NerdWallet's Smart Money Podcast - ‘The Color of Wealth’: The Emotional Trade-Offs of Wealth Building

Episode Date: February 10, 2023

Sometimes anger is the best response to finding out you’ve been deprived of an opportunity. The steps you take from there may require research – and trade-offs. In this episode of our “Color of ...Wealth” series, personal finance Nerd Elizabeth Ayoola talks with Dasha Kennedy, founder of the financial advocacy group The Broke Black Girl, about how to balance emotions and building wealth. To send the Nerds your money questions, call or text the Nerd hotline at 901-730-6373 or email podcast@nerdwallet.com. Like what you hear? Please leave us a review and tell a friend.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the NerdWallet Smart Money Podcast, where we typically answer your personal finance questions and help you feel a little smarter about what you do with your money. I'm Sean Piles. This episode, we are continuing our series called The Color of Wealth, where personal finance nerd Elizabeth Ayula talks with money experts about how Black women can build wealth, including the challenges they face and how to balance motherhood with money goals. Welcome back to Smart Money, Elizabeth. Hi, Sean, and hi, everyone listening. Thank you for the warm introduction. Of course. Who are you talking with this episode?
Starting point is 00:00:37 Well, this episode, I'm going to be speaking with Daisha Kennedy, the founder of award-winning financial advocacy group, The Broke Black Girl, which she happened to found in 2017. So Daisha is a financial activist and millennial financial coach who has helped over 70,000 African-American women and counting with a culturally relevant financial education they need to start their personal finance journeys. So one of her primary objectives is to help bridge the wealth gap. And I think she's doing an excellent job so far. Very cool. What are you guys going to discuss? We're going to be talking about the emotional challenges that Black mothers face when they're managing money. So this can include how to balance trade-offs like saving for
Starting point is 00:01:19 retirement and also building your kids' financial lives as well. Great. Well, I can't wait to hear how this goes. I'll let you get to it. Awesome. Well, welcome to Smart Money, Daisha. How are you and what are you looking forward to this year? I'm fine. Thank you so much for having me. This year, I really want to prioritize my health. I get so caught up on my financial goals that I neglect to give that same energy to my health. I get so caught up on my financial goals that I neglect to give that same energy to my health. And I mean, I want to be around to enjoy my money. So I want to really focus on my health
Starting point is 00:01:54 this year. That is a word. And that was actually one of my goals for this year too, to just slow down. So if you're healthy, then hopefully you have a lot longer to do all the things you want to do. But it's really important, I think, to be present. So lot longer to do all the things you want to do. But it's really important, I think, to be present. So I'm with you on that. Yeah, I agree. Okay. We can start the conversation by you maybe telling me how you started your journey towards saving for retirement or building wealth.
Starting point is 00:02:18 And I'm also curious about whether it started when you became a mom or after. I really started working in the finance industry when I was 19. I heard a woman say something about a 401k and I had never heard that term before. And so I was intrigued. And so for the first time I'm hearing women and men as well that were in their 30s and even some in 20s said that this was money they were putting to the side to live off of when they retired. That's when I knew that was something that I wanted to do. So I started to invest into a 401k. Still did not know what I was doing. And I really didn't get serious about it until I had kids. And I knew that I did not want to be a financial burden to
Starting point is 00:03:00 them when I became of age and could no longer work. Yes. Now, I can totally relate to what you said about not hearing anything about retirement savings or how that works until you're a little bit older, because I never really got any of that financial education either. And I just thought, OK, when I turn 40 something, I'm going to be rich and then I'll just have enough money to live on for retirement. So I didn't have any idea about how to plan for retirement or even how to save money. So I'm with you on that. And then you kind of answered the next question that I was going to ask, which is what shifted for you and made you start saving for retirement? And I think your kids are usually a good wake up call for that. So can you tell me a bit about what happened when that shift happened for you and what kind of
