The Ramsey Show - App - He’s Still Living With His Ex’s Parents and Needs a Way Out

Episode Date: November 6, 2025

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Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Normal is broken common sense is weird, so we're here to help you transform your life. From the Ramsey Network and the Fair Winds Credit Union Studio, this is the Ramsey show. Rachel Cruz, Ramsey personality, number one bestselling author, host of the Rachel Cruz show, and my daughter is my co-host today. Open phones at AAA 825-5-2-2-2-5. John's in Orlando. Hey, John, how are you? Hey, Mr. Ramies, it's nice to meet you.
Starting point is 00:00:44 So I've actually struggled to keep steady employment over the past decade. They've been fired several times due to personality and behavioral challenges. You know, I've got over 70 grand in federal student loans, considering joining the Navy as an officer, but to pay off. to build a career. At the same time, considering starting a podcast with my friend, I'm Ben, but I'm unsure what to do. I wouldn't be alive today without God and my parents spun to me, but at 40 years old, I'd like to be independent. At this point in time, no employer will hire me, even low-paying jobs that you have suggested other people do to build a work
Starting point is 00:01:24 record. I'm not sure what to do. What kind of advice can you give me to help me out? Any jobs in 10 years? It's actually 11 years, but 14. 14 jobs in 11 years. You're 40. So what'd you do before 29? Well, I was actually, I spent eight years in, you know, in college because I made a mistake early on in my life.
Starting point is 00:01:49 I didn't have a plan. I didn't really know what I wanted to do. I had a brief window of time where I had good grades, but that was only, you know, Okay, so you had, go back to the other then, thank you. I go back to the other than. You had 14 jobs in 11 years, so it's not even a year each. And you said behavior and personality challenges caused you to lose your jobs. Is that what you said?
Starting point is 00:02:13 Yeah, so I have a disability. I have a personality disability, and it took me many years to figure that out through different neurological assessments. What is your, what is the diagnosis? NPD is what I've been told I have, but I was, my mom believes, I mean, when I was, I was vaccinated when I was a kid and my body rejected the vaccine and it caused me to have epilepsy when I was younger and ADD and a few. So how does this manifest itself in the workplace? Like you're just a butt?
Starting point is 00:02:52 So what it's caused me to do is challenge authority to be difficult and, employee to work. What you'd describe would be normally, I would think, belligerence. Yeah, I guess you could put that in that category. And is it episodes, John, when it happens? Like, when it occurred, do you, are you aware of it? Like, when it's happening or how does that work? Because I'm just trying to figure out the tools to put in place for your life going forward to be able to function in society, right? I mean, to be able to hold a job. Well, hold a relationship of any time. I haven't been able to function in society. Yeah, that's the point. And the Navy's not, Navy doesn't do well with people who have trouble with authority.
Starting point is 00:03:33 Yeah, I realize that. That's going to be, that's going to be a nasty, that's going to be a nasty conflict. I mean, the whole military thing is authority. You know that. So it's command structure, and you will respect that, even if your commander is an idiot. So, wow, okay. So are you getting help with this in some way? Because I wish Dr. Deloney was here today, because Rachel and I are going,
Starting point is 00:03:58 I don't know. But, yeah, but the, I mean, is there a treatment for this where you can become functional? Honestly, no. There's no cure for it. I've proposed an idea to, because according to research, the reason why people have NPD is because of low gray matter in the brain. I think that it can be cured with nanobots that you can inject nanobots in the body and then have them programmed to heal the frontal cortex of the brain.
Starting point is 00:04:30 Yeah, we just left my page. I'm, I just, you just left me behind at the airport, dude. But no, there's no, there's no support, really. So what I,
Starting point is 00:04:40 you know, just from a common sense, your older brother talking to you, listening to you who loves you, just from that, what I'm reaching for is to try to find some way that, because there's not a career, self-employed especially,
Starting point is 00:04:54 that pays people for, misbehaving, okay? And so I'm trying to find some way that you create a sustainable life for, for, for, that allows you to be employed, that allows you to be engaged in other relationships, that allows you to do those things. And I, I think, I think that's what I'm wondering. Is there, the problem is not the career issue. It's the symptom. Right. So that's what I'm asking you, John, are there other tools, whether it's through therapy or whatnot, that when things happen, right? And even like, you could take anxiety as an example, like, something has happened chemically in your body when that happens, but there are tools to get you
Starting point is 00:05:36 back grounded when it comes to that. Is there anything, when you feel that rising up in you, has anyone give you any set of tools of awareness? I do this, I do that, to at least be able to, with saying like just a nine to five, right, to be able to have any level of function. Has anyone giving you any tools at all? Or are you just kind of out there? Yeah, I mean, I have been given tools, but one of the things that happens when I go into these jobs is I bring bitterness from previous jobs into it and kind of self-sabotage at the early stage. And they already have this, I don't know how to say this, but they already know, because they can see my resume that I haven't kept jobs. They're kind of,
Starting point is 00:06:24 Looking at my mind. It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. That's logical. That makes sense. Yeah. All right. So, dude, the answer is that this is above Rachel and my pay grade. I don't know how to answer your question because the answer to your question is to find some healing.
Starting point is 00:06:45 So that you can hold a job. So that you can hold a quality relationship. Because there's not a career path. And self-employed people oftentimes become self-employed because I can't do anything else. But it doesn't keep you from having to struggle with that because your customers are going to experience what your bosses were experiencing. And you're not going to have any customers. I mean, if you're my mechanic and you're a butt when I'm the customer, then you're not my mechanic anymore. And you go out of business.
Starting point is 00:07:11 So, I mean, you fix my heat and air, but you're a butt. Well, you're not my heat and air guy anymore. Okay. And so, you know, if that's how it's, if belligerence is how this is manifesting, which I'm not an expert in your areas. I don't know what I'm talking about, but I'm just listening to you as a friend and saying, I'm going to be in the therapy realm. I'm going to be talking to Dr. John Deloney, which I will put you on hold. We'll try to make you a caller on his show.
Starting point is 00:07:35 Maybe he can actually add something intelligent to this conversation because I can't. I don't know what to say other than you've got to get your ability to cope. Yeah. Well, and we have found people that are successful when they have very obvious limitations, whether it's a mental illness, a physical illness, a disability. You know, we talk to people on the show, and they are, you know, legally blind, but yet they're making $150,000 a year because they figured out something that got them a job, and they figured it out.
Starting point is 00:08:05 So there is a level that I don't want, John, the thing I would not want for you is playing into any level of victimhood. No. That this is a horrible thing, but people do have serious setbacks, but they overcome them. And we talk to them on the show all the time. And so I don't know what that looks like for you. Create a predictable environment. 100%. So that's what I'm saying, though, is don't fall victim to this.
Starting point is 00:08:26 No. And make excuses so that that's where the work of the healing and the proactive, you know, being proactive in that way is going to be your next step. It has to be. Man. But I think it is possible. I think there's something that you can do. Honestly, John, to find healing and to be a productive member of society. I do too.
Starting point is 00:08:42 I think there's something other than nanobots. Hold on. Christian will pick up. We'll get you hooked up with Deloney. Jacob is in Atlanta. Hi, Jacob. How are you? Good, how are you?
Starting point is 00:09:01 Better than I deserve. What's up? So I'm kind of in a predicament. I'm having to move out. I'm only 21. I make 35 an hour. I had my $40 job, and then I get to do my own sidework on Fridays and Saturdays. And I've got, oh, $2,900 on my truck, and I have $1,000 in creditored debt.
Starting point is 00:09:37 And I've never been on my own, so I guess I'm just kind of nervous about being out on your own. What caused you having to move out? So, funny story, I actually live with. my ex and her parents at the moment. Your ex-wife? No, my ex-girlfriend. Okay, so you... When did y'all break up?
Starting point is 00:10:03 I'm sorry. We broke up in February of this year. And you've been living with your ex-girlfriend's parents for this long? Yes. Oh my gosh, Jacob. Blinked twice. Are you okay? Awkward.
Starting point is 00:10:18 Yes, I'm okay. It's no... But you've got to get... out. I would assume that her parents are like. Wow. These are some unusual humans. They are nice. They sound very nice. Good humans. They're weird. Yeah. Number one that you were in there in the first place living with their daughter under their roof. That's weird. Number one. Super weird. Y'all break up and then they don't throw your butt out. Yeah. That's super weird. Okay. We, uh, we didn't, we built like a tiny house at their house or
Starting point is 00:10:50 Oh, okay. Well, all their property, excuse me, maybe the roof didn't extend over that. That maybe makes it a little bit better.
Starting point is 00:10:57 Yeah, that's not at all. Okay, so you're out on your own for the first time and you're 21. Are you, so are you out now or you're moving out? You've been there for February.
Starting point is 00:11:05 You knew this was coming since February. How much money have you saved, honey? Well, I've only got, I've got $4,000 saved. Okay, so go get an apartment. Well,
Starting point is 00:11:18 I found a house that's rent-to-home. You don't need rent-to-home. You need non-homelessness. That's all you need. Don't be homeless. That's it. Go get a cheap one-bedroom apartment and get your butt out of weird. As soon as you can.
Starting point is 00:11:38 And then plug yourself into a good church, and we'll get you on to every dollar and get your money stuff working for you. And let's start making every dollar that you have. behave. You should have more than $4,000 because you have no overhead, and I don't know where your money's been going since February. But you make enough money. You should have a stack of cash right now. I haven't always had this job since February. Oh, good. Okay. That makes more sense then. Okay. I've had this job for about two months. Okay. Would you agree with me that if you make $35 an hour for 40 hours plus side hustle, you should be able to stack some cash if you keep your rent cheap and go ahead and knock these two debts out pretty quick? Yes. I've been saving about
Starting point is 00:12:18 a thousand dollars a week yeah there you go that's my man okay good and the house that I'm looking at renting it's a thousand dollars a month it's pretty cheap around here yeah that'd be real cheap around Atlanta so are you and making sure too that when you're doing that that you're not signing yourself into this idea that you have to buy this house either I don't want you locked into anything weird so making sure contract wise you can get out I mean I yes I can get out but also I feel like the house would be a bit of an investment. No, you don't need an investment. You're 21, you have $4,000 and $3,000 worth of debt.
Starting point is 00:12:57 You don't need an investment right now. You need a place to live and not be homeless and not be in the middle of weird. So let's get your life, like, sustainable and on a rhythm that's normal before we start talking about investing. Okay, so no, I actually would not do this house deal. I smell a rat. Okay. I want you to get an apartment. that's $1,000 or less for a one-bedroom and get out and have no human beings bothering
Starting point is 00:13:23 you, no weird crap swimming around in your head. It's just you, some bread, some milk, some electricity, and go to work, get the truck paid off, get the credit card paid off, start stacking some cash. Build Jacob a life to where you can stand with your shoulders square with a pocket full of money and no debt. And then we can talk about really becoming a millionaire building some wealth and you're going to be able to do all of that but we've got to get you so far away from where you are to even get you to zero you're you're at your subterranean right now you're at negative 32 degrees i got to get you up to zero before we can get you warm okay okay and so there's so much crap in your life that you've got to clean out and so if if you
Starting point is 00:14:11 were my uh nephew or my son i would i would put my arm around you i'd walk you into a great church there in Atlanta, Georgia, that's got some good men in it that can walk along beside you and say, hey, here's how you be a man, here's how you walk with God, here's how you handle your money, let's get you out of debt, let's get you in a sustainable, boring situation, and then that's where you build exciting from. You don't build exciting from desperation. You build it from boring. Let's get up to boring first. And so go get you a simple one-bedroom, don't try to buy a house, don't do the rent-to-own thing. I'd pass on it. And, dude, this freaking week get out of there right now right now we're cheering for you jacob wow you can do it
Starting point is 00:14:55 you can do it man here's to jacob this is wow i cannot imagine the percentage of human beings that allow this a person that broke up from their girlfriend to stay on their property for nine months i don't understand i don't understand being there in the first place but i don't i said that already but the likelihood, no, no, no, no. Well, less about the parent, it would be more for me. If I'm him, I don't want to be there going into the kitchen. You know what I mean? You're like, hi, Sally, sorry me and Ashley broke up, you know, like, I mean, that's just weird.
