Proven Podcast - Financial Freedom is Emotional not Financial - Jade Warshaw
Episode Date: January 28, 2026In this candid and empowering episode, Charles sits down with Jade Warshaw, co-host of The Ramsey Show and personal finance expert, to explore how mindset, communication, and values shape our financia...l lives and relationships. Jade unpacks why money problems are rarely about math and almost always about behavior, identity, and the stories we tell ourselves. From navigating debt and budgeting to aligning financial decisions with life goals, Jade shares how intentional habits and honest conversations can transform both personal finances and partnerships. She reveals how emotional awareness, discipline, and clarity create financial stability, and why true freedom comes from control, not consumption. Together, they dive into the psychology of money, how fear, shame, and comparison influence decisions, and why alignment between values and actions matters more than income level. The conversation reframes personal finance as a tool for building confidence, trust, and long term peace of mind, not just wealth. This isn't just a conversation about budgets or debt. It's a blueprint for building a healthy relationship with money one rooted in clarity, discipline, and purpose that supports the life you actually want to live. KEY TAKEAWAYS: -Why money problems are rarely about numbers and almost always about behavior and mindset -How Jade Warshaw helps people align financial decisions with personal values -The role of communication and trust in financial health,especially in relationships -Why budgeting is a tool for freedom, not restriction Head over to provenpodcast.com to download your exclusive companion guide, designed to guide you step-by-step in implementing the strategies revealed in this episode. KEY POINTS: 01:08 – Why money is emotional: Jade explains how feelings and beliefs drive financial decisions, while Charles reframes money as a mirror of behavior and identity. 05:12 – Aligning money with values: Jade shares how clarity around priorities transforms spending, while Charles highlights why values-based choices create peace. 09:46 – Communication and finances: Jade discusses the importance of honest money conversations, while Charles explores how trust impacts financial outcomes. 14:29 – Budgeting as freedom: Jade breaks down why a budget empowers rather than restricts, while Charles reframes structure as a path to control. 19:37 – Breaking the debt cycle: Jade explains the habits that keep people stuck, while Charles emphasizes discipline and consistency. 24:55 – Emotional triggers and spending: Jade identifies how stress and comparison fuel poor decisions, while Charles reflects on awareness as the first step to change. 30:14 – Building financial confidence: Jade shares how small wins create momentum, while Charles ties progress to belief and clarity. 35:42 – Long-term financial peace: Jade closes with principles for stability and growth, while Charles reinforces that peace comes from alignment, not excess.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the proven podcast, where we don't care what you think, only care what you can prove.
On this episode, we talked to Jade Worsall, who took a half a million dollars of debt, paid it all off, saved her marriage, and built an empire.
She teaches us that it's not the strategies, it's not the tactics, it's not all the books that we've read.
It's one other thing that creates financial freedom.
And it all comes down to your emotions.
If you can't master your emotions, you'll never master your financial freedom.
But so starts now.
All right, everybody, welcome back to the show. Jade, I'm super excited to have you here.
Thank you so much for having me, Charles.
So for the four or five people on the planet who don't know who you are, could you
explain who you are and how you got here and what's going on?
Yeah, Jade Warshaw. I am a co-host of the Ramsey Show, which is one of the largest talk radio shows.
I think it's number two now in the entire nation. And then huge on YouTube.
We are a personal finance podcast talking about your life and your money.
I began hosting the show back in 2022.
My claim to fame is the fact that my husband and I paid off $460,000 of consumer debt and then went on to turn that into becoming millionaires.
There you go.
Now, there's a lot about this that we hear about all the time.
We've all heard about Dave and we've heard about Robert and we've heard about all the games and all those other things about the strategies.
But there's an emotional side of this that people do not talk about.
And there's the process that connected to that.
You've written a book about that.
Tell me about that. Tell me about that experience in the book that's coming out.
Yeah, it came out of my own journey with my husband that seven and a half years it took for us to pay off the debt.
I began to realize that people are talking about money and they're leaving out a very important factor.
It makes sense when you think about money. Yes, numbers, math, factors. Yes, that is part of money.
Behavior, another big part of money. So people are saying, here's the amounts that you need to be doing.
And then they're talking about the behavior. And here's how you need to do it.
put it in a high-yield savings account, you know, index funds, all of these things. These are the
behaviors. But no one was talking about the drawstring of all of that, which is your emotions.
And the analogy that I use for that is if behavior is a vehicle, like consider the behavior you want as a
car. You get in the car. Well, your belief is what's going to push on the gas. That's kind of like,
hey, do I believe this can happen? If it is, then I'm going to push on the gas and go forward.
If I don't believe I might, you know, go a little slower and be very cautious, but your emotions
ultimately are what's steering the wheel. So if you feel great about it, you can zoom forward,
but if all of a sudden you get spooked, you go like this and you hit a tree, right? You swerve,
er, hit a tree. So I found that many times because I had the plan, which meant I had the numbers,
I had the behavior, which is do this, do that. But what was happening is it was budding up against
these emotional barriers. And what I try to tell people is that emotions, when you talk about money,
it touches every area of your life. And you know this. Emotions affect your career. I'm sorry,
money affects your career, money affects your relationships, money affects your past, how you
perceived it as a child, what it was like in your previous relationship, you know, before the
divorce, all of these things. And so when somebody like me or somebody like you or someone
like Dave Ramsey, whoever you follow, says something very simple like, hey, if you want to,
if you want to get out of debt, consider cutting back your expenses. You go, wait a minute, what are you
telling me? You're telling me I can't get my nails done. You're telling me I can't take that trip to
the Bahamas and you get angry or you feel fearful. You've never done something like that or all
this litany of emotions comes up. You feel anxiety just thinking about talking about money, right?
And that's what I, that's what I experienced. And I said, there's a whole, there's a whole set of
emotions here. There's things that people aren't talking about and I know all about this. So,
so I'm going to dive into it and work it out for folks. So it's not just financial mastery.
It's emotional and belief mastery. And one of the things that I run into is, you know, I grew up,
I couldn't afford the last few letters of poor. And I grew up in a very specific environment.
And I can remember very specifically the moment that I flipped the switch and I was like,
uh-uh, does not doing this anymore. This is unacceptable. I'm going to go this way.
Can you remember the moment for you where you're like, uh-uh, this belief, this emotion, I have to
harness this and move things around. Yeah, I remember it. So great recession, 2008, 2009. That's when it
popped off for my husband, Sam, and I. That was the time where all of our student loans started
becoming due. We started getting the mail and I started seeing the payments and realizing,
holy crap, this is, this is wild. And I was looking for anything. And I remember turning on the
radio, I hear Dave Ramsey. And he's sitting in his cool air-condition studio, right?
talking about the fact that the recession wasn't really affecting him much because real estate's cheaper than ever.
