The Ramsey Show - Building Wealth Means Defining Needs vs. Wants

Episode Date: June 19, 2026

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Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:02 Brought to you by the Every Dollar app. Start budgeting for free today. Normal is broke and common sense is weird, so we're here to help you transform your life. From the Ramsey Network and the Fairwinds Credit Union Studio, this is The Ramsey Show. I'm Dave Ramsey, your host, Jade Washall, Ramsey Personality Number One bestselling author is my co-host today. Jeff is in Tupelo, Mississippi. Hi, Jeff. How are you? I'm doing well. How about yourself, Dave? Better than I deserve. What's up? Yes, sir. So the question that I have is, is it okay for me to pause my debt snowball to buy a more reliable, bigger vehicle for my growing family?
Starting point is 00:00:59 Tell us more about it. Tell us about the vehicle that you have now and tell us about your growing family. Yes, ma'am. So the vehicle that I have now, it is a five, seat SUV 2015 Volkswagen, Volkswagen, I inherited it from my mom. And my wife, currently we have two kids and my wife and I are expecting and she's due in January. And we just are really going to need something
Starting point is 00:01:27 that has third row seating. Okay. And everybody's in car seats? The other two are in car seats? No, no, no. One's in a car seat and then the other he's a nine years old. Okay. How much debt do you have and how much have you paid off so far and what do you want to spend? I know that's a lot of questions, but I want to know.
Starting point is 00:01:47 Yes, yes, I understand, obviously. I have a total of 16,000 consumer debt, a little over 8,000 of it is in a personal loan and then the rest are credit cards. My mortgage is paid off. Oh. So I don't have any rent or any, you know, house payments or nothing like that. That's good. Uh-huh. What's your house on income?
Starting point is 00:02:09 So it varies. I do get about $4,100 a month from VA disability benefits and GI education benefits. And then on top of that, my wife and I, we run our own HVAC electrical and plumbing company. And I usually get anywhere, it goes from like 2,000 a month to upwards of, you know, 8,000 a month. It just drastically varies. Okay, so, you know, I get it. You're looking ahead and you're feeling the stress of having another child coming. What's the folks like and worth? Private party, maybe about $7,000. They'll sell it and buy a $7,000 fan. That's what I'm thinking. That doesn't require pausing the baby steps.
Starting point is 00:03:02 Okay. Yeah, what we were looking at, I know. You were looking at upgrade. My wife is, yes, well, my wife wants to get in. upgrade. What we were looking at was something in maybe like the 10 to 12,000 range that's a little bit lower mileage, a little newer. I'll let you argue with the pregnant woman.
Starting point is 00:03:20 I'm not going to. But no, I wouldn't do that. Okay. That's a pregnant woman talking that she wants a new car for a new baby. And no, you need to get yourself out of debt. You have a $7,000 car. If you want to trade for a different $7,000 car that has third row seating, well, you have now address the need, not the want. The other is a want. I want a $35,000 Honda Odyssey,
Starting point is 00:03:48 but I'm broke. Makes perfect sense. Yeah. Okay. And then I guess the other thing also, so I'm only been listening for about a month, and I love it, and y'all seriously lit a fire under me to get debt-free. I want you to talk. I want you to talk. I want you to talk with your wife more about why you're excited about that, not what? Because right now, all she's seeing is all these new rules and all this new enthusiasm from you. And she's not sharing in the vision of why we're doing this. We have three babies. And I want to change our family tree so that we're going to live like no one else so that we can live like no one else and drive anything we want to drive and take these kids on trips and pay for these kids education and not be
Starting point is 00:04:38 worried about bills. And that's why I'm so enthused about all this, mom. And right now, she's starting to see, you're going to turn my name into a cuss word in your house if you're not careful. Oh, I think it's already become... I read your mail. And now I said she came by a car, so I'm definitely Satan incarnate. Oh, goodness. One of the other challenges that I'm running into is it's I find it's very hard to the budget. I have the Every Dollar app and all that, but just with the nature of my business,
Starting point is 00:05:15 just with the income fluctuating so much, and then also like how much I got to spend on materials for my business, it's very hard to... Your business should be a separate account. Right. You should not have your materials for your business and your every dollar budget. Okay.
Starting point is 00:05:33 Your business needs to be running on its own budget, separate checking account, all of the revenue from your business goes into that account, only expenses for the business materials, come out of that, and then whatever is left in that account, by definition, is profit. This is cash basis accounting. And what I'd also be doing is I'd be working to basically get a month ahead and make a Peaks and Valley's account to where if you know, I think you said it was anywhere between $2,000 and $8,000 that you can bring in. Did I hear that right? Yes. So let's pretend it takes $4,000 to run your household. You need to make sure that at all times you have $4,000 set aside. So on the months that you do really well and make $8,000, that's the time to fund that account. Make sure it's always there so that if you have a month where you only make $2,000, you can pull over from that account and make sure that you're balancing your budget.
Starting point is 00:06:25 Does that make sense? But I appreciate and I'm honored by your enthusiasm for what we teach because it's going to change your life. I'm happy for you guys on that. But you need to stop. You've done a classic husband move, and it's a bonehead move. And that is, you got all enthused, and you start talking about what instead of why? And what is, I don't think we can afford a car. We can't buy a car.
Starting point is 00:06:51 We're in the baby steps. And they're like, what's the freaking baby steps? Why am I in a baby steps? I don't want a baby step. I want a van. And so, I'm pregnant. What's wrong with you? And this is what's going through her head because she's not caught up with you on
Starting point is 00:07:05 why this is because this is going to make you all wealthy because this is going to get you away from the stress of money because it's going to get you on the same page oh by the way and so what i would start with if i were you as an apology honey i'm sorry i got way ahead in my enthusiasm because i'm really excited about what this can do for our family but i want to stop and would you give me a few moments and let me go back and tell you why i'm gotten so excited because i can i can see where we're going. I can feel it. And I want you to feel that with me. And then it's we are making the decision to buy a car that is the same price, but that gives us the functionality that we need as the Volkswagen so that we can clear this debt because your debt, you know, getting rid of your
Starting point is 00:07:57 debt, it frees up your most powerful wealth building tool, which is your income, so that you can become wealthy so that there's margin in your life. generosity in your life and these kids' lives are permanently changed. And you never again worry about having a third row seat. You really won't. I mean, this is the last time you'll worry about it if y'all will play through. And I don't worry about having a third row seat. If I want one, I just go get one.
Starting point is 00:08:23 And you don't either. You and Sam, if you need something, you just, you got a nice car the other day. I did. You know, and that's because you paid a price to get there. Your price to win. That's right. Hey guys, it's Rachel Cruz. When it comes to life insurance, most people fall into one of two camps, the ones who make a plan to protect their family and the ones who hope everything will just work out.
Starting point is 00:09:14 But hope isn't a financial plan. When you get married or have kids, your money decisions aren't just about you anymore. Your income helps keep the lights on, pay the mortgage, and put food on the table. And if something happens to you, will your family have protection or uncertainty? Well, at Ramble, we recommend term life insurance that 10 to 12 times your income with a 15 to 20 year term for the years that your kids are at home and your mortgage is still being paid off. That's why Winston and I have our term life coverage through Zander Insurance. They're an independent broker who works for you shopping all the top companies to find the most competitive prices on coverage you need.
Starting point is 00:09:54 Get instant quotes online in just minutes at zander.com or call 800 at 356-4282. to get your family protected with term life insurance. That's zander.com or 800356-4282. Alan is in Miami. Hey, Alan, how are you? Hey, Dave, how are you? I'm doing well. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:10:26 Good. How can we help? Yeah, I had a question. The guy currently I'm at like 59 years old, and I work in the service industry as a server. So my money fluctuates all the time. And I'm worried about my retirement that I'm going to be living on the street.
Starting point is 00:10:41 and, you know, pushing a lot of a shopping basket around. So how can I work on saving money so that doesn't happen? I'm currently in BS2. Good. All right. So you're paying off some debt. How much debt have you got? I've got like $3,800 and credit card debt.
Starting point is 00:11:01 Mm-hmm. And then I have my car loan. How much do you own your car? It's an 18. 18. All right. What do you make a year? 50k a year
Starting point is 00:11:12 Okay All right And how quick do you think you're going to have these two things paid off? Well, the car loan is set to be paid off in three years And then the debt I'm looking to put up a plan together To pay off the credit card debt by the end of the year Okay I want to have a little more urgency on both of those
Starting point is 00:11:35 Okay Crank your lifestyle down and your hours up Can you pick up more hours and work more? I can, but not until the holiday season because right now it's the summer season. So the hours are cut. What can you do with those hours right now to earn some money then? I'm probably maybe getting another job, do a day. There you go.
Starting point is 00:12:00 There we go. Something. I don't care what it is. Are there other restaurants that will pay you that you can earn more? Have you listened to Round Town? Are there better spots for you where your base income can be? higher? I've checked around town, but basically because it's a seasonal and we're in Florida, everybody's kind of pretty much on the same boat, at least where I am. Are you on the beach?
Starting point is 00:12:20 No, I'm not. I'm in downtown center. Okay. I'd be looking around. I'd want to know if I, if I can get in a restaurant that's right on the beach in a high end area where people are really high tipping, it's high dollar, all the plates, you know what I'm saying? I'd be trying to really get into one of those restaurants. I don't know where you're at now, but I agree with Dave, side hustling is going to help you a lot, but I would really be interested in getting your base income up because you're going to have to be at this for a while. And I'm worried that having a side hustle and this job for the long haul, you might drop the side hustle and you might give up. And I don't want that. So getting that core income up is going to be a really,
Starting point is 00:12:59 really big deal for you. And, but I think your ultimate is, you have a skill. At 59, this is not, You know, you didn't just start waiting tables last week. You know how to do what you do. You're a pro. I assume. Yes. Okay. So I would apply that skill as my second and third and fourth job and my new core job.
Starting point is 00:13:23 And how can I use that skill to make the most possible money in the shortest period of time? And that's what I'm going to do. I got my hours cut. It's not really an option. You got $18,000. Our car has got to get paid off. And that's standing in between you. and starting to really seriously build retirement to stay away from the shopping cart that you're worried about.
Starting point is 00:13:43 Do you have any money saved as of now? I have 4K saved. 4,000. Okay. Okay. I'd pay off the credit card today. Okay. Cut it up. Is it cut up? I don't use them.
Starting point is 00:14:00 They're not cut up. They're in the freezer. Get them out and cut them up. Destroy them and close the accounts today. Okay. And pay them all off and go get six serving jobs and work like a maniac and get this car paid off. And as soon as that car is paid off, I'd like to have it paid off by Christmas. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:14:18 You're going to be really tired, but you're not going to be so broke. Are you renting? Yes. Okay. Do you have a roommate? Yes. Okay. Okay.
