The Ramsey Show - Are You Sick and Tired of Being Sick and Tired?
Episode Date: March 12, 2024💵 Sign-up for EveryDollar today - The simplest way to budget for your life! Dave Ramsey & Dr. John Delony answer your questions and discuss: "Which debt should I pay off first?" "My family wants ...'their' money that I inherited..." "How do I balance today and the future?" "Should we leave our rental to our kids?" "Should I budget for a vacation?" "We have $60k of debt my husband doesn't know about..." "Our mortgage is more than 50% of our income" Support Our Sponsors: NetSuite Eight Sleep Zander Insurance Angel Studios Next Steps 📞 Have a question for the show? Call 888-825-5225 Weekdays from 2-5pm ET or click here! 🏦 Take Your 3-Minute Money Assessment - Get a personalized money plan! 💌 Will an online will work for you? 💼 Find the career you were born to do! 📄 Need help with your taxes? See who we trust. Listen to more from Ramsey Network 🎙️ The Ramsey Show 🧠 The Dr. John Delony Show 🍸 Smart Money Happy Hour 💡 The Rachel Cruze Show 💸 The Ramsey Show Highlights 💰 George Kamel 💼 The Ken Coleman Show 📈 EntreLeadership Learn more about your ad choices. https://www.megaphone.fm/adchoices Ramsey Solutions Privacy Policy
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Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions, it's The Ramsey Show,
where we help people build wealth, do work that they love,
and create actual amazing relationships.
Dr. John Deloney, number one best-selling author and host of the
extremely popular Dr. John Deloney Show on YouTube and podcast, is my co-host today.
As we answer your questions about your life and your money, open phones at 888-825-5225.
You jump in, we'll talk. Tayshia is with us to start this hour she's in columbus hi tasha what's
up hi how are you better than i deserve what's going on in your life so um i have been um working
my way out of bed um i actually found your page on tiktok which made me want to start working my way out of debt.
So I have started my emergency fund, which I don't know if I'm working backwards.
So I started my emergency fund first, and I will say that I have now gotten myself out of overdrafting any of my accounts.
Good for you.
How long has it been since you've how long ago did you start the overdrafting has it been like your whole life yeah this
has been my whole life thing this is a breakthrough isn't it kid the way to go
yeah it is um and then once i found like your financial thing it's taken me about six weeks to save i'm
up to thirty three hundred dollars i have three thousand dollars in my savings account i'm at my
checking account what do you make um so this so this is the thing with one job i make um twenty
seven dollars um so i work three different jobs i work two full-time jobs, one part-time. About a year,
I am averaging about $90,000 a year, but I don't really see any of it because of how much debt I'm
in and how much my spending was out of control. Yeah. First, the spending, yeah. How much debt
have you got? So when I went to go try to file for bankruptcy it was
about 30 000 did you file for bankruptcy no i didn't because they told me i didn't qualify
so how much is it all student loans most of it was i have small credit cards that are like $600.
You said was.
Is it gone?
Well, no, it's still there. Okay.
So is then.
It is.
Yeah, it's still there.
Yeah.
So you have how much in student loans?
I have about $15,000 in student loans.
I have a car note, which I have less about $6,000 in student loans. I have a car note, which I have left about $6,000, and then
the rest of it is just credit cards that I messed up when I was younger. You're 27? I'm 33. 33,
okay. Yeah, you're in that range. That's where I figured. I was going to say 30, but I didn't want to.
Okay.
Good for you.
Good for you.
Well, so you're ready to go.
You're ready to try new stuff because you're sick and tired of being sick and tired.
Am I right?
Yes.
I'm proud of you.
Good work.
Good work.
Thank you.
All right.
So here's what we're going to do.
I'm going to put you into Financial Peace University, which is our nine-week class.
I'm going to pay for it.
Thank you.
Because you're why I do this.
People that are like you.
The first time in your whole life, adult life,
you're not doing overdraft because we taught you something.
And now we're going to teach you how to get rid of this debt,
and we're going to teach you how to control this $90,000.
And I'm going to teach you how to be rid of this debt and we're going to teach you how to control this $90,000. And I'm going to teach you how to be a millionaire.
Would that be okay?
Yes.
Yes.
I'm really crying right now.
This is something I like.
This has been my dream to talk to you because it's just like this.
I've never even saved, ever saved $3,000 in my life.
I literally have an account now that I get money transferred to and i don't need
to look at that account until like payday comes and i just check to make sure whatever money i
have the percentage is put there it's not it's not a bad start but i want it to be even more
powerful than that where you don't have to hide it from yourself because you're so freaking strong
that's where we're going to go, okay?
Okay.
All right.
So with the Financial Peace University, there's a thing called the EveryDollar budgeting app
that we're also going to hook you up with.
We're going to pay for all of it.
And that's where you're going to give every one of your dollars a name
before the month begins.
And you're going to tell your money what to do
instead of wondering where it went for the first time in your life.
And then we're going to start working our way through these debts,
and we're going to list the debts smallest to largest
and making $90,000 if you will stay out of restaurants
and not go on vacation because you ain't scared of work.
You know how to work.
I don't have to teach you that one.
You got that going on so you're
gonna make ninety thousand dollars we're gonna use thirty thousand of it and in one year from
right now you're gonna be a hundred percent debt free for the first time in your adult life are
you ready yes all right you can do it you can do it um because 90 minus 30, you can live on 60 once you get your crap together.
Right?
Yes, I can.
Okay.
So you get the car paid off, cut up the credit cards.
We're going to get rid of those.
We're going to get rid of Sally Mae.
You don't need a roommate named Sally Mae.
She's an ugly woman.
We don't want her in your house.
All right?
Okay.
And you're going to make every dollar behave.
You're going to be thinking about every dollar before it comes and where it's going to go,
and it's going to be on task and on goal because Tayshia is not going to be the same woman one year from today
that she was four months ago.
Okay?
Okay. All right. ago okay okay all right and the other thing is john and i are here and anytime you need us while you're working on this you just call back and we'll talk about whatever it is you're dealing
with okay okay all right you think you can do it i think you can do it yes i can i'm excited i think
she can do it taste i know you can hey listen as you get you're going to have family members and friends calling out and saying,
hey, now that you got all this money, can you help me out?
And if they don't go on the budget, they don't go on the budget.
Is that fair?
Okay, it's fair.
How many people you bail out on a regular basis?
A lot?
Majority is like my mom, friends who ask.
I'm very much a loner, and if they don't give it back, I'll just say whatever.
But sometimes they don't understand, like, when I loan them money,
I'm loaning something that I don't even have my own.
I know.
I can tell that's who you are.
And people of character who work as hard as you do have leeches all around them.
And part of you standing up tall for the first time.
And Dave's going to give you a path.
He's going to set you free.
But he's going to set you free in more ways than just your money.
You're going to have to learn to say no.
You're going to have to learn to say no. And you're going to find freedom.
You're going to find strength you didn't even know you had.
Yeah, but the answer is no you're listen only the strong can help the weak and you're broke you need to quit helping other people okay yeah you gotta tell them just say no i'm broke
because you're broke you got thirty thousand dollars in debt you're broke you're living on
overdraft because you're helping other people you're broke so the answer you're telling the
truth i can't help you i'm broke that's the answer, you're telling the truth. I can't help you.
I'm broke.
That's the answer all the time.
No, I can't.
I'm broke.
I'm working on not being broke.
And you can too.
I'll show you how.
But I'm working it.
I'm not going to do this.
No.
No is a complete sentence, Tayshia.
You can use it on everyone, loved ones and otherwise.
Get them.
Hold on.
Austin will pick up.
We'll get you signed up for all that.
You call us when you need help.
This is the Ramsey Show.
What does the future hold for business?
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Dr. John Deloney, number one bestselling author, host of the Dr. John Deloney Show.
Ramsey Personality is my co-host today.
Yesterday, we launched Dave Ramsey's Investing Essentials for Sale on May 21st
and 22nd. I'm going to be doing a two-night event, two hours each night virtually, and so you can
watch it from the comfort of your little home or your big home or wherever it is you want to watch
it. And we're going to walk through what I do with investing. This is stuff I've never done before, not in
detail and length like this. These are things that I've never done an event on it. I've shared this
with wealthy people that I am coaching, and I've got lots of friends that are, you know, net worth
of $100 million or $500 million or a billion or whatever, and, you know, we talk about what they're
doing. We share ideas back and forth.
So what do you do?
So we're going to talk about it.
We're going to talk about what works, what doesn't, and why.
And what I open up my playbook, my real estate, I buy a lot of real estate.
How do I do that?
How do I analyze a piece of real estate?
Under what situations do I buy real estate?
Do I do cryptocurrency?
A young man asked me that at the break and, uh,
that kind of thing. So we get into every bit of that. Y'all know, I don't do cryptocurrency.
That's already a given. So we're going to talk about the basics for a few minutes and get stuff
like your 401k settled and that kind of thing. And, uh, then we're going to get into my personal
strategies on extended investing things. There's a lot of people got a lot of opinions about investing.
I actually do it.
It's not just a theory.
That's the difference.
And it's got a lot.
It's got some zeros on it.
So we're going to help you. Go to RamseySolutions.com slash events.
Tickets are $199.
May 21, 22, Dave Ramsey's Investing Essentials.
George Campbell is going to come along with me.
Also, there's going to be a format where you guys can actually submit live questions while we go along,
and I'll stop and interject and, you know, keep that moving,
keep a little bit of a conversation going, if you will, as part of it.
It's not just going to be me yakking at a camera the whole time.
So looking forward to that.
It's going to be good.
Greg is in Boston.
Hey, Greg, welcome to the Ramsey show hey john hey dave hey john nice to speak uh speak to you today
it's a real honor um now i've been uh just a listener for a while and the total money
bank over is a bible in our household um so the the backstory is my uh my wife and i are in baby
step two um we have about 5 000 left on a credit card debt of $20,000.
We've spent the last few years putting that together and being more financially savvy.
We've been paying about $1,000 a month for the last year, and we've been doing so just to chip away at it.
Our household income is about $200,000 between my base and my commission and my wife's
salary, and we have two paid-for cars and no other debt. Now, I had a good quarter last year.
We received about $12,000, but we just had our second baby a month ago, and we have all these
medical bills that are piling up, and my question is... All these medical bills. You don't have insurance? We do.
We have a...
So how much medical bills you got for a baby?
So there's a long story to that.
My wife didn't have insurance for that time.
We had to do this whole appeal process.
But the end result is that we got her back on my insurance,
and our total deductible is $3,200 a month.