So I'm just buying it up. That's what he was saying. And he said, the storm is gone around. And he said, I'm not feeling the effects of the storm because I positioned myself above the storm. And I just remember the first instinct I had, I was pissed because I thought, this guy, he doesn't get it? He's sitting there. Doesn't he understand that my life is crumbling? You know, I got angry, which a lot of us do. That was the first emotion.
then next emotion was I got jealous.
I said, oh my gosh, I'm so jealous.
I want what he has.
Then that jealousy, my brain clicked on,
and that jealousy turned into like a righteous jealousy.
Like, wait a second, he has it.
He doesn't have it by luck.
He doesn't have, he has it because he worked for it.
And I can work for it.
And I used that as, I want what this guy has.
I can get it.
It was motivation at that point.
So that, that's a class.
example of taking anger and putting a very meaningful motivation behind it so that you're not just shaking
your fist, right, at the clouds and being mad at somebody else, but you're actually letting your
anger drive you and letting that get you to what you want. And that was a click on moment for me,
because, you know, you know like I do, this great recession, COVID-19, you know, you can take it all
the way back to 9-11. That type of stuff is cyclical, right? There's a downturn. It gets better.
we forget it gets bad again it gets better and i said to myself i said man the next time there's a chaos
you know in the economy the next time i don't want to be right here i want to be above the storm and and
doing that starts today right it's these little choices that compound over each other over time
and before you know it you look back and you go oh my god i don't even recognize that person i used to be
so that was the moment yes for me with that moment was i was i got mad not only at what was going on
but I also got mad at my parents.
And I got mad at my grandparents.
And I was like, what the heck?
I was like, you didn't teach me this?
What's wrong?
The problem was they didn't know.
They had no idea about financial literacy.
They just put their head down and grind it.
And getting people to switch their belief systems,
if I told you that Target was going to have a 90% off sale,
you'd lose your mind.
But it's all that of recessions.
That's all that it is.
It's okay, real estate's got 70% off sale right now.
Go buy everything you possibly can.
You've been doing this for a while now
and you understand the emotional side of this.
is there an archetype?
Is there someone who has a belief system or is running into certain things?
You're just like, you know what?
That's going to be a hard lift.
That's a heavy lift.
The juice might not be worth to squeeze if they're doing this emotional pattern.
Let me think through what you're saying.
An archetype, if I understand what you're asking me, the hardest person to convince is the prideful person.
I mean, we all know pride goes before the fall.
And there's a person who is, and I'm going to go, I'm going to continue on with the storm
analogy. There's the person who is in the eye of the hurricane. All right. And a lot of people,
if you're not familiar with hurricanes, most people think the eye is the worst part. I'm from Florida.
The eye is not the worst part. The eye is sunny and 70. The birds are chirping. You would be fooled
to think, hey, weather's good. But if the wind blows, right? If the wind shifts to the right or to the
left, you're actually now, that eye shifts over, this part right here, the outer band
before the eye is the worst, right? The most severe weather, hurricanes, tornadoes dropping
down. And so the person who has fooled themselves into thinking, hey, I'm all right, life seems
good, but they're kind of in that house of cards. They're in a very precarious situation.
That's the person who's hardest to convince that, hey, you're actually in a very dangerous
spot. It's the person who's been robin Peter to pay Paul is the person who knows, right?
That they've been carrying this lease on, you know, this, this leased vehicle is $1,000 a month,
but that $1,000 a month has been keeping them from investing, you know, for retirement.
But they've been floating the payments so they think it's okay. But really, there's only one,
I'm going to say, one disaster away from pure chaos. And a lot of people think, oh, my gosh,
Jay, that's so fatalistic. It's not. It's not. It's not.
40% of people will lose their job during their working career.
Like, you will lose a job at some point.
The statistics around the amount of folks who will go on disability for a period of time
because they get a diagnosis or they just step off the curb and break their leg, right?
And that's what I'm trying to convince people of is life is going to life.
Something is going to happen that is very normal, but feels like a chaos.
It feels like a moment of pure, like, catastrophic moment.
And you have to be prepared for that.
So the hardest archetype is the person who looks around and goes, hey, everything's just fine.
You know, you've heard the saying, the enemy of great is just fine.
So the person who's like, hey, it's sunny and 70, it seems like things are good.
That is the hardest person to convince that, hey, you can actually be in a much better situation.
You just have to be willing to get uncomfortable to ultimately create more.
comfort than you've ever had.
Yeah, and I don't think people understand that comfort is not happiness.
They are fundamentally different things.
And people bump into that all the time.
One thing you're talking about is that things are changing.
And we've lost 10% of the value in the last 12 months on the U.S. dollar.
We're heading towards an extinction level event for employees based on AI, globalization, and everything else.
So if I sit down and I give, and I'll just give it to, you know, Robert's book or your book or Dave
Ramsey's book, we sit there and say, hey, spend less, do this, invest in this.
You know, we have the strategy.
We have the how.
We know what to do, but the rules are changing now.
When you're seeing that the dollar is changing and we'll not get political, politics are changing, and employees, again, are heading to an extinction level event, how is that changing the bogging for you?
How are you advising people to say, listen, you're running into this.
Your emotions are one thing.
It's a huge part of it, be able to mastery that have emotional mastery for every part of your life.
But also, we're running into things as a society with birth rates and everything else that,
is fundamentally changing the economy.
How do you prepare people and tell people, hey, you know, this is the plan that works, is what you need to do.
What used to work, which is not like, you need to pivot over here?
What are the things you're doing differently?
That's a good question.
And I'm going to say something that's probably very opposite of what folks are going to think is the answer, which is principles don't change.
That's why they're principles.
Like foundational principles do not change.
And so no matter what,
no matter what, the borrower is always going to be slave to the lender, period.
Like when it comes to money, if I put somebody else in control, they will be in control.
So if I can put myself back in control, in a situation, there are certain things that are going to be out of our control.
That's such as life, right?
That's the emotional component of it is I can't control everything.
That's like Alcoholics Anonymous 101, right?
give me the, grant me the serenity to change the things that I can and to understand the things
I can't control.
Paraphrase them.
There's certain things that are external that I personally am not going to be able to control.
I can't control the U.S. dollar.