Starting point is 00:03:43 financial things you started doing to put money away? Yeah. So for me, it was really a journey. I found that I was pregnant with my first child at 19, but it wasn't until probably five or six years down the line that I actually started to take it serious. I mean, as you can imagine being a young mom, I really could not wrap my mind around the idea of taking money from my check and putting it away later when I needed all of the money to survive off of. But that was what I was faced with as what many Black women are faced with when we think about saving for retirement. A lot of us can't take from what we have now because it's so little to put it away later. But I figured out probably five, six years down the line once my son was a little bit older that they should, you got to put something away. Even if it was like $10, $20, you have to start doing something because I had to
Starting point is 00:04:38 shift my mind from, okay, yes, I need every dollar to take care of him now to something is going to be better than nothing because this time is going to go by anyway. Like he's going to get older. I'm going to get older. So I have to do something. So I started just testing the waters with small amounts, $20 here, $10 here. And that started to add up. No, I completely feel you on that. And then I used to have this thing too, when I first started investing, where it was like, well, I don't want to just save 20 or $30. I'll wait till I have a thousand dollars to save or $5,000. But I think once, like you said, that shift happened, you really understand the power of compound interest and how, you know, a little bit goes a long way when it comes to investing because it's a long-term game most
Starting point is 00:05:23 times. Right. Yeah. So I wanted to get a little bit more into what you were saying about the feelings around, like you said, many Black women can relate to not having enough to put away and then being maybe sole providers of the family and just kind of different scenarios that we face as Black women. So can you tell me more about the feelings maybe that came up for you when you decided to say, I'm going to start putting some money away and this means I might not have as much to spend on, I don't know, an outing with the kids or an extra pair of shoes or whatever else. What kind of feelings came up for you and how did you deal with that? Yes, immediately. And I'm going to be honest and transparent. I was angry. That was not something that I wanted to do. I already felt
Starting point is 00:06:06 that I was working a lot. I did not like the job that I had. I felt like life had put me in a position that I needed to do what I had to do, not what I wanted to do. And a lot of it was not choices that I made of my own. You know, it was the family that I was born into, a lot of the things that they had to deal with for generations just as a Black family. So I was angry. I did not want to give up a portion of my check to hopefully need it later down the line because, you know, in my community and in my household, it pretty much was like, you just deal with whatever is what's in front of you and you face whatever happens down the line later. It wasn't a lot of preparing for the future. But I think what ended up pushing me towards wanting to actually get it right was I had to care about my son's future more than my fear of what was happening in the present time. I may not be able to do some of
Starting point is 00:07:06 the things that I enjoy, but my son is going to be able to overcome a lot of the things that unfortunately my mom could not have prevented for me. Her mom could not prevent from her. I can finally break that cycle. And if I can break this cycle with $20 per week, oh, it's well worth it. So that makes me want to know how you started. Like, what was your strategy? So were you saving just for yourself or were you saving for both you and your kids? Yeah, in the beginning, it was really just me because I didn't even know saving for my child was an option until I was like 30. So that just shows you how much time gets wasted because of the lack of knowledge, lack of awareness. Now I'm still trying to get the understanding of what it
Starting point is 00:07:54 means to invest for my retirement. And someone introduced me to a 529 plan as well as other options, but the 529 plan is what led the conversation. My mind was just going wild because I didn't even know there was a thing. So when you think about her, when I'm 30, I had my first son at 20. So that's 10 years that I completely missed out on simply because of the lack of knowledge. So in the beginning, it was just me. Then years down the line, it became for both of my children. No, I know the feeling. I only recently, just this year, actually, admittedly, I opened a 529 for my son. I just remember having similar feelings to you, but kind of feeling like when my son was born, well, I want him to have at least some kind of savings or money because I didn't
Starting point is 00:08:39 get any money from my parents. And I would take all money from his birthday and from his christening and things like that. And I put it into an account, but I knew nothing about investing. And it's still sitting in the account, unfortunately depreciating in value because of inflation. But had I known what I know now, I definitely would have put it in an investment account like a 529 or custodial account. Yes. That's why I think it's important that we have those conversations because I do think about that a lot, that the 10 years that I could have really been taking advantage of saving and investing for my son's retirement, for his education, had I simply known.
