The Ramsey Show - App - Debt-Free Living Is a Superpower
Episode Date: June 27, 2025🔗 Share the Ramsey 101 Playlist! George Kamel and Dr. John Delony answer your questions and discuss: "How do I overcome a spending addiction?" ... "My husband controls all of our money..." Why you shouldn't payoff someone else's debts. Protecting yourself and your money from scammers! "Should I take my son out of my will?" Next Steps: ✅ Help us make the show better by taking this short survey! 📞 Have a question for the show? Call 888-825-5225 weekdays from 2–5 p.m. ET or send us an email. 📈 Are you on track with the Baby Steps? Get a Free Personalized Plan ✔️ Help us make the show better. Please take this short survey 📊 Free Tools & Resources to Help You With Investing 💵 Start your free budget today. Download the EveryDollar app! 💗 Two Weekends. One Life-Changing Experience. Get away with your spouse in Nashville. Connect with our Sponsors: Stop paying more and start shopping smarter at ALDI Get 10% off your first month of BetterHelp Go to Boost Mobile to switch today! Learn more about Christian Healthcare Ministries Get started today with Churchill Mortgage Get 20% off when you join DeleteMe Go to FAIRWINDS Credit Union for an exclusive account bundle! Save 15% on your first Field of Greens order with code RAMSEY Find top Health Insurance Plans at Health Trust Financial To find out more about student loan refinancing, check out Laurel Road Use code RAMSEY to save 20% at Mama Bear Legal Forms Visit NetSuite today to learn more Use promo code RAMSEY for 18% off at The Nokbox Learn more about Timothy Plan Get started with YRefy or call 844-2-RAMSEY Visit Zander Insurance for your free instant quote today! Explore more from Ramsey Network: 💸 The Ramsey Show Highlights 🧠 The Dr. John Delony Show 🍸 Smart Money Happy Hour 💡 The Rachel Cruze Show 💰 George Kamel 🪑 Front Row Seat with Ken Coleman 📈 EntreLeadership Ramsey Solutions is a paid, non-client promoter of SmartVestor Pros. Ramsey Solutions Privacy Policy
Transcript
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From the Ramsey Network, this is The Ramsey Show, where we help people build wealth, do
work that they love, and create amazing relationships.
I'm Ramsey Personality, George Campbell,
joined by my very good friend, Dr. John Deloney,
and we're taking your calls at triple 8, 825-5225.
This is your chance to get your questions answered
to take the right next step for your life,
your money, your relationships, whatever's going on.
John will help and I'll be along for the ride.
Let's get to it.
Holly is in Louisville, Kentucky, coming up first. What's going on, John will help and I'll be along for the ride. Let's get to it. Holly is in Louisville, Kentucky coming up first.
What's going on Holly?
Hey guys, thank you so much for taking my call.
Sure.
So I am gonna be upfront.
I have a spending addiction that's been going on
for many years.
It got to the point, I'm 32 now,
but I was 21 when it started really.
I was given a six-figure sum of 250k by
People in my family that had passed on and I spent it within a year and a half to two years tops
Mean it was crazy. I went on trips and bought stuff. I never got a refund for things like I moved with it
And now I'm facing
Not being able to pay my own rent.
I have family helping me with rent because I just, I suck at managing money.
I have a bankruptcy that was, uh, done in 2021 because I was married and my
ex husband and I made some really bad choices with money.
So I know what the psychological things, I'm kind of glad that John, Dr.
John's on the call today because I mean I go to therapy, I take
my medications for my mental health concerns, but nothing's working.
I like the instant gratification, things like that.
So I was just looking for a little bit of Ramsey guidance with this because I can't
... One minute I'm following Dave's plan, the next minute I'm planning on taking out
50K in student loans for a master's degree and I just...
Sure.
I don't know what to do. So before we get going, what is your clinical diagnosis?
I have bipolar 2.
They thought it was bipolar 1 at first.
My current provider thinks it's bipolar 2, which is not big of a difference.
And then OCD, FD.
Well, that's pretty significant.
It's pretty significant.
True, true.
Yeah, you're right.
You're right. It's pretty significant. True, true. Yeah, you're right, you're right.
It's still bipolar though, I think.
And I have OCD, PTSD, and Borlaan personality.
So I've got a myriad of problems.
I've also had a lot of hospitalizations.
Telling the whole world that,
that's great to tell the whole world.
No, well, I mean, it's your life.
And so you get to choose who you tell,
but hospitalizations for self-harm?
Yeah. And intrusive thoughts, things like that.
And I got help in doing a lot better with those things.
Spending addiction is a really big problem.
I mean, I'm literally down to $35 in my banking account,
checking account, and my dad just sent me some money.
So let me just, let me jump in here.
Let me jump in here.
Let me jump in here, okay?
I wanna change your language a little bit, okay?
The language that we use, especially in these situations,
is really powerful,
so I wanna shift that a little bit, okay?
Okay.
When we keep saying the word addiction, addiction,
addiction, addiction, it gives this thing a power over us
and addictive behaviors are very, very powerful. So don't hear me say that,
but I want to, I want to just for this conversation, I want to shift a little bit. Okay.
Let me ask you a wild question. Okay. And this comes from working with folks who struggle with
addiction and usually it's an inside baseball question that most people don't even know that
we ask in these conversations. Okay. Fair enough. What does spending do for you positively?
I think it releases like endorphins, dopamine.
No, no, no, no, just stay out of the brain chemistry stuff.
Just what does it give you?
Oh, it gives me whatever I'm buying in that moment.
And for a few minutes that makes me happy.
Like if I go out, I go out to eat a lot.
So that's the biggest thing. I don't like to eat at home. So I prefer to take I go out I go out to eat a lot so that's that's the biggest thing I don't like to eat at home so I prefer to take
DoorDash or go out to eat and that's a big source of my problem but the instant
gratification is what makes me happy. Is there a part of that and this is a
leading question obviously so tell me if I'm wrong but is there a part of
clicking is there a part of seeing something and buying the scrolling is
there a part of that action
or maybe all of it that lets you get outside of your own skin for a minute because it feels
so uncomfortable just to be you sometimes?
Oh yeah, I mean I've never had good self-confidence so it makes me feel like I'm actually distracted
from myself or distracted from being in my head for just a few minutes even.
Sure, sure. So I think what I often like to do with people
who are struggling with different addictions, gambling,
alcohol spending is I wanna look at the thing
it's giving you and that feels positive for a minute.
Because if you're struggling with alcohol,
alcohol makes it to where it doesn't hurt
so bad to live sometimes.
It's just that alcohol will kill you over time, right?
Smoking weed all the time,
that actually makes you feel less anxious in a moment.
It pulls you out of your skin
and lets you just float for a bit.
And that actually is helpful.
It will just take a lot of stuff from you too.
And so what I wanna say is spending this opportunity we have
and this crazy weird little sliver of history we have,
and it won't be like this forever,
and it's never been like this before,
but we can just scroll endlessly
and click and click and click,
and somebody will show up at our house with some food,
somebody will show up to our house with a box,
and for a second, it
lets us not be in our own skin. And you have, most people I would say, start with
the ramifications, and that hasn't stopped you, right? So bankruptcy hasn't
stopped you, mental health diagnostics hasn't stopped. So there's some
normal, what I would call regular speed bumps or brakes
that normally help folks, but not everybody. And so you just have to open-handedly say,
those big consequences, they haven't stopped me. So cool, now we have another data point.
And so now what you have to do is have the courage to say, not, hey, will you keep sending me money,
send me money, send me money, send me money, but will you help me for a season, not, hey, will you keep sending me money, send me money, send me money, send me money,
but will you help me for a season, father, friend,
fifth therapist, therapist couldn't do this,
but coworker, like people you trust.
Will you help me set up some incredibly high hurdles
when it comes to me and my spending?
What does that look like?
That means canceling Amazon Prime today or giving somebody else to have them change the
passcode so that only they can get it.
So if you really need something, you have to go through them.
Giving somebody your debit card for 60 days or 90 days.
So you have no way to spend.
Freezing your own credit report or having somebody sit with you and freeze it so that there has to be a
Some hurdles you have to jump through because what you need right now is some external breaks
Because your internal systems just aren't getting the message right now
No, they're not does that make sense
It does no one's ever explained that to me like that before I've had a friend offer
To take my paychecks and send them to me like that before. I've had a friend offer
to take my paychecks and send them to her over PayPal and as I need them, she'll send
them money back.
I don't even want to do that. I don't want to do that. I don't want to be doing electronic
stuff because the more you're in there, they have these, the folks who have made electronic
payment systems are simply better than all of us at controlling our behavior. That's
why they're amazing at what they do.
They've created the most addictive slot machines
in human history and they put them in our pocket.
So you don't have any cash, you can pay with credit card.
You don't have that, you can just do PayPal.
You don't have that, just do Apple Pay.
You know what?
You don't even have to get the card out of your wallet.
You can just tap the whole thing.
You don't have to touch anything anymore.
And so if you're getting a paycheck
and you're PayPaling it over here,
you're gonna Venmo some of it over here,
and you're gonna spend some I want to drop that whole system
Okay, yeah, and that means for you
You're gonna have to be really intentional about putting some big hurdles
And then when you feel I want to buy something I want to buy something and you don't have the ability to do that
That's when you know, okay. I got to call my counselor. I got to call my
My AA support person if you're in recovery.
I've got to call my close friends.
I've got to call my pastor.
I've got to call somebody and exhale through this thing.
And that's the seeds of long-term behavior change.
It will be incredibly uncomfortable for 60 or 90 days
till you break these habits.
But put some huge hurdles in front of yourself and keep going to counseling and keep taking
your medications.
I'm proud of you for where you're going.
You'll get there.
Olivia's up next in Boise.
What's going on, Olivia?
Hi. So, my question is, my parents had the medical emergencies that have drained their savings.
My siblings and I have been helping to support them financially, but we've all been kind
of drowning in that lately and just not seeing an end in sight.
So, I was going to see what you guys felt like was the best way to use the money that
we're all contributing to help them the most.
What happened with their health?
My mom had a stroke that left her completely disabled.
Oh, so sorry.
I hate that for you.
And do they have insurance right now?
They do have health insurance.
It only covered so much.
And then my dad had to cut back to working only part-time.
And so that's put the biggest financial strain.
He's only working three to four days a week
as her health allows.
So let me start with this question
and kind of reverse engineer it. Often when kids come in to help in these kind of situations, help looks like keeping everything exactly the same. Same house, same bills, same streaming services and all that kind of stuff. here's our new reality and hey dad we're gonna have to potentially sell this house we need to move into a condo or an apartment are y'all moving in with one
of the kids like have y'all had that hey this is the new reality or are y'all
just pumping money in to keep their life exactly the same as it was a little bit
of both so they did have to relocate there in a rental now the rental prices
in our area are really expensive so so that's a big strain.
But the struggle, so he works sales, he's on commission,
and he's just not making enough to get by,
but it just varies.
We never know how much he's gonna need,
and we all wanna help as much as possible,
but it feels like we're getting by barely,
but we're looking at the future.
They had to drain their retirement savings,
they don't qualify for any benefits. And, um, how old are they? They're in their 50s.
Oh, so they're still young, huh? Yeah. Yeah. So he's in a world where he's going to have to
accept a new reality that he's got to go get different jobs. And I know that's a very hard
conversation to have with your dad, who's also like doing
medical care, I mean doing in-home care.
Right.
Yes.
What would care look like if he wasn't taking care of her?
And what would that cost?
We're all helping right now.
We have someone that helps once a week.
It's really expensive and we're just paying that out of pocket.
And then my siblings and I all help split up the care because he has to have care 24 seven.
