wait a minute. We've talked about this. We could do this.
Starting point is 01:21:34 We don't have to wait. We can do this now. Laura, I love that you went back. Okay, so where would we go? You got specific. Boom, Cameron had an answer. I love the answer. And Cameron, I don't know if you caught it,
Starting point is 01:21:43 but Laura's response was like, wow, instant. It instantly grabbed her. And I love the push for more specificity. When? Fall. Okay. That feeling of like that chill you get in your brain. when you and your partner are on the same page, it's like, wow, we're a line.
Starting point is 01:22:00 We are a team. That's pretty cool. Okay. Yellowstone is one. Again, I'm not here to tell you to spend more money. That's not my job. I'm here to help you figure out how to live your rich life. Laura, what would you need answer in order to know how to do that?
Starting point is 01:22:16 I would need you to do some planning and figure out what kind of trip that would be and how much it would cost. Are we flying there? Are we renting like an air stream and making a road trip? Or is it a guided tour? Like, what would we want and how much would it cost? I can do that. Karen, what would you need in order to be an active participant in managing your finances? That's a good question. I think in the past, when we tried to have a regulated sit down to go over this stuff, it really just, I would get overwhelmed with the spread. sheets and filling this out and mostly was just watching Laura move numbers around and it's so hard for me to have the interest and to follow it. So having like a clear obvious goal that's happening
Starting point is 01:23:06 in six months or a year, whatever, and those choices are being felt pretty soon that that helps me for sure. It's a more visible goal. Laura, what do you notice in Cameron's response? I saw the realization going through your eyes. I thought we had a clear, obvious goal, but that goal was a number on a spreadsheet that was my goal and it was not his goal. And when we're just talking about hitting a number, we're not talking about what benefit we get in our life. Like, what are we going to experience together that we are excited about? That was never, like, it was never the Coast Vigal. Exactly. It was never. That's the problem with so many fire plans. Endless instrumentation on a freaking spreadsheet with a complete lack of focus on
Starting point is 01:23:56 this. Look at my hand is palm out, palm up. What do I get? I don't care about a number. Most people don't care about a number. Laura, you don't even care about a number. It's driven you for 18 years, but you actually admitted you have no connection to it doesn't even feel real to you. People in general are not emotionally moved by a number, not even the freaks on them. most obscure fire subreddit. Not even them. We can be much more moved by walking outside with our daughter and seeing a sunset and getting an ice cream cone.
Starting point is 01:24:30 That can be more moving than literally having $5 million in a freaking spreadsheet. And what Cameron is saying, Cameron not being deep in the fire community is like, I don't, I don't respond well to something that's like 40 years from now. I want to be able to go like take our daughter to the zoo or something like that. And I want us to be able to do something. And I want us to be able to do it like this year. That would connect me. Laura, I think if I were you, I would, especially as the purported like money person in a
Starting point is 01:25:00 relationship, I would be looking at this moment with like a sinking realization. Holy shit. I have not created a healthy culture of money in this household where my husband understands what the hell is going on with money. If I get hit by a bus tomorrow, he's helpless with the finances. And that's my fault, Laura. And secondly, this is perhaps even deeper. The only way I can create a healthy relationship with money in our household is for me to create
Starting point is 01:25:31 a healthy relationship myself. If I do not have a healthy relationship with myself and with my relationship with money, then how can I create one with my husband in our house? Yeah. It's something we know. It's, you know, in other areas of my life, I've been working on it. I had a therapist as I was pregnant because I knew that I would have to be reparenting myself.
Starting point is 01:25:55 Yeah. As I raised a little girl. So I feel like this is the last big thing, but it's probably the biggest one. We spend most of our day working and earning this money. What do I get? What do we get? Have you ever had a shared goal, a shared vision? I would say most of them have been mine.
Starting point is 01:26:18 My goals that I make him achieve with me. Is that a no? Sounds like a no. No. I mean, it's like, it's not like getting the house working towards that. You know, I would say that. It is one of the major ones.
Starting point is 01:26:32 But other than that, no. And that's, you know, some, we started this call. What do we want? We want a shared vision, a shared rich life that we can get, that we can both be excited. about because just hitting co-spy is something I was excited about that didn't really matter to him and I'm not even that excited about it anymore.