Starting point is 00:14:26 Okay. So all we're doing here is doing everything we can to cut your costs and increase your income and squeeze the margin out of your budget as much as we can at that car. because when you don't have a car payment, you don't have a credit card, and we're living on a written game plan, and then you get in attack mode with every dollar you can squeeze out. Now we can talk about, okay, how much can we set aside? Let's set aside $2,000 a month. That's $24,000 a year. What's that going to turn into by the time I'm 65? Yeah. Okay, that's $125,000 plus growth. So you're probably going to have $200,000 bucks if you do that. But you're going to be saving $2,000 a month because you don't have a car payment. And you're living on $125,000. a detailed plan and you've increased your income and you don't have a credit card. And when you start doing that, I think you can get, you know, 65, 67, somewhere in there, you're going to have a pretty tolerable nesting a long way from shopping cart. What'd you get? I think so. If he said he's 59 years old, if he can start getting a side hustle, getting that income up, if you can put away, find a way to scratch $2,000 away. By 72, you could have $687,000. And so it's very doable.
Starting point is 00:15:37 Yeah. So if we're half wrong, you've still got 300 grand and you're no one near a shopping cart and homeless and all that. But you're going to have to have some urgency about this that just turns up the heat and you're just this stellar singular focus on this thing. And if you want to know how Jade calculated that, it's the Ramsey calculator at Ramsey Solutions.com, the retirement calculator. You can put in any numbers you want. If you don't like the 72 number, put in a 67, you'll probably get about 300K, which is what I did a minute ago in my head. And I didn't use the calculator. I put in 11% rate of return, which is a fair. In good mutual funds.
Starting point is 00:16:17 Yeah, in good mutual funds. In your 401 case, if you don't have one in your Roth IRAs and sit down with a smart vestor pro after you get rid of this debt and then say, I've got to catch up. I'm in a panic. I'm trying to stay away from the shopping cart. My goal is the shopping, no shopping carts. Yeah, and for those of you listening, we'll drop the link to that calculator in the show notes. But I think Alan just painted the stakes for anybody listening beautifully. We're always talking to people with a level of urgency.
Starting point is 00:16:45 We're always pushing people to do it now, do it today, be intense, get it done. Because you don't want to be 59 calling in this show with $0 saved. That is what awaits if you don't move and start action today. Yeah. Yeah, so, I mean, those of you that are, 22 that are listening, this is your cautionary tale. Yeah. And so you don't want to have to, you don't want to have to be pouring into like this.
Starting point is 00:17:11 And if you just start sitting aside 100 bucks a month right now, you're going to be multimillionaire if you're 22. Yeah. Do you work early. But when you're 59, 2,000 bucks a month is going to be your minimum to get your steak built up, dude. And so you're going to, that means you're going to increase your income, decrease your outgo and have a lot of focus on money.
Starting point is 00:17:28 You've not been real focused on money in your life. And now money is requiring. that you focus on it. It's not giving you a choice anymore. And that's what you're facing. Open phones at AAA 825-5-225. Kevin is in New York City. Hi, Kevin. How are you? Hello, Dave. How are you? Great, man. How can we help? Thank you for taking my call. It's a very heavy question and a lot behind it. But to make it simple, So I'm a lawyer. A month ago, I left my law firm job to start my own law firm.
Starting point is 00:18:05 And then last week I got an in-house offer, and now I'm debating between two options, whether to kick the can down the road and give up my firm that I started or to go in-house and take that stability. So what's the new offer? How much? $150. Okay. And what are you projecting you're going to make it on your own? So it's only been a month and doing a lot of business development, but in the first month I made about $7,000, $8,000 with a few in the pipeline. But obviously some months will be up, some months will be down.
Starting point is 00:18:42 Obviously. But I mean, how old are you? I'm 28. Okay. And how long have you been practicing law? Three years at this point. Okay. In your mind, what's the advantage of the end?
Starting point is 00:18:55 in-house offer? Is it just I know no matter what I'm making 150K or is there upside down the line? So there's no bonus. You can accomplish your own on your own. Yes. So there's no bonus. There's an equity component that they're giving. I'm not sure exactly how much that is. They won't disclose that. But really the stability. I have student loan debt. That's really my only debt and a little bit to family, about $10,000 to family, but they're not pushing it. Are you single? I am, and my expenses are the lowest they'll ever be.
Starting point is 00:19:30 So that's a reason. What do you want to do? What do you want to do? If I was told in a year from now, the law firm would be successful, I would just keep doing it. Then do it. Then do it. Working for someone else in calling that stability is an illusion. You're only as stable as your ability to get up, leave the cave, kill something, and drag it home. If you got this 150 offer, you can get another one a year from now if you failed. go get her done baby get her done this show is sponsored by better help
Starting point is 00:20:18 summer is here and listen everything changes this time of year the kids are out of school the routines go out the window you're traveling more you're for sure sleeping less and if you're not careful you and your family can end up running on fumes here's the truth if you don't slow down this summer and take care of yourself all that stress is not just going to disappear it's going to show up in your body in your work in your relationships your patience
Starting point is 00:20:41 it's going to show up everywhere. This is why I'm a big fan of BetterHelp. BetterHelp is an online therapy platform that matches you with the licensed therapist based on your goals and preferences. All of their therapists follow a strict code of conduct and you can message your therapist or schedule sessions right in the BetterHelp app.
Starting point is 00:21:00 If it's not the right fit, you can switch therapist at any time for no extra cost. Listen, you don't have to carry everything all by yourself this summer. Go to BetterHelp.com slash Ramsey to get 10% off. That's BetterHelp. H-E-L-P.com slash Ramsey. Matt is in Raleigh.
Starting point is 00:21:29 Hi, Matt. How are you? Good. How are you, Dave? Better than I deserve. What's up? So, me and my wife are kind of trying to decide we're about to sell our house here at the end of the month.
Starting point is 00:21:43 My wife has student loans, so we're going to use some of the proceeds to pay off her student loans. And the biggest question that we're, We're kind of going back and forth on as what to do with the rest. I have a... So if we're selling our house, we are moving with the military, and we're actually going to be where we're moving to. It's really expensive.
Starting point is 00:22:09 So we're actually going to be living on military housing. So we won't have to buy a house. The only thing that's required is buying renter's insurance. Okay. So how much are you going to take from? the sell of the house total? We're roughly like $38, $40,000. And then my wife's student loans is roughly $17,000.
Starting point is 00:22:34 Okay. How much is in your emergency fund? So in my emergency fund, I have about $3,000. And then I also have a high-yield savings account that has $21,000. And how much debt do you have? Once we pay off for our student loans, we'll have zero debt. And obviously, you sell the house. We would have absolutely zero debt.
Starting point is 00:22:59 Okay. Okay. So would you call that a fully funded, that's a fully funded emergency fund for you today? So I'd probably take the money. I'd park it in a high-yield savings account. How long do you think that you're going to be in this next military assignment? Do you have any indication? Roughly two to three years.
Starting point is 00:23:19 Okay. What does she want to do with that money this left? over after her student loan is paid. So she wants to put it into a high-yield savings account because she doesn't have a job lined up just yet, and she kind of wants to use it as a rainy day fund, and I've explained to her that we kind of already have that. So she wants to increase from 21 to $38,000 on her rainy day fund until she gets a job. After she gets a job, what she wants to do with it?
Starting point is 00:23:49 I have no idea. We've been just very frugal with our money. I at right now we save roughly 35% of our paychecks my told her I mean where's that going uh it's going and it's we had it kind of broken up uh some of it is going into my personal Roth IRA some is going into a brokerage account some is going into a custodial brokerage account for my daughter and then some is going into a high-yield savings account okay And so how much is in the brokerage account? The brokerage account has about $2,000.
Starting point is 00:24:32 Okay. What's that for? Just as a way to, again, the stock market, kind of separate my funds, get better yields from it because my high yields right now is, I think, only getting like three and a quarter percent back. All right. So I think that you have a – I like your thoughtfulness on trying to do the best can with this money. I actually think you're doing too much, and I think you can simplify it back a little bit. You've got what I would call a fully funded emergency fund for now. The next step in the process
Starting point is 00:25:06 is what we call baby step four, which is where you're investing 15% of your gross income, and you're investing it into growth stock mutual funds. And that would be, you know, your TSP, Roth, C plan, and it would be your personal Roth IRAs, the two of you. And when those two get to 15% beyond that, what I would be doing is using your brokerage account to put good mutual funds and start saving for your next house. Call it the house fund. Okay. Would you, so in my TSP, I do have part of that because the match is going traditional. And I have about 40,000 of that that's traditional.
Starting point is 00:25:51 Would you suggest using some of the house proceeds to convert that? into a Roth? No. Not today. Not today. You're too young. I mean, you'll get to that. By the time you get to it, you have a paid for house, and it may be not $40,000, it might
Starting point is 00:26:06 be $140,000, and you're going to pay taxes on all that when you move it over to Roth. But I wouldn't do that today. Yeah, you spend a lot of time nerding out on all these plans, and you've really got, and you've done a great job, by the way, because you're nerden out on all of it. You know it. You're, you're, when we ask you, when we ask you, what's going on, you know exactly what you're doing, and I can hear why you're doing every bit of it. That's the only one I didn't understand was the little brokerage account, and now I do. It makes
Starting point is 00:26:35 sense. So I'm going to rename that brokerage account, house fund, and I'm going to dump this money that we're talking about into that house fund as either now or as soon as mom gets our new job, one of the two. And then I'm just going to all overage above 15%, no more than 15% of your income going into retirement, all overage above that from this point forward goes into that house fund. And then when you do either retire from the military or you land in a location where you're going to be a while and it's an affordable housing market and you're going to be there and you make some money on it, then you write a check and pay cash for a house at that point. And that's what we're aiming towards there.
Starting point is 00:27:14 And I do that before I worry about converting the $40,000 traditional into Roth. and because that's your match over on the TSP. Make sure all your TSP's in the sea right now. The other stuff is sucking wind. It's just horrible. All right. Chris is with us. Chris is in Fort Worth.
Starting point is 00:27:33 Hi, Chris. How are you? Hey, I'm doing well. How are you? Good. How can we help? I'm not really sure. I have a couple questions.
Starting point is 00:27:42 So I have been in, are you seeing the corporate world, tech world, did that whole thing. And went and started selling roofs when I was like 28, 29, been doing it. I'm 36 now. I started my own company for multiple reasons now that I actually know everything. I felt comfortable doing it. Went from on average, like making about 160 to 200,000 a year to I think this year we could do around like 500 to 600,000. Way to go. Profit or gross? Thank you so much. Profit. Wow. You're killing it.
Starting point is 00:28:17 Way to go. Yeah, yeah. We're Very blessed. And we actually just became obedient to the Lord with our money very seriously as soon as we started our company and he's taken care of us. So I guess my question is this. So I let a ton of IRS debt rack up. I didn't know what I was doing. I was a 1099. All of that is about to be paid off completely.
Starting point is 00:28:45 And we have about, yeah, it's going to be an amazing feeling. And my wife is an angel and kind of helped me become disciplined around money because I'm an extremist. I kind of just. Well, you know how to sell when you've tried to outsell your stupidity. Yeah. Hey, man, I could not agree with that statement more. Literally. And if it wasn't for my wife, I'd probably be living in an apartment.
Starting point is 00:29:08 Yeah, you're doing great. So, proud of you. Thank you. So, yeah, thank you so much. So we own a, we own a home. We owe about $470,000. on it with a 6% interest rate. We own two cars.
