The Ramsey Show - App - Don’t Quit When the Journey Gets Hard
Episode Date: September 24, 2025🤔 Think you’re good with money? Take our Money in America quiz! Dave Ramsey and Dr. John Delony answer you...r questions and discuss: “How can we stop my wife’s parents from asking their 10,12, and 17 year old daughters for money?” “Should I leave my marriage because of my husband’s spending?” “How do I get out of a house purchase that my employer forced me into but I can’t afford?” “Would buying land next door be a good investment?” “Should I continue to throw everything at my debt or save for potential emergencies?” “Should I take out a $10k loan to fix up my mom’s kitchen” “How do I tell my significant other, he needs a better job?” “Can I afford to open my own business?” “Do we make enough for me to be a stay-at-home mom?” “Should I stop contributing to my retirement while paying off debt?” “Am I legally obligated to follow my dad’s wishes from his will?” “Should I cash out home equity to invest in an IUL policy?” Next Steps: ✔️ Help us make the show better. Please take 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. 📱 Get episodes early in the free Ramsey Network app! 📈 Are you on track with the Baby Steps? Get a free personalized plan. 🎟️ Two Weekends. One Life-Changing Experience. Get away with your spouse in Nashville. 🧮 Set and actually reach your goals with the NEW 2026 Ramsey Goal Planner! Hurry—they sell out every year! 💵 Start your free budget today. Download the EveryDollar app! 📈 Free Tools & Resources to Help You With Investing and Retirement 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! Find top health insurance plans at Health Trust Financial. Use code RAMSEY to save 20% at Mama Bear Legal Forms. Visit NetSuite today to learn more. For more information, go to SimpliSafe. Use promo code RAMSEY for 18% off at The Nokbox. 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)
Normal is broke and common sense is weird.
So we're here to help you transform your life.
From the Ramsey Network and the Fairwinds Credit Union Studio,
this is the Ramsey Show. Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personality, number one best-selling author and host of the runaway hit on Ramsey Network, the Dr. John Deloney Show. He is my co-host today. Cody is in Nebraska. Hi, Cody. How are you?
You know, Dave, I am better than I deserve. How are you? Better than I deserve. What's up?
Well, guys, I'm going to start off a little bit of a doozy here, so I do apologize. But my wife and I have just recently found out.
out that her parents are asking my wife's sisters that are under 18 for money for basic
bills. We don't really know, you know, I've heard in the past you guys say, like, don't say
anything unless they come to you and ask for help or guidance. We're just kind of stuck because,
you know, my sister-in-laws are 10, 12, and then 17. So I'm just kind of, we're kind of confused
on what to do. How much money do they have?
Well, so my, so the younger sister-in-law, as they were, you know, working over the summer.
So basically what happened was, is, you know, my sister, my 10-year-old sister-in-law told us that,
well, mom and dad kept saying that we don't have enough money for groceries this month and blah, blah, blah.
So I offered him my $400 that I got from dogs sitting and they took it for groceries.
And then my 17-year-old sister-in-law came over two weeks ago and said that they had, quote-unquote, borrowed $1,000 from her for bills for last month to cover.
Is this true?
Are they struggling that bad?
I would say so, yes.
It's been talked about, you know, a couple months ago, my wife overheard that they're like $10,000.
short of months he my father-in-law owns his own business and it's been I know it's been struggling
for quite a while so I want to put things in order I have you hear a sale all the time you can't help
family unless they come ask you but before that I'm always going to protect kids of course
and if you got a 10 year old that's coming to you saying dad is saying I don't have enough money for
groceries I need your dog sitting money then I would personally I would insert myself into that
situation. Okay, okay. And that's what we were thinking because, you know, it's, it's really hard
for me to have respect for people like that, that, you know, they are in a situation where they
rely on everybody else to get them out of their problems. They blame everybody else except for
themselves. A lot of this is self-cause just based off their career choices that they've had.
So it's hard for me to have respect. It's hard my wife to have respect as well.
How long have you been worried?
It'll be two years in February.
okay um yeah i'm gonna take back what i said i'd have your wife called not you but
okay yeah yeah and um i think she yeah because here's the thing if the two of you go over there
at two years into this and insert yourself in this situation you are changing the trajectory of
the next 40 years of course yep
it's not simply the situation.
Yes, what you're describing is 100% disgusting.
I'm not questioning that at all.
And if they were abusing the children physically,
we would just turn them over to children's services.
Right, yeah, that's not happening.
It'd be that simple because we're just not going to allow that to happen.
They're just abusing them financially.
And so I think, but I don't think your wife, your wife's what,
20-something years old?
Yeah, she's 23.
Yeah.
If she sits down with her mom and dad and says,
y'all need to stop this,
you all need to become responsible adults,
my guess is there's about a 0% chance
that that's going to have any impact.
110%.
And if you show up saying,
I don't respect you guys,
they're going to take it out of their house.
That's not going to help either.
Of course.
That's a 40-year long discussion.
I'm trying to think, in other words,
what will work is more what I'm thinking about.
Dave, tell me if I'm wrong.
So my thought is when I say insert myself into that,
it would be your wife calling mom and dad and saying,
can we talk.
And she's got to be careful because the backlash could come down on a 10-year-old, right?
Yeah.
But we just heard.
Sorry.
Go ahead.
In my idea at first was like, you know, my wife, I told her,
I was like, what if you like take your mom out to coffee and be like,
you know, mom, we've heard some of this stuff from,
You know, my sister's like, how bad is it?
Is it really, is that really happening?
Are y'all really that bad?
Yeah.
And is there ways we can help or is there ways we can support you or is there education?
They may say absolutely not.
And then it's about giving your niece or your sister-in-law, if you will, a safe place that she always knows she's loved somewhere else.
But that's just going to have eight years of mom and dad borrowing money.
Exactly, exactly.
And, you know, that's our fear because, you know, they're sitting.
kids up for just a lifelong. Yeah, but dude, you're 25, you're 24. I would stay out of that for
right now. Yeah, that's not, that's not. Okay. That's actually not true either. It's a bad,
it's a bad on-ramp to life, but it's not an on-ramp that can't be corrected. A lot of us have
bad on-ramps. Yeah. And then we get the opportunity to meet Jesus and change our life. Okay, so
then those kids have got the same thing. They're not being physically abused. Yeah, so let me
refer, when I say insert myself, I don't mean you flex and put on a,
a sleeve of his shirt and go bang on the door. I think your wife taking mom out for coffee,
taking dad out and saying, hey, we just happened to hear this. I'm worried about y'all.
And I'm worried about my sisters. Yeah. How bad is it? And then y'all too have a hard
conversation about could you help, will you help, and all that? Because the next question is
going to be, well, can we have $500? And you all already have that predetermined discussion before she
heads into that. No, go ahead and I'll give you the answer to that. No, because they're saying
they're $10,000 short a month.
So I'm not throwing good money after bad.
So we only give, Ramsey's only give into situations where we create a sustainable story.
We don't throw money at something, $5 is something that's a $100 problem.
That's not, you're not creating a sustainable story then.
You've got to fix the problem.
You've got to get down under it.
And so that's going to involve maybe what I would pay is for them to get with the Ramsey coach.
and the Ramsey coach boxes her ears and says you have to sell the three cars you guys you cannot afford these stupid cars you can't afford to live in that house oh maybe you need to get a job because your life your your business is not a business it loses money it's called a hobby and so no we're going to have to you know these types of things are going on under the scene because if they're $10,000 short the $1,000 from the $17 year old or the $400 from the 10 year old doesn't fix it nor does $500 from you fix it so don't do that but do say I'll cheer you on
on. I'll help you do a budget. I'll connect you with some people and pay for it for you to get
some coaching to get yourself out of this. You've struggled with this your whole life. I've watched
you. I'm your daughter. And I'd love for you to be free from these demons. And you and I've
talked about this before on the air, but parents don't like hearing money advice. So if she sits down
and says, y'all need to start, that's not going to go well. But that idea of sitting down and saying,
hey, I'm worried about you. How bad is it? Are you all okay?
we are and then tell them your story that's a different avenue yeah we are on a budget and it's
giving us great peace we have sold some stuff to be able to get in get our income in line with
our outgo and it's given us great peace and if i could ever help you get with our coach we'll
show you how to do that that kind of thing
Michelle is in Utah hi Michelle how are you
Hi. Days before my wedding, I was laid off as the breadwinner, and a month later, my husband quit his job without asking me. He didn't have a savings or financial plan. To get us through, I made a tight budget with my personal savings and gifts we received from our wedding that he agreed to, but it's been so bad we had to go on welfare. It's been months, and I recently discovered he secretly transferred money from our joint account to his personal account, spending 30,
500 in about a month and a half, leaving us with almost nothing left. When confronted, he
refused to share bank statements or make a plan to address this behavior. I got laid off.
I know, like months ago. Yeah, and I'm still not working. It's been tough. And you're still not
working. Why? Yeah. It's been really tough. I've been applying for a lot of different
positions over, I'd say at this point 250, I'm happy with the amount of interviews I've been
getting. So hopefully I'll find something soon. But you've been not working for six months.
No, not six months. I'm sorry. Three months. You've been married three whole months. Yeah.
And all three months have been hell. Wow. Yeah. Yeah. It's been bad.
Did this surprise you or did you notice about him coming in?
He's been, he's a medical resident, so he spent essentially his entire life in school.
So I did flag these things while we were dating as what I saw as problematic behavior,
just poor spending habits.
He's a medical resident?
Does he not get paid for that?
He does.
But a month, like I said, a month after we got married, he decided he wants to go into a different specialty and quit.
He quit his job.
Mm-hmm.
You quit medical residency and you don't have your MD?
He does have an MD, but he wants to go into a different field within surgery.
So he wants to start a different residency.
But it will take time for him to find that position.
Here's the thing.
Your marriage challenges are deeper than spending and deeper than him quitting.
It is you don't respect this guy at all.
and when when life three months in or a couple months into your marriage through you guys a pretty big curve ball
your biggest fears about him were exposed and you've reached that place the gotman's call it the
worst of the four horsemen of the relationship apocalypse you're at contempt i don't like you
and I think that I would be handling this different than you in a better way.
And unless you address your marriage at that level,
y'all are just going to keep playing whack-a-mole with symptoms.
You're going to create your own checking account, your own savings plan,
your own, your own, he'll do his own, his own.
And you already are roommates, y'all will have a divorce inside your own house.