I can't control whether or not Trump burps and the stock market drops, right?
There's all these things that are completely out of my control, but there's a lot that's
actually 100% in my control.
And that's what I do on a daily basis.
those are my habits, those are my emotions, those, the things that I value in life.
And so that's what, in times like this specifically, that's what I tell people to cling tightly
to. At the end of the day, no matter what, having some money saved is going to be a great thing.
Now, we can talk about, hey, when you get to a certain point, have some money here, have some
money off short. Like, there's a lot. But at the end of the day, what's going to help you sleep
at night is what I'm looking for. Because no one else is going to be there when you lay your
head on your pillow. Maybe your spouse is there and you stare at each other for a few minutes before your
eyes closed. But you're going to know, did I do everything I could? When the smoke signal went off,
did I ignore it or did I pay attention to it? And that's what matters. I think that's what gives people
peace to have options and life. And that's all I'm trying to get people is more options. The truth is,
and you know this, life isn't fair and everybody's not going to have the same opportunities afforded
them. That's number one. If you can understand that, life is not a competition. It is not,
it is a race, but it's not a race against other people. It's a race against yourself to get to your
finish line to make your best time. That's number one. There's going to be people when, if all
hell breaks loose, there's going to be people who are just fine. There's going to be people who narrowly
make it out and there's going to be people who don't. That's, that's it. I also think there's people who
don't make it, that in the actual event, be it the hurricane or whatever it is, come back stronger
later.
Because they understand it's you against you.
There is no one else coming.
It's you against you and one of you has to die.
It just is that simple.
You've got to pivot out of your old patterns.
And then you can get into it and go from there.
There was an individual I met a while ago and he was driving me to take me and I was
going to the airport.
And he was, I have three Toro cars.
And I was like, I don't know what Toro is.
Can you walk me through that?
And I think I have three Toro cars.
I was like, that's amazing.
I retire entrepreneurs, just keep me updated.
Love you to reach out.
He's now reached out.
He goes, I sold my Torah Empire and now I own all these properties.
This kid had no education.
He was not an individual who had any backing.
He barely was a citizen.
And he did it and there's a way to do it.
But he realized it was you against you.
And he decided to pivot that out.
When people go into this idea and there's a lot of talk about this and this might be beyond the book
where we're having people aging out like we've never had before.
And they're selling on their,
they're getting rid of their businesses.
So people are hunting after these businesses and they're purchasing and they're going from there.
When someone does that, I've got obviously specific advice.
What are those things that you guys are seeing?
Because again, you're on the talk show and you and Dave are doing it and this is another book and you're mastering your emotions.
There's a lot of people that are running to the get rich quick stuff, which they've always done.
Where do you say to the people who are going after that idea that, hey, I'm going to go in.
I understand I need to do something.
So I'm going to go do this thing.
What is your normal advice when you head?
towards those people. It depends on what situation they're starting out in, first off. And I would
advise them, man, please do your research. I had a guy calling in the other day. He called him
with a business deal. He'd been working in the business. It was him and the son of the owner.
The owner didn't want to leave it to his son, so was willing to sell it to him. They were doing
horse training. And he said, hey, I want to buy the business. We said, you know, tell us what you know
about it. He says, well, he has $8,000 in profit every, every month. And he says we can have that. And the business
itself, the land and the farm on it is worth about $750,000, but he's going to sell it for $6.50. And I'm already,
already, I'm thinking, hey, something's not right about this. Why is he going to give you such a
discount? So first thing is, hey, do your due diligence. If it sounds too good to be true, it's likely
too good to be true. Next, how are you going to structure the deal? Right? A guy like this, he doesn't have
he doesn't have the $650,000.
So is there a way that you can structure it to say, hey, I'm just going to pay you the profits until you make your money back.
And then we'll do it like that.
So structure the deal in a way that it's not going to put you at so much risk.
I would never tell a guy like that, hey, go take a loan for $650,000, right?
And then try your luck.
So there's a lot to that.
It would also be his first time as a business owner.
So I'm factoring all that in.
If he had told me, hey, I've had several businesses. I've been able to sell them off for profit. I'm looking at this one. It looks like a good deal. Already my radar is going in a different direction. I'm thinking, okay, this guy knows it. Right. So I guess what I'm saying is self-awareness is a big part of it. A lot of people want to get into entrepreneurship. A lot of people want to be their own boss. But it's more of like the idea of it. Oh, I get to be my own boss. That means I get to make my own rules.
means I don't have to work nine to five. Yes, you do. You still have to work.
You do. You just work five to nine. That's the difference. You just reverse that.
Yes. And expertise matters even more, right? You have to know what the heck you're doing.
My husband and I, we own an entertainment business in the cruise ship industry. And we've done that for
15 years. And I tell people, it's not for the faint of heart. You know, getting into something
on your own, everything, everything is on you. The state.
are on you, to your point, you're working more than everybody else who's got the nine to five
because everything's on you, you can't take a day off, you can't take a sick day, you don't get days
off, and you hardly get paid in the beginning. So. And yeah, you're the last to eat. That's the
thing that most people don't understand. You are always the last to eat because your employees
might be having steaks, but you're eating ramen noodles. Because you're the last to eat.
Exactly. And so. And people don't understand that. Really trying to set the expectation and set
people up to say, are you really, is this really for you? Talk to some folks who have done it.
See if there's a way that you can get adjacent to it before you just jump into it.
All of that is so, so, so, so important.
But certainly, certainly, please don't go into debt buying a business because it looks good on paper.
If you don't have any experience in that industry.
And also, you know, understand, are you an employee or do you have employee-like tendencies?
They are not the same.
They are not even remotely the same.
Yeah.
So, and having certain questions that you want to ask beforehand.
And I know in your book, there's like six very specific questions you broke down to really lock in your beliefs and to understand those.
And, you know, we could go through entrepreneur side and rip all that apart because I love that.
But I really want to get people to understand the belief system first.
And you've done this.
Not from, hey, I read about it somewhere.
But no, this was the exact questions that I went through with my husband.
This is what we were doing.
This is what God is out of debt.
Can you walk me through those six questions?
Yeah.
So the book is really a diagnostic in story form.
So over the years, I've done countless webinars, bring people on that need help with their money,
offer them free coaching in exchange for understanding how do you feel about money?
So in the beginning, we'll do a survey and say, hey, tell me, out of all these emotions,
tell me the one you identify most about money.
And over and over it comes back, stress, anxiety, frustration, anger, fear, guilt and shame.
