Money For Couples with Ramit Sethi - 255. "I’m 40 and work 2 jobs. How are we still broke?"
Episode Date: April 7, 2026Ramit Sethi of I Will Teach You To Be Rich talks to Gabriella, 36, and Chris, 40, a married couple from Pennsylvania with four kids, zero savings, and $32,000 in credit card debt. They both work multi...ple jobs. Chris travels all week and picks up extra shifts on weekends. Gabriella juggles three income streams while running the household alone. And yet their fixed costs sit at 109% of their income and the debt keeps growing. What Ramit uncovers goes much deeper than the numbers. For years, Gabriella has been managing everything alone, building budgets Chris never looks at, covering purchases she never agreed to, and quietly losing hope. Chris has been avoiding the conversation entirely. And buried underneath it all is something neither of them mentioned in their application: they've been here before. They filed for bankruptcy. And now, with four kids in tow, they're on the exact same path. In this episode we uncover: Why two incomes and two extra jobs still aren’t enough when your fixed costs are 109% The treadmill purchase that broke Gabriella's trust What Ramit means by "95% of your money relationship is in the shadows" The bankruptcy reveal that changes everything Why Chris can't give a straight answer and what it's costing the marriage The moment Gabriella admits she stopped doing everything just to see what would happen How Gabriella's new $70K job changes the numbers overnight The Florida plan and why Ramit says it won't fix anything What it looks like when a couple finally starts working as a team Chapters: (00:00:00) "I've never not worried about money in our marriage" (00:07:10) Do you have trust issues around money? (00:15:18) "What if you just stopped doing it all?" (00:17:32) "95% of our relationship with money is in the shadows" (00:22:17) Ramit reads the separation ultimatum from her application (00:34:00) The power dynamic: who earns more, who leads? (00:46:05) "So you all are broke" (00:52:27) The bankruptcy reveal (01:00:36) The Florida plan and why it won't fix anything (01:03:31) Gabriella's new income changes everything (01:05:57) "I'm too tired of being alone" (01:58:09) Follow-ups Calling LA couples: Apply to be coached for free on this podcast at https://iwt.com/apply This episode is brought to you by: Fabric by Gerber Life | Join the thousands of parents who trust Fabric to protect their family. Apply today in just minutes at https://meetfabric.com/ramit DeleteMe | Get 20% off all consumer plans when you go to https://joindeleteme.com/ramit and use promo code RAMIT at checkout ZocDoc | Go to https://zocdoc.com/ramit to find and instantly book a top-rated doctor today #sponsored Facet | As of the date of this recording, Facet is waiving the 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 facet.com/ramit to learn more about which membership option is best for you. Offer has been extended to 12/31/2026. #FacetAd If you or your partner get stressed spending $150 on dinner, or are covering up spending, I'd like to help. Apply to be coached for free on this podcast at iwt.com/apply 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 Have you or your partner fallen for a scam? If so, I’d like to help. Apply to be coached for free on this podcast at iwt.com/apply
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Gabriella, why'd you come on here?
To save our marriage.
I need him to make more money.
I need him to really have a fire under his ass about what his career plans are.
I'm a traveling electrician.
And you have a side job as well?
I'll pick up at a local brewery to make extra income.
I begged him, like, please do not pick up shifts in the weekends because you're not home all week.
You spend more than you make every single month.
Your debt is growing faster than you can pay it off.
This is how a lot of people go homeless.
fear is always with me.
Have a plan for us to save, manage our money.
I feel like you gaslight me.
You tell me it's going to happen.
You tell me it's going to be done.
And it doesn't happen.
This is not working for me.
This whole dynamic.
I'm too tired of being alone.
What if you and your spouse both worked multiple jobs,
yet you still had zero savings and you were on the brink of financial ruin?
That's what today's couple is facing.
Chris is 40 years old.
Gabriella is 36. They've been married for 12 years and they have four children. Now, they both work
multiple jobs, yet they are drowning financially. In their application, Gabriella wrote,
we aren't able to make big life decisions because he is so focused on making quick money
by working as a server on weekends on top of a high demand traveling job that I did not
agree he takes. He works 40 to 60 hours a week and is rarely home.
It drives me crazy because it keeps us in this cycle and he doesn't see the long game.
I'm looking at their conscious spending plan, which we call the CSP.
If you want my help with your own CSP, you can join my money coaching program at IWT.com
slash money coaching.
Assets, $796,000.
Investments $99,000.
Savings, zero.
Debt, $493,000.
Net worth?
$402,000. Fixed costs, 109%. Investments zero, savings, zero, guilt-free spending, negative 9%.
What do you notice? I mean, they're spending 109% of what they make every single month.
That's it. That's the ballgame. No amount of cutting back on laundry detergent can change
this structural deficiency. Before we get into this, I'll
want to say something. It takes a lot of courage to come on this show and share your financial
struggles publicly. Chris and Gabrielle are putting themselves out there because they want help
and they want to change. So when you leave comments about this couple, I want you to remember that
my community roots for our guests. We don't tear them down. We want them to succeed. So please
share your thoughts, your own experiences, even your advice, but do it with respect. That is what
makes my community different. Now, let's get started with Chris and
Gabriela.
You mentioned you've been stuck in a financial rut for the last 12 years.
And in your application, you said, I want to not worry about money all the time.
We have four children, and every decision we make is restricted because we are always
short on funds.
My husband keeps doing his own way and doesn't want to work as a team.
Can you give me a little bit more color when you say your husband does not seem to want to work as a team?
I try to share all the budgets and give like some transparency into what's going in, what's going out, how much funds we have.
And he is not actively working on those spreadsheets or using those apps.
I feel like I'm always the one that's like doing the work when it comes to like managing our finances.
And then he will make purchases that I'm not aware of those.
They'll make large purchases and that we didn't discuss.
And then I feel like I have to kind of scramble and pick up like,
how are we going to fix this or make up the difference?
And in his mind, he will go and pick up shifts at his second job,
and to make up for whatever he spent money on.
What's one of those large purchases that you made that she referred to?
Probably front and center of mind is going to be a treadmill,
even though we have a treadmill.
But this all came to a head.
We went on our makeup anniversary getaway.
We hadn't been on a vacation in like 10 years.
It's our honeymoon.
Yeah, exactly.
So that's when I dropped the bomb on her.
And when I did, that was just kind of like the,
you know, the last shoot of fall
and she was pretty upset
and understandably, though.
How much did it try to cost?
Yeah, just a little under two grand.
A little under, can you just tell me the number?
All in, it was like 1,800.
Okay, Gabriella has been itching to talk.
Go ahead, Gabriella.
What's your reaction to this?
It was a shock for me
because we had a wonderful time
at our anniversary
trip. So we were talking about our plans when we get home from our Bayleigh's trip and we're sitting
in the airport and he tells me about this purchase that he made without telling. That was just
devastated. Gabriela, do you think that there are trust issues between the two of you when it
comes to money? Yes. What kind? Not knowing what is being spent. Not knowing the
debt that he is accumulating because when we did the conscious spending plan together and we
were looking at our debts that we had and our credit card balances, I did not know that he was
using the credit cards again. So that was a surprise to me. I think those are like some of trust
issues I have. But I think one of the other things of trust is every time I wanted to go out to
eat with the kids or spend any money to do anything like activities, I couldn't because there was no
money in the account.
I just saw all our bills going out.
And so I just wondered, like, what, why would we be so short on money when?
Can I ask you?
Why didn't you ask him?
I did a couple times.
And it's always like, I call it his iPhone calculations.
He'll just, like, be like, this is where the money went and just, and then gives me, like,
he pulled out his calculator and he'll give me, like, these.
like ballpark estimates of where the money went.
And what do you feel when you get those explanations?
I feel like let down because I don't feel like that's a responsible way to manage money
and why he can't just use our budgeting or our shared platform,
like rocket money, which we have that account, to really show me that he is handling the finances.
I did take a big step back when I got laid off from,
my job in
23 because I was bringing in most of the income,
I was kind of on top of everything,
doing our taxes, our budgeting,
investments, our retirement.
And it was exhausting because I just really wanted to be a mom
and be present for the kids.
And I've been working full time for my previous employer
for almost eight years.
And I was like,
I just want you to take control of it.
And so I stopped.
When you stepped back,
after being laid off from managing the family finances,
did you have a conversation with Chris about who was going to take control of the money?
Yeah.
What happened?
I basically said, you know, handle the taxes.
My brother is our CPA.
You can handle the retirement aspect of things.
And then we sat down and on rocket money.
We went through our whole budgeting.
We came up budgeting.
I was like, it's an app.
It's under your name and everything.
you can go and handle it.
And then nothing really panned out.
Chris, would you agree that you have not taken
to the tool that Gabriela is using?
I'd say that's a fair assessment.
Okay.
And do you spend money that she doesn't know about?
I think for a long time, that was the case.
I think recently.
I've been a little bit more conscientious, but...
Like recently? Like, how recently? Like two weeks?
I'd say for a good bit of this year, I've been...
Other than the $2,000 treadmill?
Correct.
There's other purchases that he makes, though.
No, I'm not disagreeing with you at all.
I'm just saying for the majority of the marriage that was the case.
Why not just say yes?
Yes, I do spend money without her knowing.
It's going to be very difficult for either of you to make changes if you're not honest with me
and more importantly honest with yourselves about what's going on.
Like, I find it frequently.
It's like, you know, it's the equivalent of somebody hiring somebody to come clean their house.
They clean beforehand, and they're like, ah, we're actually doing a pretty good job.
It's like, why are you doing that?
You're actually deceiving yourself.
Just be honest.
I'm not going to judge you if you're doing that.
We'll work with it.
But we've got to be honest about the state of the situation.
Okay.
Okay.
So how often do you actually talk about money?
I think once a month, maybe if we're lucky twice a month.
Okay.
And give me an example of the last time you talked about money, Chris, where you were not on the same page.
I think when we put together the conscious spending plan, we were like, okay, we have an idea,
you know, let's get after it, let's be cognizant of what's going on, and then we never check back in.
Okay. Is that a common sentiment where you'll kind of make some sort of discussion or resolution,
but then not really make it happen? Yes, 100%.
Okay. Hearing yes is from both of you. Okay. All right, that's interesting. Hey, why do you think that
happens. It's easier to assume someone else has control or someone else is in the driver's seat
when really we're just kind of ignoring the obvious where it's just like we're in a situation.
We don't know how to get ourselves out. So it's easier to just kind of like that's the coping
mechanism. You know, let's just deal with it tomorrow and then tomorrow never comes.
Now, I understand that Gabriella for a while took control of the finances, kind of paid things.
Has there been a period, Chris, where you were in charge of the finances?
To the degree that she has been in the past, no.
And I don't have a clear-cut answer as to why.
Could I have assumed that role where Gabby was taking care of, you know, making sure the taxes were filed, making sure, you know, the tuition's paid for the kids, XYZ.
Sure, I think I could have stepped up, but, you know, ultimately that never really happened.
Why?