But I mean, if anyone's sick,
if anybody has something for work, he has to call in sick.
So that's really putting a strain on him as well
because he only works,
he only makes money when he works, you know.
Yeah.
What do the bills look like right now?
What do you guys need to cover for them?
It just depends on how much he makes in a month.
I mean, they have their rent.
They don't have any car payments, which is good. Medical bills are really expensive.
They're still paying on that every month. And then just, you know, food, insurance,
those things, just the basics. They don't have any debt, but...
Can we push pause on the medical bills so they can cover their own food and utilities?
That is something that we talked about was
trying to maybe renegotiate because the payment was like $700 a month and that
was really hurting them. What's the total balance on the medical debt? Oh I think
it's like probably three, four hundred thousand. Oh my goodness. Yeah and they
they know they'll never see that right? I mean it's like monopoly
money. Yeah well how long ago did this stroke Right. It's like monopoly money. Yeah.
Well, how long ago did this stroke happen?
It's been, we're coming up on the two year anniversary.
Okay, two year anniversary.
So, well, I'm gonna tell you,
may not happen in reality, okay?
I'm giving you a fantasy dream scenario, okay?
But this is one of those perfect moments.
If you have a six-month
window or a one-year window or in your case a two-year window, sometimes these
anniversary markers are great moments to get everybody, if possible, either on Zoom
or in the same room. And they just simply become, we have to have a reality
conversation. Dad and all the siblings.
And at some point, whether it's you
or whether it's one of your siblings,
every sibling group seems to have a dad whisper
and a mom whisper, you know,
I don't know who that is in your group,
but that would say,
dad, we need to know how much money y'all need every month.
Cause right now y'all,
cause also y'all can't plan for your lives either. Right yeah. And so he has to I mean he's got 20 plus years more of working life left
and just just spit shot in a sales 100 sales commission job is not going to get it done.
He's going to have to get a job where he's got some sort of health insurance if at all possible
some job where he maybe makes less money overall but he's got some sort of health insurance, if at all possible, some job where he maybe makes less money overall, but he's got a consistent income coming in.
So they can make any sort of planning and arrangements.
And then y'all have to be honest with each other about,
are they gonna move in with somebody
and take the back bedroom and the back bathroom?
And does anybody wanna do that?
No, but that's just the reality we're in.
Or y'all sit down as siblings and say,
from here on indefinitely, we can contribute 200 bucks, you know, sister can contribute 500 bucks
because she's an attorney and her husband's a surgeon, like who knows what y'all situation is.
But just get very clear so that y'all can sit down and have this two-year reconciliation meeting
and say, we've all talked, we can come up with 700 bucks between us per month indefinitely.
But from here on out, we need to come up
with a more strategic plan, a more systematic plan,
because this is just chaotic for everybody.
Also knowing your dad's entire life as he knew it has changed,
your mom's life as she knew it has changed, right?
And so it's not like this is fun or easy,
but we just have to have a choosing reality conversation.
In your particular family system, is that a possibility?
Some families are absolutely on top of that
and some just simply cannot do that.
We have done that.
That's kind of where we got to the point that we are.
Some siblings are close by,
so they've been more willing to help than others.
And like you said,
some of our financial situations are different it's it felt like it's mostly
on a couple of us and that's what we're starting to feel concerned because we're
like okay is this gonna be the fix for the rest of our life and should we be
doing something to put money away for them for the future now too because they
cashed out all their savings so we're like what what we're doing is sustaining
us for now but it feels like there's no future you know it feels like your dad
needs to be very radical about going to get work to support him and
his wife.
And the conversation needs to extend to the siblings about how are we going to be there
or not be there to support mom.
And what I want to challenge you on is if you're one of the siblings that the lion's
share of the support is falling on, if you're carrying a bigger load, I want you to choose
guilt over resentment when it comes to unspoken conversations. Because you're going to feel
guilty about saying anything, you're going to start getting mad and not say anything,
and then all of a sudden you're going to have a brother who lives in North Carolina,
sister lives in Maine, and you're going to hate them when their number comes up on your cell phone
and that's really not their fault yet
Because they don't even know you get what I'm saying, right? Is that is that fair?
Yes, definitely. So there's maybe it's not even about mom and dad. Maybe it's just about siblings
Everybody gets in a room and says okay this we're looking at 25 more years of this potentially
right, so
I'm I can't keep going like this. I miss my family.
I miss my husband.
We don't have the money to keep doing this.
Whatever things that you need to say out loud and if you have a brother who's also helping
or another sister who's also helping, let's just be honest about where we're at and call
your other siblings onto the carpet.
If they say, we are not contributing, we're not helping, we're out.
You might be mad at them, be angry, but at least you know and you can begin to plan.
Right.
Is that fair?
Definitely.
No, definitely.
Okay.
I just need you to prepare some space in your heart for this to go really bad.
For them to be like, yeah, we're not doing anything.
Right.
And then the next step is going, dad, how can we make sure that you can cover your own
bills?
We're happy to help all you need it, but I don't want you guys essentially
paying the debt for them.
I'd rather him being able to cover his household,
and if he can't pay the medical debt,
he can't pay the debt.
And that's gonna be a conversation with the hospital,
and it'll be ongoing, and you as a family
can advocate for your mom,
and do all the homework, get all creative with the options,
and can we apply for disability?
When will Medicare kick in?
Just know all of the next steps.
Like John said, let's have kind of a yearly check-in
and go, okay, what's the next step?
What does the next year of care look like?
Let's look back at how much it costs,
how much everyone's pitching in.
And that's all you can do is develop a game plan
and be real clear with the communication along the way.
What, has dad come out of the fog yet?
Or is he just running, is he just collapsed every night
after a full day of care
and then a full day of trying to be a salesperson?
I think a little bit of both.
It's really hard to sell, you know,
because he can't work all the time.
And then it's the cost too.
The biggest problem is care.
She can't be left alone.
And so every day he works,
someone has to be there to care for her.
So he wants to work more,
but he has to pay someone to be there.
So he has to make enough work to cover it.
Have you all applied for SSI benefits yet for her?
They have. They don't qualify for anything.
She's always been a state home mom. She has a whole bunch of kids.
So we have a big family. And so she stayed at home her whole life.
He was always working.
Sorry, sorry. We're getting up on the clock here.
Yeah. It's a messy situation.
on the clock here. Yeah, it's a messy situation. Ellie is with us up next in Dallas, Texas. Ellie, welcome to the Ramsey show.
Thank you.
What's going on?
So, you know, I've been married just over 20 years, to a man that, you know, he has a great job.
Naval reserve is the officer in the Naval reserves.
Um, you know, I'm a nurse, we have great incomes, but, um, you know, we started out this marriage with, um, you know, it all kind of evolved because we really
started this marriage with no communication about finances and And, you know, it's the typical
I'm the spender, he's the saver. But to him, he's very black and white, very engineer like
needs nothing in his life, you know, he doesn't need vacations, doesn't have hobbies, friends,
nothing. So, you know, that just puts my spending on steroids, which I don't even spend that
much.
I mean, it's just that to him, your Congress, you might as well be, you're out of control.
Right.
So he runs because he's so, yes, he's just so literal to the point that I mean, and that
is the issue.
The degree that he is literal is the problem.
And it's created this, you know, he's gotten so financially abusive we've never shared accounts he you know he transfers what he wants my allowance
to my account I can't see the other counts okay hold on a second hold on
hold on hold on hold on he's not on the call so I can tell you right now he
sucks that's that's not a way to be married to somebody okay but he's not on
the call I I understand.
So let me ask you.
What have you done to try to bridge this gap?
Well, I mean, the problem is he only cares about finding a...
No, no, you went right back to him.
Come to you.
What have you done to try to bridge this gap?
I've tried to talk to him, you know, and say, we need to communicate about this. Um, we came into the marriage.
I came in with like a two year old and I think we lived very separately at first
our finances were divided, which was fine. But when we had our twins,
it needed to be combined. And then it all just went downhill from there.
I have tried to talk to him, but he's, he's one that is very, I mean,
I say narcissistic Asperger's, he's one that is very, I mean, I say narcissistic,
Asperger's, there's no having a conversation with him.
He deflects, gets defensive.
You can't get past that.
We have never communicated in the 20 years.
We can't get past me trying to dive into it.
Let's do something different then, okay?
Have you ever sat down with your husband and said, listen, because here's what's funny.
I can feel myself getting defensive talking to you. And I, I barely know how Excel
works. I'm as far, my wife's love language is spreadsheets and lists, lists. Okay. And
I know how Excel works. I know how one of the formulas works in Excel. Okay. So have
you sat down with him and said,
listen, I've got one foot out the door.
I don't feel safe in this marriage.
I don't feel like not, we need to communicate better
because he's probably thinking I communicate fine
with the equal sum function on Excel.
What is so hot?
Why are we not communicating?
If you said, I don't feel safe in this house.
Yes, he doesn't, that doesn't face him.
He doesn't.
Okay, okay, but listen, listen, listen, listen.
Then you're, you're every, if you've tried that,
if you have said, I don't feel safe in my home,
I don't feel safe in this marriage,
I'm worried about our kids.
And he has looked at you, whether either exactly
or behaviorally and said, I don't care
what you think or what you feel.
Listen, if he's done that, then every second you spend
going back to 20 years ago and I've done this
and I, is a waste of energy.
Yes, yes.
It just is.
He has left you so long ago.
He just never filed papers.
Nope. Nope.
Okay. Yep.
And so the better use of your energy and your time
and your spirit and your love for yourself
and for your kids is to exhale and to grieve
that emptiness of your marriage in real time.
And then go be about the scary question,
what am I gonna do now?
Well, that's my real question is how do you get out
when you have no access to any of the finances?
I can't get a retainer fee.
I mean, and the question I had is,
do you open, you know, all my friends say,
open up a credit card.
I mean, I'll max that baby out in six months
because I don't even know if I can get credit
because I've never had a credit card
when I did the one time I did never had a credit card when I did,
the one time I did.
Hold on, hold on, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop.
He doesn't want to spend anything.
He said use your own credit card.
You're just spinning circles inside your own chest.
I know it's scary.
Okay, have you called an attorney yet?
I don't have money to even-
You don't know that though.
I don't have access to money to even do a consult fee.
You don't know that?
I have, yes, in the past, I have talked to a couple of attorneys, yeah fee. You don't know that? I have, yes.
In the past, I have talked to a couple of attorneys.
Okay.
Have you sat down and said, my husband, we have a ton of money, I have no access to it,
and so I'm going to have to pay you as a percentage on the back end?
The couple that I have weren't really willing to do that.
Okay.
Then go to the next one.
But that's been five years now.
Then go to the next one or go get yourself a part-time job. And where is your money going? I have a job. Okay.
He handles it. He... Now, where do your paychecks go? They go direct deposit into his bank account
that he has sole ownership of? Well, we have... We recently... Five years ago, we opened up a joint
account that his paycheck and my check go into and then he takes everything out and transfers it back to his account and leaves me you know like $300 a week.
But listen you have control but you have say in the joint account right?
No but if I take more than he wants me to he will deduct that change the direct deposit to go into
your account then. Go right to your boss. I have But I have, I have and then he tells me,
then he tells me he's gonna
change his direct deposit and won't
give me anything because I'm playing games.
He's done it. He's transferred his direct deposit.
You are playing games.
Tell him I am planning to leave you.
I'm worried to say that only because
he knows that we talk about divorce all the time
but he doesn't care, That doesn't face him.
He doesn't care if I leave.
He... But if I tell him that, he'll just be like,
do what you need to do.
Okay, then why does that scare you so bad?