I'm sorry, total is $3,200. And we have a $6,800 out-of-pocket maximum. Now we hit our deductible because of the
labor and delivery. And the question is now, do I just pay off the debt that I've accumulated
with my commission? I'm sorry, I'm sorry. You have, I thought you got her back on the insurance and you met the deductible.
What other bills have you got?
Well,
we haven't paid our deductible yet because the,
um,
the medical bills have piled up to the point of hitting our,
our deductible.
So we haven't actually piled up as 3,200 bucks and you make 200 a year.
Correct.
Okay. And you got $5,000 left on a credit card. So $8,000 makes you debt200 and you make $200 a year? Correct. Okay, and you've got $5,000 left on the credit card.
So $8,000 makes you debt-free and you make $200 a year.
How much is your commission check, dude?
It was about $12,000 for the last quarter.
Write a check and pay it all off instantly.
Why would you screw around with a small amount of money when you make this kind of money?
Well, I'm just a little concerned with with you know how the market is doing and i just wanted what's the market got to do with you having
eight thousand dollars in debt and twelve thousand dollars in your hand right nothing nothing pay it
cut up the stupid credit cards and stop screwing around with these people man you make way too much money it's not 320 000 it's 3200 bucks and you just told me it's
piling up see see what it's doing to you yeah even your language says this is stressing you out
and i'm setting you free and you're arguing with me help me out man what about this are you scared of it's it's more about like um not having the cash on
hand we just had a few major um issues go on with our house we had a water pump that had to be
replaced and it was three thousand dollars um you know my car just had to be serviced for additional
fifteen hundred so there's just all these bills do you you have an emergency fund? No, that's the problem. I wanted to use that money.
Isn't your take-home pay $15,000 a month?
Well, you know, pre-tax, yes.
No, not pre-tax.
Pre-tax would be $18,000 a month.
Your take-home pay ought to be north of $10,000.
You don't have any kind of a budget or spending plan that you and your wife are in agreed on.
And so you're throwing money into chaos and you're wondering why it's creating
more chaos.
You need to do your written game plan and you will get peace from that.
You will never get peace from stacking cash in chaos.
Okay.
And you need to write a check and pay off this stuff today.
What Dave just said.
Don't miss that.
You are chasing peace by trying to get a dollar amount in an account.
That is not where it will come from.
The peace will come from, and we know that because teachers become millionaires over time.
The peace is going to come from the plan and then living out that plan.
Yeah, laying out a detailed thing and executing the detailed thing.
And so there's an amazing thing that happens with money
that when you start telling it what to do, you will feel like you got a raise.
I'm sitting here aghast that you're stressed
and have this level of anxiety and drama around $8,000 when you make $200,000.
But what that tells me is you have absolutely no control over your money.
And that chaos is sucking up all of your money.
You make $200,000.
This should be the most.
And you got a baby for $3,000.
This should be the most joyous time.
You're rich.
Yeah.
But your words are indicating your stress level.
It's like because when you start saying medical bills are piling up, I thought we had a million
dollar NICU bill or something.
Right.
The way you were talking about it.
And it's three thousand dollars, which is a lot if you make thirty thousand.
But if you make two hundred.
You know, so it's not the money, it's the drama.
And the drama is we don't have a plan.
We're out of control.
And so I can't see my way to taking care of the pump if it goes out, even though I'm bringing home $11,000 a month, you know.
And so, yeah, you're going to be okay.
But you're going to get on a game plan.
Get the Every Dollar Budget app and get started with your spouse tonight and write a check out of this and be debt free tonight and make this
the first month of your life that you tell your money what to do instead of wondering where it
went this is the reason people have too much month left at the end of the money no one sits down says
i have a plan to be broke no one plans to be deeply in debt. I know Sally May for 20 years.
No one plans to have MasterCard be their master or American Distress be their sister.
You know, no one plans for that. No one intentionally says, hey, let's go deeply
in credit card debt. That'll help us. Right. Just happens because there's no plan. There's
no plan. How often do you hear people i an undercurrent i heard in that call
was he had a plan for that quote-unquote bonus money he's gonna get and now it's got to go to
paying off a credit card and it feels like he lost in addition to paying that debt it feels like he
lost that twelve thousand dollars because for the last quarter he's been waiting to get that bonus
so he could go buy a boat or a car whatever whatever. And it feels almost like a double whammy.
Yeah.
It is.
See what I'm saying?
It is.
It is because you've spent the money twice.
You spend it in your head or your heart.
And most people spend it like three times.
Well, if I have like a commission check I think I'm going to get and it ends up being
half, it's still a stupid amount of money, but I feel like, oh, I got robbed.
Right?
It's that, come on, man.
Come on, man.
Yeah. This is, man. Yeah.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, is my co-host today.
Open phones at 888-825-5225.
Today's question comes from Deborah in Ohio.
My brother-in-law recently died in his sleep and
my sister had passed away in 2019. When their children met with the insurance company, they
found out my oldest son and I were named as beneficiaries. I think this may have been an
oversight because the children were minors when they got the policy.
They still will get an IRA, a house, a car, etc.
The kids are pressuring me to sign over their money.
It would help to hear from someone not close to the situation.
What should I do? well I think you need to make a decision of was this an oversight if it was left to you to take
care of them when they were minors and they're no longer minors and he had just hadn't been
diligent with his estate plan and fixed his beneficiaries then you are saying you accidentally
did get money that was
intended for them if that's the case i would give it to them if on the other hand if we that's what
it sounds like but if there's another scenario that's like okay he wanted to leave us some money
and he used the policy to do that and he very clearly intended to do that and they just
feel like they're entitled to it just because it was their dad and mom but they but dad and mom had
a very very clear intent to leave it to us then they're just up a creek you're not entitled to
anything because you're kin uh that's not it's not their money but if you truly do believe what you said that you think it's an oversight
then on a moral basis i'd give it to them or option three
maybe these kids are hurting obviously they've been through a lot the last few years but
if they're running to their aunt saying, give us our money,
maybe there was some anticipated immaturity,
and we want you to do what's right with this money.
This best going to love these kids.
Maybe not, but, man.
Yeah, I mean, again, I think you need to decide what your brother-in-law
and your sister's intent was.
Legally, you can keep the money.
It's not their money.
Legally, it's your money, period.
No question.
Nobody's going to argue that.
No court's even going to look at this.
They'll dismiss it in 30 seconds, okay?
It's your money.
It's in your hands.
If you think that that was a mistake, it was an envelope mailed to the wrong address
and you you know you do feel like it's rightfully theirs then i would give it to them
um just would that's what i would do uh in that situation you're asking again though if they if
you on john's point option three is the parents felt like the kids were too immature to handle
this money,
and we don't even know how much it is.
You didn't tell us.
Life insurance money, so I'm guessing it's north of $100,000,
but the parents left it to you because they thought the kids were going to mess it up.
They should have left it into a trust instead, but they didn't.
They left it to you and left you in an awkward position.
Then you can handle it like you think they want it handled, which
would be to dole it out slowly to the kids, like they might have done if it was left in
a truss.
That's a good point, John.
You could do that.
Let's see here.
I think this might have been an oversight because the children were minors when they
took out the policy.
That's what I'm going on.
Right. what i'm going on right but i i'm just thinking of my family members and if i have a niece and a
nephew one of which is doing great one of which is really struggling and i know that my brother
or sister were they alive would would treat this differently and they gave me the money
i'm just thinking out loud here but maybe i might say no for tuition yeah but not for your
and i'm not going to not for
your life challenges yeah i'm going to take you i'm going to take care of you like they would have
there you go and i'm going to love you well and you may not like that yeah but if you don't like
it i don't care it's not you're not in control here i'm in control it's in my control to do
whatever but you can decide what was the what i would go with is what your brother-in-law and
your sister's intent was
if you think you if you think you can anticipate that was it to you was it to take care of this
and manage it for these immature adults or was it to was it just they screwed up and never made
the beneficiary change that's simple um and i don't know i can't you said in your email that you thought it was an oversight.
And so that's what I'm going on.
Guys, this is why you go to mama.bearlegalforms.com and you get a will.
And by the way, when you die, the state that you're living in will do the probate, not the last state you lived in
when you did your will at the other state. So when you move to a different state,
when you go through a major life change, you need to update your will. When the kids grow up,
you need to update your life insurance policy and change the beneficiary.
And you've got to keep up with this stuff and so you know this
is what rich people do they take care of the money so the lawyers don't get it in some argument
about something because they take care of business and so i'm sad for the loss of your
brother-in-law and your sister i'm sorry that. But their job was to not have this mess. Your job is to not have this mess, people. Your job is to
get a will in the state that you live in, in the family situation that you're in. So as soon as
your spouse passes away, you need a new will in the state that you live in. As soon as you move or you get a divorce or the kids grow up, you know,
we had one set of estate plan before when our kids were minors. When they were no longer minors,
we changed the estate plan and had a new will done. And so go to Mama Bear Legal Forms,
go to your estate planning attorney and get this stuff done. This is how families end up
not speaking to
each other. My aunt ripped me off. She took all that money that mama gave accidentally because
mama didn't fix it. And a bunch of freaking rednecks, you know, I can hear it now. I've
grown up with them my whole life, you know, and shut up. It's just white trash. Shut up.
Don't be arguing about money. Love your family. Take care
of your family. And if you're going to cut somebody out of the will tell them while you're
alive, let them be pissed off at you while you're walking the earth. Don't leave it on somebody else
to get pissed off at. So, you know, mad at my aunt cause she didn't, she, she executed the will
exactly as it was supposed to be executed
and was written and she's the executor of the estate which by the way means execute that's what
it means you have to do what the will says and the will says you didn't get any money so you're mad
at your aunt that's dumb you can be mad at your mama's what you need to be mad at she's dead but
she's the one screwed you out not your aunt your aunt has to do exactly the way it is so you folks if you're going to do that
stuff do it while you're alive we have a full-on estate planning meeting that goes two hours every
year basically if dave dies this year this is what it looks like it's all laid out for the
whole company leadership publicity plan traffic control everything
it's all discussed it's ridiculous because i love my family so much that i don't want them
in a situation like that to have to deal with crap that i was supposed to deal with when i was alive
that's called doing a will did i get fired up about that no i i i'm kind of waiting to hear
what you really think about the whole thing and just just so people know this is not academic i i
had um i had a an opportunity to get a will done by one of the great wills and trust professors
in the country jerry byer walked me through it, did my whole thing in Texas,
and then I moved. And one of the first things we did when we got to Tennessee was Mama Bear
Wills, and we did a will there. And it's not going to do my whole estate plan, but I had to
have something on paper. That is valid in that state. Because I'm a responsible parent in that
state. Estate planning is state law. Probate law is state law.
