The Ramsey Show - App - Debt Freedom Isn’t Fast—It’s Focused
Episode Date: June 3, 2025🔗 Share the Ramsey 101 Playlist! Jade Warshaw and Dr. John Delony answer your questions and discuss: "How do I support my family now that my husband is in jail?" "My kid is... not interested in managing my assets or my business. Should I donate everything instead?" "Is my job worth the sacrifice of not being around family and friends?" " Should we support a missionary who's being irresponsible with money?" "Should I pay cash for one rental property or leverage debt to buy multiple at once?" "Should I pull money from retirement to pay off debt?". 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. 📱 Download the free Ramsey Network app! 🙋♂️ Submit your story to have a chance to be featured on 90 Day Money Makeover 📈 Are you on track with the Baby Steps? Get a Free Personalized Plan 📊 Free Tools & Resources to Help You With Investing 💵 Start your free budget today. Download the EveryDollar app! ❤️🩹 Get trusted insurance coverage that fits your budget. 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 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
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Ramsey Show where we talk about your life and your money.
It's a call where you are the star and we take your live calls.
You can call in at 888-825-5225.
That's the number to get involved.
I'm Jade Warshaw.
Next to you is Dr. John Delo- Deloney.
Wow.
What's up with that?
Next to me.
Next to you.
I'm next to you.
You got the doctor on your name.
I'm sitting next to you.
That's right.
All right.
Let's get it started.
We got Lee in Nashville, Tennessee. What's going on,
Lee? Hey there. Oh, what's not going on? Yeah, yeah, we're in a bit of a crisis. I'm going
to try to keep it all together. We're not really in a crisis. We're actually in recovery
from a crisis. So we recently moved back near my hometown because my husband of 20 years was, well,
he took a plea deal, but he was essentially convicted of a crime that will put him in
prison for at least 10 years there.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
Holy smokes.
How are you feeling?
I mean, I'm better than I was. Yeah. Holy smokes. How are you feeling?
I mean, I'm better than I was. I've had a year to process it,
but there was so much to process
that I'll probably be processing for a decade.
You know?
Yeah. Do you have little ones?
So we have four kids.
The oldest is a junior in college,
and then I have the younger three still at home with me.
My youngest, of those three, it's 15, 11 and nine.
Wow. So a plea deal on 10 years, that means he was in to some not good stuff, huh?
Yeah, it was his ex-crime.
Yeah, okay. God, dude, I'm so sorry.
Yeah, thank you. You know, spiritually we're doing very well. We have a great church here,
good support system. You know, he had lived for himself for about 20 years, and for the last year,
I mean, something like this will really break you when you realize it hits you between the eyes what
you've been doing to yourself and your family. And he's been living for Christ for a year,
so seriously, we have that solace. But it doesn't really... Now I'm here,
I'm boots on the ground trying to figure this all out, and I've been a stay-at-home mom for 15 years.
Yeah. Are you still together?
And he was... No, we're divorcing. Okay.
Let's put it this way, it's amicable in the sense that it's with a lot of peace. Like,
we had a year to kind of work through the peace and forgiveness and watching him walk, if that makes sense. Sure, yeah, but there's
the spiritual connection, there's the resolution of the court deal, but that
light bill keeps coming and that water bill keeps coming, right? And that rent keeps coming.
Correct, and as you know, he was an excellent provider. He had a very
high-paying job, actually actually and some side jobs and we you
know we were kind of we're 40 and we were kind of at the crest of about to
push that snowball all the way down and really start building some serious wealth
and had a kind of a plan to pay our house off in the next three to two to
three years at that point you know it's just a lot and but by the time we had
hit January 1st you know he we had spent like $150,000 on
criminal defense and bond and civil attorneys, divorce attorneys, there's an attorney for
everything and-
So how bad is it right now?
Who do you owe?
It's not bad right now.
I have about $7,000 in credit card debt, but I have enough in the bank to cover that. I have about $50,000 left from the sale of our home. And because
of the circumstances and how much we had to spend that didn't benefit community property
in the divorce, I'm getting his 50% as well. So I'm leaving with everything we had left.
And how, what does that amount to? Can you tell us a little of that. Yeah, it's 260,000 in our 401k.
75 in a pension through a former employer.
10,000 through another employer in like a basically 401k through the military.
Cause that's the other thing,
we were two years from military retirement.
Hey, Lee, can I encourage you to do one thing
that's gonna be really, really hard?
Yeah.
It's going to be the probably the toughest thing existentially or spiritually that you're
going to have to do for the next six months to a year to maybe two years and beyond.
Okay.
Mm hmm.
In this short phone call, you've mentioned all of the things that were about to happen
or that were gonna happen.
And they're not gonna happen.
And they're not gonna happen. And every second you spend thinking about what almost happened
or what could have happened is energy taken away from a mama that now has to provide for
three kids all by herself.
Yeah, that's pretty much all day long. I mean, the grief is crushing.
Yeah, yeah. It's overwhelming. And it will be that way. And here's the crummiest, hardest thing
I'm going to say probably today on the show. The water bill doesn't care.
Right? And so this is going to be one of those things you're going to wake up in two and a half
years and wonder how you did it. And you're just going to have to go get it done. Right?
Yeah. And yes. And that's been the hard part right now is so when I moved, I lived with parents for
a while, they really did not have room for us. And they are not in a good school system. My kids
have always been in private school or homeschooled So knowing I needed to utilize the public school system moving forward
I moved to an area that has a really good public school system and my parents helped me
So I'm renting a house that has plenty of room. It's a great location. It's wonderful for me and the kids
It's right by can you afford it and my I can't afford on my own
But my parents are willing to pay half through it, pretty much indefinitely. Is that okay with you? Does that come with strings? No, it's no, it does not come
with strings. I will say I have, it would with my in-laws, but it doesn't with my parents. They will
do anything they can to help us and I'm willing, I would love to eventually be completely. I know,
I know, I know. You are, you're out at sea and are- I'm willing to- You're out at sea and you gotta grab that life raft
and I'm so, what a blessing that they're willing
to step up.
Yeah, I mean, we won't starve, you know, they're nearby.
Sure.
And I mean, I don't worry about it in the sense
that I know it's all gonna work and end up on the streets
or something, but I'm paralyzed in terms of what to do next.
Pay off all the debt and lose the cash. I obviously have been kind of looking around at jobs, but
I'm a little bit paralyzed with that. I'm thinking about maybe the school system, because most of my experience is with teaching. And that's great.
Listen, listen. Apply today. The dreams you had about the home school and the private school,
there's a period to end that sentence, it's over.
Yeah, it is, it's over.
The dream of the goat farm and the five acres and the chickens, that's over, right?
Yep.
For now, for now. What we're gonna do right now is we're gonna survive. So by the end of today,
you're calling the show on a Tuesday, by the end of Wednesday,
I want you to have applied to every open teaching position in your local district. And if you're,
if your district's like every district in America, they're desperate for teachers.
And is it going to be ideal? Nope. Is it going to be the best situation for you in the dreams you
had? Nope. Are you going to be an amazing teacher with empathy and compassion for those kids?
Absolutely. Is it going to take care of you and give you and your family had? Nope. Are you gonna be an amazing teacher with empathy and compassion for those kids?
Absolutely.
Is it gonna take care of you
and give you and your family insurance?
Yes.
Yeah, cause we haven't lost our insurance yet,
but the divorce will go through in the next couple of months
and I'll lose my insurance immediately
and then the kids will lose their insurance
whenever the military kicks them out.
So get on it today.
Like the only way to get through the paralysis
is to take a step.
Okay. Is that, you get what I'm saying?
Yes, I do.
I feel a little bit.
I mean, I haven't made a resume and it's got all these gaps.
I don't even know where to start on that.
How do I explain all of that?
Well, we're going to give you a bunch of gifts before we get off the line with you.
We're going to give you paycheck to purpose.
That's Ken's book. We're going to give you Paycheck to Purpose, that's Ken's book. We're going to give you Proximity Principle, that's Ken's book.
We're going to give you Find the Work You're Wired to Do with the assessment inside. All that's
going to walk you through the career side of this. There's a resume guide online. So go to
ramsesolutions.com and put in the search thing, the resume builder, and it will walk you through
a template on how to do that. And hey, call us back. Call us back if you need us. We're here. It's the same number.
We'll be here to help you.
Back to the phone lines we go
where Jerry is in Billings, Montana.
Hey Jerry, how can we help?
I need some help passing on my portfolio.
Passing it on?
Okay, tell us more.
Yeah, passing it on.
We have one child and I've been married for 42 years and I've been working in mining for 43 years and made a lot of mistakes whenever
I was young and got myself really, really upside down in debt. And I put all my money
into metals and real estate.
Okay. How'd the real estate do?
Really good. Montana is really good. Yeah.
Out of that, my, uh, uh,
my child, uh, is moving away.
She's moving out of state and she has no interest in what I built or what my wife and
I built because I couldn't have built this without my wife. Talking about the real estate stuff.
Everything, everything. The metals and on and on and on. I couldn't have built this without my wife's
support. When you say she has no interest, what does that mean?
Does it mean that she doesn't want to manage properties and manage a metals portfolio?
No, no, she doesn't.
And she is a millennial and I'm not beating up on millennials, but she's dialed into, Hey, we're going to go off and we're going to grow corn or whatever out in the
mid blast. And my question,
I've worked,
I've worked for four decades to build this.
And I went way, way, way down.
And at one time I was like 85,000 in unscared debt and I climbed out that without
filing bankruptcy.
I got you.
Uh huh.
And so you, you feel a personal connection to this.
Like this is, this is not just money you built.
Your whole story is like wrapped up into this.
Right.
I get it.
I've worked hard for this and she's showing no real interest and
I... But let's be fair. Not to be unfair, but her husband comes from a different lineage.
Yeah, but Jerry, it's not even about that. You're just two different people.
Yeah, it's not an indictment of what you've done. You did a great job, man.
people. Yeah, it's not an indictment of what you've done. You did a great job, man.
Here's the question. What do I do with it? Because I'm not going to give it to somebody that doesn't appreciate it. I think, well, I think you, let's talk
about it because I, on the one hand, I hear what you're saying. I'm not saying I
agree with it, but I 100% understand what you're saying. And on the other hand, I think there's a
part of this where she's not Jerry, she's who she is. And so
she's gonna have different interests, her story is going to
be different, the things that are the ways that she wants to
divest her energies are different from you. Now, I do
agree with you that if you have the sense that she's not
going to manage money in general well or if she's got some, you know, proclivity
to go off the rails or something, that's something, that's a totally different
conversation. But if you say, hey, I'm leaving you, you know, when I beam up to
heaven, I'm leaving you my portfolio and the thought is you'll manage it
and you will be a good steward of it.
She might not keep it in precious metals.
She might decide to roll it over into mutual funds
and do it that way.
But if she's being a good steward of it,
I think that's a green check mark.
Same thing with the properties.
If you leave her the properties
and if maybe there's some really important piece of land,
I don't know, that you're like, hey, no matter what,
just don't sell this piece,
I'd like this to be generational.
Maybe you make that stipulation,
but to assume that she wants to be a real estate mogul
over this huge, I don't know how much it is,
we didn't even talk about how much.