Because I don't know how to get money to get out because
he's going to play games during the divorce. I know I'll be fine at the end. I'm worried about...
I can't just run out like my friends and go get an apartment. You know, he's going to stop paying the phone bill. You know,
he's going to take all the things like stop paying the car insurance. He's going to, and he's going
to cut off everything and tell me he can't pay it because now we have to pay for a divorce.
It's my fault.
Ellie, Ellie, Ellie. Is this real?
Oh no, I know it's not. I just want to get out and I don't know how to get out without a dime, how to walk away without a dime. I don't care about the relationship.
How much money do you make in your job?
Well, I'm only working part time now. I probably make only about $40,000 as a nurse. He makes,
you know, upwards of over $300.
Okay, then you might have to go full-time.
If your marriage is this far gone and you're with somebody who's so abusive...
Oh, I can!
Listen, Ellie, listen. What you're saying simply isn't true.
You make $40,000 a year and you could turn a switch on and make $65,000 starting tomorrow.
And it would change your kids' lives, it would change your life., it would change your life, you'd
have to get childcare, you'd have to get rides, all that is true. But you could have an apartment
tomorrow if you wanted one, period. And you might have to pay the phone bill, you might
have to pay car insurance, all that is true.
How can you do that without credit?
Yes, you can.
You don't need credit to switch car insurance and to get a phone.
You're not going to go into debt.
So please don't open a credit card. You have money. You can do this.
Are you in debt right now?
No.
Good.
I'm not. I mean we have like 10,000 on one credit card, but I mean...
That your name is on?
You've made up so many stories.
No, his card. His card. Listen, you've made up so many stories. It's hard. Listen, you've made up
so many stories in your mind about what's going to happen and this is going to happen and that's
going to happen. Yes. That's called anxiety. You are, you are creating future narratives and you're
experiencing them in the now. Yes. I'm just so worried because I know he's going to make this
a living, you know. He is, he is, because he might, maybe he is, cause he's that kind of guy, okay?
But what's your option?
To keep just wrapping this spider's web around your arms
and your legs and your eyes and your ears and your nose
and your neck and all over,
or he's gonna do what he's gonna do,
I'm gonna go do the next right thing for me and my family.
Period. Yes, yes.
I mean, my kids are in college, but you know, he...
Then you can be in a one bedroom apartment tomorrow
with $40,000.
You can go to full time tomorrow
and make $80,000 or $60,000.
All of these things are true.
You can change direct deposit,
and yes, he's gonna retaliate
and he's gonna do all these things.
It doesn't matter.
You're gonna take ownership
of the things you have control over. And there's more in control than you think. It's day one. Go make
your move.
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We're headed to New York City up next with Sarah. What's going on, Sarah?
Hi. So my, well, first of all, thanks for taking my call. I watch you guys all the time.
Thank you.
So I did want to just start off with my question, but I'm not sure if I'm even asking the right
one. So my question is, are we making the smartest financial decision and also decision for our marriage
as me and my husband currently live with our in-laws? Um, so,
well my in-laws, so his parents,
but basically we have an amazing relationship. I mean, I have,
we've never butt heads about anything. We're very independent in terms of I,
they don't put into my marriage.
I don't put into theirs.
And it started off temporary and we originally planned to move out, but
because the living situation is really just really serene with them and we just
live well and have a better quality of life, we made the mutual decision, me
and my husband to stay with them, um them along just our whole life journey.
The eventual goal is to move out of our two bedroom apartment that he's had for
a long time. So we have a very low amount of rent and get a four bedroom,
hopefully somewhere in the South. And that will take a lot of money,
especially looking at the interest rates right now. So I'm wondering, everybody,
I mean, everyone I talked to about this thinks that we're crazy.
I can never do that.
And we get all that commentary,
but is it really just commentary or should,
are we just too comfortable and we need to, you know,
we need to just make the move and move out.
So are you asking the right question?
You started off saying, well, we're very independent,
but the definition of independent would be
not living with your in-laws.
Can we agree on that?
Agreed.
Okay.
Do you want to be independent?
It sounds like you guys are happy with this situation.
Nobody's forcing you to do anything.
I've just never found it to be a great long-term situation, regardless of if the relationship
is good or not.
I think it is healthy for you two to be on your own,
even if that means that house dream
is delayed by a few years.
So what is the situation now?
What are you guys actually saving per month?
Where are you putting that money?
And what is the strategic goal here?
Is it six months?
Is it 10 years?
So the goal is to have around 200K in cash saved up
so that we can put down a down payment,
be able to buy furniture, buy cars, cash,
when we actually make the big move for all of us.
The other portion of it is the additional reason
why we feel that we want to take this
on or agree to take this on too is because they, I, we, we could live separately, but
they would be much worse off without the financial support that, that we provide each other.
Oh, see, we've changed the riddle now.
You're no longer doing this because it benefits you.
Now it's, well, they need us.
So it's okay to have a quid pro quo,
but let's call it out that there's benefit to both parties here
and that if you cut ties, it would hurt them
and maybe hurt the relationship.
Potentially, but more so, I think, the decision more so when we keep talking about it, when
we crunch the numbers and we sit down and me and my husband talk it over because obviously
this comes up, it really comes down to conversation of I'm uncomfortable in this apartment because
we want more space.
And that is really just a matter of time. It's never really the question of the
relationship that we have by them living with us. And I don't know. I honestly, I don't
know if I'm making the right choice because I've got to be honest about it.
Well, by proxy, you've now taken on the responsibility to prop up their finances artificially. Because
if you guys weren't there, how would they cover their rent? What would they do? Would they have to downsize? Move? They would be able to
cover it but they probably wouldn't be able to get out of this situation
because the rent is so low since because of how long they've lived here. But Sarah
have they ever asked set you and your husband down and said we need you to
take care of our finances with us we need need some help. No. Okay, all right, just put a period right there.
We definitely need to stay out of each other's finances.
Put a period right there.
Have they said we just love having you all here, we know it's expensive for you millennials
to even dream of buying a house, you'll stay here as long as you want, we love having you
and the kids around, you all just save up some money and we'll deal with that then.
They, more so the conversation if it ever comes up because it's almost like taboo. They won't touch finances with us. We won't touch it with them. They never asked us to pay rent.
We just started doing it kind of situation. And the only conversation in regards to that
that they've had with us is just that maybe it's better if we live separately because they
also get the opinions from family on like this scenario. So I'm sure they probably feel that
pressure too. Okay, hold on. But if we're all happy and-
Or maybe they want y'all out and they don't know how to say it.
Oh. Yeah. Like, wow, Suzy says that y'all should be living on your own these days and Janet
says her kids had to move out. They might want y'all to go and you did or so. They
just want to be, they're too kind to say it. Maybe. I don't know. But the big, the
big thing here at George Newton, I don't hear you have a problem with his
parents. I hear that you and your husband have not agreed
on a purpose and a direction for y'all's life.
And so you throw around comically big numbers,
like when we get $200,000 in cash, then we'll leave.
Well, you know, when we need to keep doing this
and we should pay rent, y'all just go
in a million different directions at the same time.
How long have you lived there?
It's going on six years.
And how much is in the savings account after six years?
Our combined net worth now is 250K,
but in terms of the cost of retirement.
No, how much is in the savings account?
Because you told me you did this to save money in this account.
Savings is 60. Savings is 60.
So you guys save $10,000 a year in this account. Saving to 60. Saving to 60. So you got to save $10,000 a year in this account on average.
How much do you make?
Combine our household income is 160.
You and your husband?
Yes.
And out of that 160, with no rent.
You can only save 10 grand.
Come on.
No, no, no.
In the high yield savings,
because we save each around 20 grand a year
across retirement and savings.
I understand, but the stated goal was not
we want to save for retirement,
it was we want to be able to get our own place.
We need 200 grand.
So if we play out the math on this,
out of the 200 grand, you have 140 left,
which by your math is going to be-
14 more years.
14 more years of living there, and we'll have this money.
So how old are you guys?
Okay, so-
So that's madness.
I'll say it for you, that's madness.
28 and 29.
28 and 29, okay.
So by the time we're in our mid 40s,
maybe we'll have $200,000.
Who knows what home prices will be in New York City
by then for a four bedroom.
So do you-
Well, according to their latest election,
they're gonna be giving them away.
That's right.
So maybe if you'll hang on,
it'll be free rent for everyone in New York.
But do you, I'm playing this crazy scenario out
because this has been your reality
and it's pointing to the greater problem I have
with living with in-laws.
There's nothing morally wrong about it.
I just think you guys have been comfortable for too long.
And if you were on your own, you'd go,
how can we raise our income?
What kind of, how can we climb this ladder
that we're on at work in order to make 250,000 to save up?
And I think there's something in your spirit
that changes when it's on you to do it,
and you're not comfortable going,
well, we can spend a little more, we can door dash,
we don't have as many expenses.
That's what I've just found to be true.
I'm not saying that's true of you guys,
but based on the numbers, saving up 10 grand a year
is not gonna get you to your goal in any near future.
And Sarah, can I ask you one personal question
just between me and you and George
and a couple million people?
You can't be fully anchored into a boy
who even if he's the father of your kids who still lives in his mommy's house
six years later not because he has to but because there's just no other direction.
Uh, that's so, no.
Okay, so for that one, um, oh, he just really takes, he really takes on his parents as...
I mean, at this point, it's kind of he takes on his parents as children.
Okay, okay, here's the deal.
He needs to take on you.
You're his wife.
He needs to take on you as priority numero uno.
And when y'all are anchored in together and have an established financial life together,
then he can be about taking care of his children and his parents.
Y'all need to get real about, like what Georgia said, this trajectory and y'all come up with
a real plan and put that real plan into action.
From the Ramsey Network, this is The Ramsey Show, where we help people build wealth, do
work that they love, and create amazing relationships.
I'm George Campbell, joined by bestselling author Dr. John Delaney, and we're taking
your calls at 888-825-5225.
Jamie is in Houston up next.
What's going on, Jamie?
How can we help today?
Hi.
Okay. I am a woman in my 50s. I was divorced a few years ago after a 30-year marriage. My
ex-husband just came home one day and told me he was in love with someone else who was
20 years younger than him, and he was gone. A big part of my healing over the last three years has been
getting my finances in order and feeling secure that I can take care of myself and my kids.
And I've done that with y'all's help, really listening to y'all has been a big part of my
recovery. I am now debt free. My house house is paid off. Woo, yeah, dude.
I'm saving money for retirement.
I have a budget, I follow it, I follow it like crazy.
I'm on track to be able to retire
in probably 10 years or so.
Incredible. The other good thing,
I know, and y'all have been a big part of that,
you really have.
I have three kids, they're all grown and launched
and doing great, okay. I have, I recently They're all grown and launched and doing great. Okay.
I have, I recently started seeing a terrific guy. He is amazing.
He's kind and funny and smart and so sweet to me. So much better to me than I've ever any relationship I've ever been in,
but he's terrible with money and he's had some bad luck and he's deep in debt
and he doesn't want to talk about it with me. He's embarrassed
I know he's ashamed and I know he knows I'm in a much better financial position than than him
But whenever I try to talk about anything related to money, he just totally shuts down
I've sent him all of the Ramsey solution stuff. I have loaned him money. I know I probably shouldn't have but I have
My heart is telling me to rescue this man.
I love him and I wanna pay off his debts
and I have the money to do it.
Please don't.
Jamie, please don't.
I wanna reframe your words.
Okay.
He's not the best guy you've ever met.
And he's not treating you as better
than anyone's ever treated you before.
That's not true.
You know how I know that?
He won't be honest with you and he won't be vulnerable with you and he won't tell you
what's actually going on inside his chest.