Starting point is 00:15:36 All right, here we go. Jacob, we're for you. Yeah, we want you to win. Call us back. Call us back. But, yeah, you've got, you're also processing all the emotions of this. and a separate clean location that doesn't have a complication to it of any kind, like rent-to-own or former in-law sort of, all that stuff, is going to clean your mind out. And that's what I'm made by boring.
Starting point is 00:15:59 That's what I want to lead you towards. Melissa's in Hartford, Connecticut. Hey, Melissa, what's up? Hi, Dave and Rachel. Thanks so much for taking my call. Sure. How can we help? So I work for a home health agency.
Starting point is 00:16:11 They put me on a bonus structure. I'm now making 5% on the incremental above my quota. As long as I hit my quota, I get 5% of the gross profit above my quota. And they pool it pretty much to the end of the year. They cap my bonus at $2,500 a quarter, and then they're going to pool and whatever is left over, I'll get a lump sum at the end of the year. I'm wondering if I should take that lump sum
Starting point is 00:16:40 and invest it back into the company for equity or if I should focus on paying off my mortgage, which is my last remaining debt. Regardless of whether you have a mortgage or not, you do not invest into a small business where you're a minority shareholder. Okay. Because you have absolutely zero control.
Starting point is 00:17:02 You could wake up six months later, the owner starts doing cocaine, runs a thing into debt, runs the whole thing into zero, and all your monies worth zero, and you have absolutely no governmental say. The governance documents when you're a minority shareholder, In other words, if you don't own 51%, your vote don't count. Okay.
Starting point is 00:17:19 And they can vote for stupid, and you have to stand there and watch it. So it's like a single, it's like almost investing in a single stock. It's worse. It's worse. Okay. Because you can't get out of it. And I have a follow-up question for you, Dave. We have a pretty significant mortgage.
Starting point is 00:17:38 We have like $650,000 left on the house. We have about $410 in a brokerage account, $200 in our 401Ks, and a small emergency fund. And it does put a lot of stress on us the amount we pay in the mortgage and the taxes. Would you recommend anything on how to make, should I put more? I mean, you sound like you've been listening a while, and you know we're going to tell you to take the $14 and put it on the mortgage. You knew that, right? Okay. I think so, but it's scary.
Starting point is 00:18:11 to do. It's also scary to have $650,000 breathing down your deadgum neck. Right. I put the 410 on it refinance and get you current rates are down. Let's get the thing refinance and if you're getting your bonus at the end of this year too, Melissa, that's going to be some extra cash to throw
Starting point is 00:18:27 out of it too. Yeah. It's great. Invest in something you can control the outcome and or get out of minority shareholder positions aren't one of them. You ever feel like you're doing everything right with your money, but you're still like a rat in the wheel. You're not getting anywhere.
Starting point is 00:18:49 Well, you're not alone. Our own Jade Warshall. Ramsey Personality has a brand new book out called What No One Tells You About Money, the real key to getting unstuck from someone who's been there, done that, got the T-shirt, right? Yeah, got the T-shirt, wore it out, gave it to Goodwill. I'm telling you, there we go. Good-looking cover on that, too. Good-looking cover.
Starting point is 00:19:11 Thank you. So you just got back from L.A. You've been out doing book tour stuff. That's right. You were out there doing a podcast, I guess. That's right. What were y'all talking about on that? Yeah, Ellen Fisher, great podcast if you haven't seen it. Yeah, we're just talking about how the emotions of money are really what hold people back, right? We give them a plan. We give them the baby steps. It's very logical. It's very practical. It's very number heavy. But it's not usually the numbers that are the problem. You know, when you start working that plan, you do come against different emotions because we're asking you to change your behavior. Yeah. And whenever we're talking about changing your behavior, you know, the child inside comes out, right? And there's a lot of fear and there's a lot of frustration. Some of us are dealing with a lot of guilt and frustration, guilt and shame, pity. So many things. And if we don't recognize it for what it is, we can't solve it. And therefore, a lot of us get stuck. Yeah. I love that you wrote about this, though, because I'm like, it just brings the humanity to the system, right? And we talk so much about emotions on the show in the sense that we know we're dealing with. people, right? And I do think a lot of people in the financial space, they do, like, they talk numbers all day long. And I do feel like that is something that is so true and it resonates with people because they are waking up and, and what they are feeling, what they are thinking that day is going to drive their choices and decisions. And so you kind of like hitting that straight on is so smart. I mean, absolutely. Think about the advice that we give here every day. We're telling people, hey, you're not going to see the inside of a restaurant unless you're
Starting point is 00:20:38 working at one. A lot of times we're giving people tough news like, hey, you might need to your home, this is not something that in one second you're okay with. Yeah. This is something that you take home, you tell your spouse, you're mulling it over, you're feeling a type of way about it. All the logistics. All the logistics. That's right. In the book I talk about when Sam and I were walking the baby steps, we had been in it for a while. And for those of you who don't know, $460,000 of debt we were paying off, long time frame, seven and a half years. And at one point, I had just gotten so frustrated because the bill collectors were calling. me and it was just like two steps forward, one step back. And I realized in that moment,
Starting point is 00:21:17 with all my trying to do good, I was leaving out pieces of the plan and I wasn't doing it exactly as it stated. And a lot of us come up against that. We're like, I feel like I'm doing everything right. Why am I not going forward? And you kind of hit that wall and you want to give up. But then if you step back and you kind of do a little bit of an audit, you go, wait a minute, I am missing something here. For us, it was instead of paying minimum payments on all the debt and then putting, you know, everything else on the smallest debt. We were just taking all the money and putting it on the smallest debt. Well, yeah, you're going to have a problem, right? So sometimes we're so excited about moving forward. We're leaving things out. We're doing
Starting point is 00:21:53 things wrong. And that can cause frustration. I talk about that in the book. Yeah, the, um, because you don't get traction. That's right. Anytime you're, you have set a goal to move from a place to another place, the thing that starts you is hope. Yes. And the thing that keeps you going is hope. But you lose hope if you're not making progress. That's right. And so, you know, if you go to the gym and you work out and you diet and you gain three pounds after 30 days, nobody's going to keep doing that. That's just weird. Yeah, I call that toil with no traction in the book. It's when your results aren't matching your efforts. And that's frustrating. And then there's the fear part, right, where we're asking people to change and do things in their life to have an outcome that many
Starting point is 00:22:37 of us have never actually seen in real life. I remember when Dave, I used to listen to Dave on the radio when I was going through our debt-free journey and he was talking about buying cars and cash and one day you'd be able to pay off your house and one day you'd be a millionaire. I never saw that. So there was this part of what he's saying makes a lot of sense to me. But this guy better be right because I'm about to embark on serious life change and if it doesn't pan out. So there's this what if what if I do all of this and it still doesn't work is it going to be worth it what if I make all these changes you know I'm working extra instead of going to my kids recital I'm working extra and stuff you right yes it better be worth it on the other end
Starting point is 00:23:16 and so there's a lot of fear of the unknown a lot of fear of change I talk about that in the book and how to process three chapters in the book called it's a pain in the butt it's a pain in the butt to change it's hard change requires change yes yes well and that's scary I'm like when you're doing something that is so different and so new, we all feel that, right? Or you're like, you're entering into a whole new world. You're out of bicycle the first time it's anxiety. Yeah, and you're like, I'm not good at this, and I don't want to not be good, right? And so you feel like you're kind of going backwards in that sense because you're like,
Starting point is 00:23:46 no, I'm good at this, even if what I'm doing is at least I know, I know how it feels in changing that is hard. So what no one tells you about money is the new book from Jade Warshall. And this is from someone who's actually done it. So if, you know, if you don't like theory, you'll like this book. I like practical application. I, you know, I want to find somebody who did it and won. This is what it looks like to win.
Starting point is 00:24:13 Ask her and Sam. They pulled this off. Pre-order right now for $24.99 and get over $100 in free bonus items, including the enhanced audio book, early access to the e-book, instant access to an exclusive video, your financial checkup with Jade Wasro. And you can book exclusive three-weeks. online book club, which includes live Q&A with Jade. And Jade is one of the personalities that does this show every day
Starting point is 00:24:37 in case you hadn't noticed for some reason or another, hadn't been around here or you're new this week. And so she knows how to answer the questions. And not only she's done it personally, but she's been sitting at this desk answering questions for a couple of years now and doing a great job. So you can pre-order right now at ramsysolutions.com slash store. So I know when Rachel and I have written books
Starting point is 00:24:59 and this is a fabulous book. I remember going through the manuscript a few months back when we were building the thing. You were building it, and I get to look at it because I'm a CEO. I was thinking, this is a book about hope, but not fake hope, where real hope comes from. Well, that's the thing here. I really wanted to shoot people straight and not dilly-dally around the reality of what you're going to face. And so when you read this book, you're going to go on an emotional ride because I'm telling stories in it that I've never told anybody about some of the things you can encounter, some of those real emotions that pop up when you're working with a spouse, when you're dealing with guilt and shame over past mistakes. How many times do we take calls on the Ramsey show when one spouse has brought in an inordinate amount of debt? And the other spouse has to say, okay, I'm on board, right? How often do we deal with situate? That was me. That was Sam and I. How often do we deal
Starting point is 00:26:06 with situations where, you know, a spouse has gambled or they've, you know, made bad choices with money, a bad business plan, right? Those are real things that really affect or, you know, you're ready to start a family, but you've got this debt. That was one of the stories in the book from our side, you know, we would never tell anybody that you can't have a family with, you know, if you have debt. But for Sam and I, we decided we're going to wait and there was a lot of emotion that went along with that. So it's not just telling you what you're going to face. It's also showing you exactly how to work through it because one thing at Ramsey is we're going to give you a plan. We're going to tell you exactly what to do next. And that's what I do in this book. I'm helping you see the
Starting point is 00:26:43 problem for what it is because it's like the old added. You can't solve a problem without admitting there is one. Right. And then so once you see, oh man, that might be me. I think she's describing what I'm going through. Now I'm showing you and here's exactly what you do next. We talk about things like daily habits. We talk about ways to set daily rewards. We talk about all the different things to keep you motivated to pull you out of those stuck places. So anybody who's ever been stuck, this book is for you. It's so good. Y'all go get this book. Seriously, go order it today because, and I'm such a reader. I do. I love to read. And I love to read books where there is a subject matter and this one obviously is money. And to put myself in a position of that author and the fact
Starting point is 00:27:24 that you're so honest in this and you bring such a story element to it of which you guys walk through and like regardless of where you are financially you're going to relate in this book you're going to find something in this book not only that you feel like okay that is me but also it's going to show you where to go
Starting point is 00:27:41 it's aspirational of like you're at the end right from the quote unquote baby step like it's like yeah yeah you've done it you've walked through all of this and so whether you are starting this journey you're at the end seriously this book is for you when no one tells you about money by Jade Worsh Love you, Jade.
Starting point is 00:27:56 Thank you so much. We'll be shipping them in a couple of months, so get about 45 days for the ship. That's right. And so you can pre-order right now and get the deal 2499, what no one tells you about money from Jade Washa. And a good Christmas gift. So just get a box of them, hand them out to your friends. Well, a couple years ago, George Camel brought in a couple of YouTube videos and said, you've got to watch this guy.