It's not federal law.
And so Louisiana law is way different.
It's French-based.
California is way different.
It's granola-based.
I'm telling you, the laws in these states are dramatically different.
So you need to do a will in the state you live in right now.
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Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today.
Joseph is in Greenville, South Carolina.
Hey, Joseph, what's up?
Hey, Dave, how are you doing today?
Better than I deserve. How can I help?
So, just a little background.
Back in 2015, I was in a terrific car accident where I sustained a severe traumatic brain injury.
And for four years after that, I underwent many surgeries,
one of them being one of the world's most dangerous surgeries, a craniotomy,
which required the removal of half my skull for several months, and I had that done a total of three times.
So life hit me hard out of nowhere.
So the question is, and today I'm doing, and I just want to say I'm not your typical severe TBI survivor.
I'm very blessed today.
I have a beautiful family, two daughters, beautiful wife, and a job and a house. So I'm very blessed today. But the question I have for you is,
how do I embrace the present moment to its fullest potential while also ensuring
that I prepare for my future? Being someone that knows how finite life can be, how quickly it can
end, I just don't want to put myself in a place where I'm
so focused on saving for the future to one I might not have, if that makes sense.
Yeah, but it sounds like you've made a mutually exclusive.
What's the difference between living in the moment and preparing for your financial future?
Like, you know, I've been tackling debt, but I like, I want to make sure that when
I have vacation time, I go on the vacations. I, you know, I want to make sure I enjoy the
money I have now, but I also want to be saving it for the future for my kids.
Okay. And you feel like you're missing out on something if you don't do it in a spectacular
fashion. I get it. Let me tell you the thoughts that are going through my mind.
We had the opportunity for the first time ever in our family's history to do an out
of the country, all four of us, me and my wife and the two kids went.
And it was a magical trip and it was pretty cool.
And we did that last year.
If you were to ask my two kids what their favorite trips,
like what's your favorite vacations, they would name that one,
and they both would point back to this time we caught the giant catfish.
What they don't know is the giant catfish was at a KOA,
and we put a line out over water, I mean overnight,
and we got up and fought that thing all morning,
and it was a blast, and then we ate the cafe.
It was a whole thing that we did together.
My point is...
Didn't cost any money.
Didn't cost any money.
And so it's this idea that YOLO, it has to be shiny,
and we have to get on jets and go across the world
versus the most precious resource you got is time.
Yes, I do agree with that.
Okay.
So then there's no strain between your vacation and your debt reduction
or between your vacation and your savings.
Well, I understand the, you know,
obviously you can have fulfilled moments without money.
You can do these things without money and stuff.
But I also understand if it's hard now, it's easy later.
So I want to make sure I, with my job, get as much overtime as I can,
be able to save as much money as I can.
But at the same time, I want to make sure I'm not working so much
and I'm not seeing the moments just pass by.
Yeah, you've got to have a plan.
So here's the thing.
You're projecting these concepts as if they never ebb and flow,
as if they're a straight line.
Like, I'm going to work overtime for the next 25 years,
and I'm never going to see my children.
That's not how it works.
Not how life works,
number one, but it's also not what we suggest. So, but would I work overtime even in your situation
where you've had this tremendous drama that you've been through, this legitimate
that makes you value every precious moment? And I get that. That's a clear perspective, right?
And so what does that do?
And it's like going to one of my good friends' funeral the other day.
It's like one of the pastors said it's a tuning fork.
Funerals and births are a tuning fork.
They cause us to reset our lives and be very careful with what we're doing
and thoughtful about what we're doing instead of just wasting away our lives. And that's what this event did for you. And that's what you're
bringing up. And that's very wise. That's a good, that's a positive result from the horrible thing
you went through. So I'm, I'm aligned with you on all of that. But, um, you know, when we say
live like no one else, so later you can live like no one else. It's a sprint so that you can get in
the rhythm of a marathon and the sprint
is is the only thing that's in question and so you know you got 18 months to get out of debt
you're going to work like a crazy man overtime and you're going to pile up some savings get
your emergency fund in place but i don't want you doing that for 18 years and can i flip it around
joseph few people in the world understand like you do
that you can be taken away from your family
in a blink of an eye.
And you and I have both accepted a responsibility
as providers for our family
that we're going to put them in the best possible situation,
not if, but when we go.
Dave has too.
And so you know, if I'm in debt, if I'm behind, I'm going to work
with all I can to get caught up so that I leave my family in the best possible position too.
Yeah. So what I would do, what I would do is say, let's map this out. Okay. How much debt have you
got as an example? Let's use that as an example. Okay. So I just recently finished paying off my wife's R student loans.
Good.
And so right now I'm about $1,000 in credit card,
and I have to finish paying off my house and car.
Okay, how much do you own the car?
About $10,000.
Okay.
So you have $11,000 to be debt-free other than the house. That's what we call baby step two.
And what do you make a
year? About $70,000 to $80,000 a year, depending on if I'm wanting to put in the grind for overtime.
Yeah. Okay. All right. So I'd put in the grind for overtime until I cleared the car and the
credit card and cut the credit card up, be on a budget, and then let's get in steady mode
and say, all right, part of our budget is enjoyment. Part of our budget is
15% of our income going into retirement. Part of our budget is we're going to throw a little
extra at the house. Part of our budget is travel. Um, part of our budget is life. And you just start
segmenting that out and you can do all that. But, i would i would go on a short sprint here and knock
that car out in that credit card that's an example um and then you know here's the thing if you lay
it all out they quite you you can save for long term you can save for college and save for christmas
and save for a trip all in the same budget. There's, there's room in your budget to
do that with what you just described, but you're gonna have to be very intentional about it and
very careful. And you might look up and go, Oh, we need to buy a mom, a different car. So I'm
going to go work overtime for a month and save up that a little bit extra and knock that car out.
You can do that. You can, but it's a come and go thing. It's, I never have in my life
personally or subscribed prescribed for someone else. The idea that you work 80 hours a week,
your whole life, but I've worked a lot of 80 hour weeks in my life. And I'm not a bit ashamed of
that. My children are not in counseling because of that. I didn't miss out on their childhood because of that. None of that crap. Okay. It's a bunch of whining. And so, but I have worked some
80 hour weeks. I also have done went periods of time where I don't do anything. And so, um, I just
got back off the longest vacation of my life. I've never done that before. Uh, and, and so I'm not opposed to that, but you know, the point is the stuff is ebb and flow. The problem people have,
John, not Joseph, but other people on this whole subject. And we'll just finish that up
is that they, that they're never where they are. That's exactly right. They're at work and they
got one, they're halfway at work, not paying attention.
And if they're operating powerful machinery, they're a danger because they're thinking
about they ought to be at home.
And then when they're at home, they're thinking about they ought to be at work.
And then when they're on vacation, they're thinking about they ought to be home at work
instead of like, Hey, why don't you be where you is?
Turn your stupid phone off, throw it in a basket or the lake, one of the two you be where you is turn your stupid phone off throw it in a basket or the lake
one of the two and be where you is and and then you start to get this life balance that's real
or don't work an 80-hour week indefinitely because you think uh chasing something's going to solve
you or heal you or make you some sort of superhero work 80-hour weeks when you got get a job done
yeah and and then when you get it done stop stop that's right yeah move on to the next thing it's called being an
adult yeah back it off but it's an ebb and flow the tide comes in the tide goes out this is not
a still lake where the levels never change this is the ramsey show
live from the headquarters of ramsey solutions, it's the Ramsey Show,
where we help people build wealth, do work that they love,
and create actual amazing relationships.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, is my co-host today.
We're glad you're with us.
Dr. John is a number one best-selling author and host of the Dr. John Deloney Show,
where they talk about relationships and all kinds of mental health issues.
Yeah, a lot of fun.
Very entertaining.
It's on the Ramsey Networks, and you can watch it on YouTube,
as well as pick it up where any podcast is sold.
Open phones at 888-825-5225, and you people know that podcasts are not sold.
All right, let's go to Heather in Indianapolis.
Hi, Heather.
Welcome to The Ramsey Show.
Hi, Dave and John.
Thank you for taking my call.
Sure.
What's up?
My husband and I are debt-free except our house,
and I'm wondering how much we should have in our emergency fund.
I'm a stay-at-home mom,
and my husband gets paid about half of his annual income in one bonus check.
So we save a large chunk of that to be put towards the next year's big expenses,
like the property taxes, home and auto insurance, and medical,
because his monthly take-home doesn't leave a lot of room for those.
So would you still recommend having an additional six months of expenses
saved up on top of that?
Yes.
Okay.
Yeah, the emergency fund is a vague fund for unexpected events
what you're doing is you're just planning your cash flow i've got to pay property taxes there
should not be an emergency you know it's coming christmas should not be an emergency it's always
in december they don't move it you know and so you plan for those things emergencies are not things you plan for they're called emergencies and they're unexpected events the tires going out on your car is not an
unexpected event we can predict the tires are going to go out on your car you need a fund to
be able to put tires on your car you need a fund to pay your taxes in your case you're having to
manage that very carefully and have been very wise to do that because of the wild cash flow that you guys face.
It's almost like you're farmers or something.
You know, you get two crops a year and you got to live on those crops the other time, right?
But I mean, that's how a farmer does it.
Exactly.
They two or three times a year, they get a big check and they got to pay bills for the rest of the year with those checks.
And so you got to budget it all the way out.
That's all you're doing.
You're budgeting that out.
That's different than emergency funds.
You see what I'm saying?
Yeah.
You're doing a good job, by the way.
Is there a recommended place to put that?
So far we do the cash envelope system,
so I just take everything out, put it in an envelope, put it in a safe.
And, I mean, we take out about $15,000 each year from that check.
So is there a better place i could put that um yeah if you if you use the every dollar app
you can use that we have a system in there we call sinking funds which are basically little
mini savings accounts for different subjects so you'd have a sinking fund for taxes a sinking
fund for this sinking fund for that then you could set it over and it's just a separate savings account and you would have but the reason you're doing that is
you're breaking it out when you get it you're allocating a little envelope for taxes but the
taxes aren't due for nine months or whatever right and you got a little envelope for christmas but
it's going to be you know another six months before christmas or whatever the number is right
and so you're doing the envelopes just to keep it categorized.
Am I correct?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, yeah, you could do that in every dollar really easy
and then just put the $15,000 in a savings account.
Now, I would keep it separate from your checking
because I don't want to accidentally spend it.
That's why.
That's what you're doing.