Starting point is 00:09:19 Right. But I still think even though I know how that must feel, like, oh, I wasted 10 years, but obviously you don't know what you don't know. But I still think it's really commendable that you even thought, okay, let me put some money away for myself. So like you said, I'm not a burden on my son when I'm older, because I think in the black community and, you know, I hear in other communities of color as well, this is a common theme. You have money or you're trying to build wealth, but then maybe you can't get as far because you're expected to care for your grandparents or your aunties or even your siblings who aren't doing as well. And then that really kind of impedes you from being able to grow wealth. So even if you may have lost out on those 10 years for your son saving, you still in some ways help him get ahead because he doesn't have to worry about taking care of you financially when you're older. So I still think that's a win. Yeah, I agree. I completely agree. So you kind of talked about the feelings of anger that you felt when you realized that you had to start putting away money for retirement and you explored some of the disadvantages that make it
Starting point is 00:10:21 so that you kind of have to do this. So how much do you think it has to do with your upbringing and maybe your relationship with money? Some of those feelings that you felt, I know you only mentioned anger, but are there any other feelings and how much do you think this also has to do with your relationship with money growing up? Yeah. So outside of anger, I think anger was the knee jerk reaction, but outside of that, once I got past that, I was happy that now that I know so I can do better. I was excited to see what my son's life will look like in the future. My son doesn't have to have the same relationship with money as I had, which is the same relationship that my mom had, the same relationship that her mom had. We don't have to keep repeating it. Yes. I'm with you on that. And it's interesting
Starting point is 00:11:07 because the other day I was talking to my mom and I'm like, my mom is actually very financially savvy and she was able to retire early. She started investing early and all that good stuff. So I'm like, why did you never tell me about any of this stuff? Because till today, I've learned all these things just with Googling and things like that. And she just paused and she's like, well, you never asked. And I'm like, well, I couldn't ask you what I didn't know because I didn't know anything about it. And she's like, well, you know what? I'm sorry. And then she's like, okay, well, this is what you do and this is what you do. So all that to say, why do you think sometimes within Black families, I don't know how it works with other families as well, that we don't have these discussions around money, that even when
Starting point is 00:11:44 maybe they do have some of the financial information, it's not passed down to the kids. I think that sometimes money can be such a taboo conversation that it almost seems like it's just a conversation for adults, where sometimes our parents can feel like maybe we're too young to be invited into those conversations. I don't think that it is something that they do intentionally. I think that it's something that has just been passed down for generations. My grandma is only, I think my grandmama is like in her 60s. So just think 60 years ago, the climate of the country, what my grandma had to
Starting point is 00:12:23 endure. I think sometimes not talking about money for the older generations in the Black community is a sign of protection for them because you can't, someone can't take from them what they don't know that they, you know, that they have. Now, it's just something that we don't talk about. And I think that's kind of what it was with my mom. It just was normal. Not talking about it was normal. Not asking my mom about bills or money or. Not talking about it was normal. Not
Starting point is 00:12:45 asking my mom about bills or money or, mom, what's the budget? I couldn't. Even now at 35, I couldn't fathom asking my mom, mom, what's the budget? How much do you make? Because it just would have seemed to be something so out of the norm. Whereas in my household, me and my boys talk about that all the time. They know how much money I make. They know how much, you know, the rent is, how much we spend on things. We're going to talk about it because I have normalized it in our household. So I don't think that it's always, we don't have the conversations because we don't want to teach, you know, our children. Sometimes we really just, we don't know. And when you grow up, it can be hard for someone to say,
Starting point is 00:13:28 yeah, I know your family has been doing this for generations. And on the surface, you think that it works, but it really doesn't work. That's a hard reality to accept. I think that my mom did what she thought was best. She handled business. She was a great mom, took very great care of us. So in her mind, it could have been, why is there a need for me to talk to her about how I handle money?
