The Ramsey Show - Debt Is the Enemy of Your Freedom
Episode Date: September 17, 2025🤔 Think you’re good with money? Take our Money in America quiz! Dave Ramsey and George Kamel answer your questions and discuss: "My husban...d and I disagree on how to pay off our car" "How do I trust that my boyfriend will stay out of debt once we’re married?" "How do I wisely use a $350k settlement?" "My mother-in-law was scammed out of $150k" "Should I pay my mom's Parent PLUS loan now that my mom is filing for bankruptcy?" "How do I get out of over $825K in real estate debt?" "Should we sell our house that is financially crushing us?" "How do I pay off credit card debt from a stock investing training?" "How can I get my husband to work with me as a team on our debt?" "I borrowed money from a family member then I found out he had stolen it. What should I do?" "My girlfriend isn't as motivated as I am. Should I stay in the relationship?" Next Steps: ✔️ Help us make the show better. Please take this short survey. 📞 Have a question for the show? Call 888-825-5225 weekdays from 2–5 p.m. ET or send us an email. 📱 Get episodes early in the free Ramsey Network app! 📈 Are you on track with the Baby Steps? Get a free personalized plan. 🛡️ Get trusted insurance coverage that fits your budget. 🎟️ Two Weekends. One Life-Changing Experience. Get away with your spouse in Nashville. 💵 Start your free budget today. Download the EveryDollar app! Connect With Our Sponsors: Stop paying more and start shopping smarter at ALDI. Get 10% off your first month of BetterHelp. Go to Boost Mobile to switch today! Learn more about Christian Healthcare Ministries. Get started today with Churchill Mortgage. Get 20% off when you join DeleteMe. Go to FAIRWINDS Credit Union for an exclusive account bundle! Find top health insurance plans at Health Trust Financial. Use code RAMSEY to save 20% at Mama Bear Legal Forms. Visit NetSuite today to learn more. For more information, go to SimpliSafe. Use promo code RAMSEY for 18% off at The Nokbox. Get started with YRefy or call 844-2-RAMSEY. Visit Zander Insurance for your free instant quote today! Explore more from Ramsey Network: 💸 The Ramsey Show Highlights 🧠 The Dr. John Delony Show 🍸 Smart Money Happy Hour 💡 The Rachel Cruze Show 💰 George Kamel 🪑 Front Row Seat with Ken Coleman 📈 EntreLeadership Ramsey Solutions is a paid, non-client promoter of SmartVestor Pros. Ramsey Solutions Privacy Policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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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 ramsie network and the fair wins credit union studio
this is the ramsie show george camel ramsay personality host of the george camel hit
on YouTube and the Ramsey Networks. He's my co-host today, number one best-selling author.
And we're happy to have the leadership team from Fairwinds Credit Union here with us today at Ramsey headquarters.
Welcome you guys. If you haven't heard, Fairwins is our new studio sponsor. We've had a relationship with them for a little over a year.
And they've done a lot of wonderful things for you folks out there that have contacted them.
And they've even developed products just for you to get help. And as you guys know, I'm not a fan of.
Actually, I detest large banks.
So stuff like Bank of America, why would you do business with them if you don't have brain damage?
So are people like fifth third?
And I can go on from there and just name off all of my anti-friends, but I won't.
So instead, we tell folks to go to small town, local banks, and to credit unions.
And we always have for 30 some odd years on this show.
And because you get treated like a human being there, not a number.
and you actually find competent people there who care.
That's an unusual thing, too, in the banking world.
And so that's why we're so excited to have Fair Winds on
as our studio sponsor and a partner for Ramsey.
And they are doing some really cool stuff.
You need to check them out.
They've got a, they created the smart bundle for you, Ramsey fans out there.
It includes a no-fee checking account, a high-yield savings account,
which will help you supercharged that emergency fund, right?
Actually start making some money on that thing.
Keep it under your bed on a shoebox, boys and girls.
And the Ramsey debit card just came out brand new.
I saw the first real one last night.
Yeah, I got the prototype.
I got to see it, and it's actually a real one.
It says right on the front of the debit card,
dead is normal, be weird.
Now, that's a way to pay for some stuff right there.
That'll catch some attention from the cashier at checkout.
Well, I mean, when you go to Target,
like everybody in there that's ever worked there for more than 10 minutes
is trained to try to sell you one of their target cards.
And you just have to go, no, look, right here.
Read this.
Read my card.
Read my lips, right?
And so, no, uh-uh, right here.
Debt is normal, be weird.
No, I don't do your target card, baby.
So there you go.
It's a daily reminder.
You're doing money differently, and the Ramsey debit card is officially launching September
the 17th.
So we're there, baby.
You can get it.
Check it out.
So, hey, we're so excited about this whole Fair Wins thing.
And you guys ought to really, it's, you can't imagine how much trouble we would go to around Ramsey to make sure that if we were going to have a credit union doing banking stuff on our studio name and right next to our name, how much trouble we went to to to make sure they're good people and that they're going to treat you guys right and not just run you up a bunch of debt or something.
They are great folks.
Absolutely.
And we're really, really excited about this.
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It's got the debit card.
It's got the no fee checking and a high yield savings account.
at fairwinds.org slash Ramsey.
Madison is with us in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Hey, Madison, what's up?
Hey, Dave.
I have some questions for you.
Me and my husband are not seeing eye-to-eye on our car debt,
and I need your input.
Okay.
We just had a baby, our second baby, three months ago,
and my husband pays all the bills,
and I just pay the car payment.
Well, I'm sick of paying this car payment.
We owe about $12,000 on it.
We've had it for four years, and I'm just like, hey, let's go get, you know, a cheaper car.
But he's all about reliability.
He's like, the older cars aren't as reliable.
And so I'm like, is it smart to go get like a $7,000 car paid cash for it?
Or do we, you know, keep making this car payment?
I mean, I only make like $600 a month working part time and being a stay-at-home mom.
So our car payment is $3.65 a month.
And I'm like, that is just over my, you know, that's all my money, basically.
How long have you guys been living like roommates, like the splitting up vills and Venmoing each other?
Uh, ever since, everyone took out the car.
I mean, he's always provided.
Like, he's always paid everything.
No, darling.
The car.
No, darling.
Answer George's question.
Oh, shit.
This is a pattern.
There's other things going on here.
This isn't just about the car payment.
But you're making $600 a month, and he's like, well, that's your car.
You handle the payment.
I'm not touching that.
Hand him one of those kids and say, that's your baby.
I ain't touching that one.
Oh, okay.
Yeah, this is ridiculous.
Okay, stop.
It's ridiculous.
The way y'all are doing this is what's causing the problem.
Okay.
You need to combine your finances.
All of your income is our income.
When you went down the aisle, done, dun dun, da, dun, done.
The preacher said, and now you are one.
He didn't say, and now you're a joint venture,
and I sure hope you can pay your car payment with your part-time job.
The preacher didn't say that.
Okay.
No, I did it.
And so you guys need to combine your lives because you have combined your bed and your children and everything else.
And so this idea that you have to argue over who paid for the mustard in the refrigerator is asinine for a married couple.
You guys need to sit down together, develop a game plan, work together on the whole thing.
And then, yes, you probably need to sell this stupid car.
I don't disagree.
and this idea that there's no such thing as a reliable used car is ridiculous too
because 100% of the time that you drive a new car off the lot you are now driving a used
car okay so Dave we also have a savings and we have like 10,000 in the savings account
and he's like what if we pay the car off I mean we sold 2,000 that'd be okay too
that's okay too if you want to do that and keep the car that's fine we decide that together
and then we have a monthly budget on every dollar,
and we are spending our money on our goals, dreams, and fears.
Okay.
Really, are you going to do that?
You really have to do that, hon.
I know, I want to do it.
I want to do it.
Yeah.
But thinking about the same draining.
No, just demand it.
Demand it.
Okay.
You have to do this because the people,
People who do it have a higher quality marriage relationship and the people that do it have a higher probability of becoming millionaires.
We've got data that backs us up.
You guys are not pulling together.
You're pulling at each other.
And when you start pulling together instead of at each other, you make more progress, both relationally and everything else.
When you can agree on your spending, you have communicated at a deeper level of intimacy.
When you can agree on your spending, you have agreed on your future.
You've agreed on your fears.
You've agreed on a stupid car.
We can have an argument about reliability versus the $10,000 savings account.
We can take all of those things and mix them in together.
And you're missing out on all of that because you're treating this like you're married
to your college roommate or something.
And no, no, no, no, no, no, no, please.
Hey, try it my way and push through the awkwardness for 90 days.
Do what George is suggesting and Dave is suggesting.
You'll never go back.
But if I'm completely wrong, you can go back and then you'll see a marriage counselor, which is what you'll need because you can't combine your lives.
And that's what you'll be down to.
But please try it.
Yeah, right now, I can tell they have separate accounts and he's going, well, this is my money, this is your money.
I'll cover this, you cover that, and hopefully everything will work out.
Well, she's going to be in debt and resentful for the next five years.
And who knows what he's doing with his extra money, nobody has awareness or transparency in this marriage.
There's no trust here.
Just scorekeeping
Well, the biggest thing is
There's just a tremendous amount of waste
In this disorganization in chaos
Yeah, it's like one of those finger traps
They're pulling away
And they're just stuck where they are
You've got to be moving in the same direction
That's the key
I haven't thought of those things in years
I'm always thinking about those finger traps
Where do you find that metaphor?
Chuckie cheese near you, I think
Chuckie coming from a Chuckie cheese near you
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Brittany's in Missouri.
Hey, Brittany. How are you?
Hi, I'm good. How are you?
Better than odd.
deserve. What's up? So my question is, my boyfriend and I have been together for a year and a
half. We've talked about finances upside down and sideways. But from my past experience,
a lot of relationships say they're on the same page with finances, and then once they get
married, one of them go and end up being a bigger spender than they originally led on to be.
So, wait, wait a minute, your past experience, you've been married before?
I have been, yes. And that's what happened before?
Oh, yes.
So you married a man without integrity?
Yes.
And probably that lack of integrity bled into other areas, which is actually why you got the divorce, right?
Yes, absolutely.
Okay.
Go ahead.
I'm sorry.
So I guess my question is I trust my boyfriend, but how do I, like, I don't know.
I guess I'm terrified that we will get married and then it won't be everything we talked about.
but I know it's just my past experiences that are making people that way.
Well, I mean, I think we talked about it a minute ago in a sense, and for me, looking at it,
I think it's wisdom to ask the question because you got burned before, right?
Right.
But there's not, the only way to guard against it is to marry a guy of integrity.
Yes.
Okay.
And I didn't say he was Jesus.
I didn't say he was perfect.
I just said he had integrity, meaning he is who he is, who he is.
I mean, it's kind of like saying, okay, how do I ensure that my boyfriend won't call his old
girlfriend after he's my husband?