And the other thing is I would keep it separate from your emergency fund because this is not really your emergency fund. This is just where
we have, we're setting aside the money to do something we need to do in September.
That's all it is.
His monthly take home is only about $4,000. So that doesn't leave a lot of room for a family
of five. So we have to save it ahead of time and make sure we got those bills covered.
Very wise. Very wise. You're doing a great job of thinking this through.
You've done a, you know, you've been, the whole process, it's not severely broken,
but you called and asked for some help, and all I'm doing is tuning you up a little bit,
but you're really playing the right song.
Okay.
That make sense?
Yes, it does.
Thank you so much for your help.
Way to go.
Good stuff, John.
They tell you that one of the keys to having a good life is marrying well.
And one of the keys to having a very challenging, hard life is not marrying well and then not putting the effort in.
And whoever, that guy married well is what I'll say.
Yeah, yeah, he did.
She's a star.
She's a star she's
gold star yeah so yeah that you're exactly right and you know you and i've been talking about this
off air a little bit there's because we've got the marriage and money event coming up that you
and rachel do and the tickets are on sale now just to segue into that but but that has caused the
whole subject of marriage to come up more and more and more. And all of the data that we've seen in the financial world for years has
validated that,
that two spouses on the same page have a higher probability of building wealth
than a single.
They also,
yeah.
Or,
or,
or than a shacked up or than a whatever a whatever i mean you just call it i mean
but but this committed marriage relationship um the data is in it's not it's not a it's not a
moral construct it is a moral construct but in addition to that the data is in and there's a socioeconomic proof set in the research that
that is showing very very clearly and we found it again in the in the millionaire research we
didn't find hardly any millionaires that did it in spite of their crazy spouse right they did it
with a supportive spouse two horses pulling the plow together is what it amounted to which which
i've heard you teach that lesson accelerates the the the pull force right yeah exactly i mean because
or amplifies the pull force the synergy it's uh it's very very real yeah and and uh you really
and and we see it all the time and you know years ago, when I first started the show 30 years ago,
the sociologists would call it the marriage advantage.
And there was a whole book of research that was old back then,
but we've seen another round of this same type of research starting to come in
because there seems to be this discussion that marriage is no longer needed.
Well, I think the bill of goods that
we've been sold is more important than having a good marriage is you need to make a bunch of money
and the best way to do that is do it by yourself and you don't even need to be married to give a
child the best situation right and i think the sociologists, I think everybody, the anthropologists, everybody's circling back around going, oh, maybe this having a rooted structure here
that everybody can anchor into and say, come hell or high water, we're going to work hard,
we're going to fight, we're going to claw, we're going to make this thing magic,
we're going to make this thing work, has all sorts of benefits from financial to kids to health.
Yeah, it just occurred to me.
I watched a preview of
a movie that's coming out called unsung i haven't seen the preview it's the uh erwin brothers did it
that did the jesus revolution okay and uh they live here in the community and friend their friends
and so andy sent me a link and sharon and i watched unsung and it's uh about small bone family
which is rebecca st james Yeah. And it's exactly this.
The mom is the unsung hero in the movie,
and the story arc is really powerful on this.
And the family has gone, I mean, King and Country is the boys.
I mean, the family's gone on to be unbelievably successful,
but it came out of this really hard time,
and then the mom and dad locking together,
and the mom doing
these things and it's it's powerful on this exact point so you guys if you want to see an illustration
of that when that movie comes out go see it it's called unsung i'll give it a big plug it's really
good made me cry but i cry at applebee's commercials too so there you go this is the ramsey show Dr. John Deloney Ramsey personality is my co-host today.
Open phones at 888-825-5225.
Michelle's in Long Island, New York.
Hi, Michelle.
How are you?
Hi, I'm good.
Thank you.
Sure.
What's up?
So my question is, I have three large outstanding debts, and i'm trying to figure out which one to
tackle first okay i have my car payment that's 16 000 a student loan that's 30 000 and another
one that's 45 000 okay we address them smallest to largest okay Okay. So everything you've got, no life, no eating out, no vacations,
work all the time and throw it all at the car until the car is gone,
and then the $30,000 until it's gone, and then the $40,000 until it's gone.
Okay.
What do you make a year?
My thought was I make $120,000 and my husband makes $140,000.
Oh, God.
So you're going to do this fast.
I'm trying.
You know, I started your plan in January, but we paid off $30,000 of credit cards so far.
In two months.
So we're getting there.
In two months, we used our bonuses to pay it off.
Very good.
So you're in attack mode.
Way to go, kiddo.
You're doing it.
You're doing it.
Don't slow down.
Don't slow down.
Get it.
Get it.
Get it.
We're there.
We're on the way.
You make enough money, and that tells me that y'all are real smart, and in about two months,
y'all are going to start trying to overthink this.
Don't.
Just keep going.
No, she already did.
That's why you called.
You knew better.
You already knew the answer to the question you asked.
Just go.
I do, but he wants to pay the student debt first because he figures the car is
He's the broke guy that makes a lot of money.
So his opinion is really not relative.
He is a rich, broke guy.
He makes a lot of money.
He has no money.
Yeah.
Yeah, let's change that by doing something that's
proven it really doesn't matter as long as we end up out of debt but the difference is is that
people will actually do the stuff that we teach where his theory people bail out yeah but the
bottom line is the bottom line is you need about 80,000 bucks and you're done right
well i need 80,000 actually and then another
100,000 for his duty debt okay well we're married so we have 180,000 and your household income
total is two is about a quarter million right yeah about 250 right uh-huh okay and so you need
180 and you make 250 so not counting taxes if you lived on 71
year you'd be debt free in a year so you're not going to quite do it in a year but you
ought to do it in 18 months to two years 18 months to two years okay so that's like
it's like 15 000 a month which is actually the track you're on
yep because our goal is to move once we paid off all of our student debt so once you're debt-free
once we're debt-free then we want to that counts the car too not just the student loans
yeah okay you're doing it hey and by the way michelle it's going to be awful
terrible it's hard it's going to be embarrassing your your husband's gonna be like i make too much
money to i know but y'all dug a big hole gotta get out of the hole yeah you have a dadgum mess
and if you do not address it with a level of intensity you will never address it
so the start that you've got is the right start you came out of the gate hot now just put the
pedal the metal and push it through and finish it. And don't screw around with this other stuff.
But you get that car gone, you'll never have a car payment again the rest of your life.
This is the last time.
You're done.
You pay it off.
Then you knock out, and you've got a 30 and a 40 and a 100.
And then we get after them, just in that order.
Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
And we just keep firing away.
And that 100 is going to be the hardest one, not because it's the biggest, but because it's the biggest.
Hey, this occurred to me a few months ago, Dave.
I was preparing for a talk, and it was just like a light bulb went off for me.
My dad was a policeman, and then about halfway through my childhood became a minister.
And finances were a big stress for us.
I've talked about that.
But my response to that was to go make a bunch of money, go get some degrees and go get some fancy jobs. And without a plan, what that allowed me to do was to dig a hole
deeper than my dad could have ever dug
because the banks wouldn't have given him that much money.
And so without a plan, you can end up making a quarter million dollars
and you find yourself so bad off.
And that's after paying off 30.
They were 210 in debt.
Right.
Whereas if you made 85 it wouldn't
even occur to you to take out that much money right but since we mix i know not i know on this
show we get people calling i mean student loans are you know can wipe you out but but man it's if
you don't have a plan doesn't matter how much money you make you can just get more and more
and more out of control and dig yourself such a massive hole yeah that's exactly right and you
add to that the student the student loans are loaned to an 18-year-old.
And so you loan an 18-year-old $100,000 with no collateral and no business plan.
The business plan is what?
I'm going to play beer pong.
That's my business plan.
And so, yeah, this is a genius system, and we wonder why it didn't work.
I saw still one of my top five of all time favorite memes was, or maybe it was a comedian, said,
I was really, really pissed off when I was 17, and the guy at the tattoo parlor wouldn't let me get my Limp Bizkit tattoo on my leg.
And four months later, they gave me $150,000 to go to college it's like come on what are we
doing yeah this is your congress on drugs lois is in orlando hi lois how are you well not too
bad for an old lady here's my question my husband and i are in our 80s we have three rental properties
and we're debating would we be better just to sell them while we're alive or leave them
to our two children to inherit uh mathematically it would be better to leave them to inherit. Mathematically, it would be better to leave them to inherit.
Because, let's take one of the rental properties.
What's it worth today?
Just give me an example, one of them.
Oh, like $175,000.
And you paid what for that?
$43,000.
Yeah, and you've depreciated it down, so your basis is probably close to zero.
So if you sell it today, you're going to pay capital gains tax on $175,000.
Understand?
Right.
If they inherit it, their basis is the value at the time of your death.
So if they inherit it, their basis is $175,000 if it happened today, okay?
And they could sell it for $175,000 and have zero tax on it.
So if you sell it, you get taxed on the whole stinking thing.
If they sell it after your death, they get zero tax.
Okay, that sounds like a good plan.
Now, that's the math answer.
Then the other answer is, are they competent to pull this off?
Yes.
Okay.
They are.
They're two responsible adults.
Good.
Very good.
Well, you did good then, didn't you?
Way to go, Lois.
Oh, what they want to.
That's the thing.
Yeah.
Well, what I would tell them is say, listen, I'm going to leave it to you.
You can keep it or you can sell it.
But if you sell it within six months of my death, you will have no taxes on the money.
Okay.
So that's six months.
Yeah.
The IRS assumes that the value at time of death is the same inside of six months of death.
They don't say but if they sell it six
years later they'll have to go back and figure out what the value was at the time of death
and they will pay gains on the difference in that value and six years of growth
okay and lois what one thing that dave said is really. If you don't care, tell your kids,
we don't care if you keep these houses or if you sell them.
Because one of your kids may feel this innate sense of obligation.
These are mom and dad's houses.
Somehow mom and dad's spirit is in these houses.
We've got to keep them.
And if you say, I don't care what you do with those houses,
then let them know that up front.
That would be such a gift to them.
Okay.
Okay, that's real good advice.
Very cool. Good. And make sure you have a will, of course, that's up to date and accurate for the state of Florida, which is where you live. The great news is there's no probate tax either
in Florida. So there's no taxes in the state of Florida on an estate, which is why a lot of people
move there in their retirement years. And there's no income on an estate, which is why a lot of people move there in their retirement years.
And there's no income tax in Florida, which is why the economy is booming.
Note to you policymakers in these other states who thought you were going to tax the rich, and they left and went to Florida.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host.
We invite you to stop by our studios anytime here in Franklin, Tennessee, just south of Nashville.