Starting point is 00:13:47 She see I handle money. She got a roof over her head. She's fine. So I think it kind of was that set up versus when I became an adult and I became a mother, I was clueless. I was clueless about money saving, investing, budgeting, debt, credit. I was completely clueless. And I think sometimes we don't consider that this time is going to fly by. My son is 14. He'll be 18 in four years. And at that point, the financial world would be swarming around him as far as credit.
Starting point is 00:14:20 So I have to make sure he's prepared so that he doesn't waste 10 years like, you know, I did simply because I didn't know. And I'm with you on that. So I also want to ask, you know, from some of the things you were saying, I think, you know, money mindsets are really important. Right. And I think, you know, potentially for you to be able to switch from, you know, I want to keep all of my paycheck and spend it on what I want. Usually there's kind of a belief that are driving the things that we do financially in our money habits. So what would you say was your money mindset, you know, before now? And then what kind of shift in your money mindset helped you start to transition towards saving for retirement? Yes. And so in the beginning, my mindset was. If I am working 40 hours a week, I'm spending my money on what I
Starting point is 00:15:08 want to spend it on. I want to spend it all now because I worked for it. So to me, it was cut and dry. When I get my check, I do what I want to do with it. I'm not thinking about the future. I'm not preparing for the future. I'm more self-focused on today. Now my mindset is investing into the future me is taking care of me right now. It's because I can do the things that I want to do and I can relax and I can coast. I don't have to be anxious about everything because future Dasha is secured. Future Dacia is okay. So my mind has shifted where it's like, yes, I'll give up some money today because I know that I'm giving it to Dacia tomorrow. Time is your biggest component to drive your investments. So if you can start early with small amounts and just be consistent with that, and when you see how far that's going to take you,
Starting point is 00:16:06 when it's time to retire and you sit back and you say, okay, I really built this off of $20 from my paycheck. So now my mindset has completely shifted. Now, when I think about the future and I think about getting old, I'm excited. I'm excited about getting old and retiring because I know that I will be okay. Yes. I always say that I can't wait for my forties. I'm 34 now, but I'm like, I can't wait for my forties because they're going to be my thirties and I'm going to live my best life. And a lot of that definitely has to do with me making, I would say, smarter financial choices now. And then I totally agree with you in terms of, I feel like everyone in a class or in their home should have to show their kids a compound interest calculator. Because once, I think that's when it really clicked for me because I'm like, oh, I'm saving, like you said, $20 a week. That's not
Starting point is 00:17:00 going to do anything. But once I saw what that could do over 10 years, 20 years, 30 years, then I was like, I got to start investing now, not tomorrow, now. So I think that definitely makes all of the difference. Yeah. Oh, yes. My son is 14. I have to be more aggressive with the conversations, whereas I just can't say, okay, son, I think that you should probably put $20 to the side. Like you said, no, I have to sit down and show you how powerful that $20 really can be. Let's look at some graphics. Let's look at some calculators. Let's look at some numbers so that you really can get an idea of what investing for the future, what it looks like. Absolutely. So I know that you work with a lot of Black moms. So can you tell me maybe some themes in terms of emotional responses to kind of saving for the future and what we're talking about that you see other moms have?
Starting point is 00:17:53 Are there any patterns that you notice? I think some of it is a lot of the same of what I experienced when I was first introduced to investing or just saving for the future, a lot of them feel overwhelmed by the idea because it is taking from what little they already may have. The other day I talked about this actually on my Instagram, that the average monthly salary they're having to pay rent or a mortgage, core note, if you have children that's added in, you know, school and daycare fees, they're having to survive off of an average of $3,000 per month. And now you're coming in and saying, OK, yeah, I need you to still put some of that to the side for the future. That is overwhelming for anyone to hear, especially when we think of investing the way that it has been largely presented to us online and offline. It is exactly what you said earlier. A lot of times we think you need thousands of dollars, $5,000 for it to really
Starting point is 00:18:57 make a difference. So what I see the most is that a lot of Black women become overwhelmed by the idea, which is why I always focus on, especially on my platform, just starting with small amounts, small amounts. You will see that it's more manageable. You will see that it's actually attainable when you think of, okay, I can make a sacrifice and give up $20 per week. I can maybe cut out a weekly expense or drop a subscription for a little while to get used to giving up $20 per week to start investing and just letting it roll. So I think in the beginning, what I always see is it is very overwhelming. But I think once we start having the conversation more and I break it down to what investing really is and what it really can look like, more women become open to the idea of it.