That's a little bit unfair, John, am I off?
Yeah, what are we missing, Jerry?
Well, we're missing this, okay okay I've worked very very hard and to
build this to pass on and because I'm in my golden years she's moving away she's
moving out of state about 1200 miles away and okay too so sad, I'm out of here.
Hold on, I don't think that's fair, Jerry. Hang on, hang on just a second.
Okay.
I've helped take care of my parents
and I helped take care of my wife's parents.
And I didn't think it was really unreasonable to say,
hey, look, you bet that we can, we can, we can watch the dogs for the weekend while you guys go on your hot
air blunt. That that is not an option. I don't have a 401k.
Okay. How much how much do you have in your total all
portfolio? How much are you worth?
Multiple seven figures.
Tell us 10 give us closer.
10 million, 20 million?
Yeah, that could be a lot of things.
About, about 3.6.
Okay, 3.6 million.
Okay, first off, I want to say good job.
Great.
Because the fact that you've told us a couple of different times I did this.
And I think that no one's telling you, no one in your life is saying, hey, really great job.
And so I want to tell you, that's a really great job.
It's not easy to fight back
and acquire what you've acquired and amass what you've amassed.
So really, really great job.
I'm proud of you for that.
Now.
Yeah, here's the second thing.
You know what you raised?
Exactly what you wanted to,
which is a tough, smart, bullheaded daughter just like her old man with her
own thoughts and her own, I'm gonna do it my way. And so it sounds like you're
grieving the fact that she's not living by you anymore, is that fair? No. No? No,
no, that's not fair. What I'm grieving is the fact that she's not appreciating
what I'm passing on.
Show us, Jerry, explain to us what she's done that's unappreciative because we're missing that piece.
Tell us, give us a picture of what that looks like.
The lack of concern for the properties that she's been taking care of.
Okay.
And I gave her a little
bit of responsibilities. I've given her cars, I've given her real estate, given
her all kinds of stuff and... She's not taking care of it? It's all gone by the wayside.
Did she ask for any of this stuff? No. Okay. So let me, let me, let me, it's a little bit of a different direction, but let me see if
this is a way I can, I can put this on the table that we can both digest it. My dad was a policeman.
He was a homicide detective, and then he was a SWAT hostage negotiator, and then he quit all
of that to be a minister, and then he became a policeman again years years later. And
then he became a college professor and he just retired. We always talked about
when I was a kid about me coming into law enforcement and I wanted to get into
the FBI and I wanted to be a hostage. I wanted to do all that stuff. And instead
I went into education. But what I took with me from my dad is that when there's
hurting people you show up. And I learned how to talk to people in hard situations and and and so I didn't get
into quote-unquote the family business but I took his lessons and his skills
that he I watched him teach me and I put them on the table I for some reason it
sounds like you gave her all this stuff that she never asked for and you're holding her accountable for it
And now you're gonna take three and a half million dollars
And instead of cashing out and making sure you have a safe good retirement and leaving the rest to your only daughter
It's almost like you're punishing her for not loving the same things you love or not wanting the same things you wanted in your life
I want that that's a huge thing. Uh,
I want a secure future and I want her to have the secure future.
And I think it appears to me that she is
completely oblivious. Nobody, nobody, unless they can do this,
nobody has any idea what it's like to work in an underground mine.
And that's what I've done for the last 43 years.
Right, but she's not gonna work in an underground mine.
And she doesn't need to.
All she needs to be is a good steward of what you give her.
And she doesn't have to do it in the exact same ways.
She doesn't have to keep it in gold and silver
and precious metals.
She doesn't even necessarily have to keep the real estate
if she's not a great, she might not just be a great,
everybody's not a great landlord.
Everybody's not a great real estate manager.
But if she can transfer that wealth into the things
that she is good at.
Into farming, into selling eggs or whatever.
It's all in the same family.
That's right.
Yeah.
If she's a person who lacks character, that's one thing.
That's one thing. I don't hear that. I don't either. I hear a dad who's sad that she's not
going into the family business. Man, you got to make peace with that.
You're listening to the Ramsey Show. All right. So many out there, so many of you guys out there
are doing a great job of sharing the show.
You're taking it to the streets,
letting everybody know how to win with money.
And we thank you for that.
We tell you all the time, hey, share the show.
And you guys have been doing that.
But starting now in June,
we're gonna make that even easier for you
because what happens is like sometimes people go
and they'll just see like Dave Ramsey in his element. And're like, oh man, this is, this is a lot right now.
Or they'll see me or John kind of like wilding out about a certain topic.
So what if we could send them the perfectly curated playlist just to get them on the on
ramp so that they're seeing the right things first.
So they're just like not hitting it in the middle of the movie.
Right?
So this playlist is filled with classic Ramsey clips, like what the baby steps are, how to
pay off debt with the debt snowball method, how to build an emergency fund and all that
good stuff.
So it'll kind of like track them through in order, which is good.
So if you're interested in that, there's a way to share it.
All you have to do is click the link at the top of the show notes to open the Ramsey 101
playlist. Okay, so that's what you're looking for.
Ramsey 101 playlist.
You could text it, DM it, send it out in the group chat, you know, with a little, hey,
I thought you could use this.
Just don't sound like condescending or anything like that.
Or if you're listening on radio, you can also find that playlist featured at the top of
our YouTube channel, which is great.
So think about it right now.
Take a moment and think about one person that you're going to share
this list with.
John, who are you sharing it with?
I will, I'm gonna keep that a secret.
Really?
Because it's a family member.
Okay.
They need all in.
It's on a need to know basis, okay.
So one share, one step, and this could change
one person's life forever.
So forever.
Forever.
All right, there you go.
Let's go to Kim, who's in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
Hey, Kim, what's up?
Hi.
How do I get some advice on what I should do with
the money that I'm going to receive from the sale of my house?
So I had lost my husband 20 years ago
and I was a stay at home mom at the time.
And we,
his life insurance policy had expired about two weeks before he died and he died
unexpectedly. I'm sorry. So, um, thank you. Um, anyway,
I just feel like, you know, I spent 20 years like raising the kids and, um,
really spent everything I was able to make. Um, I went back,
became a teacher. I originally have an accounting degree.
I knew that I really couldn't spend that time working in that field just because
it was, it was just so much of my time was spent at work.
And so I went back and became a teacher. And so I've been a teacher since, um,
2008. Um, I love what I do. I'm a special education teacher. Uh, you know, I don't make the greatest amount of money, but I,
the only thing I guess I did right was the fact that I'm not in debt.
Good.
I, my car, it's old, but it's paid for.
Good.
And I have about $450,000 that I should walk away with when I sell the house I'm in.
Wow.
What are his calls?
What's causing you to sell the house?
Is it just a life change?
You need the money?
What's up with that? Well, I don't have the, I've obviously not been able to
have the, like a retirement plan at all in the last 20
years.
So when you were teaching, you didn't put any aside.
Yeah, like in the teacher retirement system?
Usually you're required to put something.
I would always have to take it out and use it.
And so right now I'm just, I have like 20,000 in a,
like I don't work in a public school,
I work in a charter school.
So I don't get that teacher retirement when I retire.
It's a 401k.
So you have 20,000 in a 401k?
Right.
And then I have about 4,000 in a Roth IRA.
And then I have about 20,000 in my savings account.
And then other than that, I don't really have anything else.
How old are you?
I'm 56.
Okay. So you're thinking I'll sell
this house and what? Tell me your thoughts and I can kind of help you stay on track.
Well, I'm thinking buying something cheaper and maybe investing the rest or do I rent
and invest all of it?
I would not do that.
Okay, I like how your brain is thinking.
So if I were you, what area are you in?
Okay, you're in Oklahoma City area.
I would, yeah, if I could, the 450,000,
yeah, if I could get something in cash outright
for maybe 300, I might do that, and invest the other 150.
And then my question would be to you is,
how much longer do you plan on working?
Because that 150 will continue to grow, you know,
so will the 20,000 and the Roth IRA.
But you've gotta continue working,
and you've gotta start doing baby step four,
because you're in baby step four,
but you've gotta do it, which is contribute 15% of your gross every single month. That's going to be the key here for the next 15 years.
Yeah. And I was going to start like, so my work contributes 7% of my income. No matter
what I do, they contribute 7%. That's what we're, that's what John and I were talking
about earlier. So how much is that? Okay, how much is that?
It's only like 350 a month, right? But what's it grown to? Oh
No, that's the one that's the 20,000. That's the one I was talking about
So I've only worked at this particular school for five years
Okay, okay. So keep doing that and then only ratchet it up to 15%
So they're taking the seven you do the rest and honestly if you can
You let that 7% kind of be gravy and you still do 15% if you can
Okay, because you're gonna have a better choice when you do your own Roth IRA and you do your own
You're gonna have a better choice of how it's invested. So that's the reason I say that. Oh
your own, you're going to have a better choice of how it's invested.
So that's the reason I say that.
Oh, okay. Well, I mean, I'm happy with, with how it's grown in this particular, um,
however they've invested it at this point.
Um, I think it's decent growth.
I want to say on average it's been, you know, 13 inch percent.
Okay.
That's great.
Then you add another eight to it
and keep the train rolling, you know.
That's what I would do.
I'm just concerned that, you know,
is it going to be enough?
And because I'm starting so late,
and so that's where I'm a little bit,
I get tired of making the decisions alone
because there's really nobody to balance that off of. And, you know, I just, I'm concerned that, you know, what happens if I can't
work, you know, or I mean, I'll work as long as I can because I have the ability to do that in the
field that I'm in. Let me say this. Can I, can I just, normally if you and I were just like sitting down having nachos,
me and you and Jade were just sitting down having nachos talking through this, I would
wait longer and build a better rapport with you before I said what I'm about to say.
But since we're condensed, can I just throw it out there?
Sure.
Okay.
Exhale.
So for the last 20 years, you've been doing this on your own, right?
And you had three young kids at the time when your husband passed away?
Yeah, there were one, three and eight at the time.
So you did what you had to do to survive.
And I'm going to say this with all the love in my heart, so hear me, okay?
Can you say out loud, we're on the same team?
We're on the same team.
Math doesn't care. And so over the last 15 years, 20 years,
you made choices about what kind of shoes they were going to wear, what schools they
were going to go to, what camps they were going to go to, what meals y'all had, all
that stuff as a single parent. And I'm not going gonna judge you on that because I wouldn't wish what you experienced on my worst enemy.
But the reality is you're 56
and there's nobody else coming for you.
But there's hope here.
There's tons of hope here,
but you're gonna have to adjust your lifestyle
as though you are caring for the 75-year-old version
of yourself right now.
So good.
So that means you're gonna have to opt out on meals,
opt out on vacations.
And if you wanna go see grandkids
when your children start having babies,
they may have to help you get there.
But we gotta take care of 75 year old you.
How's it gonna set up?
So let me tell you right now,
if you work your 56, if you work till you're 69,
right now we've said we'll take 150 and invest
it, put it with the 20, so now you're at 170.
If you can invest 700 a month, I think you said they're already taking out 350, if you
can match that, right, so you're doing about 15%, if you can let that grow, that's going
to be $842,000, okay?
So take that as a starting point.