Starting point is 00:28:33 He is redefining generosity. And I got to meet Jimmy Darts on the small screen the first time. And then Jimmy was in town. I don't know, Jimmy, what, a couple years ago? Yeah, well, sometime last year, somewhere. I know the years blend together, but. Yeah, it starts running together with the miles you're putting on the airplane, man. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:50 So, Jimmy is a star in the world of social media, particularly. YouTube and a champion of kindness and generosity. As a social media influencer, he's known for his heartwarming, random acts of kindness. You've seen him on CNN, Fox News, Today Show, and The Ramsey Show here. This is a second time he's been with us. He does an incredible job of walking up to someone asking for their help, someone who obviously needs help. And excuse me, ma'am, can you give me $5 or something like that, right? And then when they do, he ends up giving them, in some cases, a lot of money.
Starting point is 00:29:24 Yeah, yeah, usually, you know, $500,000, that's kind of the seed form. The video goes up, and then it's really up to the public how much they want to bless them. And so, yeah, it can be anywhere from $50,000 last week. I think a couple weeks ago we raised over $400,000 for a guy. What was his situation? Yeah, he was homeless living in his car with his wife. They was traveling pastor doing ministry with their one-year-old, and he actually passed the honesty test. So I went up to him, asked him for help, and he went,
Starting point is 00:29:54 I've seen your videos. I know who you are. I'm not going to fake like I don't. So I was like, shoot, I'm going to have to leave. I can't help this guy. And then I was like, wait, actually, he just passed the honesty test. So sure enough, we blessed him. But it's an honor getting to travel around and just see that. There really is good people in this country. Yeah, for sure. Well, and it's so encouraging how well your stuff does because I feel like it shows that people want to see that content. Do you know what I mean? Like the amount of views and stuff that you get and what you've built just shows people are craving generosity. They're craving to see good in the world, I think, and that's what you represent for a lot of people.
Starting point is 00:30:27 Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, there's, I've been blown away from laundromats to Walmart aisles to anywhere and everywhere you can think of just the kindness of people. And it's just so cool to see because in that moment when they're kind and I say, actually, I don't need your help, I want to bless you. It's like a mirror is shown to their face and they realize, wait, they actually realize they're a good person, you know, like we're all, obviously, you know, we need a savior, we're born into sin, but to understand that, man, were also made in the image of God, and that even through, I'm going through a struggle, they realized that they were generous.
Starting point is 00:30:58 And so that's why I think the blessing hits so hard. And it's really the opposite of the lottery. You know, the lottery usually lands on a foundation of greed because they're trying to get rich where these blessings land on the foundation of generosity because these people are giving when they get the blessing. Ten days ago, his first new book hit the streets, and it's already a bestseller, undercover kindness, saying yes to love, no to fear, and embracing the life-changing power of ordinary generosity and absolutely incredible.
Starting point is 00:31:27 So what caused you to, I know the answer to this, but I'll give you the underhand pitch, what caused you to start this whole thing with radical generosity? Yeah, man, really my parents, when I was a kid, I was 10 years old, and they said, hey, Jimmy, for Christmas, instead of just doing gifts, we're going to give you $200 in cash. So I was jumping up and down, doing backflips off the coach, and my dad's go, settle down. You've got to give half of it away to a stranger. And I'm like, what?
Starting point is 00:31:51 A tie is 10%. what do you mean half of it and so sure enough we're driving through the city and i see this guy freezing out in the cold and i'd get out of the car hand him a hundred dollars and just the look on his face knowing he could get a meal that night he could get a jacket i got back in the car and you know i'm sitting here today i'm 29 years old that was 19 years ago and the crazy thing is i have no idea what i bought with the other hundred dollars but i know the face and the look on that man's face and so i think my parents instilled it into me and then also just the gospel when you really understand that Jesus gave, you know, God gave his one and only begotten son. So of course I can give
Starting point is 00:32:28 five bucks off my pocket. You know, if I really believe that God did that for me, it can't help but explode your heart for other people. Yeah. And the joy that comes through it. You know, generosity, it's a big message for us. Like we talk about even at Ramsey, like when you're doing your budget, it's the first line item and the budget for every dollar. Because we believe in that principle so much to the point that, you know, we know that people, when you're handling your you are a person inside, like the soul inside of you, the character inside of you is the person actually handling it. And when your character changes and you become a selfless person through the act of generosity and giving, you know, there is such, there's such joy and such meaning
Starting point is 00:33:07 and purpose in that. And it really does create, I think, a level of depth in your life when you get to ongoingly experience that generosity. It's a really beautiful thing. Yeah, absolutely. When people are generous, like you said, their character begins to change. And what do they see? they notice, oh, when they're doing their job at serving tables or driving Uber, when they're a kinder person that people want to tip them more. When you're a more happy person, people want to say, hey, you want to come in on this business deal with me? So generosity and just, yeah, your character really just attracts more blessing. Yeah, it's beautiful. So talk about the difference in generosity and how stewardship is woven into that.
Starting point is 00:33:46 Because when you're talking, walking up to someone who's on the skids and you give them 50 or 100 grand, how are you doing that quote unquote responsibly because you don't you don't necessarily need to say yes you could just go I'm just doing it shut up yeah yeah absolutely yeah so 99% of the time when we raise money for someone it's usually for specific reason so when we were here back in Nashville there was a lady who her son needed um you know like a heart transplant it was something um with with her baby's health and so she had to leave her job she was staying at the hospital. Her husband lived like an hour away. And so, you know, she's stuck here draining their savings account. And so we were able to get her, capture her story, raised like
Starting point is 00:34:30 50 grand for her. And we just saw her video come in a couple of weeks ago. It was like a year later, she sent me a video carrying the baby out of the hospital. Everyone was clapping in the hospital. And it just took so much stress off them, you know. So usually when we raise money is for a specific cause or situation. But really, you know, the key is God calls us to give. And I think so many times people are always caught up and, well, what if I give this guy $5 or that? What's he going to do with it? Well, the truth is we're just called to give. We're not responsible for every single thing they do for it. It's like, God loves the crap out of us, and he forgives us and loves us and loves us. And if he was a pullback, his love on us, because we made a mistake,
Starting point is 00:35:09 that'd be crazy, you know. And so I think really people, we just need to focus on, man, go out there, love somebody, be generous. Obviously, be smart and wise with how you do it. but just go and do it and it'll actually change your heart probably more than the person your blessing yeah for sure that's so good you know and what's weird is the amount is not what matters as much when you are the giver it's just the act because you are you're you're flexing a muscle that a lot of people don't even use the generosity muscle absolutely yeah a lot of people are like man when i don't have this much money or this or that i'm going to give i'm going to be generous and the truth is you actually probably won't you know like you can start today let's say you got
Starting point is 00:35:46 10 bucks to your name well find a quarter buy someone a gumball you know like you you start doing that now the lord's like says be faithful a little and you'll be given much and he knows if you can't be faithful a little you're not going to be faithful with much you know when you started this channel it was on youtube to start with first and you're on everything now yeah yeah what's your primary channel now where people are probably instagram is probably the main place now yeah at jimmy darts d-a-r-t-s the new book is undercover kindness uh saying yes to love and no to fear And yes, to generosity big time. But I remember the story you're telling me before the, we got just a minute,
Starting point is 00:36:22 but quickly how you got started with nothing. You pop up a camera and here we go. Yeah, absolutely. I just, I was talking to my dad on the porch and he goes, what do you want to do with your life? And at the time I was working at his restaurant. So I realized, well, I guess it must not be working for you. And he goes, what do you want to do?
Starting point is 00:36:40 I go, man, if I could be Santa Claus year round, just go around, share the gospel, love on people, give away cars and houses. I'd love to do it, but there's nowhere on Craigslist to apply for that. And he just looks at me and he goes, start tomorrow. And I was like, man, the world has amazing drive, but sometimes lacks purpose. And the church has great purpose, but a lot of times lacks drive. If I can put drive and purpose together, I think I can make something happen. So I got in my car, started going around the country. And yeah, just spending time with people, whether that was having a conversation with a guy asking someone for a hug. And it started with $10 $20 and just kept climbing and climbing.
Starting point is 00:37:17 And so you really can start tomorrow and go after it, get after it, and do it with the Lord, and you'll be amazed at what he can do. It's one of the biggest shows on the social media platform, and it's all about generosity, all about loving people well. The new book is Undercover Kindness from my good friend Jimmy Darts. Proud to say, I know you, brother. Yeah, thanks so much. I couldn't do it without you.
Starting point is 00:37:36 If I was in a snowball of debt, I wouldn't even be able to think straight. So my dad put me on to you a while ago. Oh, Jimmy, congrats on the book. Thank you so much. Amazing. Amazing. Welcome back to the Ramsey Show in the Fairwinds Credit Union Studios. I'm Dave Ramsey, your host, Rachel Cruz.
Starting point is 00:38:02 Ramsey personality, number one bestselling author, is my co-host today and my daughter. Open phones at AAA 825-5-225. Brittany's in Los Angeles. Hi, Brittany, how are you? Hi, Dave. Hi, Rachel. Thank you for taking my call. I am in a bit of a pickle right now. I bought a house a year ago, and I am in a bit of a financial rut. So I'm wondering if I should sell my house or if I should put it up for rentals. Is this your primary home, Brittany? Yes, no. It's kind of complex. I did buy it. a primary. However, I did have
Starting point is 00:38:44 the youth tent to also, well, I didn't people to live in it, but also I was going to Airbnb it because I do work in L.A., but I don't live there. My house is in the mountains. It's a cabin in the mountains. So, when I decided to buy a home,
Starting point is 00:39:01 I asked my mother, you know, to help me, and she has a cabin up here. I should preference, this by saying I also do have another cabin, but I own that one with my dad. And, and he pays 100% for that one. I haven't had to put
Starting point is 00:39:17 a dime into it. Upon getting it in post, it's been about two years. So I was able to qualify for one on my own because of that. I had the intent of getting the house as an Airbnb whenever I'm not here. My mom's
Starting point is 00:39:33 Airbnb was doing phenomenal. But I came in at the absolute worst time. When the market started dropping was earlier this year it was pretty much right after election and I had got my permit in about February
Starting point is 00:39:49 So I think I heard you say in the last few months I wish I hadn't done this Did I hear you say that? Did I hear you say that? Okay, so what's the cabin worth? What's the cabin worth? So the cabin is worth $3.60 It's what I bought it for.
Starting point is 00:40:09 Good, and what do you owe against it? Um, I owe about 350, oh, three, I think, yeah, 350. Okay. So you put almost nothing down? Um, I did put money down, but the interest just told that, that when I put it down, it was like three, fifty three, um, at the time. Yeah, but you, you, you didn't put much down. No.
Starting point is 00:40:36 Yeah, that's what I'm saying. So you don't have a lot of equity. So I'm not even sure you can, if you sell it, you might not, even break even, agreed? That's agreed, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Have you thought about putting it up for sale?
Starting point is 00:40:51 I have. I have a realtor actually going to come over tomorrow morning because I put a lot of work into the home. So when it got appraised, one of the things that was noted was the fact that it hadn't been touched. The house was built in like 1978. Most of the cabins up here are very old. So if you've done those work to it, why is it not gone up?
Starting point is 00:41:12 up in value? Well, I'm going to get the comps tomorrow. Oh, so you don't know what it's worth right now. Okay. I don't know. I'm just going based off of what Zillow is saying. Oh, Zillow is not, don't use Zillow as truth. Okay, that's gross.