For the longest, I've kind of inundated myself.
with work, whether, you know, this current role that I have where I travel a lot, if I work
on the weekends and then, you know, I end up coming home tired, then I don't want to deal with
the minutia of, you know, finances or sitting down or budgeting or I think that's probably
one of the obvious answers that I just, you know, it seems like I don't have the bandwidth or
that's something that we can kind of figure out later on. That's probably the best answer I can
give you. I think the second runner up would be just because we're, we've been so used to
not being on the same page.
So it's just kind of like waiting for somebody to take the lead
or waiting for somebody to have a clear-cut plan of attack.
You know, for Gabby to, you know,
me thinking Gabby is going to say, hey, you know,
this is how we're going to handle this.
You know, this is our current financial position that we're in.
This is the plan that I've concocted.
As you hear yourself saying these two reasons,
what occurs to you?
I think I could have done better to maybe done something about it,
maybe not wait for Gabby, maybe been a little bit more responsible with the finances.
Gabriela, what do you think?
Chris is avoiding talking about finances.
And I feel like there's always an excuse, whether it's because he's been traveling or he's
working on the weekend, so he never has a time to sit down.
And then he does promise, okay, yes, we will sit down and talk about it or we'll do something
about it. But then when it comes to that moment, it's, he's too tired for the last like few years.
I mean, maybe more than that. I had put in the schedule at the end of the month, we would meet
and do a monthly like finance committee. And has he ever been able to like be proactive in being
like, hey, I saw that you have the committee scheduled. I'm ready. I'm prepared. I'm coming with my,
you know, eager to look at what we can do and how this, you know, coming month we can do better.
It's always me having to, like, pull him in and be like, hey, you know.
And it's just super frustrating and it's exhausting that I feel like I'm the only one taking initiative.
Can I ask you a question, Gabrielle?
What if you just didn't?
That's what I did.
And just stopped doing it.
And what happened?
Nothing was picked up on, like, no initiation, no budget.
We didn't submit our taxes.
we haven't paid our taxes.
I have no idea what hole we're in.
Okay, so you stopped driving the family finances,
in terms of setting up meetings for taxes.
What else did you stop doing?
The budget, rocket money,
asking for us to meet monthly,
having these conversations.
I've been avoiding looking at our bank account sometimes.
I just don't even bother tracking expenses.
And did you tell them you were going to stop doing this?
Or did you just stop?
Yeah, I told him, I said, I don't have time to do this because I've also started my own business.
And what was his response?
He said he would do it.
Did he?
No.
Chris, what do you say?
I don't think that's entirely true.
I mean, I will agree for the most part.
But, for example, in terms of the taxes, I found somebody a local CPA.
We didn't feel comfortable moving forward.
So we just walked away.
It didn't get filed.
We missed the date.
We then turned to, you know, the accountant that we typically.
use, you know, that kind of got delayed, delayed, delayed up until like, I guess.
It's not acceptable.
Right.
I mean, if somebody owns a number or they own a decision, life is going to throw curveballs
your way.
So what?
It's that person's job to drive it to a close and make sure it gets done.
Just saying like, oh, I didn't know this or that person didn't do it the right way.
Okay, that's life.
That's what happens.
The person who owns it has to see it to completion.
What's your take on that, Chris?
I'd say I'd probably drop the ball on that.
You know, I didn't adjust.
I didn't pivot in terms of, you know, if that person didn't get it done,
I should have been as eager to find someone else that could get it done.
Have you guys had this conversation before?
Chris, where you said, hey, I dropped the ball out.
I take responsibility for that.
I don't think I told her to her face or I didn't,
I don't think I kind of owned up to it the way I'm doing now.
Have you owned up to it to yourself?
because I don't think you did as of 60 seconds ago.
Probably not.
How much of your relationship with money do you feel is in the shadows?
In the shadows means somebody might be thinking one thing,
but the other person is thinking something different.
You never really talked about it.
Maybe one person has never even thought about it themselves.
I'd say if not all of it, like 95% of it in the shadows.
Okay.
Gabriella?
Yeah, I was going to say 90% of it in the shadows.
Mm-hmm.
When I first looked at Chris and Gabriella's situation, I thought it was going to be pretty straightforward.
One person ignores the money, the other person manages everything and they're exhausted.
Classic dynamic.
But it's not that simple.
Chris just said that 95% of their relationship with money is, quote, in the shadows.
And then Gabriella agreed.
Think about what that means.
They've been married for 12 years, four kids, and almost everything about their money.
where it goes, how much they have, what they owe,
exists in the dark.
It's been 15 minutes I've been asking Chris basic questions
and I'm not getting straight answers.
Where did the money go?
What did you spend it on?
It's just deflections and vague responses.
Meanwhile, Gabrielle is building spreadsheets and budgets,
but Chris won't look at them.
So she's trying to manage their money
while being completely in the dark about what he's actually spending.
Yeah, they're working hard,
but they're actually working in opposite directions in the dark,
no visibility into what the other person is doing.
My job is to help them shine a light on what they are both doing,
which I'm going to get to right after this.
Some of the best people I know with money can naturally swing
between what if things go right and what if things go wrong.
Like if you only focus on things going right, you become delusional.
You're a dreamer.
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You all want me to just make it easy for you?
You know those really bright lights, people buy those flashlights that are like 10 trillion
lumen or whatever and it just shines a light on the whole neighborhood?
Can we just do a little exercise for 60 seconds?
What if I pulled out one of those flashlights and just shine the light on money in your
relationship?
What would each of you say if there was a light shine on all the money issues in your
relationship?
What would you say?
What would you want your partner to hear if you could just put everything?
out on the table. I really love to just be on the same page. We have the same ideas. We have the same
goals. We have an amazing marriage. And I don't see why we can't have amazing control in our finances.
I don't feel like all the work that we've done together is where we should be at in our lives.
Chris, what would you want to say? Yeah. I mean, if there was a light shone and I had a
Put all the chips on the table, I think I can do better.
I can do better in terms of being a little bit more mature in terms of how I handle the money that we both share.
What specifically could you be better about?
Instead of having these emotional purchases, I think it's a matter of thinking long term.
And I think I've suffered, or we've, she's suffered probably more than I have in terms of thinking long term of, well, you know, this money could be going to our retirement or this money could be going.
going to, you know, a 529 for the kids or this money could be something, you know, a trip that we can all
enjoy. I think I've been a little bit selfish in terms of some of the purchases I've made without
her knowledge or without her consent. Gabriela, your response was a bit defensive and it was like,
I would love for us to be on the same page. We have a great marriage, but I'd love for us to be.
It's very, like, nice. Yeah. Can I read from your application? Yeah, for sure. I was really desperate
in that application.
Has your financial situation dramatically
improved since your application?
Yes.
Tell me.
I got a job with my brother
with his company,
and that's a full-time position
with a decent salary.
So let's update the CSP
when we get to the numbers.
Okay.
We'll do that.
You wrote in your application,
our eldest daughter is starting middle school,
and it makes me sad that we don't have
a college fund or savings
to help pay for whatever she wants,
to pursue after high school.
If things don't change before she enters high school in three years, I would want to separate.
Have you guys talked about this before?
No.
Is it true?
I wanted to, I was in Florida with my family and the kids, and I was really frustrated about our financial situation.
And I just felt like if he didn't get like a wake-up call about what to do with our
finances, that would be an indicator of him, like, realizing what's at stake.
Chris, what's your take on this?
Yeah, I mean, I'm looking forward to this being that wake-up call that we can finally
work towards something and might take full accountability in my habits and correcting my
behavior.
So she doesn't have to feel that way anymore.
Okay.
That's cool.
I appreciate that.
Gabriella, I'm struck by your language, the contrast between I would love for us to get on the same page.
That's like me telling my wife, I would love for us to eat a burrito on Saturday.
Versus what's in the application.
Yeah.
That's as serious as it gets.
Yeah.
What I would expect to hear is something like, this is what I need in order for us to be a successful partnership.
This is what I expect.
Have you ever said something like that before?
I've definitely said I need this from him.
I needed him to lead our family.
I did not want to be the working full time while our children were young.
I needed him to be in control of our finances.
And I would be absolutely the one to help and to do it together,
but I wanted and needed him to lead.
So I expressed that.
but I don't know if I've done a good job of reiterating that.
My whole dream was to be a mom and be home with the kids.
I never expected to have to work this much during these prime years.
When you had these discussions about you primarily staying home with children, Chris, did you agree?
I think in good faith, I said yes.
you know, I would do my damnedest to make that happen.
But after career change, after pandemic, after getting laid off, after a move from a different state,
you know, all these things that kind of came along the way, I'm making what I'm making.
And whether or not that is sufficient to provide, to be, you know, pay for private school tuition times four,
to pay for the house, pay for X, Y, Z.
I can only do so much with where I am and what I'm making.
Do you ever tell her that?
I'm sure I've told her a couple times,
but it's just kind of like a moot point
because it's like, well,
I understand where your heart is at
and I want to give that to you,
but I just can't.
Do you all ever look at any numbers
when you were having these discussions?
Probably right around the time
we did our contraset spending plan,
you know, just kind of like,
wait a minute, that's 10 years into your marriage.
Yeah.
Four kids later in 10 years,
hey, maybe we should look at a couple of numbers.
Yeah.
It's no surprise that you're not on the same.
page. There is no page. It's just whatever's in your head, whatever you feel, whatever he or she
feels, everybody's operating on their own independent view on money. And the fact that like,
Gabriella, you're like, I don't want to work full time. I want to stay at home. But no one has ever
actually calculated how much money you need to be able to do that. No, I mean, I have definitely
calculated how much we need. Okay. And then what happened? He will just go defaulted.
saying like he cannot make that much.
And I, or sometimes I will say, it's not enough.
Like, it's not enough for you.
And I think he has the potential to make so much more.
And I think where he's at right now, it's a shame.
I feel like he could make a lot more than what he does.
Let me understand quickly what each of you does for a living.
Chris, what do you do?
I'm a traveling electrician.
Cool.
And you have a side job as well?
Yeah.
If I'm home or if, you know, time allows it, I'll,
pick up at a local brewery and, you know, work there for a couple hours to make extra income.
How many hours a week do you work at the brewery?
A week maximum, I'd say about 10 hours additionally.
Okay.
Gabriel, why are you shaking your head?
No, that's just recent, like the past couple weeks after I got this job and I begged him,
like, please do not pick up shifts in the weekends because you're not home all week.
So I need him home during the weekends.
But he was typically working a double shift on both Saturday.
Sunday. So he would be gone from 10 and won't be back until 10.30. So that's 24 hours on the weekend
versus 10 what he just said. Chris, I think initially when I started working there, I was probably
working heavier hours. But I think as of late, I've kind of toned down my hours since school started.
This is not working for me. This whole dynamic. And I suspect this is what's been going on for a long time.
Chris, I feel like I'm trying to pull teeth to get the truth out of you.
I just feel like you're not being honest with me.
I'm looking for what got you into this situation where your wife applied and said,
if things don't change, we're going to separate.
That's what I'm looking for.
I'm not looking for you to present yourself in the best possible light.
That doesn't actually do anything for anyone.
If that's what you want, then you two should wrap up this call and go back to the way you were doing things.
Yeah.
What are we doing here right now?
I don't know.
Maybe just defaulting to how it's been.
Maybe defense mechanism.
I don't know.
Yes. Why?