I want you to get on that ramsysolutions.com investment calculator and I want you to play
with that number, play with that lump sum amount because if you can start with a $200,000
lump sum, it'll change everything.
If you are sick and tired of living paycheck to paycheck and wondering where the heck your
money's going, your first step,
numero uno, is getting on a budget. Good thing our team is hosting a free budgeting training
this month. You'll learn step by step how to make a budget, how to stick to a budget, and every dollar
is going to be on there live, right? So they're there to answer all of your important questions
about budgeting. So spots are limited. You can sign up for free at everydollar.com slash webinar.
Sign up for free today to change your life.
All right, Logan is in Iowa City, Iowa.
Hello, Logan, how can we help you today?
Hey, how's it going guys?
Thank you for giving me a chance to get on the phone.
I didn't really know I could do this until my dad mentioned it, so I'm grateful.
There you go.
Yeah.
I am in a spot where I live far away from home and don't see family or friends often
at all.
And I make really good money at the job that I'm at, and so that's why I've done it and
I've moved away.
Home is in Utah.
Okay.
But I'm currently in Iowa.
What are you doing?
The number one, what was that?
What's the job you're doing?
I sell solar panels.
Okay, excellent.
Going from job to job with the crew?
Yeah, so door to door,
I manage and help run the sales team here.
So I have employees that set appointments for me and I
walk into warm leads and close deals for solar appointments. Outstanding.
So what's your question brother? Yeah so I've been in this job for only a year
full-time and I've just to give you all the facts I don't mean to boast or
anything but just to give facts so I can get the best perspective on my situation.
And if that's all right. Yeah.
Real quick here, your phone is making a real fuzzy sound there.
Is that better? Much better. Yeah. Thank you.
Sorry about that. So good. Yeah. So I,
I've made 200 grand this last year,
which has been so far the most amount of money I've
made in a fiscal year, but I'm just far away from family and friends, which are high value
for me to be around.
And really the number one pursuit that I want to pursue in life right now is just companionship.
So you're trying to see is it worth it?
Yeah.
So I'm just trying to understand if it's worth living far away from home if it pulls me away from family and what's
your end goal? Well the end goal in general or with work? Well like this like in my
20s while my friends were starting families and like doing more hanging out
I spent more time in library studying, but I had an end goal.
And...
Yeah, the goal is to build currently financial freedom so that I can be more free.
Alright, how much cash do you have in the bank?
I have about 60 grand saved.
And do you have any debt?
No.
You made 200 grand living by yourself.
Why do you only have 60 grand in the bank?
Yeah, just investing back into the business.
Okay.
And so for me, I think the key here is a timeline.
I think that's what's gonna set you free
because you don't have any debt,
you're already stacking up cash,
you're investing back into your business, that's cool.
I think what'll give you kind of a light
at the end of the tunnel is to say,
okay, I'm gonna do this for four years,
or I'm gonna do this for three years,
and once I hit, like, make a clear goalpost
and a clear end zone so you know when you get there,
spike the ball, and now you can move on to the other thing
that you really love, but right now it feels like
it's just kind of an open, you know,
it's just an open road and you could probably go forever,
and that could mess you up if you really miss your family, you really miss your friends.
Did you have a timeline or is that kind of new information?
No, I mean, I have, I have a one year and five year plan for business, but the struggle is just
that I want to pursue relationships and specifically from Utah, I don't know if you guys know, but it's
a very dominant religion there. And I'm part of the LDS faith and so I want someone
as a partner, a life partner who has also grown up in that faith and so finding a wife
or a girl standing in Iowa is difficult compared to what it would be like in Utah.
It is, but it's not.
Like you can pursue it. If, I mean, it's just gonna be less comfortable
but you can pursue it.
There's a local church in Iowa.
I'm confident of it.
There's probably multiple local churches there in Iowa.
But I love what you said, Jade,
about I wanna have $250,000 in cash in the bank
and then I'm gonna go back home.
Yeah, set the time.
So saying that you're in Iowa
and that means you can't get companionship,
that's just simply not true.
It might be more of a challenge than it would be in Utah.
But-
I gotta believe there's a dating site specifically for-
I assure you there is.
For this purpose.
I assure you there is, but here's the deal.
I think that that feels a little bit,
I mean, that feels Logan like it's kind of
the proxy challenge, the real challenge is
it's not cool to say it if you're a 25 year old
young man making money, but I miss my family.
Yeah.
Or I miss my buddies or I miss the action.
That's all fair to say, just own it.
And maybe you build your business up right now.
Maybe you could sell it to somebody for 150 grand
and you've got 60, you got 150.
I'm going to take 210 back to in my checking account.
I'm going to go home and I'm going to call it.
I'm going to start a new business there.
If you can do warm leads, if you can go door to door in Iowa, you can go door to door anywhere.
That means you can you're the person that can make any kind of money anywhere
because you're not scared to go door to door.
And, you know, let me just give you a little bit of hope.
Possibly. I mean, you said you made 200K last year.
I think he's only been doing this two years.
I'll tell you, I moved to Nashville from South Florida.
I lived in South Florida for my entire adult life.
It is my home and it's where all my people are.
And when my husband and I picked up
and moved here to Nashville, I, let's see,
it'll be three years in July,
and I am just starting to be like, okay.
Like just starting.
I'm in year seven and I'm not even there yet.
Bro, it's tough.
I'm taking time.
Roots are a very real thing.
Like when you put down roots somewhere, it's like a plant.
Like in my house, there's tons of plants everywhere.
If I replant something and I don't treat the roots right
and I just pull it up and I replant it,
it freaks out for a while.
It drops leaves.
It does a whole lot of things
because it's trying to adjust to new soil.
If I move it from downstairs, upstairs, a new environment,
like all of those things, when you had roots down,
it does something.
It shocks your system when you pull that up.
And so I think that's just what you're feeling.
It's not to say that you can't exist
and you can't thrive in this new environment,
but you do have to give it time
and you have to give yourself the space
to just learn how to grow in a new place.
And so hopefully that kind of helps you out a little bit.
The good news is with the interwebs
and the internets the way they are,
you know, you can FaceTime and you can hop on
and see your people and you know, you're making a lot of money.
So hop on a plane and go see them as often as you can.
That's what I do.
But give it a timeline and I promise you,
you'll make it through.
It's tough.
It's not easy.
It's not easy.
All right, John, I love a good social question.
Oh, great.
I do.
But where are mine?
Do you have your, oh, there it is.
All right, from social media, we have Robin.
I love a Facebook question
because people on Facebook, they are different.
Okay, she says, after getting married,
how long is too long to wait on getting baby step two started?
I think.
Before you get married.
After you get married, like the day after the wedding, I guess?
Not that, come on, John, we got other things to focus on. Okay, the day after the wedding, I guess? Not that. Come on, John, we got other things to focus on.
OK, the day after the day after the wedding.
Yeah, I think as quickly as you can get on the same page about it instantly.
OK, that was an easy word.
OK, let's see what Janelle from Facebook asks.
She says, I know you aren't supposed to prepay for a funeral,
but what about cemetery plots? It's getting dark.
I, I don't know what, what is like,
is there like a standard Ramsey teaching on cemetery plots?
Don't do it. Don't do it.
Yeah. Just don't do it. Don't prepay.
That is what we say.
Honestly, I don't get this question a lot.
I would just not prepay.
I think that you can get a deal if you prepay
and that's why people do it. But my thing is like I'd rather, I'd rather put it in my will what I want
and then the money is there for everybody to carry out those wishes.
Well because here like it sounds like and again I'm speaking out of my ears
here because because I don't I don't keep up with this. My
grandparents both had plots next to each other. Yeah. And I'm wondering if that's a thing that
you did back in the day. It is. I think it is. But if I had bought cemetery plots when I was younger,
I would have bought plots in Texas. Yeah. My whole family lives in Nashville now. Right. And
that's where my kids are born and raised. Right. This is their home. Right. And so I wouldn't want them
having to move me back to this plot that I, right. So I'm of the opinion, put some
money aside and when the day comes, then the day comes. Yeah, because wishes change.
All right. That's a strange way to end this segment, but we'll be right back
with you before you know it.
This is The Ramsey Show where we talk about your life and your money. We're here on The
Ramsey Network taking your calls. 888-825-5255 gets you on the line. I'm Jade Warshaw next to Dr.
John Deloney. Let's chop it up with Natalie in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
What's up, Natalie?
Hi.
So I am calling about a question.
If is it appropriate to support financially support a missionary with debt and who is
making some questionable financial decisions?
Tell me more.
Yes.
So my, my husband and I have a family member who works as a missionary here in the
U S we've financially supported her for years. She carries those student loans and car loan
debt. Um, in our opinion, she's made some very questionable financial choices. She,
um, well, she announced she's going to be going overseas for a year.
She's going overseas for missions and for the first year she will be traveling to meet
with different teams to see where God is calling her.
Prior to going, she's going to take two months off at home to rest.
This is coming after a beach trip with friends, a retreat in Colorado, and an upcoming tropical
overseas vacation for her birthday.
Why are you calling us? You know the answer.
You just don't feel good about giving her the money.
Yeah, have you sat down and said no?
No.
Why?
So it's family, so it makes it hard.
No, it makes it more important because the rest of the world doesn't seem to be telling her the truth.
Yeah.
And they're desperate for someone who loves her like her aunt
to say, hey, look,
because she's living in an alt universe.
Can I raise my hand here?
Yes.
Because I'm going to raise my hand because I'm going to act like,
well, part of me is I don't know,
and then I'm also going to act like I really don't know
for the people who really don't know.
So here's the way my brain filters it,
and you guys tell me if I'm wrong.
I'm thinking, okay, if I am,
let's pretend I'm the missionary.
If I'm Jade, if I wanna go to the beach, I pay for that.
If I wanna go do Jade things, I pay for the Jade things.
And then if I think, hey, I'm going to go do this work
that is a mission and I'm giving some of my funding to it and
then if I say John if you care about this would you like to fund some of it too? The
money you give me is only going to the mission trip then I don't think that's wrong if you
saw me go to the beach and I use my own money to go to the beach.
Not at all.
So what are we talking about that or are we talking about she's using missionary money
to go to the beach?
So her entire salary is funded through mission.
Right. So all of her income
would be going towards the beach.
No, and the reason I'm smiling really big
is I knew these students.
I know these folks. I don't know.
So yes, because here's what you're doing.
You're giving her $5,000 a year
and it's going to her student loan interest
and you're paying the interest on her car note
Yes, yes, you are not serving the least of these in under underprivileged communities that desperately need food and shelter and support
Yeah, you're paying a car note. Why isn't it separate? Why is it all together?
Because it's a it's a whole ecosystem of of, dude, we're about to get some, we're about to get canceled.
It's an ecosystem where I am, you raise support for your salary.
Okay.
And let's say you make 50,000, like quote unquote, make $50,000 a year.
You go meet in homes, you meet with folks and you get a number that will be your number
for the year. Got you.
But you quote unquote live off that, right?
Okay, so now there's red tape.
Well, it's the red tape at the discretion
of the 24 year old who's raising money,
saying, well, I need new speakers, or I need new this,
or I want to, I need to get new shoes or new, right?