And so it's sitting down and saying,
I don't respect you
Here's how you've chosen to handle this
You quit your job
You quit this, you're not participating
You've got your own stuff
You don't want to be a part of this thing that we're building
We have to build a new marriage three months in already
And you got to call that
And then you also
Sending out applications
I mean it sounds like you're hustling
But there's also something about you
regaining your own dignity
By just going and working at Burger King
on the breakfast shift
just so you can feel like you're getting underneath yourself too
because it's easy to start throwing rocks back and forth at each other right
yeah and I I do respect him it's just
no you don't you don't you don't oh you wrote a letter that you read over the air
that said I don't respect him yeah you just read it to us
no I didn't say that no all the words the words say that
all the words that you wrote in that letter say that is that in a really tough
moment, he quit his job and took off without you. And he stole our money that we agreed to
while I'm trying to be the one that is the adult and make everything behave. And this guy's
misbehaving here, here, here, and here. I don't blame you for not respecting him. That's not
respectable behavior. But I think you, like, owning that. Does that make sense? Yeah, I see what you're
saying. Yeah. So what's, what's your question for us beneath these other questions? Like, how can we
help you. So in trying to move forward, like you said, I realized that the issue is much bigger than,
let's say, just money, right? But in trying to address behaviors in both of us that maybe led to
this happening, I asked him to share his bank statements with me so that we can address some of these
behaviors together, but he's not being cooperative and hasn't done so. So I guess,
what I'm wondering now is what boundaries and improvements do I need to see and should we see
and request to go forward? Because honestly, I don't blame different people for having different
financial knowledge, but I think we should work together to make that, to make each of us stronger
in that regard. And honestly, I'm just concerned that even when he is a full-blown surgeon
making that salary in several years,
we still won't be financially stable
because the spending would be.
It doesn't start with the spending.
It's the spending anchored into the fact that y'all have a marriage
where he has his bank statements and you've got yours.
Y'all should have bank statements
that anyone can pull up at any time
that y'all talk about together regularly.
Right.
You're 100% right.
and that's why we made a joint savings and teching.
If he actually does complete residency,
which would surprise me, but let's say he does,
your fears are 100% grounded.
He's going to make half a million dollars,
and he's going to say this is my money.
Right.
Yes, you're right.
I would be terrified of that if I were you too.
So what's the next step for her?
The next step is you being honest about sitting down and saying,
do you want to be married with me?
This should have been a conversation you all had before you got married.
I'm not I'm not going to marry somebody I'm not going to connect life with somebody that won't engage with a joint
feeling about a joint future together where we put our money in the same account because that funds our dreams
and our commitment to each other but you're already here and we have transparency and we have a joint
the tactical things that we are doing with every dollar we are deciding together before we do them
Right. And that's part of my concern because you did make a joint. Separation and deception can't go forward.
I see. We did make a joint budget going into this and it did make a joint savings with our money and a joint checkings.
But in order to hide the spending habits, he transferred from our joint savings to his personal account. And that's why I can't see the transaction.
And we call that financial infidelity. He's cheating on you. He's deceiving you.
Do you have any idea what he spent it on?
Yeah.
Unfortunately, just generally speaking, he wouldn't show me the statements,
but it seems to be personal grooming, hair cut, binape, his hair, fast food,
and paying off his personal credit cards.
Although going into this, given the severity of the situation,
we had agreed to not making payments on our credit cards at this time temporarily.
Okay, so he's got a really good haircut and he's dead free.
It sounds like he's leaving.
Okay.
It sounds like he's setting up another move.
Yeah.
Either that or he absolutely 100% is not interested in building a life with you.
He's interested in continuing his life next to you.
And that's a very different proposition.
That's not marriage that's roommates with benefits.
Can you imagine?
If I told Sharon, I spent money on a haircut.
I can imagine the eulogy I would read at your service.
I can imagine that.
Wow.
I'm not saying the guy's bald.
I'm just saying.
Yeah, there's something scary about, here's something scary about sitting with a spouse.
Three months in or three years in, 30 years in,
creating a plan, shaking hands, we're going to do this together, and then you find out they
went off on the side and did whatever they wanted to do. They completely lied.
Yeah, they lied to you. So this is an integrity and trust breakdown, and you can't go forward
with deception and integrity and trust issues. So you guys have got to sit down and go what the
teenagers used to call define the relationship. TDR. DTR, that's what TTR. DTR. Define the
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I promise you it's worth your time. Ethan is with us in Florida. Hi, Ethan. How are you?
Hey, David and Dr. John Deloney.
I'm awesome.
I'm just happy to talk to you guys.
I'm nervous.
No problems.
You're good.
How can we help, sure?
Okay, so I'm a young veteran, and I joined the military right out of high school.
I did my four years, got my degree.
And two years ago, at the age of 22, I moved my wife and kid to Florida to start a military-sponsored internship program at one of their approved companies.
At the end of that internship, the owner of the company promised me,
$180,000 salary if I bought his house.
That promise was put into an offer letter and an employment contract.
And that offer letter solely qualified me for a no money down VA Jumbo loan.
So I proceeded to buy his house for $830,000 with an $845,000 mortgage at a 6.75% interest rate and a
nearly $7,000 month payment.
Immediately after I closed, he cut my pay, making that offer letter fraudulent.
and over the course of the past two years, my page progressively been cut as he ran the company
to the ground. And as of two weeks ago, I'm completely unemployed. I'm owed over $150,000 in wages.
I've since vacated the house. I got a rental house for my wife and kids. I start a new job
tomorrow, but I'm being forced into a short sale and will be about $200,000 underwater.
So my question is, what would you do if you or me? And what are my options to minimize?
minimize the damage to my credit and my future home buying privileges.
So at what point in this process and how many times in this process did your heart try to tell
your head how stupid this was?
I could tell you a long story of how I was convinced it was very legit company.
I mean, I interviewed to do it.
And you never stopped and looked at this and said, this is a bad idea.
Oh, no, I mean, the company had like 50 people.
No, I mean, you, I'm not talking about the company.
The company doesn't matter.
The whole story you told me, if the company is completely on the up and up, if they're really financially strong,
and if they followed through on everything they said, this is still unbelievably stupid.
Yeah, I agree now looking back.
I mean, at the time I was 22 years old, and the guy seemed like he was made of money.
I thought I was doing him a favor.
uh because he found out he's having twins and he wanted his wife he said his wife wanted a bigger
house um but yeah i agreed looking back now i was i was completely scammed i never should
have got in this situation you ever heard the phrase if something sounds too good to be true it is
yeah that's this is it yeah this is it you're like the walking definition yeah oh my gosh honey
i'm so sorry yeah what hell you have been through thank you for your service to the country and
you deserve to be treated better i'm so sorry
Yeah, he's a veteran, too, so he's taking advantage of veterans and it's terrible.
Yeah, that's not unusual, as you know.
Yeah.
There's veterans outside the gate of every single base for the next two miles.
Just as soon as you leave the gate on each side of the road for the next two miles is stupid.
Like, every stupid human trick is right outside the gate of every military base.
And most of them are run by veterans screwing over current active duty people.
So it's not unusual at all.
I wish I could say it was different, but we know too much about your world.
All right.
So, why did you move out?
Because, so the mortgage is going to go overdue starting October 1st.
Yeah, so.
And I know my credit's going to get ruined.
Yeah, so why did you move out?
So I could start the short sale process or whatever as soon as possible.
You can start short sale process while you're living in it.
Yeah.
That's true.
I don't know.
I just wanted to get it over with and just move on with my life as soon as possible, I guess.
Okay.
It's interesting.
All right.
So a short sale is where the house brings less than the mortgage.
And if it is a short sale, remember this phrase because you're going to have trouble getting it with your veterans administration.
And it's the only way you want to do it.
Don't do it if you don't get this phrase.
And I doubt you're going to get it, but you need to get this phrase without,
recourse okay so a short sale is the lender looks at the situation and says my
borrower is a 22 year old that doesn't make enough money to pay this bill and it'll
never happen in this century that we're going to get our money the only money we're
going to get is out of this house and so we're going to accept a $600,000 $800,000 offer
$700,000 offer on this house and whatever of the mortgage doesn't get paid we are
going to forgive it without resource that's a sure without recourse that's a sure without
course. That's a short sale. The Veterans Administration seldom does a short sale without recourse.
But if they have recourse, they're going to sue you for the difference, and it's no better than a
foreclosure. Who will sue me for the difference? The veterans, yeah, the VA. And believe me,
they will sue you. Because what the realtor that told me is that the VA, they just eat the difference
on the short sale. If you do it without recourse, they eat the difference. But let me tell you, I got to
tell you nine out of ten times they don't now the FHA will eat the difference if you talk
fanny may a conventional loan into doing a loan doing a short sale it's typically without recourse
but the VA oddly enough ironically enough which is designed to help veterans is going to screw you
they're going to hammer you so I'm afraid for you right now but it's the only it's the only route
you've got so take the realtor their word but do not sign this unless it says without
recourse. I do not want them chasing you for the difference. If they're going to chase you for
the difference, make them foreclose. Do not do a deal with them and then them screw you. You've been
screwed enough by people you've done deals with. So, yeah. So whatever the, whatever the buyer offers,
the VA takes that amount and forgives the rest. Say it with me without recourse. You got that phrase?
I do not want them coming after you for the difference.
And the paperwork needs to say that, and you need to freaking read the paperwork.
Yeah.
Because the VA is supposed to be there for veterans, and quite honestly, they're not.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Otherwise, they would have never made this loan.
Yeah, I mean, I reached out to them.
They did an audit into the origination of the loan, and they said it's legit that the company who's named after the owner has the same last name.
that I bought his house with an offer letter that he signed to work at his company
that didn't raise any red flags apparently so yeah but the point is if you have a
22 year old who's never made any money in his life and he suddenly is offered
$180,000 for a job that is not worth $180,000 somebody ought to look at this and go
it violates common sense because son you are not going to get a $180,000 job anywhere else
were you no that's that's why I took it no that's why that's why we knew it was a scam
yeah yeah and you shouldn't have taken it and i would recommend an 22 year old buying his first
house not buying an 860 thousand dollar home based on a bogus salary amount that you can't get
anywhere else in the marketplace yeah the whole thing was a scam from day one it was never going
to happen from day one yeah i could elaborate to dr john about how this guy's like the textbook
definition of a narcissist you know he had a whole company of a bunch of people
People convince until now that everything was legit, but it was all the lie.
You know, Ethan, what I want to do, though, if I'm in your shoes is not define him,
I want to ask myself, what was I being that allowed me to step into the bear trap?
Yeah.
Yeah, he, we get, obviously this guy's a scumball, okay?
But you obviously walked right past several warning flags, and you need to learn from those,
so you never walk past him again.
because I did the same thing when I was your age, and I went broke.
And that's what I'm trying to keep you from doing.
I don't want you to get there.
So if you're going to do something stupid, at least learn from it.
And this whole thing was stupid.
The whole thing is a nightmarish mess.
I'm so sorry, honey.
Yeah, without recourse, that's your phrase for the day, my man.