Starting point is 01:26:53 Okay. Is it time to go from one person having a solo goal to having a shared rich life vision? Yes. Okay. You want to do that right now? Okay. Let's do it. I'll give you all 90 seconds and you can write down anything that would make the next 10 years
Starting point is 01:27:11 absolutely magical. Some of them can be you would do them solo. You could do them together. Husband and wife. You could bring your daughter along or any future children. Totally up to you. The next 10 years, what would make it magical? Go ahead.
Starting point is 01:27:28 What was that like? Writing those things down. It was nice. There are things I wrote that were kind of floating in my head as ideas that I didn't think I'd write, but I did. Cool. Laura? It was hard at first. and then, you know, the first one, two, three were hard.
Starting point is 01:27:46 And it's like, oh, we could do this and we could do that. It's like everything else. And it's hard to do it. It's like setting a writing goal. It's hard to write that first post or that first chapter. It's like you got to keep going. To do the thing, to have energy to do the thing, you need to do the thing. We never invested energy in thinking about how money could be fun.
Starting point is 01:28:06 Yeah. Can we compare notes now? I would like for each of you to share one thing. and I would like the other person to get excited and curious about it. That's how we approach this. Go ahead, Laura, you start with the first one. I want to live in either Mexico or Spain, and both of us take Spanish language classes and in Alba, too.
Starting point is 01:28:27 I definitely want to take Spanish lessons. That's something we've talked about, and I'm open to living in Spain or Mexico. I did have Spanish lessons on here. I want to visit Japan with... you and Alba. I want to go back there with you. I think you would love it.
Starting point is 01:28:45 Yeah. Hold on. Get more curious. Where, when, what do you want to eat? Get into it. Okay. What would you want to eat when we're there? Definitely sushi, ramen.
Starting point is 01:28:57 I mean, I don't want to try it all. And where to go? I don't know. I just want to go. I mean, Tokyo, there's so much, but I definitely want to go. I would want to take you to Kyoto when I was there. I thought you would really like it. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:29:10 And our daughter loves Japanese food, so we know she will enjoy it. I wrote, living closer to your parents. Yeah. And I think that's another one. Where? What is closer? I don't know how close I would want to live, but closer than we are now. Maybe we say within...
Starting point is 01:29:29 Driving distance. Three hours or less, yeah. Yeah. I wrote that I want to open a business with you in next 10 years. What kind? I'm not sure. I think I lean towards restaurant. What will we sell?
Starting point is 01:29:45 Sandwiches or Mexican food like street food, something casual, lunch-based kind of food. Can I ask Laura, I noticed the tears, are these happy tears? It's something we've talked about. But just in general,
Starting point is 01:29:58 as you're hearing this. Okay. At first I thought it was tears because you understand the margins of a restaurant. But then I'm like, wait. 75% close in the first year. Okay.
Starting point is 01:30:09 All right, keep going. Was I next? Yeah. I would want to truly take a couple of years off, like, just not work. And it would be great to do that if we had another child and just take those first two years off. Like, we know, we know now how hard that time was. Yeah. I think that would be, that's a great goal.
Starting point is 01:30:31 I think that would help us with the little one and help you. And I think we can do that. maybe pair that with living closer to your parents for a short amount of time. Yeah, you're right. That's a good idea. Can I pause you here? What's this feeling like right now? Possibilities. And combining. I mean, this is another thing. We've talked about all these things at different times here and there,
Starting point is 01:30:54 but talking about them all in one place, like what just happened is like, you want to do this? Oh, that pairs well with this other one. That was really cool. Oh, we could take two years off and live closer to their parents. you're starting to see these synergies, these opportunities that were previously just unconnected satellite ideas. It's really, really powerful and beautiful. Laura, if you weren't afraid, what would you do next? I would quit my job.
Starting point is 01:31:25 Just start, just trust that Coastify number. Like, okay, I did it. I don't need this money anymore. We could live off of Cameron's income. I would be home with my daughter. you know, we wouldn't have to be worried about paying for daycare, have another kid, and maybe another one. I don't know if that's the right financial decision or not,
Starting point is 01:31:46 but I know that that is a very useful guideline to start viewing the world through. Because it's so polar opposite of how you currently do it. Yes. Cameron, you need to get involved with the money right now. And I know that it's been challenging because, like, even for me, it's kind of overwhelming to listen to some of the spinning that happens and look at these spreadsheets.