And then there's those who give to missions
where we are putting food,
I want all of my money going directly to X, Y and Z.
So maybe you need to pick that Natalie,
you need to pick the form, you know,
the framework where all the money just goes directly to,
hey, we're packing backpacks or we're giving clean water
or whatever that is.
Maybe that's a better model for you.
So am I being too controlling by analyzing where my money is going towards?
It's your money. Okay. You're not being nearly controlling enough. Now here's the thing, I go to a small local church, there's about 150 people here in Nashville.
I have, there's two elders at that church and there's a pastor at that church. Whenever I place membership at a church, I am submitting myself to those dudes leadership. And that's a
very unpopular thing to do in the 21st century, I don't care. I'm submitting, me and my family
are submitting to their leadership. So I write them checks and I trust them that they are going
to use that money in a godly manner. I'm a Christian guy. When it comes to somebody
not, I had one of my friends' kids reached out raising money. She is going to be at a
camp all summer. I've been to that camp. I see the amazing work they do. And that was
one of the funnest checks I've ever written. In fact, I asked her to send me a video of
her, like a secret video recording of her writing her dad
a letter telling him what a great daddy is
because he's one of my close friends.
But I know exactly where that money is going.
Okay, let me open a bigger can.
Let me open a bigger can of worms.
It's almost like too, like, okay,
it's like when you're tithing to your church,
that money is pooled and it's paying salaries
for the pastors, it's paying salaries for the staff.
And some of that money is going towards outreach
or missions or whatever things in the community
that they deem necessary, however it is
that they wanna do ministry, and how many times
do people get upset because maybe they see
their pastor took a trip, and they're like,
he shouldn't have done that, and it's like,
I don't know, there's part of this
where if you're gonna be too, you know what I mean?
There's part of it where it's like,
let me just give this a go.
To me it comes down to trust.
It comes down to trust.
And if my pastor takes a trip, which thank God he does,
I know he needs it.
Yeah.
Because I trust him.
You don't trust this young woman.
That's what it comes down to.
Yeah.
And so.
Don't do it.
How would I approach that after,
like we have financially supported her for years?
This year we're not going to we're not going to be able to do it this year.
Yeah, give her a long lead notice and say this year we're going to allocate our resources
elsewhere.
And if you want to be, I had a couple of my uncles sit down and have hard conversations
with me over the course of my entire life.
And I'm so grateful they did.
Two different uncles did.
About two different things.
And so if you want to interject yourself in that way, awesome.
Or just say this year we're going to allocate our giving dollars in other places.
That's it.
And that's okay.
You don't have to feel any type of way about that.
You don't have to feel guilty.
You don't have to feel anything other than way about that. You don't have to feel guilty. You don't have to feel anything other than
this is a choice that I feel good about.
But if you don't trust the people who are being a steward
of your giving dollars, and again,
I think your important call out,
not every single solitary penny needs to go to,
there has to be administrative overhead.
That's just a part of life.
And I want people in leadership to be able to exhale
and breathe, cause I know the literature on leaders
and they burn out and they need,
I want them there for the long haul.
So all that's fine and good.
That's not why you're calling.
You don't trust this young girl.
You're seeing how she lives.
You don't like her entire lifestyle.
Does that make sense?
Yeah.
And that's what it comes down to.
And so, yes, it's a simple conversation, well in advance,
like honor her in that way, and then let them know.
Could be a good chance too, to kind of share,
because you mentioned earlier, she's got student loans,
and she's got card notes.
Could be a good chance to, like John said,
sit down and teach her about good money management
and what that's meant for you and your family
and what that looks like.
That could help her in the long haul
to get more people who are willing to sponsor her.
Again, I did not know how this model works.
Oh, yeah. Well, here's my unpopular hot take.
Take it for what you will. If you have a car note and if you have student loans,
you have obligated your time and your resources to banks, not to God.
And so if you chose to take those products, those experiences before
you could pay for them, then opting to travel around and find God's calling and
do all this like, I think you have an obligation to pay your debts off before
you start asking people. Unless you ask, hey I want some help paying off these
student loans so that I can get into the mission field. That's why I think it's
super imperative to not go into debt for these things. Very steamy. That was a hot take.
You're listening to The Ramsey Show. We've got Taylor in Calgary, Alberta. Hi, Taylor.
Hi, how are you guys doing today? We're good.
Taylor. Hi, how are you guys doing today? We're good. So I was just wondering about whether or not I should take out a student loan for care school. I'm currently only making about $700 every two weeks
on the high end and I just wanted some advice from you guys on whether or not I should do this.
What are you making the $1,400 doing?
I'm working as a receptionist right now for a storage unit.
And what does it cost, student loans aside, what does it cost to get the training that
you need for hair?
It's $17,500 for the schooling.
How long does it take?
Eight months.
So I live in Alberta, and with Student Aid Alberta, they give you six months before you
have to start paying off your student loans as well.
And I believe the interest rate for them, I don't have an exact number yet, but I believe
it's between five and 10% for interest after the six months.
Yeah. You know, I've never, Taylor, I'm never going to tell you to go into debt to get the
things that you want. Um, for many, many reasons, a, that would be like a punishment on your
dreams, which is not the way to go. Right. You want to do hair, you shouldn't be punished
for it with debt and payments. You should be able to go and do hair and the way to go, right? You want to do hair, you shouldn't be punished for it with debt and payments.
You should be able to go and do hair and pay as you go
and then enjoy that degree once you have it.
I have two parts to this thought.
A, I want to talk about how we arrived at hair,
what kind of hair we're going to be doing
and what the plan is going on from there.
But I also want to talk about how we can get the $17,000
and possibly make this happen
if it feels like the right path for you.
Do you have any debt?
I have a little bit of credit card debt.
I have less than $1,000 in credit card debt.
And my boyfriend and I,
because I live with my boyfriend currently,
and we have a little bit of financing.
We finance some stuff from Amazon, but that's only like
$500 so I'm only I only have about $1,500 in debt right now. Okay any money saved
No, okay a lot
Oh, I want to say 90% of our money goes towards bills
We have words friends because you're not making much what's he making?
No, he just got a new job, he's making, I wanna say,
about $1,500 every two weeks take home.
How old are you guys?
He just started this, I'm 21, we're both 21.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay, so as your older, hopefully surprisingly
young looking
sister, I wanna tell you that one pattern
that I see you starting is this pattern of,
if I want something, I maybe just go into debt to get it.
Even if it's not a lot, and that's usually how it starts.
I can tell you for me, Taylor, it started with,
I just need a winter coat.
And Express has a really cute pink pea coat.
It's only $500, you know, and that's the way it starts.
It starts really low like that.
And I always say that debt is a drug and credit cards are the gateway in. Right.
And so you start with this credit card thing on Amazon and then you got the other credit card thing.
And now you're thinking, oh, maybe just a student loan.
And that really is how it starts. And before you know it, like I said, it's a drug,
before you know it, you're hooked.
Because it teaches you that you can't really exist
without it, that's what it does to you.
It breaks down your ability to take your own money
and manage it and feel good about it, right?
And so you're still young, you're 21,
and I just see you on the cusp of this behavior.
And I'm like, I see you on the cliff
and I'm just like, pull her back, pull her back, right?
So that's what I wanna kind of get into your brain.
Let's not keep going towards this.
Let's walk away from the edge of this debt cliff.
And I think there's probably plenty of opportunities
around you and there are that you can make more money.
You could probably double your income
or even triple your income very quickly if we just go for the right options.
And once you can do that, now we can start to save up for this dream of doing hair.
You know, so.
Okay.
Yeah, here's the problem, Taylor.
You probably could not have called two of the worst people to ask this question.
Between the two of us, we had over half a million dollars in debt.
And here's the frustrating thing.
I'm pretty good at, I may not be great on the radio,
but I'm pretty good at my helping people
behind closed doors job.
Jade is one of the most extraordinary talents
and brilliant people you ever meet.
And we lost years of our life,
whoo, paying these things back. Okay. And so. Okay, can I add another thing? Yeah, go ahead.
To the whole debt thing. Yeah. So I also have some money from my grandfather when
I was younger, like he had put away kind of a trust fund. Now unfortunately the company that he had put that into turned into some sort of mortgage stock I think. I don't know this
is just stuff that my mother's told me but I if I'm able to access that money
later like I'm able to pull it out of the stock. Did you ever meet your grandfather?
$17,000. Did you ever meet your grandfather? Yes, I did.
Yes, I did.
If he had been able to slide $17,000
across the table and pay for you to go to school,
for you to have a career, would that have given him joy?
Yes.
Yeah.
So that might be a way to honor your granddad.
Honor him?
Yeah, yeah.
Be a good steward of that money.
The only thing is that I, with it being in my mom's name,
and I don't not talk to my mom, but it's a...
Yeah, yeah, yeah, let me back out.
Let me back out.
That's kind of one of those pipe dreamies,
like I know a friend who's got a thing,
who has a roommate, who has a dog,
who knew this one guy one time.
Here's the thing.
Yeah.
Jade was, what Jade told you is way more important.
There is no hack to learning the muscle
or to earning the muscle of being able to want a thing
and save up and go get it.
And I'm telling you right now,
money could fall from the sky.
I would probably tell you right now
if 20 grand just fell out of the sky, I'd probably tell you right now, if 20 grand just fell out of the sky,
I'd probably tell you to pay off the 1,500 bucks,
either marry this knucklehead or get your own place.
And then bigger than that,
you've got to learn to save up for something that you want
and prolong, feel that pain and then go earn it
and then decide when you're holding the cash
to actually want this thing
Yeah delayed gratification is the greatest muscle you can build up because it puts all the it puts all the balls and power in your court
If that makes sense in every single
image on Instagram
Tells you that delayed gratification is for old people and suckers
Please yeah, please don't listen to that.
You want you want a new jacket on Amazon?
Awesome. Just save up and buy it.
Mike, I promise you, when you get $500 cash,
you're not going to want that thing as bad as you think you do.
Yeah, right.
Well, paying for a car in cash, you end up buying a different car
99% of the time.
That's right. Because you're like,
all right, I'm just gonna part with this much money.
And that's interesting that you said that, John,
it's a phenomenon that happens, Taylor.
When you're broke and you're scrapping for money,
everything your eyes see, it's like, I want that.
How can I get that?
It's like, yeah, you just want so much.
And then when you get on the other side
and you've learned delayed gratification,
you've learned how to make your money behave,
you've learned how to make yourself behave,
suddenly you look around and you're like, eh.
Like it just, the dial on what you need
and want immediately just downshifts down.
It goes from like being on level 10 to just on level two.
And you're like, yeah, I might get that. I don't know. Let me research a little bit more. And you just learn how to take
time and keep the power in your court. So yeah, this hair thing, I didn't ask you what type of
hair is it? What are you going to be doing? Braiding extensions, color? So it's a, it's a
schooling for kind of everything. So I'd be getting my diploma. So I'd be taught how to cut hair,
how to do different types of haircuts, that sort of thing.
I'd learn how to dye hair.
I was having a brain. Have you ever done any of that before?
I've learned how to do, yeah, I've been doing hair.
Well, it's been a passion of mine since I was,
I want to say about five or six.
I've always been a very like cosmetology type girl.