Starting point is 00:41:28 Hopefully, it'll be more. Hopefully. Let's pretend it's 400. Yeah, let's pretend it's 400 and you can sell it and you sell it and your problems go away. Is there something wrong with this plan? Nothing's wrong with this plan. The only thing is, so that's why I'm debating. I just don't know because I'm seeing I follow houses on here on Zillow, like, religiously.
Starting point is 00:41:55 Yeah, you need to quit. This is not a good addiction for you. It probably isn't. I like to see what houses are actually selling for versus what they're being, you know. You can list it for whatever you want to list it for, but right now is, like, not a buyer's market. So I'm very, I'm kind of stressed about that. I'm like, well, could I actually really? But you're kind of stressed about keeping it, too.
Starting point is 00:42:21 That's true. Listen, I think you need to really carefully define that what you did with this purchase, the way you did this purchase, the purpose you did this purchase for, as a group, those set of ideas were bad. They did not bring you a good result. because you're stressed, you're behind on your bills, life's not good, nothing turned out like it did in your little dream when you were surfing Zillow. Right?
Starting point is 00:42:51 And so now you need to reset and go, if I'm going to do real estate, it has to be different than the way I did this. This sucks. Yeah. Yeah. Sell it. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 00:43:07 Sell it. I want you to have your life back. you. Thank you. I love my life back, too. I do a lot in my life and have a lot of hobbies and obviously everything I've had to be put on hold because I'm barely keeping up. Yeah, it's caused stress, Brittany. Yes, Dr. John Deloney always says, solve for peace. What creates peace in my life? This is not bringing you peace. This is bringing you stress and harm and lack of sleep because you're stressed about all of it, right? So just why would you? Why would you I'm just curious from you.
Starting point is 00:43:41 There's a little bit of the hesitation. Why are you hesitant? She hasn't given up on the Airbnb Zillow surfing dream. No, actually, I don't care for Airbnb. And I did say that after I got into it. It's like it's something about, and it's because most people when they do Airbnb, obviously the home is a secondary home.
Starting point is 00:44:02 For me, I am here whenever it's not books because, like I said, I own a cabin with my dad four minutes away. so I don't have personables here. It's kind of all over the place. My personal is at my mom's house. I have a bag here of things that I need. That doesn't answer Rachel's question. It's got a lot going on.
Starting point is 00:44:18 What's your hesitation? Yeah. My hesitation is that I bought the house and I felt very proud of myself as a young girl buying a house in California is really hard. And so I'm just stressed because I'm like, am I going to be able to do this again? I went through like leaps and bounce to get it the first time. and it was really hard. Yeah, you took a lot of jumps and did a lot of dances and ran around the barn three times and clicked your heels and finally got the house and it ended up not being anything like you thought it was going to be.
Starting point is 00:44:52 You forced a situation. I am proud of you for getting something done, but I was your age when I went broke because I did it wrong. You don't have to go completely broke, thank God. You can just dump this thing and learn your lesson and go, way I did this, the set of assumptions I used to make this decision were wrong. And Brittany, everybody makes mistakes. And yes, buying a home is a great thing. And we want that. I think that's a smart decision in life. But that's not who you are, right? I feel like you're tying your identity to this
Starting point is 00:45:25 decision that you've made. And for some reason, if you go back on that, it's like you're a failure or something. Like, who you are, your net worth is not your self-worth. It doesn't equal who Brittany is. And so separating those things out and saying, this is why I am with a house or not, with a nice car, or not, with a second home or not. Like, you are who you are. And then all of these other things are additions in your life. And we want to make sure the things that are additional in your life are blessing you and are good for you and not taking away. So this is, this may feel like a step back for you, but it's not. I think it's a learning idea. And you will buy a house again. I really do believe that. Brittany, you will. But you just have to be
Starting point is 00:46:05 smart about it and just to be able to have the humility to say, yeah, this was not a smart decision right now, but it's not who you are. You're not a failure, right? And so you've got to separate those two things. They feel very intertwined to me as you're speaking. Andrew is in Washington, D.C. Hi, Andrew. How are you? Hi, Dave. I'm good. How are you? Better than I deserve. What's up? And thanks for taking my call. Sure. I wanted to get your advice.
Starting point is 00:46:39 Last year in July, I had to take a trip to the emergency room. I had to get two CT scans at the time. Everything turned out to be fine, no issues. But unfortunately, because of my insurance situation at the time, the bill was not covered in any aspect. And I am currently sitting on a $24,000 ER bill that has now gone to debt collection. And the debt collector initially offered 75% of that payment, so like 18K, which I was not going to accept because I think it's just ridiculous. So I'm now on probably my third back and forth with the debt collector, and I just wanted to see what kind of advice you may have for trying to improve the situation.
Starting point is 00:47:27 What's your household income? I make around 11-5 every month. And you have money then to write the check. I do. I could write it outright. It's really just a principal thing for me. Okay. And the principle is what? Well, number one, I'm actually trying to save up as much as humanly possible for a... No, the principle is why you don't want to pay them $24,000 that they say you owe is what? Sure, because they charged $9,000 for one CT scan, $8,000 for another. The remainder is the rest of the six-hour ER visit, which at least in some of my research seems to be,
Starting point is 00:48:04 well above the average payment for CT scans, et cetera. So what did your research say? Probably around $5,000, $4,000 to $5,000 at most for a CT scan. Okay. And I am in the D.C. area, which means it's more expensive. Mm-hmm, mm-hmm. Okay. Were you incapacitated at the time? No.
Starting point is 00:48:28 Okay. And you knew you didn't have insurance when you went in there? well technically I didn't so I was in between jobs at the time and I had purchased insurance but I didn't realize I was outside of my 30 day window from the purchase date when I went in is the problem I didn't read the fine print if you ever visit a collections operation that collects medical bills you will find people sitting in small cubicles with lots of fluorescent lights with headsets on calling all day long and these are people that couldn't get a job at a 7-Eleven. This is who you're dealing with. That's correct, yeah. And their average time on the job is about 30 days. Because as soon as they can find something better and almost anything's better, they take it.
Starting point is 00:49:17 Sure. This is who you're trying to get to negotiate with on a basis of logic and market value of a CT scan. This guy hadn't got two brain cells to rub together to do this deal with. So your only shot is to continue to just beat on that organization. because you're probably seldom even going to talk to the same person. And how much of your calories are you going to burn to do this? The other only option I can think of is to call and actually try to get a meeting with someone in the administration of the hospital and sit down and say, I don't have insurance to cover this.
Starting point is 00:49:51 I thought I did when I was in there. I guess I wouldn't have cared that you were screwing my insurance company, but I do care that you're screwing me. And so I think you ought to charge you. me market rate, which is half of what you're trying to charge me, for a CT scan. This is ridiculous and try to negotiate it, right? Or try to negotiate it and just say, you know, I had no idea what I had gotten into. Please, you're a mercy operation, have some mercy on me.
Starting point is 00:50:21 But you've got the money, so we really can't play the mercy card. But I think you just try to get someone that is actually in a position to make a decision, and this bill collector is not. no but the bill collector could be negotiated with yeah a ways but you're not I don't think you're going to get them down to where you're going to end up happy with this so again I don't know how much time and effort you want to put into five grand you make 11,000 a month I'd be happy slicing it down you know at least to get 10k off of it is this sort of my my mindset I don't think you might get that from a bill collector but I don't think they're going to have the
Starting point is 00:51:00 power to do that unless unless the bill gets very, very old and all that time. Every day this sits, it's ding in your credit, by the way. It's an unpaid bill. It's out for collections. So your credit goes down every day. If you're worried about that. I don't worry about that personally.
Starting point is 00:51:16 But, you know, but we've had some luck sitting down in person and asking for mercy on the behalf of broke people or asking for reasonableness on the market value of something if I pay cash for a medical procedure. Yeah. Yeah, that's why I always wonder the moral card. I mean, I get he's frustrated because he's like, you know, there is market value elsewhere, and you could probably have a whole discussion about do things really cost all this. But there is a point that, you know, you got the service.
Starting point is 00:51:46 Yeah, you got the service and you didn't, the time to have negotiated it would have been while you're sitting there. Right, right. Like, what are you charging me for the CT scheme? Right, right. You know, but I guess if you're sitting there in the emergency room, I don't know. I mean, that's a, they kind of got you cornered in a sense. Yeah, over a barrel, so to speak. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:00 So I, yeah, I'm, the only moral thing you've got is that they're basically charging your double market because they can and because it's the ER and because it's after the fact, which is really an immoral practice. Yeah. You know, really it is. Yeah. Yeah. So is the, is the good fight worth the extra? Because they said, he said they would take 17, the bill collect. You know what I mean? So if you're trying to get half, to your point, it's five grand.
Starting point is 00:52:28 How much is your time and energy worth of it? I'll push on a little bit, but you need to push on a little bit with the bill collector or go all in and try to circumvent the bill collector and go to the administration at the hospital. And again, I find very reasonable people at the administration of the hospital. I mean, we've had people going with $200,000 bills that had $2.00. They were broke. And I had no insurance. And you actually got to talk to a human and you end up with an ICU bill. And the hospital looks at them and goes, we're not going to collect this. So if you'll pay us $5,000, you know, we're going to write it off as, you know, charity. And that's what it is. It's a gift. And we've had hospitals do that. They're generally, the hospital themselves are generally very good to work. Yeah, but it is usually with people financially that are in need.
Starting point is 00:53:12 Yeah, that's if they're in need. That's if they're in need. I have, you know, the only time I've had luck with this negotiation is on the front end, not on the back end. Meaning, for instance, an MRI. Oh, my gosh. We've actually advertised for private cash upfront MRIs on several local radio. stations over the years and it's like a fourth of what they charge your insurance company and you can walk in there for i don't know whatever it is i call it a hundred bucks instead of
Starting point is 00:53:38 400 bucks or 200 bucks or whatever but it's nothing if you just walk in and pay cash for it but if you walk in there with your insurance card they it's 4x and and then you wonder why your insurance is expensive so uh but that that's you know that's the that world so um wow strange harsh it's tough Yeah, and the moral story, of course, is make sure we have our insurance in place between jobs and be very, very diligent about all that kind of stuff. Cobra, whatever else you've got to do while you're making a step from one career to another. Yeah, Christian Health Care Ministries is a great place that if you are in between jobs even, they're a health care provider. They're like a substitute of insurance. Well, and they're actually sponsoring, they're one of the sponsors for this weekend's marriage and money, right?
Starting point is 00:54:29 Yes, money and marriage. Money and marriage. I got it backwards. Yep, the weekend with a lot of people here already that are going to be joining us. It's so fun. A couple of hundred of them in the lobby watching the show today because it starts tonight and goes through the whole weekend with Rachel and Rachel Cruz and Dr. John Deloney. Again, another sellout.
Starting point is 00:54:47 This is a huge event. Yeah, it's been fun. This is our, gosh, I don't even know what number we've done. But it's been, yep, very exciting. Always fun. We try to do new contents every year. The one in February for the Valentine's Day one, is it sold out? No.
Starting point is 00:55:04 Not quite. No, not quite, yeah. So if you want to come to that, it's on campus here. And, you know, the show, by the way, is on the class. We do the show from one to four every day on the glass. And so you can sit in the lobby, get homemade chocolate chip cookies on us, get coffee that's incredible on us, and sit and, you know, watch the show. And it's always a crowd here of anywhere from two to 200. Sometimes there's two people.