We're right on the interstate.
Very easy to find.
The cookies are homemade and they're free.
The coffee is awesome and it's free.
And usually 50 to a couple hundred folks are sitting around watching us on the glass do the show.
Right now there's a handful of folk out here, and that's free.
It's worth what you pay for it.
But we do the show from 1 to 4 Central Time, Monday through Friday, every week, every single week.
And two of us are sitting here. Two of the Ramsey personalities
are sitting here. I'm usually here Monday through Thursday, unless I'm doing something else,
which would be like when I'm out doing speaking or doing an event somewhere.
Also in that same lobby is where the debt-free scream stage is. On that stage,
Ryan and Madison are here. Welcome, guys. Thank you. Thank you. Good to have you guys.
Where do you live? We live in the middle of nowhere in Utah. In the middle of nowhere, Utah.
That's an actual town. All right. And so welcome to Nashville. We're in the Nashville area. How
much debt have you paid? We've paid off $160,000. Wow. How long did that take?
It took us 39 months.
Good for you.
And your range of income during that time?
Started off making around $80,000 and ended up making around $140,000.
Excellent.
Way to go, you guys.
What kind of debt was the $160,000?
So $60,000 was consumer debt, $41,000 in auto loans, $15,000 in credit card debt,
and about $4,000 in student loans. And then $100,000 was consumer debt, $41,000 in auto loans, $15,000 in credit card debt, and about
$4,000 in student loans.
And then $100,000 was our mortgage.
You paid off your house!
Yeah!
Yes, we did.
Looking at weird people!
How old are you weird people?
I just turned 30.
And I just turned 26.
And you have a paid-for house.
Yep.
That's so strange.
What's the house worth?
It's worth about $225,000.
How does that feel?
You guys are amazing.
You're heroes.
It's awesome.
You're so weird.
I mean, none of your friends have done it.
No.
No.
Not that we know of.
You're just strange.
I mean, it's a wonderful weird, but you're a way to go, y'all.
Thank you.
Wow.
One in the world.
What kind of hole did you, 39 months ago?
When did you get married? We got married on September 11th in 2020. Wow. What in the world? What kind of hold are you? 39 months ago. When did you get married?
We got married on September 11th in 2020.
Okay.
So you immediately started this then basically.
Oh yeah.
Almost.
Well, yeah.
Not long after.
So I actually.
Got a COVID wedding.
Yep.
My parents living room.
Yep.
Kind of a long story.
But we got married about 60 days or so after we met.
There were circumstances that kind of sped up the process.
She was pregnant, and I realized that I love this woman,
and I was ready to marry her, and then I needed to step up right away.
Good for you.
And I had already started my debt-free journey.
Good for you.
And I was working three jobs at the time, trying to save up and stash cash for my baby.
And I had paid off about 10 grand of my own debt
and then saved an additional 10 grand.
So I came to the marriage debt-free.
I've seen your face on my bookshelf
for the past 15 years of my life.
My dad started his debt-free journey
when your book first came out so um yeah
so your financial peace baby yep and then you guys get married or you're getting married you're
planning to start this life with this baby on the way the whole thing and you go okay game on we're
doing this exactly to the t or is that how it happened i mean what happened yeah kind of um
he came to me and said do do you know Dave Ramsey?
And I was like, oh, man.
Gosh, there's another one.
First dad, now him.
He said, you sound just like my dad.
And from then on, it was just, he had told me that he had just started his journey.
And so I said, I'll support you and do whatever you need me to do.
And we kind of just kicked it off from there.
And about halfway through the journey, he said, why don't we pay off the house?
And I was like, okay, we can do that.
So we did.
We started paying it down
and finished it faster than we thought, right?
Yeah, faster than expected.
Wow.
You guys almost doubled your income.
What happened?
Somebody get a job?
He worked his tail off.
So yeah, I moved into a new position
working for the company that I do now as a control room operator of a coal-fired power plant.
Okay.
Wow.
Hey, do you mind if I get a little bit sideways here for a second?
Sure.
I was just reading before we came on air.
I was sitting at my desk reading some nerd stuff.
No.
I know, right? And the number of men
who walk away
from the very situation
you find yourself in,
it was a staggering number.
And that you're not a statistic.
You turned around
and walked straight in
and said,
I've got a responsibility.
I love this woman.
I'm going to take care of this baby.
And not only am I going to do that
just in name and certificate,
but you freaking went to work.
Yeah.
And that's what changing legacy looks like, my brother.
Yeah.
So it's an honor to get to talk to you and see your face
and shake your hand here in a minute.
That's amazing.
I just happened to be reading that and I couldn't believe it.
It was such a, it was an embarrassment for men
and you're the opposite of that.
Good on you.
Thank you.
Good on you, man.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Well done.
Well done. Very well done. So what do you on you, man. Thank you. Well done. Well done.
Very well done.
So what do you tell people the key to getting out of debt is?
I think our biggest thing was just making sure that we were on the same page and being able to say no.
Self-control is a huge thing when it comes to getting out of debt.
What was the hardest thing you said no to?
Probably fast food.
That's my love language wow this is a pretty low bar i was looking at him i thought he was gonna say protein powder
oh no that was that was part of the budget we got to keep these going what's the biggest disagreement you had as a new a newlywed couple trying to get out of debt
managing pregnancy and a little baby oh man i don't even know that's hard to say first year
marriage is rough for everybody right like and i mean not even to mention that we we did the first year of marriage the first baby the honeymoon phase all in one shot plus covid
so i don't know i can't think that's not even a fair question y'all survived that
i'm still speechless at 26 at 26 i borrowed 300 for my little brother for a down payment to a house.
And y'all are debt free.
Good for you, man.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Way to go.
Way to go.
You're absolute heroes.
Well done.
So proud of you.
Who was cheering you on?
Dad had to be.
Yeah, my dad was definitely like also the voice of reason too.
If we called him and had a question of like, hey, should we do this?
He's like, yeah. Yeah, you should. Or should or no no you shouldn't and it was awesome his parents were really cheering
us on and we had friends who were like how did you do that and we'd show them and they're like
i don't want to read a book he's on tiktok, y'all. Oh, God.
We had a lot of awesome supporters.
That's good.
That's good.
Way to go, you guys.
Thank you. Hey, we've got the subscription, the one-year subscriptions to every dollar, a couple of
them, one for you guys and one for you to give away.
Awesome.
So you'll be able to make sure you keep your budget going because you're heading towards
millionaire for sure. And we want you to hit that baby steps millionaire level
pretty quick here you're on your way real real fast and you brought the kiddos now there's two
there are two yes all right what are the names and ages so grayson he is three and colton he
will be two in a couple of weeks way to to go. Some good-looking guys there to go in the mix.
Excellent stuff.
Very well done.
I'm proud of you guys.
Way to go.
Way to go.
Man, so whack.
Not even 30 years old.
Paid for houses.
Paid for everything.
Dave, you know me.
I'm speechless.
And that's a rare thing.
This is really good.
Really good people.
These people are amazing.
All right.
It's Ryan and Madison, Grayson and Colton from Utah.
160,000 paid off, house and everything, and they're not even 30.
Count it down.
Let's hear a debt-free scream.
Three, two, one.
We're debt-free!
Yeah!
Yay!
Wow!
Absolutely amazing.
So I was doing an interview with NPR this morning,
and the lady was asking me the question 63 different times, different ways,
how it is possible for young people
in our world today,
with real estate prices being what they are,
to survive.
I think we just explained it.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Thank you for joining us, America.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, number one bestselling author,
host of the Dr. John Deloney Show,
where you can hear all about boundaries and relationships
and mental health issues like you never have any other way.
I can tell you that.
It's a blast, and you learn a lot, and I do.
I love listening to it. And people are just plain entertaining, i can tell you that you're gonna it's a blast and you learn a lot and i do i love listening to it and people are just plain entertaining i can tell you that so check
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It's really important because we don't have a stadium named after us like somebody or somebody like that.
Excuse me, I've got an allergy.
But all right, Steve's in Salt Lake City.
Hey, Steve, what's up?
Hey, guys.
I've got a short-term question and a longer-term question for you guys.
The short-term question is a longer-term question for you guys. The short term is starting taking a family vacation.
So I'm a single income earner of our family.
We have seven kids.
My wife homeschools our kids at home.
We've not taken a vacation in probably eight or nine years.
And recently we ended up, we just got done doing a big home renovation,
spent about $50,000 out of pocket, cash flowing that.
And the last little probably $15,000 or so, we had to take out of our six-month fund to finish the project.
But, of course, it always ends up going more expensive than you thought.
So my question is, and first of all, we have a kid about to go off to college in about four months or whatever it's going to be,
and we want to take that vacation before he is obviously gone.
I've only saved up about $1,500 for a vacation over the past few months or so.
Obviously, that's not going to get it done to take a family of nine on a vacation.
We probably need $6,000 or so for that vacation.
My question is, do we pause on rebuilding that six-month fund back up to about $60,000
and put it for the vacation or get that full six months back in the fund
and then focus on a vacation?
Man, that's so dangerous.
That makes sense.
That's just so dangerous.
I mean, you completely rationalized spending all of your vacation money
and some of your emergency fund on the renovation,
and so you chose not to go on vacation when you did that.
True.
Yeah.
So you traded because you had the money to go on vacation
you just didn't do the renovation but you chose the renovation instead of the vacation
yeah basically we we bought a house that did not have a built-out basement and we had half
the house basically so that's when you chose when you bought the wrong house that's when you chose
to not go on vacation okay because basically. So that's when you chose. When you bought the wrong house, that's when you chose to not go on vacation.
Okay.
Because you chose to do renovation because you chose.
But see, these are all choices.
It's not like somehow somebody stole something from you,
and you put the money on one thing,
and now you don't have it to do the other thing.
That's how it works, right?
Yep.
Correct.
And having nine kids and no emergency
fund or a limited emergency fund dude you're asking for trouble okay that's so scary i'm scared
for you i don't care it doesn't matter to me you're the one with the nine kids i i don't have
to i don't have to feed them you do but i'm scared for you Okay. And I want you to get to do the things you want to do.
I'd love for you to go do that.
You can do whatever you want to do.
Y'all are adults.
You can make these choices.
You've been making choices.
But I want you to realize that when you're choosing one thing with money,
you're choosing not to do several other things.
Sure.
Okay.