Starting point is 00:29:22 One, my truck, I owe 52,000. Hers, we probably are like 44,000. Other than that, we have zero debt. How much cash you're sitting on? $290,000. How much do you owe the IRS? An investment account. $114, but that's, that $290 was after I pay that off.
Starting point is 00:29:42 So I have $114.14 rate to pay off. Did you say it was in an investment account, though? It's not liquid? The $290? It's about 100,000 of it is, the rest of it. Honestly, like you said, I am actually pretty stupid. No, I didn't say that. I said you tried to out earn your stupidity.
Starting point is 00:29:59 That's different than being stupid. I've tried that too. It means you're good at earning money, and it gives you an excuse to not deal with details. And now today you've grown up and decided we're going to deal with details. I'm proud of you. So take some of that $2.90 and pay the coup cars off tonight, okay? Oh, really? Oh, definitely.
Starting point is 00:30:18 Why did that surprise you, Chris? I don't know. I'm actually excited to hear that you told me to do that. I figured that we would do that first and then look at the house. Yep. That's right. Okay. And we have a very volatile business so we can make another 600 next year.
Starting point is 00:30:38 That's why we're telling you to do that. The goal is for you to remove as much risk from this equation as possible. And by clearing out your debt. Zero debt and a pile of cash allows you to surf volatility like it's sport. You're getting ready to hit the road this summer. You want to feel confident your car is ready to go, but when you don't fully understand what's going on under the hood, it's easier to either ignore something important or spend money you didn't need to. Because let's be honest, you're not a mechanic. And you shouldn't have to be. That's why we trust Christian Brothers Automotive, the official
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Starting point is 00:33:03 The fastest way to do that is on a game plan, and the game plan is completely outlined, outlined, dialed in, and walks you through, giving you the same answers and the same personal coaching that we would give you here on the air, and it's called every dollar. It's our budgeting app that leads you through the Ramsey plan. So it's not just a budgeting app. It's actually the plan in digital form.
Starting point is 00:33:28 So you want to do this? It's completely free. Start your every dollar. program for free. You and your spouse both put it on your phone. Boom, we've got a plan. Boom, we're going to find some margin. Boom, we're going to get out of debt. We're going to start walking these baby steps. You can find it in the app store or Google Play for free. It's called every dollar. Paula is in San Diego. Hi, Paula. How are you? Good, thanks. How are you? Better than we we deserve. What's up? Okay, so my husband and I have been married for almost two years now.
Starting point is 00:34:01 We have a baby. We got married in the church. All our friends and family were there. But we never filed the paperwork legally to be married. And that's for a few reasons. One is I was in a previous marriage and it would have to, my child support would be re-evaluated. And then secondly is because I was defaulting on a credit card at the time. It was a whole, you know, mess. And I really didn't want to mess up my current husband's credit and his chances of, you know, us ever buying a house or something like that. I just was wondering your thoughts. I know you're all about, you know, getting married. And we work together with money. I'm just wondering what your thoughts are. So it's been two years. Did you clean up these things? No, the judgment still out there. At the time, like before I met my current husband, my lawyer said, But I'm judgment proof, and she said, just don't even worry about it. Like, don't answer if they call or anything like that.
Starting point is 00:35:07 And what's the balance on this credit card? Well, it was $38, I think. $3,800? No, $38,000. And then now I think it's at like they're trying to collect $45,000. I called and made them an offer of $15 because I got a settlement. Oh, good. And they didn't take that.
Starting point is 00:35:27 So you had one conversation, and they didn't settle. Shocking. No, you have to. negotiate and argue. That's not one conversation. Oops, they didn't take it. So you're sitting on some cash to settle this with? No, my husband and I put it towards his debt. How much does he have? Well, now he's down to about 30,000. Okay. Let's go back to your initial question. I would not wait to get married. I think that at the core of marriage, when you do marry somebody, you're taking all of them, and they're taking all of you, and that includes all the baggage that comes.
Starting point is 00:36:02 with you. And I think it's going to simplify all of this when you guys can get on the same page and start attacking this together instead of letting technicalities get between you. So I would go down to the courthouse and file the marriage license. Sign it. Yeah. And then let's lay out a game plan to clean this up. And so he has 30,000 in debt and you have $38,000 worth of bad debt that you can probably settle for something. Who's that owed to that credit card? It was Chase. Now it's at some like a lawyer firm. Perfect. That means somebody bought it for pennies on the dollar.
Starting point is 00:36:37 Now you can settle it. Did they give you an amount? Did they say we won't settle it for 15, but we'll settle it for X amount? Did they give you another offer? Yeah, 38. Oh, okay. They're like, oh, we'll bring it down from the 45. That was all the extra.
Starting point is 00:36:49 Then today's point, that's all crap. So are you working outside the home? No, I've got four kids. Okay. And what does he make? He makes about $3,000 a month. Why? And I bring in $1,800 from child support.
Starting point is 00:37:09 What does he do for $3,000 a month in San Diego, California? Technical support. Not much. No, it's really not. Do you have to stay in San Diego because of the custody? Yeah, yeah, we share custody. Okay. But we're for free right now with my mom.
Starting point is 00:37:32 So we don't have rent. So most of his paycheck is going towards his debt right now. Okay. Well, he doesn't have a paycheck. We have a paycheck. And we have four kids to raise with $1,800 and $3,000 in San Diego, California. And so I want him to look at extra jobs and want you to look at what you can do, work from home, while you're managing the four kids to increase your own income.
Starting point is 00:37:56 He needs to double his income soon, soon. his career sucks. Yeah, I agree. And so I want him to make more money. I want you to make more money. And then you guys get on a game plan. And a good rule of thumb is you can't hide your way into wealth. You can't deceive your way into wealth.
Starting point is 00:38:29 And you're deceiving your ex-husband. This is an attempt to not engage and get the proper amount of child support according to what the courts say. If you're raising that many kids and they're all his kids, I doubt you're going to lose $1,800 with child support. It's not like you're getting $18,000. You're getting $1,800. And so you can't deceive your way into wealth and you can't hide from your past enough to become wealthy. So the hack that you were attempting to pull here is really hard. holding you back more than it's gaining you. Yeah, I agree. To Jade's point. And so if I were in your
Starting point is 00:39:09 shoes, I would finish up the marriage. But I would also, as a part of that, let's figure out how we can prosper if we got no child support, how we can prosper and clear these debts. And, you know, if you need some help negotiating next time, get in touch with one of the Ramsey coaches that's been trained by us, and they can help you with that negotiation because you just called up a law firm. And And they thought, oh, she's got some money now. And we'll say no and see what she comes back with. And you say 15, and they say 38, and you say, that's not good enough. What would you do?
Starting point is 00:39:44 That's reasonable because 38 isn't going to get it. We know you didn't pay 38 for this debt. You probably paid $2,000 for this debt. And because that's what debt buyers do. They buy it for somewhere around a nickel on the dollar, two and a half to three and a half to four and a half cents on the dollar, somewhere in there. And so if this law firm, represents a debt buyer, and they probably do, that's what they've got in it. I'm kind of surprised
Starting point is 00:40:09 they didn't take the 15, but they probably smelled on you that they could beat on you a little bit more and get some more out of you. And that was obviously wrong. It didn't work, but I want you, you know, let's try to scrape together some money again and come at them with another settlement and let's clear up your husband's debt and let's get your incomes up and let's quit hiding. You know, here's what's weird. If you reevaluate the child support, you might get more. That could happen. Your marital status does not keep you from getting child support.
Starting point is 00:40:43 Child support is not based on your new husband makes money. It's based on what the old husband makes and the number of kids he sired. That's where child support comes from. And so it doesn't, you know, reevaluating it would only be down if his income is down. And so, no, I wouldn't try to hide my way or hack my way around into a prosperous life. I'd be doing, I'd have the opposite mindset. I feel like the mindset should be, how can I set up my life in such a way that I don't need to depend on this money? Exactly.
Starting point is 00:41:16 And even if the courts rule that in a way that's not in my favor, I'm still just fine. I don't need the money. Exactly. That's where you want to get. And, you know, my lawyer, oh, you're paying a lawyer to fight this. 38,000. And they didn't call and try to negotiate it to the other law firm for you? That's interesting. Not good. Open phones here at AAA 8255-2-2-2-5. So basically, folks, if you have a credit card debt that is in default, and it's been in default six months a year, 18 months, something like that, meaning you haven't paid on it in that
Starting point is 00:41:54 period of time, they have no indication that you're going to pay. City Bank and, all the other rip-off huge banks that have screwed you, they don't keep defaulted debt on the books. They sell it off. They give up on it. And they sell it to somebody for a nickel on the dollar. So $50 buys $1,000 debt. That's what happens. And so that's what she's negotiating in.
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Starting point is 00:43:29 If your revenue is at least seven figures, go to NetSuite.com slash Ramsey for a free product tour. That's netsuite.com slash Ramsey. Welcome back to the Ramsey Show in the Fair Winds Credit Union Studio. Amy is with us in Raleigh. Hi, Amy. How are you? I'm good. How are you guys doing?
Starting point is 00:44:00 Better than we deserve. What's up? Yeah, so I have kind of a two-fold question. I'm just wondering if you could give me advice. I feel a little bit financially behind. So I kind of want to go through that and just see if you have any general advice. And then also I just have a few questions on how to approach first-time home buying. Okay.
Starting point is 00:44:20 we're going to pick one, and we can't do a full counseling session. Okay. So what is the main thing you need to know today? I think that I just want to kind of give you an overview and see if you can kind of decide where areas where we could be improving. Yeah, we can do that. Tell us why you feel financially behind. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:44:38 So I, my husband, I are 30. We've been married for eight years. We have two kids, two and five. He actually stays home full time with the kids and I work full time. So we're kind of working. with one income, and I just feel like at this point we should have more saved. How much do you have saved? Yeah, so right now I have about 60K in retirement, and then we have about 35K in a high-eal savings account. We have no debt at all. Your home is paid for?
Starting point is 00:45:08 What do you say? Your home is paid for? No, we rent. We don't, yeah, we don't own. Okay. Yeah. Okay. So we rent our home. That's probably why you feel behind is because your renters? Yes. I would say that that's probably the number one piece, yeah. All right. I don't think you're as behind as you think and feel. You don't have any debt, which is wonderful. You've got an emergency fund. That's excellent. And you've started retiring. I'm sorry, you started funding your retirement. That's baby step four. And so I think that's great. I think the only missing piece to your equation or of what you think is next is, okay, how do we get into a home? And it's just going a little sort of. slower than you feel like it should be going. Am I right? Right. And I mean, obviously, we've made the choice to have one income, and I wouldn't change that. Like, I think that that
Starting point is 00:45:58 has been great for our family. What is the income? So I make 155 pre-tax, and that is split between 70% base and 30% commission. What do you bring home every month? So we bring home after retirement health insurance about $660, $6,600. Okay. And how much of that is margin? After you've done all of those things you need to do, what's the amount that you're like, okay, we can do whatever we want with this money? Yes.
Starting point is 00:46:30 So after we pay all of our just regular occurring expenses, we have about 2,757 left over after all of our bills. Yeah, that's not counting commissions, though. That's correct. So the way that we approach it is because my commission, is monthly and it's kind of volatile, we just put all of that in high yield. So we put that in savings and we live only off my base pay. Yeah, okay.