Starting point is 00:55:28 But sometimes there's two people. 200. Like today, there's probably 300 out there. But yeah, and it's going to be a great weekend. There's a lot of incredible speakers lined up. A lot of mystery speakers. I wonder who they might be. It's going to be fun. I know. You know, you're in for a treat. It's going to be great. Trick or treat. Our question of the day is brought to you. by Y-ReFi. If your private student loans are in default, it can feel like the end of the road. But Y-R-R-R-R-F-I helps you find a way forward with a low fixed-rate payment plan that fits your life.
Starting point is 00:56:11 Go to Y-R-R-E-F-Y. That's the letter Y-R-E-F-Y.com slash Ramsey, not available in all states. Today's question comes from Drew in Pennsylvania. My wife and I are 35 years old with no children yet. We are on Baby Step 7 and have $750,000 in retirement. and a half a million dollar home with a balance owed of $250,000. Okay, so you're not on Baby Step 7 quite yet. I hear you talk about having enough life insurance to replace our income, but my current income is $375,000, and my wife's is $100,000 with no debt.
Starting point is 00:56:47 Is it really necessary to have insurance in place before we have children? Well, again, life insurance is there to replace your income, and you guys are living, I don't know, lifestyle-wise. I mean, you're close to half a million making that per year. And so I would consider you self-insured once the home is, if the home is paid off, that feels self-insured to me. But if something were to happen to you and your wife was making $100,000, would she be okay with the mortgage?
Starting point is 00:57:18 Could she pay all of that and be self-sufficient? So I like the idea of still having 10 to 12 times your annual income. for a buffer and if you guys are both healthy at 35 when Winston I just redid our life insurance probably two years ago and we did term life with Xander and it's just so inexpensive that a part of me is like just do it now and then once the house is paid off then you guys can have that discussion but it's so inexpensive yeah I I would definitely still keep it because again if something happened to you your wife makes a hundred grand you know how what's that stress going to be for her of having to still make that mortgage payment every month
Starting point is 00:57:56 Yeah. There's less of a burden on you guys than if you had children and your wife did not have a wonderful career that she has. Okay. But if something happens to you, she's in a pinch right now. That's a lot of house for $100K. And so, yeah, you need to be carrying some on you. Now, if you want to do a different formula than the typical, the typical formula I recommend, and Rachel just quoted it, it is 10 to 12 times your income and insurance. Now, the reason for that, that let's just back up let's pretend someone else called in they said okay i make 80 000 a year so 10 to 12 times would be 800 000 a million dollars which on a 35 year old is the cost of a pizza if you don't smoke and you're not fat okay it's simple obesity and smoking or kill it kill your rates all right and so if you're in good decent shape and you don't smoke and those are both things you can control by the way hello and so um you know now you get good rates and it's very inexpensive to have a million dollars. Now, if you got a million dollars and you die, just for general, this is why we have this formula, in other words, your wife is left with two little kids,
Starting point is 00:59:05 and they count on your $80,000 to eat with, and you get a million, she gets a million dollar check when you die. You put that in good mutual funds, and let's say just for easy numbers, it makes 10%. 10% of a million dollars is $100,000 minus taxes. Looks a lot like what you used to make. 800,000 invested, 10%, that would be 80,000, which is what you used to make. And so it creates that perpetually. Every year, it will send your widow or widower with the little kids what your check used to be.
Starting point is 00:59:39 That's why we get the formula. Now, so if you want to use that idea in this situation and say, well, we don't need $4 million worth of insurance on this guy because she doesn't have to have $400,000, his $375,000 income to eat. eat. She's going to be okay. But let's say she that you guys looked at and said, well, we want to make sure she does have $100,000 to go with her $100,000. That's a $200,000 income to pay this house. Or, you know, I want to leave her enough to get some and enough to pay off the house. So you could say million dollars instead of $4 million right now. Because, yeah,
Starting point is 01:00:16 she'd pay the house off. And then she'd write, check pay off the house, put $750 in the bank in a good mutual fund with a good smart vester pro, not the bank. And now you're making $75,000 a year with no house payment. And that's really, really inexpensive again. And so, yeah, I would do something, in other words. And here's the other thing. We're 35 years old with no children yet. I'll just kind of tell you from 35 years of doing this.
Starting point is 01:00:46 As soon as you get the life insurance going, the kid's going to come. So you're going to have to re-up the life insurance anyway. it's come so go ahead go and get the million with plans to get three more million because it's coming yeah you know yet yet all right jack is in wyoming hey jack how are you i'm cool sir how are you better than i deserve what's up so i have um a dad who has always helped me out with pretty much everything in my life and i'm i'm extremely grateful and i love him i love him the death and uh he's mentioned that my fiance and i once we get married and we sort of decide to buy our first house,
Starting point is 01:01:24 that he'd be more than willing to kind of buy it for us and then have him just kind of active in the bank. He's mentioned no interest on that and all the good things that come along with that. But I was just wondering, how do we make sure that it doesn't affect our amazing father-son relationship? And how do I do it? Dave's looking at me Jack for me to be the bearer of bad news for you
Starting point is 01:01:55 it will change your relationship so I mean there's no way around it it does and so when scripture says the borrower is slave to the lender your dad is now your bank he's your master and so now it changes the relationship whether you like it or not as healthy and wonderful as the relationship is, this almost always ends up putting a strain. And so I wouldn't do it. I would not sacrifice the most amazing relationship you have with him, which is such a gift to be a grown son and have
Starting point is 01:02:25 that much respect and love and honor for your father. Keep it pure. Keep it simple. Keep it clean. And you and your fiancé, you guys, just go. Go and. Go have your life. Yes, go have your life. Do not, do not tangle finances. It's hard to eat Thanksgiving dinner with your master. that is now let me tell you and it will affect your wife more than it will affect you she'll feel the strain in the air more than you will because you and your dad have a quality relationship
Starting point is 01:02:55 so you won't feel it as much all right but it's there and it's an unnecessary strain for a few interest points now let me give you one other question and then I'll tell you someone one more thing it's a great question by the way I'm so happy you've got such a good relationship with your dad.
Starting point is 01:03:13 That's such a wonderful gift, especially in our culture today when it's more and more rare. Yeah. The, what's your dad's net worth? You any idea? I don't, but it's, I mean, he does very well for himself. I mean, is that a million or 20 million? It's probably somewhere around 10, 10 to 12. Okay.
Starting point is 01:03:36 And the house price would be about what? that's that's would have been part two of my question had we had we gotten to that point but i mean you're what are y'all thinking i mean if you just threw out a number like a 500,000 you're brand new getting married and shy in Wyoming half million dollars will buy a great house right exactly yep so if i were your dad i might give you a house instead of being the bank a gift does not got the strings tied to it i might ask you to uh make sure that you invest the equivalent of a house payment so that my grandkids never have debt you could break the he could break the cycle forever now I
Starting point is 01:04:17 feel weird for him asking his dad that I know I'm just I said I might ask your dad I'm not sure you would but you might play this for him I might have just asked him you might hear this so um I mean so the the other thing is this the other thing is okay when we went broke 35 years ago Sharon and I lost everything um Her dad loaned us a little bit of money to get the water turn back on and to catch the car up so it didn't get repoed and some stuff like that, okay? And it was not a huge amount, but it was an amount of money, okay? And he is an absolute saint.
Starting point is 01:04:56 He is one of the nicest men I've ever met on the planet. And my wife and him have a great relationship. The fact that I owed him money drove me. bonkers until I got it paid off and so that's your wife that's the in-law that's where she's sitting I wouldn't do it yeah just keep it clean Jack Riley is in North Carolina hi Riley is in North Carolina hi Riley how are you I'm doing great. How are you and Rachel? Better than we deserve. What's up?
Starting point is 01:05:41 Hey, yeah, I own a service business in the HVAC industry, Thermostat Masters, and we've been running that business now for a few years, and during running this business, we've started to develop a product. I'm about 80,000 in on this product for R&D, and we are now at a point where we've got the minimal viable product, product. We're ready to essentially take this to investors as the direction that I want to go because we bootstrapped it this entire time. And really the advice that I'm looking for is how do I acquire funding for a product, especially I've just opened a new LLC for the
Starting point is 01:06:29 product in order to protect my service company from any debt or, you know, any kind of suing that may occur during this process, so this new LLC doesn't have any history. How do I acquire funding for this and also how do I structure the conversation with investors? I have some in mind, but then there's going to be locating the ones that I don't know me as well. How do I structure that conversation? It's very difficult because you don't have any track record. All you've got is a modified dream at this point. You've got a wish.
Starting point is 01:07:10 And so if you were a shark tank in this, they'd throw you off. Because you got no history of cash flow. You didn't come in and say, I've sold 80,000 units, and I want to take it to 8 million units, and I need an investor. You came in and said, I have a dream, and I turned it into a prototype, and I've made no money so far. So what do you think it's going to cost you to produce this thing per unit? So per unit, we're looking at about $98 per unit.
Starting point is 01:07:40 On what kind of volume? On what kind of volume? I'm not sure on what kind of volume that is, but that's the projected. How did you project it? I mean, did you get a bid from somebody to produce it? Actually, yeah, I've got... Okay, for how many units? ...I don't have the answer to that question.
Starting point is 01:08:00 I'm sorry. so they gave you a bid to make one for 98 or a million for 98 we don't know no right no I if I had to say it'd probably be 20,000 units if I had to say but it wasn't going to be a gigantic number no nothing like a million all right um well it's very difficult to attract an investor to this I mean you got a you got a cost of goods sold at 50% is what you're telling me you think you can sell it for the two hundred two hundred two hundred twenty dollar range where is it going to sit in a Home Depot or is it going to be wholesale out to other HVFAC guys and they sell it to their customers or how are you going to distribute it, do you think? The idea that actually goes into business model and it's something that I wouldn't be able to really discuss on the business model of how that's going to go for legal reasons.
Starting point is 01:08:53 Well, yeah, you can. It's not, nobody can steal the fact you're going to put it in Home Depot because they don't have home, they don't even know what we're talking about. But anyway, all right, so you're going to have a real hard time to get an investor for this, a very hard time. And I would honestly, I would counsel you against getting an investor, but you're dead set on it. I have a friend that says when you bring in venture capitalist, it's like picking up a hitchhiker and then they hijack your car. Well, I'm not dead set on, I'm not dead set on anything right now. I'm actually just calling for advice. Yeah, and so what I would do, let me give you an example.
Starting point is 01:09:29 I'll make up a thing. It's not your thing, but I'll just make up a thing. Let's say that you wanted this thing to sit on the shelf in Home Depot, Lowe's, and Ace Hardware, and tractor supply. Okay? Then I would go pocket and put out, I'd go make a thousand of them. You already got $80,000 in it, put another $100,000 in it of your money. Make $80,000. Make $1,000 of them, and let's put them on some shelves, and let's see if we can get them to come off the shelves, if that's your model.