And so you're choosing, but if you choose to go on vacation
and have a limited
emergency fund not if the emergency occurs when it occurs because it's going to occur we we have
nine opportunities for an emergency here at all times true and uh so when it occurs then you've
chosen to leave your family vulnerable and the trade was for a vacation that scares me
so you guys do what you want to do but i i think i'm going on a 1500 vacation
yeah and i think i man dave i'm totally with you and working with parents who were dropping their
kids off at college there's always this illusion that we got to get this last thing in we got to
do this thing it's not over no it's not over number one but often that last thing we don't really care about the kids we need to do it for us
it's almost like this guilt-induced this is it we got to do a thing and we got to everybody's
got to come do this thing and it is but we've never had a vacation in how many years right
in 17 or 18 years and we chose to do a renovation or buy a house that required a renovation used up
all our money instead.
That's right.
So the vacation obviously was not as important.
It wasn't a priority.
That's right.
And now it's this end
and now there's this sense of,
oh, we're about to lose them.
It's going to go away.
It's the last spring break.
We've got to do this thing.
And so I would invite the kids into a room
and say, we have this much money.
Let's get as creative as possible.
We're going to make our own snacks.
We're going to go to a KOA.
We're going to have a blast.
But this is the money we got.
And I promise if you do it right, the kids will have a great time now whether you go and feel
guilty because it's not in cabo or something that's on you but you chose to spend that cabo
money on on on a renovation or on a house but bring the kids along man and let's try to get
as creative as possible and let them be a part of the planning and see what we can come up with.
Yeah.
You seem distressed.
Well, I want him to be able to do this.
Yeah.
But I can't, as an adult, say it's a good idea.
I guess I kind of get it. But the other thing, I think that you're
pointing out something that's very right, because we had some of the best vacations with our kids
that we ever had while they're in college. Yeah. It's not over. As a matter of fact,
on the front of a cruise ship one night at happy hour before dinner, they decided as adults to
start telling us all the stuff they had done as teenagers
that we didn't know.
I would have paid money to be there for that.
And I left that room feeling like a total failure as a parent because I had been deceived
by these three brats repeatedly throughout their teenage years.
And I had no idea.
I thought I was so on top of it.
And I completely had no idea what these skunks had been into.
Well, here's what's going to
be fun at the at the ramsey cruise um we're gonna do it again i'm gonna get rachel and daniel and
do it again things that have happened in the last decade that you probably don't know about
we're gonna we're gonna go through them all again man so yeah it was a great cruise other than that
particular evening but yeah it was um but they were adults daniel i think uh maybe denise was out of college
and denise and um well no i know i guess denise and rachel were both married come to think of it
here's what y'all did and we've all heard the statistic about um we do stuff together with
them as adults that's better than it would have been when they were 13 i can tell you that well
and that's the thing i was just there's a statistic going around that you get 19 years with your kids
you get 18 with them at home in the rest of their life all added together as one
year and i think that we just go yeah that's called gosh but it's unless you're unless you're
twerp as a parent it's one of those cultural they're just gone and i think nope if you're
intentional and you build relationships and you're somebody they want to be around yeah then it's
kind of like what stage of children did you like the best?
All of them.
They're all different.
And I don't want to do any of them again.
But I liked all of them.
That little boy who just reached out to.
Oh, he's great.
He's great as long as I can hand him back.
That's what grandparents are called.
My son's humongous.
I don't have to do the potty training.
I can just do the hugs.
Okay, so that's great.
That's the way it's supposed to be.
So, you know, if I don't know how great grandkids are going to be, I'd have been nicer to their
parents.
But, you know, that's a different thing.
But I'm loving this stage.
Right.
I'm loving the other stage.
And I've loved every stage.
I don't.
Yeah.
So embrace the toddlerhood.
Embrace the teenage years.
Embrace them leaving for college.
But every expense is a choice at the end of the day.
Yeah, and you're choosing.
The thing you've got to remember is called opportunity cost in the finance world.
You lose the opportunity to do B when you do A.
When you do B, you lose the opportunity to do A.
It'll only do one thing. It won't do both.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Live from the headquarters of Ramsey Solutions,
it's The Ramsey Show, where we help people build wealth,
do work that they love, and create actual amazing relationships.
I'm Dave Ramsey, your host, Dr. John Deloney,
Ramsey personality, number one best-selling author, and host of, Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personality, number one best-selling author
and host of the Dr. John Deloney Show, where you can get help with any area of your life.
He's my co-host today.
Open phones at 888-825-5225.
Linda is with us in Cincinnati.
Hi, Linda. How can we help?
Well, I feel really broken.
I have acquired some personal loans, credit cards, and medical bills that my husband is not aware of.
They total in about $60,900 to my dollars.
I really don't know how to confront him about it, and I guess I need to know what my next steps after I would do that would be.
That's pretty scary.
Yeah, what happened along the way?
Well, we've been married.
It'll be 29 years this May.
I'm 50 years old. I'll be 50 on march the 23rd
this happened one other time that i had got some credit cards
and it was in 2012 the quantity of that was seven thousand,774. We bought a home in 2000 and we ended up refinancing it in 2012
and we were able to get that caught up. He was upset, but this time the quantity is much more unfortunately um i met a um well fortunately
i had met one of your preferred coaches back in 2017 and i wanted to get finances in order not
live paycheck to paycheck and at the time i didn't have any credit card bills, just had a few loans.
And I feel like my husband has neglected some of the emotional support that he should give.
And so the coaches said, you know, you need to be a team.
Your husband should come.
And my husband did go one time.
And during that time, you know, we talked about our situation.
He didn't show a lot of emotion.
I cried and begged for him to take over the month.
And so the next time I met the coach, he said he could tell that my husband wasn't totally involved.
And we continued to meet for less than a year, and I felt like I could maybe do it on my own.
So you're handling the whole household budget on your own, or your finances are separate,
and you on your own have gone into debt it's it's all
together um but he gets paid weekly and a lot of times he will cash his check and he will um
take some of that for his lunch money and he does smoke and so he has like he takes that money if i take the check i will give him like 120
dollars for that next week but you're supposed to be managing all the money and so the only
reason he has doesn't know about the debt is he's not involved in the money correct so why was he
upset when he gave you the money money to manage and then you didn't do it because he doesn't help.
Well, I guess, I mean, I take responsibility.
I shouldn't have done this.
But I do feel like he should have stepped up.
Yeah, both are true.
Yeah. Both are true yeah both are true and they're not you know no you shouldn't have gone this far in debt without talking to anybody you should have raised a stink a long time ago um but now
here we are so it's sixty one thousand dollars in debt and what kind of debt is this um eleven
thousand of it is credit card twenty seven000 of it is like little personal loans, but they're terrible, high interest rates and stuff.
So basically you come up short in the household budget and go cover it with a credit card or a payday advance loan or something like that.
You are correct.
Okay. you are correct okay and he and so that it wasn't like you went and bought something for yourself
on the side while he's completely running the household budget over here and you just lied
to him about a credit card you're running the household and you're not doing a good job and
that got you guys into debt he does just doesn't know about that. Am I correct or am I missing something?
No, you are totally correct.
Okay.
All right.
And the rest, so 27 is the bad personal loans.
How much was credit cards again?
$11,000.
Okay.
What's the rest of it?
I have a 401k loan that $270 comes out of each paycheck.
What's the balance on the 401k loan 5200
okay and what's the rest of it the medical bills are 7400 um i mean it's like 7407 72 but i'm just
kind of i got you're fine i don't do the pennies don't matter at this point. I'm trying to get the concepts.
So who got sick?
It was my daughter that's in college. She was having major stomach pain, and it took two emergency room trips.
So $4,000 of that is, it's twenty six hundred both of them are about
twenty dollars difference for two different hospital emergency rooms trips okay all right
linda and then here's the thing here's the thing okay you've got some financial problems
that are solvable but more so you have a tremendous marriage problem
massive
do you agree with that
i do okay i really do when something is this big you have some a data point and that is when you with him and said, hey, I've been managing this all by myself and you're not helping.
And I have driven this car off the road into the ditch to the tune of $7,000.
You've got a data point on how he reacted.
Now you're 8.5x that or eight X that, eight times that much.
I recommend you get either a couple or a pastor,
somebody that you trust to be a part of this conversation
because it may be combustible.
Are you going to be safe?
Is he going to overreact?
Is he going to yell and scream?
Is he going to hit you?
Is he going to run out of the house?
What do you think his reaction is going to be?
He's pretty much passive aggressive.
Okay.
And, you know, I do fear emotionally more than anything the rejection.
I think I could take better if somebody punched me.
He's not, doesn't beat up on me or anything. Okay, you need to sit down with a
marriage counselor. ASAP. Now. The debt thing, you can work out with one of our coaches, and you
actually know how to do that when the two of you get on the same page. Hang on the line here, I'm
going to hook you up with three months of better help for free, and at least give you somebody to
call right now today, a licensed counselor. Hang on the line.
And Austin will get you taken care of there.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey personality, is my co-host.
So, John, we wanted to let her off the hook because she had so much weight there.
And we'll help her offline a bunch of different ways come clean with a 61 000 that she hadn't told her husband about that is really derived from
her being saddled with managing all the money by herself and doing it poorly and ashamed too
ashamed to say i'm not doing it well and i can't do it by myself i asked you to help but you didn't
and then instead of bringing that forward,
she just wallows in it and it spirals and gets worse.
So 100% of that is a marriage issue, not a money issue.
Right.
And so I don't know.
Let's kind of reverse engineer that a little bit.
If somebody's in the earlier stages of something like that, what, okay, like the first, okay,
she took him to the financial counselor and he was disinterested but sat there.
Then he continues to just basically dump the entire responsibility of the household finances
on her with no emotional help or help of any kind. As a matter of fact, quite the opposite,
a cloud looming over. If you screw this up, I'm going to be mad and reject you. So what should
she do and where if someone's facing facing something similar where in that storyline should the direction change in in how she's handling this well i she she did she did the
right order she went and met with a professional one of our ramsey coaches who then said i'm not
gonna meet with you you got to do this together so she brought her spouse in spouse looked there
said i'm uninterested and i we see this happen a lot with my friends who work as personal trainers.
Like both couple, the couple comes in, they're both going to get in shape.
One's like, I'm not doing that.
So now you got a choice.
Are you going to poison yourself because it's easier?
Because it's, basically she chose over a period of time,
I'm going to cash in my integrity.
I'm going to cash in my, I'm not going to seek extra help.
I'm not going to raise the flag here
because he's not helping, right?