Period.
And probably he is running back a different version of the same script your ex just ran
on you for 30 years.
Well yeah, you just got, you just nailed it.
Please don't try to rescue him.
You tried to rescue a man for 30 years.
Yeah.
Uh, I know.
And my, it's like my heart is telling me,
I don't know exactly how much the debts are,
but I know I can do it.
It doesn't matter.
I know, but listen, the more you sit there
and try to invent stories and put them inside
his head, the more you're going to drive yourself crazy.
The only path, I mean, here's the thing, two paths forward.
One path, just you do you.
You're 50 years old, you have a paid off house, you're doing well.
I'm a podcaster for God's sake.
Like you don't have to listen to me.
The other side of this is, I've just seen this play out so many times,
you can sit down and say, here's the deal, I'm falling in love with you and you treat
me on these different metrics better than anyone's ever treated me before. I refuse
to get into a any deeper into a relationship with somebody who won't be honest and open
and vulnerable with me. I've done that and I'm through with that life. And so he gets to choose
does he want to be in a relationship with you or not. That's your other option.
And when he says, what's so supposed to mean? Say, I can't get into a relationship
with somebody that won't be honest with me. You all talked about sex, you all
talked about the Astros who are back in first place, you all talked about all
those things, and you won't be honest about money.
Which is one of the most important things to you right now is this
financial stability that you've succeeded with and you want to make sure
you're partnering with someone who's not gonna be an anchor that just drags you
to the bottom of an ocean. You've been there, you don't want to be there again.
And male shame comes out in really unhealthy ways, right?
Did we lose you?
Maybe.
Jamie, are you with us?
Jamie, you still with us?
Maybe just flabbergasted by our advice.
That happens time to time.
Jamie, you still here?
Did you hang up on us?
All right.
I lost her.
No, no, come on Jamie, come back Jamie.
Is she there?
See if you can pick her up,
we'll pick her up on the next segment.
I really wanted to share this.
This was a really great conversation.
But John, talk about seeing past things in relationships
when we're in the love phase. But John, talk about seeing past things in relationships
when we're in the love phase.
Lot of emotions and we go, well, he's a great guy,
but there's just this one glaring thing.
Right.
Can I just pay his debts?
Well, anytime you say to yourself, I want to rescue,
you're creating a hierarchy and hierarchies,
and I guess a fancier word for hierarchy is scorekeeping.
Anytime you create a hierarchy,
you're gonna have some challenges in a relationship.
Now, if my wife of, I don't know,
we're about to celebrate 23 years,
she will rescue me from a thing, right?
And I'll go rescue her from a thing,
but not, I can't rescue my wife from,
if she chose to not be vulnerable
or not be honest or whatever because she's back
here we go to get you jimmy here i can't let i don't want to be clear about
something he's not being that kind of with me i i i i don't know i'm i'm
overstating it for the radio station and the i'm overstating you know
he knows
how important my financial security is to me he knows how hard i have worked
and how the trauma and let me just be
let me hear exactly right on you you read this in without me even saying that with my 30 year marriage,
I was the primary breadwinner. My husband was cheating behind my back while I was supporting
him. I mean, it was, he knows that. And so my current boyfriend knows I have that betrayal
trauma. He knows it is deep within me and he does not, so he's just like, don't talk to her
about money. He's not asking me to pay off his debt. He didn't ask me to loan him. He just is like,
don't worry about my financial situation. I'm fine. I'll handle it. But I just want to be clear
about that. No, no, no, no. I'm a bad mouth in him. He's living his life too. Like, you hear me
say that, right? I struggle with being vulnerable all the bad mouthing him. He's living his life too. Hear me say that, right?
I struggle with being vulnerable all the time.
I still do.
That's why I talk about it so much
because it's one of my biggest demons, okay?
And so it's, and I'm not saying you're a bad person
for wanting to go rescue somebody.
You know that makes you,
that makes you compassionate and empathetic.
Yeah.
But the difference is, hey,
if your money and my money are ever going to become our money,
then we have to talk about it.
And I just have the misfortune slash the honor, both of those are braided together, of sitting
with people who get out of the long-term relationship that ends really dramatically and immediately
get right back on that same roller coaster.
And there's actually a neuroscientific reason why we do that, but that's for another show.
But you just get back in the same cart and go down the same roller coaster again.
So he may be amazing and wonderful.
And God bless you for wanting just to level the field.
Hey, look, we're both going to be debt free.
I can write you a check.
We're going to finish this thing off.
What you can't see on, it's like this, one time my buddy, his wife had a baby, and I told
my wife, hey I'm gonna call a local cleaning company to come in and clean their house for her.
And my wife looked at me and was like, are you out of your freaking mind? And I was like, why?
And I was like, she's got a newborn and she goes, would that signal to her?
So you just writing a check to a guy who's already a little bit ashamed about his finances
and saying, oh, don't worry, I'm your girlfriend, I'll pay for it all.
We'll just drive him further underground despite your great intent and love.
So all I'm saying is, you know this, I know this, you're smart, George knows this, we
all know this.
Those deepest secrets that we're trying to hold from each other to protect each other actually becomes the cancer that kills the whole thing. And so maybe it's,
that's the line. Hey, for yours and mine to become ours, we got to put it all on the table
and talk about that. Thank you so much for the call, sister.
Welcome back to the Ramsey Show. Adam's up next in Knoxville, Tennessee.
What's going on, Adam?
Hey, guys.
Thanks for taking the call.
Sure.
How can we help?
Hey.
So, I've kind of found myself in a predicament.
So, historically, I've got a job that has paid pretty well.
I'm primarily commissioned, but a lot of the jobs that I've been working with have kind
of dried up at the time.
And so my salary this year isn't quite as high as it has been in previous years.
What were you making and what's kind of like a rough year that you're looking at?
So, which I mean, my rough year is still not that bad. The rough year it's gonna be about
75-80. Last year was 120.
Okay.
And so it's gone down a little bit but again 80 is still comfortable. We're still you know
it's not anything bad not to mention you know it's a baby set to last year.
Awesome. anything bad, not to mention, um, you know, completely babysit to last year, I've all off, uh, all the,
all the trucks, all vehicles, and then, um, trying to, uh, you know,
I've got everything, I've got about three months saved up.
So still kind of lower on the baby set three, but you know, trying to, um,
on stretch and yeah, exactly. So trying to look ahead and, you know,
save money for, uh, I got two kids, try to save for their college and, uh, our retirement. So with the, you know,
with paying off the debts, I hadn't really saved much for retirement. Um,
so, you know, obviously in the statistics of it,
I'm a little bit behind on that,
but my wife is a stay at home and I'd like to keep it that way. Um,
but something has come up and I'm looking at changing job opportunities
cause I'm, I'm really unhappy with my current position. Um,
so the situation is new job is it's a, uh, it's an ownership track,
but the first two years are, it's a,
I guess you can call it your franchise fees, sweat equity, if
you will.
What kind of job is this?
It's a retail, I'd be taking up a retail position, it's a local place here.
But so the first two years it'd be about $50,000.
And my wife is really nervous about me taking this position. Long term, the average salary is about 450 to 500 a year.
So long term it was...
Is that what they're just telling you or is that a reality?
Because if I was trying to sell you on getting in my franchise, I'd be telling you the same
thing.
No, it's actually...
I've verified it with quite a few...
That's on the low end.
So this seems like a no, no, no brainer.
What's, is she upset, is she worried about
the actual drop in income for two years
or is she worried about?
It's part of it, but also part of her responsibility.
So like I said, she's stay at home, mom.
But with that, I'm gonna be working 60 to 65 hours a week,
you know, six days a week.
Um, and she doesn't necessarily want me to do that.
And the money's not necessarily worth it to her.
So for me though, looking at, at my kids' college and our retirement, you know,
I think it makes it worth it.
I don't have to stay at the work side of it,
I don't mind the 60 to 65 hours a week,
but she's gonna be home with the kids
and she doesn't wanna do that.
Yeah, she sees the next two years as I'm a single mom
and I'm not gonna see my husband
and our lifestyle is gonna take a big cut.
Things are gonna be stressful financially on top of that.
I mean, that's reasonable on her side.
I'd be feeling the same thing if I were her.
But also the other side of it is, I mean,
both me and my wife have had these same things
just on either side, like, hey, I'm going back to school
and so I'm gonna keep my full-time job,
but I'm also gonna be in grad school full-time,
which means we're gonna high-five each other
during the week and then hopefully I can see you
on a Sunday, because I'm writing papers all day Saturday. Like sometimes you do that in a marriage. Is there a,
I don't know man, like I often wonder if there's a deeper conversation here which is I'm going to
make something up okay so don't take this to heart but does she not like who you become when you're working six days a week,
do you not help out when you do have a few hours
around the house?
So is she looking at a total lifestyle change or is she,
I hate to cast this on your wife, man,
but is she kind of selfish and like,
I don't even wanna give up two years for all of the peace
and security this is gonna give us down the road?
Yeah, essentially.
And she started saying more things that are concerning to me, you know, because it's really
important for me to look ahead and save, you know, like I said, for my kids and, you know,
for our retirement.
And she's, you know, she's uninterested in saving for the kids and doesn't want to save for their college
or anything because she says she took out student loans so they can too, which she didn't
finish college.
For me, it's really important to, if I can, if I'm able to, to be able to provide that
for my kids.
I don't necessarily know how to pay them.
Give me an example of another situation
that you, like away from kids and away from this job,
where y'all are not on the same page.
It's our where we're not on the same page.
Yep, just give me a random one.
It's been, that's honestly the only time we ever really...
Everything else is just coming along? Family, we've seen
differently on family, but as far as the values, so she feels that sometimes
that if she's not the priority, that uh, you know, something else the priority is
in that sense work or you know if she's not getting defended or
whatnot okay so that's what I was getting at earlier is it may be that
she's a selfish person and no one's gonna know this but you that and very
short-sighted I don't want you going to work to build into this company that will eight or nine exits return, right?
I don't want you doing that for two years
because I can't imagine two years of having to parent
six days a week by myself.
Maybe that's the case.
And I like getting my nails and hair done
and I refuse to go two years without getting that done
so that the rest of our family's future
can be financially secure.
Maybe that's the case.
Or like I was saying, maybe she already feels like when you're busy or maybe she feels like
you're already, she's already a mistress to your job.
When you get to working a lot, you're not pleasant to be around or you come home and
just pop on the couch and start researching golf clubs.
I don't know, I'm just making stuff up,
but that's the question I'd wanna get to.
Yeah.
And is there a reality to the situation
where you guys can't afford to live on 50 grand?
Or she has to go back to work for two years,
and this is just a two year,
everybody's making, everyone's making concessions
for two years so that we can get to this place where I own this company I'm making 400 grand a year and
we have an entirely different family tree because of that yeah and that's
what I've tried to communicate to her which is I'm more pleasant to be around
whenever you know I feel fulfilled in my job which I haven't been recently but I
still do I mean most of the dishes
most of the laundry you know whenever I come back but it's it's I've kind of
gotten it pretty bad to where you know I've conditioned her to I let her sleep
in the mornings I get my you know my kid ready for ready for the morning you know
I'm back well before five even using using the language, I condition her and let her, makes her sound a lot more like my
Australian Shepherd than your wife, right?
Yeah.
And so maybe even just back, I honestly, I think y'all need to go sit with a marriage
counselor because I think the issues here are deeper than should I take this job or
that job.
You guys aren't aligned on a lot of things and money and family and priorities,
there's a lot there.
You said, well, we're pretty much on the same page
except for these three major areas.
And you told me that she doesn't even,
she's fine going into debt for the whole family
and you just told me you crawled out of Baby Step 2.