Because he's a person of integrity, and I would kill him.
And, you know, so.
Both and.
You know, but I mean, you can't, you can't be sure of that, except as sure as you are of the man's character.
Yes.
And so you need to date long enough that you are sure of his character, and you probably sit down and talk to your counselor, your pastor, about your wounds, which are valid wounds, and go, okay, I don't want to superimpose the other jerk on the new guy. That's not fair. But I also want to be wise and not let that happen again. So how do I balance those two things? And for me, I'm just going to be talking to your new boyfriend a lot about that if I'm you.
okay we talk about it like every day yeah he's probably he's probably sick of it yeah yeah so is he in debt
now he is not a lot he's got probably 20 to 30 thousand dollars in debt um i have none but i also
make no money to be in debt so okay and is he actively trying to get out he is aggressively
spends no okay um he still spends but he is working towards it i know he's paid off probably 20 to 30
thousand in the past year. Okay. So you think in another year he could be completely debt-free?
Yes. Okay. He could be debt-free in the next six months if he wanted to be. Okay. So independent of you,
whether you were there or not, he seems to be trending in a debt-free direction. His behavior is there.
He's not just giving it mouth service. He's actually doing it. Yes. So I guess my next question is,
is it stupid to wait until he's debt-free for us to make the next step of getting engaged?
I know you always say to just put everything together and pay off the debt together.
No, I would not base my engagement on debt-free.
I would base my engagement on his pattern of behavior.
Okay.
If he's going in the right direction and you're comfortable with his character
and this is who you want to spend your life with, then spend your life with him.
I'm not, you know, if you have to put out an ultimatum, I don't know,
In order to earn my hand, you will have, that's a little much.
Yeah, I'm not doing it.
How long have you guys been together?
A year and a half.
Okay.
So this is still progressing toward an engagement, maybe in the next year?
Yeah.
We don't tell people to wait to get married or have babies based on their debt.
We do tell them to wait on those things based on how they're treating their debt.
Are you being a freaking adult and addressing the issue, or are you still being a baby child?
right and that's the deal responsible yeah he's definitely addressing yeah he's doing it he everything
you've described about the guy is solid versus the last guy and so but i you know it's fair to say
you got burned and so i've got this this spot and man you just really i'm going to be super
sensitive about this subject because i got burned before and so dude you're going to have to
be super diligent to stay on the path i'd share your your fears and feelings with him and say listen
This has happened in the past. I don't want to project this on to you, but I want you to know this is how I'm feeling. And if I'm him, now I'm going to be real sensitive and probably more aggressive to getting out of debt so that you feel like, man, he's going to provide. He's not going to be making dumb financial decisions that move us backward. Yeah, Brittany, I'll give you an example. Okay. We went broke. We had a brand new baby, a toddler, and a marriage hanging on by a thread. My wife was terrorized by our water being cut off, our lights being cut off, and me filing bankruptcy.
She was in a constant state of fear.
That was 30-plus years ago.
I still, as a loving husband to this day, need to be aware that there is a wound when it comes to security around the issue of money with Sharon Ramsey.
she's not a walking wounded warrior that's not and the wound has healed progressively over the 30 years
and my behaviors for 30 years have been different than the get rich quick moron that went broke
okay so i've earned the right of trust but i as an act of love towards her need to remember
that if i even walk near the drawer where the emergency fund is kept where the little file you know
so we can get to the emergency if i even walk near the drawer like i'm going to use that for something else
it puts her in a way different state of mind.
And I need to keep that in mind in how I interact with her.
This guy needs to keep in mind that you got burned before and you've got this sensitive place.
And it'll be less sensitive as time goes along.
But you just need to be aware of each other's wounded spots and go, why would we go there?
And so I'm just real aware, Sharon needs to be reminded that we're okay.
And you earn it every day by continuing that same pattern of integrity.
And the crazy part is it takes a long time to build a trust and you can destroy it in a second.
But even then, it's not unfair to me to, even though I've rebuilt a trust and a pattern's been for 30 plus years, right?
It's not unfair to ask me to be aware that she has that sensitive spot, right?
As a matter of fact, that's just how you live together if you're married.
And so that's fair.
It's fair, Brittany, for him to be aware of.
this. It's not an invalid feeling. It's not an invalid concern. And there's tactical things you can do
once you're married, like combining your bank accounts so you both have transparency into what's going
on financially, doing that budget together, freezing your credit so that no one can go just take out
alone willy-nilly. And if he goes and takes out debt behind your back, well, clearly there's a very
clear violation of trust here. And so that's your biggest fear. And I think there's things we can do
before then. And I guess my point is, in this case, were he to do that, knowing that she has
this sensitive spot, this is more than just a violation of trust. This is like saying,
I don't really want to be here. Yeah. You're like, you're, it's a game over. You're shooting,
you're shooting the debt. I mean, you're shooting the cow. It's over, man. It's just dumb. So you're going,
you know, knowing that she's got that spot. So it's quite the opposite way to approach it. So it's a good
question, Brittany. Thank you for bringing it up. And it's a pretty standard thing. If you have been
down the you know you're going into a second marriage relationship uh if the first one had some
kind of money problems which by the way money problems money fights number one calls a divorce
in north america so if you went through a divorce high probability that there's a money issue in
there and then you take that to the next relationship and how do i deal with that and not have
that happen again that's why i want to spend a minute on her question because it's not just for her
it's for you know out of the 40 million people out there listening it's probably a couple more just like
A lot of people have that baggage from previous relationships, whether it's family or a loved one, a marriage, and it takes a long time to heal from that and to trust again.
Yep.
And at any moment, you're going, my body's saying, this could be broken, this could be broken, alert, alert.
And so it takes time, like you said, to get away from that and to heal from that.
And hopefully over time, you guys build the right habits, you do the things we teach, combine bank accounts, get on a budget, and that'll sort of disappear into the back of your mind.
Yeah, when there's no money being spent that you're not aware of and have a great.
read to, that makes trust really easy. And that's called a budget. That's called doing your
every dollar budget together as a couple when you're married.
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Shane is in Michigan.
Hey, Shane, how are you?
Hi, how are you doing?
Better than I deserve.
What's up?
So my wife and I were in a serious accident,
and we both lost our left leg.
And things kind of just, well, it goes very fast once that happened.
So when we're in the hospital, we got out, and now we're starting to do our recovery.
And then we got lawyers involved, of course.
Luckily, I hit all the right boxes on my insurance,
so my medical for our injuries are going to be covered for the rest of our lives.
But the lawyers, I didn't know they were so fast.
Like they closed and I said, hey, in 45 days, you're going to get a settlement of roughly $350,000.
And I'm, you know, we're factory workers.
We try to do the best we can, but, you know, we're not prepared for, you know, a quarter of a million dollars.
So my question is, you know, I ask friends and stuff, but what do I do from here to set myself up for success, not right now?
even just in the future because we are going to have hurdles and we are going to have
challenges.
So that's my question is how do I not blow this big lot of money and set us up for a good
future?
Yeah.
Man, you guys have been through hell.
I'm sorry.
Yeah.
How long ago was the accident?
We're not even three months through.
We're both in rehab and doing pretty good.
And you're both lost a leg.
I'm afraid we did.
Yeah, we were going through a green light, and somebody decided to turn left, and we were doing 55, and it took both of our legs.
You're on a motorcycle?
On a motorcycle, yes, sir.
Yeah, and we're getting recovered, and all that recovery is covered.
Let me ask you this.
The first thing that comes to mind is that it doesn't sound like you're getting enough.
well that's the thing he was an underinsured motorist so we got $50,000 each from his
kind of an insult to lose in a leg but I luckily I check the full pip so all of our medical
stuff is covered from my insurance my car insurance and then it maxed out at 250,000 each
and then the lawyers take their chunk and we're left with
you know what's left
your lawyer is getting
a chunk of your insurance
um
yeah we got a lawyer to make sure
we got everything right and they take 30
percent
of whatever insurance and
basically they got nothing for you i mean they got
his underinsured motors which is basic
stuff and they got yours that you already had
there was no big negotiation here they just caused the insurance company
to write a check they should have written anyway
this is not a good deal for
you okay you're paying way too much an attorney's fees for them to do something that that you
probably could have done on your own this is not this is not an injury lawsuit here this is just
your insurance paying its claims it was a it was an insult when we got it because i mean we're
well it's not an insult it's all they had the guys broke he's not going to you can't get blood out of
a rock but yeah yeah but um it wasn't it wasn't like a personal insult but it's it's a sad
small amount. Okay. Well, at least I know how we got there. Now, back to your question.
Oh, man. Okay, 350 mathematically is not enough for you guys to not work the rest of your lives.
Correct. So you're, I mean, let's just pretend you invested it at 10% for easy numbers. That's $35,000 a year.
You're not, you know, that's not going to work out.
You know, we made about 70 when we were working, and we get 80% pay for like three years, so.
Okay, so that's going to be helpful while you rehab and retool for a new career.
We also, just before that, we need a new roof, which we couldn't really afford.
So we refinanced.
We put all of our debt into the house.
I know how you feel about that, but I was out of options.
The house would have deteriorated too much.
So we owe $150,000 and we have no other debt but utilities.
So what I would do is to try to during the time you're getting your 80% pay
to create a career for each of you where the net is that you actually end up with your new
careers making more than you used to make.
Okay, that's what we're kind of thinking.
If you get there, then you don't have need of this money for survival.
right then we can use it in the ways that you would rather use it which will be paying off the house
and investing it and that was my that was my question too like but i'm not doing that until you got
an income dude okay all right that's what i was wondering yeah so you've got to pay the house
what are you all going to do do you have any already thought about this what do you think you're
going to do i'm not sure uh you know when i so the the bummer too was that um my friend had a
trash truck driving job for me, which would have been a substantial step up. And they
match like double digit for your retirement, which we have none. And they would have been better
pay. I got my permit. And then two weeks I was going to, you know, start the classes. And
I had that job lined up. And then we got hit. And that kind of, I don't know, once I get the
prosthetic and I get better with it, maybe I could do something like that. But we're still talking
manual labor with a leg that's, you know, not great.
I don't have any idea.
I don't know how.
But wow, that's the stuff you're facing.
So you've got to solve for income.
And when you solve for income, then that frees up the money and then you can decide what to do with it.
And it's pretty basic because you don't have a lot of options.
I mean, you know, you pay off the house and I would sit down with a smart vestor pro and get this money invested.
And pretend like I don't have it, in other words.
I don't have a house payment anymore.
I don't have any debt anymore.
I'm going to live on a budget, and I'm going to create a sustainable life with my income
and never touch the rest of that money.
So you would pay off the house and then with the rest of the money.
Investing.
Yes.
And get somebody to help me because my friend was like, money market account.
No, no, your friend, don't listen to your broke friends about money.
I know.
I know.