Starting point is 01:09:59 If you're going to go on the internet and just create a web page and try to get an Instagram buy or, you know, keywords on Google or whatever, then, you know, you can post it there and try to sell it just online and actually sell some units. That's going to give you two things to attract capital. One is a track record, and the other is anyone that's going to put capital in this knows that your prototype is not ever going to make it to market. You put out the first thousand units, you're going to get customer feedback to make sure. change the design a hundred percent of the time oh yeah a hundred percent of the time we don't know what we don't know until we put it out in the wild and that's business and the three rules of business apply it takes twice as long as you think it's going to it costs twice as much as you think it's going to and you're not the exception those are the three rules of business and so um just plan
Starting point is 01:10:50 on that and i would cash flow it and walk it out organically and see if you can't make the thing cash flow itself and keep the ownership. I would rather you sell a thousand and then 10,000, and then 20,000, and then 100,000 and 10 years from now sell 800,000 and you own 100%. Then you give up 90% or 80% of your equity and they bastardize your whole idea, which is what's going to happen. You're going to end up pissed when you're through dealing with these people because they're going to take your company over. That's what's going to, they're going to take your little baby and they ain't going to rock it the way you want it rocked because they know more than you do and it's their money and that's what's going to happen that's how these deals work and i'm not mad
Starting point is 01:11:35 about it if you're venture capitalist i'm not mad at you that's what you do you you know more than this guy and so you take it over and you go do it for him and he gets a little something and he would have got nothing if he had done it himself maybe but i'm going to tell you to do what we did and that's we've cash flowed everything from the ground and it is it's a slower process it's way so you're not going to be on the cover of fast company magazine. You're going to be on the cover of slow company magazine. But you're going to be open. And you're going to own it. You pay cash for your, pay cash for your experiments because you can call them failures if you want, but they're experiments. This first prototypes and experiment. Get it out there in the wild. Let people kick
Starting point is 01:12:12 it around. Let them tell you your baby's ugly. And then you put some lipstick on that sucker, put it back out there. Right. And that's what we do, man. That's those of us that are entrepreneurs. We live in a state. I mean, entrepreneurship is like golf. It's a series of failures. It's a series of experiments. Even professional golfers, it's a series of failures. They still don't ever hit exactly what they want to hit. Never. Otherwise, every time they swing the club, it would be a hole in one, right? I mean, it's impossible. So, and business is exactly the same way. We don't ever have a book to do what we think it's going to. It does about what we think it's going to because we've done a bunch of books, but still, it's a thing.
Starting point is 01:12:52 So it's a cool discussion, though, Riley. I'm really glad you're doing this. Guys like you are the ones that you could end up worth $10 or $20 million off this one idea. If you don't let it break you and if you'll just be comfortable being the tortoise and not the hair. But there's no one, I kept thinking when we first started, man, that someone was going to come along and discover Dave Ramsey and get me on all these radio stations. We're on 680 radio stations. stations today were the second largest talk radio show in america three radio hall of fames 35 years later we got every one of those stations one at a time no one has still discovered
Starting point is 01:13:33 me there are people that still don't think i'm in radio and so um but you know it's me and sean hannity we own the place you know i mean it's like and so uh but it's and now we've got you know i just got a hundred million streams on freaking spotify we did did the Ramsey show what I get you know what I was I was here part of the time that's right and then I picked up I picked up the little trophy thing to take a picture with it and broke it you have I know I broke the trophy thing from Spotify but what you've done spotify your trophy was cheap I broke it to your point though what you've done and I feel like we've even we did it incrementally yes and yeah you and the team I mean it's amazing and even knowing people that we've
Starting point is 01:14:17 interacted with in life that started with an idea kind of a small thing they grew it And then, you know, we had friends over, they did a thing for 10 years and then sold it. Yeah. And now they are, sold it for a good amount of money. A lot of money. So even, Raleigh, that could be your plan. Had a liquidity a moment. Yeah, of like, hey, what if you have an idea, you have a thing and you run it to ground
Starting point is 01:14:37 for 10 years. And then it's done well. Then you sell it to some, you know, venture capitalists and you get to ride off into the sunset. You're going to make a lot more of that way. Yep. So the sweat is not over, Riley, my friend. More sweat, more calluses are in your future before.
Starting point is 01:14:52 more money. You have not gotten there yet. Okay, before YouTube hates me, you did. You built this. Well done, Dave. No, no, it's okay. You did. They're all going to be like, I got it to a certain level, and you guys have taken it to the moon. It's okay. I'm a good platform to jump off of. I'll take it. Welcome back to the Ramsey Show in the Fair Winds Credit Union Studios. I'm Dave Ramsey, your host, Open Phones at Triple-8-8-25-5-2-2-25, Rachel Cruz, number one best-selling author, co-host of the Smart Money Happy Hour, and this weekend's sold-out marriage and money
Starting point is 01:15:33 or money-and-marriage event with Dr. John Deloney, Rachel Cruz, my daughter, she's my co-host today. Open phones at AAA-8-25-5-2-2-25. Greg is in Phoenix, Arizona. Hey, Greg, how are you? Hey, good afternoon. Afternoon, what's up? I am interested. I'm looking to see when it's okay to spend some of our wealth that we've accumulated on some fractional ownership airplanes. Okay. Well, we've created quite a bit of wealth. We are looking at taking advantage of the bonus appreciation for our business, and we're really interested in some, you know, private travel. Okay. And so how much wealth have you accumulated? Without the value of our business, our assets are 50 million and assets 45 million in net worth. And if we had to add value to the business, it would be 150 million.
Starting point is 01:16:31 Okay. Way to go, dude. Congratulations. Thank you. Very well done. Lots of hard work. Yeah, yeah. And you're probably like me.
Starting point is 01:16:41 You get a little angry when people say you're so lucky. You're right. A lot of luck. I got a few calluses. and I've been wearing overalls a long time. All right, so congratulations. I'm so proud of you. Well, obviously, there's a couple things here.
Starting point is 01:16:56 So private air travel falls in the category of ultra luxury, obviously, but you're in a category of ultra wealth. You're in the top 1% of wealth holders in the United States, without a doubt. And so you qualify financially to be able to do that. It makes sense. And the way I look at that kind of thing is, And Sharon and I, when we're looking at something that feels emotionally uncomfortable because it's so weird from the neighborhood we grew up in, do what? That's exactly how we feel.
Starting point is 01:17:33 Yeah. Like I bought the 700 horsepower Raptor R, okay, which is a pickup truck, but it's a race car, okay? Yes. And it was ridiculously expensive. It's like cost more than I used to make a year kind of thing. Yes. It'd like freak me out for about 30 seconds. I'm familiar with those purchases.
Starting point is 01:17:51 Yeah, for about 30 seconds. And this kind of falls in that category. So we ask ourselves when we're making, doing something like that, is number one, is our generosity healthy? Are we healthy with our giving? Number two, if we take the amount of money we're getting ready to blow on this toy and burned it in the middle of the floor, would our life change at all? and the answer in your situation is no it would not correct because it's not that much money I mean you're talking about a couple million bucks it's $5 million over three years with a guaranteed buyback over three years as well so it's a three million dollars spent on
Starting point is 01:18:33 and that's without using any of the tax benefits yeah and we don't do deals for tax benefits you brought up tax benefits twice that always makes me nervous don't use that to justify it Do it because it makes sense and then take the tax benefits. And it makes sense for you in your world to never see another TSA agent. That is what my wife says. Yeah, I think it makes sense. I mean, because, you know, you're making serious bank and a million dollars a year for three years. It ain't spit, man.
Starting point is 01:19:06 It's like other people buying a biscuit. I do. I feel guilty the way I grew up. I know, I know, in a sense, and it's hard to... But again, you check yourself is, is this all about me and am I out of control trying to be like some reality show person or something, or some influencer or some kind of crap, right? Or am I doing this for other people? Or am I doing this for me and my family and my generosity is probably far superior to this small
Starting point is 01:19:37 purchase ratio wise this is a small purchase then you are not spiritually or ethically or morally out of line okay you're supposed to enjoy some of your money okay i have a friend i have a friend that makes um about 60 million a year and um he uh his net worth is uh probably two billion and he just bought a 52 million dollar challenger 100 percent no fractional yeah and that's a sweet aircraft by the way oh that is god that's a beautiful yeah but anyway yeah but anyway that's that's the deal so you know that i would go do it i would go do it that's the answer to your question and and enjoy it and don't feel guilty and expect other people to not understand um there are no statues erected to critics
Starting point is 01:20:31 except actually i said that and a guy sent me one oh no did you know that did you know there Remember the movie critic Roger Ebert? Yeah. There's a statue. Oh, and he's a critic. So there's actually one statue somewhere in the world erected to a critic. But critics don't, they don't get a vote, okay? Because they haven't done what you've done.
Starting point is 01:20:51 It's not their money. It's your money. Yeah. God didn't trust them with it. He trusted you with it. And it's a small percentage of your world. And again, check yourself with, can I burn that much money in the floor? And is my generosity very healthy?
Starting point is 01:21:05 And is my motivation good, too? Is my motivation for other people or for me? Yep, that's right. That's right. If no one knows you did this ever, is it still a good purchase? And that's what, you know, I probably shouldn't say that after I just said this, but I didn't buy the Raptor because I thought it was, somebody else thought it was cool. I bought it because I thought it was cool.
Starting point is 01:21:27 I parked my Tesla right by it today in the parking lot. Plugged in and I bet I, did you feel a bit of shame? No, I bet it would beat your raptor in a race. Probably would. I think I could beat your Tesla in a 100-foot run, though. I think on foot I can beat it for the first 100 feet. No. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:21:49 It goes back. Nothing comes out. Don't everyone take that bet. Nothing comes out of the whole that fast. Not even a Tesla. Wait, what? I'm just telling you. I'll talk to you about later.
Starting point is 01:21:57 Open phones at AAA 825-5-2-25. From zero to 60, from zero to the first 100 feet, a person can outrun a car. No. Oh, 100% of the time. That is not true. Check it out. Go try it. Y'all go down the parking lot.
Starting point is 01:22:11 We'll do it after the show. All of us. Meet me down there and then we'll all go up on the hill and go to money and marriage. We'll see when Dave pulls a hammy. Oh, man. You never know. Oh, man. The Tesla will outrun the Raptor, though, to your point.
Starting point is 01:22:24 Yes. It will. Thank you. Thank you. No, but that is a question we get, I feel like more and more probably because you've been on the show. I don't have the shame of driving a rolling battery. Oh, my gosh. I do have that.
Starting point is 01:22:35 We don't ever have to go to a gas station. We can keep going. We can keep going. Welcome to Thanksgiving dinner at the Ramses. But the question of spending, because we do get that, more and more, and especially people on Baby Step 7. Because people are winning with money. That's a wonderful question.
Starting point is 01:22:52 Yes, yes. But the emotions, to your point, don't catch up. Don't catch up always mathematically to where people are when they start winning. And we have 1100 employees. We buy coffee. Our coffee bill, when I'm not. I see it, is emotional. I mean, it's like, I don't make what in the world?
Starting point is 01:23:11 Unbelievable. I remember years, you know, you start telling those old dad jokes. You know, when I walked up hill both ways in the snow. You know, it's like, golly, man. But it's a coffee bill. Everything with scale is just whacked. But I will say, money, it can be a dangerous thing, too. So the fact that he's kind of pumping the brakes and asking, I think, is a very, that's a
Starting point is 01:23:30 healthy mindset. So I think that's really, really wise. The ones are in trouble are the ones that don't ask about it. Yes. You're right. Amen. Tara is in Hartford, Connecticut. Hi, Tara, good.
Starting point is 01:23:53 How are you? Better than I deserve. What's up? So my question for you is, how do I continue with the baby steps if I don't have a home or any children? well you obviously wouldn't need to save for kids college so maybe step five does not apply um what's your housing situation um right now i live at home and um so that you know i basically my parents go away and um i take care of the house and i stay at home and that's kind of where i'm at right now with that i've been looking to purchase a house um
Starting point is 01:24:33 but things are incredibly expensive. So until that happens, I'm just saving money and living at home. What do you make? Sorry? What do you make? How much money do you make? I make about $60,000 a year. It can be kind of flexible because I'm 1099.
Starting point is 01:24:54 Okay. And when you say your parents go away, are they traveling and you like house, you take care of the house while they're gone? Yeah. And do you do that as a favor? or do they pay you as like a house manager when they're gone? No, I do that. Just, okay, part of it. But kind of in exchange.