So when I heard that, when I got the feedback, you know, time after time, I thought, man, there's something here because I felt the same way.
And so when I crafted the book, it was on those emotions.
We talk about we go through fear and we identify what it is.
I show you what does it look like at work in all the different ways.
Because sometimes these things are running in the background like a ticker tape.
And we're not aware of it until somebody says, hey, that thing that you just did, that's fear.
I'll go through, I'll say frustration.
That thing that you're, that's frustration.
You just didn't know it.
You just thought it was part of your personality and you let it go and that's why you're stuck.
So fear, frustration.
We go through pity, self-pity.
We go through guilt and shame.
I'm leaving something out off the top of my head, anger.
We go through anger.
And then the point that I want you to get to is acceptance.
And so as I go through all those, we'll call negative emotions for lack of a better word, they can be positive.
And I show you how to turn them from negative to positive.
Very much so.
Yeah, rage against a machine set it. Anger is a gift.
It's a gift. If you can learn a weapon, it's an absolute gift.
Anger, yes. Out of all those, anger is the one that is probably the most powerful because you know, like I know anger is a cry for justice.
It's a fuel force.
Yes. And that's what you want. We just got to wield it in the proper way to your point.
Right. I always talk about this. You know, anger, think it like a football game. Angle will get you to the five-yard line. It's going to get you. We don't get you across it, but it'll get you across that field.
the thing that I'd love to talk about is fear.
And there's a dear friend of mine,
self-made billionaire,
and we're sitting down and we were going,
we're about to do this to you,
we're about to buy two hotels.
And he's like, what's going on?
I'm like, terrified.
He's like, really?
I go, dude, I'm absolutely terrified.
And he's like, awesome.
I love that.
I was like, what do you mean?
He goes, you're going to be afraid, period, nonstop.
You cannot get that out.
That's hard-coded in who you are as a bald pink monkey
walking around on this planet.
You are going to be angry, just excited.
You're going to be afraid, accept it.
But you get to choose what you're going to be afraid.
Are you going to be afraid of being poor and broke and not having XYZ residual income?
Or you're going to weaponize it to say, hey, I'd rather be afraid of this, that, and the other.
And you'd get to choose that and harness it, just like you would do anger.
So would get people going to, hey, these are negative emotions or these are positive emotions, just like money, they're tools.
And you get to use them towards that.
When you're doing this with a spouse, though, since I don't have that right now, how do you go through that process and how do you deal with when it's someone else's stuff?
Like, you might be on the frustration, anger loop, but they may be on the self-pity loop.
How do you work through that and find the balance?
Well, you do have to work.
I mean, as a married unit, you're together, but you're still separate people.
And so each person still has to do their work.
So for Sam and I, he struggled most with the guilt and shame.
Like, he brought the majority of the debt into the marriage based on choices he made,
Berkeley College of Music, University of Miami, $230,000 of student loans is a lot.
my side was more it was a struggle um my side was the self pity i was the anger frustration that was mine
and so that was mine to work through now i'm not going to sit here and act like it was pretty because
it wasn't that was those are some tough years of our life but uh you know hindsight's 2020
and being able to look back and pull out the gyms and pull out the things to learn from is really
what matters and we did that.
And, you know, fear, I think both of us dealt with the same amount of fear. And, you know, it can take many, many forms. And I go through several of the different forms. Obviously, fear of change, fear of the unknown, fear of failure, fear of success. I go through all of those and what they look like. But at the end of the day, the thing I want to teach folks through that is fear, when you think about it, when I think about it in terms of money, it's a negative expectation of the future. That's really what it is. It's your look, it's it never
exists in the now. It exists in what will happen out there then. Correct. And I really
liken it to chat GPT. Fear can only, just like chat GPT, it's only existing on what you feed
it. What's already out there, what's in the ether, what's been told to it. And most of us operate
like that. We only know what we saw. We only knew what we grow up with. We only knew what so-and-so
did to us. And so our fear operates on that. There's no new information added until we turn around
to say, actually, let me look out and let me, let me change that. And so...
Sorry?
No, go ahead.
So chat GPT, it's AI, right? It's artificial intelligence. And that's, the problem is,
that's not what AI stands for. AI stands for always incorrect, because it's using data
that's stuck in this little box and you've got to feed it in that different data.
But when you're going through and you're dealing with, you know, he's on his, thanks again,
Sam for bringing all that debt. We're just bashing Sam, sorry. And you're getting all the debt,
and you guys are rock and rolling through it. And you're going through your stuff. And you guys are
bashing against each other. How is a couple do you guys find that this is, you know, I love you,
you're my home, I'm not going anywhere. How do you reconnect to that? How do you establish that
relationship where there's times where your fear might be acting out and be like, oh, well,
it's him. If you had married so and so that it was the prince of blah, blah, blah, you would have any,
how do you go through those loops and say, you know what? No, this is my person. I'm in my foxhole
with my person. I'm not leaving. How do you survive those relationships? Because it is the,
I think it's the number two indicator of divorces is financial.
Yeah. So that's when we're shifting out of the money conversation. At that point, it goes, at that point, it really isn't about money. You think it is. But at this point, we're talking about commitment. We're talking about goodwill. We're talking about how you view that person and really the value that they hold in your life. And so for Sam and I in the very beginning, I'll be honest. For us, it was pretty natural to say, what's yours is mine, what's mine is yours. There is no I or you.
it's we. And so I teach people that I say, hey, if you can go into marriage with a we mindset,
it's going to very much help you stop yourself from pointing the finger because that's the first
shift. And it's not easy. I will admit for some couples that that is not easy because they didn't
grow up that way or that's very different from how they were brought up or how they view their
independence. But if you can do that, I think that that is so, so key. Because now it's a problem that
we're solving together and now the individual is not the issue. We can gang up. We as people can gang up
against the real issue, which is, you know, the dead or the bad business plan or whatever the thing is
versus you ganging up against your spouse or your partner saying, you're the problem, right?
So shifting that in our mind, so, so, so, so key. I'd say that's a big part of it. Number two,
we're human. So we're going to have those moments where we forget what I just said. And it does shift.
I can't believe he did this.
A piece of advice that I got that I hold very tightly because it's so important is if you can remember goodwill towards your spouse, at the very, in the heat of the argument, in the middle of the frustration, if you can look over at that person and ask yourself, do I really think that they're intending to hurt me?
Do I really think that they're intending to stop me, to push me down?
Or do I think that they really do have goodwill for me?
This is just a bad moment.
This is just a moment where they're doing the best they can and I'm doing the best I can
and we're just both on a struggle bus.