Have you ever thought about applying to get a receptionist job at a salon?
Right.
I have been applying for jobs, there just isn't anything in the market right now.
And I've been applying to jobs as the hairstylist and just kind of brought up
the fact that I would be an apprentice
or the fact that I'm not in school or anything like that right now.
So instead of when you apply for these jobs, instead of telling them what you're not yet,
tell them what you are.
Tell them how long you've been doing hair.
Tell them what you're great at doing as a receptionist and make sure you see them in
person.
Proximity principle as Ken Coleman would teach is so very important.
And we'll send you that book.
Go knock on doors.
So John, earlier this year, we released,
actually it was at the end of last year, I guess,
we released, no it was the beginning of this year,
we released these videos, 90 Day Money Makeoverover it was basically this documentary series that was sponsored by
every dollar where we followed an individual or in this case a couple of
individuals over the course of 90 days and they were people who called into the
show and you know people call in all the time we give them advice but to be able
to follow them for 90 days and see are you actually
going to take the advice. And I mean, we did this together. Remember Heather?
Oh yeah, dude. And you went out and visited her on her farm. And yeah, she made some and
then she came into the studio. She flew to Nashville. We flew her to Nashville and it
was amazing. What a great experience. Great. And so every episode is a little bit
different. Every situation is different. But yeah, we check in with them at the 30 day point,
the 60 day point, the 90 day point.
And at the end, they come to Ramsey Solutions
and we all celebrate with them.
They come to like our staff meeting, get together
and everybody celebrates them.
It's this amazing thing.
Matter of fact, we have a video to show you guys
so you can kind of get a sense of it.
What's going on, Heather?
I'm just, I'm tired of debt controlling me
in all aspects of my life.
She's got a lot going on.
We've got to simplify.
She's got the farm, the divorce, the debt.
We're just praying the money's there, I guess.
You can't breathe.
Are you ready to commit to it?
Are you gonna do it?
I need help.
I'm done with it.
Getting the truck listed and putting that up for sale.
Oh my gosh, it's good to see you.
Do I want a pet of chicken?
No.
I see you doing a lot that wasn't even part of the homework,
and we're only at the 30-day point.
I want to be out of debt.
So let's go through divorce, right?
There's no guarantee that the bank would let her keep the house.
I want you to start dreaming what another living situation might look like
if it doesn't go your way.
It's not what I want to do, but it's not always what I want to do.
Very few people are sitting on one variable that could change everything.
It's just really hard.
And it's scary.
I can't keep this up for another year.
Ooh, spoiler alert.
Heather changed her life, didn't she?
Dude, that's one of the coolest stories
I've been a part of since I've worked for this Ramsey team.
She came here and the thousand plus employees here
celebrated her, it was pretty amazing.
Yeah. To be a part of that, that, yeah, I agree with you. It's probably the single coolest
thing we've done. Uh, the good news is this opportunity is still available. So if you're
out there and you saw that and you're sitting in a mess right now, or you know you need
a change and you could use a little accountability, a little bit of help, we're looking for folks.
If you're interested in your own 90 day money makeover,
you can click the link in today's show notes
and you can fill out the form and our producers
will review your submission and your story and be in touch.
And I'll even be in the process.
Like I talk to you guys on the phone, I email you.
I, you know, if you get to that point.
So we go through it with a fine tooth comb,
but if you're interested, man, we could sure use the stories
because it provides hope.
Yeah.
A, you get your life together. And then by way of you getting your life together
and other people seeing it, it provides hope to them and they get their life together.
So it's an amazing chain that you get to be a part of. Very, very cool.
Wow.
If you've ever wondered what it would be like, like, I just want Jay to come sit at
my kitchen table and walk through this with me. And I want Deloni to be honest with me.
I want Rachel Cruz and George.
I want people to sit, this is what this is.
And it's, that's so good you said that John.
It's 100% real.
Like it's not, they didn't like Frankenstein that together.
We really went to Heather's house and I really hung,
used her daughter's bathroom.
I was in up in there and she made some really delicious
bread and cookies and they were really good.
But yeah, this is a real thing.
We really get up in your stuff and we sit knee to knee
with you and-
But I took a farm woman and said,
you gotta sell your house.
You did.
And she did, she did.
And you told her like, you gotta sell the horse.
Like you know, only George Campbell tells you
to sell a horse, right?
And, but here it, like seeing her months later
come to the building and talk about how she's free.
It was wild, man.
So cool.
And you can watch that episode.
If you wanna see the rest of that episode,
it's on our YouTube highlights channel.
Is that correct?
And they'll put in the link to the show notes here, yeah.
And the link is there in the show notes.
Man, so, so, so good.
I can't wait to do that again.
I love that series.
I love real life change.
My favorite thing to do here at Ramsey
is anything where I can talk directly to you guys.
The show is great,
but if we can be in the same room together,
man, love that.
All right, switching gears.
The Ramsey Show Question of the Day
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Ooh, today's question, dude,
this is like the hot take show today.
Today's question comes from Linda in Georgia.
What's your feelings on how receiving an inheritance should be handled with a spouse?
I'll be receiving $100,000 from my parents and my husband wants to invest it in stocks.
I disagree and feel like because this money is from my parents' life work, it's not his, it's mine.
We have a home, land, and vehicles paid for,
but my husband says it's his too.
What are your thoughts on this?
Oh, geez.
Holy smokes.
Let me tell you the way I would feel about this
in story form.
So if Sam Warshaw, my husband, came home and said, you know the worst happened
So and so passed away and I'll be getting a hundred thousand dollars and oh Jade by the way, it's my money
You have no say in this
Let's just say Sam would be like a magic trick
He gone
Unsolved mystery is really what it was.
Remember William Shatner?
Was it William Shatner with unsolved mysteries?
No.
Oh yeah, it was.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
My point is I'm not being violent on purpose.
I'm just saying like that would create such-
Oh no, no, no.
My wife would kill me and they would never find my body.
Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It would create such division in our lives.
I said, it's mine, not yours.
Now, can we talk about it together?
And let's flip it around.
This is a stupid way to deal with $100,000
to just dump it into stocks.
Right, right, right, right.
And so the real question here is,
here's what I'm reading between the lines
because I'm not talking to Linda on the phone.
She's never liked how her husband handles money.
There you go.
He's always deciding, we're buying this,
we're buying this, which means he's buying this,
he's buying the cars, he's buying the land,
he's buying the whatever.
And finally she gets a little thing that's hers,
and she says,
My precious.
It's mine, that's right.
You can't touch this, finally.
And he is saying, no, no, no, I'm the smart one,
you're the dumb one, I always work out,
and so I want to do, and so here's the deal.
This is one of those moments I think Jade exposes,
it's like when it rains real hard,
it exposes even the smallest cracks in your home.
So good, John, yep.
And then all of a sudden your basement's full of water,
even with a little crack, your basement's full of water,
and that's one of these moments, right?
And so what we really need to do here, Linda,
is get to the bottom of why are you suddenly
wrapping your arms around this and saying this is mine?
If it's because you've never worked as a team,
it's always been husband's way or the highway,
then you need to, with your newfound economic security,
and I hate to put it like that, but let's do it,
sit down at the table and say,
I've never had a voice in this house.
And my guess is, and again, I'm gonna play both sides here,
he has said, you've never spoke up once.
And she'll say, I never had the ability to.
And him saying, I've tried to provide all of this for us.
And it will be one of those conversations.
And again, there could be a million different scenarios.
I'm making one up here.
I think you're spot on.
Where both people are both kind of selfish,
but at the end of the day,
both are trying to do what they think is best
for both of them.
And neither of them are creating a shared vision together
on what our life can be.
Ooh, John, I think that you are 100% on the ball. creating a shared vision together on what our life can be.
John, I think that you are 100% on the ball. We'll see.
And let's just talk, you know, the marital stuff aside,
like there's obviously some issues there.
I agree with what John is saying.
When you get an inheritance,
I do think that there's this part of it
that it's kind of like the last caller.
If somebody leaves you something, there's a joy of it that it's kind of like the last caller if somebody leaves you something there's
There's a joy that they want you to get out of that that gift, right?
Because it is a gift and so with money you do have to remember
There's three things that you can do with it always and especially with an inheritance
You really want to remember you can give some of it
You can save some of it and you can spend some some it, and you can spend some of it. And I really think within inheritance, you need to be careful to do all three of those. So it's really hitting the point
of what it's there to do. I always like the picture of the person who gave it to you sitting
across the table. And if you said, I'm going to do this, this and this, would they sit back and
smile? Yeah. That's what I always like to envision that. That to me is the picture of stewardship.
I love that.
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So guys, you need it, you need it.
You need the right insurance
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And in some cases, it can even save you money
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warranties, that kind of crap.
So how do you know if you have the right coverage?
You need to take the coverage checkup.
Again, it's free, it's online, and it's a resource that creates a personalized insurance
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It's unique to you and your situation.
It makes an overly confusing topic like insurance
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So go to ramsysolutions.com slash checkup
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if you're listening on YouTube or podcast. Brian is in Louisville, Kentucky. What's up, Brian?
How's it going? What up? Doing good. Hey, so I guess, uh, so a little background. I've,
I've been currently debt free. Um, my wife and I paid off our house and we've even gone as far as we bought our retirement home
Nice that we're gonna stay
In Wisconsin that's paid off all our cars are paid off. Yeah, and
now I'm kind of I'm like a I
Hustle a lot. I mean I have a little side hustles. My wife is a nurse.
I'm a mechanic and I kind of buy and sell cars on the side to basically fund my hobbies and pay for
everything I have. But now I'm kind of stepping up to, I'm trying to get into rental property.
I'm trying to get into rental property and and it's a little scary because I'm not dealing with smaller amounts of money now and I'm trying to figure out
if I need to I mean currently I have about $200,000 that I can spend and my
wife's mother just recently passed away and she got a little
inheritance of some stocks that currently is worth about 150,000.
And I'm trying to figure out if I need to,
what we want to do is buy a couple of houses because in our area there are
couple houses because in our area there are travel nurses and I can rent I can rent each room in the house for eight or nine hundred dollars rather than renting
it out like as just the whole house and I can make more and I'm trying to figure
out if I should leverage a little bit of debt and buy multiple houses?
Or should I just buy one?
Well, why not if I'm going to-
For many reasons, but A,
it's your first time even doing this.
And you're already spreading,
you're already making it tougher because you say,
hey, of all the bedrooms I have to list,
I have to rent them to four different tenants
versus just one family.
That already complicates it.
I think that's a great idea by the way,
but it already complicates it. And then that's a great idea by the way, but it already complicates it.
And then why not just, it's like a franchise.
Why not start with the one flagship store,
make sure it's doing well,
make sure it's in business, making money.
Then if that one does well, you open another location
and you just go at the speed of success
and at the speed of cash, which by the way,
has gotten you where you're at today, Brian.
And can I tell you why I think you're nervous?
I don't think it's the dollar amount.
I think you and your wife are very smart and you're a deal maker.
I think you're good at this.
I think you're nervous.
Here's what I think.
I think you're nervous because you're really good with cars.
And you understand it and you know how they work and you know how to fix them
and you know what they're worth.
And I don't know that you have that skillset here yet.
That's why I think you're nervous.