Starting point is 01:25:12 Okay, instead of paying rent, for instance, you're helping to take care. Okay, perfect. Okay. Yeah, so I would say you're on Baby Step 3B, Tara, at that point. I mean, I would be investing money into retirement, but I would be saving for a down payment for a house. That would be my next financial goal? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:25:28 Yep, that's what I'm doing. So for now, would you say that I'm just kind of. of like just ride on that and keep saving. Yeah, build up, build up a nice, huge down payment for a house. Because long term, you've said it, but also it's proper, it's good financial planning. Long term, you want to be the owner of a home. Correct. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:25:48 And it doesn't have to be today. It doesn't have to be tomorrow. You've got a good situation right now. But, you know, if you got a big old pile of cash, then the options start opening up. And also long term, your income could go up. You could increase the quality of your, you know, your contacts and your 1099 business. And, you know, instead of making 60, be making 120, and you look up and you've got 100,000 saved. And then something changes with the housing with mom and dad, and you're ready to go by.
Starting point is 01:26:15 And that's perfect. Okay. And would you say, so when I'm investing, I am maxing out my Roth IRA. And the rest of my money I have in, like, high-yield savings and in CDs. would you say that my money is best spent anywhere else? No, I would either be putting it in high-yield savings for a down payment for a house or I would be investing beyond the Roth IRA. And as a 1099, there's a couple of other things you can do.
Starting point is 01:26:45 You can do a CEP IRA or you can do a simple IRA, either one. And they're very easy to set up with your SmartVestor Pro. If you want to put more than just your Roth IRA in, you can do both of those as Roths. They're very easy to do. So just if you want to do more investing and less towards the down payment, just get in touch with one of the SmartVestor pros at Ramsey Solutions.com, one of the people we recommend for setting up a good mutual fund account. And they'll help you with your IRA investing. They can help you with high yield savings for that matter. But, yeah, you're just chunking money for one of two things, either retirement or house down payment.
Starting point is 01:27:22 And you can just get at this position in the baby steps, you can go as heavy on one or the other. as you want to. Yeah, I would probably try to hit that 15% and then anything above that put in your high yield for specifically for a down payment. Given that you have no rent. Yeah. No. So I'm probably going to add another retirement program to your thing. Like I'm talking about a SEP IRA or a simple IRA, one of the two, either one will work. And they're very easy to do. Well, honestly, making 60, you're probably right at that 15% into the 8,000 of the Roth IRA. Yeah. You're getting close. So that's true. It's great, Tara. Good job.
Starting point is 01:27:58 Get yourself to 15% and then go on towards the house. That's what I would do. Open phones at AAA 825-5-2-2-25. Allen is in Kansas City. Hi, Alan. What's up? Hey, thank you so much, Dave, for taking my call. I really appreciate it.
Starting point is 01:28:13 Sure. How can we help? Yeah, here's my question. So I was a pastor for many years. And we, after I got married, we had some health issues that were kind of long-term, that insurance wasn't going to be covering. and eventually I had to leave the pastorate as an occupation and take up another job. And I've been working in now IT and CRM.
Starting point is 01:28:41 I'm the head of those two departments here in Middlebury, Missouri. And anyway, I am working for a previous church member. And I'm just really wondering, should I stay or should I go? I don't know if I'm getting the best pay and vacation is what, you know, I'm thinking of my family, and I'm really doing the best for them because, you know, we don't have a lifetime of savings. We've done the best that we can, but I'm playing a lot of catch-up just because of where we came from.
Starting point is 01:29:16 Okay. So there's a lot of background information to all of that. I'm more than happy to share, but fire away with any questions you have. you've done any investigation on comp, you know, what your compensation is worth? I mean, have you looked at what I can get a job for doing the same thing, you know, somewhere else? I've done a little bit of looking on that, and it seems that in the area that I'm in, if you only look at the IT work, head of IT, that seems to be around 100, what I'm having
Starting point is 01:29:49 a hard time finding is what if you're doing IT, but you're also involved in sales and you run the whole CRM and you're writing code for the CRM, I don't know if that boosted it a lot or if it doesn't. It probably should boost it some. How much are you getting paid now? I'm right at 100 gross before anything's taken out. Okay. And you're saying for just one part of your job, it's 100,
Starting point is 01:30:14 but then you're doing additional work, which you feel like you should be compensated for above what you're seeing. Yeah, I'm wondering if I could be. I'd been pretty heavily involved in the sales department. I made the sales process, and we didn't have a sales head. How many people work at the company? About 50. Okay.
Starting point is 01:30:39 Do you have any idea what the top line or gross revenue is? Gross revenue is $9 million right now. With 50 people? Wow. I got a lot of people. payroll. Okay. Yeah, the staff, the employees that we have has grown a lot over the past eight years that I've been here. The amount of money the company makes, it has not grown so much, but a part of the direction is sort of planning for the future. There's been a lot of
Starting point is 01:31:14 investment in product and the owners believe that the company is going to explode over the next five years. Maybe not explode, but there'll be a good steady growth. Yeah, okay. That, I would hope. I would hope that, in other words, all this investment in payroll pays off. So, uh, yeah, yeah, uh, well, I'm not sure they're in a position to afford a lot more right now. Um, but as they start making more, I would expect to see some pretty good kicks in my income, uh, based on the fact that you're basically doing one and a half jobs at a minimum. And so the other thing you can do is this. Okay, so here's the thing. You're not a belligerent person. You're not a prideful person, but you're just asking an honest question of
Starting point is 01:32:01 value. And so an employer wants to know what they can, what they can make as a result of the work you do. In other words, if they pay you 100, they need to be making more than 100 off the work you do. I suspect they are. And then the second thing they want to know is if you leave, What does it cost to replace you? In other words, what's the market value of that position? And so if I were you, you're a detailed person. I would do a detailed comp study with LinkedIn and a few of the other sites and try to figure out as close as you can what you think this is worth
Starting point is 01:32:38 and have a series of facts, one page of facts, not a 26-page study, okay? And sit down with your owner with one page and go, I'm asking myself an honest question. and I want to ask you an honest question. This looks like, tell me what I messed up, but this looks like my position's worth $150 in the marketplace or $125 in the marketplace. This is what this looks like.
Starting point is 01:33:00 What do you think? And I want to be honest and I'm going to be humble. And if not, what's my growth trajectory look like? How can I grow my... What can I do to become worth that since it seems that this position is worth that? The all-new every dollar is here, and now it's way more than just the world-class budgeting app. A ton of advanced features to help you make faster progress on the Ramsey plan with your money.
Starting point is 01:33:35 The average person finds thousands, literally, thousands of dollars in margin in just the first 15 minutes of starting up. Start every dollar for free today. Get it in the app store or Google Play. All right, Jeremy and Deborah are. with us on the debt-free stage. What's up? Woo! Hey, Dave, hey, Rachel.
Starting point is 01:33:55 Welcome, welcome. Hi, you guys. Great. How are y'all? Where do y'all live? Charlotte, North Carolina. Just over the hill. Well, welcome, man.
Starting point is 01:34:02 Welcome. Good to have y'all. And if you're on the debt-free stage, it can only mean one thing. You're debt-free. And how much have you paid off? $85,614. Very cool. And how long did this take?
Starting point is 01:34:15 62 months. Good for you. Wonderful. And your range of income during that five years? 72 to 82,000. Cool. What do y'all do for a living? We own a small business in Charlotte doing a custom window treatments. Oh, very cool. Good for you. What kind of debt was this $86,000? It was our house day. Oh, no way. Who has an $86,000 mortgage? Right. What was left? Yeah, we had what was left on our mortgage. We had a little bit of a back story with ours. We actually got out of debt, consumer debt, about 10 years ago. go following your principles. And then we went through a stage of infertility and ended up getting pregnant with our first daughter. Yay. That we unfortunately lost her at 24 weeks. But we knew that we
Starting point is 01:35:03 needed to stack money for her. We knew she was going to have needs. So we put the house, you know, we paid the payments, but we put some extra on the side. Yeah. And in 2020, we were able to bring our first daughter home. Yay. Oh my gosh. And then in 21, we were able to. We were able to. to bring our son home. Yay! Yes. Oh, it's much better than paying off a mortgage.
Starting point is 01:35:25 Yes, it was. And over that time, we knew that we wanted to put them in really great school, take care of them like we were going to take care of their sister. And we kind of had that money sitting to the side
Starting point is 01:35:37 and we had that lift on our mortgage and we thought, you know what, let's just do it. Let's be weird people. Just pay it off. Yeah, we'll use the fact that we don't have a mortgage to take care of the kids.
Starting point is 01:35:49 dose. There you go. It's it. There you go. Yes, it is blessed us. They're able to go to a private Christian school and, you know, little things like that that we wouldn't have been able to do. Yeah. We're not done this. Wow. Huge blessing in our life. Thank you. What's the house worth? About 350,000. Way to go. Very cool. Good job, you guys. Thank you. You've been stacking for this. Have you been investing as well? We have. And how much is in your retirement nesting? Probably about 200,000. All right. So over a half million dollar net worth already. Yep. Way to go, y'all. And no stinking payments in the world. None done. How's How does that feel?
Starting point is 01:36:20 I don't know yet. It just happened. It's amazing to me. It's got to sink in. It's got to sink in. Make the last payment and had some major house problems, so we had to deal with that. Of course. We're able to write a check for it.
Starting point is 01:36:32 So it's not fully sank in yet, but. The next few months, you'll, yeah. It's been a blessing to be able to do that and not go back in the debt, you know, to be able to take care of the house needs. Yes, for sure. You know, because a lot of people call our show with that situation, they have the 85 in investments or something not retirement and they're like oh but i'm making a good spread on you know yeah we're making good money would you say it's a hundred percent worth it to just know that there is
Starting point is 01:36:57 no mortgage one at least 100 percent at least not more yes not more yeah we spoke with you and john last year at the money marriage and yes some um some advice for us for the situation where we're in and yes uh it helped us guide us to where we needed to do and one day we're just like no more right to check build that count back up yeah i love it yep yeah yeah but So great, you guys. Well done. Thank you. It's good to see y'all again.
Starting point is 01:37:22 I'm glad you're back. I know. I'm excited to be back. So fun. Welcome back on the Ramsey campus. Thank you. So now with all this you've been through, you pay off the consumer debt, you stack cash, you fight the whole infertility battle, which is an emotional roller coaster.
Starting point is 01:37:38 And then you turn around, look up and go, stack of cash, mortgage, gone. Yep. And so like three different major parts to this story almost, timeline. line-wise, what's your advice to people and what's the, you know, when we always ask people, you know, what do you tell people about what you do to get out of debt? What was the key thing that enabled you to go through all three of those phases? I would say, yeah, we, you have to have a team. You have to be a team. You have to be on the same page because it could easily tore us apart, you know, what we walked through in fertility wise and then losing our daughter. That was
Starting point is 01:38:14 very rough but it almost fueled a piece of me that it didn't fuel on him and and I was able to say you know what let's double down let's do this let's for our future for our future children and we're able to do that now and the feeling of knowing that we've changed our trajectory for our kids and their lives you can't can't put money on that yeah you change your family tree exactly we say it all the time but it really does mean something yes it does because from where you guys came from how you grew up do you look and think like that was the Where are you standing today? Did that feel impossible?
Starting point is 01:38:46 1,000% for me. Yeah, 100%. I had great role models as a kid. Yeah. My dad was probably a Ramsey fan, but he didn't know it until I met you. And then, you know, then he was all on board because he's like, that's how he lived his life. And I tried, you know, but then get married, make stupid decisions and, you know, pay lots of stupid tax on a lot of stuff, you know, and then just, you know, being able to turn that corner and know about the, you know, future that we want to have and the possible. and the possibilities
Starting point is 01:39:15 and, you know, are endless. What's the dumbest thing you ever did with money? Oh, boy. Much time we got left. That's a good one. I just pick one, the best one. Probably vehicles.