And if you can look at that person and go, you know what, they have goodwill for me.
They do.
That changes everything.
Yeah, I don't think anyone wakes up and says, hey, listen, you know, I woke up this morning and whatever, dating Susie, God, I hate Susie. I want to make Susie's luck horrid. I don't think anybody does. If you're in that relationship, please just leave. Right, that's an abusive relationship. Yeah, 100%. And but if you're in that situation and you're like, you know, if I have this idea that so-and-so is not purposely trying to hurt me, but they're going to do it anyway because they're human. Consciously or unconsciously, they're going to do something. Like, doesn't put the toilet seat down, doesn't put the dishes away.
whatever that litany is, it's going to happen.
And having that filter up, okay, they probably didn't do it on purpose, but they're
men and they're kind of dumb.
So let me just walk through this.
It's okay.
You can put it in the sink, honey.
It's okay.
Oh, my God.
Doing that.
And then also, I love what you said.
It's very much us versus whatever the problem is.
We're going to unify against whatever it is.
It's us versus that.
Yes.
So as you go through this and go back into the money stuff, once you are a person who has
gotten rid of almost half a million dollars worth of debt.
And now all of a sudden you're like, okay, we don't have that on us anymore, but it doesn't stop here.
Now we start the investment process.
Now we start going after those things.
Yeah.
I have found investments are very unique based on your personality.
For example, I am not a cryptocurrency guy.
I learned from Melvin Simon, who was the 64th richest person on the planet at the time.
He goes, I don't invest in things I don't understand.
He goes, don't ever do it.
If you don't understand it, do not do it.
So when NFTs came out, I was like, huh?
And I still don't understand crypto.
and I'm an IT guy.
I still don't understand Bitcoin.
I could have bought it when it was $100.
I still don't understand it.
What do you do when you're like, okay, we paid off this debt, we came out of
U.M, we've survived the hurricanes, South Florida person as well, and you're going
in that environment.
What do you start investing in and how do you start filtering through your investments now
because you have a certain level of success and you don't have this wall of debt pulling
you down?
How do you start researching it and evaluating what to invest in to create that financial freedom?
Well, I love what you.
said, I am a 100% in agreement. I don't invest in anything. I don't understand. And I would never
advise anyone else to do that either. As a matter of fact, I say to people all the time,
don't do something because you heard Jade say it. Don't do it just because you said it. Well,
Jade said it. I trust her. I'm going to do it. No, please do your research. I'm going to tell
people all the time, you know, my path is to make it as simple as possible so that anyone feels like
they can do it. Because I grew up in a household. I don't know if I mentioned this to you when we
talked before, but I moved around a lot as a kid because of my dad's job. And the time period in which
I grew up and the folks around me when I grew up really affected the way I viewed money. So whenever we
would move to a town, most of the time I'd be the only black kid in the classroom and a lot of
time in the entire school. So it was just me. And then on TV at the time, there wasn't a whole lot of
representation. So I didn't see wealthy black people. I just didn't see them. I saw people making it,
paycheck to paycheck, middle class, just like my family.
And my extended family lived halfway across the country.
And if they were doing well, I never saw it.
Okay?
So growing up like that, the only thing I saw was the Huxibles, you know, it was like, okay, is this possible?
I didn't know.
I'd never heard of it.
And I remember being at a party, fast forward to me being in my early 20s.
I remember being at a party and there was a bunch of men.
I'm just going to say, there's a bunch of white men standing talking.
and I heard they were talking about investments.
And my first instinct was I could never be in that conversation.
That was my first instinct.
And then brain clicked in and I said, you know what?
I need to be in that conversation.
So I walked over and against all my fears,
I stood there with my drink in my hand and I acted like I knew what they were talking about.
And I listened and I learned.
And that's what I want people to understand is you can learn this.
that if you can trust yourself enough to know that you can be educated on something that's half the
battle because so many of us go they hear a couple words they don't that's jargon i don't understand
and they tune out please don't do that and it's okay if you need to hear something once and then hear it
again and then hear it again for it to click because for a lot of people it is like that um so when i teach
it i try to teach it in the simplest way possible because i don't want anybody to feel like it's out of reach
it's so simple. And so I explain to them. I'm like, okay, first off, let's keep it simple. Most of us have some sort of, you know, investment vehicle available to us through our job. It's a 401k. And I just really try to explain it away. I don't want to make them sound like they're stupid. I don't want to make it sound like, you know, they're in kindergarten and I'm teaching it. But I do want to make it feel like it's very accessible. And so, yeah, I teach, I teach mutual funds. Index funds are fine. That's fine. But I really teach diversification, try to spread.
spread it out over the four different types. You know, I want you to do growth and income. I want you to do
growth. I want you do aggressive growth. I want you to do international. Balance it out. You know,
25% of whatever you're doing into each of them. That's great. That gives you the diversification.
And I teach people, hey, go back and look at the track record. Look at it over the past. See how long
the fund has been in existence. Has it done well? That's a pretty good indicator that it will continue
to do well if you're diversified. Just simple techniques. And then I say, hey, if you don't understand,
ask someone who does. You know, the interoperative. You know, the
internet is out there. There's no excuse not to be educated today. But for some of us, we learn
differently and we want the validation of a human being saying, yes, that's right. You understand it.
And if you need a teacher, reach out to a teacher. But for me, it's very simple. You know,
everything's automated for me. The money goes out. I don't even see it. You know, I take a look at it every
once in a while, you know, obviously, you know, I am a long-term investor. I said it. I forget it. I'm not a
trader. I don't do the day trade. I don't do the crypto like you. And that's what I try to teach
people is this is a long-term gain. It's a long-term game. It's very boring. And it should feel
boring. It should feel like, it should feel like I didn't even do anything today, Jade. That's right.
That's how it should feel. Yeah, I like what you're talking about the education. There's a saying in the
military first time every time, which means you do it right the first time and it works every time. That's
your goal. That's never happened in my life with anything I've ever done. Whenever someone taught me
something, I was like, ha? I had to go through it over and over and over and over. And having that
and understanding that. For example, you do index funds, not index funds, you do mutual funds and all that.
I am the opposite.
I will not touch that because I'm like, my thing is like I had no control over that.
I'm going to go into real estate because for me, real estate never hit zero.
Unless there's a sinkhole, which is insurance for that, that's where I'm comfortable.
Where I got a buddy of mine, he's like, I don't understand why you don't do crypto.
I got another buddy of mine who does day trading and he crushes it.