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Kirk is in Colorado.
Hey, Kirk, what's up?
Hey, so I've got a real estate question for you.
Okay.
We have a property that, well, there's an open property next to us.
came up for sale. And I'm trying to figure out if it's a good idea, maybe a good investment
to buy it. You have the cash? We do. Okay. How much is it? So they're asking $40,000.
For what? What is it? So it's an empty lot. It's 1.3 acres. We live in a rural area,
so everyone's got about 1.2 acres that everyone lives on. We enjoy having open lots.
on either side of us.
So buying this would, A, prevent someone from moving in and building next to us.
And B, I had the idea of incorporating it into my lot.
So at that point, if we ever sell in like 10 years and move, we would be selling 2.5 acres
versus 1.2 acres.
Okay.
All right.
And you're out of debt, except your home?
No, we are 100.
percent out of debt. We own their home. Okay, and you have the cash. I would buy it. I have done
that quite often. I bought 22 acres next door to this building that I'm sitting in, commercial
property. I bought vacant lots adjacent to every property or several properties that I own
when they come available for buffers, as you said, privacy, the enjoyment of a little extra
space, and sometimes just to keep contiguous things going. What I would
would not do is combine the properties. You can combine them when you sell them simply by selling
them both. Okay. Would it be cheaper as property taxes, one, first having two different lots?
Might be a tiny bit, but $40,000 worth of property taxes is not much in South Dakota. Okay.
We're talking about a biscuit.
Colorado.
So the thing, so I sold a big, I built this big, huge house on a hill.
back in the early 2000s, and I sold it in 21.
I had purchased two five-acre tracks that were contiguous to it, that were big lots in the area.
And I had a little green space around it, too, so I was basically sitting on about 20 acres, all right?
But I did not combine the lots.
When I sold it, the buyer of the big house didn't want the other lots, didn't want to spend that much.
and so what ended up happening was I sold the house itself at a premium
and then I ended up selling both the lots at a premium
they built next door to him and it's his choice
because he didn't want him but I ended up with more money that way
okay that makes sense yeah so but if he wanted them all I offered him
everything in one package and he didn't want it right the buyer which is fine it's
okay it's his place he didn't have to do it he was not as concerned about
buffer as I was right so I liked having 20 acres around me a lot so and I kind of miss that but yeah
but yeah that's where we are so yeah but keep it separate but yes I would buy and I don't know that
the investment will work out to be a big deal for you if if the 40 turns into 80 over a decade
you did good I'd be shocked if it did that but more than anything it's peace of mind and
control of the environment around you and you've deserved that you've you've you've
done a good enough job with your money to buy that i would i've bought that yesterday yeah no question
about that yeah and god bless any place in the country where you can get an acre and 1.2 for 40,000
i would buy that on principle i think yeah there's people yeah geez wow scott's with us in
ohio hey scott how are you doing good about yourself better than i deserve what's up um so i am
working through a little bit of a financial situation where I'm trying to understand
if I should continue to be laser focused on my debt payoff or start planning for my future
at 42 years old. So I am a single income earner household with no kids. I make about 150,000 a
year. And at the end of last year, I started to realize that just my numbers weren't adding
up for my income. I was constantly behind the ball, trying to move money around.
to pay all my bills and just came to the realization that I was both stubborn and financially
alerted.
Dude.
Wow, that's brutal.
Welcome to the meeting.
I'm John and this is Dave.
We've been there too, brother.
Yeah, so I built a really strict budget.
Since January 1st, I've paid off $37,000 in debt.
Wow.
I'm down to one credit card, which was I had $27,000 in credit cards and
January. I'm down to about 9,200 on a credit card. This is now at zero percent interest and
paying about 1,200 a month on it. Okay. Then I have a home loan for my roof, a car, student loans,
and finally my mortgage. Not counting the mortgage, what's the rest of it? Let's see here,
about 53,000. And you've already paid off 37 since January? Yeah, so I should have that paid off in
about 16 months, and then I'm left with about $196,000 for the mortgage.
Amazing.
Well done, sir.
Outstanding, dude.
Thank you.
And then I have about $71,000 in my 401K, nothing at Roth, nothing in HSA yet.
And you're not adding anything to the 401K currently?
I know I am because of where I work.
I get 6%.
Oh, you didn't understand the program.
The program is you stop the 401K.
Okay.
Oh, now we're going to get out of debt in 12 months.
This is so cool.
I have about 12K in reserves.
I have a century home.
Oh, wait a minute.
Now we're going to pay down that credit card today.
Today.
You're going to be gone today.
Look at this.
Now we're out of debt in 10 months.
This is so cool.
Okay, look, listen, you've created a either save myself now and not help myself later
or help myself later and take longer on this.
And what I want to tell you is every dollar you pay off right now is how.
helping future you.
Yes.
Your shortest distance between where you are and financial security and wealth is not
screwing around with your match, and it's not hoarding that $12,000.
It's leaning in with everything the way we taught you and you're not doing it,
but you need to go do it.
The shortest distance between where you are right now and that is 100% debt freedom
because when you don't have a stinking payment in the world, you rebuild that emergency
fund very quickly, then you start putting 15% of your income away and you're young
and you make $150,000.
Later, you're going to make $250,000, 10 years from now,
and you're still putting 15% away.
You're going to have $10 million if you do what I tell you to do
instead of doing it your way.
Well, that's what my goal was, this $6 to $10 million
for being realistic in today's climate with inflation and everything.
I feel anybody in their 40s is going to need $5 to $10 million
to have a comfortable life.
Yeah, 60s even better, but, you know, it's okay.
You're going to be okay.
You'll be okay with a million, but you'd be better off with $6,
and you'll be better off of 60s.
so but the point is quit trying to screw around with this system that works dude you you really
have made good progress remarkably without doing what we taught you to do here's the deal you're running
a marathon and you're at mile 14 you just pass the halfway mark i mean i mean not dollar-wise but you're
running and you're kind of getting tired of running and when you get tired of running you start
giving yourself reasons why you can go ahead and just quit you've already done the training you've proven it to
yourself what if we just went and got a burger hear me and dave say finish this race man okay you're
tired you don't like sending 1200 bucks every penny away every we get it you're dude you are cooking
on this thing what do you owe on the car um 16000 okay not much all right good and then my house is
worth about i think it was 345 and i'm good and that's that's going to be paid off in like seven
years the way you're going so you're doing so good yeah yeah seriously if you will
will take 10 months of doing it my way and have almost nothing in savings down to $1,000,
maybe step one, and stop your 401K for a lousy 10 months.
The grounds you'll make up as a result of that because of this increased focused intensity
is going to get you out of that so fast mathematically and psychologically and spiritually
because the feedback loops are going to kick in and you're going to go, I love this.
I'm paying off more and more and more and more.
And you're going to get out of it.
That's what happens in the brain.
and so that's kind of how it sounds my brain isn't quite so old witchcrafty but i get it
no that's a that's like a yeah like a wizard whatever you're the bad guy on inspector gadget
evil laugh right yeah there you go yeah it's like there we go you can do this man but quit
screwing around with it get it done
welcome back to the ramsie show in the
Fair wins credit union studios.
Dr. John Deloney, number one bestselling author,
host of the Dr. John Deloney show,
massive hit on Ramsey Network.
He's my co-host today.
Open phones at AAA 825-5-225.
Lynn is in New York.
Hi, Lynn. How are you?
Good. How are you?
Better than I deserve. What's up?
I wanted to see if I should take out a $10,000 loan
to help my mom fix her kitchen.
there's some emotional reasons why I would and why I wouldn't
and ultimately I'm trying to see if the financials make sense
to help me make the decision.
So you don't have $10,000 to give your mom?
I don't, no.
Okay.
And your mom's broke?
Yeah, she has a pension, she has Social Security.
She's retired, so she's on a fixed income.
How old is your mom?
She's almost 80.
And how's her health?
She's actually quite spry for her age.
Good.
Okay.
And what's wrong with her kitchen?
She tends to hire, do a lot of DIY and like hire handymen who aren't quite handy.
And so over the last few years, to renovate the home in general.
Oh, I see.
Okay.
Yeah.
And so, you know, she's half-funded projects over the years.
and it's left the kitchen, you know, with only a subfloor, no cabinets, no countertops.
It's just kind of in a state of disrepair.
And she is older, even though her health is pretty great.
I worry about, you know, her age and food safety, physical safety in that space.
Wow.
Really bad decisions.
Yeah.
Okay, man, I just appreciate how much you love your mom.
That's sweet of you, and that you want to take care of her, and you don't want to live in a house that probably wouldn't pass codes right now.
So that's nice of you.
You do know you called the show where we'd never tell anybody to borrow money, right?
You know you called that show.
I did, and, you know, I'm trying to, the other part is, you know, I've worked really hard over the last few years.
To get out of debt.
And I'm not going to tell you to spend $10,000 on an 80-year-old's kitchen.
The math doesn't work.
I mean, if you had a million dollars laying in your account
and you want to spend $10,000 on an 80-year-old's kitchen, that's fine.
But I wouldn't do that.
Okay.
And I certainly wouldn't borrow the money to do it under any circumstances.
But I do applaud your heart.
Now, let's try to fix the problem, though.
Okay.
A different way.
So is your mom in a good church?
church?
I would say she does go to a church, but the church is the place where she has been
recommended these people who have, like, fixed her home.
Good, that's even better.
That's even better.
So here's what I want you to do.
I want you to take some pictures of the mess that is her kitchen, and I want you to go
have a lunch meeting with her pastor and say some of the jacklegs that go to your church
have done this.
and so I'm going to ask since we have an elderly widow over here
that you organize a work group of some young men
who actually know how to swing a hammer
and come over and put her some cabinets in and put a floor down.
I want you to take care of an elderly widow
because she's an elderly widow and she's a member of your church
and I really want you to do it
because some of the jacklegs that go to your church
are the ones that cause the problem in the first place.
And I got a feeling you can shake you.
this pastor into getting some work done.
Okay.
Nothing feels better than shame in a pastor.
I'm messing with you.
I'm being harsh, but you see what I'm saying.
But can I tell you,
this is some of the best advice I've heard you give, Dave.
I love this idea because you know why it is,
it's the bluff call.
Are y'all going to be who you're supposed to be?
You're going to take care of widows and orphans.
Here you go.
You got quiet on us, Lynn.
Why don't you like that plan?
I mean, the handbook says that's real.
religion, widows and orphans?
Yeah.
That's what the handbuck says.
My mom, she doesn't like accepting help.
She's not always the most...
But she was going to take a $10,000 loan from you to do a kitchen.
That's called help.
She didn't ask me necessarily for the loan directly.
I know, but you had a plan where she was going to do that, so let's have a plan where
her church supports her because her church's jack legs are the ones that messed this up.