Hey, I know.
Right away, I was like, I don't know.
I need somebody I think professional.
No.
Just go to Ramsey Solutions, Dog.
and click on SmartVestor Pro, and they can help him, George.
Yeah.
And then make sure you get an emergency fund before you invest that money, set aside six
months of expenses to cover you guys in case of emergencies before you use the rest of
that money.
But that'll set you up.
You get that foundation, right, and get the income going.
You've got a great quality of life.
The money will turn into a lot of money over time if it's invested and you keep your
hands off of it because you've created a sustainable income with your new careers.
Yeah.
So, hey, I'm going to send you a copy of Ken Coleman's book, finding the work you're wired to do.
And it'll maybe help you on this journey of figuring out what your next new normal looks like.
What a, man.
Wild, horrible thing to go through.
55 miles an hour.
With no protection there on that motorcycle.
Yeah, that's just, wow.
Man, crazy.
But here's the news on the compound growth, like you mentioned.
You leave 150 grand sitting there for a couple of days.
Decades, it turns into a couple million if you add nothing to it. And so that's the good news is that this could add a nice cushion to their nest egg. And who knows what the rest of their life looks like with expenses and medical and how this affects other areas of their life.
Exactly. Well, the great news, he's got 80% pay. That's pretty good workers' comp right there, man. Or whatever it was, he's got. I guess disability income is probably what it is. Wow. Yeah, he had checked the boxes on the insurance.
lawyer ought to be ashamed of himself taking a fee on that.
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Katie is in Louisville, Kentucky.
Hi, Katie.
How are you?
Hi, I'm great.
Long-time listener.
First-time caller.
I'm so excited.
Well, thank you.
How can we help today?
Yes.
Hi, I'm calling because I have a mother-in-law who has been scanned out of probably somewhere between $150,000 to $200,000.
She lives a quarter mile from our house in a patio home, which she purchased from the sale of her home in North Carolina.
that patio home is in my husband and I's name.
And we're wondering if she should move in with us.
Why would she do that?
Well, she no longer can pay for the mortgage out of what she is currently getting.
Oh, so she didn't pay for the home when she bought it.
She took out a mortgage when she bought it.
She took at a mortgage.
The mortgage is in our name, my husband and I.
So she didn't have enough money from the sale in North Carolina to buy the house?
No.
Well, she did.
She stockpiled the rest of it in a savings account.
And then when she had an online scammer tell her that he was going to come to the United States and marry her not once, but it happened.
Oh, the romance scam.
Yes, the romance.
I can't scam. That's exactly right. And so obviously, you know, my heart bleeds for her because she's lonely.
She lost her husband probably 11 years ago. And my husband and I, when we first got married, he said,
FYI, when my dad does, my mom's moving in with us. And I said, that's great. I love your mom. Plus, she gives me diamonds.
Okay. So if you sell the patio home and she moves in with you, then you've,
gotten your wish. What's the question? Yes, yes. So the patio home is probably
$200 and D, some odd thousand dollars. However, my husband and my mother-in-law don't want
that to happen. We are supporting my mother-in-law with not a lot, basically $50 to $100 a month
to stay in her patio home. But we can't afford that either. My husband and I are both horse
trainers. We got into a little bit of tax trouble after the sale of a horse a couple of years
ago. Now we have a great accountant on board, and I see the light at the end of the tunnel.
We are, could probably be debt-free. What is your household income?
We are averaging. I'm using the Dave Bramsey app, which I love. We're averaging about
$7,200 a month.
can afford a hundred dollars
pardon me you can afford a hundred dollars
you said you're using giving her a hundred dollars a month to stay afloat and I
can't afford that that's not true you can't afford it you have seven thousand two
hundred dollars a hundred dollars is not breaking you it's not breaking us but we
are like by the end of every month you have other issues then it's not your mother-in-law
You have $7,100 worth of other issues.
Yes, yes, we do.
We do.
And the other part is if mother-in-law can't pay the mortgage,
you're getting foreclosed on because it's in your name.
Yeah.
So that is also correct.
Yeah.
And she's paying that with her Social Security, I assume.
She is paying that with her Social Security,
and then on top of it barely has enough to pay.
for the medication that she needs.
Right.
So this is unsustainable for her to stay in this house.
Yeah.
Well, at $100 a month, it's sustainable is what she's saying.
Yeah.
They're giving her $100 a month.
That's making her budget balance.
And that's what her husband and the mother-in-law want to do.
And she wants to sell the house and have her move in for $100.
No, you don't have a math case to make this case.
If you guys as a family want to do this to take care of her and everyone involved thinks it's a great idea,
it's not a problem for me, sell the patio home.
and put the money in an investment, and you'll be fine from the equity in that thing.
But the idea that $100 a month is not sustainable when you make $7,200 is not true.
There's other things going on in your budget that may not be sustainable.
So if that's what they want to do, you can afford it.
I just, I wouldn't be my first way to go.
I mean, if she wants to live there, it doesn't want to live there.
I don't want to force her to live there.
so it's just
it sounds like she's more lonely than anything at this point
yeah but she's a quarter mile away
she's not too far
Austin's in Oklahoma hey Austin what's up
hi Dave
so about three years ago my wife
and I we bought our home
and then now my life is
looking at going and getting her
doctorate degree and so
if we were to do that we would have to move away for a little while
probably three maybe four years at the max
and so my question to you is would you suggest we sell our home and take that equity to pay off
and we're not get any student loans or would you suggest us just renting the home taking on some
loans or some debt for that student for the doctorate degree and then eventually we're back
to come back and so that's the main reason we would want to rent instead of just selling it
I don't know, what are you thought?
Why is she getting a doctor degree?
So she can be a professor.
In what?
It's like a biblical theological
studies.
And does she have a career now?
She does.
What does she make at her career?
About 40,000.
Okay.
And so she could make $100 as a seminary professor?
Yeah, probably between $80 to $100.
Yeah, that's probably about right.
I agree with you.
So that's the return on investment in the Ph.D.
And what's the Ph.D. cost?
It's about $60 to $80,000.
Okay.
So you're going to send $60,000 to get a $40,000, $40,000 raise.
That's probably okay.
I spend $60.
I wouldn't spend $80.
But, yeah.
And that's going to take how long?
I think the max is typically four years.
I think it can be done in three at some schools, depending on which one.
Is she working while she...
But also, then, she has to go somewhere where she can get that job after she completes it,
and it probably won't be your hometown.
Yeah, we do have some connections in the hometown with a couple of schools.
So there is, like, there's a chance, not super high.
But, I mean, it's not a sure thing.
So, number one, I'm not going to tell you to borrow money for student loans, period, ever, under any circumstance.
Number two, I'm not going to tell you to borrow money on student loans so that you can keep a rental property.
So that's just double down.
So, no, I'd sell the house for sure.
Okay.
Yeah, if she wants this dream and you guys are on this dream more than you want this house, then it sounds like you do.
Then the proper thing to do is use the house money to get the Ph.D.
and then use the Ph.D. to get your next house.
Okay.
Which we do have, we have savings.
But you don't have enough to do this.
You don't have enough to do this because you said you were going to take out student loans.
But they'd cover about half of it.
Yeah.
There would still be student loans.
No, don't do student loans.
Pay cash for the Ph.D. or don't do it?
What's your household income?
Um, about 180,000.
Yeah.
I mean, you could save up in a year and knock this out and cash flow it.
Here's an irony for you.
Here's an irony for you.
You can't find anywhere in the Bible that God used debt to finance his plan on the earth, not once in there.
And she's going to study biblical studies.
so no don't don't be borrowing money to do this no you know it's too much irony here to
chew on you know don't don't do it no no don't do it and don't go into debt for a phd don't go
into debt for a master's don't go into debt for a bachelor's there's lots of ways to get your
education out there today it's ridiculous to do that and and then try to keep in mind that what
you're looking for is a return on investment on this education and the lower the investment the
better the return. So get the cheaper PhD because nobody's going to give a rip where you went to school.
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Welcome back to the Ramsey Show in the Fair Winds Credit Union Studio, George Camel Ramsey
Personality, number one bestselling author and co-host of the Smart Money Happy Hour.
He's my co-host today.
The phone number here is Triple-8-8-25-5-2-2-25.
Julia's in Colorado.
Hi, Julia.
How are you?
Hi, how are you guys?
Better than we deserve.
What's up?
Well, first of all, I love you guys.
So happy to hear that.
Well, thank you.
I have been listening to you guys for, like, the last eight months, me and my husband and I,
and we've been working on getting through steps one and two.
We just had a baby not that long ago in May, and I heard just through the grapevine that my mother is going bankrupt.
I think she already filed, actually, and she has a parent plus loan from my first two years of college and has been just recently just started asking me to help pay for it, which we already agreed that I would pay for it.
that was the goal, but I had, like, no idea what we signed up for, and I don't know what it
looks like with her filing bankruptcy.
Okay.
The Parent Plus loan is not bankruptable.
It will depend on what type of bankruptcy she files as to whether it will affect the loan
at all.
Okay.
There's two types of bankruptcy that might work.
One would be Chapter 13 bankruptcy, which is a payment plan for five years.
If she puts the Parent Plus loan in the Chapter 13 bankruptcy,
which if she's doing one, she probably did,
then they're going to be paying payments inside the bankruptcy
on that loan through that five-year period of time.
Okay?
Oh, okay.
And so it's a mess.
It's a mess.
And so if she files Chapter 7 bankruptcy,
which is what most people think of when you think of bankruptcy,
which wipes the slate clean,
the Parenthood Plus loan is not bankruptable,
and it'll still be standing after the bankruptcy.
It'll wipe off her credit card debt.
It'll wipe off her credit card debt.
It'll wipe off her medical debt.
It will wipe off any unsecured debt, but it won't wipe off a student loan or an IRS debt.
So she still owes it.
But the bottom line is you morally owe it because you promised to pay it, correct?
I did.
Either way, it's not going away.
And so either way, you're going to get the opportunity to do what you said and pay the bill.
But you don't even know how much the stupid thing is.
I do, actually.
They sent me a statement last year.
Oh, okay.
And I just had trouble, like, getting in there because I thought I was co-signed on it.
You're not.
No, you're not.
Not an apparent plus.
You can't get in there, but what was the balance?
It was about $19,000.
Okay, good.
And what's your household income?
A couple hundred.
So my husband and I, we make anywhere between $40,000 to $50,000.
We're working on growing our income right now.
He just started a business, and that's gradually growing as time goes by.
And how much debt do you have other than this 19K parent plus loan?
So without that would be about 30K.
On what?
16 of it's on credit cards.
He has a credit card.
And then we have a car, which is only about 9,800 of it.
And then the rest is other student loans because I want to.
back into school thinking I can do it now that I was sober because I went to this whole
time period where I was struggling in addiction and I really got behind on finances and it's
been a long time to catch up. This is my fourth year. Good for you. What were you on? What were you
addicted to? Mainly so I started on psychedelics and then I would use weed to kind of make up for it
when I gave up the harder stuff.