He's lost all of his hair, but he's cruises it.
I was like, dude, that's your gift, man.
God bless you.
So finding your lane and what resonates with you, if you love basketball, mausel,
If you love baseball, mazel.
But if you love baseball,
too, go play basketball and vice versa.
So it is what it is.
Stay in your lane.
So as you're going through this and you're walking through this and there's belief systems
that hold people back, there's also, and I love you talking about your family,
there's also your environment.
And I grew up in Hialeah, and I was, where I'm not religious in any way, shape, or form.
My last name is Schwartz.
So I was one of two Jewish kids in the entire environment.
Yeah.
So I was right next to Opalaka.
So we were in a very different environment.
So if you're from South Florida, you will understand where I'm going.
I do.
So there was Carroll City and Opelaco right next to me, and I was the one little lone Jewish kid there.
I didn't see wealth like everyone else did if you had my last name.
I didn't understand that.
I was the richest kid in our community because we had carpet.
So it was a different world.
Expect that what got you here didn't get you there.
And I've got a question about this.
People talk about why I don't know how to do it.
I'm like, yes, you do.
Because Michelangelo said, I didn't create David.
I just took off all the pieces that weren't, David.
Start with what you don't know.
When someone has this limiting belief and they go in like, I can't do this.
I'm from a minority.
I'm, you know, I already have the things stacked against me because I'm a minority.
I'm a female.
I wasn't educated on this.
And you have all of these things.
When do you sit there and go, uh-huh, but then let that go and say, but I have to do this.
How do you find that?
Because there's such a limiting lock-in on that limiting belief.
I talk about this in the book.
We have to be curious.
we have to be. It's very easy to, when you're from a situation like you described, when you're from any sort of marginalized situation, even if it's not marginalized, even if you're just find yourself comparing yourself to something on social media, okay? Anytime you're in a situation where you're looking over there and you're going, they have something I want, I want it, they deserve it. It seems like I don't deserve it or I don't understand why they deserve it and I don't deserve it or do I deserve this. Whenever you're in that situation of,
less than or you're viewing yourself as less than,
you've got to change your mind.
So what most of us do is we'll fall into a couple of areas.
Well, first one is you can tell if you're in that area,
if you have a really hard time celebrating that.
If you have a hard time celebrating people who are doing well,
if you have a hard time acknowledging people who have accomplished things that you've never
accomplished, you need to, that's a flag, that's an indicator, something needs to switch on here.
If you're a person who has a hard time, you can name everybody else's blessings for lack of a
better word and accomplishments, but you can't name your own. The light switch needs to turn on.
If you're a person who becomes very passive aggressive in the face of other people's success,
light switch needs to turn on. If you're the person going, well, if I made $300,000 a year,
I'd be doing that too, right? Or if you're the person,
who says, well, it must be nice. Everybody can't afford to take vacations like that, right?
You're that kind of like snide, backhanded compliment. Be honest with yourself, first off.
And then what has to happen from then is we have to go from being very critical to being very
curious. We have to be willing to go to people and say, hey, what degree is required to do what you do?
You have to be able to go up to people and say, hey, you know, I've never written a business plan before.
What's the first step? How do you do it?
have to be willing to ask questions because you and I both know, unless you're a complete jerk,
a lot of successful people love to answer questions. They love to talk about themselves.
They love to be, yeah, yeah, sure, let's sit down, let's get coffee. Be willing to ask,
because if you don't ask, if I had not walked up into that conversation with those men who seemed like,
who seemed like they knew more than me, were smarter than me, none of that was true. They had just
ask the right questions in life and been willing to get the answers. That's the only difference.
Are you willing to ask? Are you willing to receive the answer? Period. That is the only difference.
You're smart. You can understand this. I also think it matters not only what you're saying,
but who's surrounding you, what are they saying? Because if you're around people who are saying,
oh, if I had this, I would do that. Or another, then you're in the wrong room. Yeah. Period. And the
example I give on this all the time is Ryan Reynolds from Blade. There was a, there was a movie.
It was in Ryan with Blades. And it was in this scene. And I was like, man, he's in good shape. And I was like, wait.
that's possible? That's a thing? I can get in shape like that? I was like, okay, I need to talk to somebody now.
And that became the narrative, that different than mindset. And I did have friends who were
less than, I mean, they did have bodies of gods. He bad it was Buddha. So we're round. Round is
shaped. That's the shape they were in. And I was like, I can't, I can't go eat with these guys
anymore. I have to change some patterns. So getting people to change the patterns. If there was one
pattern or one path that you would want people to go through right now, because again, you hear it every day.
You're talking about financial literacy.
And I do love that you mention that successful people, we want to talk about it
because the problem is we want to talk about it all the time.
And our friends are annoyed by us talking about it all the time.
They're on that checklist.
Yeah.
They're like, hey, I don't want to hear about your investment right now.
But it's really cool.
Like, dude, we're hiking.
Can you shut up for a minute?
I was like, oh, man.
So getting those different people.
But as you're going through this and you're gift shifting yourself and you're looking for things
in a partner and you're looking for things in yourself, what are the,
the work that's been proven to do right now as you go through it.
So, hey, you know what?
I'm going into this.
This is what I'm doing.
I found Jade her book talks about belief, where everyone talks about strategy,
which is useless unless you have belief, your belief's locked in and understanding the
emotional side of it, which I think people should read about that first before the tactical stuff.
Absolutely.
It doesn't matter.
What are the things that people can start doing now?
Like, is it journaling or what do they can do right now to start gear shifting?
Yeah.
You know, I do talk about the fact that systems matter.
atomic habits, right? We know about systems. And it's the same thing with money. I can teach you this stuff
all day, the emotional side of it, but at the end of the day, when it's time to lock in and actually do it,
yeah, there are daily habits that matter. I talk about, depending on the emotion that we're talking about,
changes what I might have you do. So for instance, if you're a person who has dealt heavily with
different fears, yeah, I'm going to tell you, mental check-ins matter. It matters for you to check in with
yourself. Some people, because of traumas that they've experienced around money, maybe they grew up
with homelessness. Maybe they grew up with, you know, food scarcity. Maybe they grew up with a dad who was
abusive and lorded over the money, right? Those are very real things that are going to impact the
choices that you make today. And much of that, you can't walk through alone. Much of that you do
need the help of a counselor. And so I suggest that if you're a person who has a major financial
turnaround that has to take place in the case of, you know, me, maybe you're paying off significant
amounts of debt. Yeah, you need ways to track it. Tracking is so important for your psyche, right? You want to have, you want to be able to,
you want the dopamine hit, right? You want the thing that says, hey, I was successful. Now I want to do it again. And that could be something as simple as journaling. So you can go back and look. It could be something, anything that's measurable, you need to be doing it if you're trying to stay motivated. Measure measurable is so important for staying motivated.