And by the way, this is going to be good practice because over the next 10 years, she's going to
need more and more support and care from you and others and others and you're going to have
to get out of the habit of debt fixes anything because it makes it worse yeah because i don't want
to give you a negative scenario but i really don't want you paying a loan off after your mom
passes away and you're paying payments on a kitchen that she's no longer uses that would be
really, really negative.
Can you imagine writing that check every month?
Yeah, and it wouldn't be, it wouldn't be an investment in that sense that I would get back.
So it's not, yeah.
No, it's not, it's just consumption.
And it's just your sweetheart wanting to help your sweet mom.
And I think both of you are sweet ladies, and I don't want her to get messed over anymore.
And I don't want you to mess yourself over trying to be sweet.
And so let's not do this.
Let's not step up in this trap.
I'm real serious.
If it was you, if I was you, I'd go have a, and I've got the money to write the check,
but in this case, I think this church has an opportunity to serve.
And that's the other side of it is they have an opportunity to live out a mission
with the congregants of that place.
This is one of those rare win, win, win, win, wins where everybody wins.
And an elderly widow gets in her kitchen put back together.
and the church gets an opportunity to go help somebody out.
That's awesome.
And I don't know how we got here, but seriously, if a recommendation came from inside of her congregation
and they left an elderly widow in this situation, the pastor really has an opportunity
to work with that person on their character.
Right.
Absolutely.
Because you just don't want to be on this list of it.
You don't want to be on the list of people who messes with kids, widows, and orphans.
There's several things in the scriptures that are really don't, you don't want to be on
that list.
you want to be on the list of the people that help those people.
That's the list you want to be.
It's the naughty list and the good list.
I mean, this is it.
Not Santa Claus, but it's got.
And so, you know, it's, woo, whoo, who serious stuff.
That's a, you know what?
That's a great idea.
I hope that happens more and more.
Well, you have so many opportunities to do things that way.
And honestly, I work with so many churches.
I mean, we worked with, had 50,000 churches have taught 10 million financial peace congregants over the last 25 years.
And I know a bazillion churches that have the funds and have the systems to take care of the single mom, the widow, the orphan, and they don't always know a way to connect to one.
Yeah.
And so just giving them the opportunity, letting them, hey, here's one.
And they go, thank you.
Yeah.
And they're ready to go do it.
pretty incredible that they're just standing there ready to go.
They're willing, ready, and able.
They just don't have the connection.
Because no one wants to raise their hand and say, help me.
And I know a number of young men who are asking, hey, there's no places to serve.
Like, I can go to a local soup kitchen or something, but I've got to get in line.
And there's all that.
Man, if you could go to church.
There's a 25-year-old Bible study group of men at that church.
Show up on a weekend.
And this was their weekend project.
They could put that whole kitchen back together.
Amazing.
Yeah.
And then they'd all walk a little bit taller to you.
Everybody wins, boys and girls.
This is how this works.
I like it.
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Today's question comes from Ava in Ohio.
Ava writes,
My significant other and I have been together for 15 years and we have two kids together.
We're both 30 years old.
He's currently scraping by, being self-employed, making roughly $65,000 annually,
but pays taxes of about $6,000, and his reimbursed expenses are included in that $65K,
making his true income about $26,000 a year.
We do not have joint finances.
I pay for everything for us from the house, utilities, groceries,
and even his health insurance.
I make $163,000 annually.
He does have some great skills to get a decent job, but chooses not to.
How do I motivate him to get a better job
and ask him to start paying for part of our family expenses?
I don't think you can.
in 15 years you hadn't motivated him to get married
I don't know how you're going to motivate him to get a job
and by the way
30 years old we've been together 15 years
this started when you were 15
high school man yeah
it's Dawson's Creek I don't I don't want to wait this is good man
I like teenage romances
but he's got a pretty good setup here
his wife is rich he can kind of do what he wants
You have three kids.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Just one of them is humongous and old.
I think the path here is to sit down and be honest about you spent half your life together
and to sit down and say, we've been co-managing our lives.
We've been running in parallel.
And I want to start making a marriage.
I want to make a life together.
Not where I have my money.
You've got your money.
I pay all the bills.
You just kind of do what you want when you want to do it.
But what we want our life to look like?
How do we want to feel when we come home every day?
What dreams do we have?
And here's what it's going to take for all of us to get where we want to go.
And he's probably going to say, I'm good.
And then pop the top on a cold Budweiser and go on about his day.
But that's where that conversation starts.
And David.
Yeah.
Now, but I also, okay, this is how, the problem is not just that we're here, it's how we got here, okay, there was never any request for this man to grow up.
This is an adolescent.
Exactly.
And so he didn't have to get married to have kids and to start a life with this woman.
he can just run he doesn't have to develop a career he can go over here and do something
I'm going to follow my passion oh brother you're killing me here and um we're broke but I'm
real passionate about it you know the um no it doesn't work so the problem is you've got to undo
at least 10 years worth of mixed messages that you've been sending with your behaviors
but with what you've allowed and this is not about you get what you talk about you get what you
Right. Exactly. But this is not about we can't make ends meet. This is about we've got money. She makes 163K and he makes 26. So they make 100. They make 200 grand of you. Right. They're fine. The deal is I don't respect this guy that I've been with for half my life. Yeah. And you got to have that conversation. Are we going to do life together or not? And here's what that looks like. And let me ask you this. It occurs to me. I'm stepping over into your field of expertise.
your world but it feels like to me not only does she not respect him she knows she allowed all
this exactly and so she's starting to be mad at herself almost all of this starts with i'm angry
at myself and i'm gonna put it out into the world yeah and so yeah if she wants to sit and that's why
it's so important when you sit down and have these conversations to use eye statements i've allowed
this i have gone out and created a world where we're not married we're not married two kids you don't
have to do anything. You don't work much. I'm saying I want to be connected and build something
together. And that's where this is a scary thing. You kind of got to do one or the other in this
situation. Ava has to have an or what statement. Here's what I want to have in my life. Or I'm going
to go ahead and move, like solidify the separateness that is our world already. Or I'm not
leaving this guy. He's a part of my life. I'm going to make peace with it. And I'm going about my
life. Most people get stuck in between the or I don't want to make a declarative or what statement
but I just want to complain about it and be frustrated about it all the time. So either make peace
with it. You make a great salary. We're moving on. You got a third kid. Maybe he's fun and
whatever. Or I'm going to draw a line in the sand and say as for me in my house, I want more than
this. I deserve more than this. I want to build something together. I don't want to be a single mom
anymore. That's right. You got to grow up. I need a man in my house. Not a third kid.
And more importantly, here's what that looks like.
Here's the path for that.
So tactical steps, if you're in that situation, I'm going to say, if you want to go forward, it's going to look like this.
You're going to get a career development plan and execute on it.
We're going to get married.
And in order to work our way through all that, we're going to sit down and see a counselor.
Absolutely.
And if you don't want to do those three things, you are electing for us not to be together anymore,
because I don't want to be a single mom and pretend like I'm not anymore.
Since behavior is a language, you're telling me very clearly, I don't want to be a part of your life.
Yeah, yeah.
And here's the problem, okay?
The data now tells us, and John and I have talked about this.
We talked about it on our tour quite a bit.
It came up a lot.
There's tons of actual research, multiple different research projects that are airtight research,
looking at actual labor department data.
Census Bureau data that says a single man 35 years old, it has one-seventh of the net worth of a married man that's 35 years old.
A single woman that's 35 years old has one-tenth of the net worth of a married woman that is 35-year-old.
married men live 7 to 10 years longer and have a 20% higher probability of surviving cancer than single men.
Wow.
So your net worth and your incomes, all the data tells us your net worth, your incomes, your health,
your relational satisfaction is in multiples of 10 greater for marriage.
couples than couples that shack up and yet more than half the couples listening to
this right now are shacked up instead of married and you think you haven't done
any damage but you have you you've lost what we call what the data calls a
marriage advantage versus the shack up advantage there is no data zero data
that says you outperform physically relationally and financially by
shacking up the marriage the married couple zero times do you out
perform zero and yet everybody does it but i think what's important is the financial metrics the health
metrics those are lights on the dashboard of a person who has a life where they exhale where they can
anchor in and go work hard right you can work harder when you know you've got a you've got a ride or
die next to you um when you're in the hospital you've got a reason to get up and get out like when
you're you've got all like those things i would never tell you
somebody to go get married so you have more money i would say hey go build a an amazing life with
somebody it's going to be hard it's going to be challenged go do that and the fruit on that tree
is going to be more than you can imagine and i would tell you that the dashboard is right um i think
you're exactly right the financial problems are never the problem they're the symptom right so financial
limitations are never the problem they're the symptom financial uh success is never the real success
it's the fruit on the tree yeah it's the symptom yeah it's the symptom
And so what we're telling you is, is that it turns out that the best way.
And like, for instance, when we interviewed the 10,167 millionaires, we asked them, you know, what percentage of you, did you or what's your relationship with your spouse have to do with your wealth?
89% said a willing, able, and enthusiastic partner is what my spouse was.
When you interview the general public that's broke, you ask what percentage of your husband?
spouse, you know, what percentage of you is your spouse, a willing, abone, enthusiastic
partner?
40%?
Not 89?
There's a causal effect here.
It's a causal statistical analysis.
That's what caused it.
It's the dashboard light.
That's exactly what it is.
Investing might seem complicated or confusing, but it doesn't have to be.
the Ramsey investing and retirement hub is packed with interactive tools and resources help you get informed learn not be intimidated we'll help you
you can check it out Ramsey Solutions.com slash retire or click the link in the description
Katrina is in Canada hi Katrina how are you I'm great thanks how are you doing better than I deserve what's up
So I currently live on a three-acre parcel near a small town.
I'm single, no kids, never married, and I work in law enforcement right now, and I make
a pretty decent wage.
But I have, basically, I work like half a month.
And I'm looking to increase my wealth, and I want to do something that I really love.
Like, my job right now is, it's fun.
There's things about it that I really like.
but I'm looking at possibly like starting a mini cowcalf operation
and my question is am I I just want to see like if I'm how I'm doing
financially and would you advise if this is a wise decision a miniature cowcalf
operation yeah you mean the operation is miniature or the cows are just the
operation because my land is just three acres so I was thinking if I get
three cows and rent my friend's bowl once a year.
Yeah.
The expenses would be approximately $3,500 to $4,000 a year.
Yeah.
And then they would bring in around $7,000 to $8,000 a year.
Okay, and your three acres is fertile enough to feed three cows?
I'd say about 75% is grazing land.
And it's fertile enough to serve.
Because there's parts of the United States, it takes 20 acres to do that.
Parts of the United States, one acre will do that, so I don't know what you've got.