Because for the first time,
hearing myself kind of hear myself talk and it's maybe I'm not liking the truth I don't like the
truth yeah I'm about this close to ending our conversation right now and I don't want to do that
you all went through a lot to get to talk to me I want to help you yeah I can only imagine how
frustrated Gabriela is if she asked these questions and gets the kind of answers you're giving me
yeah can we re-center here I want to stay I want to talk to you why did each of you come on this
call, to have a plan for us to save, manage our money, get on a page, work with each other,
and be fully transparent. Okay. I appreciate that. Gabriella, why'd you come on here?
To save our marriage, because I was really getting at a frustrated point,
I want us to be able to enjoy our children, our family, each other, and not let money be the
thing that breaks us.
Two different answers.
Chris, you've heard of a lot of guys who one day they get divorced and they're like,
I never saw this coming.
Why didn't you talk to me?
You've heard that stuff, right?
Yeah.
Every guy's heard that stuff.
This is it.
She's screaming it.
Even though she's not physically screaming, she's screaming it to you.
Listen.
Tell the truth, even if it doesn't make you look great.
Because there's no way out of this unless you go through the fire and take responsibility by being
honest.
Right now you haven't done that.
Okay.
Kind of getting frustrated with Chris.
When I ask a straightforward question and I get a response that circles and circles without
ever landing, we can't make progress.
If you can't talk plainly about what's happening, then you don't understand it.
And if you don't understand it, you can't change it.
Gabriela said she often asks a simple question and walks away more confused than before.
When that happens repeatedly, year after year, it takes a real toll.
You start to doubt your own perspective.
Most people just stop asking questions because experience has taught them it's not going to lead anywhere.
And I can feel that dynamic playing out between them.
After years of indirect answers and unresolved conversations, Gabrielle is not even sure what to say.
She hasn't developed the tools to speak clearly and to advocate for herself.
And as long as that dynamic stays in place with Gabriela and Chris, both of them are going to
remain stuck no matter how many hours they work.
My wish, one of my core wishes on this podcast for you, is that you learn how to communicate
directly, how to answer questions candidly, and most of all, how to simply state what you
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Gabriela, what is your new full-time job?
Director of business development and operations.
And what kind of firm is this?
It's an accounting firm.
Cool.
All right.
When you got this new job, did it substantially raise your income?
Yes.
What were you making before and what are you making now?
Gross income.
So my gross income was around like monthly,
It was around 2000.
Mm-hmm.
And now?
I haven't got paid yet, but my salary is $70,000 a year.
Okay.
Yeah, that's a big jump.
Wow.
Okay, great.
How would you each describe your relationship with money?
Terrible, non-existent.
Okay.
And Gabriella?
Like, I'll avoid it when it's not going my way.
But if I was, you know, in control of it, I feel ambitious with it.
Wait.
How can you be ambitious?
and avoidant with money.
I guess when I was working full-time,
my salary, it was a six-figure salary
when I left.
So I had money.
I had my 401k, I had an investment,
and then I got my payout.
So I felt like I wanted to be more in control
because we had enough income.
And so I was doing investments and those things.
But when we don't have as much money
and it seems we're stretched in, then I avoid it.
You have an interesting interplay of the word I versus we.
So it's like when I hear success, you're talking about I.
When I hear struggle with money, you're talking about we.
What do you make of that?
I do see myself as successful.
And maybe I feel like maybe that's been intimidating in the past.
Do you know if that's true or not?
Ask him.
Chris, does that make you feel intimidated?
Maybe subconsciously, yeah.
First time you all ever had this conversation?
In front of a third party, yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, that's okay.
Well, most people don't talk about anything in front of a third party.
So how about between the two of you?
Yeah.
I don't really think we've ever talked about how he must have felt when I was, you know,
working full time in the past and making what I was making.
And I was always very concerned.
I did vocalize it.
I was like, I don't want you to feel like I am.
overpowering or not allowing him to be able to take the lead. I want our children to see him as
successful and I don't want him to feel less than just because I was making more money.
When I make the money and my success, I always say that it's our success. It's our money. I've
never put out any of that money into a separate account and nine times out of ten, I never spent that
money of myself. It always was for the family or paying off debts. Chris, what do you make it?
It seems like a pretty big topic. Gender and relationships and power and identity.
For almost a decade, she was the primary breadwinner. And maybe in the back of my mind,
that was kind of one of the reasons where I wouldn't behave the way that I was with money,
you know, kind of to make myself feel better as opposed to try.
trying to hit it head on and have that conversation with her and say, hey, like, I understand
your wants, your needs, your desires to be a stay-at-home mom, but, you know, with your trajectory
and with my trajectory, you know, I don't know that we can switch roles. Maybe that wasn't a
reality I was willing to accept or at least own up to. I didn't even hear you accept it there.
No, I'm comfortable. I can, I can own up and say, look, this is where I'm at.
What we need to do, I feel is if we can get a hold of our finances and change my behavior,
Maybe I can give you that and work with what we have as opposed to just...
You think that your income alone can provide for her to stay home with four children?
Is that what you're telling me?
She's also a bersed doula where she can make her own schedule.
So if with that income and with what I have and if we make it to Florida with the proceeds of the house and have a fairly small mortgage,
I feel if we work together, I can give her that where she doesn't have to work full time.
Okay. I'll tell you what. We're going to look at the numbers and we'll see how we can map it out.
Now, you mentioned moving to Florida. Tell me a little bit about what this plan is. I believe this is in the next 12 months. Can you describe the plan?
Is to list the house in March and then hope to finish the kids out of school and move by June.
Okay. So you're going to sell the house. You're going to move to Florida. And then what are you going to do about housing in Florida?
We're going to stay with family until we find a home.
Buy or rent?
We want to purchase a next home.
Okay, got it.
And how committed are you to this plan?
Like, on a scale of 1 to 10?
10.
11?
Wow, so it's going to happen.
Yeah.
Okay.
Good.
That's very helpful to know.
And where are you with this plan to move to Florida?
Gabby's, you know, working with her brother.
So he works out of St. Pete.
So she's already secured employment if we need to get a VO.
in order to secure a mortgage, we have that kind of wind up.
My job, as long as I'm close to an airport, I have a job.
So that kind of ticks two boxes right there.
Have you calculated your numbers for how much you will make
and how much you'll be able to buy when you go to Florida?
I have, but I haven't incorporated the new salary.
All right, cool.
We're going to take a look at your conscious spending plan.
Gabriela, can you read off the word in bold
and the number in full next to it for this entire box, please.
Assets, $796,000 in $836,836. Investments, $99,227. Savings, zero, debt, $493,953.
Total net worth?
$402,110.
All right, what do you both think of those numbers?
It's great.
I just don't like that we have such a no savings.
Okay. Chris, what do you think about the numbers?
The money that we do owe, it'd be nice if it was a little bit smaller than the number on the screen there.
I feel like if that money can be applied the right way into the next house, I see a glimmer of hope light at the end of the tunnel when I look at that.
What do these numbers mean to you?
I see like a mountain to climb.
to pay off the debt.
Okay.
And I have a little fear if something bad were to happen,
we don't have an emergency fund.
Okay.
So it makes me nervous.
I look at what Gabriella was able to do with her previous employer
and she was able to swirl away, you know,
almost $100,000 in her 401K.
And I look at our net worth.
And again, I see promise.
And I feel like if there's a plan in place moving forward,
then I think we'll be okay.
You know what I hear when the two of you describe what these numbers mean to you?
A lot of words, but there's no numerical rigor.
There were almost no numbers when you talked about it.
It was like a lot of just arbitrary feelings.
Yeah.
I'm fixated on this.
I can't believe that number is so low.
I don't want to dwell in the past, but there's hope at the end of the tunnel.
It's like we're describing pros.
Are we talking about Shakespeare right now, or are we talking about five numbers?
What do you make of that?
I guess looking at it is like 60% of it is debt to our assets.
And that's scary.
That was a very good analysis.
Chris, what do you make of these numbers?
I'll put them back up on screen for you.
Our debt is higher than our net worth.
And it didn't need to be that way.
Okay.
That's a good assessment.
Anybody asking questions like we're 40 years old, roughly 40?
Do we have enough for retirement?
Nobody's asking those questions.
And I've always been like, we need to start thinking about our retirement or why am I the only one thinking about our retirement?
Gabriel, I agree you have until now been the only one thinking, but my question is, are you actually thinking about it?
Because how come you didn't bring up anything about retirement?
I think I look at that number and be like, that's okay for someone or for us at our age.
How do you know?
Just based off of some of what I've read from your newsletter.
and your book.
My newsletter said $99,000 at age 40 is okay?
No.
It didn't say okay, but compared to the other people that you worked with.
Why would I compare myself to somebody else?
There's no numerical rigor here.
Yeah.
The thing about operating purely on feelings is that it presents an argument that is unassailable,
that nobody can argue with.
the way you feel, even though you might be completely wrong, but you're like, I feel this way.
That is why we have to do two things to live a rich life. Number one, we got to know our numbers.
Right now, I can tell that the two of you don't even know your numbers. You don't know what these
numbers mean at all. They're just numbers. And what you're doing is you're making up meeting.
It's like I went into the Museum of Modern Art and I don't know what the hell I'm looking at.
And I'm like, this represents a fresh perspective on cleanliness. That's why they only have three dots.
And this art docence, like, shut the fuck up.
What are you talking about?
You never studied any of this.
Okay?
Now, it's different.
I don't need to be an art expert,
but you actually need to be really good
at your household finances.
You don't know your numbers.
Second, you've got to master your money psychology.
You have to actually be able to understand
why you behave the way you do with your money.
Why do you feel the way you do?
And I suspect that's not happening.
We're going to get to both of those things today.
But right now, I just want to point out to you
that it's no surprise that you have not been on the same
page with money because you're not actually talking about numbers at all. It's just feelings which build
up to resentment. And ultimately, you're talking about something completely abstracted from these numbers.
Okay? Let's keep going. This time I'm going to ask Chris to read off the combined gross monthly income.
Chris, gross monthly income, $8,277. Great. That means that this is all prior to Gabriela getting her new job,
but let's just stick with this for a second.
That means that the two of you made a household income of $99,327.
Who knew that?
Prior to the CSP, not me.
Gabriela knew it.
Chris did not.
Okay, not bad.
50% right on target with my statistic.
All right.
And Chris, you didn't know.
What did you think you made?
7,700 prior to doing the CSP.
7,700 a month?
Correct.
Which is 92,400.
Not far off.
7,000 bucks off.
All right.
All right.
That's fine.
I think that just goes back to the fact that you brought up that we weren't talking numbers.
And I don't think we ever sit down and speak numbers and as straightforward as possible.
At least I didn't.
Why don't you do that?
I think just avoiding.
Yeah.
Why?
Because then you have to kind of take accountability, responsibility for your actions.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
And how does it feel when you have to do that?
It kind of sucks if you don't have a good enough excuse or response.
It's a very interesting comment. In my mind, taking responsibility is not about having excuses.
Right. Actually, the excuse just doesn't matter. Somebody shows up a week in a row late while the train was late today and my hairdryer blew out yesterday. And I'm just like, I don't care. It doesn't matter to me. You show up on time or you don't have a job. It's simple as that.