So there's already some differing tracks here
that worry me, but I think there's truth to both of your situations.
You see a financial future that could change
your family tree and she sees two years of hell.
And both things can be true.
And just, this is me just loving you as best I can.
Not being aligned on family and kids and money,
those are three real big issues, which I would say means we're not aligned on the big rocks, right?
You gotta be on the same page on those.
And I would do your homework on this franchise.
I'm not saying it's too good to be true, but I am wondering,
Adam seems like a sharp young guy, but why Adam and not the next,
why is there not a line of people going, I can make 400 grand in two years, sign me up. So I would just ask a lot of questions
before I went, no, no, this guy told me I'll make 400 grand in two years no matter what.
That part worries me as well.
George, um, yeah, it's tough when I don't know.
We don't know. This is The Ramsey Show.
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I gave my IRA funds to a precious metals company, oh Lord,
to invest and after they finished with me I had less than
half of what I gave them. I kept asking what their fees were and they told me about the fees for the
depository and conservator but never mentioned their fee which was extra. They also sold me coins
instead of bullion. I am 77 and have to take out RMDs. I will be getting only half of what I
would have had had I left the funds in my IRAs. Do I have any recourse against them to get my money back?"
Oh boy. Dude, scams, George, are getting worse and worse and worse and worse,
particularly in this demographic. 100%. And I don't even know, this might be a legitimate company
that she did business with and not like a scammer
across the world.
And precious metals just went down.
Yeah, she just lost money
because she didn't understand the fine print.
She didn't understand that this money was being invested.
Well, and let's be honest, Kimberly, I love you, hon,
but I wanna assume this company was,
it's never a good company, it's never a good business deal, but they weren't trying to scam you.
But when you keep asking what their fees are, and at the same time give them every single
thing they're asking for, then you are communicating with your actions.
I don't really care what the fees are, here's everything. And so had you gone back to do this again,
you would have said, hey, I'm not giving you one penny
until I have a piece of paper here
that says exactly what your fees are,
what's the fee schedule, what do you get fees for,
what's the past ROIs, what's the, all that kind of stuff.
But you gave them all your money and then asked questions
and it was too late.
Yeah, and a lot of these scams,
they generally involve inflated prices for coins and bullion.
They switch these promised metals for lower value metals
and there's all kinds of misleading claims
about tax advantages and how it's so great to do this
and it's super wise to do with your money.
By the way, the dollar's all going away,
it's all coming down, you better hold on to gold coins.
Fear mongering.
So there's a lot of issues here
and they're predatory toward elderly folks,
like our friend Kimberly here.
So you're in retirement, they got a bunch of money,
that's a great target demo for scammers
when they know you're not gonna read the fine print,
they know you're not gonna come after them.
So I don't know how much recourse you have,
you can talk to an attorney, I don't know the much recourse you have. You can talk to an attorney.
I don't know the company.
We don't have a lot of info here.
I also don't think it's worth your time
to spend the next two years fighting this
because I don't think you're gonna get your money back,
especially if it was a legitimate company.
And they went, no, no, no, here's what happened.
She invested the money.
She knew there was risk here.
She signed her name saying that we could invest this
knowing she could lose it all.
So I'm sorry you went through this.
This might be the biggest stupid tax you've ever paid and I hope you stay away from any
of these companies ever again.
And for anyone out there thinking about getting into precious metals because of fear of the
headlines in the economy, they are marketing this stuff so hard right now because this
is their Super Bowl.
When the economy looks spooky, you see the billboards to trade in and buy some gold because
it's somehow going to save you in an apocalypse.
And no time in history has that ever worked out.
So stay away.
I don't have any gold.
I don't think John has any gold.
Not even on my faucets.
Not even jewelry.
No. No, you've got to, I think it's a plastic bracelet even on my faucets. Not even jewelry. No.
No, you've got a, I think it's a plastic bracelet he's wearing.
Exactly.
There we go.
All right, Mary is in Los Angeles.
Up next on the line, what's going on, Mary?
Hi.
Thank you for taking my call.
I'm very happy to be able to speak to you.
You too.
I am, thank you, I am a 56-year-old woman, single, no kids, um,
live alone and I am approximately about $75,000 in debt.
And my question is, um,
I have an opportunity to early withdraw a portion of my pension plan.
I have a pension, uh,
an early portion of my pension plan up to have a pension, an early portion of my pension plan up to
about $22,000 and I'm considering on doing that because I want to, I have some
chunky monthly payments that are slowing down the snowball method I'm trying to
use through the baby steps which I'm trying to apply in my life. And, um, it's going, if I do that, it allow me to expedite,
um, take these chunkier payments and put it towards my much bigger debt.
Um, this, I'm just wondering if that's not a good idea.
I'm very leery of going down the road of my pension plan even
though there's two parts to my pension plan but this is one of them and I'm
just wondering if that's just not a good idea. Do I leave it alone? You know and
and the the tax benefits the disadvantage to this is obviously I would have to pay taxes on it.
But...
Is there an early withdrawal penalty?
Are you saying you can take this portion out tax without any penalty, but you'll still
pay taxes?
Yes, that is correct.
I can...
It's a hardship plan that they are offering...
Is this a qualified hardship?
Yeah. Is this a qualified hardship? Yeah, if it's a qualified hardship for 10% they basically waive the 10% federal early
withdrawal, the federal taxes at 10% penalty you get, that gets waived.
But I still have to pay all the other taxes, of course, you know, all the other federal
taxes, which I'm being told you can
pay it over three years.
Okay.
Well, I'll tell you, I don't love this plan, number one, because it really doesn't change
Mary's behavior, which is what got us here.
It feels like a shortcut and we go, wow, we did something.
Now we feel a little more comfortable.
So I don't know how intense you have been about paying off debt. You
said you're in your 50s? Yeah, I'm 56. How much? You have 75 in debt. What kind of debt is that?
It's debt that's basically broken up between, you know, I have a car loan, a
HELOC, home equity line of credit, you know, and a consolidation loan.
I have some medical bills.
And I did back in 2016, I did take out a 401k loan, which was the biggest mistake of my
life.
And that's, that's sort of stuck into a weekly withdrawal from my paycheck every week.
And it's not a huge amount and that's
where I went wrong and they won't let me change that. You're still paying this off
nine years later? Yes, yes. And are you able to... I want to try to get to that faster. So how much is this
401k loan balance? Right now it's at about it's between 24 and 25,000. Even after nine years?
Yes.
Oh, yeah, yeah. See, this feels like another shortcut scheme
for Mary to go, well, I'll just rob my retirement,
which is going to unplug all of the growth,
give you less money in retirement.
So that's my fear is that you end up retiring broke
and never change the behavior that got us here
and continue to stay in debt for the next nine years
Right. I have been committed to
I'm going through trying to save I'm trying to save my small emergency fund right now
I've done my budget. I've looked at everything. I've been diligently working on this but how much do you have saved up so far?
I I'm not I'm at about six hundred, but. How much do you have saved up so far?
I'm not, I'm at about $600 of my emergency fund, my small emergency fund, my first steps of my emergency.
Yeah, $1,000 is your starter.
Yeah, the $1,000, yeah.
Okay, how much do you make?
I'm almost there.
My take home after taxes is about $79,000
before taxes is 112.
Okay, so you have a great income. I'm confused where all the money's going even with minimum debt payments
Are your expenses just out of control? I I'm a little house poor. What's your mortgage bad decision?
My mortgage well, I don't feel my mortgage payment is on is out of control. It's I my means, it's 23.78
and I roll in my escrow, my taxes,
and it's rolled into that, yeah.
My insurance and my taxes are rolled into that.
I think we need to make way in this budget
and do better than saving 600 bucks
and being still in this debt.
I would not cash out this portion of the pension
to knock out some of these debts.
It's gonna make you feel like you did something,
but it's a drop in the bucket as far as the total debt
and the behavior change needed to get out of this.
I might consider selling the car
to clear some of the debt and downsizing,
but I personally would not cash out that pension.
personally would not cash out that pension. If you're tired of living paycheck to paycheck, wondering where your money's going, your first
step is getting on a budget.
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Heather is in Jacksonville, Florida coming up.
What's going on, Heather?
Hey.
Hey.
How can John and I help?
Okay, so my question is,
I am a single mother of three little boys.
I rent currently, I do not own my home.
I've done really good to not accumulate debt over my young life.
I just turned 30 this year.
My car is paid for.
The only things that I have as far as debt is concerned is just over $3,000 left of my
student loan.
And my question is, is how do I get ahead? It seems like in this economy,
I am just breaking even every paycheck
and I don't really see owning a home
as being in my near future.
And it's a huge goal of mine.
It's something I really wanna give to my children
and set that example for them.
So just wondering how to
To get ahead. I Love it. Well, can I just tell you you're doing a great job so far? Yeah
George is the goat when it comes to the money stuff, but kind of say the example you're setting for those boys is
It's family tree changing
Regardless of whatever you they inherit or whatever you pass down
to them they're they're watching a warrior of a mom provide for them work
hard be an incredible mom. Just be there man yeah you're amazing. Thank you I
really appreciate that. No like for real don't blow over that you're a good mom
okay. Yes sir. I don't care what the divorce papers said. I don't care what that guy told you.
You're a good mom, okay?
Yes, sir.
I appreciate that.
And don't say sir.
George is older than me.
Neither of us are as old as Kelly.
Jeez.
All right, go ahead.
Under the bus she went.
Poor girl.
All right, go ahead, George.
Okay, so how much do you make right now?
My take home monthly is $2,728.
Okay, I love how, that tells me you know your numbers.
Well, that tells me how tight things are, right?
Exactly.
Not 29, we don't have that extra dollar, kids.
How old are the kids?
I have a nine-year-old, a five-year-old,
and a two-year-old, they're all boys.
Party, okay, what does childcare look like
while you're at work?
Yes, so my oldest son is able to spend most weekdays at my mom's.
She does work from home and he's fairly self-sufficient, so it doesn't require too much.
The two younger boys are in daycare.
So that is running me about $800 a month split between their father and I.
Okay, that's my next question.
Is there any alimony, child support coming in on top of the 2,700?
No, so we do have 50-50 of the two youngest.
My oldest son is mine only and there is no financial help.
Okay, so the only help is you're splitting the daycare cost?
Yes, sir.
And your portion is 800?
Yes, sir.
Okay, and how much is your rent?
My rent is $1,000. Okay. Which I much is your rent? My rent is a thousand dollars. Okay. Which I
know is crazy in this market. That's great. Well you're making 2,700. So the next question is,
I feel like you are on top of your expenses. You don't sound like you're spending frivolously here.
Correct. So the next question is, how do we get the income up to create enough margin
to get out of debt faster knock out this
3000 get you an emergency fund of probably six months because you're a single mom of three
Let's get to that number and boys and then get you to investing everything's yes and the boys
And they'll be eating like just I don't know Costco size
steak packs pretty soon
So what are you doing for work?
size steak packs pretty soon.
So what are you doing for work?
So I am a service coordinator for a family owned furniture retailer.
Okay, so if you looked at your skill set,
what jobs in your area could pay you more
for using those same skills?
So I do feel like most of my professional career
I've just been kind of chasing, which
I think this is kind of my generation in general, we're just chasing that next dollar raise.
Who's going to pay us a dollar more?
I want you to think bigger.
Yes.
You mean additionally to what I'm doing now or a change?
A total change.
Instead of going, who can pay me a dollar more?
It's how do I make $80,000 a year with my skillset?
Right.
I would say that my skillset is mostly
in dealing with people.
I've been in service and coordination roles forever.