Starting point is 00:46:52 Okay, well, that's good. So 6600 is not your real take-home pay. It can't be. Okay, it's just take-home pay on your base. Yeah, that's just the base. That's correct. Okay, so if you continue saving... 2,000-plus commissions are going in high-yield for your down payment on your house, right?
Starting point is 00:47:07 That's, yes. You're not behind. You're doing great. Yeah, if you continue saving at that rate, what do you have at the end of the year? Yeah. You got rid of it. She's going to be $2,000 is 24,000 a year plus commissions. And she's making $155.
Starting point is 00:47:21 So she's got another $3,000 average a month. So she's going to put $40,000, $50,000 away. So all you've got to do is look out at the housing market, look at what it is that you guys think you want, and do the math backwards, work backwards and say, okay, what must be true? How much do we have to save in order for this house to be no more than 25% of our take home on a 15-year fixed rate? And then you're running it back and say, okay, we'll be there in three years or we'll
Starting point is 00:47:44 be there in two years. Yeah, you're going to be there in two. That's what it sounds like. And, you know, you stay out of debt, you have your emergency fund, and you can decide I'm not putting more money in retirement today because I'm going to put it all on this house down payment. Or I am going to put some on retirement today, and that's going to kick the can down the road a little bit further on when we're able to buy the house. Either one of those answers is fine, but you're not behind. You're not. And more and more people are buying homes in their 40s. And I think that that just opens a bigger conversation on just comparison and making sure that you're running your race and you're not comparing everything that you do to TikTok and Instagram and the other people at work
Starting point is 00:48:22 and what your, you know, what your friends are doing. Your race is your race to run. And you don't have any apologies to make for that. When you read out your numbers, I thought it was excellent. I thought this person is doing what they have to do. Another person is going to call in and they're going to be 30 years old and it's going to look totally different for them. But as long as you're taking the next right steps for you, you have something to feel good about. Yeah, where you're moving towards, you're going to own a home in the next three to five years. That's a conservative good purchase. And then you'll start and begin, continue putting 15% of your 15% of your 155 away. By the way, it's going to increase over time. And so you're going to be putting, you know, $25,000 away a year for it towards
Starting point is 00:49:02 retirement and you'll retire multimillionaires. So, no, you're not behind. If you keep doing those things. Now, if you go out and buy a stupid car that you can't pay for and $1,200 a month car payment, when we had to have one, our puppy needed a seat to sit in or some kind of bull crap that people do to buy a car, right? Then no. No, you're going to get yourself in trouble. But you're not doing that right now. You've been very wise, very smart. And you're right on track. Cheyenne is in Fresno. Hey, Cheyenne. What's up? Hey, how's it going, you guys? Thanks for taking my call. I'm with me with your advice today. Well, thank you. How can we help? So I'm newly divorced, and I'm wondering if a refi with a cash out is my only option,
Starting point is 00:49:44 because I need to pay off my father-in-law who was carrying our note, as well as the ex-husband. And my concern is that I'm going to be living paycheck to paycheck, and I don't want that to be my future. I have two young boys, a three-year-old, and a six-year-old. What is the owed on the house? Right now, with the father-in-law carrying the note, it's $123,000. Plus you got to buy your X out for how much? $104,000. Oh.
Starting point is 00:50:12 So $227,000. Yes, sir. Okay. And what do you make? $64,000. I just renewed my contract. And so I work out of private school. And so my salary and my new contract.
Starting point is 00:50:27 Can you pay a payment on $200,000, making $64,000? So when I was doing my research, the best rate that I could find for a refi is 6%, which should be about $1,300 a little bit more for a mortgage for a 30-year fixed rate. So my take home is about $3,700 per month. What's the house worth? $355,000 at our last appraisal. Okay. And what other money do you have?
Starting point is 00:51:02 So I do get child support. However, because the divorce is new, I just don't. Want to consider? I'm not. That's okay. How much child support do you get? $1,700 a month. Did you get a half a million dollars in a 401k or something?
Starting point is 00:51:18 Is there any other money? We didn't touch each other's retirement or anything. And I do have, like my side hustle is I bake, kind of do my own little cottage business. So I bake decorated sugar cookies. So I try to do that as much as I can. No, do you have any money in an account, like a brokerage account or anything? Oh, I have $101,000 in my retirement account. I have savings.
Starting point is 00:51:48 I have about $20,000 in emergency safety. Why don't you use $101,000 to buy out your ex? I wondered that, but my tax advisor said not to. You said it's a brokerage, right? Your tax advisor is a moron. Okay. Your tax advisor doesn't need to be advising you anything on your life. you've got kids and a father-in-law in your ear and an ex trying to figure and now you're going to go borrow money because your idiot tax advisor told you.
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Starting point is 00:53:18 you understand what you're actually buying. I've trusted Health Trust Financial for over 20 years because they help Ramsey fans make smart health care decisions. Go to health trustfinancial.com today and talk to a real person without pressure or confusion. That's health trustfinancial.com. The Ramsey Show question of the day is brought to you by Y Refai if you've fallen behind on your private student loans and don't know where to turn. Why Refi works with borrowers, other lenders won't. And it helps explore low fixed rate refinancing options. Go to Y-refi.com slash Ramsey. That's the letter Y-R-E-F-Y.com slash Ramsey might not be in all states. Okay, today's question comes from Carmen in Virginia. She says, my husband and I are on baby step six and have a question about
Starting point is 00:54:27 paying off our home. Should this still, should this still be our focus, even though we are sure, this isn't our forever home. Or should we be saving up more to put down along with our current equity on the right one when it comes along? Okay, so for anybody listening, Baby Step 6 is the baby step that you do in tandem with four and five. Four is you invest in your retirement. Five is you put towards kids college and six is you put any extra money towards the house
Starting point is 00:54:57 if you were wondering. And, you know, if she told me we know exactly the house. you know, that we have our eye on, you know, it's just we need a little bit more time. I might have a different feeling about it, but you don't even have your eye on a property. I think it's just something that's living in your mind as an option. And until then, I would put the money on the current home because... Here's what's interesting. The way she phrases it, she feels like if she puts it on the current home, it's like she's
Starting point is 00:55:24 going to lose it or something. Yeah. If you pay down your mortgage, it increases your equity. When you sell your house, you get a bigger check. So it's just a savings account. Your equity is a savings account. When you pay down your mortgage, you're putting money into a house. It's just hard to cash out of.
Starting point is 00:55:41 You can't just go down to the bank and take an ATM withdrawal on your savings. But, you know, it's forced savings. And the beautiful thing about paying down in your home, instead of stacking it over in a high-yield savings to use as a down payment later, it doesn't accidentally buy a bass boat. Right. That health savings account, those high-yield savings, accounts sometimes oh we went a little over on Christmas oh that cruise it just came available and I've always wanted to go and don't have the money so I'm going to use the down payment money for the next house on that that doesn't happen if you pay down on your house so abs it's forced savings
Starting point is 00:56:20 it's trapped savings it's not lost money no you do not put money in a high yield savings account to the side for a future down payment when you already own a home with the mortgage. No, you pay down the mortgage instead. Every stinking time because it traps you and it makes you behave. Protects you from your biggest problem, which is you. It protects me from my biggest problem, which is me. Jenny's in Denver. Hey, Jenny, what's up?
Starting point is 00:56:49 Hi, thank you for having me today. Sure. How can we help? My husband is a mortgage loan officer, has been coming up on three years. And what he is bringing home isn't covering our bills. We have prayed about it a lot, and we were wondering what you would do in our position. He could go back to being a police officer. When he was there, he made about 118 to 120 a year.
Starting point is 00:57:18 We do have a base pay from the military and a little bit from the mortgage company that he works for, but that's about $6,400 a month. and our bills are about 7,500. What are your bills? We don't have any debt and we have home insurance. How much is your home mortgage? I don't. It's 2,300.
Starting point is 00:57:41 Okay. Well, that's not 7,500. Where's the other $5,000 going? I feel like we are pouring some into his business, doing, you know, trying to market things. We have a couple of kids. I mean, our cars are paid for. gas, groceries, that sort of thing. So you don't know where it's going?
Starting point is 00:58:04 We do have a budget. Apparently not. You can't tell me where the $5,000 is going. Sure. I do think that part of it is, I'm not sure. I think our gas and groceries are a lot of it. No, it's not. That's not $5,000.
Starting point is 00:58:24 Sure. I agree. Okay. So you guys don't have a budget that you don't have a budget that you're, you don't have a budget that the two of you have agreed to and that we stick to and that we live on every single month. You have a general idea of where you think the money's going, but right now we can't figure that out, right? Well, no, I do the every dollar budget. I do it monthly. We both look at it. Get it out and tell me where the $5,000 every week. Sure, I think we have spending money.
Starting point is 00:59:00 We have things that come up like he has had some trips that he's had to do for work. We tithe the 40, let's see, 2,200 we get from his mortgage company, 4, 4,400 we get from past VA. Mortgage is 23. We tithe about 750, the 10%. We use $1,600 to $2,000 for not just groceries, but that also includes any toilet paper and things that we may use, 400 for gas. I can't think of anything else. I mean, I can pull it up if you truly want me to.
Starting point is 00:59:48 So my question is, okay, so you've got your home with the kids. How many kids are there? Two. Okay, and their ages? 14 and 9. Okay. I think that you, I love that he's looking at ways to get his income up. I think you can do more to contribute too.
Starting point is 01:00:05 That's where I see your biggest opportunity. If you told me you had littles, it would be a little tougher, not that you couldn't do it, but it would be very tough. But with a 14 and a 9-year-old, I actually think, I mean, I know I'm not wrong, that you've got some time that you can put into this and close that gap because it's not a big gap. It's a $1,000 gap. And I think that's exactly where you fit into this equation. Okay. So, number one, the reason he changes careers is not because you guys can't make a budget that we don't know what it is. And so your $7,500 minimum to get by sounds very high.
Starting point is 01:00:46 And so I think you guys need to look at that. So what are we spending money on? What's out of control in this household? And what things are we trying to do with this money that we shouldn't be doing with this money while we're tight? Number one. Number two, we could add some income from you. And then number three, if then he can't, he's not. bringing in enough to support his household and he has the opportunity to change to another
Starting point is 01:01:11 career he should but there's a third option other than stay okay one option is stay with the mortgage company option two is go back into law enforcement a third option is do something else that makes more than the mortgage business right now the mortgage business is tough right now yeah it's hard right now so maybe he should change but just running back I mean he left the law enforcement world for a reason yeah reason was that that and that reason is probably reason enough not to go back to it. So I, yeah, I might go to something else, but does your husband need to take a career that that will support the household? The answer is yes. Do you need to do some things to add to the household? The answer is yes.
Starting point is 01:01:55 Do we need to look at this budget and figure out why we're, why it takes us $7,500 to exist? That's high. Okay. When things are tight, now, that's, you know, but you act like that's a template that that's a... I think it's what they were used to when he was doing. I know. Law enforcement, that's what you guys were used to. I'm talking about why when you, you know, acting like we can't make, we can't make ends meet. Well, that doesn't make sense.