Yeah, no, that's true. I agree. I actually just said this to my brother that the way I treat
my work is completely different than my personal life or her life.
Why?
I feel like maybe I feel in some type of control. There's like a framework, whereas in my
personal life, it's just chaos.
Very insightful.
And so I shut down when there's chaos.
You know, at work, it's a little bit more straightforward.
First of all, there's levels of hierarchy.
It's very clear who's in charge.
There's accountability.
And accountability is not about excuses.
It's about like, if this person doesn't have to do it, they're fired.
They're going to be fired.
That's not usually the same thing that happens in a relationship, right?
I mean, there is that possibility if things go very, very wrong.
But that's not usually the first, second, third thing that gets discussed.
what I see is that some people, when there's no strict rules, they fall apart. They need those
strict rules. Chris, would you say that's true for you? Yes. And Gabriela, what about for you? I'm
not so sure. What's your answer? Yes. Both. I thrive in structure. Wow. Okay. That's interesting. And the two of you
have no structure when it comes to your money. Right. Well, no surprise.
It's not particularly going well.
Let's keep going down the numbers.
All right.
This is interesting.
We're learning something here.
The rest of the CSP at $99,000 a year.
Your fixed costs are,
Gabriella, what's that number?
109%.
Okay, so 109%.
So y'all are broke.
You're spending more than you make every single month.
Yeah.
Where's the money coming from?
You put it on credit cards?
Yes.
Oh, we're in trouble.
Yeah.
Big trouble.
It's sort of irrelevant to go down
the rest of the CSP because we're going to see, investments are at zero, savings are at zero,
guilt-free spending is at negative 9%. So the rest of the CSP is basically like inaccurate. You
basically do whatever you want and then try to figure it out later. You have debt of $493,000.
Can you explain the debt? That is our mortgage. And then I have one student loan that's been outstanding.
Hold on. How much is the mortgage for? $433,000. Okay. Great. And how about your
student loan? The student loan is 26,000. What else? I have two credit cards. The balance is 11,500.
Total. Total. Between the two. Okay. What else? Chris took out a personal loan one year and I think the
balance is 13,247. All right. What else? And then Chris's credit cards. So the two credit cards
that are used for travel are 5,500. That's at 29%. Okay.
And then smaller cards that I have, about four of them, for a total of $2,350.350.
Correct.
Okay.
So I have questions.
The credit card debt, what are you all spending on that to get to that amount of debt?
That is mostly like paying our bills, paying, going out to eat, paying for the Amtrak when we went to Florida.
some of the costs of when we went to Belize.
So it's like some of those bigger spending
when we don't have it enough in our budget,
then we'll put it on the credit card
and say we'll make more money
or we'll pick up a shift and then we'll pay it off.
When you tell me what those things are for,
what you spent on those credit cards
and you hear yourself saying it out loud,
Amtrak, Belize, et cetera.
What do you make of that?
that we should be spending money when we don't have it.
Yeah.
I think it's we want to go on vacations.
We want to do nice things for the kids and the family,
but we really didn't have the money to do it.
So how did you decide to do it?
What did you tell yourselves at the time?
We will figure out a way to make more money
or find another way of income for my business.
I was like, my business is going to take off or I'll be able to find more income or more a business and growing my business.
Does it work?
No, it doesn't work because we can never anticipate when something else comes up like an emergency situation.
And then we have to use our money towards that.
Why do you do it?
I think it's to make me, make us, I don't know, feel better about our situation, like masking the reality.
that what I would love for our lifestyle as a family is not happening.
So I mask it with spending it on these credit cards.
I appreciate the honesty.
Chris, what about you?
What do you tell yourself when you make these purchases and they go on credit cards,
knowing that you have over $30,000 of credit card debt?
I think I tell myself that, you know, I work hard enough.
I deserve it or, you know, just this last time and after that we'll fix it.
But I think in the moment it's just kind of like, like Gabriella said, you know, because in reality,
we can't afford it.
So we just put it on credit cards and kind of get a fix out of that.
What does that mean fix, you know, kind of convince yourself or I convince myself that I'm rewarding
myself for working so hard.
and, you know, tomorrow will come and I'll figure out a way to eliminate the debt,
and tomorrow just doesn't happen for me.
So what happens?
Like, let's just say, pretend we ended the call right now.
You all carry on the way you've been doing, and fast forward for me.
What happens?
What happens is sometimes, you know, the thought of withdrawing from my IRA to come.
to pay off the debts.
He's always an option.
Let's say you did that.
You have $99,000 in there.
It was $160,000.
We've withdrawn from it to pay for the credit cards.
You've already taken out $60,000 to pay credit cards down?
$80,000.
Okay, so what happens if you keep this up?
It's just we keep killing our retirement.
We want to have money.
And then what?
Then there's a lot at stake.
I mean, our house would be like foreclosed.
Yeah, and we don't have a roof over our head.
Then what happens?
I think we have to pull the kids out of tuition, out of private school, which is not something I want to do.
How many of them?
Four.
You're four kids in private school right now?
Yeah.
All right, so let's say that you might lose the house.
Maybe they wouldn't be able to go to private school anymore.
And then what?
I mean, they'd go to public school and, you know, there's a possibility of the Florida
to move doesn't happen, house gets foreclosed on, and then this is the way that the market is right
now, some rentals are even more expensive than owning your own house. You all realize how close
you are to being homeless? No. I don't think it's entered the possibility for you, right? I know you
have some family support, which is really helpful. But if we just take that away for a second,
you spend more than you make every single month. Your debt is growing faster than you can pay it off,
and you're not really paying much of it off anyway.
Yeah.
You're basically just decimating whatever future retirement you have,
and it's just going towards debt, which is growing anyway.
I mean, where does it end?
This is how a lot of people go homeless.
I mean, that fear is always with me
because we've been in this situation in the past.
What do you mean?
In our previous home, we ended up having to go through foreclosure.
What?
Mm-hmm.
When was that? I didn't know that.
But we avoided it by filing for bankruptcy.
What? You filed for bankruptcy?
No.
You just heard them reveal that they filed for bankruptcy years ago.
And now they are right back on the same trajectory, except this time, with four kids.
So what's really going on here?
Well, have you noticed that Chris and Gabriella don't look at numbers?
They talk about money entirely in feelings.
like they're rowing a boat in the middle of the ocean and they're arguing about how they feel
they should go left or right without actually stopping to look where they are. They don't review
their spending. They don't track where the money goes, not even in a few key categories. A lot of
this is just reaction. Feeling stress, feeling overwhelmed, feeling like they can't get ahead,
and then making decisions based on those feelings instead of incorporating numbers as well.
Now, by only talking about feelings, that's why Gabriella and Chris take trips they can.
afford. That's why they put them on credit cards. That's why they're not prioritizing debt pay down
or building any savings. Because without knowing their numbers, they have no financial structure.
So everything just becomes reactive. Money comes in, money goes out. They're just arguing about
their feelings that are totally disconnected from their finances. And this is a real problem.
They have zero savings. Their debt is growing. They're basically one unexpected expense away from
being in a serious crisis. And they have children. This is a red alert.
The stakes are high, so I'm going to push them to make some hard changes.
Now, if you recognize yourself in this pattern, and if you want help building financial structure,
then you can join my money coaching program at IWT.com slash money coaching.
You do not have to do this alone.
Once you filed for bankruptcy, what did you tell yourselves?
And we would never be in this situation again.
You know, not that many people find themselves in dire situations over and,
and over six years apart, especially having a six-figure job in between. What do you think's really going on here?
I think for me, it's not getting a handle of my finances and then kind of telling myself
that it's going to get better and it's going to get better and not changing behavior.
It's not going to get better. It's going to get worse. It's actually getting worse every single day.
Yeah. I think that's probably a pretty honest answer, though, Chris. And Gabriella, what about you?
I can't figure it out. At the end of 2023, when I was getting laid off, we sat down and had a conversation and what's the best thing to do. The conclusion was he was going to go back to school while working full time. And I was going to take the payout and start my business and go back to school and get my certifications to become a Burstola.
Great. Like you made a lot of plans. You executed on them. What went wrong?
I don't think the job that Chris ended up getting was the job that met what we were anticipating or our goals.
What was the number you expected Chris to make?
I said 80,000.
And then what happened? What was the actual number in the job?
Gross is 74.
Comes out to like $30, $31 an hour.
You know, it's interesting because you said the job that you took Pagey 74K, but Gabriella, your plan was for him to make 80K.
That's not that far off.
The problem is his overtime.
It's not like he's making that just doing 40 hours a week.
And so I can't do my business effectively when he's not home.
Who's going to watch the kids?
And so I've never been able to do that very well.
So that's what makes it a little frustrating for me is the time he spends away.
He's gone every week almost, sometimes five days out of the week.
That's tough, especially with four kids.
It's incredibly tough.
Yeah.
And it wasn't what we planned for.
We had a discussion, and I told him, I don't agree with him taking on a traveling job.
And I said, if he does it, I can only handle it for a year.
It's now been over a year.
What's the plan, Chris?
I think that's kind of where Florida comes into play in terms of moving closer to family.
you know, we have family that can kind of help out.
Obviously, it's a little bit selfish to count on them to help us out week and week out.
That's not the idea, but I think...
Hold on. What is the idea?
First of all, have you spoken to the family?
Are they willing to watch the kids?
Yeah.
Okay, good.
My parents are very aware of our situation.
I'm very close with them.
And they do think that is the best thing for us to move down to Florida.
They see me struggling. They see my frustration. And they would love to help and they can help if we're closer.
Let's say that you moved to Florida and let's say that family is super helpful with the kids.
Chris, you still have your same job at that time. You're going to be traveling.
Sure. Right. What does this move to Florida do for your finances?
We'd take the equity, get the house, that's secured. I'm personally looking to have a small of a mortgage payment,
possible. We've already looked at schools down there. We'd be able to get a $8,000 per kid credit
so they can continue to do their Catholic studies. If we can operate in a way that Gabby can
be close to the kids, do her doula business, I'm making what I'm making, and we eliminate the
debt that we can, then everything is now in our favor. That's what I'm hoping.
That's not a plan. Chris, you're just saying words. You're just saying words.
What is different about being in Florida?
Your mortgage is already $1,898.
That's pretty low.
Are you going to get a lower mortgage in Florida?
No.
Yeah, so what are we talking about here?
I'm not hearing an actual plan.
How does moving to Florida change your finances for the better?
A lot of our move to Florida is not really a financial move.
It's more of an emotional move, I feel, because we are in a really sweet spot.
We have a 4,000 square foot home.
It's beautiful.
It's a five-bedroom home.
It's in Pennsylvania.
You have a 4,000 square foot home?
Yes.
Does it feel a little weird to have a 4,000 square foot house
and be in $32,000.5,000 of credit card debt?
Yes.
And have $0 in savings with four children?
Yes.
Does that not seem a little outlandish?
Yes.
It is.
But we would never be able to have this house
if it wasn't for my parents helping.
us with mortgaging.
I mean, just to ask the obvious question, why don't your parents just pay off the credit
card debt?
Whoa.
Look at Chris's, look at Chris shaking his head.
No, he came real quick with that.
Chris, go ahead.
Yeah.