And you've been driving for four years.
Good for you, kiddo.
And you've got a baby and things are turning around.
Your husband's got a new business.
Good, good.
Good for you.
I'm glad.
Yeah.
Good.
Thank you.
Are you working full-time right now?
So, yes, I am working full-time.
I'm an independent contractor in the marketing industry as a brand ambassador.
So I have busier seasons like throughout the summer and spring into fall.
And then winter is our slower season.
so we like to make up for it with Instacart, and then we also do ministry on the side,
so we have some fundraising money that's coming in, and we're starting to learn how to fundraise
a little better for that stuff.
Yeah, and he's got to get his business going, because y'all don't make any money.
No, we don't make a lot.
Yeah, well, you need to really get the career going, both the careers going, and get them going,
because basically what we're saying is you've got $30,000 for the debt plus $19 that you promised to pay of your moms.
and again, you're not legally obligated.
So what I would do is deal with what's in your house right now.
Let's get your income up and address these debts smallest to largest.
And once you're out of debt, then I would reach over and start taking care of the Parent Plus loan that you promised to.
But it's not in your name.
You are not legally liable.
You're just morally liable because you did a handshake with your mom, said I'll pay it.
Right.
And I think the problem is, like, I've, I expect.
that to her recently that we're trying to do a snowball. We're just getting our household in line
and then paying off the way you guys teach. But we don't have the best relationship. It's already
strained. Yeah. And like we don't talk. She hasn't even met her grandson yet because I don't feel
like I can and let her into my life. Yeah. Well, that's okay. I mean, you still are going to go
and pay the bill when you can pay the bill.
But you paying a bill one way or paying it,
another way, it's not going to fix your relationship with your mom.
And it's not going to fix her money problems either.
Right.
She's not paying it now.
So, I mean, if you want to start paying the minimum payment on it as a part of your plan,
pay minimum payments on everything with the little one, attack the little one,
and when it's gone, attack the next one, that's snowball process, right?
If you want to pay this and put this in the debt snowball that way,
I don't have a problem with that.
but pre-paying that loan before you take care of these other things, no, I wouldn't.
Regardless of if it upsets the person that's already upset, oh, well.
Right.
Yeah.
And what kind of business does your husband do?
So he kind of does a lot of different things related to music.
He rents equipment, and then he's a show promotion promoter, and he runs a record label.
So there's a lot of different things.
going on in that area. Which one is most lucrative? The most lucrative would probably be his show
promotion and planning. We make, we're making up to 200 a show right now. So he needs to do 10 shows a
month to make two grand? About, yeah. Is he doing that? Um, no, but we're just getting started. He just
got started with that like a couple months ago. I would make this a side hustle and he should be working
full time doing something else, even if it's retail, because you guys need consistent income
right now. We can't hope for a show and hope for a brand ambassador gig. We need stability.
Yeah, when Instagram's your fallback, it means you need new careers.
Right. So the problem is he had a manager job last October, and there was a lot of politics
with the regional manager, and just last minute lost his job when I was pregnant. And so he's been
trying to get a lot of, like, jobs that doesn't require.
like 60-70 hours as a manager and they won't hire him unless he's like full-time yeah he needs he's
got a baby he needs to be working full-time he's in crippling debt and his family needs him he should
be working 60 hours a week right now we got a mess to clean up yeah great place to go when you're
broke to work
Statistics show that
You know,
Statistics show that
that half of Americans,
don't have enough life insurance or they don't have any at all.
I don't understand this, John.
Why don't people want to take care of their family?
They think they're going to die or something?
Well, I used to be one of those guys.
I didn't even think about it.
And one of my buddies said, hey, the only reason to not have life insurance is if you hate
your wife and kids.
And I immediately went and got term life insurance.
That's a gut punch.
And you're telling me, and for decades, Dave, I've sat across people who've lost a spouse.
They've lost somebody important to them.
Me too.
They don't know what to do next.
Me too.
I mean, you're going to have a crisis here.
And, you know, you've got two options while you're sitting and talking to a young widow.
She's concerned about how she's going to invest all this money properly and not mess this up.
Or she's concerned how she's going to eat tomorrow.
That's exactly right.
These are the two options.
And take care of your dadgum family, man.
Term life insurance can replace income, pay off dads, cover funeral expenses.
So your family can actually have the opportunity to just be sad, to just miss you.
That's exactly what it's supposed to be.
It's saying, I love you to your family.
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Today's question comes from Kurt in South Carolina.
I decided to dive into real estate investing a few years ago.
I bought five single-family homes, all 100% financed for a total of $825,000 and thought,
wow, I'm a genius.
I also had 175,000 personal mortgage and 40,000 in student loans.
I had my wake-up call last week when I had to take my three-year-old with me
to post an eviction notice on a tenant's door.
I just didn't take into consideration the time and the emotional stress this leap would require,
not to mention the constant calls for repairs.
The house is cash flow and the tenants pay on time,
but at this point the return doesn't outweigh the hassle.
I bring home $150K from my day job,
and my wife, who's a stay-at-home mom, could work from home if needed.
How do I get out of this mess?
Man, this guy sounds like a young Dave Ramsey.
That's exactly, well, except I had a little better situation than he's got.
Yeah, he's 100% financed.
He's got personal student loans.
And he's going, how do I get out?
Well, the good news with the house is you can sell them.
So that's maybe one way out of this mess.
George, that was insightful.
I'm Yoda of the finance world.
That's it.
Just sell the house, dude.
I mean, why do you even need to ask the question?
And he might take a loss on some of them.
I mean, who knows what the...
Oh, well, you pay some stupid techs for doing stupid stuff.
Play stupid games get stupid prizes.
But, yeah, I mean, I've done that, right?
And you have to.
Everybody's done that.
But yeah, you just woke up and went, I just did a bunch of $825,000 worth of stupid.
The good news, I can probably get $800,000 worth of it,
and it'll only be $25,000 worth of stupid.
So, and it make $150, so I'll clean up the mess.
Yeah, the good news.
news is his day job has a great income and so maybe they went up in value enough he said a few years ago
yeah so if this is you know 2022 we've seen some decent appreciation over the last few years yeah
south carolina maybe make a little money on it even and get out whole that would be incredible
knock out your student loans in the process get you an emergency fund and restart from there and do it
the right way which is slow which is let's get rid of the personal mortgage first then save up
and pay cash for any investment property katie's in utah hi katie how are you hey dave
them better than I deserve. How are you? Just the same. What's up? So I am the mother of eight
children. We just had our eighths back in April, and I homeschool them. I stay home with them. And my husband
is a physician assistant. And a couple years ago, we brought our first home, top of the market,
top of interest rate. We were kind of lured into it by the two-one buy-down idea. And our mortgage
hit its full scope in July, and I feel like I'm going crazy.
So I'm wondering if you would advise us to actually sell our home.
How much is your house payment?
3,900.
And what's your husband's take home pay?
He makes $120,000, and he works full-time at one clinic, and he picks up a couple extra shifts
at another clinic, and he's also donating plasma every week, so we can pay for groceries.
Yeah, because your house payment is 50% of your take-home pay.
I know, I know.
And it was before the 2-1 started even.
I mean, it already was in the stupid zone.
As soon as you moved in, the 2-1 didn't even buffer that.
We were living with my parents, and I was expecting my seventh child,
and my husband was commuting an hour every day.
Yeah, but, I mean, you went from homeless in your mother's basement to $4,000 a month.
I know.
This is not like a small step.
This was a great leap.
I know.
Yes, you've got to sell your house, kid.
You bought a house you can't afford.
Unless his income is about to double, which I don't think that's in the cards.
I know.
It's not.
The thing, too, is that he loves his job so much.
And where we live is actually very, very expensive.
So even renting, like, a three-bedroom house who costs us around 3,000 a month where we live.
Well, you can't afford to live there, then.
I've been telling him this for a long time.
Back in May, when I had my four-week-old baby, I said, let's just sell our house and live in a trailer.
I'm willing to do anything, but it's hard for me to get him on board with making a name.
I'm not saying live in a trailer, but you go to extremes.
You go to extremes.
I do.
$3,000 a month rent to a trailer in one sentence.
I know.
Why don't you just go do something reasonable like $2,000 a month and live out far enough away that you can find that and let him go to work?
okay yeah and let's get rid of this problem but yeah yeah don't you know um and then let's start
talk maybe you can find something you could buy that fits in that i don't care if you own or not um
but but the house payment needs to be more like a fourth of your take home pay not half of your take
home pay especially when you have eight little birds to feed that's i can't imagine eight kids in a
trailer that's no we're not doing a trailer
And we're not going back to Mamas either.
None of that's necessary.
But, I mean, we're a fur piece from there at $4,000 a month.
Okay, that's a, this is a big, big, serious, nice house here.
So there's a lot of different things we can do.
Millie is in Washington.
Hi, Millie.
How are you?
Hi, thank you for taking my call.
Sure.
What's up?
Well, I've had to pay the stupid tags, and I did the wrong thing in the past,
and I'm trying to do the right thing now, so I'm calling you asking for advice.
My question is, should I cash out my index fund?
And if I should, should I use it to pay towards student loans or for car repairs or for both?
What's wrong with your car?
One of the problems, they're not sure they can't figure it out.
The other one is like a cooling system.
He's replacing their estimate for that is 1900.
Who's estimate?
The dealer?
No, the mechanic.
You have an independent mechanic that doesn't work at a dealership?
Correct.
Good.
Okay.
Are you, is it just you?
Are you single or you're married?
I am single with five children.
Okay.
And what's your income, ma'am?
Up until this month is about $3,000, but I am increasing my hours and I did just get a raise.
I do have some help issues from keeping me.
from working too many hours or physical labor, but for the job I have.
How old are the kiddos?
I'm working what I can.
My youngest is 12, and the oldest is 18.
She set it off the college year this week.
Is there any child support or alimony?
No.
Wow.
In lieu of alimony, when we divorced, I did get a little bit extra on the house when we sold it.
and that money's in the index fund how much is in your index fund
um 7,800 mm-hmm how much okay and how much student loan debt do you have
about 90,000 okay well number one you're out here you're out there fighting this by yourself
so you've got to get the car to where it's reliable period and more debt is not the answer
to do that so yes we have to use some of this to get the car reliable and the
the rest of it, you know, we're going to try to make sure that you continue to move up in your career and continue to raise your income because that's going to be the issue to address the $90,000.
What did you get your degree in?
I got it in marriage and family therapy.
Okay.
Undergrad or did you finish your master's?
My master's.
You're licensed?
Yes, sir.
Why are you not doing that?
I am doing that.
$3,000 a month?
Yes, because I was only working three days a week, but I'm increasing, I just increase it to four days.