Starting point is 01:02:21 Yeah. Well, your mortgage was a little high to begin with. Even on the $7,100 a month, it was a little high. So now it's really cutting into your margin in a major way. Yeah. Yeah. So, yeah. Yes, he does need to consider changing careers.
Starting point is 01:02:34 but not necessarily go back to where he was, but maybe go to the third option, which is something new. Yes, you do need to consider having a career. And yes, you all need to go back over this budget together and figure out what we have called a need that is actually a want. Yeah. And figure out where in the world this money's going. I agree. One of the biggest myths about money is that if you're winning with money, you're never supposed to spend any. That's not true. Some of the best money you'll spend is making memories with the people you love. That's why I was excited to find out about Young Washington from Angel.
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Starting point is 01:04:42 The truth is, the two tickets to Young Washington pay for the first month on their own. Celebrate America's 250th with a great movie this July 4th, and a great deal. Sign up at angel.com slash Ramsey. That's angel.com slash Ramsey. Investing can be confusing, and people have always asked, Dave, what is your personal playbook? How do you do real estate deals? How do you choose your mutual funds and so on? Well, two years ago, for the first time ever, we decided to unpack that playbook. We called it Investing Essentials. It was done as a two-night virtual event with me and George Camel talking about investing and going through my playbook and also going through several buckets
Starting point is 01:05:41 of other types of investments that I don't do and why I don't do them. That's pretty cool. Well, we've only done that two times. We're getting ready to do it for the third time. We're changing some of the content if you've watched the other ones. And now we're going to add some stuff on will planning, estate planning, reducing taxes, and some stuff on building a lasting legacy as well. So, which is part of my playbook.
Starting point is 01:06:06 I do all of those. And so this year, going to be new content in there. It's going to be September 1st and 2nd, a two-night virtual event investing essentials. Tickets start at 199, get yours at ramsysolutions.com, or click the notes in the, or click the link in the show notes if you're listening on podcast or YouTube. Matt is in Knoxville. Hi, Matt. How are you?
Starting point is 01:06:33 I'm doing good, but. for getting back in touch with me. I had a quick question on if you have equity in your home using that equity to pay off your other debt, so it's all consolidated into one thing, well, into one loan. And if it's a bad idea, can you tell me why? No one else can't. Okay. It's a bad idea.
Starting point is 01:06:56 And the only time we suggest you do that is if you're on the edge of bankruptcy and it's the only way to stay keep from filing bankruptcy. And you're not. it's a bad idea. Now, why is it a bad idea? Well, in 35, almost 40 years of doing this, of coaching families on money, what we have discovered, including my house with me and Sharon, is that personal finance is 80% behavior. It's only 20% head knowledge. So math is most of the time, not our problem. Most of the time, it's our behaviors. And the data tells us, the research tells us, that 88% of the time that you take your debts, your miscellaneous debts, your student loans,
Starting point is 01:07:39 your credit cards, your car loan, some medical bills, whatever it is, is piled up, and we move them over to a home equity loan. We no longer feel the pinch of all those bills piling up, and we don't change our habits. And nine out of 10, 88% of the time, people run up more debt. because they didn't fix the habits that caused the debt in the first place. So how much debt have you got? Let's see if we can figure out how way to get you out without doing that. As of right now, I have $80,000 left to pay on my house,
Starting point is 01:08:19 and I got my wife's car that's $25,000. And then one car is paid off with my work car, and then my truck only has $2,000 left on it. Everything else has been paid off, credit card, personal loans. So the only thing we're talking about rolling is these two cars. Yeah, it'd be 27,000. And how much, what do you all make? How much have you paid off so far?
Starting point is 01:08:40 As of right now, we make 80,000. My wife's still in a doctorate school. She'll graduate next year. Doctorate in what? Occupational therapy. Is there any student loans for that, or she's cash flowing in? A lot of grants. Her parents have helped, and we've just stayed to the grindstone.
Starting point is 01:09:01 Good for you. All done. Okay, so she's going to come out making 80, right? As should, should, yes. So you're double your income, 160. And when does she do that? She probably in about two years because we want to have our second kid after she graduates and didn't want to have to go into work and have just a newborn right off. Okay, I got you. all right and so and you make 80 okay all right I well you can do a couple of things here
Starting point is 01:09:42 but what I would do is simply get on the every dollar budget and the two of you sit down and say all right we have a plan the plan is for her to graduate have the second child and then begin work and and so encompassed in that plan is that we also need to clean off this $27,000 in debt which is $2,000 a month for 26 months. Okay? No, it's not. No, it's not. It's $2,000 a month for 12 months.
Starting point is 01:10:12 Okay, yeah, okay. Yeah. And so I'm figuring it up in my head. No, it's four, okay. 13 months. 13 months gets you out, 14 months, whatever. All right, so $2,000 a month, we need to put on this debt, and we'll be done in 14 months. If we're not willing to cut our lifestyle enough to do that,
Starting point is 01:10:31 and you pick up a little extra work. Maybe she picks up some side hustle. I don't know, whatever it is. Maybe we sell something else. You have money and savings? Approximately right now, $5,000. Well, that was before we put it all towards the truck that we was doing. The snowball effect, we put everything towards my truck.
Starting point is 01:10:51 It was a $19,000 last year or a year and a half ago. Okay, so you've been working on this. How much debt have y'all reduced so far? Around about $30,000. How long did that take? Two years. Okay. All right.
Starting point is 01:11:11 So 14 months to do $27,000 is not too far off. All right. So you're already living like that. You're already living like this. Well, and before this, up until this year, I was only making $45,000. So I got a big. Okay. So you got a huge increase.
Starting point is 01:11:29 And so we're going to live. on nothing, finish her school, and get these cars paid off. Or we're going to sell it stupid $25,000 car. That's what I would do. Because when I'm looking at this, I'm going, okay, you just told us you used to make $45,000. You're already up against the rule of it being more than $50,000, more than 50% of your take home at 80 because she's not making the other 80 yet. So if I were in your shoes, I'd actually sell the $25,000 one now and go down in car and get you something that is more reasonable for what you're earning today. And then when she starts making 162 years from now, then you can upgrade your vehicles. Your household income goes to 260. You upgrade your income.
Starting point is 01:12:07 Yeah. That's probably the best thing. If you're unwilling to do that, you're going to have to sacrifice hard for the next 14 months and stay on a beans and rice schedule to clear these off. You cannot borrow your way out of debt. You're tired of hustling and grinding and pushing this debt monster and you called us looking for an easy way out with a helock and it does not get you out. It just moves it. And it keeps you from addressing the issue and the issue is you really bought a car you shouldn't have bought. But if you're going to keep that car now, and it's not horrible, it's just bad, okay? It's not like scream at you. This is the dumbest thing I've ever seen in my life. It's bad, but it's just bad. Yeah, it's causing you to move slower than you should be.
Starting point is 01:12:53 It's a dead weight. It's a walk with a limp. And here's the interesting thing, Matt. You guys are so goal-oriented and you're so focused that you've detailed out every part of your lives. You've done a really good job of planning your life out. I mean, you've got her in school with grants, mom's help and mom and dad's help and some hustle and grind. We pay cash for that school.
Starting point is 01:13:14 She's going to come out with a freaking Ph.D. And PT and going to walk in straight into 80 to 90 grand whenever she wants after. But wait, we're going to have a baby first. We've laid everything out. And it's well thought out. You've done a good job of planning all of this. The only thing that doesn't fit in there is this car. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:13:34 And you've got to view it as making your journey easier, not as a negative. You know, that's the way you've got to view it. But no, under no circumstance, would I roll these cars onto my home. Because it's going to make you feel like they're not there and you're going to relax and you're not going to deal with the issue. And so, absolutely. Absolutely. If you want to keep it, roll up your sleeves and get her paid off. Otherwise, let's dump it and get the other two cars paid off. And you've got your old truck.
Starting point is 01:14:03 She's got a smaller car, a less expensive car, and we're fine. She's a student. She's not a PT. She's a student. We're driving a $25,000 car. Who is with us in Philadelphia. Hey, Joe. What's up? Oh, man, I can't believe I'm speaking with me, guys.
Starting point is 01:15:22 I've been speaking to big-time celebrities. I have a lot of fans in my family, and, oh, there's something else. We're honored to have you, sir. How can we help? I'm honored to speak to you, too. I want to know, I want you bless me on this. If you think it's a good idea to mortgage that I'm still on, but my ex-wife and my kids still live in the house, I no longer live there.
Starting point is 01:15:51 And this would be as a surprise. Wow. That's an unusual thing to do. Would you agree? Not many people call me up and want to bless the ex-wife. She's an awesome woman, and she's the mother of my kids. Wow. That's, I really want a slow clap right now.
Starting point is 01:16:14 Like, I'm not going to lie. Well, I want to give you there first. I know it's a great, I think there's a great idea, but also like, Joe, you got to do this. You've got to deliver on this. you can't just dream it up. Are you financially able to do this? Tell us about your money. I think in a poll in about $200K.
Starting point is 01:16:34 I work multiple jobs, so it's hard to get an exact figure. But I am starting to get on the Ramsey plan, paying off my debt, piling up a big, trying to pile up an emergency fund, and then I'll be the last part of that will be saving up a Splush fund to do this transaction. Okay, and what's out on the home? It's $77,000.
Starting point is 01:17:00 I believe by the time next year when it paid off, it'll be around 65. Okay. And how much debt? So let's calculate your journey. So you've still got debt to pay off on your own. How much do you still have to go? About $20,000, but I will be done with that in about two months.
Starting point is 01:17:19 Okay. And then how long will it take you to save up three to six months of expenses? I am shooting for an arbitrary number that should do it around 60K. Okay. And that I think will take around 7 or 8. Okay. Okay. And how old are you?
Starting point is 01:17:38 43. And how much do you have in retirement today? I have over 500,000. I have a network about 1.2 million. Okay. And so 500,000 in retirement, where's the other million? While I have, I'm sorry, I should cut that down to about 9.50 because of some of that is the value of the house. I have to split it when doing that.
Starting point is 01:18:05 I also have my own Ross. I have kids for a 5-29 plan and have some other investments baked in there too. Do you have root listing? Tell me about the other investments. Oh, it's, well, I mean, that's like, sorry, I think of investments, I've run around 800,000. A lot of that is money devoted to my kids. I also have about 30,000, and it's just a. You have 800,000 devoted to your kids?
Starting point is 01:18:42 No, no, no, no, total investments. Okay, investments in what? Oh, 529 plans, like, for the market. I have a 200. No, you don't have, you don't have 800,000. in 529 plans. That's not true. No, no, no. No. I'm talking about my net worth. I know. I'm trying to understand how your met worth is broken down.
Starting point is 01:19:04 So the total in 529s, the total dollar amount is how much? 2.10. 210. How old are your children? 14 and 11. Okay. And how much is in your 401k and Roth IRAs? A total of that is $500,000. Okay, so that's $7.10. And then what other investments do you have?
Starting point is 01:19:33 I have HSA. I have around 30. Do you have any non-retirement brokerage accounts or anything like that? Around $3,000. Yes. Okay. All right. All right.