I think it's important for me to take full responsibility and move forward with an understanding
of our finances.
So is the answer the in-laws?
Is that really what we needed to get to?
Chris, you don't want to be embarrassed about what the in-laws think about needing to go ask for
help. Is that it? It's not a matter of being embarrassed. I think it's a matter of I made my bed and,
you know, we have to deal with this problem. And if I'm not willing to change my behavior,
the way that I operate, then, you know, what's to say this doesn't happen down the road?
Okay, I like that. I appreciate that attitude. That is actually really cool of you to say,
I agree with that. Can I just point something out? You all are just going to be in this exact same
situation in Florida. Oh, yeah. That's why I replied for this. Oh. I just want to be able to be in a
better spot and not bring this to Florida with us. Okay. Let's update the CSP with your new income,
because that will make a positive difference. Your old income gross, Gabriella, was $2,63 per month.
What is it now? 5,833. Should I just put 5833 here? Because you're not making the 20063,
right? I'm continuing to work at the school. Oh, great. Okay, so 2063 plus 5833.
Right. Okay, nice. 7896 gross. And then how much do we want to put for net? Like take 30% off of that.
5527. Holy shit. That really changes things considerably. Wow. Wow. Wow. Do you guys see what just happened to your fixed cost number?
It was almost half. Yeah, it went from 109% to 66%. What the hell? That's pretty good.
Yeah.
Anyone want to smile right now or we all just want to be depressed as on this call?
I don't want to be depressed. I want to be excited.
You've been so, you've been unhappy with money for so long that you actually don't know how to be happy with it anymore.
That's true. This is true. I see the possibility. 66% you all have a great shot at fixing this.
But if you can't see that, you're in trouble.
It just stinks that I had to go back and do a full-time job on top of my business. And this is not calculated in the
gross monthly income. But I do bring in like around $2,000 a month just on my Dula business.
That's not in here? No. Why? Because it's not stable. All I care is about the annual.
Annually, do you make $24,000 per year roughly from the Dula business? Yes. As I've booked clients
this year, I'm booking at least two per month. Okay, that's amazing. So you're
telling me this why. I love it. Hold on. I need to set, I need to set the right modeling for everyone.
Great. It's amazing. Everybody's smile. I'm super excited because this is what I'm passionate about.
So why are you telling it to me as if like somebody just killed my mom? Why are you saying it like in
that tone? Oh, I'm saying it because it takes a lot of work. You know how own, own,
your own business. And I'm putting a lot of hours and time into it. Plus working 20 hours at the school.
And now working 40 hours for my brother.
It's too much, right?
It's way too much.
And on top of my, Chris is not home.
So I'm also running everything for the kids on the evenings.
And then on the weekends, he's not here either because he's at the restaurant working.
It feels like I have to put in my time and energy into making more income.
and I feel like Chris needs to really step up.
Be specific.
What do you need?
I need him to make more money.
I need him to really have a fire under his ass about what his career plans are.
And I want to visually see him doing something about it.
Instead of on the weekends, wasting time, his precious time with our family,
or if it's about income, I would love to see him doing something.
that's going to get him to advance in his career.
I just don't see it.
It's a lot of word salad.
And I say this to him all the time.
I was like, I feel like you gafflight me.
You tell me it's going to happen.
You tell me it's going to be done.
And it doesn't happen.
And so then I have to come up and come up with a plan with my brother about getting this
new job, which is why I probably wasn't super excited because I was like, okay, now my time
is even more, it's going to be dedicated to something else because we need the income.
Chris, it's a pretty honest comment thing.
What's your reaction?
This is the one spot where I'm going to have to politely disagree with her in terms of
having started a new career and, you know, she was at her previous spot for almost a decade
and she jumped the corporate ladder.
So then I don't get that same kind of grace.
I don't get that same kind of understanding.
It's like, I went to school for a trade that's paying $20.
I'm making almost $10 more than that.
So what do you want me to do?
These unrealistic expectations of, you know, having to take care of everything overnight
is not realistic.
I can agree to everything in terms of my mismanagement of my money.
I can agree to all that.
I take full responsibility.
I'll take my share of the blame.
But to expect that I'm going to make this large sum of money overnight, I can't agree
to that because I don't know.
what it's going to take for me to get to that point.
I can't give her a solid answer.
I'm not even getting a solid answer from you right now.
What did you hear her say?
So Gabby is saying that she doesn't see me working towards making more or advancing my career.
What about all the other stuff she said?
She said, I now have gotten this job and I work X hours at the school and I work Y hours
doing the birth dula and my husband is not home on the weekends.
she said all that stuff.
What about that?
I agree with all that.
Hold on a second.
I didn't hear you nor do I think she heard you validate any of that stuff.
I mean, she's mom of four kids.
Yeah.
And you're gone all week, understandably so, because you're working hard.
I understand that.
But I don't even think I heard you say like, hey, that's got to be really tough, you know?
And I really appreciate that you do that.
And now you got this job and that's really going to help us out.
That's validating.
I didn't hear you do that.
You jumped right into, I.
don't agree. Why did you jump into disagreeing? I think she knows, but I mean, I have no qualms about
telling her directly. I appreciate everything you do. And I mean, I want to work towards giving
what you need for me. Are you all in therapy? No. You ever gone? No. Why? You know, I love Chris,
and I think we have a wonderful relationship. We got along really well. We laugh. And I think we just
avoid talking about these hard things because we both don't like to be vulnerable.
I think a couple can be happy and have a loving marriage and still go to therapy.
Yeah.
I don't, you know, the old days, like in our parents' generation, it was stigmatized.
Like, what's wrong with you?
Yeah.
My wife and I have gone to therapy many times.
You know, I love her.
We have a great relationship.
We want to learn some skills.
It might be a couple of things that are irritating or a problem.
but just from watching this dynamic of the way that the two of you communicate with each other,
Gabriella, your inability to specifically ask for what you want to really set boundaries as to
what you need.
To be able to do that much work every single week is really difficult.
And you're a mom of four.
Yeah.
And we have a dad of four who's traveling all the time, then picking up 24 hours of shifts on
the weekend, a lot.
And not communicating.
There's not a lot of validation or love between the two of you when you're talking about
these really serious.
It's one person in this corner and another person in this corner.
It's actually impossible for you to get out of this whole, financially speaking, unless the two of you are totally aligned.
So if I could make a suggestion, it would be that I would really encourage you to see a therapist regularly,
because right now you don't have any time to actually talk to each other.
And money is just probably one of many topics to discuss.
What do you all think about that?
No, I agree.
I'd be open to it.
I mean, it's awesome that, Gabriela, you've been able to now make almost $8,000 a month gross.
That's incredible.
It changes the entire financial picture of your family.
Amazing.
I think that the way you do it is unsustainable.
Like, you could maybe do this for a year, and it would be brutal, but you could do it if you know that there's a light at the end of the tunnel.
Right.
There is no light right now.
Mm-mm.
So if we can just look at the rest of the numbers here, just take a little.
With 66%, you all have over $3,000 a month that has flowed down to guilt-free spending.
What does that tell you?
Well, first pay the debts off.
We have some extra funds to pay that off, and that could be a huge release.
And then once that is paid off, then I would want to start really contributing to the 529s,
especially for our oldest daughter, who's not getting younger.
You know who else is not getting any younger?
Me.
Two of you.
And the two of us, yeah.
Is it possible that some of your instincts,
the two of you, have led you astray with your money?
Yes.
Chris?
Yeah.
I'm going to try to reorient you as to where your instincts might be off.
Okay?
You ever know somebody who just gets in a bad relationship over and over again?
And you just want to shake them?
And they're like, well, it's because it was winter.
And it's because I ate tomatoes that day.
You're like, no, no, no, no, it's not that.
You have bad instincts.
We're going to fix them.
But your instincts are leading you astray.
We're seeing an example of that right now.
Right now, I go, you have $3,210 extra per month.
What does that tell you?
And your response is pay off the debt faster, which I agree with,
and then you jumped right into 529s.
I don't think the two of you have put yourself first in a long time.
No, not at all.
Chris, what does it mean that you have over $3,000 a month,
extra after your fixed cost.
There's some money that we can put away for retirement.
Agreed? What else?
Probably don't help to work on the weekends.
Great. Great. Yes. Yes. How does that feel?
Gabriela?
That's exactly why I took the job with my brother and the 70,000. I said,
if I take this job, you're going to stop working on the weekends.
Oh, you said that? And Chris, what did you respond?
I think reluctantly I said I'd eliminate one of the shifts if that might,
is actual and it's tangible, then I think I wouldn't have any, any, I like to stand on
and justify my being away on the weekends. It's interesting that even with Gabby making,
now being the primary earner, making quite a bit of money, that you said, I'm willing to give up
one shift if I see the money in the account. You are now making the most money in this relationship.
Then, Gabriel, you all need to have a real honest, honest, candid conversation about power dynamics.
and about what needs to happen for this family.
This idea that was set 10 years ago
that you'd like to stay at home,
it's not happening.
We need to stop entertaining a dream
that was created 10 years ago
with no numerical rigor.
And we need to say,
look, in order for this family to survive,
especially on the kind of credit card debt
that we have run up,
we need two incomes.
I, Gabriella, happen to be the person
who can earn more.
I'm doing that.
Therefore, here's what I need.
I need you to be home on the weekends
and take care of the kids.
and I need to have two hours to myself just to do whatever I need to do because I'm grinding it out.
And I will take two hours on Sunday.
And I know you've been grinding it out as well.
But we need to work as a team.
I just don't hear any of this clarity.
Chris, how many times have I said this exact phrase that Rameet just said?
You brought it up a couple times.
But I think what I'm going to have to agree with Rameed in terms is like the power dynamic.
I know it's something you've held near and dear to your heart, you know, not working full time.
but, I mean, if you are going to be making the vast majority of the income,
if it requires me to stay home, then, I mean, I'm prepared to do that once that's a regular thing.
Hold on. Too many words. Yeah. What in the hell is happening? Chris. Yes.
Why are you overcomplicating this? I'm getting so frustrated just listening to you. Do you know what you
are saying right now? Yeah. What are you saying to her in one sentence? I agree with you and I'm prepared to
make that my reality. I mean, if...
What, make what? Be specific.
So if Gabby's the primary breadwinner, and if she requires me to be home on the weekends,
and she needs certain things for me to accommodate, I'm happy to do that.
You are not communicating effectively, Chris, because you were actually just agreeing with
Gabriela, and it was so frustrating the way that you were presenting it, that even I got
frustrated, and I do this for a living. Do you see the problem that even when you are agreeing,
and you're saying like, yeah, I'm willing to stay home on the weekends,
that it comes across like you are disagree.
That's a major problem.
I didn't know that about myself.
Your lack of clarity is costing you a lot of connection in your relationship.
Yeah.
Because most of the time you're actually disagreeing with Gabriela.
I think it's because the way that I grew up and sometimes money being scarce or not around,
the ability to make additional income and it's guaranteed and it's quick,
I think is appealing to me.
What do you remember about your family saying about money when you were young?
There wasn't a lot of structure.
There wasn't a lot of organization.
I just remember, you know, my parents split up.
I was in elementary school.
My father was a truck driver.
He spent a lot of time on the road.