I was a bank teller and an audit coordinator
and a trust funding coordinator.
I did not go to college,
so I do not have a degree that's gonna help me
as far as my resume is concerned.
But I am good with people.
I'm a good listener.
I try to take care of people, and I think that served me well throughout my professional
career so far.
Absolutely.
And there's a lot of jobs out there, even without a degree, that I think could pay you
more and get you making progress a lot faster.
And so I'm gonna gift you our friend, Ken Coleman's book,
Find the Work You're Wired to Do.
It comes with a get clear career assessment.
I want you to take that and start to dream a little bit.
I feel like you have been in survival mode
for probably a long time
and you haven't really got to focus on Heather
and go, what does Heather want to be doing?
What could Heather be doing that could provide,
what if you had a $4,000 take home pay?
I mean, that would change your life.
Absolutely.
Because you told me your goal is to have a home one day.
And so the prerequisites are, get out of debt,
get the emergency fund in place,
let's begin investing for the future
into our retirement account,
and then let's begin saving up this down payment.
And maybe by the time you're in your mid 30s
or heading toward 40,
you're in a totally different place financially. Right. Now, as far as credit is concerned, that is another major area of concern for
me. I do have a very low credit score, not because I've done anything wrong, but just
because I haven't used it. My payment history is 100%. My credit age is 11 years and five
months, and I have three closed accounts and one open account. The only reason I've kept
the student loan account open
is just so I have some credit.
Heather, do you know what my credit score is?
What?
It's zero, none.
You know what George's is?
None.
Like you're good, you're good.
It's not because we're really smart.
We just, once we paid off debt,
we just stopped going back into it.
And so that's what's gonna happen for you
once you pay off these student loans.
Your credit score, it might dip down a little
because credit score system is so stupid
that if you pay off your debt and be responsible,
they penalize you for it.
But then over time, over after,
yeah, once you close all of your credit accounts,
you have no credit cards open whatsoever,
after about six to 12 months,
your credit score will become indeterminable. And so not having a score is not a bad thing. Having a low score can hurt you.
So can I throw just some options to keep your eyes open around your local area?
Yes.
I want you to look at or consider things like, is there any local community colleges or universities where you could get,
because what you have is the equivalent of an entry level salary, right?
Correct.
Could I get a job at a place working with people as a receptionist, as a personal assistant,
as a fill in the blank, as a residence life coordinator, right?
Where I'm just answering phones, I'm taking care of people, but also allows me to get free tuition.
Or can I get a job at a local school district
that also allows my kids to go into childcare here?
Or-
Yeah, that's definitely something I could look into.
Or at an apartment complex where we could all live for free.
And that's a thousand more dollars.
Like I'll run the front desk of this apartment complex
and yada yada, and then they take care of your housing too.
So for single moms in your situation,
where it's just, I mean, like you said,
like at the beginning of the call, every dollar matters.
Where are these places and they don't exist for everybody.
I know that and it's not a panacea,
but where are those places where I can double
and triple dip?
I'll work here and also I get to get a free credential over time or I'll work here and my kids get to go to
school here also. Sometimes you take a reduced salary for that privilege but
over time, man, if you could end up working at a university for four years
just doing entry-level work but you enter the bachelor's degree that you
don't pay for, how amazing right?, that's not something I thought of.
And then you stay there and then your kids have a discount
when they go to school there.
So it's just asking some of these questions.
Let's think bigger than if you're into service
and that's what you like to do,
where are some places where I can be of service
and they've got these extraneous benefits
that could support me as well?
And reach out to your community, your friends, your family, and see what jobs
are out there, where they're working, are they hiring, and start digging around
these job sites and you'll see your skills listed there. And yes, some of them
might say degree required, but you might apply and they go, oh my gosh, Heather's
amazing, she's got the experience, she has the skills, forget the degree, come on
board. I worked at one university, my highest paid person
on my team, and I had a humongous team,
did not have a degree.
She was a gangster.
And she was my highest paid team member that year.
So it's possible for sure, because I've lived it.
Keep fighting, Heather.
From the Ramsey Network, this is The Ramsey Show,
where we help people build wealth,
do work that they love, and create amazing relationships.
I'm George Campbell, joined by the host of the Dr. John Delaney Show, Dr. John Delaney.
We're taking your calls at 888-825-5225.
You call us, we'll do our best to help you take the right next step for your life and
your money.
Samantha's up in Dayton, Ohio.
What's going on, Samantha?
So I have a 20-year-old son that I want to take on vacation,
and he told me because he has debt
that you guys would tell him no.
Oh. What?
Who's footing the bill for the vacation?
So I am a baby millionaire,
and I am footing the whole bill because of between his schooling, my schooling, my daughter schooling, you know, in COVID we
weren't able to go on vacation. So I figure this is our last vacation before
they all start their lives and move out and fly the nest. Samantha, how long have you been his mom? Twenty years.
You know by now when he's fibbing to you.
He isn't.
He is a very dead serious person when he talks.
Okay, well, he is confused because we've never once said just because you owe money, you
cannot go on a fully funded vacation with your millionaire mother.
Well, he just feels that he's supposed to close on a fully funded vacation with your millionaire mother?
Well, he just feels that so he's supposed to close on a house next week. I don't plan on going on vacation till September of
26.
Why? Why? You're a millionaire.
Just because of their schedules with a little bit of schooling,
like I'll get done with my doctorate.
Hold on.
They'll get done with
I'm confused, Samantha.
You told me that he won't go on vacation because he's in debt and we said not to, but he's
buying a home while he's in debt?
So his debt is his home.
That is the only debt he has.
Hey, you tell him to leave us out of this.
He's trying to blame us because he doesn't want to go on vacation with his mama.
Ding ding ding. Is that the case? He says he does. No, he says't want to go on vacation with his mama. Ding, ding, ding. Is that the case?
He does. No, he says he does.
I've asked him that question.
He's listening to the show for 10 seconds.
He knows when we say don't go on debt wire, don't go on vacation while you're in debt.
We mean baby step to consumer debt.
So you're telling me he's still feels that any debt is bad debt.
So he's not going to he's not going to go on vacation for 15 years if he has a 15 year mortgage?
Well, he has 65k he's putting down on a 160k house.
Okay, okay listen I have to tell you, I have to tell you this, I've worked with 20 year olds my entire career.
This is his sideways way of telling you,
I don't wanna go on a vacation with you, period.
He's gonna have a hundred thousand dollar mortgage.
Even Dave Ramsey would not tell him to not go on vacation.
And by the way, Dave is on vacation right now.
Like, that's what me and George are here.
Even if this vacation cost him money,
we'd say, hey, have a good time,
budget for it, pay cash.
We wouldn't tell him to not pay, just budget for it.
Put 63,000 down in the house
and go have some fun with your mom.
That is what I'll tell him,
but he's pretty serious that bothers him, so.
Well, it's allowed to bother him.
He just can't blame anybody else but the dude in the mirror.
Yeah, don't throw John and I under the bus.
Don't sully our good names.
We don't have great names, George.
It's fine.
But yeah, he's got to own this.
Say, I don't want to, I'm so paranoid
about my $100,000 mortgage
that I don't feel like I could go.
Oh yeah.
Does he have a girlfriend?
Does he have a girlfriend?
No.
Okay, so it's just him.
It's just him. Okay. Is he a fuddy-duddy? Does he enjoy anything in his life?
Because I don't know many 20 year olds that have 65k. He would like to be a
homeowner.
She's a different child. He
splits cars on the side and works a full-time job.
Okay. He's just been trying to rake in money to make sure that he can be set for life.
Here's what I want you to tell him, Samantha. I want you to tell them that you talked to the
Dave Ramsey guys and they approved his expenditures or his time away. But then I want you to look at
him and say, and I don't care what Dave Ramsey says because I'm your mother. It would be a
great deal to me if you would go on this trip with me. I
Surely will will you say that to him?
Yes, where's the vacation to?
We want to take a cruise out of Miami for six days we do or you do
We've gone on cruises every other year So they picked the destination of going down was that's that? Out of Miami to the Caribbean. Both my kids.
Including your son?
Yes.
Hold on. He picked the destination and he's gone every other year, but all of a sudden
he's like, no, no, no, no, no, mom, I can't go.
It's just, yeah, he keeps saying I'm about to close on this house any day and that's
a lot of debt.
Is he stressed out about this?
He has a job that has, I think he's a little stressed just because it's the unknown, but
he has PTO that'll still pay him while he's on vacation.
I told him he'd still be fine.
He could still make his expenses, but he's like, I could just get a second job during
those six days and add like a construction company and help pull my debt down more.
I'm weirded out that he's that concerned about this debt.
I took a call this week about a guy who's $100,000
in debt from day trading.
And so for him to be concerned about a mortgage,
it's $100,000.
There's guys who have car payments bigger than his mortgage
who will call into the show this week.
So I just think there's something behind this.
I think that's what we need to get to the root of,
because I don't think it has anything to do with money,
unless he's truly stepping into home ownership
as a young guy and he's scared.
He's going, I don't know what this is gonna cost me,
and I feel like stepping away from this is a bad idea,
and I got new expenses in my life,
but it's not the actual expense that's bothering him
of this vacation.
I have a big concern. I think it's just the unknown, since's bothering him of this vacation. I have a big concern.
I think it's just the unknown
since you don't know what's gonna happen
when you move to a new house.
But he's got the money.
It sounds like he's got no debt
and a fully funded emergency fund.
He's investing for his future.
He sounds like he's got the baby steps down pat.
And he's 20.
He's 20.
That puts him ahead of 95% of all Americans.
He's further ahead than I was at 20. That puts him ahead of 95% of all Americans. I'm sure he's further ahead than I was at 20. Me too, by a hundred miles. Maybe you tell him this, that hey, this may be a great opportunity
for you to take him to breakfast and say, hey, I've taught you how to live financially
and you've picked up those messages from me, but I also want to talk to you about a life well lived.
And an important part of a life well lived
is knowing when to exhale and put down the pen
or put down the hammer and just go see nature,
get on a boat, go let somebody else cook your meals
for a few days, go meet some new friends.
Does he like to read books?
No.
He's a gear head.
That's all he does is play with cars all day long.
Okay, so he's got his hobby and he's happy with it.
Well, I think you have a conversation with him
and say, listen, this is one of these experiences
I wanna have as you step into adulthood.
We know there's not many vacations left.
I got all the expenses covered.
If you have any fears about home ownership,
I'm happy to talk about those with you.
I'm happy to help, but with you. I'm happy to help.
But I would really mean a lot to me as your mom
if this was our last one big vacation.
As you step into home ownership, let's celebrate it.
And then as a good millionaire mom,
next year you have to give them the same speech.
Just one more vacation.
And then the year after that, you're gonna have to be like,
all right, listen, listen, one more vacation.
Like you've gotta keep doing this indefinitely.
I promise I can do that.
Who's the other child involved?
You have another son, a daughter?
I have a daughter, she's 18.
She's in a master's program.
She's for sure going, isn't she?
Oh yeah, she's like, sign me up.
Exactly.
Worst case, mother-daughter trip.
Best case, maybe she can convince him.
Sisters have a way of getting under brother's skin.
Maybe she's the chicken.
Push his buttons a little bit, get him riled up.
Investing may seem complicated or confusing, but it doesn't have to be that way.
Whether you're a complete beginner or you're looking for next level strategies, we've got
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So go to ramsysolutions.com slash investing to check it out or click the link in the description
if you're listening on YouTube or podcast. Katie is up next in Columbus, Ohio. What's going on Katie?