And like I said, they just gave me a raise, so it will be going up.
Yeah.
So part of the issue is that I work 50 miles from home.
So it makes it a little bit of a juggle with the kids and making sure they're out the door in the morning and such.
Can you do any remotely part-time?
Not with this company.
Okay. Because, you know, if we can rearrange this situation a little bit,
a typical marriage, licensed marriage and family therapist don't make 100 plus a year.
Yes, but I only am at an associate level right now.
I'm not fully licensed.
Why?
Because I just graduated in 2023 and just got this license in 2024.
Oh, you've got to get some hours.
You've got to get some hours in to move up.
Okay.
All right.
Yeah, you're going to have, I mean,
income is going to be your overall answer,
not a $7,800 index fund.
But for now, the answer is, yes, fix the car.
But long term, the answer is let's rearrange our situation
so we can get our income up.
And I think that's going to be really, really important
in order to be able to create a sustainable situation.
This show is sponsored by BetterHelp.
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Greg is in San Diego.
Hi, Greg.
How are you?
I'm doing well.
Thank you for taking my call.
Sure.
What's up?
So after listening to your show, I learned that I acknowledge that I made an impulsive decision.
I attended a faith-based event in 2024.
And the event pretty much motivated faith believers to invest in the
real estate market and also the stock market i paid for that training i didn't have the money but
they told me that if i charge it on credit cards that i would be able to make that money up during
the zero interest period and pay off the charge and learn how to trade well that period is gone
and it didn't happen so now i'm now i'm stuck you know because now i have a 20 000 credit card
debt from that and i haven't made much money on the stock market
So now talking to my wife, I'm trying to decide, okay, do I keep trying to invest and pay
and make money so I can pay off this charge that I accepted, or should I just focus
and go back to the snowballing the credit card debt?
I'm sorry, Greg.
Yeah, you got scammed.
Yeah, after the fact that I realized it, and we were doing, we were doing the snowball effect.
We were going, we're on track.
We were about 20K away from reaching zero.
But when I saw this, I said, hey, we can do this.
And I'll all accept, you know, my leadership decision at my home.
I thought it sounded great.
But it is what it is.
So I'll own it.
You were looking for, you know, you're looking for an easy button.
Yeah.
And there's no easy button, yeah.
And this easy button is broken.
And you've discovered that now.
So I'm sorry, man.
Yeah, you just got to pay your 20 grand off.
And the last thing you do is keep investing the way they were teaching you because you're going
getting more trouble.
So we do have money on the side because I was going to invest.
So you're saying focus more off paying off the debt, about $8,000.
Yeah, you know, you're going to do what you're going to do.
But if you ask us, we're going to tell you what we would have told you before you did all this.
And that's list your debts, smallest, the largest, pay minimum payments on everything with the little one.
Take all your money that's not in retirement accounts and throw it at these debts in that order.
And let's get them cleaned up because the shortest distance between where you are and wealth is not.
an easy button stock market course it is your income and getting that back and understanding that the borrower is slave to the lender is the only way to do it there's nothing worse than a scam artist except a scam artist that wraps himself in jesus oh and charges $20,000 for this quote unquote training man that's heartbreaking Greg that just pisses me off I get so mad
it's just so wrong oh but you know when you fall for stuff like that you need to do a c s i on
your character and your soul and your spirit and say lord what is what is in me that allowed me
to believe that and um you know there's a there's some interesting
proverbs he who is impulsive exalts folly impulsive exalts folly impulsive exalts folly folly
is the verb of a fool in action.
And I have been a fool in action.
I've been impulsive plenty of times in my life.
But I exalt folly.
I lift up a fool in action when I'm impulsive.
I become a fool in action.
The other one says, Proverbs says,
the wise see trouble and seeks refuge.
The simple continues on and is punished for it.
You just keep walking right off the cliff.
Yeah, just keep moving.
And I've done that.
I've done that.
I like, I know better.
I know this is bad.
He even said it.
He's like, I know down inside of me.
This is not.
I know this.
I know this is.
And you walk right into it anyway.
That wisdom section of the brain just shuts down.
Yeah.
You go, I can get rich quick, though.
There's something about it.
And I'm simple then.
That's another word for fool, right?
And I've been that, I've been a fool in every one of these cases.
And, man, when you start studying fool in proverbs, you start seeing yourself, it's painful.
It's just like, God, I did that.
Yeah, I did that one, too.
And the number of times I've been a fool and it survived because a biblical fool is not a greeting.
It's not like, hey, fool.
No, this is like an idiot.
I mean, this is like, when I have done this, I was an idiot, you know?
It's like, yeah.
So, Greg, I can relate, man, I can relate.
I haven't done that one in a long, long time, but I did that one once myself, not 20 grand, but I mean, it's, you know, you believe that there's an easy button and they'll show you a course on how to get the easy button.
A get-rich-quick scheme is what we would call it now, looking back at it, right?
Yeah. And you go, the wise, the wise see that. They seek refuge. They see danger and they seek refuge.
The simple continues on and is punished for it.
It's a healthy skepticism with these Facebook ads, however he fell for it.
Yeah, here's a healthy skepticism on anything on social media, period. Is it even real nowadays, right? Is it AI? Yeah.
Oh, gosh. Did he really say that?
And I saw one the other day that I was promoting car loans.
Someone asked me, they said, hey, I saw a video of you and Dave promoting these car loans.
I said, nope, that was a scam from AI and the devil himself.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, if it's completely perpendicular to everything you know about us, come on.
I mean, how dumb are you to believe that?
That's not AI.
But yeah, there it is.
And it's just, golly.
But yeah, it's, we're there with you, brother, but I'm sorry you having to clean up the mess.
The good news is you probably never make that mistake again.
That's a good news.
Amy's with us.
Amy's in Chicago. How are you, Amy?
Hi. Thanks, Dave. Thanks for taking my call.
I've been listening to this show for about a year, and almost true with the last bit of our debt.
We've paid off $500,000 in medical school debt in the year.
Yes, we got radical, we sold our house, and used part of the equity to downsize and the rest to pay off the medical school debt.
Wow. So what's your household income now?
Well, my husband's a doctor, so we're doing pretty okay. We make about $25,000 a month.
Wow, good. I'm so glad. Congratulations.
Yeah, thank you. Thank you. But I'm in a weird situation with a car loan. I'm in outside sales,
and so I drive for work, and I'm putting on easily 2,000 miles on my car a month.
And I had to buy the car for the job, and now I'm underwater. So I'm underwater. So I'm underwater.
about $7,000, and I've just been told that my company is going to be going to fleet vehicles
in the next year. We have basically a year to three years to start participating in the fleet
vehicles. So they'll give me a car and they'll cover all the costs associated with it.
Love it. Yeah. That means between now and the time you get the fleet vehicle, you've got to get
this one sold and cover the $7,000, right? Yeah. When are you going to get the fleet vehicle, do you know?
it'll probably be sometime next year that they'll open it up for us to start doing that and at that point
I'll have to I'll have to have something to drive between now and then yeah just keep driving it
unless what's it worth getting paid down you got great income yeah that was my question do I keep
driving this and just pay it down until I'm no longer underwater or do I try and like sell it
get something cheap well if you pay it off you're going to get all the equity when you sell it
The difference in now in six months it doesn't matter.
Okay.
So just pay it off.
Let's just get it paid off as soon as you can.
And then you get you sitting there with a paid-for car,
it's got a lot of miles, and you sell it when you get the fleet vehicle.
I mean, you can knock it out before the end of the year, right?
I think so.
What's left on?
It's $36,000.
Yeah, you can knock it out.
Because now you've got a $400,000 income, don't you?
You make $25K a month if you throw $12.
He makes $25K.
Yeah, you make how much?
I make a 165 base.
He makes 165 base and we both make commissions.
Okay.
All right.
Wow.
Good for y'all.
So, yeah, this thing's knocked out by Christmas and you're not losing sleep over it.
And then you'll sell it when you get the fleet vehicle and whatever it's worth.
And that makes you debt free, right?
Yeah.
Woo!
Yeah, let's knock it out and then and be done with it.
Man, wow.
Good for you.
Good for you.
We're going to be able to be.
Casey's in Ohio.
Casey's in Ohio. Hi, Casey. How are you?
Hi, I'm doing great. Thank you for taking my call.
Sure. What's up?
So me and my husband are on baby step two.
I have a debt about $6,000, and including his, it will be a total of $78,000.
$4190.168, which I find very appalling, and we are not.
Stop a second.
I didn't understand what you said.
You said he had $78,000 on what?
No.
So I owe $6,000, and adding my husband's debt, it's going to total up to $78,000.
Okay, so your husband has $72,000 in debt, and you have $6,000.
Yes.
And his $72,000 is on what?
It's mainly on student loans.
And what's your $6,000?
It's medical bill and credit card.
I have $4,000 in medical bill.
How long have you all been married?
a year but we've been together for six years okay and what's your household income
um what I make as a nurse is about 90,000 and my husband has his own insurance
company which is not doing well and he makes about 30 um he did get a new job right
now which uh which he gets he brings him um 3,000 to 4,000 now month
Our main issue is mainly him disagreeing on me giving tights every month.
And I do not like the fact that he has leased a Tesla and sold our car, which we only had two years and we could have paid it off.
So I'm not sure how we can work together to tackle this debt.
When y'all got married, did you not talk about?
like doing life together?
I didn't think.
So before getting married, I was thinking about like, oh, my money's, my money and your money
is yours, but I am watching your show.
I just, I've come up on your show probably like a couple of months ago and that's
when I realized that, um, yeah.
So you want to get out of debt and he doesn't really care?
What's the status now?
Well, he does care, but he does.
agree with the baby steps he wants I don't know he doesn't want to get of his credit
card he thinks we need credit to get approved to buy a house to get a car and
things like that and on one of your videos I watched over 33 wow you sound like
you're 20 I yes he sounds like he's 20 he's so immature yeah wow okay and
So what's his plan to get out of this mess?
He just wants to pay off the smallest amount that doesn't have an interest.
I mean, that does have an interest.
He wants to start with that.
But I know with the baby steps, you have to start with the smallest amount first, which I've been doing.
I've been doing that myself, but he hasn't.
I'm sorry, I'm just so overwhelmed.
I've never been in this so much that before the most debt I've had was the $6,000.
Yeah.
So here's what you need to do, huh?
Okay.
You need to sit down with him tonight and say, I'm so scared I can't breathe, and you are killing me.
So I'm going to go see a marriage counselor because our marriage is in deep trouble, and I'd like for you to go with me.
okay and you need to go see a marriage counselor okay you don't need to be talking to two gobs on a
podcast when your marriage is falling apart all right you got to sit down with somebody they can
actually help you and him grow up and walk through the process of learning to respect each other
combine communicate but this guy does whatever he wants to do and then just comes home and tells you
at least a Tesla.