Starting point is 01:19:54 Keep in mind, I'm just starting on this journey. Yeah, when were you divorced? 20, 23. I'm sorry? 20, 23. Oh, three years ago? Yes. Okay.
Starting point is 01:20:10 All right. Okay, so back to your question then. Jade's right. We want you out of debt, an emergency fund in place, and putting 15% of your income away for retirement. Beyond that, if you want to do a generosity move, you would pay cash for the generosity move. which is going to be around $65 or $70,000 in this case.
Starting point is 01:20:29 And then the question is, should you do that generosity move of paying off your ex-wife's house that has your name on the mortgage? One benefit of that is you no longer have that liability of that mortgage. If she pays it slow, it doesn't screw you up. If she doesn't pay it at all, it doesn't screw you up. Probably wouldn't anyway, because the house is probably worth a lot more than $65,000. Okay. What I want you to visit is this.
Starting point is 01:20:53 before you write that check, because you're thinking about the kids and you're thinking about the guilt from the divorce and some of these other things, I want you to visit. How old are you today? 43. Okay. Let's say it takes you two and a half or three years to get there, so you're 46 years old, and you're sitting there with that money in the bank ready to write this check and pay off her house, okay? That's about what we're talking about, I think, if I understood all these numbers right. All right. And I want you to ask yourself, I'm 46.
Starting point is 01:21:23 At that point, I will have been divorced for many, many years. The kids will just be at home a few years more. So you're not really doing it for the kids because they're going to be gone from that house shortly at that point. They're already teenagers. They're going to age out of that house. All right. And so I want you to ask yourself, when I'm 56, and I'm dating someone and she says you paid off your ex's house?
Starting point is 01:21:57 How's that going to feel? She actually approves of it. She listens to this show. Oh, you're already dating someone. Yes, she's awesome. I think... She also read Jade's book, too. She loves Jade.
Starting point is 01:22:12 I think that... I think what you really want here is the option. and I like that you're working towards it and I think that you have the option that in two years if this suddenly doesn't make sense you don't have to do it and so in the meantime
Starting point is 01:22:26 I would keep this aspiration to yourself I wouldn't go telling the ex-wife I wouldn't go telling the kids I wouldn't be talking about this as though it's something that you're definitely going to do because to Dave's point a lot can change in two years and you might change your mind
Starting point is 01:22:39 but I think it's awesome that you're thinking of it let's pretend the lady you're married that you're dating your one y'all want to get married and buy a house and you say wait I have to buy my ex-wife's house first. I have to pay off her house. I get it. Yeah. That's going to feel weird. So I'm not saying it's a dumb idea. I'm not saying you're not going to do it. It's unusual enough. And I think it sounds like you're thinking about this only in the moment. And you haven't
Starting point is 01:23:05 visited the 10 year from now version of yourself and ask that version of yourself, is this really something I should be doing? I wonder if there's, and we didn't ask him, but I almost think of it almost like a bankruptcy. If you feel like you owed someone something and it was absolved. It got absolved and it was fair in the divorce, but you still feel like there's something that you owe. I wonder if there's something there that he just feels like he needs to. Just be real careful with those kind of motivations because they don't age well.
Starting point is 01:23:40 That's what I'm talking about. So, you know, especially when if it means you can't. do something else that is in the present because this money is being written into the past. It's not being written into the future. It's not being written into the present. It's just money going to the past, which is not the end of the world. It's not the end of the world. You can do that. It's your money. You have that right. It's not immoral. It's not a horrible thing. It doesn't make you a saint. It doesn't make you a sinner. It doesn't make you any of that. It's just a guy that felt like that's something he wanted to do. And it's his money. So if that's what you want to do with
Starting point is 01:24:18 it, that's fine. And I can't say I would, I'm not going to tell you I don't recommend it. I'm not going to tell you I do recommend it. Yeah. I want you to get in financial shape to do it. And I want you to think about what this means that you can't do and what this is going to sound like in your head a decade later. And if it still sounds good and you still think you want to do it, Then fine. Write a check. Welcome back to the Ramsey Show in the Fair Winds Credit Union Studio. I'm Dave Ramsey, your host. Thank you for joining us.
Starting point is 01:25:18 Open phones at AAA 825-5-225. Jade Washaw, Ramsey Personality, is my co-host today. John is in Raleigh, North Carolina. Hi, John, how are you? I'm doing well. How about you, Dad? Better than I deserve. What's up?
Starting point is 01:25:34 Yeah, so just a little bit about myself. I'm a financial advisor. in large part because of listening to your show for years and seeing how you all have helped people with their money and wanting to be able to do the same. More recently, also I've stepped into a leadership position with my church as an elder. And what I've noticed is I've become more educated and learned a lot more about, you know, different financial products and solutions is, you know, I've developed opinions on and, of course, follow you and your opinions on the whole life insurance. And so one thing I've realized in the past couple years is we have a member of our church that is another financial advisor for more of an insurance-based firm. And I've noticed that he started working with more and more couples at our church specifically. What I assume is around whole life insurance policies and more recently confirmed that when one of my closer brothers in Christ told me that he had started working with him.
Starting point is 01:26:30 And when I talked to him about what he had bought from him and invested in, one of things was a whole life policy. And so I've spent some time educating him on, hey, why I feel like it may not be the best solution for them. And, you know, the young couple helping accomplish their goals and really wanting to better understand and see your all thoughts on how can I address this with the other leaders of the church, maybe for those that don't fully know how this product may not be beneficial for them. and how do I potentially confront this member of our church who I'm not sure. I do believe that he could be doing what he believes is best for the people he's connecting with. Wow. Okay, there's two separate issues here for me.
Starting point is 01:27:21 All right. Issue number one is the guy simply is in a business that you disagree with, and he's doing business with some members of the church. Okay. That's right. And you're not going to be able to keep that. That's going to happen all your life, okay? Because there's going to be a banker in there and people go to open a visa card at that bank.
Starting point is 01:27:49 And or worse yet, there's a payday lender that goes to church there. Or a car dealer who leases people cars that goes to church there. and they may be elders on the board with you. That wouldn't be unusual for bankers and car dealers and insurance agents to be right there on the board with you. Or right there on the deacon board or the elder counselor, whatever it is in your situation, you name it, governance-wise. So they simply are in a business doing things that they will give them the benefit of the doubt that they love Jesus and that they think that what you said, that they think what they're doing is good. So I long ago, 30 some odd years ago made the decision on those folks, I don't do anything. Okay?
Starting point is 01:28:37 It's just my job to educate and my job to help the ones I'm supposed to help, but it's not my job to be the police officer of what I deem to be a good product for the entire church. And so, and what happened was a guy who's a strong believer and an elder in another church that owns a low. car dealership, call me when I first started the radio show almost 40 years ago, and I was tearing his head off. I wasn't by naming him, but I was just saying car leases a rip-off. You're screwing people with a car lease, and I'm on the radio saying this, and he's leasing cars every day at the Lincoln Mercury dealer, right? And so he calls me and he wants to sit down as two brothers in Christ and resolve this. Well, we weren't going to, it was a dumb thing to do. I did sit down, and I don't take those meetings anymore because at the end of the meeting,
Starting point is 01:29:24 he's still selling cars on leases and I still think they suck. And we both had to have agreed that both of us are probably going to be in heaven. And so, you know, we just had to go, that's the way it is. Bygones be bygones. And so I wasn't going to change him and you're probably not going to change this guy. And you're probably not going to keep him from doing business with somebody in the church. Now, that's bucket number one. Bucket number two is if you feel like he's going to church,
Starting point is 01:29:54 and using his church membership as a prospecting tool, then he's in there. He's a wolf in the middle of the sheep pen then. And I don't care what he's, I don't care what he's selling then. I don't care if he's freaking selling aluminum siding. You know, that stops. That's church discipline.
Starting point is 01:30:19 if his reason for being there is not, it has nothing to do with church, and he's just looking at this congregation as a feeding pin, if that's how it's actually going down, then that stops. Yeah. And I'll tell you one thing, one time I did do that, I got church leadership involved, was, as you might imagine, a very enthusiastic guy in a multi-level thing. wanted everybody in the church to join his multi-level thing because Jesus had told him. Oh, boy. You know, well, I kind of stood in there and I went, no, you know, you're here for the wrong reasons and you either need to cease and desist, you're prospecting the congregation or you need to leave.
Starting point is 01:31:09 And we did get agreement within church leadership on that because the guy's motives were not pure. He was there to do business. He was not there to worship Jesus and to be of service to a few members of the congregation. But if, John, if you, as a valid financial planner with ideas that I agree with are in there, and your reason for being there is you're just looking across the pew every week trying to figure out who you can prospect, I'm going to call you out on that. Absolutely.
Starting point is 01:31:42 Okay. So if he's in that bucket, I'm shutting him down. and if he's just in the bucket of I disagree with him, I'm not going to say a thing. Yeah. I mean, you've been in church leadership. I mean, yeah, I think there's a community aspect of church where it can be an advantage. You know, you can find a lawyer. You can find somebody to work on your car.
Starting point is 01:32:04 You can find somebody to help with this and that, right? Yeah, but that's different than prospecting. Yeah. And unfortunately, even in that situation, even if you're using it as community, one person has the ability to talk to another person after service and find out that they sell insurance and they can say, oh, I'm in the market for insurance and they sit down and talk and it's fine. And I agree with what you said, Dave. You can't, you're not the police of that. There's, there's plenty of people who are going to find methods of how they want to live
Starting point is 01:32:30 their life has nothing to do with what you believe when you walk into the place. Yeah, yeah. And I, you know, I sat on a church board with a whole life guy who absolutely could not stand me. Because his business was suffering greatly because of him. Yeah. Yeah. And I was real pleased that his business was suffering greatly. Yeah. You know, I think the bigger discussion here is there are things, there are products out there that we view as villains, right? Like we view car leases as villains. We view payday loans with villains. We view credit cards, all those things. But it doesn't mean that the people who haven't figured that out yet are bad people. If they're in that business, do you know what I'm saying? Yeah. There's usually some level of them that they think that they're doing somebody a service when they gave you a car loan.
Starting point is 01:33:16 They think you're doing you a service when they put you in a lease. But if you have the sense that this guy is in there, he's just got his hair clippers out and he's shearing the sheep, then, yeah, we're going to put his clippers up. I'm going to put an end of that for sure. In any business, legit or ill-legit. That's not the reason you go to church. Dave Ramsey here. For more than 30 years, I've been talking to folks on the air.
Starting point is 01:34:04 And I can tell you that most people are broke, not because they're not because they're they don't make enough money, but because they don't have a plan. You need to give every dollar you earn a job because when you do that, something changes. You stop guessing. You stop worrying. You stop stressing. Our every dollar budgeting app will show you how to find extra cash, pay off debt, and finally start winning with money. But most people won't do it. They'll keep living paycheck to paycheck. Keep hoping things will change without making a change. It's time to say enough is enough. It's time to take control of your money. It's time to start your every dollar budget for free today. Go download it in the app store or Google Play.