Will the three acres feed the cows?
It'll feed them for the summer, and then the winter would be...
You're buying feed in the winter?
Yes, yes.
You are in Canada.
Okay, that makes sense.
All right.
And the feed costs, what, for the winter?
The feed, I just did the feed and medical expenses will be for three cows, around 3,500 to 4,000.
Oh, that's the 35.
Okay, plus the purchase of the cows?
That does not include the purchase of the cows.
Right, so are you out of debt?
So right, no, I'm not out of debt, no.
Okay.
So you don't have $3,500 plus the purchase of the cows?
No.
The plan is to hopefully do it in the next year or two.
Oh, after you're out of debt?
Oh, yes, yeah.
Oh, okay.
Well, then I'm not an agribusiness expert, but business is pretty simple.
You want to bring in more than you have go out, and the difference is called profit, right?
Right.
And so what's the cows cost?
They range from 2 to 2,500 per head.
Okay.
So you're going to have $10,000 invested, and if you produce at least three calves a year out of that,
then you're going to make $7,500 on your $10,000 investment.
Yes.
Okay, give or take, right?
Plus or plus a lot of trouble?
And are you, you know, are you making a dollar an hour when this is done?
Because you're going to be out there, you're going to be one out there with your sleeves rolled up.
Mm-hmm.
In the cold, throwing hay.
Oh, that's fine.
Yeah.
I don't mind hard work, but like right now because of my current job is.
I do if it's a dollar an hour.
Mm-hmm.
I really mind it if it's a dollar an hour.
It pisses me off.
So I want to make $100 an hour, right?
Yeah.
Especially if it's cold.
Yeah.
Hello.
So, you know, that's the way you run the numbers out on the business.
As you say, you know, your time is not worthless because you could use your time
and go do something else and make money.
So it's called opportunity cost on your time.
So you need to make better than a wage for running a business and taking all this risk.
because he's stinking cows might die okay and this is there's risk involved in all this
you run the business and so you've got to make really really good money like 100 bucks an
hour for the time you put into it otherwise it's otherwise it's an ugly hobby with it requires a lot
of work because you like cows that's not that's not a business though if you want to do that
that's fine but just call it an ugly hobby because I like cows and that's what I want to do but
But don't, but if it's a business, and you're taking the risk of the loss of the animals and all those kinds of things.
And so, you know, you say, all right, I'm going to put $10,000 into this.
I'm going to get $7,500 out a year, and I'm going to put X number of hours into this, and X number of hours equals $7,500.
So if I put 75 hours into it, I made $100 an hour.
And I think you're going to have more than $75 hours in this.
If you had $7,500 in it, you made $1 an hour.
Yeah, most of the time, they're just out there eating.
anyway.
Yeah, but I mean, you've got to make sure the medical procedures are taking care of,
that the bull doesn't bust down the fence and inherit the neighbor's yard and, you know, all this
stuff.
There's a lot going on here, kiddo, and I want you to run out the number of hours that you can't,
if I put 10 hours a week in this, 52 weeks, that's 5,200 hours.
I made not even a dollar an hour.
That's not cool.
so we've got to figure out something else to do with this that that scratches your farmer
Jane itch but that is actually profitable enough to screw with because I think you're
going to have more than 10 hours a week in this and I want to Dave's point sit down with somebody
who runs cows that will talk to you about birthing challenges and vet bills and all that
other stuff that nobody thinks about because it does it's easy to drive by a pasture and
just say I can put some cows on my place and I could just
sell those cows but man my buddies that run actually run cattle in Texas and
Oklahoma it's a it's a it's a whole lot more stuff going on yeah yeah and be
honest about when you're doing your law enforcement work half the year who's going to
take care of the cows then too well it's not like she's working half time not a half year
oh I thought it was half a year half a week okay if I understood right okay it's more like a
72 on 72 off thing or something but yeah yeah anyway it's um that's that's that's
That's how you analyze it.
Then you've got to decide and say, is it worth it?
The problem is when I start crunching the numbers on this, it takes all the romance out of it.
It takes all the, ooh, we get to play with cows.
No, that's no longer fun.
I don't know.
That's a whole thing now, Dave.
Just to go sit in a field and hug a cow and it's like a whole therapy thing people are trying to do.
Okay.
James is super into it.
We need to get $7,500 an hour for that.
Exactly.
There you go.
Somehow, let's get this stinking thing profitable.
That's all I want.
I mean, cow hugging, cow birthing, you can go wherever you want to go with it.
I don't care what the product line is, but it needs to be profitable when we're done
for the trouble that I put into it.
Or maybe we can do both.
Have a, you know, birth the cow and then hug the cow.
I don't know.
Hence James.
It's, um, I, uh, whoa, James get thrown on the bus.
He's not into cows.
Collie.
That's, James.
We can do nothing with him except turn off his microphone.
That's all we can do with him.
He can turn off hours.
That's the problem.
That's what I meant, yours.
oh mine
got you
no it's a whole thing man
I know equine therapy
is one of the most amazing things
in the world
of the proven track record
and now people pay money
to go sit in a field
and hug a cow
and they're calling it
they're not for the therapist
I don't know therapists
but it's an experience
kind of like yoga
or goat yoga
it's just like a weird
like it's people
with a lot of live laugh
love signs in their house
I think
that have some extra resources
and they're just like
the 70s were good
to their parents
I think it's probably
real, real good to their parents.
And they're like, you know what, would make me feel better.
I'm going to go, I'm going to go to a cow and I'll post about it.
I don't know.
I like Katrina's idea better.
I love it.
But I would like to, um, I'm more akin to actually, you know, doing a business here.
And, um, you love burgers and rib eyes.
Yeah.
Well, but I mean, you know, let's make some cows and calves and, you know, I just, I'm afraid
that when all the smoke clears on this, that the investment is not, the, the juice
and it'll be worth the squeeze.
And that's what you've got to be careful of.
And you do have to factor in that in business there are three rules.
It's going to take twice as long as you think.
It's going to cost twice as much as you think.
And you're not the exception.
Those are the three rules.
Caitlin's in Missouri.
Hi, Caitlin.
How are you?
Hi, Dave and John.
I'm calling to find out if my husband and I can financially afford for me to stay home with my baby.
Can you live on his income?
I think so.
My husband's take home is about $6,000.
My take home is about $4,000.
We have no debt, no mortgage.
Our house is worth $500,000.
We have about $250,000 for mutual funds that you recommend.
How much is your house payment?
No mortgage.
house is worth $500,000.
Well, you ought to be able to live on $6,000, can't you?
Yeah, I think our overage would be about $2,000.
My husband's currently only putting $5,000 toward retirement,
so he needs to up that to 15%.
But I think it's hard.
I like my job, but I want to stay home with my baby,
but it's a little hard, it's a little scary to quit.
Well, stay there's about $1,200.
Are you working now?
You're working now?
Yes.
You're back to work after the last baby.
This is my first baby.
and I'm back to work after the 12 weeks of leave.
Okay.
And, yeah, that's a real hard thing.
Okay.
Yeah.
So why don't you live on your husband's income
and bank your income for a couple months?
Okay.
Just to prove to yourselves you can do it.
Mm-hmm.
So that's a good idea.
I think you can.
The numbers you gave me sound right.
Yeah.
It's going to require a life change, though.
and the life changes, we're not going to be able to be as willy-nilly as we were.
Because you have no payments, you've got no mortgage.
When you're bringing home $10,000 a month, you can kind of do whatever you want.
Yeah.
And by reducing your income, 40%, you're going to have to make some changes.
Like, we're going to have to eat at home, and we can't take that vacation.
And that's just going to be the trade-off to being a stay-at-home mom.
I'm 29, 27.
Who knows how many years I'd be off maybe three to five,
and then go back. It's just scary, I think, to quit your job and take the leap of faith.
And you have to be ready for a couple of things.
Thing number one, you are now part of the woman industrial guilt complex or the mother industrial guilt complex.
People will be after you for staying at home. People will be after you for not going back to work.
People are going to want to do stuff and you're going to have to say no.
Your husband's going to want a new thing and he's going to have to say no because there's just going to be this always this sense.
that I'm not enough
or I'm doing the wrong thing
knowing that on the front end
you can prepare for it.
Might not even be a sense.
It might be a direct message
from some loser on the outside.
And so you just got to go,
your opinion doesn't count.
You don't really get a vote.
We're living on six grand
and I'm here with the baby
and I'm really, really happy with that idea.
I also understand I'm no longer a professional woman
and that does bother me a little bit
but I made a choice between that.
Put that on the scale.
I put a baby on the other side
scale, the baby won.
But that doesn't make you suddenly not want to have a career.
Or not be intellectually stimulated by hitting and setting goals.
Yeah.
And so putting some things in place like I'm going to have two or three women that I get
together with every week and we're going to have a book study.
We're going to talk about politics or deep stuff or projects or I'm going to backfill
some of those intellectual needs, the stimulation needs, the adult conversation needs.
I'm going to make sure that's still a part of my life because it's
meaningful to me, and it makes me who I am.
Yeah.
I think I get scared that I won't be able to find a job when I try to back, enter back.
You will.
Oh, yeah.
No troubles at all.
Okay.
What's your field?
I work in marketing.
Okay.
And I have an MBA.
Okay.
But I've only been working for.
The stuff you learned in the MBA was generic and strategic.
It was not tactical marketing skills you use today.
true your tactical marketing skills were acquired by being in the marketplace and moving around you will
lose those because the way we do marketing today is vastly different than it was 18 months ago
and way different than it was 10 years ago and so if you stay out of the market five years
you know what is the what does AI do to the marketing process it's going to change it and you're
going to be behind on that but does that mean you can't get a job no you still have the
basic marketing skill set, and then you'll have to just learn some of the tactical things
to stay up to date.
The other thing you could do is after the baby is a year old or so, you could start doing
some freelance stuff on the side just to keep your skills sharp just for fun, not because
you have to, but because it keeps your toe in the water and we know what the temperature
is.
Mm-hmm.
That might be fun, because there's a lot of small businesses.
use somebody with an MBA with marketing skills to help them move some of their marketing along
and they don't have this they don't have the financial bandwidth with somebody on full time like that
that's what i would do which is easy for me to say on this side having never had to make that
that trade right but finding one or two people who have a small business and you can help or
you can take a little bit of money and but you keep your you're doing it less for the money but
more for the skills but here's the thing you guys make good money you and your husband and
And he makes good money, and you've already done a great job.
You've got a paid-for-house.
You've got money saved.
You're going to be in great financial condition.
And so what happened with Sharon Ramsey was she never went back.
She transferred from full-time mom to full-time grandmom to full-time Bible study leader and book club leader and generally all these things.
I mean, she's got her thing.