I mean, that's a husband needs to be smacked.
And so I can't help you with that because I can't reach him from here.
But it's clear he doesn't respect your opinions on money.
Yeah, and he's not communicating.
And he doesn't make any money, which is kind of humorous.
You're making triple what he makes.
And then he, but he's got all these opinions.
That's hilarious.
Broke people with deep financial principles.
And so, but yeah, it's that all that comes out in marriage counseling.
but you're terrified and your husband's causing it.
So that tells me that we have marriage counseling issues
and you need to sit down with somebody.
I'm sorry you're going through this kiddo.
All right, Eric is next.
Eric's in Houston.
Hi, Eric.
How are you?
Hey, Dave.
How's it going, buddy?
Better than I deserve.
How can we help?
Yeah, I just need some, you know, advice from Uncle Dave.
I call you Michael because I've been listening to you for a little while now.
So I just need some advice.
I'll give you the quickest, shortest story of rundown I can't.
A year ago, I was facing some legal troubles, had to go to court, stuff like that.
I needed a lawyer.
So I went to my uncle.
He was doing a little bit well off financially.
So I taught him if you can help me, find a lawyer, you know,
but he decided to take on everything himself.
He paid for the lawyer with, you know, the lawyer.
with, you know, the Lord one with me to court.
Fast track a year up to today, you know, I've come to find out, you know, from the news
and everything that he gained all his, all his money from illegal immigrants looking
and seeking, you know, legalization, green card, stuff like that, to be able to live here
in the U.S.
He was defrauding them.
telling them that he's, you know, he works for the law firm.
He can help them expedite that situation.
Your uncle was doing this.
Yes, sir, yes, sir.
How much do you owe your uncle for the lawyer?
I owe him 10,000.
And what do you make?
Okay, but let me give you, let me give you just a quick sidetrack to that.
The money that he gave me, the money that he accumulated from all these people,
So it was about 1.4 million.
FBI and everybody, they did a joint task force investigation.
And, you know, what I'm at now, I'm trying to figure out morally, you know, should I pay him back?
I would like to try to help out somebody, you know.
I mean...
I don't know that you can.
Have they seized his bank accounts?
I mean, I'm guessing he's going to jail for a long time.
Yeah, they seized his bank account.
He bought a couple of...
Do you have $10,000?
Um, no. Okay, then it doesn't matter, does it?
Yeah, I mean, I mean, but the thing about it, the thing about it is that he's, he's been, he's been hounding me and he, you know, he's been...
Hounding you for money you don't have.
Exactly, and he's been throwing my name under the rug to my whole family, making me out to be this bad person, but...
Maybe we don't have to worry about what he thinks, because he's a scam artist, he's going to jail, okay?
We're not going to have some kind of moral competition.
worried about his opinion of anything.
He's a criminal.
He's a criminal.
So none of that matters.
But what does matter is, regardless of how horrible person he is, or what he said or did,
he loans you $10,000 and you owe him $10,000.
So someday, when you get some money and you get a job and all that, you probably ought to
pay the man back what you owe him, regardless of morally, regardless of what he has done.
You know, that's up to you, but you can do that.
But that's your only option is either not pay him or pay him,
but you don't have an option today at all because you don't have the money.
So it's theory right now.
He can call you.
He can hounds you.
He can tell all the relatives that you're a bad guy while he's sitting in a jail cell
because the FBI raided him.
That's funny.
He's telling people you're a bad guy.
That's kind of humorous if you think about it.
But, yeah, I wouldn't worry about it, Eric.
When you get some money together, then deal with the problem.
and when you get some money together,
if you someday should pay the ban back what you owe him,
regardless of his character.
Because you paying him back is not about his character.
It's about yours.
And so I want you to pay him, but not today.
You don't have it.
It's living rent free in your head until you do pay him.
I can tell it's weighing on you.
You don't like what it's doing to your reputation.
I'm not paying him because of anything he says or does.
And I'm not paying him because your mama calls because he called her.
I'm not paying him for any of them.
that. I'm just painting because I owe it. That's simple. Nothing more, nothing less.
a major purchase like a home or car, but it's also a good idea to put in the work
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using Ramsey trusted pros. Whether you're looking for car, home, or any other type of insurance,
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Welcome back to the Ramsey Show in the Fair Wins Credit Union Studios.
George Camel, Ramsey, personality number one bestselling author, is my co-host today.
Open phones at AAA 825-5-225.
Brianna is with us in Maryland.
Hi, Brianna.
How are you?
Hi, Dave. I'm so glad to be here.
Well, it's good to have you. How can we help?
Well, I'm feeling overwhelmed.
I recently signed up for the free version of the Every Dollar app.
I did all of my budgeting.
I'm still feeling underwater, and I can't find the second job.
But I'm calling because I want to find out if the 400% interest rate for the payday loan that I originally took out for $1,500, is considered actual
debt. It's not on my credit report. I've already paid about 2,500 of it. And when I realized that
I kind of like stopped answering their calls and ignoring them, so just not sure what to do.
Why are you ignoring them? I really don't have the extra finance to pay them. And I figured it
wasn't showing up on my credit report, so it wasn't necessarily hurting me. And I kind of felt like
they already got their money because the loan was for 1.5 originally.
Well, it's debt.
I mean, knowing anyone, anything for any reason is debt.
And so whether it has shown up on your credit report or not isn't the issue.
You've got clearly in a bad cycle.
I mean, there's a lot of problems that got you into that payday loan, payday lender, right?
What caused this?
Yeah.
Well, I do a lot of lending, I guess, to my family.
And I'm actually currently trying to get out of, like, our family savings club.
Like, we all put in, like, $600 a month.
And then when your month comes, like, you get the money.
And then I recently got a car.
It was $15,000, but I'm upside down.
It's just $55,000 student loans.
So I'm just trying to, like, make it day by day.
I have a clearer picture of my finances with the Every Dollar app.
but I don't understand why it's so hard to find the second job right now.
What's your total debt?
I've got $75,000.
And what are you making right now?
$61,000 a year, about $3,800 net.
Okay.
And your smallest debt is now what?
Is it the payday loan?
No, a $900 by now pay later type thing.
What did we use that for?
But I got a TV.
Okay.
How long ago was that?
It was about two months ago, and I was paying the minimum.
When did you start the every dollar out?
I only started a few weeks ago.
I just started listening.
Okay, good, good.
All right.
Have you stopped your 401K?
I did.
I did stop that.
It was only $900 in there anyway.
And you're going to stop the family thing today.
Just call the family and say I'm out.
they're not going to take that well but yeah i'm sorry tough i'm broke i owe a payday lender 400%
interest i don't need a family savings club you're taking out a 400% interest loan to put into
the family savings club do you understand how crazy that is yeah yeah so that stops today just
you know sorry guys i'm sorry i've messed up my finances and it's going to take me a little while to get
them straightened out and i've got this payday lender i've got to get off my back and i'm sorry
So, yeah, I can't put anything else in.
And I can't participate in something that involves money right now.
So I'm also not playing, I'm also not playing poker with you next week.
So, you know, it's like, we don't have any money.
So, and then I don't know why.
What do you do for a living?
I'm actually a secretary for the Defense Counterintelligence Department.
So, like, I really can't have my finances out of order, otherwise I lose my job.
Yeah.
Your finances are out of order.
order if they did a security check on here. You're in trouble already. You've got to get
this mess cleaned up or you will lose this job. You're right eventually. So yeah, I, you know,
there's lots of things you can do part time. I mean, you can clean houses. You can pet sit. You can do
all kinds of stuff part time. And I would get with doing something starting yesterday immediately.
Six different things work in my tail land off.
See if you can return that TV.
If you're in a 90-day window.
You don't have time to watch TV.
You've got nine side jobs you're about to have.
And so just follow the debt snowball.
It works.
And get rid of this payday lender.
I don't care what's on the credit report.
You've got to get this monkey off your back.
Otherwise, it's going to be another fee, another rollover loan.
And that's how people get stuck in these cycles.
If it's several months, if it's been several months since you paid them, you may be able
to call them and settle it with a lump sum, but you'd have to have the lump sum.
Say, look, I don't know what I owe you, but I've got $1,000.
If you'll take that a settlement in full, we'll close this out.
But you need the $1,000 in your hand to be able to have that discussion,
and that is involving extra work and extra income.
Anything you can do to create some extra income, that's moral and legal.
You need to start doing it yesterday.
Lisa's in Georgia.
Hi, Lisa.
How are you?
I'm fine.
How are you?
Better than I deserve.
What's up?
Question.
I've been married for 42 years.
And then in the last few years, my husband's been diagnosed with mild to moderate dementia.
With that, it's come a lot of radical changes in his personality as far as our finances.
The latest is we have a second home we have for sale.
And now he wants to rent it out.
And I'm at a point in our lives where I feel like we need to sell it, take the equity invested.
That's our retirement.
Is he aware that he has dementia?
he's aware but denial
strong denial
then he's not aware
he doesn't believe he doesn't believe he doesn't believe he doesn't believe he doesn't
believe he has dementia
one of the things he wants to do
in our discussions now with the sale of the house
he's decided that he wants to take 50% of the proceeds
and spend it any way he wants to
and his own private account the answer is no
you have dementia
and I'm not going to go along with anything you want to do
no that's the way I've been pushing back no you have dementia you are not of your right mind
and no we are not going along with any plan you have I'm here to take care of you I have for
42 years I'm going to stick with you in sickness and in health and we're not doing anything
you want to do with money you have dementia so how do I move forward to do I need to
do a court order that he can't because everybody else think there's nothing wrong with him
I see it.
Well, wait a minute, everybody else.
I thought you said the doctor diagnosed him.
That's true.
Well, then everybody else doesn't think that.
Just the doctor.
Just the doctor.
Yeah, just he thinks there's his friends and his.
Well, who gives the crap what his friends think?
Yeah, exactly.
So do I need to do get an attorney and do a court order so that he can't make these decisions?
Because right now, we're 50-50 on account.
He can do whatever he wants.
I don't know how to move forward.
Yeah, I think you have him declared incompetent in court.
Okay.
And your physician's going to have to go along with that.
Because he's not of right mind.
We have to protect him from himself.
Yeah, I don't know that he'd sign a power of attorney for you to have financial control.
No, he's not going to do that because he doesn't think he's got dementia.
Correct.
So he's going to need to be forced into it.
Yeah.
So, I mean, in order to take care of him, he's not of his right mind.
That's sad.
I'm so sorry that because, you know, when people get early onset, they generally turn either
really mean or really nice. And it sounds like he's gone the mean one. So, wow, I'm sorry. And so it's
going to be really combative. But yeah, what his friends think doesn't matter. I mean,
that's irrelevant. What his mama thinks doesn't matter. I mean, what the doctor says he's got this
and you've observed the pattern, then your job as his spouse is to take care of him in spite of
him. And, yeah, that's a court order.