Starting point is 01:34:48 Well, we wish we could answer every question on here, but we just simply can't get to everybody, but we do have a solution for you. Go over to our website at ramsysolutions.com and use the Ask Ramsey tool. If you ask Ramsey, it will tell you what Ramsey thinks about this. And so everything that Jade has said on the radio or any of us have said on the podcast in the last three years is built into the data set. All of the articles and books that we've all written are built into the data set. So Ask Ramsey knows what we would say here on the air very accurately. And it's free. It's an AI tool that we have trained only on Ramsey data. It doesn't have any of the sewage from Reddit or something else tied into it or TikTok.
Starting point is 01:35:46 It's Ramsey data only. So it gives you a Ramsey only answer. If you want an answer that's not Ramsey, don't go there because it's going to be a Ramsey answer. Ask your question today for free at Ramsey Solutions.com. Ask Ramsey. James is in Charlotte, North Carolina. Hi, James. How are you?
Starting point is 01:36:06 Hey, Dave. I'm good. How are you? Better than I deserve. What's up? So a family member of mine is getting ready to sell their home in Key West. And I am wondering when is it okay to buy your second home or vacation home? When you pay cash, can you? No.
Starting point is 01:36:32 Okay, then you can't. Pretty simple. Got it. Yeah. Because a second home. is a toy. It's a luxury item. And so it's like I'm going to buy my fourth car, and there's only two of us.
Starting point is 01:36:50 It's a toy. It's a luxury item, and it's going to get used about as much as the fourth car. Okay. If I was able to make it my full-time home and rent out my home in Charlotte, what would that look like? Why don't you just sell the home in Charlotte and pay? for it. Okay.
Starting point is 01:37:13 If you want to move to Key West, you want to live in the house? I mean, it's pretty great. Okay. I love it down there. Your career is mobile? Yes. Okay. I am able to move.
Starting point is 01:37:28 Wow, that's pretty cool. Well, that's an option. I would do that. I mean, that's not a second home, though. That's a transfer of primary residence. Got it. Yeah. But second home is I want to buy a lake house.
Starting point is 01:37:40 I want to buy a beach house. I want to buy a mountain house. I want to buy a house in Mexico, whatever it is, right? That's a second home. And that's a toy, and you need to pay cash for those because you're going to be disturbed at how little you actually end up using them. Okay. And so, I mean, even if you work at using them,
Starting point is 01:38:00 you're not going to be there but six or eight weeks a year, right, on a second home. But now if you're going to live in it, that's not a second home anymore. So, yeah, sell the house in Charlotte and go buy it, maybe. That might be your best move. And I want you guys to get a second home. I'm not against second homes. But the other thing, Jay, we don't want to do is we don't want to rationalize it and say, we're going to rent it out.
Starting point is 01:38:24 And the renters, the Airbnb renters are going to pay for it for me. I feel like you're not going to show up and it be the same house. You know, I feel like you're going to have wear and tear. And you're going to be mad that when you came back, it, you know, it's not the way you left it every single time. I don't know that I'm right, but I feel like I would feel that way. Completely right. You turned your house into a hotel room. Yeah. I want it to be mine. And you know what they do in hotel rooms? They take stuff and screw it to the walls so people can't steal it. Yeah. I don't want to know that somebody else was in my shower or in my sheets.
Starting point is 01:39:02 That bothers me. That bothers me beyond belief. I just got creeped out bad. Jason is in Denver. Hey, Jason, what's up? Hi, Dave, Jade. Nice talk to you guys. You too. How can we help? Got a question for you. So, quick back story, I guess I'm 27 in your life.
Starting point is 01:39:23 We have a one-year-old daughter. Congratulations. Well, thank you. We're technically in baby steps four and five, I believe. Good. But from our families, our background, we come from the Amish men and I, college isn't really a thing. Is it still smart to do a five? 29 plan if we know chances are she won't be attending college or is there a better way to invest?
Starting point is 01:39:46 Okay. I mean, I'm vaguely familiar with Amish Mennonite thing. I wasn't aware of a prohibition against higher education. Yeah, are you saying that you're not... Go ahead. It's not like they're... Well, I mean, technically the Amish are against it. Now we're not in the Amish anymore.
Starting point is 01:40:08 So we're not against it. It's just, like, my background was I got a full-time job at 14. We were homeschooled up to eighth grade, and then went into the work. And you were doing a trade of some kind? Correct, like construction. Yeah, that's what I started doing. Okay. So you're in the construction business, all right?
Starting point is 01:40:26 And this is your one-year-old daughter? Correct. Okay, and so what do you perceive in your all situation? You're not technically Amish anymore, but the cultural, and the belief system continues to influence you, which is fair, if I understood you, right? And so what do you perceive that this lady, this young woman of 20 years old, is going to be doing? Man, it's hard to say career-wise. I mean, my guess is I technically come from a family of entrepreneurs.
Starting point is 01:40:59 It wouldn't surprise me if she joins, you know, family business here and there somewhere. But chances are if she's like my wife, I mean, her dream is kind of to be a single person. stay-at-home mom. Not really career-driven. Right. Okay. So, well, so what education gives a young lady in that situation, whatever the education is, I don't care what it is, but something beyond a homeschool, high school education, what it gives them is options. Right. And as her dad, what I want her to have is options. In other words, if she had a degree, and a two-year degree from the Associates College, local community college, and entrepreneurship.
Starting point is 01:41:46 And then she decided she wanted to be a stay-at-home full-time mom. I can make the case that she's better at being a stay-at-home mom because of that education. Could you? Yeah, I can see that. She's raising the next generation of entrepreneurs, and she actually knows something about it. Okay. And so education, you know, again, but she also has the option.
Starting point is 01:42:08 of joining her husband's business and helping him run it because she knows something about accounting. Right. So education has a value in the value, if it's usable education, I don't want her to get a degree. You've heard me. We don't want them to get degrees in left-handed puppetry. That's a waste. Well, I want a well-rounded left-handed puppetry. No, that's bull crap.
Starting point is 01:42:32 That's just you want to go to school and play beer pong. That's all that is. And that's not what we're talking about here. But if there is some kind of, let's call it continuing education after high school, trade school of some kind, a entrepreneurship program of some kind that is a formal certification program, that would add options to her life, even though there's a probability that she's going to be a full-time mom because she's been taught to enjoy that and devalue that. I don't care. I mean, I'm fine if she does that. My wife's been a full-time mom for 40 years, and we're not Amish. So, you know, I mean, I place a value on that.
Starting point is 01:43:19 So, but I would wager that her having a four-year degree has influenced the confidence and poise of the daughters and son that she raised, my wife. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Okay. And she's never actually used her four-year degree in the marketplace. So, you know, but, but. Yeah, that's a good way to look at it. So anyway, that's a thing to think about.
Starting point is 01:43:45 So I would be setting some aside. Yeah, I wouldn't. To continue education. Yeah, I wouldn't overfund a 529. No. I wouldn't go ham on that. I wouldn't go 200K in it. No.
Starting point is 01:43:56 And you don't even have to do 529. You can just have a mutual fund in the kids name. Absolutely. You can just do that. This is for you, this is for you to continue your education. because more knowledge adds to the quality of your life, usable knowledge. And honey, we want you to do that because it gives you confidence, it gives you dignity, it gives you poise as a young woman, particularly as a young woman, young man too,
Starting point is 01:44:21 but particularly that carries herself well, knows what the flip she's doing, right? You should not feel uncertain about investing, and you don't have to. That's why we created investing essentials. a two-night virtual event where George Camel and I walk you through my playbook for investing and wealth planning. We'll simplify everything from 401Ks and mutual funds to passing on wealth so you can invest with confidence. Tickets start at $199. Get yours today at ramsysolutions.com slash events or click the link in the show notes. Thanks for joining us America. Open phones at AAA 8255-2-2-25. Leslie is in Auburn. Hi, Leslie. Welcome to the Ramsey Show.
Starting point is 01:46:11 Hi, Dave and Dave. Thank you so much for your time today. Sure. So, yeah, I have a boyfriend. He's on disability. He served as a Marine and has PTSD, which really prevents him from going out and getting a traditional job. I have encouraged him to develop some flexible side businesses related to skills that he's expressed interested in, interest in, such as landscaping or woodworking, but he doesn't really seem to show much initiative. And I'm wondering how do I approach this topic with him, since we both agreed that if we were to get married,
Starting point is 01:46:47 that we want a more traditional setup where I can stay home at least part-time and homeschool the kids. So you know he's got PTSD. Is he also depressed? Like, is he feeling like he doesn't have purpose in the world? because that's what I'm hearing, you describe. Right. It's on and off. He does have a bit of a kind of pre-time addiction right now.
Starting point is 01:47:11 He's kind of always watching TV or gaming, and I think that's just taking up all his time. But he does have, the PTSD is better now, but he does struggle on and off with depression. And he's working, is he working with a counselor on that? Not at the moment. So why would it get better? Time, you know, he said the PGSD is a lot improved. No, it's not. Okay.
Starting point is 01:47:41 Yeah. He's hiding in games. True. They're all shooter games. And he's depressed because he doesn't want to go out in the world. He doesn't have any hope. And so he doesn't want to go, his ambition's gone. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:47:57 I don't think there's anything you're going to be able to say in one sitting to convince him of that. Yeah. Okay. He is not a, if he is not progressing in his healing and doing the work to progress in his healing, he's not going to have any change. And you don't want to be connected to the guy that you're connected to right now, 10 years from now. Right. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:48:29 If he doesn't, if he's not getting better, then then you have a dream of the way things are going to look, but they're not going to look that way unless he heals considerably from where he is right now. Is that fair? Yes, I think so. He also had a really hard childhood, so I think there's a lot of healing, but he's kind of lost faith in counseling. There's a lot of reasons we could be here. But the reasons are all in the rear-view mirror, and the question I've got is hope about the future. And hope about the future means, okay, I'm dating a person that's bipolar.
Starting point is 01:49:02 I'm dating a person that won't take their meds and won't go to counseling. Well, they're not going to get better. I'm dating someone who has a gambling problem, and they just won't do anything about it. They're not going to gamblers anonymous. They're not sitting down with a therapist. They haven't cut off draft kings yet. And so, you know, they're going to continue to have a gambling problem. But you have this idea that they're going to be something they're not.
Starting point is 01:49:29 And it's one. Wonderful that you have that hope for him. I actually have that hope for him, and I don't even know him as an American that he served in the military on my behalf. I have a hope for him. I want him to heal. I want him to get his childhood and the horrible things that happened in the military in his rearview mirror and move forward with a healthy life. And I know many, many men and women who have, but they don't sit in the basement playing games all day. Right. Right. Yeah. So in other words, I might reframe this. Can I be your old uncle, ugly Uncle Dave for a minute? Yes, please. If he's not going to get better, don't keep dating him. Right. For your sake. For your sake. Don't believe a, don't believe mythology about what you wish. Actually observable things that he is doing, actual behaviors that he is doing that are moving forward for him. becoming the man that God designed him to be. But if he's not going to engage in those movable observable patterns, then this is mythology that's in your head.