And none of it is earning an income, quote, unquote.
other than allowing me to, which earns her a great income.
But, you know, all that stuff.
So, you know, that it doesn't have to be that you do this in order to be a real person.
So just whatever you want to do, that's the point.
And whatever, whatever, whatever floats your boat, right?
Whatever, whatever makes you happy and takes you there.
So I would do all of those things.
But, yeah, I think coming home, if you see, you'll worry about the financial thing less if you
just take two months and say, we're going to bank my check and live on your practice, make our
every dollar budget with your check, your take home pay.
And by the way, he does have to get that back up to 15%.
You've got to be putting 15% of your income away, at least.
And you don't have a payment in the world.
There's no reason you can't do that, except that you want to spend it on other stuff.
So that you really do need to be doing that.
But 15% of 6,000 is not that bad.
It's not, not, it's not, nine or bucks a month.
It's very doable.
Very doable.
And that's going to take you to a lot of wonderful places that you're going to want to go to.
And for everybody listening, I think this is an important moment.
This couple has put in the work up until now,
and now they can honestly sit across the table and do whatever they want.
And it's not a matter of, I have this deep sense that I want to stay at home,
but I can't because I've got all this past, all this old things that I've already bought,
but having it paid for dragging behind me.
And so they put the work in, and here they are,
and now they can do whatever they want.
it doesn't mean it's going to come without a sacrifice, without frustrations, but they could do
whatever they want because they put the time in. So I love that they're in this, they have this
opportunity. Yeah, I do think that I'm pot and I don't think, I'm sure, that ladies in our society
today get a lot of messages from a lot of people that don't have a right to put a vote in
on whether they should work or not. And so if you're working and, well, you're about,
mom. If you're a full-time mom, stay-at-home mom, well, you're, you know, you've abandoned,
you've not become your best version of you. You didn't go be a professional woman and do all this
stuff. And they get these guilt messages from both sides. And, um, and like you said, it's the
industrial female guilt machine. Right. And what I hear a lot on my show is people make the
sacrifice, women make the sacrifice. They stay at home. And suddenly they find themselves in a place
that they've never experienced, which is a deep loneliness as they've got no other adults in their
life. And they either turn to scrolling as a way to connect with the outside world. And that's
where these messages get dumped in there. Oh, God. Or their spouse, their husband comes home and it
becomes like the trash can. He dumps all the bad stuff that happened to his day. She dumps all the
best stuff. And that's a way to split your marriage. And so knowing, hey, I'm going to be all by
myself and so I'm going to not just go home and lock myself in a box for the next three to five
years, but I'm going to create community intentionally that I might have got just at the water
cooler at the office. I'm going to be intentional about it. And man, then there's going to have
a whole bunch of people speaking into your life that are real people that actually care about you.
Yeah. And here's the trick. Decide what you're going to do and you and your husband,
you're the only ones really get a vote. What everybody else thinks doesn't really matter.
You don't get a vote. And you're going to have to turn it off because the, the, the,
Crap is out there, and people don't mind shoveling it today.
Welcome back to the Ramsey show in the Fair Winds Credit Union Studio.
Dr. John Deloney, number one person, number one bestselling author.
I'm the number one person, Dave.
You're the number one person.
That's it.
I'll take it.
Yeah, you're all of that.
And number one show on the Ramsey Networks, not really, but a big show on the Ramsey Networks.
He's number one everywhere in his mind.
So check it all out.
He's here to help me this hour, since my mouth is apparently not working.
Open phones at AAA 825-5-2-2-2-5.
Thomas is in South Dakota.
Help us, Thomas.
What's up?
Hey, Dave, hey, John, what's going on?
I'm calling today because I'm 18 years active duty military.
Thank you.
Unfortunately, thank you.
Unfortunately, a couple years ago, life happened, and I ended up getting divorced.
with that before we got divorced my ex-wife and I we were completely debt-free and I was able to
contribute 60% of my income towards investments holy 40% was going to my TSP and another 20% was
going to my kids college funds wow but now that I'm divorced I've been divorced now for two years
I have found myself accumulating a little bit of debt I'm back at $57,000 worth of debt
What in the world?
What did you buy in two years?
So I bought a vehicle.
Oh.
What kind of truck is it?
It's a Ford Raptor.
Well, I think we found the problem, Thomas.
It's definitely part of it.
No, it's the whole thing.
It's all of it.
Taylor Swift wrote a song about it.
It's your divorce Raptor truck.
We know what it is.
It's called I'm the problem.
It's me.
So my, I'm calling because I can pay this debt off pretty quickly.
What do you make?
I make $78,000 a year.
You make $78 a year.
And you owe what on the Raptor?
I owe 57.
Yeah.
Well, I owe 37 on the Raptor in $18,000 in credit card debt that I used to purchase furniture and stuff for the house.
I got divorced.
Okay.
I still contribute the 60% of my income towards my TSP.
You can't afford to do that for broke.
So I was thinking, so my philosophy here and what I was looking for is some guidance.
I was thinking about cutting off my TSP.
However, in the divorce, my ex-wife decided to go ahead, hey, your whole military pension is yours.
I just want half the TSP.
I've still been contributing because in my head I was like
I'd rather make a little bit more money on the back end
versus stop contributing altogether
and out of spite just not contribute because I don't want her to get it.
When does she get half now?
67.
What?
No, I meant.
That's not possible.
Is this divorce isn't final, is it?
Um, it is. Yes, sir. So when we went to court, there was, I had several different, uh, options that I could do. Um, and you agreed to give her half of your TSP at age 67.
Yes. Not how, not what half of it becomes by then, but whatever's in there at half. That's not right. Something's wrong.
That's based off what the lawyers were saying and stuff, they said that was the better of the deal.
Apparently these lawyers didn't take math class.
that's a horrible deal um all right so you need to get clarification because i don't think you
understand what really happened or you got the worst deal in the history of divorces i've never
heard of this deal if this is what you got it is normal for you to transfer half of your tsp to her
now that is a normal process and a divorce and she can roll that into an IRA and have no taxes
it is very strange for her to get anything at age 67.
Like, I've never heard of this in 35 years of doing what I do.
That's strange.
What they wanted to do was she would get half of my military pension on top of half of the TSP.
Yeah, that would be normal.
But half the TSP today, not at 67.
Well, now with the deal that they had worked out was she doesn't get any of the military pension,
and she only gets the TSP.
Okay.
Now, or at 67?
At 67 when it matures.
Okay.
Then it should be half, what, like your half of your TSP.
How much is in your TSP today?
166.
Okay, so half would be 80, 84, 83,000, okay?
Right?
Yes.
Today.
So whatever 83,000 grows,
to at age 67, she should get.
But she shouldn't get half of everything you put in between now and then,
because otherwise you would put in nothing between now and then.
Right.
So that was going to be my next question is if I just stop contributing altogether.
You have to contribute.
Listen, if you did the worst deal in divorce history,
and she gets half of your TSP regardless of whether you put money in or not,
that's the worst deal I've ever heard of in my life.
I've never even heard of, you get half at 67.
That's just very weird, dude.
Like these lawyers are completely freaking incompetent, weird.
Okay?
But if you did do that, you need to go back and clarify,
is it what half of it today becomes,
what 83,000 becomes at 67,
or is it just half of whatever's in there?
Because if it's half of whatever's in there,
You don't put another dime in it.
You're done with that.
You've got to go put money in Roth IRA and you've got to put money in other stuff.
But the TSP's off limits to you because she's going to take half of everything you put in there for the next, you know, how many?
How old are you?
I'm 36.
Yeah.
Good God.
For 30 years.
You're going to contribute to her.
No, thank you.
You did the worst deal ever.
So, no, we're not doing that.
That's dumb.
That's dumber than a rock, man.
I'm telling you that.
I'm so pissed at your lawyer right now.
I can't see.
I want to smack him.
This is horrible.
But you did the deal.
I guess it's final.
So you need to go back and get clarity if she gets what half, what $83,000 becomes or if she gets half of whatever's in there.
It's going to be whatever's in there.
Otherwise, they would have just transferred the $83 out.
They should have just transferred the $83 out.
That's what they should have done.
That would be normal instead of this dumb butt thing they did.
Yeah, John is correct.
It is whatever is in their mater
Because I tried to fight and get the half now
But then they were like
Okay, then here's what it is
She gets what that half becomes
Because it's not going to become anything else
Because you're not going to have anything else to do it
You're stupid if you do
Okay
But you are the one that signed this divorce decree also
Oh my God, this is a horrible man
It's just horrible
She has 30 year claim on future earnings for you
Jeez man
You'll have kids
We have two of them
I've heard a future.
This is, I want to get away from this woman really bad is what this is.
I've heard, I've heard in a rightfully so a future claim on future earnings if you've got kids through the age of 18, right?
So if you were making 25 grand and something, you're making 150 grand.
That's child support.
That's not this.
That's child support.
That's normal.
That's what I'm saying.
I've heard of that.
That's normal.
But half the 401K is normal.
Half the TSP is normal.
But you transfer it now and it rolls out into an IRA and then she does whatever she does with it.
Okay.
your answer is you have a truck you can't afford that you bought while you're grieving your broken heart
and your heart was broken by your wife and your idiot attorney so you have two reasons for a broken heart
so you've got to sell this truck honey and i love raptors i drove one over here today i like them
but this truck is brain damage so it's killing you you cannot afford to drive this truck it's more
truck than you can afford with the money you make sell your truck get your budget back balanced
and move into the future.
And please don't put anything else in this TSP.
If you died today, how would your family keep the lights on, pay the mortgage, afford the groceries?
If anyone in your life depends on your income, you need life insurance.
That's called being an adult.
But how do you choose from all the options out there?
Well, it's actually simple.
Life insurance has one job.
It's to replace your income if you die.
Term life insurance is the most efficient, inexpensive way to do that.
The others include investments in crap that rip you off, like whole life and permanent life.
We don't do those.
End up doing a really bad job at everything.
Instead, just do term life, 10 to 12 times your annual income, 15 to 20 year level term,
which means the premium stays the same.
If you want to learn more about this, you can get the free term life insurance guide.
Go to Ramsey Solutions.com slash term life guide or click the link in the show notes.
Wendy is in Washington.
Hi, Wendy.
How are you?
Hi, good.
Thanks for having me on.
Sure.
How can we help?
So there's no easy way to say this.
So I'm just going to jump right into it.
Cannonball.
Let's do it.
Okay.
So my sister stole everything from my parents in their senior years.
And my mother died of neglect under her care.
And my dad ended up in the hospital days later, during which she wiped out their bank accounts, maxed out their credit cards.
And she contributed on some level, if not all, of their reverse mortgage being maxed out to the tune of $450,000.
My father has later stages of dementia.
Now I know from going through what I've been with him the last two years that my mom also, I'm positive, had dementia at the time.