Cause you're getting into what you've,
it's like I'm graduating up as though
what you've been doing that has bought you two paid for homes
and has given you and your wife an amazing life wasn't somehow was less than you get what I'm saying?
Yeah, you've done an amazing job, dude. It's awesome.
Well, I hear that but a lot of times I also have a sometimes I feel I'm really good with money, but then I also times I feel like I'm I make
stupid decisions like I have a I have a hobby that literally like not only do I build cars,
but I restore classics and I I don't even want to say how much it is, but I spend stupid
amounts of money.
Yeah, but you don't owe anybody anything.
You have to pay for houses and you can.
Yeah, you there's a certain amount of margin in your world
that you could literally set it on fire and it'd be okay.
I went fishing this weekend with my son.
Do you know what I spent?
I'm not even gonna say it on the air
because I'm embarrassed.
But I just kept telling my son
when we were running out of lures, go get another one.
Go get another one.
Because we were having so much fun.
But I've budgeted for that and we can do that. So you don't
need to justify that man. I'm glad that you have a passion that you're so good
at you restore old cars. That's amazing. It's a blessing, yeah. But here's the thing. Well one
question. What, what, I mean couldn't I, couldn't I miss out though, like I mean
houses are always going up. Okay. I mean couldn't, couldn't I miss out if I buy, if I
don't buy. You could could let's play that out.
You could, but I want you to talk to a whole bunch
of leveraged rental home owners who during COVID
out of nowhere were told you don't have to pay your bills.
Or-
Wow, see that's why I actually,
the reason I'm getting into this is cause when I,
when I moved to my current place, I transferred,
I've always worked on high end cars.
I was, I used to work on Lamborghinis and four houries
and now I'm work on more luxury lines like BMWs
and I got a nice offer to move down here and
the lady that I rented from that's what she does and she actually
Introduced me to my wife. She worked. She's also a nurse and that's how I met my wife
Okay, okay, but she does this and that's why I was thinking let me throw wrenching
Here's what you're not hearing.
You're not hearing.
It has worked up until now.
Everything is, it's called the turkey problem.
The turkey thinks the farmer is the greatest person
of all time because every day that farmer comes out
and feeds it and takes care of it
until the day before Thanksgiving.
And what you're doing is you've seen somebody who in a season this thing has worked.
What if in 24 months AI gets good enough that it really kind of shuts down the travel nursing
market and just localizes it all?
Okay.
And suddenly you've got four houses that the mortgage just keeps coming and you're going
to have to sell your Wisconsin house to make the payments on them because you can't rent
them out.
Will that happen?
I hope not, but I don't know.
I'm just making something up.
But if you own a house outright that you've taken this $350,000 and just bought one, and
then suddenly you've got four people renting it out from you at 900 bucks a month, then within a few years,
you're going to buy another one with cash and then another one with cash. And if anything in the
market downturn downturns, you're just out that. Yeah. I think what John is saying is so it's so
good. Um, and don't get me wrong, like COVID, that was kind of an outlier. We don't know if something
like that's going to happen again, but the fact that risk does exist all the time.
That's why they call it leverage.
There's another side of the fulcrum. All the time.
And and I also do want to say plenty of people,
Brian, probably go out and do what you're doing.
And they're OK.
You know, somehow they make it through and people call here all the time.
They've got a couple of properties and we don't necessarily tell them to sell them.
And they find a way to make it through.
But I wanna capitalize on what you said earlier,
which is, am I missing out?
And I think that you need to reframe your brain
on what that means.
You could say, oh, I'm missing out on money
I could be earning on rent.
Or you could say, by buying these in cash,
I'm missing out on the stress that everybody else has to think about.
I'm missing out on the debt that every,
cause and those are things you wanna miss out on.
You wanna miss out on debt.
You wanna miss out on stress.
You wanna miss out on the anxiety if somebody doesn't pay.
Those are things that they're good to miss out on
because plenty of people are doing this
and they have to carry all of that
because they've done it on debt.
For you to be able to do this without that,
what a wonderful thing to accomplish. I would say that you're more successful
if you can carry less properties, but carry them in cash and grow them over time than the person
who is sitting there with a portfolio of 10 properties that they carry debt on.
From the Ramsey Network, it's the Ramsey Show. I'm Jade Warshaw. Next to me, Dr. John Delaney.
We're taking your calls about your life, your money.
You can get in on the show by calling the number,
888-8255-225.
Gets you at least to the answering machines.
And then from there, you know, you could schedule a call.
Very rarely do you just get like straight through.
I don't know.
You could try it.
Yeah, you can get straight through.
All right, with that being said, Ashton got got straight through Ashton and Charlotte, North Carolina. What's up Ashton?
Hello, how are you doing good? How can we help?
So I'm calling. I am 37 years old. I have one daughter
I currently just moved back in with my parents because I'm actually renting out my house.
So one of my questions is, I have a 401k through my job.
It only has about $5,000 in it.
And then I also have a Roth IRA, which has maybe about $1,000.
Do I need both a 401k and that Roth IRA?
For retirement in the future? Or are you trying to cash them out for something?
Well, that would be my next question. I knew it.
So with credit card debt, I have probably about $4,500 from credit card debt. Personal
loans, probably about $3,000. I'm then I have a car loan for about 7,000,
but then I also have student loans, which are about 60,000.
So question is,
should I withdraw the funds from that 401k in that
IRA to like pay off the small loans like my credit card debt and maybe my
personal loan.
And then also with the money
that I'm making from my home, should I take that money, take some stuff off or because
my plan is I wanted to save that money and like buy like another investment property
so that I can keep getting passive income.
God help you. Ashton, Ashton, just take about 75% off.
Just slow it down.
Okay, I'm sorry.
No, you're good, you're good.
Like, let me ask you this.
Why are you renting your house out
and living somewhere else?
Just to get ahead and like, just to make,
get passive income.
I'm tired of living paycheck from paycheck.
Here's what I like about what you're saying.
What I like about is you're looking for,
you're like, you know,
knocking on the wall to see where the hollow spots are. Like you're trying to get out and I like that.
What I do think is that you're getting a little ahead of yourself. So I think John and I can help you find the right escape route to get out of this debt and get to where you're trying to get to.
So first off, there's a point that we drain savings
in order to pay off debt, but we never drain retirement savings because that is your future.
And if you draw, if you drain your retirement savings, you're essentially robbing from yourself.
You're robbing from your future self and you're going to need that money. There is going to come
a time where you will no longer be able to work. And I know it's a long ways away, but it will come and that money needs to grow for you
so it's there when you need it.
So no, do not, even though it's only $6,000 today,
do not touch that 401k, do not touch that Roth.
That's 6,000 bucks, just give or take,
you're gonna pay 30% in taxes and fees.
Taxes, okay, that makes sense.
So that's 6,000 bucks.
It's all nothing.
You might get 4,500 bucks, or 4,000 of it, right?
They're gonna just, I mean, you wouldn't borrow a loan
at 30%, right?
Right, that makes sense.
That'd be madness.
So don't, yeah, it's just, it's not good any way around.
So we're not gonna touch that.
Do you have any other money saved, liquid money saved or in a you know,
high yield savings or anything like that? So the money that I
have in my house, I have that in a high yield savings account.
But that's all the money I have saved. And how much is that?
Right now it's about 5000. Okay, so now that you're I'm going to
get to this in a minute. But I want to talk hypothetically right now. Now that you're, I'm gonna get to this in a minute, but I wanna talk hypothetically right now.
Now that you're a landlord, this is the business, right?
And so there's part of this where it's like,
hey, this $5,000 there, but as long as you're a landlord,
you need a cushion because if the AC goes out in that house,
guess who's paying for it?
The landlord, right?
And you don't wanna go into debt
to have to cover that stuff.
So as much as I'd like to say, yeah, that 5,000 is yours, that would be a little bit
tough for me to tell you that because anything can happen with that house, which leads me
to my next conversation.
I love that you're looking for ways to get out of this, but living with your parents,
do you have any kids or significant other, anything like that?
Is it just you?
I just have a daughter.
Okay. A daughter.
So you going to live with your parents at this age
is a tough call.
And I'm not gonna tell you don't do it.
I'm not gonna tell you to do it.
I am gonna say if you are, if you choose to do it,
you need to have a very clear timeline
and you need to have a very clear set of goals
that you're gonna accomplish. If you're doing this, I would not do it while
renting a house because you're still keeping around the very risk and the very ability
to have to shell out cash that homeownership provides. So you're not really giving yourself
that much breathing room by doing that. So you need to decide, am I going to be a homeowner
and live in my house with my daughter
and pick up extra jobs to pay off this debt?
Or am I gonna sell my house?
Am I gonna live with my parents for two years,
clean up all this mess, save up for a down payment,
and then go back and buy another house again?
That's the decision that you've gotta make.
And maybe you make it on this call, I don't know.
What are you thinking?
It's definitely something I will consider.
And like I said, another reason for me
renting out my house is because I wanted to try
to save up some money so that I can possibly
buy another rental income.
And see, you can't do that yet.
You gotta pay off this debt first.
Yeah.
And you've gotta pay off your current home first.
This idea, and I know you're coming at me
from something that you've heard something
or seen something that seemed very successful,
and I get it.
There's just this allure right now to passive income,
which by the way is not really passive.
You have to do a lot of work.
And like we've just discovered,
you have to actually have a lot of money saved
if you're gonna float this thing.
As respectfully as I can say that you're just not there yet to be able to do it successfully.
The best way to do real estate is to go very slowly with cash.
That's the way you're making money quickly.
All these people who are floating several multifamilies and all that, they've got so
much debt and they're strapped up to their eyeballs.
And if one thing falls in that line of dominoes,
they're filing bankruptcy.
Like that is the truth.
If one tenant doesn't pay.
That makes sense.
How much equity do you have in your home right now?
So I just got about 30,000 left on it.
I mean, how much is it worth?
If you sold it today?
Um, probably about close to $300,000.
It's a townhouse.
And you only owe $30,000 left?
Mm-hmm.
It was my mom's house before she passed away.
Okay.
And when she passed away, I'm the only child, so of course.
Can I tell you something crazy?
Yes.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
What if you sold that house?
I wouldn't.
I'm just, if you sold that house and pay the capital gains,
I don't care about all that.
You sold that house, you pay off all of your debts,
you have a hundred grand in the bank.
That's true.
That's one route.
That's one route you should should you could 100% consider.
And Jayden, I wouldn't do it. I'm all about peace. And so, yeah.
The only reason I wouldn't do it is because you only owe 30,000 on it and it is a family home.
And you're not, I didn't ask you how much do you make? Tell me how much you make.
You just make about 50,000, nothing. Okay. Well, 50 something. 50 something and with the debt that
you have, it's not out of reach. I'd probably keep the property because I don't think anything's on
fire. I think you already have the help with your parents. They're helping you with child care. They
were willing to help you, you know, staying there. I think this is about you getting a second job and
even applying for better jobs that will pay more. And I think it's about you getting a second job and even applying for better jobs that will pay
more. And I think it's about you getting a little bit more uncomfortable on the career side to make
this happen. I want to hook you up with Financial Peace University. I want to hook you up with
every dollar because that's going to be the key for you to get out of this.