Starting point is 01:32:06 It's a lot. In some ways, my money situation is simpler than yours. And that shouldn't be the case. Your money situation should be infinitely simpler than mine. But I need both of you to be involved if you want to be able to escape this trap of the spreadsheet. That means, Cameron, you probably need to, like, have you read either of my books? You probably need to. You probably need to be able to connect with Laura and speak the language she's speaking.
Starting point is 01:32:34 A lot of what's really being communicated here is loneliness. It's like I don't feel safe. I don't feel like I have anybody looking out for me. I need to do this all on my own. So give me every burden. I'll plug it into the spreadsheet and I will live smaller and smaller and smaller. Laura doesn't say that, but that's what's being communicated. Laura, is that how would you, is that true?
Starting point is 01:32:56 Yeah. I've had to do everything alone. Yeah. So Cameron, you know, one of the best ways to combat that is to be her partner. And that means start off. You have a structured approach here. You take one, take both of these books, read them, have a book discussion with her, host it and ask her questions. She'll be, she'll love. Optimizers love to talk about their numbers and their knowledge and all that stuff. But at the same time, you're actually going to be becoming competent with money. And you may discover
Starting point is 01:33:24 that she actually has made a couple decisions you don't agree with. I would love that. My wife has challenged me with some of the decisions I've made. She runs our like internal analysis that we do every quarter. It's awesome. That would be amazing. Then the two of you can together craft your vision of a rich life. This is the kind of thing that you can actually use money and feel really good about it. It's as small as an art class, as big as an international multi-generational family trip. It's so cool. As for the job, those are bigger discussions, right? Yes, you've got to be able to look at the numbers and Cameron you'll be able to work those numbers up yourself and both of you can talk about them but also you have to decide like what do we want in our life what's important now what's
Starting point is 01:34:10 important later let's start with the vision first the money can come later okay yeah I recognize that you've been doing this on your own and it's time for me to step up and I think looking at it a bit from a real goal is helpful to me and having us start with these are the things we really want is also helpful, but I need to do my part. So yeah, it's a good starting point, the book, and kind of discussing it and maybe starting afresh from kind of building this out, using a different form or a different version of a spreadsheet or something like that. I want to say thank you to Cameron. I want us to do this together. Me too. That's awesome. I love that. You two are a team. It's so obvious. You really are. You two light up when you talk about your families
Starting point is 01:34:56 and being able to travel, being able to have a vision, maybe future kids. It's really quite lovely. Just a couple of pieces of feedback I want to share with you all. Cameron and I already mentioned you would lead a book club with one or both of these books. I would probably start with money for couples because it's like there's a lot of dreaming in it. There's a lot of recalibration. Who are each of you in your relationship with money and who do you want to be? So you can lead that discussion and I'm sure Laura will come.
Starting point is 01:35:26 participate. Laura, if I were you, candidly I would unsubscribe from all of the fire-related stuff that I'm in. I actually don't think it's serving you anymore. The spreadsheets, the subreddits, the email reminders that you get.
Starting point is 01:35:40 You know it. You already know that stuff like the back of your hand. It's not going away. But I would start looking at what is your future. Obviously, you know, I think my material is really helpful. I think there's a lot of great material out there. But to focus on the future
Starting point is 01:35:55 and deciding what you're rich like, is as you two start to create a vision i think you're going to discover a totally fresh way of looking at these big discussions that have consumed you questions about where are you going to work is one person going to take a step back or pause working for a while should we have a second child or maybe more those conversations which it feels like you've been running right talking about them i think those are still very important conversations to have but it's almost like you're going to approach eating chicken the same chicken you've had but it's going to have different spiking It's going to taste different.
Starting point is 01:36:28 It's going to be more engaging and rewarding to talk about jobs because it's not like, you should do this. I don't know about that. It's going to be like, oh, we have a vision together. Let's figure out how the pieces of our life fit in there. That is what I want for you. I want to give a huge thank you to Lauren Cameron for speaking with me today and for being so open.
Starting point is 01:36:46 We're going to get to their follow-ups in just a minute. And honestly, they surprised me. The truth is people who have trained themselves to never spend, almost never change. They think they want to. They may even come to me and ask for help, but when it comes down to making decisions to actually spend more money, they don't. What they often do is just wrap their inability to spend in a coat of virtue. Oh, I don't need that nice car. I'm simple. I don't need that dinner out. I'm practical. I don't need that fancy wine or even to get a new jacket. Why would I need that? They claim they want to spend more, but when it comes down to actually doing it, they usually change nothing.