Starting point is 00:19:52 Yes, absolutely. I know when I first started out, I felt definitely angry, overwhelmed, kind of all the emotions that you said. But it really made me, you know, have to reconcile with my money mindset. Because one of the sources of the overwhelm was, like you were saying, I don't have enough. And I don't have enough. And this is making me feel frustrated. And this is making it feel unattainable. So I realized that I had a scarcity mindset.
Starting point is 00:20:18 And I didn't really have the inherent belief that I could have a lot of money, or I could have more than enough, or I could have enough to invest for myself and my son and still enjoy my life. So I really had to start kind of shifting the way I thought about money and think, well, why can't I have enough? And I do have enough and I have the resources and access to make enough money. And I think that really, really helped shift my investing journey as well. Yeah, that's why I definitely think it's important to have more conversations about what investing looks like, especially when we think of the Black community and we consider so many other factors like the issues with income disparities, the racial wealth gap. When we consider all of those things, sometimes we have to have conversations that
Starting point is 00:21:01 look completely different from the most trending and popular conversations online. So when I see a lot of investing content online, you will see like, oh, you know, if you invest a thousand dollars per month, by the time you retire, you will be close to a million dollars. And when I see that, like, it's like a horrid pause for me because I can only imagine how many people that are low income or Black that are already dealing with so many other disparities when it comes to money and investing are going to see that and they're going to feel like, okay, I'm never going to be able to do that. So why try? So when conversations like that take the lead, it can be very damaging. So I always try to focus on how we can do so much and how
Starting point is 00:21:53 small incremental changes in amounts can have a huge impact on our future. Even if a person was only able to retire, we're going to say like with a couple of hundred thousand dollars, that's way more than most people are retiring with at all. So it just, I say that to say something is always better than nothing. And when you design an investment strategy that works for you, for your income, according to your life, I think that is 10 times better than just not doing anything. Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes. So I have one more question for you, which is, do you have any resources or tips you'd like to share for any Black moms or just moms out there who are feeling some of the emotions we named angry,
Starting point is 00:22:46 overwhelmed, like they can't do it, like they don't know where to start, like they don't have enough to kind of help them overcome those feelings and get started. So the very first thing that I would say is definitely do your research, especially with us having just resources available online with a click of a button, you can research the topic. What is a 529 account? How do I get started with a 529 account in my state? I think those things are very, very important. Using the resources that are available to you, knowing that a little goes such a long way. And when I think of Black women, especially Black moms, and I say this from the heart, I know that we want a break. I know that we don't want to work
Starting point is 00:23:34 forever. So when I'm thinking of investing, even if it's a little per month, it is because I want to give future Dasha a break. I want her to be able to rest. I want her to be able to kick her feet up and enjoy, you know, her hard work. That's right. Those are some excellent, excellent tips, Dasha. Yes. Thank you so much. That's all we have for this episode.
Starting point is 00:23:57 Thank you so much, Dasha, for sharing all of your wisdom, your experiences as a parent, and all of your financial knowledge with us today. Of course. Thank you so much for having me. To share your thoughts on how to budget, pay off debt, or manage finances as a parent, shoot us an email at podcast at nerdwallet.com. Also visit nerdwallet.com slash podcast for more info on this episode. And remember to subscribe, rate, and review us whenever you're getting this podcast. And here's our brief disclaimer. We are not financial or investment advisors.
Starting point is 00:24:31 This nerdy info is provided for general education and entertainment purposes, and it may not apply to your specific circumstances. This episode was produced by Sean Piles and myself. Liz Weston helped with the editing. Kaylee Monahan mixed our audio. And a big thank you to the Nerd Wallet Copy Desk for all of their help. With that said, until next time, turn to the nerds.

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