And so my sister had been living with them, slowly took over.
She moved in right before COVID, slowly took over their home, slowly took over their finances
and just abused them because they weren't mentally and physically able to do anything about it.
What a lovely girl.
It's really hard.
It's really hard.
So my dad is safe.
He's in a secured memory care facility now and he's being cared for.
It took me seven months of fighting on so many levels.
I can't even name them.
It would take 20 pages of writing.
But finally got his Social Security safe, which is all he has left.
The home that they owned for almost 40 years was auctioned off, and we lost it.
And I did not expect to get any funds from it because of the condition she left in.
It basically looked like a meth house that Squatters got into.
But it did.
It auctioned off for an amount that left funds to the tune of about $130,000 left.
And as soon as those funds came into my control,
I was forced to go through conservatorship and guardianship to help my dad
because there will, unfortunately, their will wasn't notarized,
and every banking institution and everyone we dealt with said that it was invalid.
And so it took me a lot of hard work to try to prove that there were any funds stolen when I didn't have access or
and I wasn't a POA to request copies of financial statements and those things.
So it took me seven months to get his money safe, his account safe, and he ended up homeless and living with my husband and I,
and we cared for him for seven months until his health got to a point where he needed to be in a secured memory care facility.
I got you. Okay. So where are we to do?
So where we are, the house actually auctioned off.
We have the $130,000.
He immediately lost Medicaid because he had that money, so we're on private pay.
And I don't expect those funds to last through mid-next year.
Okay.
And then it'll be back on Medicaid.
Then I'll be back on Medicaid, correct?
And so here's my question.
If my dad passes, he's, you know, I mean, the reality of it is it could be at any time.
If my dad passes, the will states, the intent of the will and what my parents wanted was to the funds to be divided between their living children, which would be my brother and my sister and I.
My soul cannot do that based on everything she's done.
And I'm, I guess.
You mean the $130,000 if he died today?
Yes.
Because that's the only thing is left, right?
There's nothing else.
That's all that's left.
And honestly, there are a few bills like between attorneys fees and things.
I just don't see anything being left over.
But I also didn't expect the house to sell.
Yeah, when you went through all the stuff for the last seven months,
did you have expenditures out of your pocket?
Oh, yeah.
My husband and I financially supported him.
Yeah, yeah.
I did a little, I did a little bit.
No, reimburse yourself.
All of it.
Okay.
Out of the 130.
Okay.
That moves it out of his name into your name.
as a conservator I had a very strict budget that I had to stick to you so I could bring it up next time I go to court
I go to court and say I need all my legal fees reimbursed for protecting him yeah those are covered those got reimbursed
yeah and I need to pay all the legal bills I need to pay out of this I want to deplete this money down to where there's nothing there
and then you don't have a moral conundrum yeah I also was curious if you know if the intent of the will still
stands no okay the will's not valid everybody told you that
okay the will doesn't it's not even a will because it's notarized and your state requires it to be
notarized right you know he's dying he's dying without a will he's dying without a will
okay so he's not competent to execute a will i'm sorry he's not competent to execute a will under
your state's terms right now correct and he and he doesn't have a will under your state's terms
right now am i understanding that right that's what everybody told you right correct that's why
the conservatorship was put in place because the will
was deemed invalid.
Okay.
So the will doesn't matter.
It's irrelevant.
That's hoping for...
Yeah, but guess what?
The state is going to say, most states say,
the three children are the three errors
and they'd be split three ways if there's no will.
That would be normal.
So you're back to the same problem,
but there's going to be no money left if I'm you
because I will have spent this down
like the next time in front of the judge.
Okay.
I'm going to go buy him.
an $80,000 bed and put in there.
Yeah.
I'm serious.
There's not going to be any money left.
Yeah, no, I don't expect there to be.
I think my biggest fear, and it's not like a thing of trying to win or trying to stick it to someone or anything like that.
I've got a better idea.
Go before the conservatorship, and what I want to do is prepay the next year of his care, and I want to reimburse you for all of your legal expenses.
and I think the money's gone.
Yeah, it will be.
Okay, good.
All right, and Wendy, you were about to go there.
I'll go there for you.
You don't, there's no revenge.
Let your sister go.
Oh, I have.
I totally, I 100% have.
I think I had a really hard time with the fact that she's never been held accountable for anything.
I've got a hard time with it.
And I'm kind of pissed right now.
I let it go.
You haven't let it go, though, because you're projecting future what-ifs
and you're trying to solve them
and be heartbroken and angry in the present.
That's true.
It's true.
You caught me.
Just stop.
You have enough challenges for today.
Yeah.
You and your husband have proven to each other
that we can come together
when life throws us chaos.
You've done an amazing job.
You have a great marriage.
I'm so proud of you.
And guess what?
Parasites don't eat as well as carnivores.
They just don't.
So at the end of the day,
she's still a miserable hack.
She didn't get what she was after.
She was looking for something she couldn't get there.
No.
And so it's like, you know, just being a thief is never,
it's never a rewarding profession.
Especially from your aging parents.
She's got to live without the rest of her life.
Talk about a burden.
Yeah.
Let her carry that, not you.
She disappeared for the last two and a half years,
but during the guardianship, yeah,
and during the conservators,
process, she had to be served and she found out that there was equity in the home and immediately
showed us. Of course she did. Of course you're saying that like you're surprised. You're doing all this
again. You're seeing that like you're surprised. Of course she did. She stole from your parents. Of course she's
going to show up. She wanted to finish the theft. Oops, I left a brooch on the on the dresser.
Don't create stories in the future and let them keep you up at night in the present.
You know, it's just, you've been running this over in your head. You burned a whole lot more
on this than she has.
Yeah, thank you.
Yeah, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry you've been through this.
And what she did was horrible.
You're an amazing daughter.
She's a horrible human being and you did all the right stuff.
So come out with the rewards, which as you know, I did the right thing.
I put my head on my pillow.
But yeah, I'll go prepay the nursing home with the conservator's permission and put the rest in
your pocket to recoup all of your time, your expenses, your legal fees.
I'll guarantee you there's $80,000 there for sure.
Mike and Lori are on the debt-free stage in the Ramsey Solutions Lobby.
What's up, guys?
Hi, Dave.
Good to see y'all again.
Y'all were on the cruise with us.
We were.
We were.
Wow.
Well, welcome.
I'm glad you didn't wear your swimsuit on the debt-free stage.
You don't want to see that, John.
I've already seen it.
I'm all right now.
Everything's better now.
Everything's better now.
How much debt have you two paid off?
$175,000.
Wow.
How long did this take, Mike?
29 months, Dave.
Whoa.
And your range of income during that time?
Range of income was $210,000 to $250,000.
Woo!
What do you all do for a living?
I am an accountant, I'm actually client services representative for a MCO, a workers' comp MCO company.
And I'm a health care administrator and a nurse.
Oh, awesome.
Very cool.
What kind of debt was the 175?
It was mostly...
Our home.
Oh, look at weird people.
I'm telling you.
House is paid off.
I love it.
What's the house worth?
About 600,000.
Very cool.
And how much in your retirement nestsakes?
Over a million, Dave.
Good.
So your baby steps millionaires.
Yep.
Debt free house and everything.
How old are you pups?
Today is Mike's 60th birthday.
It's my 60th.
All right.
Very cool.
Kind of a milestone.
And I'm 57.
All right.
And you got a net worth of a million and a half to two million dollars.
Way to go, y'all.
Very proud of you.
How's that feel?
Amazing.
It feels amazing, Dave.
It really does.
Like you say on the show, it just takes something off your shoulders when it happens.
Just amazing.
Yeah.
Man, I'm so proud of you guys.
That's so amazing.
So how did you run into the whole Ramsey thing 29 months ago?
I'll just tell you.
I'll start watching your, Lori got me really hooked on your YouTube videos,
and we just started watching those.
That was a big part of it.
I'll just tell you this.
She bought your Total Money Makeover book about over 25 years ago,
and I think you're right, it was kind of just on the coffee table for a long time.
Yeah, it's a good coaster.
And then we're like, we started reading it, we're like, oh, this is unbelievable.
And just, I think the goals are so important.
I know we'll talk about this.
But just the system itself is just incredible, and we're very thankful.
So you got, you went in all, you took it off the coffee table and went full in when?
well we when we took the FPU so we kind of baby Ramseyed it a little bit yeah when was that
probably during COVID because we couldn't travel anymore okay so five five years you've been going
but the last 29 months was paying off the house right okay pretty much all right wow good for you
guys fun fun fun fun man all right now that you've been through all of that and you're standing
here I mean you remember being 20 something and thinking about being a millionaire
someday oh no i do he did i remember that i remember it yeah oh it but i had no idea how much work
it was going to be right right and i had no idea how good it was going to feel i had this this feeling like
i was in my head it was like hitting the lottery yeah but it's quite the opposite it's much deeper
richer it's not as the money's not as important it's what you become while you're getting it together
yes true and who you are as a couple and who you are as people and the way you see things it's
completely different. No doubt about it, Dave. What do you tell people the key to getting out of debt
and being a millionaire, almost two millionaire by the time you're 60? I just think the main reason
is just, we just, we almost acted as one, Dave. Like you talk about marriage, we always felt like
we had a solid marriage over the years, but it just took it to a new level where we're just doing
something that we each have a goal for, and then we just did it together. Do you think, hon? Yeah, and I think
you know, having a vision and finding a plan. And when you look at a plan, I mean, the Ramsey
seven baby steps is the best plan to have. And I have to say one of the things I really, I know
Rachel gets a lot of hate mail for this is one thing I really had a hard time doing was combining bank
accounts. And we did not do that until closer to the end of our debt freedom. And it simplified
our whole entire life. So I just, I think, keep saying that to people, because I think we do need to
hear it so you were the one that was resistant yeah is that what you're saying okay why you know
probably some rooted fear somewhere and well mike is a scary guy don't smile not happy yeah that's right
you mentioned something that we've started saying more more around here there's solving for this
fear somewhere and there's always going to be more fear over the horizon but you went in and did this
and you started solving for peace.
And just the idea of getting multiple bank account statements every month,
just looking at each other and just reconciling one,
gives you 30 minutes back a week or an hour back a week,
and suddenly you start to do things together.
I just, I love it, man.
What's a tangible, you're in your 60s?
I like to say that now.
Sorry, that was pretty harsh.
She's not.
That hurts.
Yeah, she's not.
Imagine there's a couple who's in their 30s.
They've been married for three or four years.
what would you tell them right now
what the other side of this journey feels like?
I just think it's just
you just got to focus
I mean the big thing is just believe
you know a lot of people out there
I think you talked about this on the show
they don't believe they can do it
and no matter what you're dead is
you've seen it with Jade with others
it can happen and just focus
get on the same page with your spouse
and just go at it
and it's so worth it John like you said
it's just it's not an easy thing
but it's a lot easier than being in debt.