Starting point is 01:37:28 And that is because of their identity. They have created an identity, almost a prison in their own head that they could simply walk right outside of, but it's hard. I will say that by the end of our conversation, something shifted. Maybe. Cameron leaned in, he got engaged for the first time they were able to dream about something as it relates to their rich life. and hearing them talk about it gave me hope. Maybe they can make some changes. The real shift is starting small. Take the trip, like the Yellowstone trip, and don't overcomplicate it. Try something simple, start to feel good, realize it's not going to compromise your retirement, and then keep going.
Starting point is 01:38:09 I also want to thank this episode sponsor, Delete Me, for people like Laura who've lived through financial betrayal and still carry that fear, Delete Me offers peace of mind. It's one small way to take back control and to protect yourself. If you use DeleteMe, which I personally use, you'll get 20% off all consumer plans when you go to join DeleteMeat.com slash Ramith and use promo code remit at checkout. Now, let's listen to their follow-ups. My biggest takeaway was realizing with your help that we've already hit Coast Vi, which was this big goal that I said I'd been trying to achieve. And, you know, I'd been obsessing over tiny details in that spreadsheet for a long time, but I had never let myself celebrate that milestone.
Starting point is 01:38:56 And if I truly believe in the math of Coast-Fi, then I don't need to keep contributing to my retirement right now. I can use that money to buyback time with my family, which is most important to me. So as a result of our conversation for the first time in 15 years, I dropped my retirement contributions to zero, and that was terrifying. So my immediate the next steps are building up our emergency fund and saving for a car. And that should take probably eight months. Another shift that I'm doing is instead of having conversations that are really stuck in the short term, like arguing about what's going to happen in the next year, like car and daycare expenses,
Starting point is 01:39:38 you helped us zoom out and frame what could we do in the next 10 years that would be wildly exciting and fun. and we've never been excited about our money. It's just been a chore. I'm also reclaiming more time. I cut a weekend commitment, and I'm using grocery delivery only, and just doing those two things this past weekend. I finally enjoyed slow mornings with my family
Starting point is 01:40:06 instead of hours at the grocery store. So these are small changes, but this is time that I'm reclaiming, and it feels amazing to spend that with my family. Thank you. Big a surprise that I've also been living with this survival mindset for years. I think I was so used to it. I didn't realize it. And by being absent from the financial discussions, I'm leaving Laura to figure all this out
Starting point is 01:40:33 alone. And I am allowing the survival mindset that she's had for most of her life to sort of run our family. And that's really not something after going through the call that I think we need to do anymore. We can afford all the things. we want to do. The time is now to do them. So we need to think big, stop getting stuck in the day-to-day minutia and actually do these things. Changes. I've decided to work four days a week during the slow time at my company to give Laura and I a chance to be together and again start doing the stuff we talked about. And then being a part of the kind of financial discussions as we have them and really trying to keep the focus on the big picture, you know, the goals that we have over the next
Starting point is 01:41:19 six, 12, 18 months, and again, not the day-to-day transactions. Thank you. Hi, roommate. This is Laura. It's been three weeks since our call with you, and something that has really stuck with me from our call was talking about how much fun we could possibly have with our time and money. So last weekend, it was a beautiful Sunday, and we each had plans to be out of the house and it was like a logistical nightmare. And I asked, can we just cancel all of our plans today? What would be the most fun that we could have right now as a family? And within a couple minutes, we decided, like, we're going to go to an amusement park. So we canceled all our plans, took our kid to six legs, and she got on every roller coaster that she was tall enough to ride.
Starting point is 01:42:03 And we had a really good time. And we would not have been so spontaneous without asking ourselves that question and giving ourselves permission to use our money to do something really fun. Right now, in a cabin in Georgia and we took a road trip down here and we stopped. We made a, you know, an excursion out of it. We got last minute tickets to a cave to see an underwater lake. So much fun. Like we are creating beautiful memories for our daughter. And even while we're here on our trip, we're asking every day, like, what's the most fun we could have today? What is something we could do that would be really memorable and enjoyable for the whole family? So thank you for sharing that positive mindset and really simple question that we can ask.
Starting point is 01:42:43 ask ourselves as it's working. And it's been amazing. Thank you.

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