Thomas is in Miami, Florida, my favorite place in the country. Welcome to Miami.
What's up Thomas?
Hey guys, how are you doing?
Doing good.
How can we help?
Good, good, good.
Before I get into my question, I just wanted to say first and foremost, Dr. John Jade,
my wife and I are long time listeners.
We love you guys and we just really appreciate what you do.
Thank you, brother.
Appreciate you, man.
That's so kind.
Yeah.
What's up?
So initially when I submitted my question several months back, it was in regards to
a pregnancy announcement in the midst of the baby steps.
My wife and I are in the middle of baby step number two right now.
We found Ramsey probably about three or four months before we found out she got pregnant.
So we started to go gazelle intense and stop being stupid, but and all that stuff and I
picked up a second job.
But we didn't get to have the opportunity to become parents on this side of life.
My wife had a miscarriage earlier this month.
Been there brother.
Ain't that for you guys.
Yeah.
Uh, and it's, it's come with his challenges, you know?
Um, but we do have a beautiful community people around us and it's a lot more
common than we think.
Um, and so it's like, just no one talks about it, but when we started opening up
and talking about it, a when we started opening up and talking
about it, a lot of people were like, yeah, us too.
And you just got to keep on trucking and stuff like that.
So my question today, initially I wanted to make it a financial one, but I guess is for
the both of us, we want to be able to use this as an opportunity to help other people
where we've been at.
Obviously we're very dedicated to the baby steps. I still have a second job and
we're working hard doing the dead snowball and all that stuff. We did pump
the brakes a little bit initially when it happened but you know we're kind of
getting back on track now. I just want to know from your guys opinion you know
what will be the best way for her and to be able to move forward and use, I guess, this tragedy in life to be able to
be there for others and just let other people know that it doesn't stop life, that it's
a part of life and it happens, but you can keep on moving forward and have hope in the
future. I mean, my rule of thumb is I don't talk about stuff or try to teach on stuff
until I've fully metabolized the grief. It doesn't mean it's going to go away,
the loss doesn't go away. The second thing that I think is really important is,
I'll take it away from miscarriage because that's a really heavy topic for all
of us.
Yeah.
I get a lot of emails, or direct messages especially, from, it goes something like this,
I cheated on my wife nine times, we rebuilt our marriage and now we want to have, we're
writing a marriage book and we want to become, like help other people.
And I always want to say, hey, you're the worst person that you don't need to write
a marriage book, right? And so, and here's what I mean by that, is a
personal experience in a thing is the gateway to become really skilled at
sitting with other people. Does that make sense?
Yeah, absolutely.
And so what you guys have now is a shared experience. It's painful, it's hard,
you know, working through it and you know what it feels like from the inside out.
That is a powerful, powerful thing. What I would suggest is also now learn the skills of sitting
with folks. Maybe attend grief classes,
maybe attend Sunday school where they have a ministry
for this or something like that,
where you can begin to listen to other people's stories.
And that's how you begin to earn that credibility
to not only have a shared experience,
but also you've heard the stories of a bunch of other people
because everybody experiences that differently.
What was really, really hard on my marriage
is I experienced it very different than my wife did.
We had two very different experiences with the same tragedy.
Right? Yeah, 100%.
And so, and we ended up having three.
So it was a different one every time.
All I have to say is I love your heart and your spirit.
What I would do is begin to rebuild your life.
Y'all are building a new life now. Y'all now know like pain, you know how each other grieves
and you know how each other says things that you wish you didn't say. All that stuff that
comes along with pain and marriage and then be on the other side of this thing in six
months in a year or two, maybe at your local church you say, hey, we're going to start
a Sunday school class for people who've experienced this or any type of
loss or we're gonna once a month go volunteer at the church I mean at the
local hospital and sit with folks who just found this out and then over time
you become really skilled in the art and science and spirit of sitting with
hurting people and I think that's a that's a thing that all of us need more of
in our community.
So I commend your heart.
What do you think, Jade?
I think John is exactly right.
And I wanna ask another question
because my screen says, can I take my wife on vacation
while we're in baby step two?
I'm assuming that with this grief,
you're wanting to get away and wanting to change scenery.
Is that what that is?
We I mean, initially, you know,
like John talked about, we kind of went through all the stages of this.
And I'm not sure it's fully done either, because I still have my moments
for when I think about it, I shed tears and stuff like that.
But yeah, she's I mean, it's crazy to say it, but honestly, it like made me be even
more in love with her. And I guess in my own way, due to the things that I've been through
in my life, it just made me fall in love with her all over again. I get it. And I just wanted
to know how much of an amazing person she is.
But we're in the middle of the baby steps right now. And so it's the point of like,
you'd be in discipline with our money
and thinking differently.
We do have money in the bank just from,
you know, saving before we came to Ramsey and all that.
Yeah, so let me talk to this for a minute because,
you know, we talk about stork mode, which is,
you know, you're having a baby
And so you save up all this money then there's storm mode
Which is a really tough storm comes and a lot of times we hear that in the form of like a job loss or you know
someone gets sick, but grieving is a storm and a big change is a storm and
I do think it's okay
I'm just gonna say this and some people are gonna be like, what?
There's bigger and more important things in life
than money sometimes.
And there's things that come up where it's like
the priority was paying off debt
and now the priority is me loving my wife
well in another way.
And that could look like you guys getting away.
I know you're not unreasonable people.
So I don't think that you're gonna take
a 30 day vacation to Scotland, right? I don't, I think you're not unreasonable people. So I don't think that you're going to take a 30 day
vacation to Scotland. Right.
I don't. I think you're probably like, hey, let's
let's let's, you know, get away for a weekend and
do that. I feel like you're going to do something
reasonable and it's going to be helpful to your
marriage. And it's not going to be this major
cannonball into your finances.
I trust that that's not what you're talking about.
And I think that if that's what you need to do I think you do that and
you do it ASAP. Yeah okay that makes me feel better. I guess you know in a way
sometimes when you're sifting through the guilt you kind of want to find
permission. Yeah I get it. I just I want her, she's just the most amazing person ever.
Let me tell you a couple of things that I learned in this process and just
sitting with countless people in this. I promise you, you can't say dumber things
than I said. I promise you. And I promise you, you can't mess this up worse than I messed it up, okay?
And so if you said some things or thought some things
or didn't understand the impact of things,
don't beat yourself up, man.
Definitely.
Like exhale through it.
The second thing is most men in this kind of situation,
they run around and try to solve a problem.
This isn't a problem to solve.
She is a wife to love.
And so ask her, how can I love you?
And it might be, how can I love you today?
Okay, here's a third thing.
That one hit.
Have some, and by the way, today it might be,
I just need you to sit here and hug me
and watch old office episodes.
And someday it may be, get away from me.
I just need to be by myself.
Here's a third thing.
Have some sort of marker or ceremony,
whether y'all write a letter to this kid
and talk about, we had plans,
we had pictures of you guys, you and whoever you were
gonna marry at a Thanksgiving table 20 years from now,
that's not gonna happen.
Write a letter to that little boy
and read it to each other.
And the final thing, I went and tattooed the three losses.
We had names and everything.
I went tattooed them on my body.
Like come up with some sort of process,
some sort of, I'll call it a ritual,
some sort of experience that y'all can share together
to mark this moment.
It's not about getting rid of it,
or it's not about moving on from it.
It's about like metabolizing it. It's not about getting rid of it or it's not about moving on from it.
It's about like metabolizing.
It's a part of you now and it's a part of your shared experience.
But ask your wife every day, how can I love you today?
She might say, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know.
Keep asking her and keep asking her and keep showing up.
You're a good husband, my man. Okay, buying or selling your home is a big deal.
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Like for instance, medium home prices went up slightly last month to about $430,000.
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Right now, there's nearly one million on the market, which happens to be the highest
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That is true. Also, the average 15-year fixed rate
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then you can go to ramsysolutions.com slashash market or you can click the link in the show notes if you're listening on podcast or YouTube
Beth is in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
What's going on Beth?
Hey
The crux of my question is essentially my husband owns a home in New Jersey that he rents out to his ex-girlfriend.
Um, and let that marinate for a minute. You just spent that.
Ooh. Okay. I know. So, um, they, well, he bought it. It's entirely in his name,
uh, the, both the mortgage and the deed. Um, he bought it in like 2016, 2017.
And then, um, you know, a few years later they broke up.
Um, they do share a child together.
So that's kind of where the rental agreement came in.
Yeah.
So I wanted to make sure that, you know, there was limited, like, you know,
disruption for his child.
So, yeah.
So he runs out the place to his ex and now, you know,
fast forward a few years,
we are trying to get qualified for a home
and the credit report came back
and she has been laying on payment.
So it's affecting our qualification process.
You don't say, no way.
Yeah, I know.
I know.
I thought exes always did exactly what they said they were going to do.
So he's not collecting the rent and paying the mortgage. He's just assuming that she's paying it.
Correct.
Oh, oh.
Yeah.
Amazing. This is so great.
Okay, okay. And let me say, I kind of get that.
He was probably like, I don't want to have to be involved in this if I don't have to
be, right?
Like limit contact kind of thing.
But that's exactly it.
So it wasn't a fun breakup.
And so that's a part of the dynamic here, right?
One he wants to obviously be low conflict,
who puts back for his child in the situation.
So just keep that in mind, right?
Like that's where his intention was.
So that's kind of the situation we're in, right?
So how far behind is she?
She's actually like the payments are up to date.
She has just had a history of late payments.
So in this year alone, right? Like as of mid's just had a history of late payments. So in this year
alone, right, like as of mid-May, she was late on three payments and it's like past
the 30-day mark, right? So it's being, it's hitting his credit report and then
we did a more extensive credit report and she was late about 20 times over the
history of like the last like five or so years that she's been paying. Yikes.
So you're not getting a house.
Yeah, you aren't getting a house.
Not for a while.
That's surprisingly enough, right? We did our credit report and his score isn't as bad
as you might expect.
What is it?
Because he's in, I think it was in like the low sevens.
Okay.
Yeah, that's not as bad as I would expect.
Right, exactly.
And that's what the lender said as well, you know, that he was really surprised, but it
goes to show you that he is on top of his finances with the exception of this situation.
So what's your question?
Yeah, my question for you is, what do you is, what would be your advice in a situation
to move on from it, right?
I would sell the house.
Yeah, you gotta sell the house
and let her get her own space.
It's been how many years?
Five years.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And she's been married
and they hit her and her new husband
have a child together.
Oh gosh, yeah.
This is overdue.
Yeah. This long overdue. Yeah.
This is long overdue.
And I wouldn't make a big drama about it.
I wouldn't go talk about the past missed payments.
I would just say, hey, it's been five years.
I think we've all moved on.
I think we're all in a good place.
And honestly, we're about to buy a house anyway.
So we need to clear this out.
We're gonna give them the right amount of time.
We're gonna be selling the house in six months
or give them a window to get out of there and then sell it.
Or if there's an incredible, I'm making up a number here,
but let's say the house is worth 500 grand
and he's got $200,000 in equity.
If he wanted to make them just a stupid deal on it,
they let them buy it as like a gift to his daughter
or something like that, he could do that.
But y'all gotta sell the house.