So I tell people I tell people that make one of those little trackers.
The same way, if you're, I was running a marathon back in 2024.
And one of my favorite things on the app was it would tell you the streak of how many days you've run in a row.
And you don't think that that's going to be a big deal, but it becomes a huge deal.
You're like, oh, I can't miss a day.
I can't, you know.
And not only the tracking of the streaks, but to be able to say, well, when I started, I was only running three miles.
now I'm running 13. Holy crap. So being able to see that progress, being able to measure it, being able to keep track, that awareness is so key if you're trying to stay motivated on a journey. So really depending on what it is that you're doing. And I go through all of that in the book, whether it's daily habits, mental check-ins, tracking your progress, or even creating different milestones. All of that is so important. And I talk about all of that in the book.
I also think, you know, because I'm a triathlete, when you're doing these things, sharing that
tracking with an accountability partner that's set up for you.
That sit there and they ping, you're like, dude, did you really go 16 days?
I'm absolutely.
The other thing is, and I'll reference it towards running, if you're doing a marathon or triathlon
or anything like that, there is going to come a point where your body is going to shut down.
It's going to come a point where you're going to be in pain.
It, a thousand percent is going to happen.
And when I was being trained on how to do this, is you sit there and you acknowledge it.
You're like, yeah, I can't hurt.
I can absolutely, I can feel the desire to quit and want to shut down.
I just don't get to feel it right now.
I get to feel it later when I'm meeting the dog.
But right now, I got to push through it because I made a commitment.
It's like, so you can't feel the fear.
You can't feel the doubt.
You can't be scared.
You can have the insecurities.
You just can't do it right now.
You just push it off to the side and we deal with it at another time where it's more appropriate.
It's the dumb thing from what was a movie predator where the guy gets shot and he's like,
I really don't have time to bleed.
He's like, I got time to bleed right now.
I'll bleed later.
It's not critical.
I'm running.
It hurts.
Of course.
It's running.
It's not,
it is what it is.
So when you're going through this and you're trying to find a way and you're
working with,
you know,
you've done yourself.
What are the things you look with?
Because now you've done it with a partner,
which most people have a hard enough time doing it with themselves.
But what are the things that if you could have gone back before you had connected
with Sam?
Connected with Sam.
And you're like,
these are the things that I've learned that I need to not only work on myself,
but what I need to look with in a partner to have that connection,
say,
hey, how do we work through these things?
How do we talk about that?
Because a lot of people in my world, you know, they don't believe in pre-ups.
We're like, why would I do a pre-nup?
I could just put it in trusts.
I can put all the trust in the Cook Islands.
You can't touch it anyway.
So they've already weaponized that because these are people who have made an immense amount
of money.
So when you're going into this, which I don't feel as healthy, let me preference that.
I've had to coach them out of that.
Do it of 20 years.
Anyway, when you connect with people and you have those conversations, what are the things
that you look into the partner?
Like, hey, I'm doing this work.
What are the things you look for in the partner to do that so you can get through some of this stuff?
If I'm coaching someone, I'm looking for someone who, and I have this, which is why it worked for Sam Nye.
You want somebody who's interested in bettering themselves.
You have to have somebody who's interested in doing work.
And some people aren't.
Some people, you know, you've heard it.
You know, I've always been like this.
This is the way I do it.
It's not going to change.
It is what it is.
Right.
The it is what it is mentality.
Oh.
That is like, oh, God.
gosh, you have to have somebody who is willing to change. You have to have somebody who's willing
to be able to say with sincerity, I was wrong. Because some people can't say that. I mean,
you say like, oh, well, yeah, some people cannot admit when they're wrong. They just can't.
So these are big things. And those are personality traits, character traits, really. But
on a more practical level, what the person needs to be doing is having conversations that will
allow those things to be revealed, right? So you need to strike up that conversation in the dating
process pretty early on. And I say it like this. I say, when you're dating someone, what I would do and
what I did is you bring up the conversation of money, but not to share your viewpoints. You view it up
to put the ball on their court because when you like someone, you kind of change your answers.
And so what you don't want to do is say, oh, gosh, you know, what are your views on money?
I hate debt.
You know, I just stay away from credit cards.
And I don't say that because then they're going to go, oh, yes, me too, me too, right?
Especially if they really like you.
So what you do is you just say, hey, what's your philosophy on money?
Just let them talk.
Just let them say.
And if they could say something that's completely opposite from you, don't stop them.
You want to hear this.
You want to hear everything.
You want to say, have you ever, you know, I'm thinking about visiting accounts.
or have you ever seen anybody? Like, how do you feel about, like checking in? Like, how do you feel about
understand? These are going to be things that tell you, are they interested in self-improvement?
Are they interested in bettering themselves? Do they have a lot of pride when it comes to unveiling
themselves? Are they forthcoming? These are the things that you want to know, because those are the
hardest things to change in someone. Somebody who doesn't want to change is going to be very hard to
change or you know that's that's the best advice I give you yeah it's the understanding that
therapy is a gift you give yourself and everyone I absolutely think everyone should do it the the shortcuts
that I use in this world one of them is escape rooms if you're getting serious about with someone by
about the third date go lock two of you in an escape room go to one of those things it's a fun
date idea see how the person reacts when there's time pressure see how you react when there's time
pressure see how you guys work together huge and the other thing is there's a game and I
it's not connected to your environment, sorry, but there's a game called cash flow.
And you play that it's like Monopoly.
It's made by Robert.
You play cash flow with each other.
You will learn more about yourself and the other.
Do those two things completely changing the environment of who you're going for and what you're going into and how it works going forward.
Now that you guys have, and you've done this and you've had a level of success that most people aren't used to.
And they haven't had that because it's a blessing to have what you have to the talk show and the success and the marriage and running a marathon and doing all this.
What's next? Like what is the next thing that you're sitting there going, okay, this is, I've done this. What is my next hurdle?
Right now, I love that question. And again, I think the answer is not going to be what people think. For me, I'm always looking for peace. I'm always looking for the next level of peace and freedom. My goals are rarely monetary. They're rarely career driven. I look and I go, where's an area that I feel like I'm not,
as free as I want to be. Where is an area that feels like I don't have as much peace as I want to have?