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Ed is in Kentucky. Hi, Ed. How are you?
I am doing well. How about yourself? Just the same, sir. What's up?
All right. Well, thank you all so much. So my wife and I were really excited. We bought our house back in 08, and we have been throwing a lot of money to get it paid off, and we're on track to have our house paid off by Thanksgiving of this year.
Way to go. Good for you.
Thank you. It took a lot of hard work.
But so, you know, we're really excited about what's coming up next, but also that's a lot of unknown for us.
And so, you know, we keep investing in our 401K. I've actually upped my 401K contribution rate that she's going to be doing the same.
But just wanted to try to at least get an idea of what are some things that suggestions that you all would have for us post having the house paid off?
because after that we will have no other debts.
Yeah, way to go.
Well, maybe step seven, we just say build wealth and give.
And so there's three buckets, and you need to be very intentional with the money that we'll have.
And you're going to have a lot of it now because no payments, right?
And go, you know, there's three things we can do.
We can have fun and enjoy the money.
And you need to do some of that.
You can invest some, and you need to do some of that.
And you can be outrageously generous.
And you need to do some of that.
and so, you know, you're still going to look at the pile of money coming in every month,
and you're still going to assign it to something that falls in one of those three buckets,
and you need to have a pretty good rhythm where you're touching those buckets,
at least annually, but hopefully monthly.
Yeah, definitely.
And, you know, definitely, you know, the fun part and the invest part and the generous part,
yeah, that totally makes sense, and that's something that we really want to do.
And we just want to also make sure about the time we retire that we can retire and have some peace of mind.
How old are you?
I'm 42.
And how much is in your 401ks now, retirement account?
Right.
Well, in my retirement account, I'm currently at $340,000.
You and your wife?
And my wife, she actually has a little bit more.
she was actually at around 500,000.
Okay, she got $850,000 in retirement right now.
What's the house worth?
The house is worth $175,000.
Okay.
So you're millionaires.
Cool.
That's pretty neat, yeah.
Yeah.
The $800,000, if you don't touch it, you know, you said you're 40 what?
I'm 42.
You're 42.
If it's invested in good mutual funds,
when you're 49, it'll be 1.6, and when you're 56, it'll be 3.2. And when you're 60, 63, it's going to be 6.4.
You're okay. You did it. You're real far ahead on retirement. So I wouldn't worry. You keep investing. Don't, you know, let the foot off the gas there. But also, figure out, hey, do we want to upgrade an house? Could we pay cash for a different house, you know, five years?
from now. Yeah. So setting some goals and you're spending, saving, and giving areas at least
once a year and then check in and do the monthly budget. You get been so focused on this house,
there's some stuff you need to do in the fund category. You need to upgrade her car. You need to go on a
trip you've been telling her for 20 years you were going to do. I don't know what it is, but there's
some stuff y'all need to do. Renovate the kitchen. Yeah, something like there's some things like
that you need to allocate some money to. And yeah, while you're doing some investing and while you're
doing some increased and intentional generosity.
And, yeah, you just keep all of those things moving and, you know, just make lists of things
we want to do.
And then let's force rank them.
What do we want to do first?
What do we want to do second?
What do we want to do third?
And then you start, you know, fund that with what used to be a house payment.
And you're going to be in great shape, man.
I mean, you're really doing beautiful.
I'm proud of you.
Pretty stinking incredible.
Cantree's with us in Texas.
Hi, Cantree.
How are you?
Yes, sir. I am doing good.
Good. How can we help?
Yes, sir. So I am currently joining the United States Army Special Forces, and if I pass, I will get a $34,000 sign-on bonus.
I'm used to being broke, so I'm not sure exactly what to do with that, but there's a motorcycle that I want to get that is about $20,000.
What do you think I should do with that bonus?
How old are you, sir?
I'm 20.
Thank you for serving your country.
We appreciate you.
Yes, sir, thank you.
Well, number one, if you invest in things that go down in value,
you're going to be broke your whole life.
Yes, sir.
Motorcycles go down in value.
I don't mind you getting a bike, but you don't need a $20,000 bike.
What are they paying you?
What are they going to be paying you and not counting the signing bonus?
It's going to be about $2,500 a month.
Good for you.
But, of course, I will be living on base, so I don't have to pay for living.
expenses. Yeah. Okay. Well, you need to be very, very careful with what happens to that
2,500 a month, and you need to be very careful with what happens to 34,000. I would spend
some of it on fun, but I wouldn't spend two-thirds of it on fun. Yes, sir. So no, I wouldn't
buy a $20,000 bike. You make, you're 20 years old. You make $2,500 a month. You're brand new in the
military. But if you want to get a $5,000 bike for fun, that'd probably be okay. You know, do you
have a car? Yes, sir. Yes, sir. I have an 0-1 silver item. Is it paid for?
Yes, sir. Also, I do have a loan that I'm currently, it's a $4,000 loan. I've already paid
about $1,400 of it off. So, so I take that bonus. Definitely, definitely wrap that up, too.
Knock it, knock that out. Set you some money aside as an emergency fund. Get you a toy, but a
cheaper one. Okay. And then let's start talking about investing and doing grown-ups.
stuff with some of this money.
A lot of the guys you're running around with aren't going to be doing that.
Good, yes, sir.
Okay, because we've worked with the military for 30 years, and when you step off the base
and most of the bases in the U.S., down each side of the road for the next two and a half
miles is stupid.
Yes, sir.
Every stupid thing a 20-year-old could possibly do is on each side of the road all the way
down through there.
And it's like they set it up to suck all the money out of you guys.
And it's a shame, but it is.
It's like stupid on parade right outside.
the base gates everywhere you go. And, you know, you can really screw up here, man. So be a,
be a grown-up and not a little kid with the way you're looking at this stuff. And thank you
for asking the question. It's a good, wise question. Yeah, I mean, this $34,000 is going to
disappear quick in a good way if you do the right things with it. You pay off this loan,
that's $2,500. Maybe put $20,000 aside in your savings and spend $5,000 on a bike and fund a
Roth IRA with the rest of it. It's gone. And then you can't do something stupid with it because
it's gone. Yeah. Yeah, you're going to be able to do a lot of fun stuff with this over time.
But, yeah. Use this to set yourself up with a great foundation. As a 20-year-old man, I wish I was in
that shape at 20. And by the way, the $5,000 bike is probably a 4-year-old version of your 20.
That's how much it's going to go down in value. So maybe a Facebook marketplace.
Maybe a 5-year, yeah. You'll find a 24-year-old who made that decision at 20, who's now trying to sell it.
There you go.
He's probably in the military.
That could easily be the case.
If you're on base and you jump on Facebook, all those people are probably in the military.
So that's how to find the deals right there.
Yeah, that could easily happen.
No doubt about it.
Well, everybody needs insurance, but it can be hard trying to figure out and find the pros who aren't just looking to make a buck.
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We love listening to it.
It's all good.
We can do that.
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We've all done dumb things with money. I've done them with zeros on the end.
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Leonell is with us on the stage right here, the lobby of Ramsey Solutions.
Where do you live?
I live in Menifee, California.
Cool. Welcome to Nashville. And you're here to do a debt-free scream. How much have you paid off?
$75,117.1.17.
I love it. And how long did that take you, sir?
20 months. Good for you. And your range of income during that two years?
$78,000 have included my bonus for my base pay, and around 96, nine months after that.
Good for you. What do you do for a living?
I'm a CPA. Good for you. Wow. Very cool. How old are you?
25.
What made you getting in gear and say, I'm going to get rid of 75,000 20 months ago?
I was actually given a book called Foundations and Personal Finance.
It was gifted to me in my last year of my MBA.
And I started saying, wow, that's a lot of debt.
That was more than I was expecting because I went straight in, not realizing, you know, how much I borrowed.
And I saw I was in a big hole.
So you said if I follow your plan, you know, be very aggressive towards the debt.
I could pay it off within about, I believe you said a range of 20 to 24 months.
So I said, can you not? I'll do it. I'm in a bad hole. I'll do it.
Wow.
You took Dave up on the challenge. I did. And he was right.
Yeah, he was right. As per usual with Dave. I love that, man. Congrats. So this was our curriculum,
the kind of the workbook for the curriculum, foundations and personal finance?
It was a green book. It was a thin little green book. Okay. Very cool.
Went through that. Very cool. And the 75,000 was student loan debt. All student loans. Couldn't
bankrupt on it.
Okay.
food for you. Did you attempt to? You sound like you're like, I couldn't. Well, I learned in my CPA exams that student loans, you can't bankrupt. Yeah. So. So you're like, well, I guess I got to claw this out myself. I took it out. I signed the dotted line. Let's knock this out. Oh, yeah. Wow. What did you learn during the 20 months while you're working on this? It's more behavioral than it is actually mathematical. Because I would take a look at what you would talk about. And, you know, I'm a CPA, so I would just check everything you say. And I say, is this guy really right?
And he said through the snowball method, it's only around, you know, at most two months slower.
And when I looked at the avalanche method, it came around that much for me.
So I'm like, wow, this guy actually knows what he's talking about.
So I followed it, and it worked really, really well, and it made sense.
Wow.
How's it feel to be free?
You know what?
I have a lot of peace.
Actually, it's pretty great because now I feel like it can actually take risks I couldn't take before.
Like what?
Well, I was really taking a look at my course study work that I can be really aggressive in my investing now.
So I can actually grow my wealth as, you know, within reason to actually grow my wealth more.
I was learning through education where they said the three biggest risks in stocks was overpaying, having to sell before you have to, and bankruptcy.
And by being debt free, I'm able to avoid overpaying by, you know, I can invest in Mitchell funds, you know, using dollar cost average.
I could do valuation with my background, not having to sell before I want to is being debt-free.
That's the only thing I would really force me to sell.
You're not desperate.
You've reduced your risk, and therefore you're less desperate to go do something stupid and miss out on the market returns.
You're staying invested consistently.
Yes, sir.
Way to go, man.
So if somebody's listening and they said, okay, the guy paid off $75,000 in 20 months, how did he do that?
What would you tell him the key is to getting out of debt?
Well, for me, I was a college student, so I delayed my life heavily.
I moved back and home with my parents.
I didn't finance a car.
I didn't go and get a mortgage for a home.
I lived humbly and with my parents, and then I just saved as much as I could.
My goal was to only live on about 25% of my take-home pay, which I achieved,
and I put 75K towards my, not 75K,000 of my take-home pay towards my loans.
and then I had people who keep me accountable,
such as my brother and my parents.
Wow.
So living on less than you make.
Oh, that was a key.
It was just be super disciplined about that
and you'll be shocked at how quickly
you can knock out the debt.
Absolutely.
Which makes the avalanche method obsolete
because of how fast you're knocking this out.
Yeah.