It sounds like if she's late 20 times
or over the course of five years,
she's got other issues financially.
Right, and that's the other thing
where it's like, you know, conscious of,
because right, if she can't like,
for context too, like the house,
the mortgage payment is like $1,100
a month, right?
And if like you're late on that, you know,
the last thing that I think he wants to do is,
and he's not responsible for their finances,
so like understand that, but the last thing he wants to do
is kind of like throw them out, you know what I mean?
And you know, he's not-
It's not throwing them out,
you're giving them five, six months to get their own space
and it's fair.
He owns the house.
But I personally wouldn't wait five or six months
just because I don't trust what they would do to the house
or they might just stop paying on it altogether.
And they might.
And if that you can stipulate all that,
like that can all be stipulations in how you do this.
But the point is you're giving them a fair amount of time
to find something new.
And if you find that they are not holding up their end of the deal yeah you
accelerate that process and you can let them know that ahead of time. We're
telling you this out of good faith because we love this daughter and we
care about making sure you land on your feet. Now if you abuse that then we'll
accelerate this and you'll be out in a month. Yeah, I'll evict you in 30 days. Exactly.
What's the custody arrangement with daughter?
Every other weekend.
Okay, every other weekend.
So she stays almost all the time with mom.
How come?
You know, that was an agreement when they first broke up
because he was working, you know, two jobs
and like he, you he put insane hours.
And so that was kind of what they agreed on then.
And that's kind of, yeah, outdated as well.
Yeah.
So here's the broader picture for me is this,
he doesn't have an obligation to that mother
or that her new stepdad.
That's their responsibility to figure that out.
And what I'm gonna say is gonna sound harsh
and I don't mean for it to sound harsh,
but you and him, by the way, this house is yours too.
It's y'alls.
Okay?
And y'all need to decide what kind of life
y'all want to live, to have, right?
And I wouldn't personally want my wife's ex-boyfriend
five years later still messing up my financial life.
I know that's right.
Okay, and I can't breathe right if I'm away from my daughter
for more than three or four days.
Call me a sucker, I don't care.
I don't like it.
When I'm on the road for two weeks at a time,
I just, I get out of sorts.
And so if he is okay seeing his daughter
every other weekend, more power to you.
I couldn't live like that.
And so it may be we're gonna revisit
a whole bunch of things.
And if her new stepdad and her bio mom
cannot afford to find a place to live,
cannot afford groceries,
I'm gonna have a different conversation
with them in the courts
about my daughter's wellbeing and safety.
Right.
But I'm not gonna burn down my financial life
supporting somebody that has no interest
in supporting themselves.
Yeah, because you're right. If they're struggling with $1,100 on this rent,
they're struggling, struggling.
But they really, yeah.
Or they're struggling, but you know why? Because they can.
Yeah, exactly.
I don't know how much of that, because it's not like like obviously with the mortgage being only in his
name and everything she wasn't the most financially responsible person. Because she didn't have to be.
He allowed that. You've been the safety net there this whole time but John is exactly right. You
have a stake in this and y'all sit down. You sit down together and say this is what we want.
This has been going on long enough. It's been five years for crying out loud They're okay to go out on their own. And yeah, I am with you John. I don't I could never see
I'd do a walk through that house and I'd put on the market sooner rather than later
Our Ramsey show scripture and quote of the day. Look at the birds of the air
Our Ramsey show scripture and quote of the day. Look at the birds of the air.
They don't sow or reap or store away in barns.
And yet still your heavenly father feeds them.
Are you not much more valuable than they?
That's Matthew 6.26.
Then Jordan Peterson said,
pursue what's meaningful, not what is expedient.
Let that one marinate.
Put that tea bag in your water and let it steep.
All right, let's go to Myles in Hartford, Connecticut. What's up, Myles?
Hey, welcome back. Those quotes were friggin' awesome.
They were, weren't they?
That's my favorite Bible verse, and I love Jordan Peterson, so thank you.
Perfect. It was just for you. Just for you, Myles.
We knew you were calling.
How can we help?
What's up, dude?
So, I got a bit of an issue. My parents have recently come to light about, I've always known they have some financial
issues, but recently the extent of it has come through.
Basically they are 400,000 in debt with Parent PLUS loans and it looks like they're going
to lose their house.
They just started talking to a bankruptcy attorney, so I was just just more curious as to what some of their options might be.
Well, they can't discharge those parent plus loans with bankruptcy, can they?
They're in the process. They said something about, basically they filed a criminal report. My mom
says that she would not have checked off recurring every year. So she says it's fraudulent in that way.
I suspect it's not fraudulent.
Yeah, I don't think it is.
Wait a second.
So you're saying that she,
hold on, let me make sure I get my mind around this.
You're saying that she signed for maybe one semester
and they continue to send them
for the other semesters automatically
and she wasn't aware of that?
Yeah. So then how did-
But she continued to cash the check.
Um, yeah, because how did she think school was getting paid for?
Did it go right to the school? I don't know how they work.
But I guess my question is whoever the loans were for, how did she think it was getting paid for if
she wasn't pulling out loans? That's a great question.
The likelihood of these being discharged unless it truly was criminal, which it doesn't sound
like it was, is like zero percent.
So let's go back to your first question then.
So what else do you, I mean how old are your parents?
My mom is early 60s, my dad is late 80s.
Okay.
Who do they sign these parent plus loans for?
Mainly my sister, and I think some of it is me, but my mom says it's not for me, but I suspect it is.
So what degree does your sister have for $400,000?
Early childhood development.
You can't be serious. That's impossible.
Well, they've probably been accruing tons of interest over over 40 years.
I think my mom hasn't paid it in 10 years.
So it's just been so what I think what what it sounds like.
I think there's a lot of unknowns here.
If I were you, I'd sit down with your sister.
First, probably, and say.
Tell me, think back in your mind, you know, tell me, what do you think?
What what was the student loan conversation with you and your mom?
I'm just trying to get some, you know, thoughts around this,
because here's the hard part.
You whether the money was for you or your sister, because here's the hard part.
Whether the money was for you or your sister,
they took out the loans.
And at some point in their minds,
they thought, hey, we're gonna gift them,
and I put gifts in quotes,
we're gonna gift them an education,
we'll take out the loans in our names, right?
And so many parents do that,
and not realizing that it's just not a gift for anybody.
And now they're in this situation and you guys are like, well, should we pay it back?
But the truth is they took it out in their names.
And if the if the agreement was never for you to pay it, then it's not for you to pay.
Now, that's that's like the truth.
Now we can look at other ways to get around it, which is miles.
How are you doing financially? Is there a portion
of it that you feel led to take on to pay? And then we could talk
about that? Or you know, same thing with your sister, if
that's even a valid thing to discuss.
So my concern isn't as much like, feeling an obligation to pay
it back. I don't. Most of it's just like, I don't want them to lose their house. And that't. More so it's just like I don't want them to lose their house
and that's kind of what it's looking like it's going to be. And they also I guess are going to
start docking my dad's social security. Yeah they will. Yeah they're going to come for your soul dude.
You got to pay them. How much do they owe on the house? Do you know?
I think 200 left. How much is the house worth?
I think 200 left. How much is the house worth?
Probably 400, 500,000.
Yeah, they're gonna have to sell the house.
And by the way, I just wanna say to you,
it's really tough to watch people that we love
go through things that we feel like
could have been avoidable or could have been different,
but their lives are their lives.
And we can't, you couldn't have changed
that. Do you know what I'm saying? It was their choice to take on the loans. It was their choice
to maybe not pay on the loans. It was their choice to stick their head in the sand for a decade or
more. And it's just really tough to sit there and watch that. And it's totally, yeah, of course,
nobody wants to see that happen, but I don't know that there's anything that you're gonna be able to do to stop that.
Unless you have $400,000 sitting around
that you're happy to give as a gift.
Or if there's a way to go back and negotiate
with the, on the interest,
like, hey, we're gonna write you a lump sum
of $210,000 and maybe they'll negotiate with you.
I don't know how they,
I don't know what happens when you haven't paid on 10 years.
My guess is they've sold it
and then it's been sold four or five times.
Not if it's a federal loan.
If it's a private loan, possibly you could, you know,
make some deals, but federal loans, man, they don't budge.
Yeah.
But yeah, there's a pay the piper moment on this
and this is it.
And your mom can file fraudulent charges.
Here's the deal.
She's been getting letters and emails for a decade.
Yeah.
That's just the way that is.
Yeah.
Do you have money, Miles?
Would you recommend a little bit?
Not much, there's about 50,000.
Yeah.
Yeah. And does your sister have money? I mean, if you have debt, yeah.
Yeah, she's early childhood development.
I recently told her to watch a Ramsay show, so she's not in great shape.
Yeah.
I don't know who's giving your parents bankruptcy advice here, but if they're filing for bankruptcy,
it may be worse than they're telling you
That means there's a lot of other things not just this 400,000 of student loans because you just can't discharge
There's other stuff. Yeah, you just can't discharge that student loans. Yeah
though
Hear me say this because I'm not saying you have to if you wanted to
Yeah
Your sister could say what portion of the student loans are mine sister could say, what portion of the student loans are mine?
And you could say,
what portion of the student loans are mine?
And you could either say, yeah,
I'm gonna give you a lump sum for what the original amount
was and I've washed my hands of it.
Or, you know, if you are a person who has the means to help
and you'd like to help, I just want you to hear me say,
you have the ability to do that, that's up to you.
You set boundaries around it,
you make clear expectations, move on.
But you're not, you don't have to do that in this case.
So it's just one of those things where,
John, I hate Parent Plus loans for this very reason.
Ah, dude.
For this very reason, because it,
A, it's debt, so it's chains and shackles.
But B, the water is so muddied because it's well,
it's for your education, you know, pointing to the son or daughter.
It's for your education.
But the parent is the one that says, yeah, but I'll sign it.
I'll take all the onus on me.
And then decades roll by and life doesn't go the way mom and dad
thought it was going to go.
And they put it off and put it off.
And now it's like, well, technically this is on you
because it's your education.
And they're pointing back at the son and daughter again.
And then the son and daughter feels the weight of it,
but they're like, I never, half the time they didn't even
know that that was the way college was being paid for.
It's like, I didn't even know you did this.
It's just such a-
Or a kid would sign for staff for loan back in the day
and didn't know that mom and dad had signed for another-
Right.
It's like the Spider-Man meme
where they're all pointing at each other.
Like, who was it?
And like you said, this points to a bigger picture
of financial mismanagement, just sounds like a mess.
And then you got a young man looking at the door
and here's what he's staring down.
My parents are gonna lose the house.
They're moving in with me.
Yeah, now what?
They're moving in with sister.
Now what, yep.
And there's a, yeah, there's a very much a now what? And they're 60 something years old,
and they're going back to work at wherever they can get a job. So this is a message for parents
right now who are in their, I don't know, 40s and your kids are getting ready to go to college.
You have very important choices to make. And those choices are A, making sure your kids are set up to
go to college by educating them and
setting expectations on we're not doing debt. I don't care how you do it but we're not doing debt
and three make sure that you're taking care of your retirement and taking care of your own self
and don't pass that burden off onto your children. That's not fair, it's not nice, and it's not loving
your children well.