And at some point when somebody,
when your person you're married to cashes out,
you have to make a choice to,
I'm not going to further dig a hole and punish myself i'm
not going to live a more miserable life because you're not participating i'm not going to take
misery plus misery here and so i'm going to control the only thing on earth i can control
which are my thoughts and my actions and i'm going to do the best i can with what i got and if you're
not going to help me then i'm going to get a coach to walk alongside me for the entire duration of
this thing yeah i'd get a coach but i'd also then every time it comes up short i'm gonna dump it in his lap every single time yeah every time the first time the first time
i'm doing the budget and we don't have enough to cover everything i'm gonna go i we're out we're
short or i'm gonna go put a i'm gonna get a realtor and put a sign in the yard because we can't afford
this life that we're living yeah there's you know i'll put a sign in two car windows, this idea that you're going to give it to me to handle.
And that's suddenly going to make you not have to deal with it. Isn't going to happen because
you're going to deal with it every time it comes up short. I'm going to dump this in your lap.
We're going to turn Mr. Passive aggressive into all the time. We're talking about this
because I'm not going to carry this by myself. I'm not going to drown just because you won't swim yeah right and i'm not going to allow your uh inaction to cause me to hide everything right out of shame
and here's the other side just put it in his lap put it in his lap put it in his lap put it in his
lap every single month i can't do this i'm not doing it right it's going in the hole what do
you want me to do because you don't like it when it goes in the hole i don't like it when it goes
in the hole but i don't know how to fix it. Can you help?
What are we going to do?
What are we going to sell?
Who's going to go make some more money?
That's it.
There's a choosing reality part, which maybe you've got to go get a job.
Is that fun?
No.
Is that right?
No.
But the reality is we've got a hole.
Yeah.
Right?
If the only thing you're going to do is earn money and dump it on me, you're going to have to earn some more because we don't have enough.
Right.
So you need to get two jobs.
Or I'm going to go get a job because we don't have enough right so you need to get two jobs or i'm gonna go get a i'm gonna go get a job because we don't have enough money and so you're
gonna have to be you're you're making dinner yeah if you want to eat at night and in the morning
good on you because i gotta go work because something's got to give here and we get i think
we get stuck in the loop man the very first time that would be my suggestion the very first time it comes up short you bring it up and every single time thereafter as opposed to slowly going
into debt small cash advance small credit card debt at a time and then
their daughter was ill has stomach issues did that run through your mind
too oh yeah I wonder why she has stomach issues.
That's just a chaotic home.
Yeah.
I assume so.
There's so much stress in the air.
So much stress.
But again, when you live a life without any margin,
one of your kids pops up sick.
And that's why we do this.
We don't teach people to get out of debt
so that nothing ever happens.
We teach them to get out of debt
because something's going to happen.
Yeah.
Right?
You are going to have a kid call from college who needs to go to the ER in the middle of the night.
I made that call countless times.
So I get two kinds of debt being hidden from spouses.
Kind number one is I wanted to do what I wanted to do.
He wouldn't go along with it, so to hell with him.
I'm just going to go take out a credit card and buy a Louis Vuitton. Right. And, and, uh, and I want to buy
something and I don't like this budgeting stuff. So I'm just going to be a child and act like I'm
in Congress and spend money. I don't have right. And, um, open a credit card. He doesn't know about
so I can get it done. That's kind's kind number one that's a spoiled brat princess deception in financial infidelity that but but i run into this one almost as often the hidden debt
uh where we're hiding debt from the spouse because the spouse said you handle the money
they're not handling the money well and the shame that they're not doing a good job
and therefore they're going into debt causes them
to not reveal it rather than turn and dump the whole shoebox of bills right back in his lap and
go hey buddy turn off mid turn off monday night football you gotta help because i can't do this
and you're going you're gonna whine and cry and carry on if i do it wrong so i'm out i'm out or
you're spending more money than we have,
and you don't seem to get that.
I'm not paying any more bills.
I'm not sending the money anymore because.
I'm not going to sit over here and carry 100% of the stress
of this entire freaking household while you just go off to work.
And you cash your paycheck that you got this week.
I ain't your mama.
I'm your wife.
That's right.
Yeah.
And so there's the adjustment there. But that's the two kinds of deception I find.
And actually, I think the Louis Vuitton one is actually a lot more evil, that version, to me, than this is.
This is shame-based.
And that one's arrogance and pride-based.
Yeah.
But both are deception.
The shame's heavy, man.
It'll bury you if you're not careful.
It's real.
It's real. It's heavy, man. It'll bury you if you're not careful. It's real.
It's heavy.
Yeah.
And makes you do things you wouldn't normally do, but I think it's about standing up and
saying, I'm worth more than this life.
Yeah.
No.
No.
No.
Not doing it.
Nope.
Nope.
Yeah.
Nope.
Nope.
Jake is with us, and Jake is in Indianapolis.
Hi, Jake.
How can we help?
Hi.
So let me give you some context before I ask my
question. Quick. My long-term girlfriend and I recently graduated. We each have about $100,000
in student loans. I'm all in and paying it off in two to three years. I'm excited to get
to tackle this beast. She's more excited about the new likelihood of getting engaged and married. We've had this dream talk
that you guys mention quite often about money, and she's questionably on board with paying off
the debt. I say questionable because historically she's not been great with money and kind of
avoidant around taking action despite our discussions and my offering help. So my question
is, am I wrong to think we should
wait a year or so before getting engaged so we can both pay off a chunk and kind of show that
we're both committed and being on the same page it's not it has nothing to do with both you're
trying to test her to see if she's worthy of engagement that's bullcrap yeah youall need to go talk to somebody as a couple. Yeah, no way.
Nope.
Well, yeah, I agree with John that you should go talk to somebody as a couple because, hey, she's not going to change by getting engaged.
And she's not going to change by you making her pass a test to get engaged.
That's a false box to check.
Neither one of those are there.
She's going to change when she decides that it's as important as you think it is.
And until you're aligned on that, you should not get engaged.
But I'm not going to have her pass a test to get engaged.
You're going to do that when she wants to have a baby.
Well, you've got to pass my mom test.
And then when she wants to buy a house, we don't test our marriage partners.
We walk alongside them.
Yeah. And so,
yeah, she's got a, uh, but I agree that you shouldn't go forward with marriage until you
get this figured out and get aligned because your values aren't aligned. You're not aligned. You're
going to have a long life trying to make this happen. It's not going to happen. So you guys
need to get aligned and then you need to get engaged and get married as soon as you're aligned,
regardless of the debt, as soon as you're aligned, regardless of the debt.
As soon as you're aligned.
But you're not aligned right now.
This is The Ramsey Show.
Dr. John Deloney, Ramsey Personalities, my co-host today.
I'm Dave Ramsey, your host.
Harry is in Pittsburgh.
Hi, Harry.
How are you?
Hi, good.
How are you guys doing?
Better than we deserve.
What's up?
So my wife and I recently finished paying off all of our debt,
and we have our emergency fund fully funded now. Way to go.
How does that feel?
Thank you.
It feels amazing.
I couldn't even explain how good it feels.
Amen.
Love it.
Good for you.
Thank you.
Yeah, and now I guess we're looking ahead at new goals and one of those being potential homeownership.
And basically, my question is, you know, would it be better to do the 15-year mortgage or just save up and pay for a house in cash?
Well, it's always better to pay in cash, period.
Now, then what tempers that answer is this is one of the few things on the air
or in our teachings that I answer that I'm going to do it one way
and I'm going to give you an option of doing it the other way.
I do everything we teach, everything, okay?
And I don't borrow money ever for anything, no matter what.
So if Sharon and I were asking this question, we would simply have to wait.
We're building a house right now.
There was no chance we were building that house unless we had the cash, period,
because we just do not borrow money.
We will never be in debt again, haven't been in debt in 30 years we'll never be there again ever okay now when people call in on the air we say as
you know harry because you've referenced it uh we're we don't yell at you for a 15 year fixed
rate mortgage where the payments know more than a fourth of your take-home pay and then you turn
around and have the goal that the average baby step millionaire following the Ramsey stuff has their home paid off in 10.2 years average.
Meaning some do it slower, some do it faster.
Because the sooner you get your home paid off, the sooner you're not paying the bank, the sooner you're putting that money into investments, and the sooner you reach millionaire or two millionaire or five millionaire.
Right?
And that's the goal.
That's where we're headed. So all of that to say, if you did take out a mortgage, the way you're asking the question,
I would want to take out the least possible and pay it off the fastest possible at a minimum,
15 year might be it, but it sounds like with you guys, it might be something else.
And then I step back and I say, okay, how far out are we? Like I know one couple saved up the money to pay cash for a house in three years.
If you can do that, then save up and pay cash.
If it's going to take you eight years.
If we kept the intensity, that was such a horrible part of our life
that I think just the idea of going into it again for a house is very uncomfortable for us and that's why i wanted
to make sure you're not going to wreck ourselves uh as both of us okay okay because i mean yeah
yeah some sometimes one person is like completely panic attacked about debt like me and the other
ones not as they're they go along but they're not not as worried about it so um uh so what's your
household income about a hundred thousand okay and what what size home are you thinking about
buying price range wise um in our area we were looking around three hundred thousand okay and
what do you have now saved towards it? Anything? $40,000.
Okay, all right.
And so you need $260,000 to pay cash out of $100,000 a year.
And so if you put, you know, if you put, I don't know, $50,000 of that,
you're going to be there in five years.
Right.
I guess, you know, the other thing I could do and what I was doing while we were paying off debt is i was working extra so our income used to be higher because i was doing doordash and
uber eats and things like that when i was off to try and accelerate everything how old are you guys
there was um 25 okay all right um Yeah, I would probably get a really good strong down payment in your situation,
and I'd be just fine with you guys taking out a small mortgage
and then having a five-year plan to pay it off.
Now, is pausing retirement smart to do that?
If you're going to do it in three years, but you're not going to do it in three years.
Okay.
It's pausing retirement to pay cash for a house, smart.
Yeah.
Yeah, but if you're going to do it in three years or four years.
But if it's going to, this is going to take you guys five years.
Because we do not recommend gazelle intensity all the way through the end of this.
And put you on a five-year plan more than you've already done of door dashing.
Just to, no, I just to no i wouldn't i wouldn't
if i mean i would because i don't borrow money but uh but you know or i'd buy less house and
do a step-up plan you know i'd go buy me 150 000 house which ain't much right some kind of dump
in pittsburgh that's what it would be probably i. I don't know. I guess it would be. And so, but I'd get in there and at least get in there and then didn't go do it again,
then go do it again. That's kind of what we've done too. We did that with cars. I was driving
a piece of crap that was worth a hundred dollars. And then, you know, then I got a $2,000 car and
then I got an $8,000 car. And then, you know, every time I just, cause that, you know, but I,
you could, that that would at least i
had a car and you can kind of do that plan here too either one of those would work but
any of the none of these answers are wrong harry because they're all heading in the right direction
what's wrong is taking out a 30-year mortgage um and promising you're going to pay it and the
payment's a huge chunk of your take-home pay and
you can't breathe and you go oh because real estate prices are high and i'm a whiny millennial
you know and give me a break you know no that's just bullcrap uh because we have actual stud
millennials who pay cash for things all the time or pay off their debts all the time so it's doable
it's just but we have this when there's systemic problems with the economy.