Where is an area that I feel like I don't have as many options as I want to have? And that's going to be
the guiding light right there. So that's how I do it. I had a couple of projects on the burner
in 20, we're in 2026 now, Jade. I had a couple of projects on the burner in 2025. And they were
really, they were really cooking. And in the final quarter of 2025, they were really supposed to pop
off and they didn't. They didn't. And you know when you get to that point where you're just,
you're just pushing and pushing and pushing and it's just, it's not happening and you have to make
that choice. Is it not happening because I'm not pushing hard enough or is it not happening because
it's just not supposed to happen? And I just need to take all the signs, right? I decided that this is
taking, it's taking everything. Like, it's taking all my piece. And sometimes, you know, to quote
Mr. Wonderful, sometimes you have to just take something out back and shoot it. And, and,
And it's hard to do that.
But once it happens, you're like, oh, yes.
Yeah, okay, that was right.
That was the right thing to do.
And I want more of that.
Right now, I'm looking for the things that I need to let go of so that I can have more
peace.
And that's what my focus is on right now.
And so for some of us, it could be, what do I need to let go of?
Do I need to let go of debt?
Okay.
Yes.
Now I can start thinking about the numbers.
For some of us, it's do I need to let go of a relationship that's very
toxic? Yes, I do. Now, and maybe again, I need to start thinking about the numbers because maybe you were
living together or maybe you had, you know, your lives were intertwined and that sort of way. So I usually let
those things be the guiding light of what do I need to pursue next. And, you know, I've got young kids.
They're five and seven. And so for me, I'm looking at, okay, I would like to, I would like to be locked in a
little bit more with them in this season. I've had seasons where I'm very like career, career, career.
I need to lock in a little bit more there. So that's where my eyes are right now.
So when you do that, because again, with kids, five and seven, the statistics is you really only have them for, what is it, 19 years total of their lives, the amount of time because you have the first 18 and then collectively about a year left out of that.
And once they hit that teenage year, that 13-ish year, you become an ATM and an Uber driver for them.
So it's a really small pocket of time that you have for them.
And most of the people at first were like, well, I just want to go to Costco and get more duct tape.
So they just leave me along.
They're quiet.
This is the most precious time that you.
have with them, you've spent a lot of seasons, you know, helping other people, listening to
other people, walking them through those things. What are the things that you have found that's
proven that has, after seeing it over and over and over again, that has proven to create success
not only in themselves, but also in their financials, because people are going to want me to
ask that. When I told people that I was interviewed and we were going to come on the show,
they're like, what is the one thing? And I was like, first off, y'all need to stop asking me that.
I just don't ask questions. It's never just one thing. You need to stop that. But with that said,
what are the things that you've seen overall
the proven things that work?
The person who stops
caring what other people think
is a superhero.
The person who
completely
could give two rips
about what anyone else thinks
is the person who will win
and will succeed, period.
Because we don't even,
we do so much
with the intent of what somebody else will see
and how they'll judge it,
how they'll perceive it,
The minute, oh goodness, the minute you let go of that, it's like, yeah, I'm going to do what I want to do.
Think about how many times we choose a career path because we're thinking about what our parents are thinking.
We buy a car because we're thinking about how it'll look in the parking lot next to Bob's car, you know, who works in accounting, right?
What people will think about the fact that we picked up a side hustle.
well, if they find out I'm driving Uber, then they'll think, so you don't pick up a side hustle,
even though you know that's just the thing you need, right?
The minute you stop caring, because here's the thing, no one is, no one is checking for you.
No one is thinking about you.
We're so self-centered, Charles, that we think folks are thinking about us all the time.
They are not thinking about you.
They are trying to live their own life with their own stress, their own families, their own worries, their own paycheck.
And at the moment you go, okay, I was being extremely self-centered thinking that the whole world was watching me.
Now you just do what you want to do and you make the choices that you want to make and you follow the path that you know you're supposed to follow and you don't give a beep what anybody else thinks.
I think it goes back to everything that we're talking about.
It's not the strategy.
It's getting after and going after the elite system, going after your emotional, going after your mental status when they do that, which is why I was excited to have you on to talk about the book.
So if people wanted to track you down and people want to define you and want to connect it and learn more about this because I want people to understand, you already have every answer on the planet on how to invite.
You have access to a phone.
You have access to Google.
You can build a nuclear submarine.
Yeah, don't need more bloody tactics.
You need to get this other stuff.
And this is why I was so excited about the book and talking about it.
It's like you need to get your emotional.
You need to get your mindset.
You need to understand your identity.
You need to lock that in first because then the strategies work.
So if someone wants to track this down and get a copy or get in touch with you or do all of that,
what's the best way to go hold of you.
What's the best way to connect?
Yes.
So the book is what no one tells you about money.
Obviously, you can pick that up.
Anywhere books are sold.
Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Target.com.
Ramsey Solutions.com is where you get it through my company, where I work.
I'm on all the socials, but if you want to interact with me directly, go on Instagram because I'm there.
I'm in the comments.
I'm in the DMs.
And I give, I'm just, I know, Charles, you, you are a giver.
I give all the game that's in this book.
I give it on the internet.
I remember when I couldn't afford to buy a book that somebody was buying, you know, selling.
So if you can't.
afford the book, just follow me on Instagram and you will, I will spill it out over time. I promise
you that I will because I want you to have the information and I want you to have the tactics
to really, really win. It's not numbers. It's not behavior. It's you on the inside. I'm going to
help you see it and diagnose it. I'm going to give you the antidote to fix it and work through it
so that all those things that you thought were negatives become positives.
I'll also say with that because we both are both written books. For those who haven't
written books, the amount of insecurity that goes in when we're writing a book,
want to just overload it with value.
We're like, oh, my God, I didn't give enough.
I didn't give enough.
So we're constantly just adding more and adding more and adding more.
So for, like, I'm very expensive to work one-on-one with.
But if you just bought my book for whatever it is, you're going to get more value than spending
that month with me.
It's all there.
Please understand.
Just get the day book, please.
So anyway, Jay, thank you so much.
I really appreciate you for coming on and sharing all this with us and being so vulnerable
about everything. Yeah, it was my pleasure. Thank you so much for having me. This was a great
conversation. Absolutely. That's a wrap on another episode of the proven podcast. Money isn't
math, it's mindset. Strategy doesn't work until belief does. Stop blaming the system. Start owning
your decisions. It's because when you master your emotions, your money finally follows.
And I remember, if your progress isn't intentional, it's just debt in disguise.