Hi there. Hi George and John. My question is should me and my husband continue our
debt snowball if he may be losing his be out of work in 90 days? Oh wow. How
imminent is this? Well he was just told
today that he either needs to find another position within the organization
or he needs to or he'll be let go in 90 days from his current position. Wow, what's
the cause of this? They are canceling out that position. So I mean, I guess the first thing I would do if I was him would be to get another job
in that organization so he can keep a paycheck coming while he figures out what's next, right?
Yes, and that's what he's planning to do.
Great, great, great, great.
Are they wanting to keep him on board and put him in another role or is the writing
on the wall
Hey, we don't want you here
No, usually for somebody in his position. They would have just like walked into the door
but
Because of his relationship with the administration
They actually gave him 90 days and they want him to stay within the hospital. Okay, what's he making right now?
105 okay, and are you working outside the home? I Okay, what's he making right now? About $105.
Okay, and are you working outside the home?
I am.
What do you make?
Yes, so including my VA benefits, I make $173.
$173?
Yes.
Wow, way to go.
Did you all have a crush on him?
I'm a quarter million dollars.
Yeah. How much debt do you me? I'm a quarter million dollars. Yeah.
How much debt do you have?
We had a plan.
Our debt without the house is $200,000 and then with the house is about $400,000.
Okay, what kind of debt's the $200,000?
This includes student loans, some loans that we took out, the vehicle, and then just like some other little things.
We paid off a good chunk, like we don't have any credit cards anymore, anything like that.
Yo, what's the current rate?
If your husband kept his job, how soon would you guys be free of that $200,000 in consumer
debt?
If he kept his job in the next four years including the house,
the way that we're going. Okay, because making a quarter million, if this has
been the case, I feel like you guys could knock out more than 50k a year, which is
the current track you're on. Absolutely, and we've been very diligent about just
living within our means, not eating out. We used to have a $1,600
a month food bill. We have five boys. We've gotten that down to $1,100.
Good.
And we've just been really, really tight with our budget.
How much money do you guys have in savings right now?
We have about five. in our emergency fund,
we have about five.
Five thousand.
We had to use some recently for an emergency.
Okay, so you've been doing the baby steps out of order.
Baby step one, thousand bucks, anything beyond that
starts going toward the debt.
You have more than that saved up.
So we would tell most people in this case that,
hey, if you're in storm mode or stork mode,
if you have a baby on the way,
those are the two times to pause the debt snowball.
And so if he knows for sure he won't have a job,
then I would pause that debt snowball,
just make minimum payments on the debts
and just stack up cash to cover you guys
until he has stable income again.
Okay, can I add that if I'm just the one paying like our bills and our minimum, we would have
about $3,000 left monthly.
Okay.
That we could put towards debt. So should we just save that still if he's not working
or should we just-
You're saying even without his income?
Correct.
Okay. So if he lost his income today, you're making your 173, you'd
still have three grand left over. So you're saying really we're good. We're okay. Is your
job stable? I'm a healthcare provider. So I can easily find another position much quicker
than okay. Yeah, if you're in a good position financially, where you can continue that snowball,
absolutely. But if it was a situation
where you're not gonna be able to cover your bills,
well, that's different.
And so if you can cover all of your expenses plus some,
plus cover the minimums, plus throw some of the debt,
I would continue.
And all that will do is just slow down your debt snowball
until he has gainful employment again.
Okay.
So I'm good with that plan.
I would prefer you guys keep, you know,
push play on the debt snowball and not pause it because because I want to see you guys out of debt real soon.
In fact, I want to see it done in two years. If he can keep this income up, I think two
years is the goal at most.
I agree, and God has blessed us tremendously. And I also, I can bonus. And so, you know, if I bonus,
then we just plan to put all that to the debt as well.
I love it.
Yeah.
And if I would push,
I would do that regardless of if he keeps the job or not,
if he gets another one,
I would get that bonus,
work as much overtime as you can and clean up this mess.
Cause you guys are too successful
to be hanging on to this debt.
So I'm rooting for you.
And I wish him the best on the job search. Greg is up next down the road from us in Nashville, Tennessee.
What's going on, Greg?
Hey, how's it going? I listen to you all the videos all the time, so thanks for taking
my call.
Oh, awesome. How can we help today?
Yeah. Well, basically, we just want you all to kind of help me settle an internal debate
about what to do with my 401k, kind of forward. Um, so I just quick understanding of my, I'm a 29 year old engineer.
I work for a firm that's an ETHOP.
So a hundred percent employee owned.
And so basically you're buying company stock with the retirement options.
And so they put in, if you put in 5%, they'll match up to 4%.
Uh, so I put in nine, so I'm getting an aggregate total of 13%
for towards 401k and I do a Roth 401k option so it's after taxes.
Right.
Well so we got our we got our ESOP statements just the other week and I'm at $100,000 I saved
up for retirement.
Right again.
Which I was yeah I'm very excited about but then I kind of had this a little bit of a debate going on of I
One part of me is like, oh, it's going great. Let's just keep focused on this
Maybe even at you know up the percentage of what I'm putting into this for. Okay
But then there's the other half of me. That's a little bit more conservative side of me
That's like well kind of putting all my eggs in one basket of, I'm only, you know, I totally buying company stock and my firm has been having a record
year for the past five years and I've only been there for six.
So I mean, it's been going great, but it's not like the normal.
So there's a part of me, it's like, okay, reduce my contributions down to the 5% to
get their match.
And then the other four, or I'll just round it up to five, and I normally do put that into a Roth IRA.
So, just diversify.
So is that the route y'all think I should go,
or do you kind of put it all on black?
And put it all on black on my...
Bro, my mom worked at a company called Enron.
They put it all on black.
And they gave everybody company stock
to keep buying company stocks
so that they could turn around
and give everybody more company stock
and everybody went broke overnight
when that company dissolved.
So I'm with you.
I have a built in bias against that.
Are you getting these stocks at 80% of cost or something?
Is there a discount here?
Well, and that's something I'll have to kind of,
I haven't dove too deep into since I'm so far out from actually-
Like is this an employee stock purchase plan,
or is the only option in your Roth 401k
to buy their company shares?
Or are there more options?
No, there are more options, and honestly,
that's something I could talk to kind of like my accounting
about-
Yeah, I wouldn't buy any of the stocks then.
Okay. They're not for- So you would just give them, yeah. Yeah, I would't buy any of the stock then. Okay.
They're not for you.
You would just give them it.
Yeah.
Yeah, I would just choose some great mutual funds inside of that 401k, invest up to the
match.
If they don't have great options, invest up to the match and then again, move on to that
Roth IRA and max that out if you can, if you do that without hitting your 15%.
So what's your total income?
At least from the firm, around 110 a year. 110.
That's about money, yeah.
Awesome. So at 15%, you'd be investing 16.5 a year.
And so you'd invest a portion of that
into your company account and then anything left over,
put into that Roth IRA.
And if you ran out options there, then you can move back to that Roth 401k at work and keep dumping some money into there.
Gotcha. You're crushing. So proud of you. Congrats, homie. It's awesome. A young dude with a good head on
his shoulders, an engineer, which we know is the number one career of millionaires in our millionaire
study, over 10,000 of them. So Greg, you're on the path, my man.
Keep it up.
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Anna is up next in Las Vegas.
What's going on, Anna?
How can we help?
Hi, thanks for taking my call.
Okay, I'll cut to the chase.
I'll have to tell you a brief story just so that you understand.
I like a story.
Yeah, a good story too.
I have a son who is a narcissist, like a horrible father, horrible son, horrible husband, everything.
Just think of the worst.
So I have a trust, and my son's in the trust with my other two children and my two
grandchildren.
My daughter-in-law is not in the trust.
Her, the financial advisor attorney said, you know, don't put her in case of divorce
or whatever.
Okay.
So she's not in it.
So I always felt like she was a stepchild.
I decided to pretty much disown my son because of
being like this horrible narcissist. So I have a brokerage account that my other
two children knew all about and they said don't give it to us we don't need
the money they're very successful you know they both make over a hundred
thousand dollars each you know just you know so they're like half a million
dollars a year and I said well won't you know, so they were like half a million dollars a year.
And I said, well, won't you feel bad? And they said, no,
just leave it to Scott. He can't hold down a job. All right.
So his name was on the brokerage account.
What I want to do and here's my question to you is I want to take him
off of it because he does not deserve it he doesn't know about it so
that's good
and what i wanted to put her
on it
because he are now getting divorced because i forced her to
i'll complain again to you if you forced your son's wife to divorce your son
yes what he's a narcissist. And he's causing the children to grow up to be ones.
You know what I'm saying?
You put children like that, they're six and seven,
in a toxic, horrible environment.
I don't know that a six-year-old can be a narcissist.
I would take off the clinical diagnostics.
If they're in an environment like that for so long.
And I talked to this seven-year-old because
he despite my mom you might find money needs to fill me
i can't get him
thirty thousand dollars
one year
because kept losing his job and again another fifteen
but now that it's that
you know how to keep him
pretty her indian school and in karate classes, because I think that's important for, you know, children.
She didn't see any of that money.
I just found this out when I went to Texas.
He kept all the money.
He didn't give it to anyone.
So how can we help you, love?
That's a hard one.
So that's my question.
Okay, I want to take her and put her on the brokerage account.
The ex-wife?
Yes.
If you do this, if you-
She's going to have, okay, okay.
To take care of the kids?
Here's my situation. Here's the situation. She will take care of those children. She's a
wonderful mother.
I know. Listen to me. Listen to me.
Okay. He's an ex-wife and he won't pay child support.
I know, listen, listen, listen, listen, listen, listen,
listen, listen. Okay, okay.
You not wanting to give him money,
cause he's not, let's don't call him a narcissist ever again.
That's using clinical diagnostics.
Let's just call him a bad person, okay?
Okay, he was diagnosed, but that's okay.
Okay, that's fine. Okay, if he was diagnosed, but that's okay. Okay, that's fine.
Okay, if he was diagnosed, I'll let you use it.
You know that, everyone on the internet uses it.
Okay, if that's his diagnostic, you can say that,
but let's just call a spade a spade.
He is not providing for his kids.
He's not taking care of his wife.
He's not a person of character, okay?
No.
So, you are well within your right to spend your money however you want to spend it.
Okay?
I know, but I want to do it financially correct.
I know.
I mean, I want to be a smart person.
Okay.
If you give her this money and she turns around and leaves him, he will get a huge chunk of
it during the divorce settlement.
Don't do that.
Okay, so I have to wait until they're divorced? No, no!
Just do this.
Okay.
Just say, I want to designate money,
and every year I want to pay for this with the kids.
And if in your trust...
But what do I do?
What do I do about this brokerage of kind?
I gotta leave it to someone.
Are you dying?
Well, I'm old.
Okay, well then put it in your will.
You don't have to liquidate it all right now.
Well, I don't have a will. I have a trust.
Okay, then put it in the trust.
I don't want to in the trust because I can't change a trust.
I promised my husband I wouldn't.
Have you talked to your estate planning attorney about all this?
Yeah, well, oh, about my brokerage account.
How much is in this account?
What are we talking about?
Oh, just 200,000.
I mean, it's no big deal.
Okay, then when she moves into a house, just...
She probably won't even get in the house.
She'll probably have to go in an apartment.
I mean, he's gonna, I'm telling you,
he's gonna quit his job, he's gonna save,
doesn't have any money, I know him.
Okay, but if you put money into an account
and give it to her, he will get it, you know that.
Even after the divorce?
Well, you gotta talk to with an attorney about that.
Okay, okay.
My guess is he's gonna file some sort of alimony,
some sort of something,
and he'll get his hands on it in some way.
That's why I would love to see-
Well, he's gonna ask for alimony from her.
I know he is.