Lori and I have gone on trips over the years prior to COVID,
and we budget a certain amount.
We went to Italy, went to London, went to Hawaii and stuff,
and then we'd always use our credit cards
over and above what we budgeted.
And that's just, you can't do it.
Just go over it.
And then it's so rewarding once you do get that control.
I think it's about doing the right thing biblically
and just doing the right thing as human beings.
It's so strange that discipline is satisfying.
Oh, my gosh.
Dave. It's a strange paradox.
And she's amazing. I just have to say this. She's the reason we kept on getting the increase in income. That's Lori. I've had the same job. I love it. I like what I do. But she has just gone over and above to get new jobs. She also even did a side hustle. She got her nursing degree and she does a side hustle working at this village, actually, senior village in Columbus. So she was a big part of this, a huge part of it.
yeah well the bigger the shovel the faster you get out of the hole that's a big deal i don't know
how i'd feel if a nurse walked in and's like hey this is my side hustle that didn't sound good
no that's so that's incredible guys i'm so proud of you thank you proud of you well and hey it's hard
it's hard to change patterns in a marriage this far along and for you to say like how long have you
been married 23 years yeah i'm scared to do something
as seemingly simple as join a bank account. We've been doing it this way for this long.
This isn't working. I'm going to try this. That takes real courage and bravery. I'm proud of you,
man. It's hard. It's hard to stop the dance. It's been going on for 20-something years. And you did it.
That's amazing. Thank you. Yeah. And you'll reap the benefits of it. So now you're worth a
couple million dollars. You're 100% debt-free, house and everything. You're making a quarter million
year. What's the first big financial fund thing you're going to do? Well, we're going to take my mom to
Spain next year. Yay. Why Spain? We've always wanted to go. Oh, because you wanted to go. Okay.
And she wants to go too. Of course she wants to go. I bet she does. And it's a cruise too, Dave. So you guys
got you got us kind of hooked on cruises. All right. That's good. John, I just have to say this.
We actually did the marriage class with you and Rachel and it was phenomenal. I mean, I just want to thank you.
Well, you guys are so entertaining to you.
You're funny.
They're like a couple comedians doing stand-up.
Marriage stand-up routine.
Well, I'm glad you came.
Thank you, John.
That's good.
All right, well, enjoy Spain.
I'm very proud of you guys.
Excellent.
Live like no one else.
Now you can live and give.
Take mom with you like no one else.
I like it.
Reward it.
That's good.
So $175,000 paid off in 29 months.
House and everything in the process.
confirm and become baby steps millionaires.
Mike and Lori, Columbus, Ohio, count it down.
Let's hear a debt-free scream.
Three, two, one, we're debt-free.
Yeah!
That's how you do it, ladies and gentlemen.
Worth all the trouble, that's all I can say.
And I'll say this, the biggest lesson I'm taking away from Mike and Lori is, it's never too late.
Amen.
It's never too late.
It's never too late to change the way you interact with your marriage.
It's never too late to change how you interact with money.
It's never too late.
Friday, guys.
Well done.
Our scripture of the day, Romans 837, yet amid all these things, we are more than conquerors
and gain a surpassing victory through him who loved us.
A.A. Milney said, don't dodge difficulties.
meet them greet them beat them all great men have been through the ringer and women for
that matter that's true yeah true true true Pam is in Houston Texas hey Pam how are you
I'm just fine how are you doing better than I deserve what's up well we have a house that's
paid off and we have a lot of equity in it good so my question is you know I just see an
opportunity to put more money into the stock market and I don't really feel a lot of our
money growing with all the equity that we have into it.
So I want to get your thoughts on different scenarios, you know, sell the house, you know,
because we're in, you know, we're 65 and 63.
What's wrong with the house?
Oh, nothing's wrong with it.
It's just everything is selling it, renting and taking that money and then, you know,
stocking away in the stock market.
So what's the house worth?
Um, we're about a million.
And what's the, how much do you have in your nest egg currently invested?
in 401Ks and so forth?
We've got several seven figures.
Several million?
Yeah.
Okay.
Like more than three?
Yes.
Okay.
So the answer to the question is this is a hypothetical because your life is okay.
Yes.
Yes.
But I hate seeing money set idle.
It's not sitting idle.
The house is going up in value.
Well, I mean, that is true.
It's going up in value almost as fast as the market is.
Well, I would hope to think so.
No, I mean the actual data says that.
It's not a hope.
Well, that's good to hear.
I buy real estate as an investment because it goes up in value.
Yeah, and that is true.
We've bought several properties and some that we've made money and some we've just kind of broken even with.
But, you know, I just felt, I just thought that, you know, by freeing up some of this money,
we could just buy more stuff in the stock market that we would like.
I can just see if that would, if that's a good investment.
And if we rented anything, it would just be what I'm paying right now.
And property tax, my tax, you know, HOA's and insurance.
I wouldn't want to go over that particular number.
So.
I'm sorry, if you rented, I got confused.
I thought you mean you're selling the house in this scenario.
Yes, if I wanted to sell the house.
And then we went to rent something.
Yes.
At our age, we have the flexibility to not worry about the house.
Then I could take all that money and then just sock it away in the stock market and then make my kids' lives easier if something should happen to us.
Your kids are okay.
Your kids are going to be fine.
And if they're not, it's their problem.
Wow.
Can I ask this question?
Pam, you and Dave are in a different stage of life to me financially and age-wise and otherwise.
I keep asking myself, if I got to be your age,
Uh-huh.
And I had that kind of resources.
I'm living in a paid-for-million-dollar house.
Yeah.
Why wouldn't you look to have fun?
Oh, we do have fun.
We do have fun.
I mean, we just got back from a, you know, three-week trip in Europe.
So is the house a burden in some way?
It's a lot of work.
It sounds like you want to move and you're looking for permission to move.
I guess so.
We do a lot of the yard work ourselves.
It's just, you know, that's who we are.
We're hard workers.
So just move.
So stop it.
Yeah, pay somebody.
I don't do yard work.
Not because I'm a snot.
I can just afford not to do it.
You say you enjoy it, but you want to sell it and start renting.
Well, it just frees up.
You know, I don't have to worry about the house.
You're trying to make the fact that you don't like this house anymore into some kind of wise, sophisticated financial move, but it's not.
Just sell the house and moves.
That's the answer to the question.
If you want to move, that's okay.
If you want to move into a, you know, if you want to sell the house and buy a condominium for half of the price and all the work is done for you because you want to travel and see the world and you're tired of the upkeep and those kinds of things, that's a different motivation than Dave.
I think it's wise to borrow or to sell my house and put all the money in the market and be a renter for the next 35 years.
That is not wise.
Okay.
Okay.
Mathematically, that's not wise, because what you have to have, your largest line item in your monthly living expenses is housing.
And when you do not own the house, your largest line item called rent goes up every single year.
And you destabilize the situation.
Now, not enough to cause you guys to be broke.
You got enough money.
You're going to be okay.
But it's a destabilizer rather than a financial mathematical blessing to do what you're talking about.
And the data also tells us this, that the typical millionaire in the first $5 million of net worth has mainly investments in 401ks and a paid $4 million house.
Yeah.
That's the typical millionaire.
None of the millionaires, precisely zero of the $10,000 that we interviewed, said, I became a millionaire by borrowing on my home and investing it into the stock market.
That's not what you're proposing.
but you are proposing to go
to go backward
in the line of financial evolution
and become a renter instead of an owner
I got you
and that destabilizes a situation
now can you afford to do that
yes
if that's what you want to do and you'll still
be okay with the numbers you gave me
but is that
but we're not going to blame it on the fact that
it is a financially sophisticated move
it is not or if you want to
instead of paying rent
take a quarter of that and hire a full-time yardkeeper.
Butler, maid, cook, whatever you want.
Yeah. And you...
Turn this thing into Downton Abbey and ring a little bell.
And it's okay for y'all to do that to say, hey, we're 60 now.
We don't want to do yard work anymore.
We're going to go for walks instead.
We're going to have long coffees.
And then we're like, you're here.
You made it.
You're here.
And that's okay.
Or if you want to sell, like Dave said, if you want to sell a house and buy an 800
square foot house, do that.
But don't say it's, don't try to like come up with some.
like matrix algorithm just say this is what we want to do because but no it's not it's not
wiser to be a renter and have the money invested in the stock market than it is to be an owner
of your personal residence mathematically it is not wiser that's the answer to your overall question
and can i say one more thing yep your kids are going to get millions of dollars when you pass
they're fine now you're um there's a level of i'm trying to think of the right
word codependency. I need to make sure their future problems that they haven't even experienced
yet are going to be okay so that I can be okay now. Yeah. And so I cut my own grass. So,
right. Don't put that on your kids. I cut my own grass so that you have an inheritance. They're
going to get a million dollars each. They're going to be fine. Y'all going to be fine. And if
they're not, they're still going to be fun. It ain't the million dollars fault. They've learned
how to work hard for me. Plus or minus a yard fee. Right. Right. Yeah. Your kids are good.
y'all are good yeah so i cut i cut grass as my high school thing and 27 yards to cut when
i was 12 years old i cut so much grass by the time i was 19 god said i never had to do it again
no he didn't so he did it was a personal appointment i had with him he said he spoke audibly to
me not i'm kidding but um i've not picked up a weed eater or a lawn mower again i mean i mowled my
grass i mow my grass when sherman and i got married for like one year
and after that I just I'm done I'm done with mowing grass and you know but guess what I can make more
during the time that I would be you know and calling myself a hard worker riding a zero turn mower
around and around in circles like all the old men on my street and I could do that but no I can
make more in that two hours than that guy costs and and he's got a good job and I got a good job
and everybody's happy and I don't have poison ivy you know life's good you know it's just um
there's some things that you what uh author brooks talked about this other day he you know i had him
on entree leadership and you had him on your show too the guy the happiness professor from harvard
one of the things that money does is it buys back your time it's it's it's the it's the
it's the single greatest thing money does is it buys you time buys your time it's a time machine
it does buy you some comfort creature comfort things but it buys your time it's your time
back. And so if I don't have to do this thing over here, then I can do something else. And that's
what money does for you. It will buy your time. And that's the beauty of having been as incredible
as Pam and her husband. We're picking at her. But I mean, God, money, they got $3 or $4 million.
It's pretty incredible. You can do what they want. Well done. Very well done, y'all.
Pretty stinking cool. That puts us our The Ramsey Show in the books. We'll be back with you
before you know it. In the meantime, remember, there's ultimately only one way to financial peace,
and that's to walk daily with the Prince of Peace Christ Jesus.