And even as a math nerd, you're like,
yeah, you could, you might,
but the people who actually become debt-free,
it's behavior.
It's behavior.
Way to go, man.
That's big.
We're proud of you.
You get the rest of your life now
to build wealth.
to give, to enjoy.
So you went like one step backward going,
well, I'm missing out right now.
There's probably some FOMO.
But then you're catapulting forward exponentially.
Yes.
While your friends are going, dude,
how are you investing that much?
I don't have debt.
That's incredible.
Wow.
Well, good for you.
Good for you, man.
That's awesome.
I'm proud of you.
Very cool.
Who was cheering you on as you went?
Oh, definitely my brother,
my father and my mother.
And I could tell that I made them really proud
because I did something that they haven't done.
Yeah.
Changing your family trade?
You can get out of their basement, so.
Have you moved out yet?
No, actually, I'm glad I paid off my debt so quickly because I got laid off.
Whoa.
Yeah.
So one month after paying off my debt, being aggressive, they said, yep, we don't see you as being meeting our standards or valuable.
We've got to let you go.
We're going to go with other people.
But from there, I was just glad I was really aggressive.
And you're working again now?
It's only been about a month or something.
So I've just been applying, applying aggressively, and I'm not too worried because my credentials and background.
I'm willing to move for the half to.
Yeah, you're a sharp guy.
Good for you, man.
Well done.
Proud of you, proud of you.
And you brought your brother to stand with you while you do the debt free screen.
Bring him up and introduce him.
Hi, this is my brother Danilo.
He's following my footsteps.
He's doing everything I'm doing but better.
I love it.
Way to go, Danilo.
Very cool.
Very cool.
All right, Leonel from California, $75,000 paid off in 20 months.
making 78 to 96.
Count it down.
Let's hear a debt-free scream.
Three, two, one.
I'm debt-free.
Yes!
Yeah.
There we go.
Oh, my goodness.
That was incredible.
He gave it as all on that one.
That's fun.
Left it all on the dance floor, as they say.
I wish I had that energy.
You know, I missed the 25.
year old energy. I'd probably hurt my back doing that now. Yeah, well, I mean, you're staying up all
night with newborns. Yeah, different phase of life. It affects your energy level, George. I'm just
saying. What a great story. Well done, sir. Well done. Very, very proud of you. Good work.
Jasmine's in Texas. Hi, Jasmine. How are you?
Hi, Dave. I'm doing fine. Good. How can we help?
So my husband and I are on baby step two. We're kind of newer to the Ramsey.
teaching method and um i was actually recently laid off um as of yesterday so it was yeah it was a
little bit of a shock to us you didn't know you didn't have any idea it was coming um we had some
differences and my um boss said that they i wasn't meeting the expectations that the company was
wanting um so i thought i was fixing a lot of those issues and then yesterday they asked me for
another meeting after having a meeting last week and then they said that we're just going to have to
let you go. So I thought that I had a little bit more time to kind of save up. And it turns out
I just had yesterday. What did you make? I made $45,000. Doing what? I was an admin assistant
for one of the businesses, local into the town that we live in. Okay, cool. All right. And are they
giving you severance package?
They are not.
Wow, okay.
How long did you work there?
About a year.
Okay.
All right, cool.
And what does your husband make?
He makes $65,000.
Okay.
So you used to have a 110 income,
and now you have a $65 income for this moment?
Yes.
Okay.
Well, here's what we have found,
and we faced your situation,
many, many, many times over 30 years.
The first thing is it's really emotional.
And you're semi kind of angry and scared at the same time, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
The second thing is, if you push through that and go out there right now and go get
another job fast, you'll probably get a better job than you had, paying more than you had.
If you wallow in this for about six weeks, you're going to end up probably
getting a worse job than you had so you throw the shoulders back and you brush your teeth and
you go to work again fast hang on we're going to send you a copy of ken coleman's book the proximity
principle which will help you get that next job quick quick you're better than they said you are
girl go get you something better
We're going to be able to be.
Our scripture of the day, Philippians 2.14 and 15, do everything without grumbling or arguing so that you may become blameless and pure, children of God without fault in a warped and crooked generation. Then you will shine among them like stars in the sky. Maya Angelou said, if you're always trying to be normal, you will never know how amazing you can be. Dave's in Maryland. Hi, Dave. Welcome to the Ramsey Show. What's up?
Hi, Dave. How are you, sir?
Better than I deserve. How can I help?
I, well, first and foremost, I want to thank you for everything that you've taught me over the years.
You helped me change my life financially.
I never thought that I would be in a position that I am today with money, and it's because of everything I've learned from you.
Wow. Well, good for you, man. I'm proud of you.
Yeah, it's awesome. So I've just, I've been struggling for a while now in my current,
relationship with my girlfriend.
I'm just trying to figure out whether I should stay with her or not.
And most of it has to do with our differences financially.
How old are you guys?
So I'm 48 and she's 44.
We've been dating for about five years.
And it's kind of at the point to where this is either going to be it or it isn't, you know.
Yeah, that's a long time.
It's a long time to paint or get off the ladder, right?
So what's the difference in financial values here?
Well, I'm a small business owner, and I think I do pretty well.
And she's, I don't know, I'm more goal-oriented, money-driven, success-driven, than she is.
and she really doesn't have a whole lot financially or like possession wise and things like that
and sometimes I just feel like I would rather date someone that has a solid career path
you know makes a good good salary someone that's more focused on their career and money
but on the other hand we get along I mean she is just she's an amazing woman
and she's the best girl that I've ever dated in my life.
So are you wanting someone who has the same level of drive you do?
Well, maybe not drive, but just someone that's closer to me financially, you know.
So you feel like there's a disparity between how hard you've worked to build your wealth and success
and how little she cares to do that for herself?
Yeah, something like that.
And I guess it's also not, you know, it's, I'm afraid, not a friend.
afraid, but just being the breadwinner, and I don't know, it's a little difficult to explain,
but I just, I wish that she had more money and she had a better job.
You know, that's pretty much.
What is she making?
She makes about 60 a year.
That's a solid income.
And I'm, well, see, that's the thing, because if we combine our finances, I think we would do okay.
I'll make between 80 and 90 a year, and she makes about 60.
So we would bring in around 140 combined, you know, and we've been talking about moving in together and things like that.
But, you know, the money thing just kind of is what's been holding me back.
I don't see any crazy red flag so far.
Is she in crippling debt that she refuses to get out of?
She has spending problems?
No, she's very frugal.
She's a single mom.
She raised her son pretty much on her own with help from her family, but she's a single mom.
She's very frugal.
She's independent.
She has no debt.
I mean, she might have like a one or $2,000 credit card.
She rents her house and her car is paid for.
I mean, you guys are going to build wealth together and you'll accumulate more assets
and you'll have a paid-for house together.
And so I wouldn't judge this just based off of, well, she's not coming to the table with
enough assets for me to move forward.
You know, I would need a little more ammo than that to end this relationship.
And it's not like you make $400,000 and she makes $30.
And so the disparity is not as big as I think you think it is.
It feels more emotional that you're worried you'll resent her and not respect her going down the line.
Yeah, something like that.
And also, I struggle a little bit because I grew up in poverty, you know.
So I've had this inborn fear of poverty my entire life.
and that's why I saved so much and I guess sometimes I think what if the bottom fell out of my business and I didn't I lost my money could I count on her to support us I know that doesn't really make sense but sometimes that's how I think you know well I'm not hearing any huge fireworks going off in terms of something
some kind of bad warning here.
This sounds like a lady who's rolled up her sleeves,
raised a kid by herself,
and has pulled off life pretty well.
You know,
maybe she's not quite kept up with you,
but it's not like you make a million dollars a year
and she makes $10,000 or something.
I mean, this is not some huge disparity.
It's fairly minor.
I guess are older.
But here's the big question is not how much money she has
or how much money she makes.
That part, that shouldn't even really be in the discussion.
What should be in the discussion?
discussion is do you respect her character, her work ethic? Do you respect her intellect and what
she can add to the equation? And if you don't respect someone, then it's very difficult to love
them. And they go together. And so long term, real, lengthy, 25, 35 year marriage, 50 year marriage
love type stuff. Okay. If you think she's deficit the whole time, that's probably not going to end up
being there. And so, but it's not based on her income. And it's not.
based on that. Actually, the things you, her story that you described to me, I think she's
pretty incredible. So, but, you know, you got to, you got to think that. It's not me. I'm not
marrying her. So I got pretty incredible already. I've already got that covered about 44 years
ago. So, but, yeah, that that's what I'd be looking at. It sounds, you know, probably a good
opportunity for some good pre-marriage counseling to sit down with a good marriage counselor and get this
stuff out on the table.
Put those fears out there.
kind of combed through it a little bit, that kind of thing. And, you know, the other thing that
might help, too, you kind of brought up your poverty past. Let me send you a copy of Rachel Cruz's
book, Know Yourself, Know Your Money. It talks about your family of origin and how it affects
your view on money, her family of origin, how it affects her view on money, even her story
and it affects her view on money and how she got to where she is. And you guys get, you know,
give you some jumping off points to understand each other a little bit better.
before you make the final decision on marriage or on breakup, either one.
And, you know, that's definitely where I would go with that.
So, hey, thanks for the call.
We appreciate you joining us.
Open phones here at AAA 825-5-2-2-25.
So, George, one of the big things we get, and I think that know-yourself,
know-your-money book is helpful for that, is with couples that are dating,
trying to figure out if they're a match.
and money is a good thing for that, not because money's important, but because money reveals
a lot about your character. It reveals a lot about your dreams. It reveals a lot about your
fears. It reveals a lot. And Jesus said your treasures where your heart is. And so how you
handle money, the way you look at money, what you're trying to get from money, all say a lot
about you. And so it's a great way to get to know someone in a relationship like
that is to, you know, to study their money habits. Because as Dr. John Deloney says, behavior is a
language. Yeah. And if the values are there, then you can survive it. You'll have a nerd and a free
spirit, a spender and a saver. But if the values are there at the, at a foothold and foundation,
you can survive the relationship. And so that's an important thing to look into is, hey,
do I value living a debt-free life? If not, you're probably going to be broke for a long time.
You know, that's a good point. Looking back on it, we didn't mean.
to do this. We weren't sophisticated enough to do it when we were dating and getting married.
But Sharon and I accidentally got married with having two extremely different families,
but both families put a heavy emphasis on hard work and work ethic.
Common sense.
Yeah. And so neither Sharon nor I have much use for somebody that won't work.
And so, but, and, you know, consequently we team up on that a lot.
Like Sheenie says, you need to go to work.
And Dave does it.
That puts this hour of the Ramsey show in the books.
We'll be back with you before you know it.
In the meantime, remember there's ultimately only one way to financial peace,
and that's to walk daily with the Prince of Peace.
Christ Jesus.