That's why I'd love to see this directly go to,
hey, I just bought you a $200,000 house
and I'm gifting it to you.
Or I put 100 grand and a 529 for one kid's college
and I put 100 grand in another one.
And you can't do that, right, that way.
But you get what I'm saying.
I would love to see some direct gifts that are assets.
Yeah, so far you've just thrown money at problems
and hoped that they went to the right things.
Okay, okay.
And that's where we're wrong.
But listen.
But then, okay, so let's just say
I've got this $200 thousand dollars in a brokerage camp
And then she gets divorced and she's living in a little crappy apartment. I want to buy her house
Yeah, and look what we live in America. You can buy a house for anybody you want to okay
It might have a tax penalty for you. I don't know what all that is
I have to pay taxes on those
Well, that's what I'm saying. You're in a grand
You'll have your capital gains tax and if it was held for longer than a year
It'll be long term likely 15% depending on your situation.
So you'll pay 15% of whatever money you liquidate from the brokerage account.
But I think you should talk to your, get a tax pro and go to ramesysolutions.com.
Well I got, you know I'm a Ramsey girl.
So I have a tax pro through him.
Okay, then talk to your tax pro about what's the best way
to get this money into the hands of my grandkids
and that woman.
Okay, okay.
See, I didn't know who I should ask.
Yes, because there will be tax implications,
but they may be able to give tax, who knows?
Yeah.
Yeah, there's a few people you can work with.
The tax pro is gonna help with tax strategy.
You can contact a SmartVestor pro
to help with the investment side with the brokerage account
and what the best ways to use that are. And they can also connect
you with the right people if, hey, this is more of an estate planning thing. Sounds like
you have some history there with an estate planning attorney, but you know, whoever set
up the trust, but they're going to know the best way to set this up to keep his hands
off of it.
But here's what I'm hearing from you and I want you to be very careful, okay? Okay. You're mad. Oh I'm angry. Okay, you're angry. But I will, now
I will always be angry because he did something to me and I will never forget.
He almost had me die. Okay, so he almost killed you. Listen, listen, listen, listen.
No, he didn't almost kill me. He just wouldn't let me get my medicine.
I mean, it's no big deal, but you know,
this is unforgivable.
It's a huge deal, it's a huge deal, but listen to me.
When we are angry,
when we go to fight or when we go to flight,
our brains literally shut off
the critical thinking parts of our brain
and we are simply responding animals. We're running from things or we are fighting things. Okay? And so if you
are angry and you are moving this account out of anger, you're not gonna
think clearly. And I'm going... that's why you gotta get a professional in your
corner so that you can exhale and make a logical move, get a critical thinking brain
next to you, whether it's yours or a tax pros
or an investing pros or in a state attorney,
somebody who's gonna say, okay, I know you're mad,
but let's do this in the right way, in the right order.
Our scripture of the day, Isaiah 55 2.
Why do you spend money for what is not bread and your wages for what does not satisfy?
Listen carefully to me and eat what is good and let your soul delight itself in abundance.
Jordan Peterson said, the successful among us delay gratification and bargain with the future.
There's some wisdom for you. Jay is in Charlotte, North Carolina up next. What's going on, Jay?
Hey, thanks for taking my call. I've got a question. It might sound silly, but I don't really trust people or stockbrokers or whatever you want to call it with money.
I'm trying to make some passive investments and just kind of looking for some
advice on how to move forward without kind of maybe it's me not letting go of the reins or
something but I just I've seen the horror stories and I've heard the horror stories of people
trusting other people's money so that's kind of my my hesitance. Have you heard the millions and
millions and millions of other stories where people just put their
money with an investment professional or even in just an index fund and they've made, just
had a good retirement?
I have, man.
And I'm ignorant to how to move, how to do it.
I've done okay for myself and I'm just looking to make some passive investments, but I'm
scared to bite the bullet to be honest with you.
So I guess the big thing is there's no such thing as a passive investment. That's
a made up Instagram word. There's no such thing as that.
Okay.
Me and George, our colleague, Dave Ramsey, he owns a jillion rental houses and he'll
be the first to tell you there's zero passive about it. He owns shopping centers, zero passive about any of that. It's a job.
It's all work. Okay. So this idea that you just like set it and forget it is not a real
thing unless you're talking about mutual funds in the market or maybe that's more so what
I was talking about.
I'm sorry to interrupt you. Yeah. That's, that's more so what I was talking about. I've got
some commercial stuff and stuff like that. I consider that active, you know, I've got
my active stuff that I do, but I'm looking, so how do I get smart about the real stuff where you're just
handing over the money and they're investing it in companies and EFTs or whatever. It may
be that. That's more so where I need guidance.
Sure. I don't know if you've had a bad experience or if you've just read stories, but there's
a difference between a stockbroker
and a financial advisor.
So a stockbroker is on just a transactional person.
Hey, you wanna make this trade?
I'll make the trade for you
and I'll take a commission or a fee.
And so that's very clear what they're doing.
You're still in the driver's seat.
And I think I wanna remind you
that if you are not in the driver's seat,
you're working with the wrong person.
If they just say, hey, hey, hey, man,
just give me 10 grand, I got it. I'll turn it into 20 run far away. But if you're
in the driver's seat and they're educating you on what they're recommending to put the
money in and then you say, yes, I want to put my money in there and they're showing
you the track record. They're showing you the expense ratios. They're explaining all
this to you. That's a different situation. So I don't want to, you know, throw the baby
out with the bathwater
and say that all stock brokers are fraudsters
because that's not true.
And so I think you can do your due diligence.
You can jump onto ramsysolutions.com, hit SmartVestor,
and you can interview several financial advisors
and go with the one that you trust
and you still make all the decisions.
You control how much money goes into these accounts,
where this money flows into,
they'll show you at any given moment
how the investment's doing.
And the other side is,
this idea of just giving someone
and they just lose all the money,
that's legitimate scams and fraud.
That doesn't happen in the true investing world.
So let that also give you some peace of mind.
I would love to know,
like where does your heart rate get up? Where's
that from?
Where's that from? Yeah, yeah, I got, I got scammed a while back and then I was real close
to getting scammed by somebody recently here that was in the news. That was a big scammer
in the Southeast. So how are you finding these people that have scammed you?
They're finding me, I guess you would say.
Exactly.
So that's a key red flag.
If they're coming to you, run away.
Sure.
So you put the ball in your court,
you reach out to them and you can see,
hey, what are their qualifications?
Are they properly licensed?
Are they governed by the SEC?
This is not, my uncle said he can flip this investment.
And so I think that will, I think we need some time
to sort of heal from this and realize that
I fell for some traps and that
it's not all bad apples out there.
That will help you.
But you're asking about investing.
Are you looking to just invest outside of retirement?
Yeah, yeah, I'm looking to, you know,
I've got some cash and that's my cash,
so I'm just looking to like make that, you know,
I don't know where to put it other than money markets
at this time, you know, so that's kind of it.
Sure, well there's only, I'll tell you what,
the only type of investments Dave has
is real estate and mutual funds, and that's all unique.
And you can define mutual funds as an index fund.
I'm not, this is not a debate about index versus mutual.
What we're talking about is a giant group of stocks,
like 90 to 200 or more in one fund,
and then having multiple funds to diversify against that.
And so that's gonna also give you some piece
that the market's not gonna go down to zero, right?
If you have a single stock in a single company,
there's a chance that company goes bankrupt,
you lose all your money.
But when you're invested in the entire stock market,
well, we know that would be apocalyptic
if every company went to zero.
That's an insane predicament.
And so that should also give you some peace.
And we'll send you over our investing guide,
ramsaysolutions.com slash guide.
I think just reading through that
and understanding the basics of investing
will give you some peace of mind
that it's not as complicated as you think.
There's not some guy in a back room
secretly picking some secret stock
that no one else has access to.
It's just someone explaining to you how the market works,
what the track records have been,
and then just trusting that the US economy, like we've seen over time, will be up and to the right, even during
scary times like we're in right now.
And I guess, let me just say this man, my smart Vestor Pro that's been in the Ramsey
program forever, I've called and said, hey, I want to do this.
And he has taught me, like, I will do whatever you say. I work for you.
He says that all the time.
And he said, walk me through why you're thinking this.
And then he teaches me, here's why I'm doing what I'm doing.
Here's why I think your idea is not a good move.
And here's exactly how I will do it,
if that's what you want me to do.
And I've been with him for so long now.
Now we laugh.
Like, he'll say, hey, he'll know the market's down.
He'll text me and say, you're about to get an email.
Don't open it because you're gonna freak out
and you're gonna call me.
And so like just to whatever, whatever it's worth,
my experience has been 100% the opposite of yours.
And I don't wanna say that to like have any shame
or anything, I just wanna let you know,
dude, there's good guys out there
There's great men and women out there taking care of people like me. I'm super sensitive and I'm dramatic and all that who just
Work with me on
Like taking care of my my family's future. You know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah
That's what I'm looking for that and I want that peace of mind and I need that peace of mind because I'm getting older
And I just you know few more years. I want to call it mind and I need that peace of mind because I'm getting older and I just, you know,
few more years I want to call it quits.
You know?
Yeah, exactly, man.
And dude, I can hear it in your voice.
There's like a tension around it, man.
I want to free you from that, dude.
Not free you from the risk of financial stuff.
It's scary to put a lot of money out there.
You know, it's scary to say,
hey, take my money and you know,
know when I've worked so hard for it, you know?
Absolutely, yeah.
And you know what else is scary is seeing your money
not even grow at the rate of inflation.
Yeah, correct.
And so I also don't want you to just park it in a mattress
or even a money market for the next 20 years
because you're spooked by the market
or by stock brokers or whatever.
So you definitely need to get over this hurdle.
And I think interviewing some of these SmartVestor pros,
you can jump on ramsaysolutions.com slash SmartVestor
and type in your zip code and talk to them
and say, hey, here's all my fears.
Here's the trauma I experienced in the past.
Can you walk through this with me
and help me understand what I'm getting into
by trusting you and with these recommendations
on what to do with my money.
And if you don't get a good vibe,
just say, all right, I'm done.
I'm gonna move on to the next guy.
Hey Jay, how much have you lost?
About 250,000.
Okay, can I just tell you,
like your apprehension is well earned.
Your body's working perfectly, good on you.
You're not paranoid.
You're right to be apprehensive.
You're probably a little paranoid like me,
like paranoid recognizes paranoid, right?
Cause we all know it's all coming down, Jay.
Game recognizes game. But like, man, you got hit in the mouth hard. You're probably a little paranoid like me, like paranoid recognizes paranoid, right? Cause we all know it's all coming down, Jay. Right?
But like, man, you got hit in the mouth hard.
So good for you for not just running back into it
like a mad man, right?
But also the only way to have peace in your life
is to exhale and be smart,
but then get back in the ring at some point, right?
Yeah. Yeah. I hear you.
I hear you. Yeah. Good on you, yeah, I hear you. I hear you.
Yeah, good on you, man.
I appreciate it.
Good on you.
I appreciate it, man.
Thanks for taking the call.
All right, bro.
Yeah, good luck.
And I love this call,
because Jay was very honest,
just going, listen,
I don't have it all figured out.
And I've gotten burned before.
Been burned.
He's a smart guy.
He makes a lot of money.
And so this is not a guy who's a beginner,
but he's realizing I need a pro in my corner I can trust.
And it's the same reason I use a real estate agent and I have a barber, because I can't
be trusted to do these things myself.
I want to offload it to the experts.
And that's okay.
And if you want to connect with a SmartVestor like we mentioned, just jump on to ramsysolutions.com
slash SmartVestor, get connected, and give you some peace of mind.
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