So the fact of his being gone and, you know, my brother and I never wanted for anything.
You know, if we wanted the latest and greatest gaming system we had it, if, you know, whatever.
We had all the latest designer brands and all that, you know, shoes and whatever.
Wait, is this not quite similar to what your kids are experiencing now?
Correct.
Dad's not around and they can buy nice stuff, et cetera.
It's kind of the same, isn't it?
Yeah.
So is that what you intended?
Is that what you want?
No.
I'm hoping this is going to help correct that.
But I'm fully aware that I'm kind of repeating the cycle.
What did you envision in your life about money?
I think the extent of my understanding and my relationship with money was as long as I'm willing to work for it, I can attain it.
What about your mom? What did she do?
She was a house cleaner.
Wow. So truck driver, house cleaner, and it sounds like your family made pretty good money.
How are they doing now, financially speaking?
My dad's still a truck driver.
His house is paid off.
He bought his rig.
My mother, she refinanced a little bit of go,
but I think she's got maybe three years left on her house.
So financially, they're in a good spot.
My father makes a good amount of money even still.
He doesn't carry a lot of debt.
I don't think he has any credit cards.
Does he invest?
I don't think so.
They should be retired, but they're still working.
Are they working because they have to or want to?
Both has to and wants to.
They're workaholics.
It's interesting, like considering that there are some messages about money that you are now bringing into this relationship, such as, you know, hey, dad's away for most of the week, kids are provided for. What do you think about the message that dad is still going to be working and traveling when he's in his 70s? Do you think that's true for you? Because history would suggest it might be. If I can help it, I'm intending to change that. I don't.
That's an interesting answer.
If I can change that, who else could change it?
I mean, no one else but me, but I'm willing to put in the work
so my kids don't have to experience what I experience as a kid.
Chris, regardless of what you even said,
I'm willing to bet deep down the belief is like, I'll just keep working.
What's the problem?
I'll figure it out.
I'll just keep working because that's exactly what your dad has done.
How does that strike you, Chris?
Yeah, I mean, I acknowledge it, I see it.
I know I say I don't want history.
to repeat itself like I'm not in the driver's seat,
but I need to make a change,
and I need to do it like yesterday.
Okay, thank you very much for being honest.
It's really interesting to hear about your mom and dad.
Extremely impressive.
Very evident how money messages are transmitted from generation to generation.
You know, and it's probable that without a change,
some or maybe all of your kids will pick up some of these money messages for themselves.
Gabriela, what about you?
What do you remember your family saying about money when you were younger?
My parents also immigrated here.
My dad came from a poor family, farming family, and my mom, they lost everything at gunpoint in Venezuela, and then their family moved here.
Growing up, it was, my dad was working.
He had his master's in business administration, so he was able to work the corporate ladder, and my mom stayed home.
But my mom also handled all of the finances, and, um,
She was an natural accountant for the family, and I saw my parents have healthy conversations about money.
They met weekly every Sunday night.
My dad would, you know, sit down with his spreadsheets.
My mom, then they would just do all these things and planning, savings, retirement, saving for our vacations.
My mom built a whole allowance system for us, so we did chores and stuff in the house.
My parents always were telling us what to do or like how to manage our money.
How are they doing financially?
Financially, they are very well.
They're doing very well.
They retired.
They lives in Florida and a 55 and up active community.
You talk to them about money?
I talk to them all the time about money.
What do you say?
When I got laid off at the post and I got this payout, I grabbed your book.
And that's how I actually learned how to invest.
And I was excited about it.
So I called my dad.
and I was like, I did not know that the money sitting in my IRA wasn't making any money.
And I actually had to invest it.
But when I read your book, I learned how to do that.
And then he was like, oh, great, let's sit down and do this together.
What about your family finances?
I also talk very openly about our family finances because with the mortgage being held with them,
there's many times where we're not able to make that mortgage.
So we've been actually for the past two years, only been paying the mortgage interest.
What do you mean you've only been paying the interest? It says that your mortgage is $1,898 per month. Do you tell me you have not been paying that?
Yes.
How much is the interest that you've been paying?
It's $998 and $17 a month.
So you've basically been paying like about half of what it says here.
Yeah.
Can I ask you all, now that I've understood a little bit about your backgrounds, what do you think is going on?
I want you to imagine that the two of you are floating above this conversation, you put on
white lab coats, your scientists, and you're about to analyze, what is going on here?
I think some of the money isn't being accounted for. Like, I think on the CSP, we put a certain
value on groceries. We probably spend a lot more. Okay. Gabriela. I was going to put a lab
come on. Okay. These people do not know where their money is going or someone is not, is hiding,
where what they're doing
because this doesn't make any sense
or they're just not taking money seriously.
I agree with all those.
It doesn't make any sense.
It doesn't.
And I've tried to make sense of it
and I can't.
Like I've beaten the spreadsheets.
I've looked at it.
That's because the answer
is not going to be found in a spreadsheet.
Yeah.
Obviously there's money not being accounted for it.
That's obvious.
Like thousands of dollars every month.
The fact is the two
of you are not only not aligned, you are actually polar opposites. You're sneaking expenses in here.
You're not using the same system with each other. Like teammates both want to win at the same goal.
Exactly. You two are actually fighting each other. Each of you might be getting what you want,
but you're certainly not achieving what a team would want to achieve. I actually don't
think you know what your team wants to achieve. Do you? We are in a lot of alignment. One was,
we want to do more family vacations. And then the other one was to retire well. I want to retire young.
Guys, you can't do either of those. Yeah, we can't. Can I just be very direct with you? Yeah.
You cannot take vacations when you have $32,000 of credit card debt mere years after going
bankrupt. You just can't. That's just not acceptable. You just cannot do that. You cannot retire early.
You're 40 years old. You have zero dollars in savings. That's not going to happen at your current
trajectory. Deep down, you know that you cannot afford vacations. You know that, right?
Right. I know that. And then it hurts. It hurts to know that we're living our family time
when the kids are home and we can't do family vacations. I did not grow up like that. I mean,
We went on family vacations once a year.
One of the best signs that someone is not going to get ahead with their money
is trying to recapture how they grew up living
without matching their socioeconomic status.
You do not have the same kind of money your parents had.
You have way higher expenses.
You have four kids.
Your family did not have four kids.
Four kids in private school, your family did not have that.
Chris, deep down, do you know that you cannot afford vacations?
I do. Why'd you guys go to Belize? You couldn't afford that. Convincing myself with the points,
with the miles, with the hotel, a lot of the yeses outweighed the fact that the reality that we probably
shouldn't have gone on that trip. I mean, look, you all came to me because you want help. I can help you.
I want to help you. But I can't help if the two of you continue to lie to yourselves.
Like, you're telling me, oh, you know, we're aligned. We want to take vacations with a kid. That shouldn't even be the
top five things you're discussing right now. That's just not practical. It's not real. And by avoiding
what you actually need to do, you're just kicking the can down the road so that this pattern can
repeat. Going to Florida. I mean, maybe, maybe that's the right move. Maybe not. But is that
really the solution to the problems here? I don't think so. You're going to end up in Florida
just in the same situation you are today. But I don't hear any focus on like, where's the money going?
and how do we pay off our debt aggressively?
And how do we figure out why we got into debt and never get there again?
I haven't heard that once.
Yeah.
Why am I bringing it up?
How come no one on this call is bringing it up?
I think the answer is that you want to magically have the debt, just sort of go away,
not think about it, and just keep living life where you buy the kids a bunch of stuff,
send them to private school, take vacations.
Yeah.
And not really change anything substantive.
Tell me if I'm wrong.
No, you're not wrong.
I mean, this is why, like, another reason why I, you know, took the job with my brother is like, okay, now we can now pay aggressively on the debts.
I have always been trying to, like, commit to paying off debts and not accumulating these debts.
It's just really hard to do it with a partner who doesn't see the seriousness of it.
I've been seeing these red flags for a while.
There's a lot of stuff that's not necessary that you've purchased.
and I've brought this up to you before.
I've gone to our storage units,
and I've opened up boxes,
and it's just packages and packages of things.
What's in there?
It's like soccer jerseys and shoes, mostly.
Chris, how many shoes you got?
Probably 20 pairs.
Gabriela, you agree?
I can't even have the heart to count this tub-aware of shoes,
but I'll just see, like, a new one,
where I'll find a box in the garage.
He'll sometimes do the same thing for the kids and buy them Jordans when I'm just like going to the school closet and trying to get free clothes for the kids.
Chris, what's your response when she asks you, what are these Jordans?
Probably deflect, maybe avoid the question altogether.
It's pretty honest.
Why do you buy them?
I think just that behavior growing up as a kid and my parents kind of getting me whatever I wanted, I think for them, it's just kind of like dad taking care of them and making sure they look good.
What is it costing you to continue this pattern that you learned when you were a kid?
Costing us to be $32,000 in debt?
Yep.
What else?
Gabby's overdue patience with me and putting a strain on our relationship.
What else?
Looking on the weekends.
Yep.
What are the kids learning?
Material goods over time and togetherness.
Yeah.
Four kids are going to take that same message to their families.
Oh, I just work hard, just grind, grind myself to dust, just so I can buy what?
Shoes?
That cannot be the purpose of your life.
That's not even the most important thing to you as part of your rich life.
This is why I asked, did you grow up poor?
But you didn't.
Your family made good money.
It's just that your dad was absent a lot.
And he bought stuff and it replaced his time.
And now you continue doing exactly the same thing.
Your time is gone.
You buy your kids 20 pairs of shoes in a storage room when you have $32,000 of credit card debt.
What does it sound like when I say it out loud?
That's pretty crazy.
I mean, look, you all know what you should do.
You don't need me to tell you.
But I am curious, if we just stop talking right now, what do you think would happen?
I think we'd have to come up with a plan and be realistic and fully transparent.
I'd be prepared to not work on the weekends.
I'd take a hard look at the stuff that I have in the crawl space collecting dust.
I would put on Facebook Marketplace, put on eBay.
And then what would you do with the money?
Pay down the debt.
Gabriela, what about you?
If we stopped talking right now, what would you do?
I continued doing what I was trying to do with selling items.
And every time I do that, I pay down the debt.
And then once the debt's paid off, I wanted to start contributing to the Ross.
But with the immediate Florida move, I would just keep saving money to help with like a down payment
and moving costs.
How much do you need for that?
For the moving costs, definitely around 20,000.
Closing costs, $20,000.
So we need at least $50,000 for the move itself.
We're looking at different options for the house.
My parents are offering, depending on what we pick,
to continue to roll over the mortgage into the new home
so we can take the full equity of this house and put it down
and then just continue the $433,000 mortgage with my parents.
How much would you get for the house if you sold it today?
Well, we'd sell it for $8.50.
You'd sell it for $8.50, and then your mortgage is $433, so minus expenses, et cetera.
What do you clear?
$400,000. $400,000, yeah.
That's pretty good. But you got to have a down payment.
Right.
Do you need to buy?
We don't need to buy.
I just have grown up with the mentality that when you rents, you're throwing away money.
Hold on.
What's that I smell?
Horrible instincts.
Oh, yeah.
Anytime you say to yourself, I grew up thinking, whatever you're about to say next, do the opposite.