Yeah, right.
You're stuck.
You're so stuck.
But, you know,
because we're not like the baby boomers
who bought their houses for three buckets of strawberries.
So, yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, God, the whining is just incessant.
But, yeah, you're not whining here
I'm not making fun of you, but this is the crap we deal with in the social media world. So
Uh, yeah have at it man
Um, if you want to do five, but you need to have realistic numbers
How fast can you get I mean if you do 70 000 a year, it's going to take you three and a half years
If you do 50 000, it's going to take you five years just do the 260
Divided by some number out of your
hundred and then how much door dashing do y'all want to do how badly do you want to do this i mean
you got little kids at home she's going to be sick of you being gone all the time how far do
you stretch this out what level of price are you willing to pay and and order we you know scale
down the house price and move 40 miles further out of town so that we buy about the same house
for 200 instead of 300 maybe that's a way to do it i don't know there's maybe some other choices
you can make here that gets you going but but no i would not try to do something you know for 10
years we're going to have no life so one time we pay cash for house and it's the perfect house by
then the target will have moved yeah and i think it's just coming to terms if you're going to sign up for a mortgage let's put it in a blood oath that this isn't going to be
a gateway drug to just borrow more money again yeah and let's let's say okay we're gonna do it
for this one thing and just to get us a house and we got a five-year plan to pay it back we're
gonna be pretty diligent but we're also gonna go on dates and we're gonna get a couch and things
like that but let's do this right and this is not a path to deconstruction again. Yeah. But I mean, we had one couple,
they, they just gotten married and they made a hundred and they were telling us about,
they moved into this rich old lady's apartment over the top of her garage. Um, and they were
a brand new married couple. He cut her grass and she fed her dog and walked her dog.
And they lived there almost free, and they made $100,000.
Well, I mean, they saved $80,000 a year for three years and paid cash for a $250,000 house in three years,
and they were 25 years old.
And so that's not a bad plan.
But doing that for 10 years is different than doing it for three.
And they found a way to make the thing work and uh uh that's a cool story i
like that story and uh i mean one of them was a fireman one of them was a teacher you know that's
pretty neat and so that's similar to we moved into a residence hall for a year to pay off everything
and we were going the other way we were so underwater but but similar yeah not everybody has that story but it was it was cool but we figured out a way yeah right yeah
you scratch and claw and fight and do weird things it's a weird real estate market out there and i
and i'll make fun of you guys but also tell you i know it's tough yeah but here's the thing you
can either scream at the wind or you can adjust your sails. This is The Ramsey Show.
Our scripture today, 2 Corinthians 1-4, he comforts us all in our troubles so we can comfort others. When they are troubled, we will be able to give them the same comfort
God has given us. Jordan Peterson says, face the demands of life voluntarily. Respond to a
challenge instead of bracing for catastrophe. Amberlee is with us in Concord, New Hampshire.
Hey, Amberlee, how are you? I'm good. How are you? Better than I deserve. What's up?
Well, my husband and I have made a series of really bad financial mistakes,
and we were just wondering if we should sell our house this year or next year.
What kind of mistakes?
Well, we're house poor.
We bought a duplex that, you know, it's overwhelming.
We pay about $3,000 a month, and we only make about $60,000 gross a year.
So why would you wait a year?
You're drowning.
I know.
We are. What is it you're drowning. I know we are.
What is it you're waiting on?
Well,
I,
I,
I'm the main person who does the budget.
And I was,
I was just,
I,
for some reason,
it seems like we make,
we do somewhat make a little bit more money.
It's by staying here, but i feel like it's
wrong like i feel like it'd be better if we can move i'm confused it feels like you make more
money math is not a feeling do you make more money or not well we we make 60 grow 60 grand growth and then we also get $2,500 a month
from the other side.
And so
I don't know.
I know we probably should.
Do you not like being a landlord,
Amberlee?
No.
I don't.
Solid.
Be honest about the problem.
I can hear it.
This thing's a brick around your neck.
Yeah.
Your sanity is not worth it.
It is.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's a stupid house.
Yeah, it is.
And we found out that our tenant has been running the water 24-7.
And so, sorry, I'm just a little overwhelming being on the air.
Sorry.
It's okay.
You're good.
We've never lost a patient.
You're okay.
Yeah, and I want to, and we're in this market where I know that we could technically,
you know, this house would appreciate, but...
Doesn't matter. I do want to get would appreciate, but. Doesn't matter.
I do want to get rid of it.
It doesn't matter.
It's not fun.
No.
Everything in this conversation says you're not having fun.
No.
This house has not been a blessing.
It's been a curse.
Yeah.
And TikTok told you that the way to wealth is to buy a duplex, rent the other side, they'll
pay your mortgage and you're going to.
And now it's not fun.
Now it's not fun.
You found out TikTok was wrong.
Oh, there's a shock.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, I mean, should we put it on the market, like, next month?
By Friday.
Yeah, Friday.
Friday.
Friday sounds good.
Okay. I'm not kidding. good okay i'm not kidding okay i'm not kidding if i have something i own that i hate as bad as you hate this even if i made a mistake and i'm ashamed
to admit the mistake i'm still going to admit the mistake i want to kill it as soon as i can
kill it i want it i want it in my rearview mirror as a distant memory of dumb things i've done
otherwise every time you drive up the driveway you're going i don't feel really good about me I want it in my rearview mirror as a distant memory of dumb things I've done.
Otherwise, every time you drive up the driveway, you're going, I don't feel really good about me.
Yeah.
And you can't be the wife you want to be.
You can't be the mom you want to be.
You can't be the employee you want to be. It affects every squirrence of your life.
You're not having fun.
We can hear it.
And it's not just you're scared to be on the air.
It's your whole situation, right?
Yeah.
I mean, if you had a house payment you could afford, you could breathe again.
You're having trouble getting a full lung full of air right now.
Yeah.
It's overwhelming.
I'm scared.
Yeah.
We can hear it.
And it's not being mean to you.
I've been exactly where you are.
That's how I can identify it.
I smell it.
I know what it feels like and um so the thing is that uh the faster you act on this the quicker you're
going to get peace yeah and peace is really our goal here you got plenty of time to buy a different
house plenty of time to make different real estate decisions, sell this thing, and go rent an apartment or something for six months and breathe a little bit.
And then slow down and make a better real estate decision the next time you move into real estate.
You can do this.
Okay.
So go to RamseySolutions.com and click on Real Estate ELPs for Ramsey Trusted Real Estate Agents,
people we trust that we have vetted, and they'll help you get the thing on the market and help you get it sold ASAP. and click on real estate ELPs for Ramsey-trusted real estate agents,
people we trust that we have vetted,
and they'll help you get the thing on the market and help you get it sold ASAP.
That's what I would do if I were in your shoes.
I like real estate, but I hate real estate.
Isn't that interesting?
Because I see what it does to people when you do it wrong, including me.
It leaves a mark.
It's not fun. Alejandro is with us in Miami. What's up,
Alejandro? Oh, excuse me. Sorry, I just drank water. No troubles. Yes, my question is,
is it worth it to go to college? Now, the reason why I'm asking that is because I have a, you know, my brother, he's basically studying in us
and he's been going to college for basically eight years now. Cause he's getting his doctors.
Now he's a, you know, straight A student and everything. And, um, my, my worrisome is that
his depth is five digits. So no, yeah, it's five digits, basically.
So he's going from, like, let's say from $9,000 to $60,000,
and, like, the amount of debt that he's getting is ridiculous, right?
Are we asking about you or him?
This is more for him than it is for myself.
Well, he's already made his decision.
Right, right.
But what I want to know is that
from what I see in the market overall,
I see employers basically asking
more than what they could give off,
as in like a story that he was telling me
is that, oh, hey, there's a position
that they like his degree,
but they're only offering like $70,000 instead of the range that the college
promised them.
And that's kind of like, you know.
What is his degree going to be in to continue the discussion?
Sports medicine.
Okay.
And so he's going to end up how much in debt to do sports medicine?
$60,000.
Okay.
And this is a four-year degree?
It's becoming eight.
He did four, then he got his master's like two years ago.
Oh, so he's getting a Ph.D. in sports medicine.
Yes.
Yeah.
Well, that's not necessary in that field.
That's not necessary.
But the problem is you cannot extrapolate that to is it okay to go to college
because, yes, it's okay to go to college.
College is worth the expense if you pay cash
and study something that's actually usable in the marketplace.
The problem was your brother overdid it.
He got two more degrees than he needed to function in that in that space
or at least one more that he could afford and if he wants to move up then he gets his master's do
not need a phd in sports medicine to function in the sports medicine space yeah unless maybe if
you're going to go work for an nfl team or something they may want you to have a doctor
by your name but who knows i don't even know the particulars of that but the college is going to
give you a range,
and when they give you a salary range,
those things are skewed by if they're taking numbers
from San Francisco and New York to Nebraska.
It's all over the place.
And so don't blame the college.
He's got to do his own research and say,
what does it pay in the area that I want to live?
Yeah, I wouldn't go to school eight years for a $70,000 job.
Absolutely not. I agree with you, Alejandro.
That's not worth it.
Absolutely not.
And you can get lots of $70,000 jobs for four-year degrees
and lots of $100,000 jobs going to trade school and being a welder.
So if you're just looking at return on investment, the trades are awesome.
There's a gap right now in the marketplace, and they pay beautifully.
But to say college is completely
never worth it is an incorrect not a factual statement either yeah it's not a factual
statement getting a degree in stupidity left-handed puppetry or german polka history and then thinking
you're going to end up with being anything but a barista is ridiculous and so that's dumb but you
can't take somebody doing something stupid like that
and saying all higher ed is bad.
That's just not true.
My kid's going to go to college.
Yeah, mine too. Mine did.
There you go. That puts us out
of 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. If you're a leader, your personal growth matters for your organization,
because whatever you lead can only grow as much as you do.
I know from experience.
I've been CEO of Ramsey Solutions for
over 30 years, and now I'm sharing that leadership and business coaching experience with you on the
Entree Leadership Podcast. I'm taking your calls and helping you figure out how to overcome
challenges within your organization. One episode could change your business. Check it out on Apple,
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