Starting point is 01:50:49 Don't mess yourself up on that, kiddo. So he needs to be moving back to earn the right to date my niece, the princess Leslie. this guy has to earn the right by working on his healing. That's right. And you need to have some very clear milestones in your mind of what that looks like so that if the box is checked green, you can go great. He's doing that. And if the box is checked red, you can follow that down the line and go,
Starting point is 01:51:20 okay, now it's time for me to move on. Exactly. Exactly. That's what I would do. Yeah. But you can't take your ambition and inject it into someone else's veins. No, you can't. You can't take your hope and inject it into someone else's veins.
Starting point is 01:51:38 No, you cannot. You can lay out a plan and say, if we did these things, here's what would happen, and give someone a reason to have hope. Yes. But you can't make them accept it. No, you can't. Horses don't drink just because you let them to water. Shue. Oh, man.
Starting point is 01:51:56 That's hard one. That is tough, yeah. Emily's in Dallas. Hi, Emily. How are you? Hi, I'm good. How are y'all? Better than I does.
Starting point is 01:52:03 serve. What's up? Okay, so my husband and I are in baby step number two. We have three kids and one on the way. And I want to start planning to be able to stay home eventually with my kids and we've got to get out of debt first. Okay. So my question is, should we pay, should we sell our home, our current home that we have quite a bit of equity in, use that to pay off most, if not all the debt, downsize as a family of six and live in a smaller home first. a few years while we get that debt paid off. Wow, you're really willing to embrace some discomfort here. How much debt are you trying to pay off? I believe it totaled about 84 to 86,000. Oh, no, what? All right, we have two credit cards and a line of credit that's about 12.
Starting point is 01:52:53 My student loan is 13. My husband's grad school loan is 25. We have an auto loan that's 16,000 And before you told me, to sell the car, the car's only worth $8,700. We consolidated debt stupidly a few years ago, and so the loan is more than the car's worth. And then we have a home improvement loan that's tied to the mortgage. It's $20,000, and then our mortgage is $212 with a lovely 3% interest rate. And what is the home worth? I think if we sold it, we could maybe make $340 to $350,000, we have not gotten serious comps on it yet. but just in my research, that's what...
Starting point is 01:53:35 And what's your household income? We bring home about 95 to 10 per month, sometimes a little bit more. I'm in sales, so I occasionally have a bonus. So you bring home $9,500 a month? Yes, my husband and I. Got it. Okay, so about $150K a year. Yes.
Starting point is 01:53:57 What portion of that is from you and what portion is from him? Oh, gosh. I think his after taxes and everything on our budget, it's 4,731. Okay. And mine is the rest. Okay. So we've got to get this to the point where you can live on $4,700 a month, assuming nothing changes in his income. Yes.
Starting point is 01:54:17 And he is trying to up his income. He's a teacher and a coach looking into some principalships, things like that. But right now that's what it's happening. Do you like your house? I do. We've done a lot of work to it. It's not our forever house, but it fits us well right now. What do you pay for it every month? What's the mortgage? Our mortgage is 1,947.
Starting point is 01:54:38 Oh, that's pretty good. I don't see how today selling the house is the key to this, because I think I heard you say you owe 312 and it's worth 340. No, 340 and they owe 212. 212, okay. You got 100,000. It clears up their debt. Okay. They'll be 100% debt free if they sold it. Yeah, I might sell it and rent for a couple of years and save up my downbubes. payment for the next house. But the next house has to be purchased in such a way that it allows you to quit. That's the trick. But yeah, if you want to be dead free quick, that's one way to do it. I would not sell it and buy again. All right, let's cut to the chase. It's easy to get discouraged about crazy house prices and interest rates. But when you have the right real estate agent to help
Starting point is 01:55:41 you buy and sell the right way, you'll have confidence to make smart decisions. Ramsey trusted agents aren't just experts who guide you through buying or selling. They're people you can trust to have your back from the first call to closing day. Find a Ramsey trusted agent near you at Ramsey Solutions.com slash agent. That's ramsysolutions.com slash a... Proverbs 3.3 is our scripture of the day. Let love and faithfulness never leave you. Bind them around your neck, write them on the tablet of your heart,
Starting point is 01:56:31 then you will win favor and a good name in the sight of God and man. Conrad Hilton said success seems to be connected with action. Successful men keep moving. They make mistakes, but they don't quit. Almost what we were talking about with Leslie a minute ago. There's action involved. Martha is in Nashville. Hi, Martha, how are you?
Starting point is 01:56:55 Better than I deserve. How can I help? Yes, I'm calling because about nine months. ago, well, actually I would say eight months ago, me and my husband decided to pull our kids out of public school and homeschooled them for a bunch of different reasons. And we have done that. And now I'm actually eager to go back to work for a bunch of other reasons. As I'm just calling to see if it is the best choice in that to me to put my kids back in public school and go back to work full time. What changed? Well, about a year ago, or actually right before we started homeschooling our kids, we were in marriage counseling for about almost a year at that point.
Starting point is 01:57:45 And the very last session that we had had with our marriage counselor, he had recommended to me that I separate from my husband due to some verbal abuse and emotional abuse that was good. going on that, in all honesty, I'm not really for sure if I would consider verbal abuse or emotional abuse, but he had picked up on a few things that we have talked about. And so I let it go and we said that we wanted to take a break. And counseling also got very expensive for us. Well, about a couple of months later, or a month later, actually, something changed where I just felt in me that we needed to homeschool and I brought it up to my husband and we proceeded forward. Well, the last eight months...
Starting point is 01:58:29 I'm sorry, what does that have to do with the whole marriage counseling thing? I really don't know. I don't either. It's very confusing to me as well. But I guess I had just ignored anything the counselor had said, and I had proceeded just to move on with my life as if he had never went to marriage counseling ever. So you approached your husband and said, let's do homeschooling. You started doing homeschooling. It's been eight months, and now you want to go back to work.
Starting point is 01:58:58 What has changed? We're not on the same page financially. I got brought up in marriage counting as well, and I ignored it then. Understood. And so homeschooling and honesty has brought out a lot of things that I guess I was blind to before or I had ignored. But being home as much as I have been and seeing the chaos that has run amok in my house where the discipline is not there, the interest, and the baby steps is not there,
Starting point is 01:59:28 the interest in about anything in our marriage is not there. And I guess I needed homeschool to at least show me that. Understood. So you're seeing the money is a mess, everything's a mess. I got a feeling you want to get a job so you can leave. I don't necessarily want to leave, but I do want to get out of the house. And I didn't realize how much I was going to miss working until I stopped working. and since we are not on the same page financially.
Starting point is 01:59:57 I don't know how you getting a job is going to fix this entire soup that you have explained. I don't believe that is going to fix it. You're in the middle of a soup being stirred around. And you getting a job versus homeschooling is just one item in the recipe. And you keep jumping from one thing to another thinking that have nothing to do, with your marriage problems thinking it's going to fix your marriage problem and it never does because you refuse to address the marriage problem. See, I don't think I'm trying to avoid addressing the marriage problem.
Starting point is 02:00:34 Yeah, you both quit and then you quit work to come home with the kids that has nothing that's not connected at all to your marriage problem. If you tell me... It just seems random and impulsive. If you tell me you went and saw a marriage counselor because you needed a professional to step in And then the professional has said, you've got a problem here, you've got a problem here, and a problem here. But you've said, I've ignored what he said and you've done your own thing. Then I think that's where the issue is.
Starting point is 02:01:01 You've got to listen to the professional. 99% of what will be fixed in your home is going to be fixed when you guys get your marital issues aligned and spend your time on that. I would spend all of my energy on that. If you want to go back to work while you're doing that, that's fine. or if you're going back to work and in your mind you're going, I need some money because I need to hire an attorney and this is over, then that's a decision. That's a logical decision. I'm not sure it's a good one, but it's a logical one at least. But it's just, I'm going to come home and then I'm going to go back to work and then I'm going to come home.
Starting point is 02:01:35 And meanwhile, everything's burning down around me. And I'm ignoring that. Yeah. And that's not okay. It's not going to help you. So, yeah, go on back to work. That's fine. I don't care.
Starting point is 02:01:46 It doesn't matter. But you're still going to have hell on earth. until you deal with this. That's not going away until you deal with it. So you've, my, my suggestion is you use some of your new income to pay another marriage counselor, a different one, and the two of you lean into that. And if you're not going to lean into that and heal this thing, then call it. If you're not going to fix it, call it. Because your children are suffering in the middle of this cesspool right now that you call a relationship. It's awful. Bill is in Raleigh, North Carolina. Bill, how are you?
Starting point is 02:02:20 Howdy, how's it going? Doing well. Good. How can we help? So my grandma really wants her childhood home to stay in the family, and my wife and I were thinking about buying it from her. And so we've actually been renting it from her to kind of test drive it and see if we like it. And I pitched to her last weekend the idea of doing a rent-to-own situation rather than going through the traditional bank because I've never had a loan in my whole life, and I don't plan to get any debt ever, and she's on board with it.
Starting point is 02:02:50 So I just want to know where from here we should go to get, like, a lawyer involved to make this official. I would not do a rent-to-own, but I see what you're after. I'll give you a different structure, okay? Okay. What's the house worth, and what's she going to sell it to you for? It's worth about 130, and I think she's going to sell it to us for about 100. Okay, and how old are you, too? We are in our early 20s. I'm 23.
Starting point is 02:03:17 And what do y'all make? I make around $62,000, and my wife is a stay-at-home mom. Okay. All right. Well, a couple things need to be addressed. How old is Granny? She is in her late 70s, and we have talked about the situation in which she passes away. She's, you know, that's been in the conversation. Yeah, if she passes away, you've got to have legal documentation that protects you.
Starting point is 02:03:43 Exactly. Exactly. And so what I would. What I would do if I were her and I wanted you to have this house is I would sell it to you for $100,000, put it in your name. Okay. And I would carry back the note. And when I die, the note is forgiven. Okay.
Starting point is 02:04:09 That's what I would do if I were her and I wanted you to have this house. Okay. Right. Now, the downside of that is, is your parent and siblings, your aunts and uncles might feel cheated out of $100,000. Right. It is an older home, actually, and my wife and I have been putting out a lot of work. You don't need to put work in somebody else's house. Stop that.
Starting point is 02:04:40 You're not on this house. Do not put any work into someone else's house. Okay. Don't do that. That's going to end up in disappointment and anger later. Noted. Okay. She dies.
Starting point is 02:04:55 You got nothing written down if she dies tomorrow. All the work that you put in is going to be taken by your aunts and uncles, and they're going to sell that house, and they're going to make money on it on your work. Do not do this anymore. Until this house is in your name, stop working on it. Well, she's paying me for the labor fees. It evens out. I feel like. But I understand what you're saying. Okay. But you've got your heart and soul going into this and you're going to get your heart broken
Starting point is 02:05:22 if you guys don't get this written down and quit acting like it's all going to work out. So get it written down, whatever it is. Go to a real estate attorney and come up with a structure of some kind in writing that protects you in the event of her death. And then lastly, I'm going to go ahead and disappoint grandmother. There's zero percent chance you're going to be living in this house when you're 70. Zero. Keep that in mind. That puts this hour of the Ramsey show in the books. We'll be back with you before.
Starting point is 02:05:51 You know it. In the meantime, remember, there's ultimately only one way to financial peace, and that's to walk daily with the Prince of Peace, Christ Jesus.

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