Because your history has not led you to the right place.
It's led you astray.
Talk to me about that.
You're throwing money away on rent?
What does it mean?
Yeah.
Instead of them, you know, putting money towards building an equity in your home, you're just spending money.
Every time we've taken out on mortgage, it's been less per month for what we would get.
If we rented, it would be a huge downsizing and we'd be spending more on rent.
Are you sure?
Have you looked at the buy versus rent in the area you're going to in Florida?
Yes.
You have?
I did.
Let's look right now.
Okay.
Just give me a nearby city.
Sarasota.
And what are we looking at?
How many bedrooms?
We're looking at a four or five bedroom.
Hold on.
Only in America.
Do I talk to a couple that went bankrupt a few years ago,
now has hundreds of thousands of dollars of dead.
They go, Ramit Satie, I need a five-bedroom house.
The craziest part is that,
both of your parents are immigrants.
Just call them right now and say
how many five bedroom houses exist
in the country you were born in.
What would they say?
Like a president lives in one.
That's it.
Yeah.
I guess it's hard for me to accept again
because I grew up with my parents
provided a four bedroom home
in the same town that we're in right now.
The reason that it is so difficult to accept
is that in America,
we like to believe that each generation will do a little bit better,
have it a little bit easier.
Yeah.
And because of NIMBY's,
sort of like your parents' generation,
everybody who bought a house,
the minute they buy a house,
they go,
I don't want anybody to develop any houses around me.
So they've stopped more housing from being built.
Now it's incredibly expensive.
And so the very same house you grew up in,
you could never afford it.
It's impossible for you.
You realize how frustrating that is.
I totally get it.
Like, it doesn't,
feel good. And so your conclusion is, we're going to do it anyway. Yeah, you're right.
And I have to encourage you not to do that. That is exactly what got you in this situation.
Can you afford to buy a five-bedroom house? I don't know. I haven't looked at the listings,
but almost certainly not with zero savings. It's just not possible. Can we really have a five-bedroom
house when we have zero dollars in savings today? Does that sound realistic?
No. Can we move to Florida in a matter of months, which is going to cost us $50,000?
Where's the money coming from? Yeah, I think we were just banking on the sale of the house.
I think Chris and Gabriella believe that moving to Florida will solve their problems.
And this is really common. A lot of couples believe that if they change their location, they get a
fresh start, maybe they're closer to family, cheaper cost of living, that's going to somehow
reset their financial situation. And actually, I want to say, I agree a lot of the time.
I actually think moving geographically can be one of the most powerful things you do.
But as they say, wherever you go, there you are. And so the question I would ask is,
what's going to be different in Florida? Because if we're honest, they're going to bring the same
spending patterns to Florida. The same communication patterns, the same debt. They're going to still
avoid looking at their actual numbers and operate primarily on feelings. The only difference is they'll
be doing this in a different state. And here's what really concerns me. They haven't truly
considered the numbers on this move. Yet another example of how they are focusing on feelings,
but they are ignoring the numbers. They're talking about selling their house for 850K,
clearing 400K, using that to buy another house in Florida,
but they also need at least $50,000 for moving costs and a down payment.
Their mortgage payment will likely go up, not down.
And what about the core issue?
They don't have a system for their money.
So, okay, they could move to Florida,
but without addressing the root problem,
they will end up in exactly the same situation.
If you are listening to this,
you should always ask yourself for the important things in life.
What is the real problem here?
What is the root problem?
Until you understand that, you're just throwing darts randomly at the wall.
If you need help on identifying the root problem, get in my money coaching program.
The point here is focus on the actual things that matter, not just the accoutrements around those things.
For this couple, the question isn't should we move to Florida?
Maybe, maybe not.
The real question is, are we willing to fundamentally?
change how we operate as a financial team. You cannot build a serious, successful financial life,
just hoping one thing after another happens right. I hope he gets a better job. I hope this
Dula thing works. I hope we sell blah, blah, blah. That's just hoping. You already went bankrupt once.
What I'm trying to get you to do is to actually develop a system and approach where we go,
hey, we're going to live beneath our means.
We're going to save and invest money every single month.
That's going to come first before freaking eating out and buying shoes and taking vacations.
That's not who we are anymore.
But the truth is, I can't change your identity.
So you tell me, what do you want to do?
I want to change my identity.
To what?
To someone who is living within our means and accepting reality and driving to that
so that we can ensure a better future.
Okay.
What about you, Chris?
Yeah, I want to learn how to be frugal,
have a mindset of, you know,
I think this is as severe and as dire as it gets.
And I guess having gone through it
and having had an escape route
is kind of like, oh, well, you know,
that was a close call.
That might not be there next time.
That's exactly right.
That's a really good way to look at it.
Like, we lucked out last time,
but we're out of lives.
Yeah.
Like that's it.
And next time we end up in a much worse, perhaps desolate place.
Yeah.
It's not like the two of you are bachelors.
You have four kids.
You have very heavy load to carry.
So here's what I'd like to do.
I'd like to go back to the conscious spending plan.
The two of you make $169,000 per year now.
That's a significant amount.
When you hear that, it's actually over 170,
maybe 180k when you factor in everything.
What is a couple who makes 180k do with their money?
Everything can invest it.
Mm-hmm.
Make sure that it covers all the fixed costs
so that there's a roof over our head and food on the table.
What else? Chris?
They're in control of how the money's being spent.
Constantly sitting at the table and talking to each other,
where are we with our spending, you know?
In my opinion, a couple that makes $180,000 a year does not have credit card debt.
That's simply unacceptable.
That couple saves and invest aggressively because they're making a lot of money.
They are selective about what they buy.
They do not just buy whatever's in front of them.
Because a couple that is making $180,000 has standards for themselves.
They're very thoughtful about what they want.
if they can afford it, they get it.
They don't apologize for it.
But they're not just going wherever
and just buying whatever's in front of them.
That's not going to happen.
And a couple that makes $180,000 is aligned.
Because in order to make $180K,
you probably have to be working one or two very good jobs.
And that means it's a lot of time, a lot of work.
If they have four kids,
they have to be communicating effectively,
which means if they don't have the skills to do it,
they buy the skills.
How?
They go to therapy.
Or they get a communications coach.
Yeah. How much of that rings true for you?
100%.
Shall we make some changes on the CSP?
Yeah.
All right.
All right. So you all told me what you want to accomplish.
I'm just the executor.
You tell me what changes you want to make on your conscious spending plan.
Let me remind everybody listening and watching.
Because of Gabriela's new income, their joint fixed costs are 66%.
And they have 34% left over or $3,210.
All right.
One at a time.
Let's make a change.
Gabrielle up first.
Maybe we add $1,000 more into our debt payments.
Okay.
Let's go to Chris now.
What do you want to do?
The groceries stand a little bit low.
I'd probably do $2,000 for the groceries to be a little bit more realistic.
Really?
Who does the grocery shopping?
I do.
Really?
Yeah.
In my head, I'm like, okay, well, if we batch cook and if we do this and that,
it could be closer to $1,500.
Okay, Chris, one of the main problems going on here is that you lie to yourself.
Yeah.
You got to stop that.
You can't fix this by doing this lying thing in your head.
And that needs to be worked out in therapy.
I'm not joking.
This is actually one of the biggest roadblocks to you all succeeding.
You lie to yourself all the time.
You've lied to me multiple times on this show.
I love it.
I love getting lied to.
Now, I can get away with it getting lied to every day.
You can't get away with lying to yourself.
Yeah.
Stop it.
Okay?
I know you have four kids.
That's a lot of kids.
but $2,000 a month for groceries,
when you go shopping, Chris,
do you ever look at the prices?
A thousand percent of the time,
but I think my Achilles is
because Costco is a little bit further away
and given my schedule
and it's a little bit harder to get to,
you know, bulk shopping
where our money could probably go a little bit further
and the realistic total would probably go down
or be closer to $1,500.
I'm just going to go back to how my parents solved it.
Y'all just need to figure it out.
Yeah.
spending $500 extra dollars a month because you can't find time. Well, guess what? Now you have the weekends free.
Take a couple kids and enjoy. That's exactly what I said. Great. Done.
$1,500 it is. Let's move on. Chris, what's your suggestion?
Probably throw a little bit in post-tax retirement. All right. How much?
I'd say maybe anywhere between $500 or $1,000.
All right, let's just say $1,000. Fine. So watch what happens here. You're now at 11% for investments. That's pretty good.
And you're down to 13% for guilt-free spending or $1,100.
$189. What do you all think about that so far?
I like that. I like that too. How often you eat out?
The last time we ate out was for your birthday, your 40th birthday.
Yeah, so that was September. But are we counting like yesterday I brought take out food, carry out?
Yeah, we're counting that. Hey, everybody. Are we counting less than 24 hours ago? Yeah, we're counting that.
Just give me a number. How many times do you eat out per week? Not often. I mean, we don't, we may
coffee at home. It's more like, okay, I just landed from the airport. Do you feel like cooking? No.
Okay, I'll bring, I'll bring takeout. We don't go out a lot. And the takeout is like between
$70 to $100. How often? That's like once every week. Maybe once every week.
I think you all have been spending a lot of money on stuff that you're not tracking.
It's impossible for me to give you specific feedback here because the numbers just aren't accurate.
Like you have 20 pairs of expensive shoes. You got all this stuff that's just being spent randomly.
because it's not properly represented, the best I can tell you is like don't.
And more importantly, here's what you have left right now.
I just want to show you something.
You have $1,189 a month total that you can spend.
Oh, and there's one other thing.
You're actually saving no money per month.
This is a major, major problem.
You're this close to losing everything.
It's only because you have these backstops.
First you went bankrupt.
Now you have your parents who will backstop you,
that you are leaning on them like a crutch
instead of actually building your own ability,
build a healthy financial life.
Yeah.
So we've got a number of problems here.
I want to talk about some of the debt.
If we take your credit card debt, the high interest debt,
if you pay $2,500 a month,
you're paying that off in 16 months.
So like just under a year and a half,
and you're going to end up paying $6,700 in interest.
But once you pay that debt off, it really frees things up, like your student loan debt.
At $750 a month, you can pay that off in three years.
You can see that it starts to really compound.
First, we knock this thing out.
Then we knock that thing out.
And each time we knock it out, we have a little bit of extra money to put somewhere else
like investing, et cetera.
That starts to build a cycle.
Let me pause right there.
What do you take away from that?
Chris. If we start tackling the debt with some kind of a structure, more money becomes free
and we're able to kind of have a little bit more freedom to really do what we want. But at the same
time, be strategic about how the debt is being eliminated, as opposed to like just shotgun
blast in the dark, hoping something gets hit. That's exactly what you two have been doing so far.
It's just like randomly like, let's do this, let's hope that. But you're actually sabotaging yourself at the
same time because you're spending more on the credit cards. The credit cards need to be frozen and not
used again. That's it. It's over. You're going to have to figure out how much to put in savings.
You all are, you need savings. It's very important. Without savings, you're in grave risk.