Starting point is 01:39:25 Yeah. Okay. Buying vehicles that we had no... Yeah, I bought a 2016 fully loaded off the showroom floor maximal with 20-inch rims on it. No money. And I had no money to my name.
Starting point is 01:39:37 Yeah. And now you bought that in 2016. Yeah. Yeah. In 2016. Yeah. That wasn't now. You didn't buy that the other day.
Starting point is 01:39:42 No, no. Yeah. Yeah, that's, that's it, you know, since this whole journey, we've, we financed, you know, three pregnancies, you know, cash flow, cash flow, not finance. Yeah. Multiple vehicles in cash, you know, it's just, you know, a whole reverse trend. Yes, absolutely. It's never, never go back. Well, I just want, I wasn't doing that to make fun of you.
Starting point is 01:40:02 I just want to remind people that you can do dumb things and not be dumb. Absolutely. Absolutely. I have done some incredibly stupid things and I'm not stupid. Yeah. But I have done some stupid butt stuff in my life. And so I look back on, I'm like, you, you're, man, it's dumb. But yeah, but then you go, but I don't have to live that way.
Starting point is 01:40:19 I can change. Right. Just the piece that you get to have foundation issues at your house that you, you know, oh, it's just an inconvenience, like you say. Yeah. It turns out of an emergency fund, you know, it's just, you know, to be able to pay for our kids school and, you know, it'd not be a question. So good.
Starting point is 01:40:38 How old are the kids now? Five and three. Five and three. Oh, wow. So great. Oh, were they kind of part of it? the five-year-old like funny enough she's she's she's learning we have a school store at school so she's learning about the privilege of earning and being able to buy what she wants and we have that
Starting point is 01:40:54 the the kids um or the financial piece you know yeah we have that for her so we're working through that with her I love it sometimes you know five it goes in one ear and I'll be 100% I was gonna say because some kids you know people that are working the plan now they're listening yes they have kids in the home and they're kind of you know part of that journey yours are obviously yeah they're younger but to think that they'll never know. They'll never know parents with stress around money. And hopefully they'll project them to live the same. 100%.
Starting point is 01:41:20 100%. Well done, you guys. Thank you so much. So good. Proud of y'all. Thank you. Who was cheering you on? We got family.
Starting point is 01:41:29 These are friends here. We met at the Money Marriage Retreat last year. They became friends. And they said they'd drive up to meet us whenever we did it. Oh, my gosh. And obviously, we've had family. Some here. so I'm not here anymore.
Starting point is 01:41:42 Yeah. Wonderful. Well, well, congratulations. We're very proud of you. Thank you. Jeremy and Deborah, Charlotte, North Carolina, $86,000 paid off, house and everything. Yes, they are official weirdos. They did this in 62 months, making 72 to 82.
Starting point is 01:42:00 Count it down. Let's hear a debt-free scream. Three, two, one, we're debt-free. Yes. You know, you watch their body language. You guys, if you're not watching this on video, you watch their body language, Rachel, and the way they're interacting.
Starting point is 01:42:25 The unity is apparent just in their presence. So strong. They were knitted together by the tragedies and by the victories and by the victories. Yes. And pretty cool. Yep. Pretty cool stuff. Our scripture of the day, Matthew 1016, look, I'm sending you out of sheep among wolves, so be as shrewd as snakes and harmless as doves.
Starting point is 01:42:59 Ronald Reagan says the best view of the government is seen on a rearview mirror as one is driving away from it. Amen and amen. Oh, Elijah is in Nashville. Hi, Elijah. How are you? I'm doing great. Thanks for calling you guys. Certainly.
Starting point is 01:43:19 How can we help? Well, my parents are in their mid-50s and don't really have a retirement plan in place. But they do have a car payment and an RV payment. So they're definitely upside down right now. So for me, my parents can't, it feels like my. parents can't see what's so clear to me and my wife, what do you think we can share with them to help them understand? And ultimately, what do you think they should do in their situation? Well, you're in a very difficult position. We call it the powdered butt syndrome. Once someone
Starting point is 01:43:57 has powdered your butt, they don't really want your opinion on money or sex. So they don't really care what you think. And so trying to give them advice, even though what you're saying is probably perfectly correct, you're in the least leveraged position to actually have influence. Does that make sense? Totally. Yeah. So what I do in those situations is a couple of things. I never talk about them, talk to them about what they should do, although by God it's tempting. You know, instead I talk about what I've been doing. And so, you know, I have a friend who trades cars and borrows money every time he trades cars, and we're still friends, but he's dumb, okay?
Starting point is 01:44:47 And so he's in car debt all the time. It's just dumb. And he knows I think it's dumb. But I've never said a thing to him about it. But I have told him some wonderful stories about the piece I have driving cash paid for cars. Yeah. So I would just say, you know, my wife, you know, if you're having Thanksgiving dinner or you and your dad are having a cup of coffee or whatever it is y'all do together, you say, hey, you know, we're doing this thing and we've gotten out of debt and we don't have any card debt and we don't have any this and we built an emergency fund and gosh, dad, I've got to tell you, I'm so peaceful. That's the thing.
Starting point is 01:45:21 I'm so peaceful. I'm so hopeful. It's tricky because they're the ones who taught me how to budget and they put me through FPU and so we're already. Yeah, I would just bring it back on them then, but don't tell them they have. have to do it. Don't shame them. It'll have no benefit to say. Thank you for teaching me all those FPU lessons. This budgeting stuff y'all made me do. It's changed everything. We're going to, my wife and I, because you guys taught us that stuff, we do it all. We don't borrow money. We're on a budget. And we're going to be really, really wealthy. We're tracking to be millionaires by this
Starting point is 01:45:53 day. Thank you so much. And wow, thank you. Thank you. And then eventually they're going to go, oh, well, maybe I ought to do it. But I mean, you really can't, you can, if they, say something like I wish I could do it or something, then you could just go, I know you could. You're the one taught me. I know you could do it. And I think some of the fear that we have that my wife and I share is that, you know, we, at this point, it doesn't really seem like to have a plan A. So plan B is to live with their kids.
Starting point is 01:46:22 And we love them enough to know that if they were forced to move in with us, our friendship would likely implode. Yeah. So that's kind of like the under-dirty. Therefore, we're not planning to do that. That's not a plan. Right. They can plan to do that.
Starting point is 01:46:33 But that's not an issue today. They're in their 50s. Okay? They're okay. They got an RV payment and a car payment. They could turn this around in three years. It's not a problem. Sell the RV, get rid of the car payment, and start saving for, they could be millionaires by the time they retire very easily if they turn it around today.
Starting point is 01:46:50 So I'm not worried about them moving in with you. But I'm just trying to figure out how to influence them. So thing one is I do that. Thing two is I bring in experts. And I was going to say, give them a total money makeover book or give them one of Rachel's books or something and go, hey, this book really influenced me. I thought you might enjoy it. But you have a problem with that. If you give a fat person a diet book, it's kind of insulting. Yeah. Okay. I think you might ought to read this. You know, it's probably, it's kind of harsh, right?
Starting point is 01:47:15 So you've got to be careful with that. And they know. Yeah. I mean, they went, I mean. But in this case, they've already got the stinking book. They just aren't doing it. And then the third thing I do is I ask myself who, I do four things. The third thing I do is I ask myself who could have influence. Is it the old FPU coordinator? Is it the pastor at the church? Who is it that's a sold-out FPU person that they would listen to where they might not listen to that young whippersnapper, okay? Right? And so forth. The fourth thing I do is I pray and I ask God to send someone into their lives that's going to mess with them. God make them uncomfortable. Or that they have a change of heart. Yeah. And Elijah, too, I think part of growing up
Starting point is 01:48:00 which is so funny saying this next to my dad. You are not this at all. This has nothing to do with you at all. Make your disclaimer. No, but really, I'm like, it is, as you're becoming an adult, it is weird when you look at your parents. You're like, oh, wow, I feel like
Starting point is 01:48:16 whether emotionally, spiritually, financially, business, like whatever the thing is when you start to surpass them in wisdom in an area and you with money with your parents in this way, right? I mean, honestly, it is a weird thing. like one of those parts of growing up that you have to learn like you can't control them like and I think we all have this thing in us and we have people in our lives that are doing something
Starting point is 01:48:39 that you're like oh yeah I you know I wish they were doing something else and and we have this belief of if I could just have this one conversation or I could phrase it in this one right particular way they're suddenly going to get it and the light bulb's going to come on and I think I've just learned like you can't you just don't have that control over people and I think we believe we do to a degree and we really don't and so I don't know Elijah there is is a point that you know you can do all and I agree exactly with what what Dave said of you know you guys celebrating where you're at and you're able to share where you are but at the end of the day it is a little bit of a I mean grief sounds like a really strong word but it's a it's this like
Starting point is 01:49:13 kind of like oh wow I'm starting to surpass my parents in one area of life and that's and that's weird and that's weird seriously I mean yeah that's very weird I mean it's bizarre a little bit what you're saying it's one thing if they had no you know no idea but they know it so I don't know It seems like a lot of these stories have to do with buying campers and RVs, don't they? Yeah, they do. They do, you're right. It's a little bit of a midlife crisis sitting in the driveway out there, I'm just saying, yeah. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 01:49:41 And I do wonder, how do you know that they have no retirement? Have they said that to you guys? Yeah, we've had some candid conversations. They're pretty transparent about their finances, and, you know, they'll ask for financial advice. You know, they'll say, like, well, what should I do? And I'll be like, you know, Roth IRA. It's just, it's just this pain point, I think, for them is the RV. And it really does come down to just like a heart for, you know, we want to raise our grandkids in this RV.
Starting point is 01:50:10 We want to join these trips in our retirement. But the thing is, I think they just bought it 20 years too early. Could be. I think you nailed that one, buddy. I think you nailed it. That they're asking and, you know, all of it. And, yeah, and I think if you come out of it with some curiosity of like, hey, you know, how are you guys feeling about it? And truth be told, they may be fine with the RV.
Starting point is 01:50:29 I turn it back on them and say, okay, you know, if you want to have wealth in the future and quality retirement to be able to enjoy with the grandkids, what do you think you should do? Yeah, and I'm trying to help them connect the dots between the financial strain that they feel right now and the, you know, $900 in, you know, car payments that they're paying, you know, but it's hard for them to connect those dots, I think. No, they're just, they're in denial. That's all it is. They just don't want to connect the dots.
Starting point is 01:50:57 They know. Yeah. They know. I think that's true, too. They taught you this stuff. I mean, you turned out, dude. You got all the answers. You could do this show.
Starting point is 01:51:03 I mean, you called up asking questions, but you already knew the answers. And, yeah, so I'm going to try to get some people to influence them, some situations to influence them, talk about your successes. And if they ask a question, I'm going to answer it with a good, strong question that is basically a statement. What do you think you ought to do about the RV? I mean, seriously, have them answer. have them be answering what they're feeling and thinking and making them say it out loud, that could be a light, old moment, I don't know. A little mirror action.
Starting point is 01:51:35 But I kind of appreciate that, yeah, that they're so open with you guys. I think they're going to be okay. I think they're going to be okay. I think they're probably closer than you think they are to waking up. And part of what makes me think that is the way that they raised you to where you know the answers, which means I know they know the answers and they'll come back around to common sense it'll it'll start to haunt them eventually and um but the but the fear he's having of them living with them is like yeah that's not that's not i put that down yeah yeah
Starting point is 01:52:06 just tell them stay in the RV just keep the RV it's a really old RV at that point isn't it he's here 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.

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