And even if you're able to save $1,000 a month for savings, didn't you tell me it would be at
least $20,000 to move to Florida? Yeah. The way I see it is you have two options. One is, you could sell
the house. No doubt. You could walk away with 400K. You could pay off all of the debt, wipe it, bank a bunch
in savings, retain your high incomes, and go to Florida. But in Florida, it's going to be very difficult
for you to buy a house. So your option would be, one, you could rent, and with your income,
you could swing it. Two, you could buy. You might have to tap into your parents for help.
but I see it as you two are just trading one place for another.
Your financial situation wouldn't get better.
It might actually get worse because your expenses would go way up.
Or you could stay here, make a plan, and save that $20,000, $30,000 you would spend in moving costs, down payment, all that stuff.
Put it towards this and commit that we're going to stay here for like five years.
And we're not even thinking about moving until we have at least this much saved up and invested, etc.
that's another option.
It's totally up to you two.
But I don't get a sense that until now you have discussed
these type of decisions with numbers.
100%.
And I think it was part of my fear
of not being able to get what we want for the family.
I want to be close to my family
and I'm tired.
I'm too tired of being alone.
And I guess I'm trying to try to.
to force this move.
And I know deep down in my heart that we need to stay here to fix our finances.
Of all the things we talked about today, this is the one that really reached you, has really
gotten you.
The thought of like not being around family and raising the kids and all being together
and Chris continuing to work away from us.
It's like I'm losing time.
Well, can I say this?
If it is that important to you,
you might be able to make it happen,
but probably not in the way that you thought.
You probably can't live in a five-bedroom house that you own.
You probably can't put all your kids in private school, maybe.
You probably can't take all these vacations every year.
You just can't.
And you certainly cannot stay at home with the kids.
That's just not realistic.
If you wanted to, if this is the number one thing in your family,
you might be able to make it happen.
But it would probably require Chris getting a higher paying job.
The expenses have to come way down.
You would have to both be aligned and have a ironclad vision together.
You can't be arguing with each other or even trying to convince each other.
That day is over.
And you would probably not be able to do it next year.
Yeah.
So there's possibilities.
Yeah.
Again, there are variables.
But right now you're not.
with real numbers.
Yeah.
And while I feel your desire to want to get close to family,
I'd actually love to help you get there,
but you have to be using real numbers.
And the debt that you have incurred
is a weight against you being able to go back there.
Yeah.
What has surprised you most about our conversation today?
Where I thought I was a little bit in more control of our finances.
I have been pushing, forcing these things to happen without actually looking at the numbers.
Is Chris your partner in the next chapter of your rich life that you want to embark on?
Absolutely. I don't want to do this alone. I want him to be right there with me with a clear vision.
What do you need and expect from him?
I need and expect for him to drive into finding a higher income.
come. How much? I want him to be making $150,000 at some point. Maybe he can't. And I'm going to ask
Chris what his takeaway is, but maybe he can't. Maybe he won't. How are you going to handle that?
I really don't know how I'm going to handle it because I feel like I've sacrificed a lot of the
beginning parts of our marriage and motherhood. And I just want it to be his turn. Okay.
Chris, what surprised you most about today's conversation?
What surprised me is just the fact of like something so simple as far as talking numbers.
Never crossed my mind to just sit down and talk specifics.
I feel like I miss that somehow.
That and then also just, I mean, I always knew, you know,
I know how Gabrielle is close to her family and how desperate she is to get there.
I feel like we were at a point where, you know, I kind of had a career path.
I'm starting this position.
It's going to take a little time to get to where I need to get to within the company.
But I feel like the urgency or the, you know, maybe the expectation is a little bit unrealistic on her part.
But it's not lost on me.
I know what I know what she wants.
I'm asking for a little bit of patience getting there.
And in exchange, I am committed to making the changes I need to make to lower the debt,
to be aggressive about our conscious spending plan and, you know, drive towards something that we're
both aligned in, which is living a debt-free life and towards financial freedom.
Can you all finish this sentence for me in full?
Just say, I feel, and then tell me what you feel.
Chris, you first, please.
I feel relieved.
Great.
Gabriela?
I feel disappointed.
Mm-hmm.
Why is that?
I mean, we've had plenty of time, and we just walks to a lot of time.
I think that's a pretty honest assessment.
Sometimes when you're trying to move forward, people end up spending a lot of time looking backwards,
and it becomes very hard for them to go forwards because they're just stuck in the past.
I'm going to give you some really direct feedback.
This is how I would handle it if I were you.
So first off, immediately I would begin.
Therapy, once a week.
I would read the book and I would start to implement every single step of it.
Each of you would be responsible for at least two numbers in the family finances.
I would become extremely aggressive about debt.
The family mission is now to become debt free.
Everything gets sold.
Everything.
Because if you can find $7,500 of stuff to be sold and you put that directly towards the credit card debt,
that shaves off months and months of payments.
Next, we would be meeting every single week, each of us showing up, alternating who is in charge
of the meeting.
Chris, you've got to be there.
You got to show up.
Doesn't matter.
Find a time that works for both of you.
The weekends need to be crystal clear about who is taking care of the kids.
The other needs a little relief.
Both of you work hard.
It's time to settle that.
You need to be saving money.
You need to be saving at least 10% of your money.
Yeah.
so you all got to cut some expenses and or make some money.
I would raise my rates on my doula business immediately.
Chris, I would look for a higher income job.
It has to happen.
Like in order for you to get where you want to go,
you cannot simply wait.
You need that level of aggression with your career too.
That's talking to your boss,
finding out when, when are you getting the raise,
be specific.
And if they're not providing it to you, find somebody else who will.
Debt's got to be paid off.
No more spending on credit cards.
build the savings account.
As for the Florida thing,
I mean, it's possible
if it were me, I wouldn't do it.
I wouldn't do it for at least a year
because just staying where you are
with this low mortgage
and fixing all this financial stuff,
you will, it's like repairing a wound.
And then when you go off into the forest,
you're healed.
That is an amazing way to go.
Again, you're not obligated to do what I say.
I'm just telling you what I would do.
I want to thank Chris and Gabriella
for being willing to have this conversation.
It's not easy to look at your money, your relationship,
and your relationship patterns that you've been carrying for years.
They are at a point where they finally have more options.
There's more income.
There's a clearer plan.
There's a chance to really change their trajectory.
But it requires reorienting the way they make decisions.
Can they slow down?
Can they communicate clearly?
can they truly change the way they make life decisions together?
And this is especially true with major life decisions like moving.
In my opinion, this is an amazing opportunity to use this decision as a test
for how they can make major life choices in a healthier, more thoughtful way.
Let's take a look now at how things are going in their follow-up.
So our biggest surprise from the conversation, well, for me, was dating deep into kind of our past, how our relationship is outside of money and kind of the psychology of how we approach money.
I wasn't expecting to go so in debts on that. And then the realization that where we were at for our retirement was,
pretty significantly low for what we are trying to achieve in our future.
I'd say I agree for the most part.
Our behavior patterns, how our past kind of led up to where we are in terms of finances,
or at least for me, you know, with my father and my mother, the way that they would spend
on material things and not necessarily talk about, you know, how to save money or, you know,
all that, but how I was falling into the same behavior pattern as my husband.
father, exactly. But the other biggest takeaway for me is after going down the numbers and then talking
about Gabby's additional income, that would be, you know, soon how salvageable our situation actually
is. How the CSP showed a reduction in debt to 66% was a little bit more manageable.
And for me, the biggest takeaway was to accept that our situation is different than what I grew up
with and to not dwell on the idea of being a stay-at-home mom and that I need to help by working
full-time or working with a higher income in order to really get us out of the financial situation
that we're in and that I also can't just let go of tracking our expenses and our finances and just
hope for the best. And then I really need to work with Chris on tracking where our money is going
and having a clear picture and demand that, like ask for exactly what I need from him so that we
can succeed instead of shutting down or letting go. And also maybe nagging him or, you know,
approaching it is where he gets annoyed and avoids it as well.
For my biggest,
are the things that I've committed to change,
I have three.
So one is kind of putting a stop to those purchases,
like the treadmill or, you know,
nice new pair of shoes that I can justify with whatever excuse.
So doing away with those.
Whenever I travel, my per diems,
keeping a close eye on those.
Oh, and no more working Saturdays,
which I asked Saturdays today for now.
What I've immediately committed to is freezing my credit card use,
working full-time with an excited and happy heart,
meeting Chris every week.
We've decided to meet every week on Sunday evenings.
to review our spending and make sure we're on track with our conscious spending plan.
We have also committed to reading the books again.
I will read this with Chris and they'll actually finish this one together.
And the most important thing that I've committed to and I've changed my mindset is
being open to waiting a year to move to Florida.
and with that move also being realistic on the house that we get there,
and committing to something that's more economical, downsizing if we need to,
that is more in our budgets, using actual numbers
and that we can actually afford without getting us into a similar situation
that we found ourselves in the past.
So, recapbing while we're at, I think for me, the biggest change that I've seen, and I think you may partially agree or fully agree, somewhat agree.
I think I've just kind of committed to letting go to materialistic things in terms of purchases and just kind of like justifying it.
But now seeing the bigger picture where we want to go or we want to end up, Gabby had a lot to do with it, but the treadmill was gone.
I did sell the treadmill, and he was happy to let it go.
I helped put it in the flatbed for the new owner, along with another piece of workout equipment.
So he sold out for $2,600.
Yeah, made a little money back.
A couple of items on eBay right now as we speak.
Plenty to go, plenty to catalog and list.
So I've just found it a lot easier to just kind of not even think about it and just, you know,
prioritize the future and kind of break the cycle of just mindlessly buying things that I just don't need.
So that's kind of like my takeaway.
I can be better at budgeting, not budgeting, but we had our responsibilities of what we're going to track.
I can do better with that.
But going for the bigger picture, I think, is different from me.
So I'm committed to that, leading into that.
That's my takeaway thus far.
I've been going crazy with selling things. So I've sold TVs. I've sold furniture. I even sold a toilet. Still working. Still acquiring new clients for my business. And every time I sign on a new client and I get paid, I pay myself and I pay off debt. So we've done a pretty good job.
paying off credit cards.
Pay off a couple so far.
Yeah, like two or three of yours.
Yeah.
And definitely working on getting mine below 60%,
trying to make more income where we can.
But we have decided that moving to Florida would still be a priority,
even if it's maybe not the most financially smart thing to do.
But because Chris is traveling is even gotten,
even more frequent.
I have left the restaurant.
That took some time.
I did it.
You did it, but not when you said you would.
I got rid of the Saturdays and then...
Yeah, you said you weren't going to do weekends at all.
I said I would call that.
Once you saw my first paycheck and you said, first paycheck, I have to see it to believe it.
And Matt came around and you still continued to work.
What?
And then it was the Saturdays only, and then last week you decided to do it behind my back.
So we still have to work on our marriage therapy.
But I'm done for good.
Yeah.
So I think we're still going to move in the summer.
We haven't bought a house yet, but we are going to list a home in a couple of weeks.
and we figure we've already talked to family, we can stay with them during the summer,
and that should help with being able to save up money.
I think we can still do better about tracking expenses.
I got Monarch for couples, and I really enjoying it because I could put the conscious spending plan right on there,
and it has all of our accounts tied to it.
So that's our update.
We're doing better.
Could do even better, but we're working on it, and we're excited.
Listen up. If you want my help with your specific money questions, there are only two ways to get it.
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